Sunday, August 23, 2015

Reading Update

I really wish I was good at book reviews. Really, really.  Unfortunately I just can't form my thoughts into entertaining words, which is why I am a blogging failure.  I thought maybe if I blogged more I would get better.  I have had different blogs over the years and I'm pretty sure I was better with words pre-Facebook.  The easier things get the more my brain turns to mush.  Raising four kids didn't help.

I really wish I had started a book blog wayyy back when blogs first came out.  If I had written daily maybe I would have gotten really good at it and made some money from said imaginary blog and also maybe would have been sent free books to review.  This is my dream that I didn't dream in time and now it's too late.

Anyway...I'm still reading.  I love that my kids are grown or almost grown and I don't have much to do and I have a ton of time to read and am able to buy books whenever I would like.  I am living a book lover's dream, to a certain degree.  If you don't dream too big.

I'm currently reading a few books:

Vanessa and Her Sister by Priya Parmar
The Poison Tree by Erin Kelly
Notes from a Blue Bike:  The Art of Living Intentionally in a Chaotic World by Tsh Oxenreider (on my Kindle)
Habibi by Naomi Shihab Nye (aloud to my teens for their curriculum)
The Return of the King by J.R.R. Tolkien (aloud to my teens for fun)
A Tree Grows in Brooklyn by Betty Smith (aloud to my daughter to share a great book)


Maybe I'll come here more often and just record what I'm reading and ramble on a bit.  Maybe I'll forget about this blog again for a few months.  Who knows?
Today the plan is to go read on the beach while watching my husband and oldest son attempt to surf.  I hate that they're surfing...sharks, rip tide and all that fun Florida stuff...but I will enjoy reading and the relief I feel when they finally finish and they both still have all their limbs.
Happy Reading fellow book lovers!

Saturday, January 3, 2015

Leaving Time by Jodi Picoult






Wow.  I just finished this book.  It was hard to put down at times and at times I needed a 15 minute break from it.

I've read a few Jodi Picoult's novels.  The Storyteller was amazing, My Sister's Keeper made me cry (I saw the movie first, which prompted me to read the book), The Pact, which I wasn't too impressed with.  I think that's it.  The Storyteller is what made me pick up her newest book.  I have seen many negative comments about it, including that it goes too much into elephants and their behavior.  I'll agree there were times when I was tempted to skim a page or two, but I didn't.  For the most part I enjoyed learning more about these majestic, intelligent animals.

Leaving Time is about a young teenage girl, Jenna, who is looking for her mother, who disappeared when she was three years old.  Her mother was a scientist studying elephant behaviors, specifically elephant grief.  Both her parents worked at an elephant sanctuary in New Hampshire (of all places) and one night there is a death that is deemed an accident to avoid a messy, possible murder investigation. That night her mother disappears from the local hospital and is never heard from again and her father ends up in the psychiatric hospital, where he still resides 10 years later.

Jenna, who has lived with her grandmother since that night, finds a washed-up psychic and the detective that was on the scene the night of the accident who blames himself for not digger deeper, to help her find her mother or at least figure out the truth of that night.  There are twists and just when I thought I had figured it out, I turned the page and was shocked at the turn of events.  Leaving Time is definitely a good story and I look forward to reading Jodi's next book.

4/5

Thursday, January 1, 2015

Joy in the Morning by Betty Smith


This was my final book in 2014.  I loved A Tree Grows in Brooklyn.  I first read it sometime around 2005 and I've since reread it and had my oldest daughter read it and she also loved it. 

I don't know what took me so long to try another novel by Betty Smith, but I'm glad I finally did.  I really enjoyed this story.  Annie and Carl are young and in love and they decide to get married even though both families are against it.  He's in law school and she comes out to his college and embarks on her own self-education.  She discovers she has a passion and talent for writing and just like Francie Nolan, she loves books.  The young couple goes through some hard times, but always some bit of luck or help comes at the last minute to save them, which I thought was a bit too convenient but I remembered when the book was written and enjoyed the story for what it is.

There's a few things that did annoy me:  Her vague references to her step-father and some incidents that are never fully disclosed and also through most of the book I just did not like her husband, Carl.  I felt that he antagonized her purposely, only to make up with her right away for his own selfish reasons.   He's also jealous of her reading and writing, worried she may out-grown him and I can totally see that happening if the story continued on.  As it was it ended with a bright future ahead of them.  I truly enjoyed this sweet, simple story of a new couple's first year together.

4/5