Morning Meanderings… Oh the BOOKS!

Good morning! 

Running a little late here (I could not get to sleep for nothing last night – toss, turn, toss, turn…. )…. BUT I had to share with you my fun findings as I traveled the blogeshpere yesterday during the Monday meme. 

First stop, my dear friend and fellow Bookie, Angie posted about a book on her blog By Book Or By Crook that I am super interested in. 

Stop by Angie’s post to read more about this book.

Then Laurel over at Rainy Days and Mondays wrote a review for a book I have been considering for awhile now…

Read more about this book on Laurel’s blog…. wow.  Seriously. 

And finally, At Quixotic Magpie, this little gem made me long to read it:

I think it was last year I remember a couple other books coming out centered around Little House On The Prairie.  Both I wanted to read, neither did I get to. 

I am off to work, but will be back with a review in just a little while today.  Any good books you have seen while traveling the blogs?

Benny’s Angel by Laura Allen Nonemaker

Who stole the flowers in God’s Secret Garden?

When Ella Eagle discovers that the flowers in God’s Secret Garden have wilted, she alerts Mayor Benny Bunny. The main suspect in the case is evil Count Slime, who is jealous of the joy the animals have in the garden. Mayor Benny calls in Oliver Owl, the captain of the Owl Force Wisdom Watchers, but the owls have not seen Count Slime during their patrols of the garden. Mayor Benny suggests the animals pray for an answer. God hears their prayer and sends Marietta the angel to help them solve the mystery.
Author Bio
Laura Allen
Nonemaker
Laura Allen Nonemaker’s desire to write took root as a child in Bermuda. Since then, Laura has written in a variety of genres and her work has appeared in Essence Treasury: Celebrating the Season, Alive! and Kentucky Monthly Magazine.
Laura has been involved in short-term missions, including trips to Russia, Poland, and the University of the Nations in Kailua Kona, Hawaii. Three years ago, her interest in the arts motivated her to join the planning team for Artful Missions, which conducts juried art shows and donates to outreaches in the U.S. and India to rescue women and children from human trafficking.

This book was sent to me as part of a tour with KCWC Blog Tour.  While this book is short and sweet, it packs within its pages a powerful message about our joy and how we are in control of the way we respond when things go wrong. 

 

 

I remember when my boys were growing up and they would come home all upset about what someone had said to them.  Maybe it was name calling, or maybe it was a comment about how they played a game or answered a question.  I always told my boys that they had the power to choose how they responded, a kind response or none at all can really take the power away from the offender, after all – they are fueled by the reaction.  The same goes for the message within this book, while Count Slime wanted to see the animals of the garden have sorrow and feel scared, when that reaction was missing – the Count goes about his way… defeated.

 

 

I think even as an adult I need to remind myself sometimes that I choose how I respond to situations that may be difficult or painful.  Knowing that, somehow makes me feel better.

 

 

This book would make a wonderful addition to a Christmas stocking.  The book also includes a code for a free download of the audio version of the book.  What fun to play the audio version while paging through the colorful illustrations that go along with this story.

 

 

 

Thank you to KCWC Blog Tour and Tate Publishing

for offering me this book for review

It’s Monday! What Are You Reading?

This is a great way to plan out your reading week and see what others are currently reading as well… you never know where that next “must read” book will come from!

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 telling me how many you visited.  **You do not have to have a blog to participate! You receive one entry for every 10 comments, just come back here and tell me how many in the comment area.

This past weeks winner:

Paula at Community Book Stop

WOO HOO!!!!  Please choose an item out of the Reading Cafe Grab Shelves  and email me your choice with your mailing address as well!   journeythroughbooks@gmail.com

It is a balmy 44 degrees here in Minnesota and we are snow-less.  I could not be any more thrilled.  Hate cold.  Hate snow.

This past week has been nice with a few sprinkles of snow that did not stick.  As far as my reading adventures, here is what happened on the blog:


The 2012 WHERE Are You Reading Challenge sign up is ready.  LOVE this challeneg and I hoep you will join in the fun!

Book Coveting for 2012 (come on…. everyone is doing it!)  😛


The Kitchen House by Kathleen Grissom (a fascinating journey set in 179 1 centered around a tobacco plantation and the African American “help” that work the land and the kitchen.


Read Dystopia 2012 Challenge (In my new found appreciation for Dystopia reads, I am offering up a challenge with giveaways that is not too big and should be a lot of fun.  Come on!  Join me!  :razz:)

Ok, thats a little embarrassing that I only posted one review for this past week.  😯  I have another written and ready to go, I have two that I will be finishing in the next day or two, and I have a tour on Tuesday as well as book club review on Wednesday so this next week will look a lot better reading wise.  😛

Here is what is new for this next week:

Life was always just about perfect for Brooke Madison Bowers. She was the prettiest, most popular girl in small-town St. Dennis, Maryland, a prom queen, local pageant star, and the pride and joy of her loving parents. She even married the man of her dreams. But the promise of happily ever after fell to pieces when her husband was killed while serving in Iraq. Brokenhearted and longing for the solace of better days, she returns to the idyllic world of St. Dennis, and the familiar comfort of the family farm. Surrounded by her loving family and friends, she’s determined to build a new life, complete with her own cupcake bakery. She’s equally determined never to fall in love again.

For Jesse Enright, life has been a challenge. A fourth-generation attorney, he’s spent his life fighting to escape the shadow of his irresponsible father. Now he’s moved to St. Dennis to run the family law practice, and he’s ready to find the right girl, get married, and settle down. But his carefully laid plans go out the window when he meets Brooke and finds himself caught between the unbreakable law of attraction and Brooke’s resolve to go her way alone—despite the undeniable feelings Jesse stirs in her. But just like catching lightning in a bottle, is it possible to fall head-over-heels, heart-and-soul in love all over again?

On tour – see my review this coming Tuesday!

In the summer of 1974, a fourteen-year-old girl in Dolton, Illinois, had a dream. A dream to become an actress, like her idols Ron Howard and Vicki Lawrence. But it was a long way from the South Side of Chicago to Hollywood, and it didn’t help that she’d recently dropped out of the school play, The Ugly Duckling. Or that the Hollywood casting directors she wrote to replied that “professional training was a requirement.”

But the funny thing is, it all came true. Through a series of Happy Accidents, Jane Lynch created an improbable–and hilarious–path to success. In those early years, despite her dreams, she was also consumed with anxiety, feeling out of place in both her body and her family. To deal with her worries about her sexuality, she escaped in positive ways–such as joining a high school chorus not unlike the one in Glee–but also found destructive outlets. She started drinking almost every night her freshman year of high school and developed a mean and judgmental streak that turned her into a real-life Sue Sylvester.

Then, at thirty-one, she started to get her life together. She was finally able to embrace her sexuality, come out to her parents, and quit drinking for good. Soon after, a Frosted Flakes commercial and a chance meeting in a coffee shop led to a role in the Christopher Guest movie Best in Show, which helped her get cast in The 40-Year-Old Virgin. Similar coincidences and chance meetings led to roles in movies starring Will Ferrell, Paul Rudd, and even Meryl Streep in 2009’s Julie & Julia. Then, of course, came the two lucky accidents that truly changed her life. Getting lost in a hotel led to an introduction to her future wife, Lara. Then, a series she’d signed up for abruptly got canceled, making it possible for her to take the role of Sue Sylvester in Glee, which made her a megastar.

I have seen Jane Lynch in a couple movies, a a bit in GLEE.  I have been interested in her story and am currently listening to it on audio.

Kristina’s stay at summer horse camp is horrible to say the least, and it’s all because Hester and Davina are there as well, making her life miserable. When Hester’s cruel prank goes terribly wrong, it’s actually what sends the three girls back to the magical land of Bernovem. In Bernovem, Kristina is very excited to see her former friend, Prince Werrien. When he invites her to sail with him on his ship to his homeland Tezerel, putting it simply, Kristina can’t refuse.

Reunited with her gnome, dwarf, animal, fairy friends … and best of all, Werrien, things seem like they couldn’t get any better for Kristina. But when Werrien becomes fascinated with an unusual seeing stone, the ”Black Shard”, Kristina is haunted by a ghostlike old hag. Struggling against suspicion, guilt, illness, and ultimately the one who wants to possess her soul, Kristina will see it’s in her weakest moment that she will encounter more strength than she has ever known.

I read The Magic Warble by this author about a year ago and now have the opportunity to read this second book.

Christopher Boone, the autistic 15-year-old narrator of this revelatory novel, relaxes by groaning and doing math problems in his head, eats red-but not yellow or brown-foods and screams when he is touched. Strange as he may seem, other people are far more of a conundrum to him, for he lacks the intuitive “theory of mind” by which most of us sense what’s going on in other people’s heads. When his neighbor’s poodle is killed and Christopher is falsely accused of the crime, he decides that he will take a page from Sherlock Holmes (one of his favorite characters) and track down the killer. As the mystery leads him to the secrets of his parents’ broken marriage and then into an odyssey to find his place in the world, he must fall back on deductive logic to navigate the emotional complexities of a social world that remains a closed book to him. In the hands of first-time novelist Haddon, Christopher is a fascinating case study and, above all, a sympathetic boy: not closed off, as the stereotype would have it, but too open-overwhelmed by sensations, bereft of the filters through which normal people screen their surroundings. Christopher can only make sense of the chaos of stimuli by imposing arbitrary patterns (“4 yellow cars in a row made it a Black Day, which is a day when I don’t speak to anyone and sit on my own reading books and don’t eat my lunch and Take No Risks”).

Confession – my book club read this years ago and I could not get into it.  After sitting through the review while they all raved, I felt I missed something and have kept it on my shelf ever since.  Now I am going to try it in audio.

This may look like a heavy reading week but I am hoping not.  My Monday class has been cancelled this week, Tuesday is book club, Wednesday is helping with students, but Thursday, Friday, Saturday and Sunday are pretty open. 

 

Oh and one more thing, Teach Mentor Texts has asked and received my permission to start a MG (Middle Grade/ Childrens book version Of Its MOnday What Are You Reading.  If you or any bloggy friends you know review mainly MG or Childrens Books, they may wish to link up there as well as here:

SO what are you reading this mid December?  Does this time of year just get crazier so your reading becomes less, or as the weather turns cold and the days are shorter do you tend to read more?

Add your link to Its Monday!  What Are You Reading below where it says click here.  I would love to see what you are reading!  😀

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Read Dystopia Challenge 2012

First of all a little disclaimer.  I have been working on putting this post together for a while now and did not know there was already a Dystopia 2012 Challenge already going on.  Bookish Ardour has one happening that looks like a lot of fun and by no means is this one to take away from that one.  In fact, theres looks to be at a whole different level than this one so please feel free to check them out and sign up there if that is more to your liking, or feel free to do both.  😛

That said, the reason I wanted to go ahead and run this one anyway, is that I am fairly new to dystopia. 


dystopia

an imaginary place where the conditions and quality of life are unpleasant. The opposite of Utopia.

dystopia – a work of fiction describing an imaginary place where life is extremely bad because of deprivation or oppression or terror

Honestly, this is a genre I did not think I would get into, but now looking back over this past year I am surprised as to what books I have read and loved that I would say fall under this genre.  My hope with this challenge is to maybe pick up some of you newbies that think that this is not a genre for you.  You (as I) may be surprised. 
I have compiled a list here of books that fall under this genre.  Please check it out and know this is not conclusive by no means, this list is to just help you get a feel for what Dystopia is, and feel free to let me know of other titles that should be on the list.
This challenge will go from January 1 – December 31.  I will put up a bi-monthly link for you to link an update post too as to how you are doing with this challenge and thoughts and feelings on the genre.  Those participating here on the full challenge and who link to the bi-monthly challenge will go into a drawing for a dystopian novel (TBA with bi-monthly post) that will be sent to any USA address.  If you are participating and are out of the US I will connect any winner to a $10 gift card through Amazon. 
At the end of the year you will earn badges by how many dystopian books you read (or listened to!) over the year.  Also, at the bi-monthly link ups, a question will be posted for your update, something like, what did you learn about survival in the dystopia books you have read these past two months?  Something just for fun.  😀

1-3 Dytstopia Books read in 2012:  beginner

4-6 Dystopia Books read in 2012:  Intermediate Post World Trainee

7-10 Dystopia Books read in 2012:  Leader of Your District

11+ Dystopia Books read in 2012:  SURVIVOR!

To sign up please add the link to your blog or challenge post here.  Feel free to grab the button from above and add it to your sidebar. 

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Morning Meanderings… Voice Texting Can Be… AWKWARD

A late good morning to you!  😀

I got up this morning, putzed around a bit on Facebook, read emails, and did not have time before church to write my post.  Now home, I have shopped for dinner, started a roast with vegies in the crock pot, straightened up the kitchen, put on a pot of coffee…

AND NOW…. I get to write a bit and read a bit.  😀

Have you head of and/or used voice texting?  I love it.  Seriously I think it is my favorite part of my new phone.  I can talk into my messaging and wala, there it is in print, I hit send and off it goes!  No more trying to text quick messages at stop lights:

“I am on my way.”

“Do we need milk at home?”

“Stuck in traffic”

As much as I RAVE about voice texting, it is important to take time to proof what you have said before you hit send.  Occasionally, it hears you wrong.  😯

For instance, for mid December in Minnesota, the weather fairy has been exceptionally kind to us.  Yesterday afternoon it hit almost 30 degrees.  My friend Heidi and I decided to take a walk on the bike trail.  I text my husband this information and hit send.  What I meant to say was “going to go and take a walk with Heidi, be home later.”

What I actually sent was, “Going to go and pick a lock with Heidi, be home later.”

LOL

 My hubby Al, said nothing on my apparent confession to breaking the law.  Well, what can I say… times are tough all over.  😛

In bookish news, I am currently in Pennsylvania with Miranda and her family dealing with the aftermath of the meteor hitting the moon.  The sky is now gray from the volcano ash and things do not seem to be getting any better soon (Life As We Knew It by Susan Beth Pfeffer).  I am also hanging out today with Jane Lynch today in the late 70’s while she is cruising in a car with her sister and the “cool girls” (Happy Accidents by Jane Lynch). 

Oh and the walk yesterday…. added 340 calories lost to my pathetic kick off to the 20,000 calorie challenge… 😀

Current total:  1,340 calories burned

The Kitchen House by Kathleen Grissom

When Author Kathleen Grissom and her husband restored a plantation tavern in Virginia.  While researching the history behind the area, Kathleen found an old map where a notation had been made on it…

Negro Hill.

When asking around about this, Kathleen found no answers other than that perhaps this marked a place of great tragedy. 

What could Negro Hill have been?  What had once happened on this very soil?  What secrets were left like whispers in the wind that time had absorbed?

This… was the beginning of the idea behind The Kitchen House.

Lavina is seven years old, white, and orphaned when she comes to live on the tobacco plantation owned by Captain Pyke, in Tidewater Virginia.  The year is 1791, and Lavina works alongside the African-American servants in the Kitchen House day after day.  Belle, who is the illegitimate half white daughter of the captain soon becomes good friends with Lavina. 

Lavina becomes close with all the African-American servants who work in the Kitchen House, referring to them as family and never understanding the privileges and status of white people over her friends. Throughout the years of the Kitchen House, Lavina is witness to abuse, rape, racism, and eventually.. murder.

As Lavina grows into a beautiful young woman, she agrees to marry the Captains son Marshall, but Lavina being only 17 when she marries is not yet wise to the ways of power-hungry men and soon discovers that Marshall will stop at nothing of for anyone to get what he wants, destroying lives in his wake…

In the end Lavina needs to figure out how to save the only family she has ever known from impending disaster. 

The Kitchen House is a book I have had my eye on for a while now.  I liked the look of it, the synopsis, and had heard good reviews, yet I never seemed to pick it up.  When I seen it on audible.com for a sale price I could not resist, I moved on it. 

The audio is told in alternating voices from the point of view of Lavina, and then Belle.  This made for a delectable story as Lavina was a young white girl who did not always see things as they truly were.  Belle could give a retelling of what was happening from an African-American slaves perspective.  By the book bring told in this way, as readers we are allowed to see things unfold from all angles. 

There is a lot of front information before the book really gets moving.  In the beginning you are witness to the fondness that not only Lavina has for the people of the kitchen house, but the love they have for her as well.  Through Belle’s telling, we see some of the white people for who they truly are, in full color descriptions, where Lavina may see things in more gray shades.  As the story gets moving, these shades of gray burst into full color as Lavina grows, marries, and starts to see how things really are.

While I found the first half of this audio interesting, it was not until the second half that the story really takes off and you get a full understanding of all the details laid out in the earlier part of the book.  As events began to topple over one another I felt the story click together like a Rubik’s Cube and I loved the way it did! 

Author Kathleen Grissom offers up a recipe for a Molasses Cake that Belle makes frequently in the book.  While I have not made this myself, I believe I will soon as even mentioning it here is bring up scents of mouth-watering molasses baking in the kitchen…  (Offered up for Weekend Cooking at Beth Fish Reads)

Simple Molasses Cake

½ cup butter
1/3 cup packed brown sugar
1 egg
½ cup milk
1 cup molasses
2 cups flour
1 teaspoon baking soda
1 teaspoon ground ginger
1 teaspoon cinnamon
2 dashes ground cloves
¼ teaspoon salt

Preheat the oven to 350 degrees. Grease an 8-inch square baking pan. In a large bowl, cream the butter and sugar. Beat in the egg. In a separate bowl, combine the milk and the molasses. In another bowl, combine the flour, baking soda, ginger, cinnamon, cloves, and salt. Add each of these alternately to the butter mixture, beating well between additions. Spoon batter into the prepared pan. Bake for approximately 45 minutes, or until a toothpick comes out clean.

Amazon Rating

Good Reads Review

The 2011 WHERE Are You Reading map has been updated to include The Kitchen House

I purchased this from audible.com

Morning Meanderings… UGLY Sweaters…

Good morning!  Happy Saturday. 😀
Last night I was at an Ugly Sweater party with Al.  We go to this party every year.  It is just a gathering of friends, good food and good conversation.. 

Usually I have a great picture to show you – but this time, it was not until after we left that I realized that no pictures had been taken.  I know, I know… I am usually so on this, but I think after a day of looking for a great sweater (KOHLS, Walmart, Bargains On 7th, and finally Good Will) I came up with nothing… I heard that recently there was a big Ugly Sweater gathering at the Casino and the top prize was $10,000 so I am guessing that all ugly sweaters had been taken.

So I came home and dug through a tote of sweaters I have in the spare room that I no longer wear and came up with a dark green kind of stretched out one and wore that.  Al wore the same one he wore last year. 

For Saturday Snapshots, here are the two previous years sweaters:

2010: I called this one "Lion King Extra"
2009: Al's sweater we referred to as "Old Yeller" and mine I called "The Wuzzle", truly something right out of Dr. Suess

Looking at these past two years I am a little bummed this year was not captured.  Hopefully I will make up for it next year.  😀

As for this Saturday… I have several books that are partially read that I hope to get a grip on finishing.  I also have a couple of reviews that I have been meaning to write for days and just have not found the time. 

What does your Saturday look like?  Any good books being read?  Any fun events?

Morning Meanderings… Book Coveting for 2012

Good morning!  I hope this Friday finds you all well. 😀

I was sitting here in my home with Asus (laptop) a warm blanket and a hot cup of coffee. It is currently 4 degrees here, the coldest it has been yet and I thankful that I do not need to go out this morning.

As I have had a little time to visit blogs the past couple of days I love to see the excitement generated in the posts surrounding the best books of 2011, challenges for the new year, and books coveted for 2012.  The later baffled me as I had no response to what I was looking forward to book-wise in 2012.  I know there are books I am waiting on… but my mind seems to have shut down that avenue for construction because I can not recall them.  😯

Then this morning, I recalled a book that I have started hearing buzz around this week.  I guess I thought it was already out there and as I became more and more interested in this book… I realized it does not release until January 17th  2012.

But oh… how I am coveting it…

Have you heard about this book?  It’s the story of Evelyn, who walks into a book store (always a good start!) and is handed a book on Medieval Romance by a boy names Brendan… little do either of them know that this is just the beginning of their story…

*raise hand and wave it crazily*  “Uhhh Sheila, you don’t really like romance novels, right?”

Yes, that is true… BUT there is always an exception to every genre rule, and this would be one of those exceptions… what has me LOVE LOVE LOVING the idea of this book is that you can read it from either side… open one way and you can read the story from Evelyn’s account.  Flip it to the other side,and you can read the story from Brendan’s point of view. 

 

 

Anyway… I think it is going on the wish list 😀 

 

Today I have lunch with friends and tonight hubby and I have an Ugly Sweater party…  ah…. this time of year can be fun, even if it is cold outside.  😛

Morning Meanderings… Planning The First Book Of The Year

Good morning.Here in central Minnesota we have only a dusting of snow… seriously, that makes me deliriously happy.

Snow…

not a fan.

Perhaps you may think for a person who is as anti-snow as myself would have chosen a different place to live other than MINNESOTA then…

but here is the kicker…

Spring through Fall here are AWESOME!  The air is crisp and I can smell the signs of things to come…. warm air, rollerblading, biking, sitting on the deck reading…

wow…. I miss it already.

I wish I had an attitude like Lorelei Gilmore when it comes to snow…

 

Anyway…. I always look forward to January 1 because that is when I read my first book of the year.  That has been a tradition for years – long before blogging.  I usually start it New Years Eve but I finish on New Years Day thus being the first book I read of the year.  AND – it is always a treat, a re – read like last year (Lauren Kate rocks! ) and in 2010, well… I was in the mood for Harry… or one that I have simply been dying to read….

this year I have my eye on City Of Fallen Angels…. but I am also thinking maybe Divergent… AND it will also mark my first book of 2012 on the Reading map…..

oh the possibilities…. 😛

Do you plan out the first book of the year?  Any thoughts on what it may be?

 

Morning Meanderings…. Goodreads Book Awards Announced!

 

Good morning.  😀

The weekend was so busy and Monday I had work and meetings and Tuesday I had work and dinner with friends.  Really, I feel wiped out this morning and today is another big day. 

 

Anyway… in bookish news, the Goodreads awards have been posted and I was so excited to see that!  This is a great selection of books… and totally gift worthy!

 

Winners of the 2011 Goodreads Choice Awards

Bossypants by Tina Fey

Best Humor

8,722 Votes
City of Fallen Angels by Cassandra Clare

Best Goodreads Author

6,097 Votes

 

Out of these I have read Bossy Pants, Little Princes, and Where She Went.  WHAT I still hope to read soon out of this list is:  Divergent (won in two categories!!!), IQ84, 11/22/63, Graveminder, and City Of Fallen Angels. 

How about you, have you read any of these?  Are there any you want to?

 

6 week Calorie challenge update:  1,000 calories burned /out of the 20,000 goal… 19,000 to go.  I need to step it up!  😛