Morning Meanderings….


I feel as though I am in a sort of frenzy.  Coffee Cup and I are here this morning with an agenda over the next few days that I am having a hard time wrapping my head around.  Busy isn’t even the word for it…. insane seems the better word.

This morning I have my Group Power class at 8:25 am.  I refuse to let this go… this may be the one thing that makes the rest possible.  After that, I will come home and shower and then I have a funeral at 11:00 am for a friend of mine’s mom who passed away suddenly on Thursday.  Then home, change, and with a little luck I can get the dogs in for their kennel shots because as of Wednesday evening they need to be in a kennel until February 9 (which breaks my heart a little bit).  Then I have business phone calls to take care of and I must (I MUST) make some time this afternoon to go and see my Grandfather who is in his 90’s.

So why the suddenly  rush of events?  Because on Thursday morning we leave for Florida where my hubby attends the equipment auctions each year and we will return home on February 9.    Only to leave again on the 11th of February for Illinois for our sons graduation from the Navy.  Wonderful things, yes… but the getting there – or more like getting ready to go there is the stressful part.  In reality, my life will not settle down until February 15th after we are back home… and then Al (hubby) and Justin (19 year old son) leave for Honduras on the 18th of February and will not be back until the 28th.

Welcome to the month of insanity!  Lap Top of course will travel  with me and I will continue through it all – the meanderings, the reading, the reviews…..  and yes, I realize my Meandering meme is upside down but found that somehow appropriate….  😉

So….  looks like I have time for one more cup of coffee before I hit the ground running.  I am overstretched right now with the details in my own life…. lets talk about yours.  Any plans for trips in 2010?

In My Mailbox

Is it just me or did the week go by super fast?  I can’t believe we are here again and I am digging through the books that came in this week by mail, by Library, or uhhh….. by me purchasing….  Thanks as always to Kristi at Story Siren who hosts this weekly adventure into the mailbox!

So here is what has entered my home this week…


One terrible night. One outraged act. What price will people pay to hold their homes and dreams together?

When Kate and Stuart Kinzler buy a run-down, historic house in Ann Arbor, Michigan, they’re looking for a decent remodeling investment and a little space in which to rekindle their troubled marriage. Instead they discover that their home was the scene of a terrible crime many years ago—a revelation that tips the balance of their precarious union.

When a mysterious man begins lurking around her yard, Kate—now alone—is forced to confront her home’s dangerous past. Hers is not the only life that has crumbled under this roof. But the stranger who has returned to this house—once his own childhood home—is in search of something Kate may never fully understand.

Featuring a diverse cast of characters and building to an unforgettable climax, Dream House embraces the volatile issues of race and class to chart the concentric effects of one fateful decision—a moment of rage that will echo forever within these four walls.

Doesn’t this book just look good?


Two sisters of opposing temperaments but who share the pangs of tragic love provide the subjects for Sense and Sensibility. Elinor, practical and conventional, is the epitome of sense; Marianne, emotional and sentimental, the embodiment of sensibility. To each comes the sorrow of unhappy love: Elinor desires a man who is promised to another while Marianne loses her heart to a scoundrel who jilts her. Their mutual suffering brings a closer understanding between the two sisters — and true love finally triumphs when sense gives way to sensibility and sensibility gives way to sense.

I know… I feel like I am the last person on the earth who has not read this book!



You’d think Polly Martin would have all the answers when it comes to love—after all, her grandmother is the famous syndicated advice columnist Miss Swoon. But after a junior year full of dating disasters, Polly has sworn off boys. This summer, she’s going to focus on herself for once. So Polly is happy when she finds out Grandma is moving in—think of all the great advice she’ll get.

But Miss Swoon turns out to be a man-crazy sexagenarian! How can Polly stop herself from falling for Xander Cooper, the suddenly-hot skateboarder who keeps showing up while she’s working at Wild Waves water park, when Grandma is picking up guys at the bookstore and flirting with the dishwasher repairman?    No advice column can prepare Polly for what happens when she goes on a group camping trip with three too many ex-boyfriends and the tempting Xander. Polly is forced to face her feelings and figure out if she can be in love—and still be herself.

Sounds interesting!


Seventeen year old Veronica “Ronnie” Miller’s life was turned upside-down when her parents divorced and her father moved from New York City to Wrightsville Beach, North Carolina. Three years later, she remains angry and alientated from her parents, especially her father…until her mother decides it would be in everyone’s best interest if she spent the summer in Wilmington with him. Ronnie’s father, a former concert pianist and teacher, is living a quiet life in the beach town, immersed in creating a work of art that will become the centerpiece of a local church.

The tale that unfolds is an unforgettable story of love on many levels—first love, love between parents and children — that demonstrates, as only a Nicholas Sparks novel can, the many ways that love can break our hearts…and heal them.

Ok… Sparks has been on a role lately so I can’t let this one pass by!  Giveaway coming up on this as well in the next few days!



David Marion and the Freyl family return in a page-turning story of international suspense and intrigue by award-winning author Joan Brady.

I know right?  The description is awful – but that’s what I find on-line to describe it.  In reality it looks like a smokin’ good book!


A champion trainer and true horse whisperer, Dr. Lew Sterrett has used patience and a firm but gentle hand to earn the trust of more than 3,500 horses.

Ok this is another poor description from on-line.  This book is more about the whispering to horses…  (I am cracking myself up here…) it is also about life and well, it sounds good!


On the outside, Nick O’Reilly has it all: a high-flying legal career, as a partner of an elite Wall Street law firm, and financial security, with an apartment overlooking Central Park. Having grown up in a working-class family, as far back as Nick can remember this was his dream. But at the age of thirty-six, after several years of sacrificing his personal life for professional gain, Nick has started to ponder his future and consider the mark he wants to leave on society both professionally and personally—his legacy.

After being chastised in the press for turning a cold shoulder to the community, the firm calls upon Nick to help rehabilitate its image by handling its first pro bono case. Nick is asked to represent Dawn Nelson, a domestic violence victim who is fighting for custody of her young son, Jordan. A far cry from Nick’s specialty of defending the misdeeds of Corporate America, it is up to Nick to set Dawn and Jordan on a path to a better life. But Nick gets much more than he signed on for, as Dawn forces him to reassess his life choices and, ultimately, be true to himself. Only when Nick finally realizes what is truly important in life does he face his toughest—and possibly final—challenge: a battle for his own survival.

Ok now this is a book description!  I really like the cover on this one – it is peaceful!


Fun, approachable book that helps in conversations with kids about poor body image, self confidence, negative self-talk and bullying. As parents, we are always looking for good resources to help us raise our kids from the inside out. “Do These Pants Make Me Look Fat” by Andrea Zimmerman is a fun, easy read with whimsical, full color illustrations that addresses negative self-talk, poor body image and bullying. What’s especially wonderful about this book is that engages both kids and adults. The book includes a helpful discussion guide that could be used by parents with their kids or in group settings such as Girl Scouts, health classes or other groups that focus on building self-confidence, good body image and positive thinking.

While this book looks cute and fun – it is also sad that young girls do really suffer from lack of confidence in their body image.  This book is a lighthearted way to look at this up closely and address it in a way that builds girls up.  I am so glad I am able to review this book!


Purchased Books

In the opening pages of Jamie Ford’s stunning debut novel, Hotel on the Corner of Bitter and Sweet, Henry Lee comes upon a crowd gathered outside the Panama Hotel, once the gateway to Seattle’s Japantown. It has been boarded up for decades, but now the new owner has made an incredible discovery: the belongings of Japanese families,left when they were rounded up and sent to internment camps during World War II. As Henry looks on, the owner opens a Japanese parasol.

This simple act takes old Henry Lee back to the 1940s, at the height of the war, when young Henry’s world is a jumble of confusion and excitement, and to his father, who is obsessed with the war in China and having Henry grow up American. While “scholarshipping” at the exclusive Rainier Elementary, where the white kids ignore him, Henry meets Keiko Okabe, a young Japanese American student. Amid the chaos of blackouts, curfews, and FBI raids, Henry and Keiko forge a bond of friendship–and innocent love–that transcends the long-standing prejudices of their Old World ancestors. And after Keiko and her family are swept up in the evacuations to the internment camps, she and Henry are left only with the hope that the war will end, and that their promise to each other will be kept.

Yes you do see three books!  This is our Bookies Book Club choice for February and a couple of the girls asked me to order theirs as well.  This one will be going to Florida with me – our book club meets the day I return to Brainerd!


British social comedy examines a young heroine’s struggle against Victorian attitudes as she rejects the man her family has encouraged her to marry and chooses, instead, a socially unsuitable fellow she met on holiday in Italy.

As part of the Gilmore Girls Challenge – this is one of the books on the list.  I have purchased two so I am able to have a giveaway on the other!


If a miracle happened to you, wouldn’t you tell everyone? What if they thought you were crazy?

Poor in health but rich in faith, Gina Merritt—a young, broke, African-American single mother—sits in a pew on Ash Wednesday and has a holy vision. When it fades, her palms are bleeding. Anthony Priest, the junkie sitting beside her, instinctively touches her when she cries out, but Gina flees in shock and pain. A prize-winning journalist before drugs destroyed his career, Anthony is flooded with a sense of well-being and knows he is cured of his addiction. Without understanding why, Anthony follows Gina home to find some answers. Together they search for an answer to this miraculous event and along the way they cross paths with a skeptical evangelical pastor, a gentle Catholic priest, a certifiable religious zealot, and an oversized transvestite drug dealer, all of whom lend their opinion. It’s a quest for truth, sanity, and grace . and an unexpected love story.

Does this book sound amazing?  I think it does!  This book is for a Round table discussion that will take place the end of February.  Watch for more details!


Library Books


The bonds linking family and the lines separating enemies have become very blurry for 17 year old Robert. With his father away fighting for the Union, Robert must decide to act alone in order to help his ailing mother, extricate his injured Confederate Uncle, and bring relief to his cousin, Emily.When he unwittingly gets entangled in a Confederate escape plot, Robert must forge his anger and shame into a new determination to save his family. And, perhaps, he must also realize that the saving might not be entirely up to him.Honor and duty to God and country aren’t as clear-cut as he hoped them to be.

I think this is another one that looks good and yeah – I am getting my use out of that new library card 🙂

So that is what is in my mailbox this week!  How about you?  I would love to hear about what you had arrive in your mailbox!



Faith In Fiction Saturday

Faith In Fiction Saturday is presented by My Friend Amy.  This weeks question was:


What Christian Fiction books am I looking forward to in 2010?

So…. I thought I would list a few here.


Beguiled by Deeanne Gist, Mark Betrand:   Rylee Monroe, a dogwalker in Charleston’s wealthiest neighborhood, never feared the streets at night. But now a thief is terrorizing the area and worse, someone seems to be targeting her. Reporter Logan Woods is covering the break-ins with the hope of publishing them as a true-crime book. The more he digs, the more he realizes this beguiling dogwalker seems to be at the center of everything.As danger draws ever closer, Logan must choose: Chase the girl, the story, or plunge into the shadows after the villain who threatens everything?



As Young As We Feel by Melody Carlson:   Once there were four Lindas in a first grade classroom. Inseparable, they laughed and cried through their tweens and teens—and then went their own ways. Forty-seven years later, a reunion has brought the successful attorney, empty nester, frustrated artist, and aging starlet together again. Join them as they discover that friendship knows no statute of limitations


Her Mother’s Hope by Francine Rivers:  The first in an epic two-book saga by beloved author Francine Rivers, this sweeping story explores the complicated relationships between mothers and daughters over several generations. Near the turn of the 20th century, fiery Marta leaves Switzerland determined to find life on her own terms. Her journey takes her through Europe and finally lands her with children and husband in tow in the central valley of California. Marta’s experiences convince her that only the strong survive. Hildie, Marta’s oldest daughter, has a heart to serve others, and her calling as a nurse gives her independence, if not the respect of her mother. Amid the drama of WWII, Hildie marries and begins a family of her own. She wants her daughter never to doubt her love-but the challenges of life conspire against her vow. Each woman is forced to confront her faulty but well-meaning desire to help her daughter find her God-given place in the world.


In the steamy city of New Orleans in 1974, Amalise Catoir sees Phillip Sharp as a charming, magnetic artist, unlike any man she has known. A young lawyer herself, raised in a small-town Christian home and on the brink of a career with a large firm, she is strong and successful, yet sometimes too trusting and whimsical. Ama’s rash decision to marry Phillip proves to be a mistake as he becomes overly possessive, drawing his wife away from family, friends, and her faith. His insidious, dangerous behavior becomes her dark, inescapable secret.

In this lawyer’s unraveling world, can grace survive Ama’s fatal choice? What would you do when prayers seem to go unanswered, faith has slipped away, evil stalks, and you feel yourself forever dancing on shattered glass?

These are few that I am looking forward to.  I also currently have Ted Decker’s The Bride Collector.  I havent read Decker in a while but have his last three books on hand.  I am looking forward to visiting his works again.

Collision Of Evil by John J. Le Beau

As evening falls against the majestic backdrop of the Bavarian Alps, Charles Hirter, an American tourist, is savagely murdered. In the peace, quiet and pastoral splendor of this magnificent setting, Charles Hirter draws his last breath. Was Charles simply in the wrong place at the wrong time? Kommissar Franz Waldbaer, the German detective in charge of the case, faces an investigation that yields neither clues nor suspects nor motives. A gruff, go-it alone detective, Waldbaer is dismayed by the arrival of Robert Hirter, the victim’s brother, who insists on joining the investigation. But there is more to Robert than meets the eye. As Robert and the Kommissar uncover a nefarious nexus of evil past and evil present, they find themselves probing dark, long-forgotten episodes from the Third Reich in order to identify the present threat. Thrust into a violent world of fanatic passions, malevolent intentions and excruciating urgency, Robert Hirter and Kommissar Waldbaer must race against the clock to stop a sophisticated, covert, and deadly plot.

Yes, this book falls slightly outside my “comfort genre zone”.  However – always in for stretching myself I wanted to give this book a read.  Why this book?  Well, I do love a good mystery – and even a good thriller.  The stretch comes in the international espionage type books that just can’t hold my attention.  An international spy I will never be.  The hook for me was actually in the author, John J. Le Beau.   I like to read books where the authors really have a background in what they are talking about and John does have that.  He served as an operations officer in the CIA for over 25 years and now serves as a Professor of National Security Studies.   I have always heard that you should write what you know…. and John does just that.

I enjoyed the fact that the person going after Charles murderer was his brother Robert.  That made the story real to me… not so over the top that I couldn’t keep up.  By uncovering the pieces to Charles murder, Robert starts to bring in the reality that what has happened has a larger impact on the world then he could have ever anticipated.

A fast paced – and plenty of action read, John does deliver the book I believe he sat out to write.  I have to say that while this would normally not be a book for me, I found that John was able to write this style of book without overloading it with so many complications and twists that it left readers like myself in the dust.  I was pleasantly surprised.

My Amazon Review

I received my review copy of this book from Omnimystery

Morning Meanderings…


So some days…. I admit to being a little slow.  Lets take yesterday for instance, I posted my meandering in the morning and went about my business for the day popping in a couple times throughout the afternoon.  It wasn’t until 10 pm at night when I sat down with a cup of chocolate ice cream and my lap top that I seen that Peter over at Kyusi Reader had featured my book shelves on his blog!  I really need to be more alert LOL!

Peter likes to feature book shelves on his blog so if you wish to share your pictures stop on by and let him know!  🙂

So here is my crazy weird Saturday morning thought…. on your bookshelves – what is a book that has been on your shelf a long long time and is still unread.  How long has it been there?  Why is it still unread?

Morning Meanderings…

Hi people!  🙂

Yes – I had a total brain melt down yesterday and started a morning Meandering about 5 times and stopped….. deleted, and started again.  I couldn’t put anything together so left for work without doing one.  Of course, while I am driving to work my head fills with ideas of things I cold have chatted about.

Here are a few of those things…..

You may have noticed that Word Verification Balderdash, that fun meme I created and played every Thursday has not been on here for a while.  I just honestly have not had time to keep up with it, and if I had a review going up that day suddenly I had a saturation of posts:  the meandering, Word Balderdash, a review….  it just became too much.  However – I do love the play on words and didn’t want it to die off, so I passed it and all rights to it to the one who could come up with incredible words every week:  Ryan at Wordsmithonia.  If you have not stopped by to see this master of all things Balderdash at work I suggest you do – if we were playing Balderdash in real life the man would win consistently!  🙂  Thanks again Ryan!


I also recently did an interview for Reading Minnesota and in that interview I was telling them some of my favorite reads from last year and I mentioned a set of books that have always held a special spot in my heart, Nora Roberts Three Sisters trilogy.  I had explained that while I was not a Roberts fan, these were not your typical Roberts books.  What I failed to do – was mention these books by name and I have had people asking.  The book titles are:  Dance Upon The Air, Heaven and Earth, and Face The Fire.   I highly recommend these books!

So now that I have done a bit of housekeeping I must grab Coffee Cup (and a water bottle too!) and head out to the gym.  Have a wonderful morning and I will be back a little later!  🙂

Book Blogger Convention (Maybe)

Ok…. so I am so new to all of this.  I am now signed up to go BEA and so excited!  This will be my first time attending and my heart is spilling over with excitement!  To think a year ago I knew nothing of this world…. this is like my utopia!   🙂

The Book Blogger Convention is actually the day after BEA, on Friday May 28th.   The Book Blogger convention is a one day event intended to provide support, instruction, and social time for people who blog about books.

I would absolutely love to do this – but I need a roomy.  I am going to BEA with Reagan (Miss Remmer’s Reviews) and she has to return to Minnesota on Thursday.  I don’t want to stay alone so I am currently planning on returning to Minnesota with her, unless someone needs a roommate for Thursday and Friday night – and in that case I will see what the cost is to add a couple more days on to my plane ticket.

In the event that I have a blogging buddy out there who is also considering doing this and is in the same boat as me, or you are planning on attending but wouldn’t mind splitting room cost, please email me at journeythroughbooks@gmail.com.

Either way, if I go or not – I still think this is a wonderfully exciting event that I am happy to help promote. 🙂  Be sure to go to the Book Blogger Convention Blog for all the details!

American Rust by Philipp Meyer w/ Giveaway



ABOUT THIS BOOK

Set in a beautiful but economically devastated Pennsylvania steel town, American Rust is a novel of the lost American dream and the desperation—as well as the acts of friendship, loyalty, and love—that arise from its loss. From local bars to trainyards to prison, it is the story of two young men, bound to the town by family, responsibility, inertia, and the beauty around them, who dream of a future beyond the factories and abandoned homes.

Left alone to care for his aging father after his mother commits suicide and his sister escapes to Yale, Isaac English longs for a life beyond his hometown. But when he finally sets out to leave for good, accompanied by his temperamental best friend, former high school football star Billy Poe, they are caught up in a terrible act of violence that changes their lives forever.

Evoking John Steinbeck’s novels of restless lives during the Great Depression, American Rust takes us into the contemporary American heartland at a moment of profound unrest and uncertainty about the future. It is a dark but lucid vision, a moving novel about the bleak realities that battle our desire for transcendence and the power of love and friendship to redeem us.

◊◊◊◊◊◊◊◊◊◊◊◊◊◊◊◊◊◊◊◊◊◊◊◊◊

Phillipp Meyer takes up right into the restlessness of the book from the first page, the first sentence even.  We are introduced to Isaac, who’s mom has been dead for five years and he can not stop thinking about her.  He has stayed home, passing on college to take care of his paraplegic father but stirs for something more…   this is the passion that starts American Rust rolling page by page into what was meant to be an adventure and turned into something much more.

Isaac likes to do things, lets say the adventurous way not necessarily the easy way, or in many cases even the right way.  Along with his friend Poe, they find themselves deep into a murder that becomes quite interesting due to twists and turns such as the Police Chief is having an affair with Poe’s mom.  And this is just one example of how the plot of American Rust ripples through the small town.


It took me a while to get into the rhythm in which this book flows.  Phillipp has a way with words and a certain method to his writing that I found at times harsh (the strong language was not a plus for me) and at other times refreshing ( for a first time author, heck for any author, Phillipp really can paint an intriguing picture using words that brought me into the action).

I agree when they say this book evokes the restlessness of John Steinbeck’s novels of restless lives during the depression.  Restless is a great word to use to describe the characters that bring this book to life and I would expect this book to make its way into the Classics of tomorrow.


Philipp Meyer grew up in Baltimore, dropped out of high school, and got his GED when he was sixteen. After spending several years volunteering at a trauma center in downtown Baltimore, he attended Cornell University, where he studied English. Since graduating, Meyer has worked as a derivatives trader at UBS, a construction worker, and an EMT, among other jobs. His writing has been published in McSweeney’s, The Iowa Review, Salon.com, and New Stories from the South. From 2005 to 2008 Meyer was a fellow at the Michener Center for Writers in Austin, Texas. He splits his time between Texas and upstate New York.

Yes – I had mentioned a giveaway!

I have one copy of this book to give away to one person who leaves a comment on this review leaving me the name of your favorite classic read.

Giveaway is open to USA and Canada – ends February 17

That’s it!

This review copy of this book came from TLC Book Tours

The Tour stops for American Rust:

Monday, January 18th: Literary Feline

Tuesday, January 19th: Book Club Classics!

Wednesday, January 20th: A Circle of Books

Thursday, January 21st: One Person’s Journey Through a World of Books

Tuesday, January 26th: Luxury Reading

Thursday, January 28th: Ready When You Are, CB

Tuesday, February 2nd: Rough Edges

Thursday, February 4th: Bibliophile by the Sea

Monday, February 8th: Bibliofreak

Tuesday, February 9th: Becky’s Book Reviews

Thursday, February 11th: The 3 R’s Blog

Friday, February 12th: Beth Fish Reads

Thursday, February 18th: So Many Precious Books, So Little Time

RENÉ HAS TWO LAST NAMES/ RENÉ TIENE DOS APELLIDOS by René Colato Laínez


Pub. Houston, Tex. : Piñata Books/Arte Público Press, c2009.

Young Rene is from El Salvador, and he doesn’t understand why his name has to be different in the United States.  When he writes Colato, he sees his paternal grandparents, Rene and Amelia.  When he writes Lainez, he sees his maternal grandparents, Angela and Julio.  Without his second last name, Rene feels incomplete, “like a hamburger without the meat or a pizza without cheese or a hot dog without a wiener.”

His new classmates giggle when Rene tells them his name.  “That’s a large dinosaur name, one says.  “Your name is longer than an anaconda,” another laughs.  But Rene doesn’t want to lose the part of him that comes from his mother’s family.  So when the students are given a project to create a family tree, Rene is determined to explain the importance of using both of his last names.  On the day of his presentation, Rene explains that he is as hard-working as Abuele Rene, who is a farmer, and as creative as his Abuela Amelia, who is a potter.  He can tell stories like his Abuelo Julio and music like his Abuela Angela.


This is a delightful book about family.  When the book opens up Rene’s teacher gives him a name tag that leaves off part of his last name.  Rene thinks that maybe her pen ran out of ink and adds the rest of his last name to the tag .  As the kids in the classroom laugh at his long last name, the book opens into a whole discussion on why Rene’s name is important.

The book is told in alternating paragraphs of first in English, then again in Spanish.  What a great book to share with kids about the importance of names, history, and of family!  I think this book would open wonderful discussions with the children in your life.  Beautifully illustrated with rich colorful pages , I read this three times through in one sitting…practicing the little Spanish I know as well!


My goal as a writer is to produce good multicultural children’s literature; stories where minority children are portrayed in a positive way, where they can see themselves as heroes, and where they can dream and have hopes for the future. I want to write authentic stories of Latin American children living in the United States.

I am René Colato Laínez, the Salvadoran award winning author of I Am René, the Boy, Waiting for Papá, Playing Lotería, René Has Two Last Names and The Tooth Fairy Meets El Ratón Pérez. My picture books have been honored by the Latino Book Award, the Paterson Prize for Books for Young People, the California Collection for Elementary Readers, the Tejas Star Book Award Selection and the New Mexico Book Award. I was named “Top Ten New Latino Authors to Watch (and Read)” by latinostories.com. I am  a graduate of the Vermont College MFA program in Writing for  Children & Young  Adults.

Prizes Each Day During The Tour

Leave a comment or a question here for the author and be eligible to win an autographed copy of Rene Has Two Last Names!

René Colato Laínez Book Tour

Jan 11     Leslie        Regular Rumination

Jan 12     Yolanda     Cuponeando

Jan 13     Marytza    Tartamuda

Jan 14     Lisann       LaLicenciada

Jan 15     Jen           Devourer of Books

Jan 18     Lynn         Chronicle of an Infant Bibliophile

Jan 19     Mayra       Latino Book Examiner

Jan 20     Sheila       One Persons Journey Through a World Of Books

Jan 21     Ana Rod    The Sol Within

Jan 22     Carrie       Bilingual in the Boonies

My Amazon Review

I received my review copy from JoAnn@LatinoBookTours.com

Morning Meanderings…

I am sitting here this morning with Coffee Cup and have this little smile on my face.  I had a great book adventure yesterday!  Thank you to everyone who went over to Reading Minnesota and read my interview.  Late last night I popped over there and seen the nice comments that people had left and well…. my heart grew two sizes!

Last evening I sat in and listened to That’s How I Blog, where they talk weekly to a blogger about their life, their books, hobbies, and of course how they blog.  They end each talk with the 20 minute book club where the guest shares a book they have read and really enjoyed.  Last nights guest was Natasha from Maw Books and the book she spoke on was War Child by Emmanuel Jal.  When I read her post about what she would be reviewing on, I knew I wanted to read this book.  This is the true story of Emmanuel Jal’s life.  I could say more on that – a lot more, but for one, I didn’t finish the book yet, and for two…. when I do I want you to read a review that I think is going to be heart wrenching and passionate – and well…. just stay tuned.  🙂

If you got to That’s How I Blog and want to listen to last nights discussion, or any of the archived discussions, just look at the Blog Talk Radio thingy to the right and highlight the talk you want to listen to.  I have sat in on a few and they are always informative.

Ok – before I go – I have a giveaway from yesterdays Morning Meandering comments…  and this morning Random.org gave me this winner:

Alexia561!!!

Alexia561, when you have a chance – look through the prize box and then email me at journey through books @ gmail dot com to let me know your mailing address and the item you have chosen and I will get that in the mail to you asap.

🙂 Have a great day everyone!!! 🙂