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Archive for August, 2011

Book Lovers Day

Tuesday, August 9th, 2011

By James L. (JimiJam)

 

I have always been what we classify as “a Reader”.  Surely, there was a time before which I had not yet gained the ability as such, and, of that time, I do have a number of memories.  Once that most essential of skills was acquired, however, there was never again a time in which a passion for

photo by James L.

reading did not exist in my life.  Even learning to read itself was something to which I took with an inordinate amount of dedication; I learned by way of a series of phonics tapes, and distinctly remember, upon completion of one cassette, begging for the next lesson.

 

I remember the joy of joining what could properly be considered my first “book club”, receiving a steady supply of “I Can Read” books, beginning with the first in that series, Danny and the Dinosaur.  I remember coming home from kindergarten with my primer, running with it clutched to my chest, into my room, and reading it from cover to cover by the end of that very first day.  I remember my first sparsely illustrated chapter book, Albert in Wonderland, read over the course of several evenings in the time before bed.

 

Looking back on those days in such clear retrospection, it amuses me to observe the one thing missing from those memories: a realization that my love for reading was anything even remotely out of the ordinary.  Our school certainly made the practice seem normal enough, first through the Book It! reward program, then followed by Accelerated Reader’s points-based system, each requiring that we read a number of books each month.  Naturally, it seemed to me that reading was simply the way one was meant to use one’s free time.  It wasn’t until around the age of ten, by which time I had begun reading books like The Three Musketeers, that others took note of what was apparently an odder sort of habit than I had thought.

Kansas City Public Library

Kalocsa Episcopal Library

Even while I continued to earn puzzled glances throughout the remainder of grade school and junior high, it wasn’t until high school that I truly saw how uniquely integral reading had become for me.  By that time it had become somewhat impressive to a select few, who themselves knew an intense love for reading.  We would exchange titles or volumes which we had found particularly entertaining or educational, sharing ever-broadening horizons with each other.  When moving from one classroom to the next, I may have absentmindedly left the occasional textbook behind, but rarely –if ever- did I fail to bring along whichever extra-curricular volume I happened to be reading at the time.  I even had a deplorable tendency to eschew the required reading of my English classes for the sake of continuing my own literary selections.  This behavior troubled my teachers, and certainly had a deleterious effect on my grades, but I never managed to regret such decisions.

 

Yet, for all of this, I never knew the bibliophilic existence until years later, well beyond the realm of class and hall.  Though I continued to read with a voracious appetite all the while, I had scarcely three dozen books to my name during the years that followed my formal education.  My love for reading, and indeed for books in general, was not fully realized until one fateful day, little more than 4 years ago, on which a friend inadvertently revolutionized my world by asking a rather simple question: “Have you heard about this PaperBackSwap thing?”… 

 

As I now sit, surrounded by more books than I can reasonably count, having fatted my mind and spirit on the finest of literature, at times I find myself pausing and simply marveling, not only at the profound pleasure and fulfillment derived from this life-long obsession, but at the sheer logistics of having crafted a life that so revolves around books and their ocular consumption.  There are moments in which I can but stand and stare, virtually aghast at the size and quality of the library I now possess.  That there should be a day dedicated to Book Lovers is almost preposterous in my mind, as indeed every day in my world, as well as the world of the PaperBackSwap, is a day so dedicated.  And yet I am thankful for the excuse to expound upon my experiences thus far, to share briefly in the spirit of that which has shaped not only my life, but the lives of each and every member here.

 

Whether we read casually or obsessively, for education or pleasure, collecting our books or setting them loose upon the world once the last page has been committed to mind, we are all, undoubtedly, book lovers.  It is in light of this kinship that I find myself so often smiling – when my attention is not focused otherwise on the book of the moment, that is.  I wish all of you a most splendid Book Lovers’ Day, and, as ever, the very happiest of swapping.

 

Some books about the love of books

 

 

 

 

Mystery Monday – Nicotine Kiss

Monday, August 8th, 2011

Nicotine Kiss by Loren D. Estleman

Review by Vicky (VickyJo)   

For the past 25 years or so, Loren Estleman has been entertaining readers with his Shamus-award-winning series of mysteries starring Amos Walker, a private investigator based in Detroit, Michigan.  The 21st Walker mystery is due to come out in early July, but in the meantime, let me tell you about an earlier novel in the series, Nicotine Kiss.

Amos is on the trail of a dead-beat dad in Grayling, Michigan, on the opening day of deer season.  He’s hanging out in a bar called Spike’s Keg o’ Nails, because sooner or later, all deer hunters end up here. This particular dead beat dad may not pay his child support, but he’s never missed opening day.

While hanging out, he runs into an old acquaintance named Jeff Starzek, an active cigarette smuggler who mysteriously mentions that he has “diversified” his smuggling activities.  Before Amos can get any details, his dead beat dad arrives, but seems to sense that Amos is on his tail, and leaves immediately.

He follows him to the parking lot, where Amos is unexpectedly shot.  By the time he’s aware of anything else, Amos is told that his assailant committed suicide after shooting him, and that a mysterious man drove him to the ER…a man who fits Jeff Starzek’s description.

Amos, now with a limp and a cane, finally makes it back to work after the New Year.  His first walk-in client hands him a business card…Amos’s own business card.  He says his wife Rose has a brother named Jeff Starzek who smuggles cigarettes.  Jeff told Rose that if she didn’t hear from him by the first of the year, to hire Amos to find him.  Amos agrees to look for Jeff.

A few minutes later, a local police officer arrives, with a Homeland Security Fed in tow.  They’re looking for Jeff too…a coincidence?  Amos doesn’t think so.  They know Amos and Jeff go way back, and wonder if he’s been in touch.  But then they drop an interesting bit of information… according to the Feds, Jeff has an older brother, but no sister.  So who was the man in Amos’s office, claiming to be Jeff’s brother-in-law?  What has Jeff gotten into?  It’s not just cigarette smuggling; what has Jeff diversified into?  And how can Amos help?  He owes Jeff for saving his life back in Grayling.

His search takes him to the frigid shores of Lake Huron and a strange little church called the Church of the Freshwater Sea.  Amos begins finding clues that perhaps his old friend Jeff has left cigarettes behind and is now involved with a terrorist counterfeit ring.  Post 9/11, this isn’t good.  Not good at all.

No one today writes noir fiction, or the hard-boiled detective character better than Estleman.  His writing is witty, sharp, smart…and the action is steady.  From his first Amos Walker novel, Motor City Blues in 1981, Estleman has given us consistent, high-quality noir mysteries. Nicotine Kiss is the 18th book in the series, but I really feel his books can be read as stand-alones.  If vintage Raymond Chandler is your cup of tea, and you’ve never picked up a Loren Estleman novel, you’re in for a real treat.

 

Memoir Review – The Summer of Ordinary Ways

Sunday, August 7th, 2011

 

The Summer of Ordinary Ways by Nicole Lea Helget

 

Review by McGuffyAnn M. (nightprose)

 

Nicole Lea Helget has written a memoir that will stay with you. Her story is real, heartbreaking and vivid. She writes with incredible ease, in spite of the words and images they invoke.

 

Admittedly, it is a painful book to read, as the author’s memories are often quite unpleasant, even horrific. But that is the reality of a memoir: it is real life, as the author experienced and recalls it.

 

She tells of growing up in rural Minnesota, the oldest of several daughters. Her father is an apparently disturbed and cruel man, while her mother is a tired and overwhelmed woman. Nicole, herself, is overwhelmed.

 

Each chapter is a dated story, in beautifully written prose, in spite of the pain described. While it may not depict the small town and rural life that we want to believe or read about, it depicts the story that Nicole Lea Helget lived. This is a very powerful and emotional memoir.

Memories, Musings and Miscellany from our MoM’s

Saturday, August 6th, 2011

Today our featured Member of the Month is Cozette M. (CozSnShine)

who was named our member of the month in December 2007


How long have you been a PBS member?  

Seems like forever in some ways.  How does one make so many friends, play so many games, swap so many books and have so many discussions in just 1,200 days or so??  Signed up on Feb. 05, 2007.   Don’t add up those days, I’m sure my math is spot on!


How did you find PBS?

I read an article about PBS in some magazine, wrote down the name and promptly forgot about it.   A few months later I came across the name again and here I am!


How has PBS impacted your life?

Wow! that is quite the question.  I guess it would be an overstatement to say that PBS has become my life, but at times it feels that way.  I’ve said before that PBS is more than about books, it’s about community.  I’ve found so many new authors and books I’d never pick up, before, in a million years.  But I’ve also found so many FRIENDS, who I’d never have interacted with if it were not for PBS.  People who do not think like me, who were not raised like me, who I wouldn’t have any reason to meet in real life.  But I come on PBS and here they are, the good and the bad, the caring and the UNcaring, the sensitive and the hard, the liberal and the conservative, the happy and the sad.   Those who interact with you and those who react to you.  People, people, people who make up the fabric of PBS and therefore, the fabric of my life.


What does PBS mean to you?

Paper back swap, what does it mean to you???  Good question.  It means I have a ready supply of both books and friends.  It means that I have support when I need it.  It means that when your loved one dies, there are hundreds that crowd around to surround you with love.  You may never see their faces but you always see their souls.

It means that in the middle of the night, when your heart is aching there is somewhere to go, somewhere to place your thoughts.  SomeONE who will hear you.

It means that I have a safe place to ask questions.  A place where I don’t expect everyone to agree with my ideas but where the majority will at least respect them.   It means that I can read and digest thoughts and ideas that are so foreign to mine that they shock me, and yet I can also value them.


Did you read as a child?

I was one of nine children, growing up on a farm in Kentucky.  We didn’t have much but we always had something to read.  I don’t remember my parents buying books when I was a child.   But we always had magazines and newspapers and books from our school.

Once when I was sick, my brother brought home my new health book, from my teacher.  When I went back to grade school a few days later the first thing my teacher said is, “I imagine you’ve read all of this already?”  She was right – I read it from cover to cover.


What was your favorite book growing up?

I’m not sure I had one.  Between the time I started junior high until I graduated, I read almost every book in our high school library.   I devoured them, sometimes so fast that I didn’t retain all the wonderfulness in them.  I remember going through a phase where I was reading about American heroes.  Our library has a set of books about them and I read them for weeks and weeks.


What is your favorite or most meaningful book read as an adult?

That seems to change as my taste change.  Certainly one of the most meaningful books I’ve ever read is  Banker To the Poor Micro-lending and the Battle Against World Poverty.   It completely changed my definition of poverty and changed my perceptions about it.

The Help, recently read, is one of my favorites.  Wonderful book with great insight into a world I grew up knowing about.




In Love and War by Sybil and Jim Stockdale will always have meaning for me as that introduced me to a world of POW’s that I knew little about.  I knew this couple in the later years of their lives but read the book long before then.





What are you reading now?

I normally only read one book at a time but seem to have several going right now.

I’m deep into Unbroken by Laura Hillenbrand.  Not an easy read, but one with a lot of insight and meaning.

I’m also reading a Christian fiction book written in 1946.  It is interesting how the genre has changed over the years.  Not My Will by Francena H Arnold.




Just finished Silver Girl by Elin Hilderbrand, a great summer read.

Just finished Medals, Flags and Memories by John and Stacey Holley.  This is the true story of the death of their son in Iraq and their fight to have the fallen soldiers brought home with honor.  Recently meet this couple and they touched me deeply.




PBS is a source of so much for so many.  I watch and see how people love Lester and Marilyn, how they support Abbey and her girls and how they cheer others on and it just touches a deep cord in me.  It still gives me strength today as it did on the day my husband died.

We never know where the words we throw out there will land and what good or harm they might do.  On PBS they do a whole lot more good than harm.  If this was just another book swap, I’d probably be long gone.  But it’s a community of many, each of which is important and is loved by someone.



If you have any nominations for Member of the Month, submit them to us here.  Your nomination will not “expire”–anyone you nominate will have a chance at getting Member of the Month if enough nominations accumulate over time. Each month the person who has the most votes accumulated when the Newsletter goes to press gets to be Member of the Month and gets a newsletter mention and a nifty MoM icon to wear on profile and forum posts with pride.  So go for it! Tell us who’s helped you in the Forums, who’s been a great swapper, who in your opinion is a credit to PBS.  We are keeping a list of all the nominated members.  Who knows–one of them might be YOU!

MOM MOM MOM MOM MOM MOM MOM MOM MOM MOM MOM MOM MOM

Fantasy Friday – Wolfskin

Friday, August 5th, 2011

 

Wolfskin by Juliet Marillier


Review by Jennifer (mywolfalways)

 

Marillier’s historic fantasy takes place on the Light Isles, now called Orkney, sometime before 880 AD.  It chronicles a possible history of the arrival of the Vikings and what transpired between them and the natives.  Marillier’s dedication to an accurate portrayal of Viking life was a delight to experience from beginning to end.  She does take a few artistic liberties, which she explains in a note at the end of the novel.

Eyvind begins the story as a twelve year old boy, living in a long house with his kin where he helps with the farming and hunting.  Eyvind befriends Somerled, a fosterboy, and teaches him all that he knows.  Somerled’s goal is to one day become king and finds that many of the games and activities that the other children play and Eyvind teaches him to serve no purpose.  He also informs Eyvind that he is a simple boy, but he should still make something better of himself than simply a Wolfskin (berserker).

Near their parting at the end of their boyhood, they decide to become blood brothers, permanently bound to each other.  Eyvind succeeds in passing the test to become a Wolfskin and Somerled goes to live at court.  While their paths are different, they often cross and eventually end up on a voyage together to the Light Isles.

At first things are peaceful between the immigrants and the natives, but things soon turn sour.  Members of both tribes are found dead, until it escalates to the point that Somerled finds himself in charge.  Eyvind throws himself into the heart of the conflict, attempting to prevent any further bloodshed on either side once he figures out what is truly going on.  Because of his interference, Eyvind is accused of betraying his kinsman.

After so much loss, the young priestess of the island decides to take a risk.  To bring the truth to light, she calls upon the selkies, the seal people, to create the harp spoken of in legends.  Once it is finally revealed to both peoples, Eyvind is left to make the most difficult decision of his life.  Marillier does a wonderful job of conveying Eyvind’s conflict between his emotions, his honor, and what is right.  The kind of decision that each one of us dreads to be forced to make.

Mystery Monday – Still Midnight

Friday, August 5th, 2011

Still Midnight by Denise Mina

Review by Cheryl R. (Spuddie

 

#1 Alex Morrow series mystery set in Glasgow, Scotland. Alex is a Detective Sergeant who ends up working a botched kidnapping case in which the sixty-year-old Amir Anwar is taken from his comfortable suburban home by an amateurish group of thugs. Problem is, the kidnappers seem to have gotten the wrong guy–they were after some guy named Bob. Mr. Anwar is a Ugandan political refugee who owns a small corner shop, not someone you’d expect to have a two million quid ransom lying around.

The case looks to be a big one and Morrow is disappointed when her rival of the same rank, golden boy Grant Bannerman, is given SIO for the case and she has to take orders from him. Morrow also deals with personal demons that make just doing the day-to-day of her job none too easy.

Gritty and fast-paced (definitely not a cozy!) with interesting twists and turns, the author reveals information about the main character in such a way that you get well sucked into the story itself before finding out details about why Alex behaves and thinks the way she does. Tantalizing tidbits are dropped and then later you find out some heart-wrenching things that make you gasp. I feel that we’ve just seen the tip of the iceberg with Alex and I look forward to seeing what she gets up to in her next adventure.

The story is also told in part from the point of view of other characters, including the ‘bad guys’ and it really serves to humanize the criminals so that you feel they aren’t all that different from you or I, just someone who made a couple of bad choices that left them on a path that is now hard to turn from. Also a word of caution–the author uses a lot of Scottish slang and dialect in the book, so if this is something that annoys you, you may want to pass this by…but it really does help you to remember that you are not in New York or Atlanta or even London…this is definitely Glasgow.

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National Champagne Day – 8-4

Thursday, August 4th, 2011

It’s National Champagne Day!

by Hunter S.  (Hunter1)

 

“In a perfect world, everyone would have a glass of Champagne every evening.”

–Willie Gluckstern from the book The Wine Avenger–

 

August 4th is National Champagne Day???  Is this the greatest day or what??  Some insist Dec 31 is NCD (well duh, New Year’s Eve), while in 2010 there was a movement to make October 28th the day of bubbly.   But after intense research (okay, 5 minutes cruising the Internet), I decided to go with the majority and so now August 4th it is.

What can I say about Champagne, except it’s the greatest thing EVER!  It’s truly one of the reasons I get out of bed each day.  There’s a chance I might get to have a glass of this fabulous drink and I don’t want to miss it.  Some people need a good reason to drink champagne as it’s thought to be more of a celebration drink, but National Champagne Day is a holiday in itself which gives everyone an excuse to imbibe in the bubbly!

Just think of it, we could have a glass of Champagne at every meal.  Breakfast, second breakfast, brunch, lunch, afternoon tea, high tea, dinner and evening snacks.  We could even do a Champagne picnic and shoot corks at each other!

Actual Champagne is produced exclusively in the Champagne region of France, but let’s not get picky.  If it’s a sparkling wine you have, then go for it.  Champagne is ready to be drunk when purchased.  It is at its peak and will not improve with further aging, so don’t save it for a special occasion.

Champagne was created by accident and was called “the devil’s wine” as bottles exploded or the corks jolted away, creating quite a stir and quite a scare and probably quite a mess.  Personally, I like to think of it as “Life Sustaining Liquid” or “It keeps me from becoming a serial killer” juice, depending upon what kind of day I had.  The dryer the better for me (extra Brut), but there are heathens out there who actually prefer sweet Champagne.  To each his own.

However, all should agree that champagne should be served cold in tall, narrow Champagne flutes.  And even though spraying Champagne might be considered a fun sport in some societies, I prefer not a waste a single drop of this precious liquid.

Let’s not forget the health benefits of Champagne.  Studies have shown that moderate consumptions of Champagne may help the brain cope with the trauma of stroke, Alzheimer’s, and Parkinson’s disease. The research noted that the high amount of the antioxidant polyphenols in sparkling wine can help prevent deterioration of brain cells due to oxidative stress.   If this is true, my brain cells are in tip-top shape!

No one drinks Champagne because they are thirsty; there is usually always a special occasion to uncork that bottle. We drink Champagne for its special aura, it’s taste, the bubbles that tickle our noses and burst in our mouth, and, of course, to celebrate. But, please, remember life is too short to wait for a special occasion to indulge yourself with this mythical, sparkling wine.

 

 

 

A few examples of books listed on PBS

The story of the visionary young widow who built a champagne empire, showed the world how to live with style, and emerged a legend Veuve Clicquot champagne epitomizes glamour, style, and luxury.

 

An instant guide to the world of champagne and how to enjoy it, with cocktailswith dinner, with recipes, and with quotes. Lots of sparkling information th at will help you save and serve.

 

April Liesgang and Caleb Shannon have known each other for just three short months, so their Valentine’s Day wedding at a chapel near the shores of Lake Michigan has both families in an uproar.

 

Faith Usher had a decidedly morbid personality. She talked about taking her life and kept cyanide in her purse. So when she collapses and dies from a lethal champagne cocktail in the middle of a high society dinner party, everyone calls it suicide, including the police. But Archie was watching it all and suspects it was murder.

 

BUBBLES GALORE! — Underneath her bubbly, carefree facade there was more – much more – to the champagne girl.

 

The reader is thus drawn into these tales examining the way technology complicates human relationships.

 

 

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