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Posts Tagged ‘Book Suggestions’

PaperBackSwap Review Contest Winner!

Thursday, November 19th, 2015

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Congratulations N R. (Moonpie)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

A Cup of Dust by Susie Finkbeiner

 

N R. (Moonpie)’s  Winning Review:

 

After watching a documentary on the Dust Bowl, I have become very interested in it. While nothing like what these individuals experienced, I remember growing up in East Texas as a child and the small dust storms there. I can recall the grit in our home and between my teeth. I haven’t forgotten the sting of the sand as it hit my legs. As an adult I experienced a dust storm here in Oklahoma, where the sky was darkened, and the air so thick I felt I would suffocate. These small events in my life have me in awe of what the people of this era dealt with, and not for a few days but for years. This book made me realize how incredibly courageous and resilient dust bowl families were.

Instead of this part of history being told through the eyes of an adult, the author does it through the eyes of 10 year old Pearl Spence. A child’s view is very simple, but it is also glaringly honest. Although Pearl does not understand everything she sees and experiences, her account is authentically candid.
So vivid are the descriptions of life in this Oklahoma town that I could feel the discouragement and desperation of the characters. Her mother’s constant battle to keep her home clean and maintain a normal family life was heartrending. It is clear the large role adult’s attitudes and actions play in how a child handles a crisis. Pearl’s grandmother, mother, and father were an anchor for her in this unsettled time.

I better understood the despair and fear of never knowing when another dust storm would strike or when the nightmare would end. The author was brilliant with the way she took amazing historical details, brought to life powerful characters, and then created a story filled with danger, mystery, and excitement. A fantastic read!

 

Last Day to Vote in the Review Contest

Tuesday, November 17th, 2015

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Come vote in this week’s Review Contest!

We had a lot of really enjoyable book reviews this week! It was difficult to choose, but here are the finalist reviews.

To vote: click the links below, and choose Thumbs Up on the review. You can “Like” (or Share) the review to double your vote! The winning review will appear in the PaperBackSwap blog, and the winning reviewer will get a FREE book from her/his Wish List!

Links to the reviews are below:

 

“Anybody out there raising older teenagers? Anybody out there rash enough to try to relocate them at that stage in their life?” asks S. J. T. (cactuspatch) in her Book Review Contest Finalist review of the lowcountry tale “Shem Creek” by Dorothea Benton Frank. Read cactuspatch’s review at the link below and vote on it with a thumbs-up and/or a “Like”:

http://www.paperbackswap.com/reviews/details.php?r=TFJUWm9pM1VFOHc9

 

 

 

How about “a gripping tale of a truly good person facing down the evil of our world”? Stephanie T (stephkayeturner) recommends “The Hummingbird’s Daughter” by Luis Alberto Urrea, in her Finalist Book Review. Vote for the review using the thumbs-up and/or the Like on the page below:

http://www.paperbackswap.com/reviews/details.php?r=T0FXRjc5YVMyREk9

 

 

 

 

Want a “vivid and brilliant” historical fiction read? N. R. (moonpie), one of this week’s Finalist reviewers in our Book Review Contest, recommends “A Cup of Dust” by Susie FInkbeiner, set in the Dust Bowl era. Read moonpie’s review at the link below, and vote for it using the Thumbs Up and/or “Like”:

http://www.paperbackswap.com/reviews/details.php?r=c0Q3bXcvSlJRZlU9

 

 

 

 

Good Luck to all of our Finalists!

Mystery Monday – The Case of the Phantom Fortune

Monday, November 16th, 2015

The Case of the Phantom Fortune by Erle Stanley Gardner

Review by Matt B. (BuffaloSavage)

 

This Perry Mason novel from 1964 should not be confused with Phantom Fortune, a novel by Mrs. Braddon, the author of the still worth reading Lady Audley’s Secret.

Long-time readers of this blog know that I’m mildly unimpressed with Gardner’s output of the 1960s. He asks for leaps of faith and suspensions of belief that are beyond me. But notice that I still read them. While doing so, I look on the bright side.

The upside of this one is that Perry Mason re-assumes his hard-boiled manner of the novels from the late 1930s and early 1940s. He tells a blackmailer of the three ways to deal with a blackmailer: pay up, go to the cops, or kill the blackmailer. He lets the blackmailer conclude that Perry will indeed snuff him if he persists in his demands.

Another upside is that the blackmailer ruthlessly exploits the guileless youth. He also has a George Sanders-type charm that is smooth and reptilian. He’s a scary creation, more memorable than Gardner’s usual greedy businessman or desperate lover.

The main appeal of this one is its twists and turns. So I don’t want to give away incidents in a review.  I think any Mason fan will like this one.

 

 

 

 

Thriller Thursday Review – Charlie M

Thursday, November 12th, 2015


Charlie M by Brian Freemantle

 

Review by Matt B. (BuffaloSavage)

 

Published in 1977, this is a classic cold war thriller. A top Russian spymaster signals that he is willing to defect. The directors of the British and American secret services ruthlessly jockey for the best positions to take the prize. And while the elephants fight, it is the ant Charlie Muffin, seasoned operative, that finds himself at the highest risk of being stomped. Born in the working class north of England, Charlie offers his betters as much upward contempt as he can deliver by dressing badly – Hush Puppies, for pete’s sake – and banging a daughter of the land-owning elite.

In the 1970s, spy writers often used a derisive tone when describing people in power. In this novel, the head of the British spies, an ex-Army man, plans the operation with different colored push pins decorated with little flags. During his off hours, the Russian general that planning to defect replays the Battle of Kursk with toy tanks on his living room floor. The head of the CIA is a power-hungry psycho. Since he gives leaders such a resounding Bronx Cheer, Freemantle is clearly an ex-journalist.

This novel was the first of 16 Charlie M novels. The tradecraft seems plausible and, in contrast to many thriller novels, people suffer adverse effects from drinking too much alcohol. Those into a lite John LeCarre would probably enjoy them as would readers who like Ross Thomas. Charlie M is the US title, Charlie Muffin the UK title.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Book Review Contest – Vote by 11/11

Tuesday, November 10th, 2015

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These are the finalists in this week’s Book Review Contest!


To vote: click the links below, and choose Thumbs Up on the review. You can “Like” (or Share) the review to double your vote! The winning review will appear in the PaperBackSwap blog, and the winning reviewer will get a FREE book from her/his Wish List!
Links to the reviews are below:

 

 

 

Did you like Jhumpa Lahiri’s “The Namesake”? You won’t want to miss “Free Food for Millionaires” by Min Jin Lee, then – Book Review Contest Finalist “Bookfanatic” says it really “captured the second generation immigrant experience” in the same way. Read her review and click thumbs up to vote for it (and “like” it to double your vote)!

http://www.paperbackswap.com/reviews/details.php?r=bXNNYTZPWGFjaFk9

 

 

 

A book that likens a spiritual journey to a rummage sale? Believe it or not, it works, says Lizzie G (lizzieg88) reviewing “Out of Sorts” by Sarah Bessey. Vote for her review in our Book Review Contest – click thumbs up to vote, and double your vote with a “like”!

http://www.paperbackswap.com/reviews/details.php?r=Q3FCVndabStsWFk9

 

 

 

 

 

 

Kelly S (getinmybellykelly) says “This wonderful book should be required reading for everyone.” Read her Book Review Contest Finalist review of “The Things They Carried” by Tim O’Brien, and click thumbs-up to vote for it (and “like” it to double your vote)!

http://www.paperbackswap.com/reviews/details.php?r=NmliQXJvdXIwNGc9

 

 

 

Good Luck to all of our Finalists!

 

 

Facebook Review Contest Winner!

Thursday, November 5th, 2015

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 Congratulations Cat S. (catscritch)!

 

 

Still Time by Jean Hegland

Winning Review by Cat S. (catscritch)

 

John is losing his mind. Or is he gaining insight into his past? This novel picks you up and drops you into a world most of us fear. Yet does it in such a way as to be entertaining, heartwarming, frustrating and wondrous, just as living serves us all. The beauty lies in his ability to fall back on his long love of Shakespeare although, all the studying, reading and teaching those tragedy/comedies have nothing on the final answers his quest to understand will bring. No one knows for sure what goes on in the mind of those who have lost all sense of time and current events, but Hegland makes if feels right. The ups and downs of memory loss are a maddening affair. Full of things unspoken, promises broken and love’s small tokens. I was hooked from the beginning and did not guess the ending. A wonderful tale to behold. I would recommend it to all as it surely expanded my attempts to understand from the inside. The characters are richly detailed and I was never as lost as John. I need to call all my family and tell them I love them. Right Now!
A preview book was supplied free for an honest review.

 

 

 

 

Poetry Review – One Hundred and One Famous Poems

Wednesday, November 4th, 2015

One Hundred and One Famous Poems compiled by Roy Cook

Review by Mirah Welday (mwelday)

 

Christmas 1989.  I received the anthology One Hundred and One Famous Poems for Christmas from my brother (even though my wisdom tells me my mom bought it for my brother to give to me, that’s what mom’s do).  I still have this book and it has its permanent position on my bookshelf dedicated to classics.

While this anthology includes works by the big names in poetry (Longfellow, Emerson, Burns, Wordsworth, and Tennyson), I prefer the poetic gems from less recognizable names like Cooke, Masefield, and Bennett.

Upon receiving this anthology, I discovered the poem How Did You Die? by Edmund Vance Cooke. People are quite often taken aback slightly when I tell them the title of my favorite poem; I admit it sounds morbid but it’s not morbid at all, it’s all about living!  This poem speaks to me in a way no other poem ever has and it really is my life mantra, my internal reminder to always move forward. My copy of this book almost opens to the page with this poem on its own, I’ve been to it so many times. To this day, I feel the emotions of the lines in my gut and I usually can’t recite it without getting tears in my eyes.  It’s hard for me not to have a strong response to these wonderful lines by Cooke:

And though you be done to death, what then?
If you battled the best you could;
If you played your part in the world of men,
Why, the Critic will call it good.
Death comes with a crawl, or comes with a pounce,
And whether he’s slow or spry,
It isn’t the fact that you’re dead that counts,
But only, how did you die?

I simply love this stanza.  For some of us, our legacies are all we have to leave behind and I’m determined to leave a positive one!  With this poem, Cooke put together words that have given me inspiration to live a better life for almost thirty years!

There are so many other wonderful poems in this anthology (including a couple of my favorites from Poe) and most of them are short, so people who don’t consider themselves huge fans of poetry won’t get bogged down in pages and pages of stanzas.  And the best part: there are multiple copies available through PBS, so order your copy today!  You could discover a poem that can impact you the way How Did You Die? impacted my life when I was just thirteen years old.