Caught by Harlan Coben (Audio)

Book Journey traveled to New Jersey

An interesting looking Coffee/bookstore in the area that I think Michael Bennett should visit is Bogart’s

Audiobook format from audible.com

Cover Story:  I like it.  I am not sure why but it looks like you are about to enter something…..

Haley McWaid is a good girl.  She doesn’t cause her parents any trouble, gets good grades, is involved in sports, and has surrounded herself with good quality friendships.  So when one day she just disappears from her home it makes no sense.  Her parents can not believe she would run away…

Wendy Tynes, a local “big time” reporter is on the case of trying to capture pedophiles… this brings Dan Mercer into the picture who answers an online add that Wendy has set up under a false name, and the book is off and running – in some cases, faster than I can keep up.

♦          ♦          ♦

For the record – I have always enjoyed Harlan Coben’s books.  He is a lighter version of Dean Koontz, with the same quick wit that I enjoy in my reading.  When this book came out I was beyond thrilled to get my hands on it and for time restraint purposes I chose this in an audio format so I could take it with me as I drive, worked out, and worked around my home.

The unfortunates of this audio was I did not enjoy the reader.  Audio reader Carrington MacDuffie was fine for the female parts, but the male parts (and there are quite a few in this book) I felt sounded forced and almost silly.  Another thing I did not enjoy was all the characters.  I like books more centered around a small group of good well-developed characters, yet in Caught, between police officers, suspects, wives, criminals, Wendy, her son, her father in law, the …… well, you get the point.

Bottom line… I enjoy Harlan Coben.  The story line itself once I sorted through all the characters as good, and the ending it what I had grown to expect out of a Coben read.  I think I would have had better feel for this particular read if I had went with the book instead of the audio.  That way I could back track (as I tend to do) to sort through the characters and the who said what’s…

This audio has been added to my Book Journey Map:


I purchased my copy of this audio from Audible.com

It’s Monday! What Are You Reading?

What Are You Reading, is where we gather to share what we have read this past week and what we plan to read this week.  It is a great way to network with other bloggers, see some wonderful blogs, and put new titles on your reading list.

I love being a part of this and I hope you do too!  As part of this weekly meme I love to encourage you all to go and visit the others participating in this meme.  I offer a weekly contest for those who visit 10 or more of the Monday Meme participants and leave a comment.  You receive one entry for every 10 comments, just come back here and tell me how many in the comment area.


Last weeks winner (using Random.Org) was:

Dollycas

Congratulations!  Please choose an item out of the PRIZE BOX and email me your choice with your mailing address as well!   journeythroughbooks@gmail.com


This week went by so fast!  On the bright side I did finish up a few reads I had going and have a couple more on the brink of being finished too!


Here is what was completed here this past week:


Read, Remember, Recommend and Read, Remember, Recommend for Teens by Rachel Roger’s Knight (super cool journals for your all your book needs!


Worst Case by James Patterson (audio review) – I love this series!!!


Create Your Own Book and Title – Chance to win a $10 Gift Card

April Recap and winners!

Deadly Deals by Fern Michaels (Audio Review)


Titanic 2012 by Bill Walker (Oh my!  I really enjoyed this one!)


Choose My Next Book and win it for yourself! Its that time again and there are good choices here!  Winner will be announced this Friday!


The Threadbare Heart Mother’s Day Giveaway I encourage you to try your hand at this one!  I would love to see what you come up with and you have a chance to not only win Jennie Nash’s book signed for yourself, you could win the grand prize book club package!


Caught by Harlan Coben – review up tomorrow


What’s The Special Brew Of The Week?

Columbine by Dave Cullen: 1/2 way through….  this one is hard to put down

Fablehaven by Brandon Mull:  3/4 way through…. and wow!  That’s all I can say right now 🙂

House Rules by Jodi Piccoult (audio- in IPOD) just started

Kite Runner by Khaled Hosseini (audio in car) just started

The Girl She Used To Be by David Christofano (Book Club read for May)

Love In Mid Air by Kim Wright ( Review with Kim later this week!)

My week might seem lofty but I don’t think so.  I am loving the Jodi Piccoult audio and suspect I will have that done in the next couple of days.  I have a bike ride this Saturday which will put me on another road trip tot he cities and that should help me listen to most of Kite Runner.

As always, I am looking forward to seeing what you are reading this week!  Be sure to link your post to the Linky here!  😀


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Click here to enter your link and view the entire list of entered links…


The Threadbare Heart Mothers Day Contest May 2-4


The Threadbare Heart is a story about a mother and a daughter torn apart by grief, jealousy and misunderstanding — and the family heirloom that finally brings them together. To celebrate its publication, and in honor of Mother’s Day, I’m running a ―Favorite Fictional Mother & Daughter‖ contest with the fantastic bloggers listed in the box to the right. We want to know which fictional mother-daughter pair made you laugh? Made you cry? Made you cringe? Which pair revealed something true about your own mother-daughter relationships? (And yes, mothers and daughters in film are eligible. Fiction is fiction, right?)

I personally am thrilled about this book and I am so excited to be a part of this incredible contest!


HOW TO ENTER:

On MAY 2, 3 or 4, visit one of the blogs and enter 250 words explaining your favorite fictional mother-daughter pair. These are some of the best blogs about books, literature and life. Have fun exploring them – **but you can only enter on one blog.


ON MOTHER’S DAY
, I will post the entry I like best. Each blog’s winners will receive a signed copy of The Threadbare Heart and will be entered in the Grand Prize Giveaway.


On MAY 16,
Jenny Nash will choose a Grand Prize winner from all the winning blog entries. (How will I pick? Whichever entry just hits me as being heartfelt and true.) The Grand Prize will be announced on the participating blogs, on my website and on twitter.


WHAT YOU WIN:

The Grand Prize winner will receive a ―Book Club in a Box— ten signed copies of The Threadbare Heart, a call-in from the author, and a delicious rum cake to share with your book-reading friends. (Why rum cake? You’ll have to read the book to understand! I’ve picked out a cake by a baker named Kelli because she started selling rum cakes when she lost her baking buddy to cancer and I loved her story – and I happen to think that good stories are a big part of a good life.) Happy Mother’s Day! Jennie Nash


THE CONTEST BLOG ROLL  *Remember you can only enter on one blog!

5 Minutes for Books
Bermudaonion weblog
Beth Fish Reads
Book Club Classics
Booking Mama
Books and Needlepoint
Books Like Breathing
Care’s Online Book Club
Caribou’s Mom
Devourer of Books
Jenn’s Bookshelf
Linus’s Blanket
Lit and Life
Literary Mama
Manic Mommie’s Book Club
Maw Book Blog
Mother Daughter Book Club
My Friend Amy
Book Journey
Peeking Between the Pages
Redlady’s Reading Room
S.Krishna Books
She is Too Fond of Books
The Literate Housewife
Word Lilly
Write It Sideways
Writing Forward

Please post your entry below!

Good Luck!

In My Mailbox

I missed out on last weeks mailbox as I was out of town.  So now I am catching up on two weeks worth of books.  Thanks Kristi at The Story Siren for hosting this fun meme.  Here is where I list anything bookish that came in my home… be it by mail, or Library, or purchase….

Kristen Anderson thought she had the picture-perfect life until strokes of gray dimmed her outlook: three friends and her grandmother died within two years. Still reeling from these losses, she was raped by a friend she thought she could trust. She soon spiraled into a seemingly bottomless depression.

One January night, the seventeen-year-old decided she no longer wanted to deal with the emotional pain that smothered her. She lay down on a set of cold railroad tracks and waited for a freight train to send her to heaven…and peace.

But Kristen’s story doesn’t end there.

In Life, In Spite of Me this remarkably joyful young woman shares the miracle of her survival, the agonizing aftermath of her failed suicide attempt, and the hope that has completely transformed her life, giving her a powerful purpose for living.

Her gripping story of finding joy against all odds provides a vivid and unforgettable reminder that life is a gift to be treasured.

Rebecca’s life just keeps getting better. With Jack away on business, she’s looking forward to four days alone to work on her new client’s PR campaign to help women take back their lives. But her past intrudes. Roy, the man who stalked and assaulted her years before, has been released from prison. Home alone in her big, beautiful house out in the country, Rebecca has to learn to take back her own life while facing her fears and regaining her strength. But will she be strong enough when she faces the ultimate test?

Set in 1956, bestseller Smith’s edgy second thriller to feature Leo Demidov (after Child 44) depicts the paranoia and instability of the Soviet Union after the newly installed Khrushchev regime leaks a secret speech laying out Stalin’s brutal abuses. Now working as a homicide detective, Leo has long since repudiated his days as an MGB officer, but his former colleagues, fearful of reprisals from their victims, have begun taking their own lives. Leo himself becomes the target of Fraera, the wife of a priest he imprisoned. Now the leader of a violent criminal gang, Fraera kidnaps Leo’s daughter, Zoya, and threatens to kill Zoya if Leo doesn’t liberate her husband from his gulag prison.

Kathy Spence awakens in the middle of the night and finds herself in a living nightmare. Her husband has been run down and she is the primary suspect. With an eyewitness to the crime and proof that her car was the murder weapon, it appears to be an open and shut case. Terrified for her future, Kathy turns to amateur sleuth Anne Marshall for help. Believing in Kathy s innocence, Anne launches her own investigation, uncovering proof of a conspiracy that reaches from Kathy s past and threatens her own life. In a race against time, Anne must count on her close friends and even the ghost of her father to help her bring a killer to justice before it s too late.

It’s almost the end of Miranda’s sophomore year in high school, and her journal reflects the busy life of a typical teenager: conversations with friends, fights with mom, and fervent hopes for a driver’s license. When Miranda first begins hearing the reports of a meteor on a collision course with the moon, it hardly seems worth a mention in her diary. But after the meteor hits, pushing the moon off its axis and causing worldwide earthquakes, tsunamis, and volcanoes, all the things Miranda used to take for granted begin to disappear. Food and gas shortages, along with extreme weather changes, come to her small Pennsylvania town; and Miranda’s voice is by turns petulant, angry, and finally resigned, as her family is forced to make tough choices while they consider their increasingly limited options. Yet even as suspicious neighbors stockpile food in anticipation of a looming winter without heat or electricity, Miranda knows that that her future is still hers to decide even if life as she knew it is over.

At the beginning of the twentieth century, the small east Texas town of Howbutker is run by two families. The Tolivers preside over the massive cotton plantation of Somerset, while the Warwicks possess acres upon acres of timber. The children of the families, pretty and stubborn Mary Toliver and suave, strong Percy Warwick, are like water and oil. Percy insists that Mary will eventually marry him, and Mary is adamant that she will never have room in her heart for anything but Somerset, yet their undeniable attraction pulls them together. Through a trick of fate, Percy and Mary are forced apart. The consequences of their separation vibrate throughout the years, giving rise to lies, deceit, secrets, and tragedies that their families must suffer through, until, ultimately, they just have to leave it to Percy, Mary, and plain fate to see if they can make things right in the end.

BOOTLEGGING, BARNSTORMING and a Hard-Rock BOONDOOGLE. Los Angeles, 1934: Based on a true chapter of California history, Houdini Pie explores the depths to which a family, and a city, will sink when hard luck comes knocking and there’s nothing left to lose. Young Hal Gates is a celebrated pitcher for an upstart rural ball club, and the son of a notorious booze smuggler who vanished at the end of Prohibition. At his lonely mother’s urging, and with the desperate backing of the municipal powers-that-be, he teams up with a crackpot geologist to mine for a mythical Hopi treasure trove buried miles beneath the downtown streets. The deeper they tunnel the more Hal learns about loyalty, treachery, hunger and hope, and mostly–in ways he never would have imagined–about love.

When an avalanche thundered down the mountain housing the Fourth of July Mine in Swandyke, Colorado, that bright April afternoon in 1920, it carried death and destruction but also provided the seeds for forgiveness and redemption. Grace Foote, the mine manager’s wife, sees the children on their way home from school. Joe Cobb, the only black man in town, is one of the first to dig for them. Sisters Lucy and Dolly, estranged for years, unite now in the face of shared tragedy. Essie Schnabel, from New York City and Jewish and working in a brothel, stands vigil, as does Minder Evans, a crusty Civil War veteran raising his grandson. Dallas presents another historical novel about the hardscrabble mining communities of Colorado, set just down the road from her best-selling Prayers for Sale (2009), creating a patchwork of individuals whose lives had not intersected until this singular, transformative event. Readers may find the abrupt transitions and preponderance of flashbacks confusing and distancing.

In life, children and adults both face obstacles that can cause fear and anxiety. Bug Goes through the Maze reminds us that we can all learn important lessons to help us become stronger by meeting new people and trying new things. It also reminds us how to make every experience an adventure, while overcoming obstacles along the way.

Battling his own personal demons, Police Chief Jonah Westfall knows the dark side of life and has committed himself to eradicating it. When a pair of raccoons are found mutilated in Redford, Colorado, Jonah investigates the gruesome act, knowing the strange event could escalate and destroy the tranquility of his small mountain town. With a rising drug threat and never-ending conflict with Tia Manning, a formidable childhood friend with whom he has more than a passing history, Jonah fights for answers—and his fragile sobriety.

But he can’t penetrate every wound or secret—especially one fueled by a love and guilt teetering on madness.


In the year 2088, Christian missionary Abigail Caldwell leaves her New Guinea village to seek help for fellow villagers, who have all been stricken by a mysterious disease. A message from her grandfather, an American neuroscientist who is the co-inventor of a silicon brain replacement, draws her to America, where religion has died out. Abby joins forces with a historian who has a connection to Abby’s family as they investigate the death of her grandfather and face the spiritual implications of transhumanity—humans with replacement silicon brains that promise eternal life but make impossible personal connection with God.


The hilarious, implausible, and touching story of twin brothers accomplishing the impossible—making a feature film (with a cast and crew with 11 Academy Awards and 26 nominations) with no experience, no money and no contacts.

When identical twin brothers Logan and Noah Miller’s homeless father died alone in a jail cell, they vowed, come hell or high water, that their film, Touching Home, would be made as a dedication to their love for him. Either You’re in or You’re in the Way is the amazing story of how—without a dime to their names nor a single meaningful contact in Hollywood—they managed to write, produce, direct, and act in a feature film alongside four-time Academy Award-nominated actor Ed Harris and fellow nominees Brad Dourif and Robert Forster.


An elusive heirloom cradle symbolizes childhood’s pains and possibilities in Somerville’s spare, elegant first novel (after a story collection, Trouble). Marissa, pregnant with her first child, becomes obsessed with tracking down the antique cradle her mother took when she abandoned the family a decade earlier. Marissa’s husband, Matt, is sure he’s been dispatched on a fool’s errand, but his journey soon connects him to Marissa’s family and his own history of abandonment, neglect and abuse amid a string of foster homes and orphanages. Matt’s quest through four states is interwoven with another drama that takes place 11 years later, in 2008, in which poet and children’s author Renee Owen is haunted by memories of war and a lost love as she prepares to send her son off to fight in Iraq. Again, long-buried secrets come to the surface, one of which poignantly links the two story lines.

Imagine God recycling bottles and planting trees. In this book by faith and culture writer Merritt, God is honored as the ultimate environmentalist who restores and loves His own creation. Evangelical Christians are less supportive of environmental causes than other groups, a statistic that Merritt attributes to misinformation and politics that hamper understanding. Through a compilation of scripture, statistics, and his own anecdotes, Merritt explains that creation care is a shared moral obligation—not a political viewpoint or a film by Al Gore. The world is God’s apologetic about Himself; it is the Christian’s job to maintain its beauty and complexity. Merritt arms the reader with Bible verses commanding care for creation; resources and suggestions for green living are given in the appendixes.

LIBRARY

Columbine I have seen around on other blogs and is a book that I know will be a hard read – but one I want to know about.  I have read a few other books surrounding Columbine.

The Arrival will be my first dabbling in a graphic novel.  This was reviewed at my friend Anigie’s blog By Book Or By Crook and I thought it sounded interesting.

I have had this book on my shelf for sadly – years.  I just never get to it.  Today I picked it up in audio form the Library and I will start listening to it tomorrow!


*Whew!*  There’s my mailbox of 2+ weeks.  How about you?  What has arrived in your mailbox this week?

Titanic 2012 by Bill Walker

Bookjourney traveled to:  Southhampton

While not in Southhampton, there is a coffee shop in LA that is referred to as Titanic Coffee

232 pages (Not 2012 like it says on Good Reads – yipes!)  🙂

Cover Story:  I like it… it is what drew me to the book in the first place and is a perfect fit for the story.


After being pressured by his girlfriend Julia Magnusson to attend his Harvard 20th Class reunion, Trevor Hughes has no idea how RSVPing to that event will forever change his life.  Trevor is a best-selling mystery writer and feels that perhaps his career choice was not as far-reaching as those of his classmates.  Catching up with long time friends Solly Rubens (now a wall street millionnaire and the attitude to go with it), Ken Faust (software entrepreneur); and Harlan Astor ( real estate tycoon), proves otherwise.

As the reunion winds down and the four friends share time together over drinks at the Harvard Club, Harlan drops incredible news.  He has been working for the last 2 1/2 years on rebuilding an exact replica of the Titanic, doing so in Poland to keep it out of the public eye, and paying the 1500 workers a bonus to keep it top-secret until it is finished.  Harlan lost a relative at the sinking of the original Titanic and wants to sail the ship in honor of those who lost their lives on the 100 year anniversary.  While Solly has no problem telling Harlan that he is nuts for rebuilding one of the worst catastrophes in history, and Ken uncomfortably excuses himself…. Trevor, who has always been a Titanic fan since James Cameron’s movie, is intrigued, and because of this, Harlan invites Trevor on board for the maiden voyage on April 10th 2012.  Trevor, much to Julia’s dismay, eagerly agrees.

Trevor shows up and with Harlan’s more than thrilled approval, has decided that he will interview the guests on board the ship as well as the crew about why they wanted to be a part of the new Titanic.  He is going to write a new book that his editor is sure will be a huge success and a publishing company has already paid out advancements on the book for the rights.  What Trevor finds through his interviews is more than he bargained for.  As Trevor tries to piece together the real reason behind the remaking of this grand ship he meets Madeleine Regehr, a beautiful widow who captures his heart and makes him believe in new possibilities.


I am a big fan, much like our main character Trevor, in all things Titanic.  My interest in the ship also came at the time of the James Cameron movie, which I first I refused to see.  (*See bonus notes on that below).  Reading this book rekindled a smoldering fire within me.  I really enjoyed the story of Trevor, and as a fiction mystery writer of course he was going to be a character I would love.

The references to Cameron’s movie as well as shared lines throughout the book made me smile and long to sit down and watch the movie.  The actual idea of rebuilding the ship to be sailed on the 100th anniversary of the Titanic’s maiden voyage I found to be so interesting, although I know not everyone would agree with me on that.

I don’t want to give away too much about this book as I thoroughly enjoyed it, picking it up one afternoon and reading it as late as I could, and then finishing it the next morning.  This was a book that I could place myself in and was a joy to read.

≡          ≡          ≡          ≡         ≡

Bonus notes:  When the James Cameron’s Titanic movie came out in theaters I had no desire to sit through a 3 hour and 14 minute movie.  My friends bugged me to no end until finally, I caved, and Al and I and our two sons went to the movie.

I remember form the point they lowered Kate Winslet’s character (Rose) down the side of the ship in the lifeboat I started crying and pretty much did from that point until the end of the movie.  I also remember I had to go to the bathroom so badly but did not want to miss a thing so refused to get up and go – resulting in a mad rush at the end of the movie as well as a headache from crying.

I then proceeded to see the movie with anyone I could get to go with me, no less than 5 more times – in the theater.  My most proud of triumph being my assistant manager at the time Colleen, who was not about to watch a movie about a ship sinking.  When I finally was able to get her to attend with a group of us she fell in love with the movie just like I had.  I made a t-shirt for her that I wrapped up and she had to open in front of a store meeting (about 50 of us) that on the front said “I finally saw Titanic”… and on the backside I had ironed on “… and I cried like a baby.”

This book has been added to my Book Journey 2010 map:


I received my copy of this book from our local Spring Library Sale

it will now be sent to Ryan at Wordsmithonia

(who won this through my “What should I read next?” giveaway – which I will be posting a new giveaway from these books soon.)

Morning Meanderings…


Good morning everyone!  I am up and ready to leave the house soon for leadership training this morning.  Starting out my day today with Coffee Cup and a bowl of pomegranate oatmeal which is hitting the spot this gloomy Minnesota morning.

Yesterday afternoon I came home to grab a few things for the post office as well as a book I forgot to return to the library.  I was only going to be home a few minutes but as I started prepping everything, one thing lead to another – I swept the kitchen, then mopped…. then dried and folded laundry… caught up on emails…. twittered…. and alas figured I could return the library book today and picked up Titanic 2012 and started reading.

I read until I fell asleep.

When my husband came home from the office and I was prepping for our dinner and movie plans, he asked me where I was going.  “I am not going anywhere until we go out, why?”

He them informed me that the Jeep was running.

I forgot that when I came home – HOURS before…. that I was only going to run in the house and grab the book and the mailing and go again.  I never shut the Jeep off.  It had been running for 4 1/2 hours.

Seriously – I have never done that before.  Getting into it for dinner it was like sitting in a sauna as I had the heat cranked up due to the rainy cooler weather.

Anyway – moving on.  Today is May 1!  That means that I have comment winners for April, as each month, I keep track of all comments on non giveaway posts.  As a thank you to my readers, and a little encouragement to not just read but also to share your thoughts (I do love reading them!) I use Random.Org at the end of each month to:

1.  Give a $20 Gift Certificate to the reader who comments the most throughout the month

2.  I choose two readers/commenters using Random.Org to choose a book out of the prize box (these books are some of my gently used reads that I have either reviewed or picked up at sales when I found them in really good condition.

Here are this months winners:

The two random.org winners are out of 1057 non giveaway comments:

#459  Lisa (Lit and Life)

# 357 Esme (Chocolates and Croissants)

Congratulations – please choose out of the prize box and then email me at journeythroughbooks@gmail.com to let me know what you picked and your address!

My Top Commenter for the month of April is:

and this was close between three commenters…

Library Pat

Pat I will email you your gift card for Amazon later today!

I have to run or I will be late for the meeting!  Have a great day everyone!  The new comment contest starts today and I will be back later with a review!

Pondering Moment…. Create Your Own Book and Title


Recently for my giveaway of Abraham Lincoln, Vampire Killer (I know, I know…. don’t even get me started…) I had asked participants to create a new book title for an existing book but change it up like the books we are seeing all over now:  Sense and Sensibility and Seamonsters, Slime and Punishment, Mr Darcy Vampyre….

** For the record, I have not read any of these and if there is an original book IE. like Sense and Sensibility, I will not read any of these books if I have not read the original first.  In many cases, not even then….  (sorry – side rant)

Anyway – the responses on this giveaway are so fun – so original and brilliant that I wanted to open that discussion up here.  I would like to see a new title to an existing well-known book, that includes werewolves, vampires, zombies, seamonsters….  and a little synopsis of what the book would be about.

Here is my example:

Alice in Zombieland.  Alice one day is out walking through the cemetery, a short cut to her friend Kate’s home, when she falls into an open grave.

For anyone who has participated in this through the Abraham Lincoln, Vampire Killer giveaway, feel free to use your same answer if you would like.

I just love to see what everybody comes up with.

That’s all you need to do to participate – I will choose one participant using random.org on May 6th to win a $10 Amazon Gift Card that I will email to the winner.  Have fun!

Morning Meanderings…



Good morning!  I am sipping away at my first cup of coffee this morning.  I mentioned yesterday during the morning meandering about a book review format that I was excited to try out.  I did that yesterday starting with my review of Worst Case.

The idea was to make the reviews have a bit more of my personality, a bit of “Book Journey, One persons journey through books and coffee.”  So that is what I did.  I actually had fun doing it.  I added:

  • Book Journey traveled to:  ______________________
  • some type of coffee related tip about the area the book is about
  • page number or CD count
  • Cover thoughts

On my left sidebar you will see a new “Where Have I Been?” map and that I am still working on but it is so far a lot of fun.  On this map that I am making through Google Maps I am charting out where the books I have read this year are from.  What I am finding most interesting about that is how many books I have read this year that are set out of the US.  I have read books centered around London, England, Italy, South Africa…  (I have a lot more to enter yet too)

If you click on the link to see the map zoom it out by using the little bar on the left side of the map and clicking the minus sign.  I have no idea why when you enter it is fully zoomed in so you see nothing.  If you click on the blue pegs, it pops up with the book cover, title, and links back to my review.


So I am off to prepare for my day.  I have a meeting at 8:30 am across town, a recap of the home show we had a month ago.  I am excited to hear how it went overall.  Then I am in my office for the afternoon and probably gym with my friend Heidi after that and tonight, I am making BLT’s and we are watching SURVIVOR!

**  A fun pondering moment coming up in a few hours….


Morning Meanderings


Good Morning!  Coffee Cup and I are sitting here this morning on the verge of what looks to be a beautiful day.  I was just thinking about a discussion going on at a blog I was reading earlier this week about review layouts.  The discussion (and I am so sorry but I do not recall where I seen this at) revolved around if we had a set layout for our reviews.  Such as:  some of us, write our own synopsis of the books we review, or we link to other reviews of the book, or include the page number and/or genre, links to purchase, ratings…  the list goes on and on.

So…. as I look at my new (and hopefully improved) blog name, I tried to think of a more designed review style and actually came up with a few ideas that have me not only excited for this blog, but I think I can apply one of the steps to my book club group as well.

I don’t want to give it all away…. and as in all things, there may be tweaking as I go…. but the new review layout will show up on the review that I am posting later today.  And that is all I am going to say about that.  😉


According to my local weather on Google, today is the last of the nice sunny days for a while.  Looks like rain tomorrow through Friday which hits the bummer scale for me as that means no biking or rollerblading.  It does however mean reading time and that is good as I am so loving the Michael Sullivan series and can not wait to review the first three books of his series.

I leave you with this…. I have been in such a Potter mood lately.  I recently listed to the second book on audio (which I HIGHLY recommend) and since then I have been jonesing for book three.  Must…. stay….. strong….

However – my dear friend Heidi who knows about my Potter addiction, sent me a link to the following video.  I had seen this before but it is still so fun!

Have a great day everyone!