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Children’s Book Review – Miss Dorothy and Her Bookmobile

Thursday, March 29th, 2012

Miss Dorothy and Her Bookmobile

by Gloria Houston, Illustrated by Susan Condie Lamb

Review by Brenna B. (demiducky25)

 

I saw this book in a display at the library and the cover image immediately caught my attention.  In concept, it reminded me of one of my favorite childhood books, Clara and the Bookwagon, so nostalgia caused me to pick this book up.

This book tells the story of Miss Dorothy, a young woman who grew up with a love of books.  She went to college and studied hard with the hopes of one day becoming a librarian in a library similar to the one in her town.  However, Miss Dorothy got married and ended up moving far away with her husband to a very rural town without a library.  After living in the community for a while, Miss Dorothy spoke at a town meeting to convince everyone that they needed a library.  The townspeople agree, and a collection was taken to purchase a bookmobile.  It’s not what Miss Dorothy wanted as her dream was to work in a brick library like the one she grew up with, but it’s a start.  Eventually, Miss Dorothy’s bookmobile becomes an important fixture in the community, and she provides a service that the people in this spread out rural community wouldn’t have had otherwise, but will Miss Dorothy come to see that it isn’t the physical structure that makes a library a library, but rather the love and enthusiasm that the librarian brings to the people?

The colorful illustrations in this book really help to bring this story to life.  Although the exact time period is never stated in the story or in the author’s note afterwards, you do get a sense that it is in the past from the illustrations, but nothing is so clearly “dated” that you can really even estimate a time-frame.  The author’s note at the end does provide some information about the real Miss Dorothy, Dorothy Thomas, but the only hints in figuring out that the events in the story happened quite a long time ago was the fact that it was mentioned that she had died and no one today seems to know where she’s buried.

Being the history buff that I am, of course I had to research the real Miss Dorothy so I could find out anything else about her life.  I’m still conducting my search, but there were very few references to her that I could find.  One reference I found was a quote by a Dorothy B. Thomas, librarian in North Carolina from an article about interlibrary loans written sometime in the 1950s and a county officials list from North Carolina written in 1967.  I’ve estimated her years of service to be 1948 with the start of the bookmobile to sometime after 1967 if that list of county officials refers to the same Dorothy Thomas (perhaps she served until the early 1970s or so).

Besides those brief references, the only two other sources that I could find with some information were an article about the county libraries celebrating their 50th anniversary of joined services: http://averyjournal.com/Centennial/story/AMY-at-50-joins-in-Averys-Centennial-Celebration-id-008643

And an article written in the Yancy community paper about the same event (on the second page there is a picture of Dorothy Thomas with the bookmobile): http://www.yanceytimesjournal.com/index.php?option=com_docman&task=doc_view&gid=46&Itemid=18

Otherwise, the information on Dorothy Thomas has been fairly sparse.

Although Miss Dorothy and her Bookmobile is meant for ages 6-9 according to the book jacket, I recommend this book for any child (or adult), especially those who just love books.  It gave me a warm feeling of happy nostalgia since it reminded me of the bookmobile book that I enjoyed growing up, and I hope that reading this book will help a child out there today discover their love of books.  The dedication page says “For all Librarians, who bring the world to our door(s).  So thank you, Dorothy Thomas and all the other librarians out that for opening those doors for us! 🙂

 

Erotica Review – Tempting Turquoise

Wednesday, March 28th, 2012

Tempting Turquoise: An Anthology

by Amy Ruttan, Elaine Lowe and Regina Carlysle

Rain God / Feral Moon / Veins of Turquoise

Review by Cynthia F. (frazerc)

 

 

Very loosely themed anthology – all stories have turquoise in them.

 

Rain God by Amy Ruttan

This is a futuristic – all surface water has vanished from earth – people live in space stations and L5 colonies.  Our heroine is looking for water that might be hidden deep in the earth – but finds a piece of turquoise instead.  She returns to her station only to find out the turquoise contains a hunky guy who claims to be the God of Rain.  He tells her all they have to do is make love in the ‘Heart’ and rain will return the waters to the earth.  If you can ignore all the ‘Huh?’ moments, it’s an OK read.

 

Feral Moon by Regina Carlysle

Shifter story – lots of angsty lust – followed by lots and lots of wild sex with various numbers of partners.  And the turquoise in this story is in the h/h’s rings – which pop out and get used as vibrators.  Yeah, made no sense to me either.

 

Veins of Turquoise by Elaine Lowe

Another futuristic which manages to blend avatars, virtual sex, cyberspace, hacking, and an intelligent planet all into one story.  The heroine manages to discover real sex, commune with the alien consciousness and save the world – all in the space of 90 pages.  The whole thing jumps around a bit but I thought it was the best read of the lot.

 

 

Mystery Monday – Waking Hours

Monday, March 26th, 2012

 

Waking Hours by Lis Wiehl with Pete Nelson

 

 

Review by Cynthia M. (clariail)

 

Book Synopsis:
All towns have secrets. Some have demons. — Welcome to East Salem. A deceptively sleepy town where ancient supernatural forces are being awakened. A local high-school girl is found murdered in a park amid horse farms and wealthy homes of northern Westchester County, New York. The shocking manner of her death confounds the town and intrigues forensic psychiatrist Dani Harris, who is determined to unravel the mystery. All the suspects are teenagers who were at a party with the girl, yet none remembers what happened. Could one of them be a vicious killer? Or is something more sinister afoot — something tied to an ancient evil?

But it’s not just her waking hours that challenge Dani. Each night, her eyes open at 2:13 due to troubling dreams. Dreams filled with blood, water, and destruction. Is it a clue — or a supernatural sign?

Across town, former NFL linebacker Tommy Gunderson finds his state-of-the-art security system has been breached by an elderly woman. Mumbling threats in Latin, she attacks him with an uncanny, preternatural strength. Before he has time to process the attack, someone close to him is implicated in the girl’s murder at the park. He agrees to help and finds himself working with Dani, the only girl who could resist his charms years ago when they were in high school.

A heavy darkness is spreading. Yet a heavenly force is also at work.

My Thoughts:
I love to read Christian Fiction, especially mystery/thrillers. I also like to read books that have elements of spiritual warfare in them. This book contains both.

One of the two main characters in the story is Dani, forensic psychiatrist. I wouldn’t say that she is a non-believer but she looks are everything from a scientific stand point. If she can’t explain it scientifically then she more readily accepts the spiritual application.

Tommy is the other main character for the story, who is a believer and sees things from the view point of faith and what the bible says.

Both of these come into play as the story goes along and I did like reading the discussions between the two view points.

Even though the book was written by two people, I thought that it flowed very well. It was a slow reading book to me but it kept me intrigued to see what was going to happen. The mystery part of the book concerning the murder was resolved by the end of the book but I believe that the ground work was being laid for the next book in the series as far as the spiritual elements were concerned as there wasn’t any resolution or explanation for the events that had taken place.

The only complaint that I had, and not a real biggie, was that they used words occasionally that I either wasn’t familiar with or thought that they were using a fancier word than necessary. For instance, instead of saying they were running blood tests, they used serology. That’s just me though.

Non-Fiction Review – The One-Straw Revolution

Saturday, March 24th, 2012

 

The One-Straw Revolution: An Introduction to Natural Farming

by Masanobu Fukuoka

Review by Jennifer (mywolfalways)

 

Masanobu Fukuoka left his job as a customs inspector at the age of 25 to become a farmer.  Making plenty of mistakes along the way, including killing an entire grove of his father’s citrus trees, Fukuoka found a life of self-sufficiency possible.  Even more astounding is the fact that he managed to remain self-sufficient and still have food leftover to sell at markets without the use of pesticides, herbicides, and many of the other modern conveniences most farmers use.  But how did he do it?

 

Through careful analysis and deconstruction of both traditional and modern technique, he learned what was necessary.  He found that many of the traditional techniques only caused more damage to crops, as did many things that are so popular in modern technique.  He discovered that the many insects, plants, and animals that are commonly considered as pests can actually be utilized to encourage growth.  Many times when his neighbors’ crops were devastated by swarms of insects, despite having used insecticides, his crops were saved by natural predators, like swarms of spiders or large infestations of reptiles.  Oddly enough, Fukuoka found that nature takes care of itself.

 

Fukuoka was generous with his knowledge.  In fact, until a few years before his death, Fukuoka let others join him at his farm. While many visitors were only tourists with a passing curiosity, many of them came to live alongside him and follow in his footsteps of self-sufficiency.  He would teach them his way of living.  His way of teaching was not through the traditional means of a step by step process, but instead by total immersion.  He believed this was the best way to illustrate his beliefs and practices, while at the same time helping to free the minds of his visitors from the common misconceptions of farming taught by modern agriculture.

 

Like the buds of life that peek through last year’s straw, seeds of Fukuoka’s wisdom reveal themselves in the most unlikely places.  While reading, I found that many of the simple techniques he applied to his fields could also be applied to keeping my mind and spirit healthy.  Perhaps the most important lesson that can be gleaned from this text is that nature must be observed and studied as a whole being, rather than just focusing on select parts.  We must focus on how all of its parts interconnect and work together and in doing so, we can do the same for our whole being as well.

 

First published in 1978, this book on self-sufficiency has proven it’s worth even today.  The latest publication date for this book is listed as 2009.  Masanobu Fukuoka’s wisdom is so treasured that another book is being published postmortem entitled “Sowing Seeds in the Desert” (ISBN: 1603584188).  There is even a website kept by Larry Korn to share the ideals of Fukuoka at http://www.onestrawrevolution.net .  I hope that many others will read “The One-Straw Revolution” and find it useful to their own goals of self-sufficiency and mindful action.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Fantasy Friday – The Crystal Cave

Friday, March 23rd, 2012

 

The Crystal Cave by Mary Stewart

 

Review by Jerelyn (I-F-Letty)

 

A little bit of magic and genius; is Mary Stewart’s take on the Merlin myth.  When I read this book for the first time it was in the late 1970’s, and it was a revelation. The Crystal Cave is one of those books that I just have to take out and re-read.  It is timeless and still as good today as it was when published.

We meet Merlin as a six year old boy, the bastard grandson of a Welsh King. The myth about him starts very early because his mother refuses to name the boy’s father.  She allows people to think that he is no man’s son, thinking to protect him, but it only places him in danger. There was something about the small boy, separateness, something dangerous, and something to be feared.  He has the sight and untrained he cannot control it. Then as now what men do not understand they fear.   The Romans have only just abandoned Britain  The Saxons have come, Christianity is still very new to Wales and the old ways still hold sway but times are changing. The Saxon King Vortigern is aging and fears his much younger enemy in Brittany, who has spent his time gathering and training an army to take back is birth right.

Merlin meets his first teacher one day having escaped his tutor who has a bit of a drinking problem.  Galapas the hermit has things to teach the boy whom he has waited for, living within the crystal cave of the hollow hills.  Over the years, Merlin learns language and music and mathematics from Galapas, he learns herb lore and healing, and is beginning to understand his psychic powers, while the dangers of war come closer and even members of his own family want him dead.  Finally he must flee into the unknown world, after an attempt on his life.  He puts his faith in the Gods that he realizes have been guiding his path all along.

The Gods are good and Merlin finds himself in the house of Ambrosius and Uther Pendragon, in Brittany.  Ambrosius has a claim on the throne of Britain and had plans to unify the many kingdoms into one.  Under one High King himself.  He too has been waiting for a sign; a sign which is Merlin.

I think the thing I love about this book and the others that follow is the completely different take on the Merlin myth, and Arthurian legend.  Stewart is a master story teller and these books were a departure for her.  She had been know up to this point for a genre she pioneered, romantic suspense. With the Merlin series she tried her hand at historical fiction/fantasy and it worked out very well Crystal Cave, Hollow Hills, The Last Enchantment and the last The Wicked Day where her best selling novels. Crystal Cave is one of my 5 star reads.  If you or your teen loves the dark ages and historical fantasy I really believe you will enjoy this book as well. It is already considered by many as a classic.

 

 

 

Thriller Thursday – The Blue Zone

Thursday, March 22nd, 2012

 

The Blue Zone by Andrew Gross

 

Review by Vicky T. (VickyJo)

 

One of the most common questions I get asked in the library goes something like this:

“I love BLANK (fill in any author’s name) but I’ve read everything he/she has written.  Who else writes like him/her?”

This is a popular dilemma.  People find an author they really enjoy, but when they have read it all, they don’t always want to wait for the next new book.  They want to find someone else that can hold their interest and offer the same type of reading experience.  So, librarians who advise readers on what to read next collect “read-alike” authors.

If James Patterson is one of your favorite writers, and you would like to read someone else that writes like him, I’d like to suggest Andrew Gross.  I have several good reasons for this:  one, Andrew Gross has actually written five novels with James Patterson:  Judge and Jury, Lifeguard, The Jester, and two of Patterson’s Murder Club novels, 2nd Chance and 3rd Degree.  Second, Gross has the formula down pat:  a plot that takes off like a roller coaster; short chapters with cliff-hanger endings, twists and turns and surprises at the end that makes a novel a page turner.  And now, Gross writes novels alone, and so I picked up his first solo effort, a fast-paced thriller called “The Blue Zone.”  James Patterson himself called this a “tense and chilling thriller”…and I had to agree!

The title comes from a code devised by the agency that oversees the Witness Protection Program; this code describes three stages of agency involvement.

The RED ZONE is when a subject is held in protective custody, while in prison or on trial.

The GREEN ZONE is when that subject, along with his or her family, has been placed in a new identity and location and is living securely in that identity, known only to his case agent.

The BLUE ZONE is the state most feared, when there is suspicion that a subject’s new identity has been penetrated or blown.  When he or she is unaccounted for, is out of contact with the case agent, or has fled the safety of the program.  When there is no official knowledge of whether that person is dead or alive.

Benjamin Raab has it all…on the surface, anyway.  A loving wife, three great kids, a thriving business.  Life is good for Ben, until the FBI knocks on his door.  He is arrested on charges of conspiracy, money laundering and intent to defraud the United States government.  Ben has been acting as a go-between for a business, buying and supplying them with gold.  The FBI now informs Ben that this business is actually a cover for a Colombian drug cartel, and it certainly looks as though Ben knew this all along.

The only way out is for Ben to testify against the cartel, which puts his family in immediate danger.  Ben goes to prison for the 8-10 months before the trial and his wife and children enter the Witness Protection Program.  Well, everyone except his oldest daughter, 23-year-old Kate.  She refuses to leave her life: her career as a medical researcher and her boyfriend Greg, who is in medical school.  It’s a gamble, but she is willing to risk it.

A year later, strange things begin happening.  Kate feels as though she’s being followed; it seems that someone has broken into her apartment, and she starts to wonder: is she just being paranoid, or are they really out to get her?  When her colleague Tina is shot in the head late one night after closing up the lab where she and Kate work, Kate realizes something is terribly wrong.  And then the news comes that her father, after testifying and serving his prison time, has disappeared.  His case agent is brutally tortured and murdered, and it seems this ruthless cartel not only has a long memory, but is willing to do anything to find the Raab family and exact their revenge.  It seems Kate has entered The Blue Zone.  The question is: can she survive long enough to get out?

 

 

 

Note:
We have had the pleasure of an Author Interview with Andrew Gross for the PBS Blog, click here to see the interview!

Romance Review – My Lord Vampire

Wednesday, March 21st, 2012

My Lord Vampire by Alexandra Ivy

 

Review by Kelsey O.

 

FIRST LINE: Gideon glided through the vaulted marble corridors of the Great Hall.

 

The vampire Nefri divides the magical Medallion that created the Veil (a utopia for all vampires) into three pieces and places them into the care of three women for safekeeping after rogue vampires decide to go after the Medallion’s power. In My Lord Vampire, we follow the arrogant Gideon Ravel on his rescue quest of one of the woman holding the Medallion, Lady Simone Gilbert. Simone has a dark secret of her own and there is a reason she wants everyone to believe she is the “Wicked Temptress” and remain apart for others. The first vampire traitor, Tristan, has located Simone and it is Gideon’s mission to protect her from him. Gideon is instantly attracted to Simone which makes protecting her just that much easier.

 

This first installment of Ivy’s republished Immortal Rogues trilogy fell short for me. There is little romance and the characters just weren’t strong or unique in my mind. I did think that the premise of having the vampires living behind a Veil different but the story doesn’t touch on this alternate world much. If you are looking for a light, quick paranormal read with the standard mysterious vampire then I think you would enjoy this.

 

3 STARS