It’s Monday! What Are You Reading?

It’s Monday! 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:

Laurel!!!

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

Lots of reading completed this week as I could squeeze it in but really need to catch u on my reviews this week and my goal is to a book review a day.

Here is this week in review


Life Sentences by Laura Lippman (audio review)  Not my favorite Lippman but I have not given up!

Garlic and Sapphires by Ruth Reichl (book review) LOVED this book about a food critic!

Book Blogger LOVE and a Pistachio Thumbprint cookie recipe


I have read none of what I said I would last week, because Tuesday I thought about it and decided it was INSANE to be reading all these other books on the week the theaters release Deathly Hallows .  SO…. I tossed my book list out and instead I have been re-reading The Deathly Hallows.  (Seen the movie Sunday afternoon – review coming up later on Monday!)

This Weeks Reading Plan

I leave for Honduras in 9 days so I am going to try to keep my plan real….

 

I met author Selene Castrovilla in New York in May and I am so excited to read her book!

Just a few months ago Jesse was junior class president, a star baseball player, the newspaper editor, and the crush of every girl at Midland Prep in Manhattan. Now he is fighting a rare cancer with only a 4 percent survival rate. When Samantha, his best friend and next-door neighbor for the last 15 years, turns her compassion for Jesse into a relationship, the teens fight the unknown with their growing love. Sam’s wavering voice, at times mature beyond her years and other times still needing her mother’s comfort, gives readers insight into both Jesse’s burden of dying and her own story of being the one left behind.


 

I met author Rhonda Hayes at BEA in New York in May as well, and can’t wait to read this delightful looking read!

Fifth-grader Abbie Adams is a witch in a family of witches. When her father, who is trying to find a cure for Witch Flu, brings home a kitten, she realizes that there is something strange about it. It turns out that the cat is Thomas Edison. Her parents do everything they can to make him comfortable while they try to find the right spells to break the curse and get him safely back to his own era before history is changed forever. Abbie is a likable character, and readers should relate to her. She loves her little brother (even when she has to clean up his magical messes), is nervous about her first school play, and wishes she didn’t have to keep secrets from her non witch friend.


 

Oh!  You have no idea how excited I was to get this one in my mailbox for review!  Seriously I have been drooling over this when I seen it on other blogs!

A volunteer for a French relief organization, Elsa Murphy, a young nurse, has left her tragic life behind in Boston in the hopes of finding a purpose by providing aid and medical care in Afghanistan. Living without running water and on rationed kerosene, the one comfort from home Elsa allows herself is lipstick, which helps her retain her identity behind the veil she wears. Elsa’s work engenders two relationships that will change her life: a friendship with Parween, a young, strong-willed Afghani widow whose hatred of the Taliban is born out of unimaginable loss, and a romance with Mike, a handsome, brave U.S. soldier with flashing blue eyes. Though the Taliban have largely been driven out by the soldiers, Elsa learns they are still very much a presence.

 

I think with the Thanksgiving weekend this list is pretty doable…. we do not have a lot going on during the holiday.  College son will be home on Thursday for the day but has to go back to Mankato to work the weekend.  Chance will be staying with us but he is super easy, so I anticipate a weekend of movies and board games… and of course a few books to!  😀

 

Now for my favorite part…. checking out what you are reading!  Last week I found five books by reading all your posts and four of those five are currently in my home thanks to my library!  Please add your link to your post below where it says “click here”.

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Life Sentences by Laura Lippman (audio review)

Writer Cassandra Fallows achieved critical and commercial success with an account of her Baltimore childhood growing up in the 1960s and a follow-up dealing with her adult marriages and affairs. The merely modest success of her debut novel leads her back to nonfiction and the possibility of a book about grade school classmate Calliope Jenkins. Accused of murdering her infant son, Jenkins spent seven years in prison steadfastly declining to answer any questions about the disappearance and presumed death of her son. Fallows (white) tries to reconnect with three former classmate friends (black) to compare memories of Jenkins and research her story. In the process, she discovers the gulf (partially racial) that separates her memories of events from theirs. Fallows’s pursuit of Jenkins’s story becomes a rich, complex journey from self-deception to self-discovery.


What really captures my attention in Lippman’s books is that most of them are based on true stories. This particular one is in reference to the disappearance of a Baltimore woman’s son. The woman chose not to make a statement and in doing so spent seven years in jail for contempt of court.

I of course enjoyed the storyline of the main character Cassandra as she was an author.  Bookish characters always fascinate me and automatically seem to have an “in” with me.   I liked the idea that Cassandra wanted to write about a childhood friend acquaintance and was doing research to find out about Callie’s reason for going to jail rather than answer questions about her son.

What ensues seems to me like a long drawn out maze of happenings as Cassandra visits old friends and finds out that if they even know she is a writer, they are so not impressed. Somewhere along all of this I lost touch with the book and waited anxiously to see where it was all going and when would it get there.  In the end, I just didn’t like Cassandra very much.

I have read and enjoyed Laura Lippman before and know that many things could have contributed to my eventual lack of interest in this one, including the fact that I listened to it in my car on audio.  While I am a huge advocate for audio, I am well aware that at times audio is not the way to go as you can miss key points in a story that if reading, I would have back tracked through the pages to figure out what I missed.

I have heard wonderful things about Laura’s book, ‘What The Dead Know’ so I believe that will be my next Lippman adventure!

Amazon Rating

 

Book Journey’s 2010 reading map has been updated to include Life Sentences

Cover Story:  Hmmmm….. I guess I am not fond of it and do not see where it captures the heart of the story

I borrowed this audio from my local library

Morning Meanderings…. When Did I Become A Movie Theater Snob?

Good Morning Sunday people!  It is a little bit of a snow dust happening here in central Minnesota right now and of course I find that a bit annoying but what can I do?

I know…. I can look forward to this afternoon when Chance and I are going to go to Harry Potter and The Deathly Hallows!

SSSSQQQQQQUUUUEEEEEEEEE!!!!!!!!

Sorry about the “sssqquuueeee” but seriously…. the movie has been out for three days and I have been chomping at the bit (what a gross saying) to get there.

Even better…. since our original midnight showing plan was axed, I wanted to up the ante so we are bypassing the local Brainerd Movies 10 with our noses in the air and driving the 30 miles to Sunset Cinemas to see the 1:00 showing.

I have never been to the Sunset Cinemas but have heard of the larger more comfy cushioned seats, and nicer theater all the way around.  I am drooling with anticipation!

Born in Brainerd, I never knew there was a different way to do movies and maybe that is true of all of us.  Movies 10 is a large dark theater with sticky floors that make your shoes make noises like suction cups as you walk to your seat.  The chairs are the hard old school ones that flip down for you to sit in them with a big cup holder for that over-sized beverage I no doubt purchased for just such a movie.  And it goes without saying that you do not put your purse on the floor as if you are lucky enough to be able to release it from its sticky grip after the show you are more than likely going to spill everything in it when it releases like a bottle rocket.

Ok… I may be exaggerating a wee bit…..

I know I am suffering from “the grass is always greener” symptoms but this is a great movie to try a new theater with so we are doing it.  I have been saying for over a year now I would like to try out that theater and the anticipation…..  well, need we go back to the sssqquuueeee?

So that is my plan for this afternoon!  I hope you have a wonderful Sunday and I will see you later for a review and hopefully tonight when I post the It’s Monday!  What Are You Reading?

Garlic and Sapphires by Ruth Reichl

Garlic and Sapphires is all about the New York Times food critic’s journey from the  L.A. Times to the new position she held for 6 years in New York (an unwanted one at that…. and how she tried to blow the interview!).  Ruth Reichl learns quickly that in New York the restaurants have been learning about her months before she has arrived into her new job.  Rumor has it they even have her picture posted in the restaurants so everyone can be aware when she enters.  A flight to New York gives Ruth time to come up with a plan….

With the help of a family friend, clothing, make up and wigs, Ruth is morphed into several alter egos:

Molly Hollis:  A larger older woman, bland in her clothing choices

Miriam:  The creation of her own mother

Chloe:  A blond bomb shell who dresses to the nines, with red nails and lipstick to match

Brenda:  The earth mother

By utilizing these different disguises, Ruth is able to dine in the restaurant she wishes to review without fear of being recognized or receiving special treatment…. in fact, with each disguise, she learns how the restaurants really treat their everyday customers… in some cases poorly, and in other cases – remarkably well.  Ruth’s reviews lead her to be the most influential restaurant critic int he country, but it was hard-earned.

I always thought being a restaurant critic would be pretty glam.  Eating at wonderful establishments, waiters fawning over you bringing you the best dishes to eat… but Ruth shares the dark side of her job as well, such as hate mail, angry restaurant owners, and even trouble sleeping at times, fearing if she went to far….

I loved this book.  I picked it up from my library yesterday and this morning after I took care of a few home projects I settled into my cozy chair  with a blanket and let the life of a restaurant critic both amaze and delight me.  I enjoyed how Ruth came up with her many disguises, her funny restaurant happenings, and the opinions of her husband and five-year old son.  I really enjoyed reading the story of the restaurant and the follow-up with the actual New York Times Review.  Every so often Ruth wold drop in a recipe as well which has inspired me to do a little food creating myself – which for me is a rare occurrence!

I never knew I would enjoy a book like this but I am so glad I read it.   Ruth’s writing is fun, down to earth, and filled with facts I never knew about food and cooking.  (note to self:  wasabi has a smoother and milder taste than shaved fresh as opposed to the powdered version).

Truly a delight that I would recommend to any food lovers.  Thank you to Michelle at Red Headed Book Child for posting about this book earlier this week and bring it to my attention.  I would love to read this author again.

Amazon Rating

Book Journey has updated the 2010 Reading Map to include Garlic and Sapphires

Cover Story:  It is appropriate for the book… although it would have been cool to have either her face peeking out or maybe Ruth in the center surrounded by pictures of her alter ego’s

I borrowed this book from my local library

Morning Meanderings… What I love about Book Bloggers and a Cookie Recipe

Happy Saturday!  Seriously… if you could see me now I am quite literally doing a dance in my p.j.’s.  YES!  Saturdays are my favorite day of the week.

  • It is the one morning each week I do have to get up super early
  • I don’t work on Saturday’s so any commitments are mine to choose

Saturdays to me are reading, writing, a movie or two, book reviews, time for breakfast, sitting in p.j.s a little longer than I should, staying in the house if I choose, dinner with hubby that for a change does not feel rushed, hanging with friends, indulging in a little down time…

ahhhhhh Saturdays!

This morning I am going to be shipping out books that people have won, and refilling my Giveaway box.  I have reviews to write and a couple of books I am looking forward to finishing.

None of this so far… has anything to do with my post title and I think that is awesome too.  😀

Here is my recent story.  A few days ago I realized that I had not heard from my pal Reagan from Miss Remmer’s Reviews.  When I looked at her blog I seen that I was correct, she had been M.I.A. and had not posted in a while too.  Reagan was one of my roommates in New York for BEA this past May and again in September of this year in Minneapolis for a Book Festival.  Due to these facts, I have her phone number.

I called her up and left her a “Heyyyyyy, just seeing how you are doing and making sure all is well” message.  She called me back shortly after that and we talked for about 40 minutes about the craziness of life, juggling commitments, finding balance, all the fun things we (or at least I) as book reviewers tend to have to sort through time to time.  It was fun to catch up.

I hung thinking that it is so cool that there are people in my life, Book Bloggers, who a year ago I did not know but now, I notice when they are not posting.  I feel for them when things are hard in their life.  My online friends.  I love it when people share what is on their hearts and when they pop in to comment here, I feel like I know a little about them and can check in with a “Glad you are feeling better, or welcome back from vacation – how was Florida?”

Anyway…. there’s a bit about me there too I guess… I just enjoy my bloggy friends.

Cookies.

Yes…. A couple (or has it been three?) weeks ago I had a girls weekend at our cabin in Finland, Minnesota.  We baked cookies and made crafts throughout the weekend and my plan was to come back and share with you a recipe or craft a day.  I have done a few, but still have not finished sharing with you that weekend fun….

So with no further ramblings from me – let’s get on with the cookie!

Pistachio Thumbprints

Sara (in the "Cookie Zone")

Looking for a melt in your mouth cookie?  My friend Sara brought this recipe to the cabin and these not only looked good and smelled amazing – they also melted  in your mouth.  (My mouth is watering just talking about it now!)

1 cup softened butter

1/3 cup powdered sugar

1 egg

1 tsp. vanilla extract

3/4 tsp. almond extract

2 cups flour

1 pkg. instant pistachio pudding

1/2 cup mini chocolate chips

2 cups finely chopped pecans

In large bowl, cream butter and sugar until smooth.  Add egg and extracts; mix well.  Combine flour and pudding mix; add to cream mixture.  Stir in mini chips.  Roll into 1 inch balls; roll in nuts and place 2 inches apart on greased baking sheet.  make a thumbprint in the center of each cookie.  Bake at 350 degrees for 10 – 12 minutes.  Remove to wire rack and cool.

Filling:

2 Tablespoon butter, softened

2 cups powdered sugar

2 to 3 Tablespoons milk

1 tsp. Vanilla Extract

Cream butter, sugar, vanilla, and milk.  Spoon into center of cooled cookies.

Glaze:

1/2 cup semi sweet chocolate chips

2 tsp. shortening

Melt chocolate chips and shortening and mix well.  Drizzle over cookies.

Happy Saturday!

The Snow Globe by Sheila Roberts

“Craving a little early Christmas?  The Snow Globe may be just the book to put you in the spirit of magical moments and miracles.”

Sheila

Kiley Gray has had better days.  Her boyfriend has dumped her for her sister.  Yup.  Her scatter brained sister.  Kiley is having trouble finding a job and if that wasn’t enough, her two best friends Alison and Susanne have full lives and really do not have time to be the friends that Kiley needs right now.

When Kiley and her friends get away for a girls weekend (lets just say I love girls weekends and I was hooked from this point on!) you find out that each girl has a reason to need a break.  While on this getaway, Kiley wanders into an antique shop where a snow globe catches her eye.  The stores owner assures Kiley that this globe will bring miracles into her life and really, what does Kiley have to lose?

There are times when a book just hits you in the right mood and the right time and that is what I found with Sheila Robert’s Snow Globe.  It’s no secret that I enjoy reads with women’s friendships and adding a little Christmas magic to the pages as Minnesota has its first snow of the season is well… a bit magical.

Through this small book I found friendships that while at times may seem distant, you soon see that the base of these friendships is strong and sometimes a little Christmas magic, even when found within a snow globe, can remind us all of what is truly important.

I really enjoyed this book and found the writing to be much like another author I enjoy for this style of writing., Debbie Macomber.

There is so much more I would like to share about this delightful book but because what lies between the pages is part of the magic, I am going to leave it at this.

Amazon Rating

Book Journey’s 2010 Reading Map has been updated to include The Snow Globe

Cover Story:  It oozes Christmas and magic…. I like it


Thank you to Dorothy at Pump Up Your Blog Tour
for allowing me to be part of this book tour

Morning Meanderings… My Hit and Miss With Harry Potter …

Good Morning!  I am truly thankful it is Friday!!!  I have had a super busy week and I am so glad to see that I arrived fairly unscathed to Friday morning.  I had a meeting o some sort almost every evening this past week.  Last night I had two tickets to go to the midnight Harry Potter release and due to unforeseen circumstances, we did not go.

I know, right?


So….. hopefully we will get there yet this weekend and I can give a “WOO HOO” report yet.  😀

In other random literary news, I received this list of the up and coming new releases.  Without having time to really look into these books, I would be interested in knowing more about #2, #5, #8, and #9.  I have read Fannie Flagg before and enjoyed the writing.

Any of these books catch your eye?

New Releases in Literature & Fiction
1 Lord of Misrule by Jaimy Gordon
Lord of Misrule by Jaimy Gordon
Read more
2 Great House by Nicole Krauss
Great House by Nicole Krauss
Read more
3 Full Dark, No Stars by Stephen King
Full Dark, No Stars by Stephen King
Read more
4 Sunset Park by Paul Auster
Sunset Park by Paul Auster
Read more
5 The Distant Hours by Kate Morton
The Distant Hours by Kate Morton
Read more
6 The Wake of Forgiveness by Bruce Machart
The Wake of Forgiveness by Bruce Machart
Read more
7 Luka and the Fire of Life by Salman Rushdie
Luka and the Fire of Life by Salman Rushdie
Read more
8 Mary Ann in Autumn: A Tales of the City Novel by Armistead Maupin
Mary Ann in Autumn: A Tales of the City Novel by Armistead Maupin
Read more
9 I Still Dream About You by Fannie Flagg
I Still Dream About You by Fannie Flagg
Read more
10 Doctor Zhivago by Boris Pasternak
Doctor Zhivago by Boris Pasternak
Read more

Morning Meanderings… A Girl Goes On A Blog Hop…

Good morning!  My apologies to all my blog subscribers when you sat down for your Morning Meandering in your email yesterday morning and found I did not exist.  I did start a post yesterday morning but was in a hurry to get to work and planned to activate during a break in the morning…

well, that break never came.  😀

I do love my new position at work, it appeals to the creative side of me, but also includes times when I need to participate in evening events and this week… there are three of those.  SO…. that would explain my absence yesterday.

Moving on…

I had a wonderful time checking out what people are reading this past Monday and found a few treasures that appealed to me.  I would love to share with you what I found:

I reserved this one at my library
I reserved this one at my library

Set in 12th century Korea, this is the story of Tree-ear who lives under a bridge with his disabled older friend Crane-man. Tree-ear becomes fascinated with the potter’s craft and longs to create Celadon ceramics. However pottery is a trade passed on from father to son and Tree-ear is an orphan. He works long and hard hoping to become an apprentice.

Thank you to Jan at Eating Y.A. Books

 

 

Do you seriously see this cover? I fell in love with it and ordered it right away!

In the midst of a Katrina-like disaster, 10-year-old Dinah and her siblings, teenager Zeke and toddler Rebecca Ruth, find themselves cut off from society, with only their distant cousin for company. To distract the siblings from their predicament, Gage begins to tell them the story of the skibbereen, the creatures generally known as tooth fairies. His story focuses on What-the-Dickens, an orphaned skibberee whose adventures bring him into contact with a house cat, a bird, a tiger, and a variety of humans, including Gage himself.

Thank you to Mardel at Rabid Reader

 

 

This sounds so good - I reserved it at my library

Garlic and Sapphires: The Secret Life of a Critic in Disguise, Reichl focuses on her life as a food critic, dishing up a feast of fabulous meals enjoyed during her tenure at The New York Times. As a critic, Reichl was determined to review the “true” nature of each restaurant she visited, so she often dined incognito–each chapter of her book highlights a new disguise, a different restaurant (including the original reviews from the Times), and a fresh culinary adventure.

Thank you to Michelle at Red Headed Book Child

 

 

I was intrigued as soon as I read the synopsis and ordered it on line from a second party

A debut novel for the British Ghanaian writer tells of a dark childhood in an apparently safe Devon boarding school.

In the interview Yaba Badoe tells Nicola Barranger about how her work has been 18 years in the creation and how a tragic event in her own childhood drove the narrative in her True Murder.

Drawing on her rich family heritage Yaba also discusses how Ghanaian traditions inform the novel bringing together West Africa and South West England.

Thank you to Amy at Amy Reads

 

 

Love the sounds of this one! My library doesnt have it and it is a bit pricey on line so I will keep my eye out for it.

Agnes McMillan and Janet Houston were convicted for shoplifting. Bridget Mulligan stole a bucket of milk; Widow Ludlow Tedder, eleven spoons. For their crimes, they would be sent not to jail, but to ships teeming with other female convicts. Tin tickets, stamped with numbers, were hung around the women’s necks, and the ships set out to carry them to their new home: Van Diemen’s Land, later known as Tasmania, part of the British Empire’s crown jewel, Australia. Men outnumbered women nine to one there, and few “proper” citizens were interested in emigrating. The deportation of thousands of petty criminals-the vast majority nonviolent first offenders-provided a convenient solution for the government.

Crossing Shark-infested waters, some died in shipwrecks during the four-month journey, or succumbed to infections and were sent to a watery grave. Others were impregnated against their will by their captors. They arrived as nothing more than property. But incredibly, as the years passed, they managed not only to endure their privation and pain but to thrive on their own terms, breaking the chains of bondage, and forging a society that treated women as equals and led the world in women’s rights.

Thank you to Mari at Bookworm With A View

 

That is the beautiful thing about seeing what other book lovers are reading.  I love to see the books not yet known to me and read the excitement and experience of the book through another’s thoughts.  It was a great week to find new titles that appealed to me.

Have you found any wonderful “must reads” while reading other blogs recently?

Shoulder Bags and Shootings by Dorothy Howell

If Haley Randolph was taking a survey on her life right now she would most definitely check the box marked FABULOUS!  What was not to love?  She had just spent the time of her life in Europe with her all too wonderful boyfriend Ty Cameron, who just happens to own the Department store where Haley works.  And as if life just wasn’t delicious enough, Ty’s grandmother Ada has handed the keys of her Mercedes to drive….

the icing on the cake would be to get her well manicured hands on one of the seasons “must have” hand bags!

All things come crashing in around Haley when she finds the body of her nemesis, Tiffany Markham in the trunk of the all too beautiful Mercedes, and to rain a little more on Hailey’s parade, due to a recent encounter with Tiffany, Hailey tops the suspect list.  Her only choice is to try to find Tiffany’s killer before death becomes her fashion faux pas!

When I first heard of this book and the description I immediately thought of Stephanie Plum from the Janet Evanovich books.  There was a time, many years ago where I admit, Stephanie and I made the rounds as I started with One For The Money and made my way all the way through book twelve of the series before I let this series go.  In many ways, Haley reminded me of Stephanie and that over the top ditsyness  sometimes is a little too sweet for my tooth.

However- the book also reminded me of a quick cozy mystery which occasionally…. goofiness and all…. I do crave.  (Darn sweet tooth!)  While I did laugh at the sheer goofy happenings at times in the book, I think I would have enjoyed it more in the summer on the deck with my sun glasses on and a very large iced tea close at hand.

I discovered as I was reading that this book is actually #3 in the Haley Randolph mysteries, but never fear – I did not feel I needed the previous two books to follow what was happening.


Amazon Rating

Book Journey has updated the 2010 Reading Map to include Shoulder Bags and Shootings

When in Los Angeles you should whip on over to Down Beat Cafe where the coffee is as good as the music!

Cover Story:  It’s cute and eye-catching.  It reminds me of cotton candy.

I received this book for review from FSB Associates

Morning Meanderings… Blowing Up This Weeks Reading List

Good morning!

Oh?  You are curious about the bomb?

I have decided to blow up my reading list this week and do a re – read of a book I really can’t believe I did not consider for this week.  In honor of this week’s release of the final Harry Potter movie, I have decided to set aside the previously planned reading by a few days to celebrate one of my all time favorite series….

Hopefully Chance (Kinship Partner) and I will be attending the modnight showing on Thursday night … errrr…. the wee hours of Friday morning.  This is kind of a tradition with us except this time it will be a school day for him and a work day for me on Friday at 8 a.m. so we still are in the planning phases 🙂


Are you reading any of the Harry Potter series this week?  Are you planning to see the movie?