Morning Meanderings…

Good Morning!  It took two days but I am thrilled to say that I have my house back in order and I have book shelves!  YES!   I said it out loud and there was a happy dance.  Here they are the finished product and I am so glad to be clutter free!  🙂

(Seriously… this will be the last babbling about these shelves… after this post I will return to my regular scheduled Morning Meanderings)

Oh wow!  These are the first books I put up there…. congratulations to author Randy Alcorn who took up this corner!

Here is the other side of the room.  I love it…. its better than I even pictured it!


I still have space !  Yes!  The step in this picture belonged to my Great Grandmother.  I have had it in the basement for years but now I think I am going to paint it and maybe put some cool book quotes on the steps to use in this room.

One close up of the shelf in action.  🙂


Ok enough about the shelves….  what are you reading today?

Take Your Best Shot by Austin Gutwein

It is people like Austin Gutwein who inspire me to be a better person.  ~  Sheila

Only God could weave a story that would captivate people all over the world, bring thousands of people from seventeen countries to a free-throw line, raise over a million dollars in international AIDS relief, and build a school and medical clinic in Zambia.

And only God do it through the hands of a nine-year-old boy.



What an amazing story of what a difference one person can make!  Austin’ story is one that made my heart sore.  I love true stories of young people doing things that those two, three, or four times their age have not attempted.  There is something pure int hat kind of thinking and that is what I found within this book – within Austin himself.

This past September I had the opportunity to take part in a bike ride that raised money for children with AIDS.  It was one of those experiences that caused me to step away from my own life and really take a look at what is going on around me.  It was life changing and I am so ready and willing to do it again.  This book, Austin’s story, brings me back to that moment – a moment of seeing things that often are overlooked.

At the end of each chapter are questions to ponder, scripture to think on… and a task to do.  The task could be send a card to someone you know who is ill, connecting with an old friend – all the way to putting together your own Hoops of Hope event.

I found this book to be a wonderful reminder of the power that each of us has within us.  When we think there is nothing possibly that we could do – we need to remember we dont know the power of a smile to someone who is desperately hurting, we dont know the power of a kind word to a stranger, and we do not know what picking up the phone and calling that person who has been on our heart lately will not only do for that person – but for you as well.

Click here for Austin’s Blog

My Amazon Review

I received my review copy from Thomas Nelson

Morning Meanderings…

Good Morning!  By the time you read this know I have already been to the gym working off (hopefully) the wonderful Chocolates I indulged in over the weekend.  🙂

In yesterdays Meandering I was all pumped up about the book shelf that is being placed around the upper part of my reading room.  Today I promised pictures.  I dont have a fully finished product yet as they did not get finished, but most of them are up.  I will add more pics after it is completely done and with books even on them!

Oh and how appropriate…. this post marks my 100th Morning Meandering 🙂

Winners of Recent Giveaways

The last few weeks were a bit crazier than I had anticipated and I now am behind on my giveaways!  So please bear with me while I catch up here in this post.  On the bright side…. I have winners and lots of them!!!!

I have three winners (yes three!!!) for this wonderful audio of 9 Dragons by Michael Connelly:

Ryan

Karen K

Shawna Lewis



The Guernsey Literary Potato Peel And Pie Society was won by:

Julie H

(this was a special Christmas giveaway and Julie was notified last week and the book was sent to the person of her choice)


I have three winners for The Lovely Bones audio!

Jody

amt946

Jamie P


I have three copies of Say You Are One Of Them to give away to these winners:

Esme

Lynne

Rebecca Graham


Three copies of this audio of Permission Slips goes to these winners:

Wanda

Patricia Barraclough

Peaches



The Donate A YA Review giveaway of a $20 Amazon Gift Card for sending Reagan at Miss Remmer’s Reviews your good YA reviews for her students (which by the way – you can do anytime!)… The winner is:

Shanyn!!!


I have 5 copies of The Magician’s Book to give to these wonderful winners:

Margie

Zia

J.T. Oldfield

Winning Readings

Michelle Miller/ TheTrueBookAddict

Congratulations to all the winners!!!  Please watch my Giveaway Page for great giveaways still going on and more to come as we enter into the new year!

*All winners were picked using Random.org

BLURT!

I love board games!  I have a large closet dedicated to just them…. we have played them as a family for years and enjoy the old ones as much as a new one!  This past weekend, Christmas Day actually, myself, hubby Al, out son Justin ,and Kinship Partner Chance all had a fun time playing a great game of BLURT!


The beauty of this game is that it takes all of 10 seconds to learn.  There are not pages and pages of rules and maneuvers…. it is simply a nice looking board game, a box of cards that hold your clues – all I had to do was add people.

I had people.


So you take turns being the reader and read a card clue something like this:  *A strip of leather or cloth that goes around your waste to hold clothes up…..

Then the first person to shout (well you don’t have to shout – but you would be surprised how many do!) the correct answer wins.  It sounds simple and in a way it is….  but there are harder cards, and sometimes you get so caught up in the excitement and the laughter of the game…. you forget what the word could be…. and then it really gets crazy!

This is a game that is wonderful to play with a mix of ages…. young or old… everyone really has a good time with BLURT!  I know I did.

*The answer:  A belt!

I received my review copy from BLURT creator and author, Tim Walsh

Timeless Toys by Tim Walsh

Oh wow – this book is like a step back in time… suddenly I was filled with wonderful memories of childhood toys and games and the friends that gathered around them!  ~  Sheila


We all had a favorite toy or game growing up.  Those toys usually have memories attached to them… bringing up an image to said toy can bring along with it memories of our youth, the home we played with them in as well as the people who were a part of this time.

Arranged in chronological order, this book is a delight for any one – any age.   As I looked through this book I was filled with nostalgia, for games such as Candy Land, Slinky, Silly Putty…

Each game/toy has the year it was originally made, the packaging as it changed through the years, and it’s creator.  I enjoyed reading this book literally page by page absorbing all the facts behind my favorites and seein g the brilliance that was behind favorites like Scrabble:


Alfred Butts

Alfred Butts was the creator of Scrabble (originally called Lexico (1931-1938) and the n Criss-Cross(1938-1947).  In1931 Butts made sets of this game by hand and sold them to friends and acquaintances.  More significantly, he tried to license his creation with Milton Bradley and Parker Brothers and both rejected him. Butts assigned each letter a face value based on its occurrence in every day language.  He gave the Q and Z 10 point values.  By using this criteria there should have been more S’s in the game than Butt’s had introduced, but he correctly surmised that the game would be too unbalanced if easy points were often scored by pluralizing.  He shrewdly added two blank tiles, which could be used for any letter the player wanted.  By 1953, to fill the demand, 150,000 Scrabble tiles were made daily.

This book is a true treasure that I will keep on my bookshelf for reference for years to come.  My whole family enjoyed looking through this book and sharing facts on our favorites and I am sure yours will too!

Erector Set
Sea Monkeys

My Amazon Review

I received my review copy of this book from author Tim Walsh

It’s Monday, What Are You Reading?

Thank you to J Kaye’s Blog for hosting this fun meme!  Well…  I will make this short and hopefully sweet.  🙂  I did not get through the books I had hoped to last week.  In fact, I temporarily lost my copy of The Heretic’s Daughter and I thought that maybe I had left it at the gym.  This caused me to complete the books that I did:


nightlight by Harvard Lampoon (I did laugh… I really did.  I had never heard of these spoof books before!)

Life On The Mississippi by Mark Twain (this was for the Newsweek Challenge that My Friend Amy was holding)

Horrid Henry’s Christmas by Fransesca Simon (this was my first adventure with Henry…. what a BRAT!  LOL)

Mrs. Claus Explains It All by Elsbeth Claus (this was a sweet book!)


None of these books were overly large, and the ones I was hoping to get to this past week just didnt happen.  So this is what I plan to read this week:

I am about half way through Heretic’s Daughter and 60 pages into hush hush.  The Heretic’s Daughter is not moving as quickly as I had hoped and hush hush had me from Patch.  (LOL)

I am listening to The Murder Of King Tut in my vehicle and while it is a bit hard to follow three different time periods, I am enjoying the story itself.

What are you reading this week?  I would love to know and stop by and link up to J Kaye’s Blog!

Morning Meanderings…

Hoo Hoo!  Today is the day I get the book shelves in my Reading Room.  I am excited and nervous all together…..  this is my Christmas present from my husband and it will be a shelf that goes around the top of three sides of the room.  The point of this is to relieve the pressure of my bulging book shelves by putting my already read and collections up high.

I am excited because this is really going to help me with the recent book clutter…. and nervous because I am using a guy who was a recommendation and I have only met with him once when he measured the room…. I have never actually seen the shelves…. and …. I know…. breathe.

So – there will be pictures tomorrow.  He said this will be like a 6 hour project (yow!) so I am at home all day today.  I plan to write a couple reviews and catch up on some filing.

I know many of you set your books free once they are read but what about those of you who like to keep the treasured ones?  Where do you keep them, how do you organize them – if you organize them, and why do you keep them?  (Yeah… I have questions!)

In the meantime…. my two dogs Bailey and Elmo look out the window knowing something is up….  😉

Bailey and Elmo

Have an awesome day – I have an incredible review coming up in a couple hours.

nightlight by The Harvard Lampoon

I laughed out loud at some of the “spoofy” comments…. ~  Sheila

About three things I was absolutely certain. First, Edwart was most likely my soul mate, maybe. Second, there was a vampire part of him–which I assumed was wildly out of his control–that wanted me dead. And third, I unconditionally, irrevocably, impenetrably, heterogeneously, gynecologically, and disreputably wished he had kissed me.


And thus Belle Goose falls in love with the mysterious and sparkly Edwart Mullen in the Harvard Lampoon’s hilarious send-up of Twilight.

Pale and klutzy, Belle arrives in Switchblade, Oregon looking for adventure, or at least an undead classmate. She soon discovers Edwart, a super-hot computer nerd with zero interest in girls. After witnessing a number of strange events–Edwart leaves his tater tots untouched at lunch! Edwart saves her from a flying snowball!–Belle has a dramatic revelation: Edwart is a vampire. But how can she convince Edwart to bite her and transform her into his eternal bride, especially when he seems to find girls so repulsive?


While this book had its funny moments and there were quite a few:

  • Making fun of Belle’s seemingly irresistibly to the male species from every classmate all the way to the mailman….
  • Belle’s mother’s obsession by emailing her 40 times to see if she is alright…
  • How Edwart would not be able to resist Belle’s blood (her’s was grapefruit scented!)

But honestly for the most part… the humor was a bit lame… the story line (I wont give it away but Edwart is not a vampire after all) is dull and I found myself skipping pages just to see where it all ends up.

While fun to skim through and I did laugh out loud at times…this book would make for a funny gift for the Twilight Fan…. but I would classify it as just that – a gag gift.

My Amazon Review


I received this book from my son Justin for Christmas

“Thanks Justin!”

In My Mailbox

In the reading room I have this great little 2 drawer stand.  The stands drawers are deep like a filing cabinet and as books come in to my home each week (by mail, by gift, by library, by me…) they go in the drawers of this stand until I take them out and catalog them for this weekly post.

Many weeks, such as this one, I start pulling out of the drawers and I am surprised how many have entered these walls.  Its like a little Christmas each week!  So a special thank you to Kristi at Story Siren, who inspired me by hosting this weekly meme.

Secrets, secrets are no fun. Secrets, secrets hurt someone. . . .

An eccentric new girl. A brooding socialite. The scion of one of New York’s wealthiest families. A promising filmmaker. As students at the exclusive Chadwick School, Phoebe, Lauren, Nick, and Patch already live in a world most teenagers only dream about.

They didn’t ask to be Society members. But when three of them receive a mysterious text message promising success and fame beyond belief, they say yes to everything—even to the harrowing initiation ceremony in a gritty warehouse downtown and to the ankh-shaped tattoo they’re forced to get on the nape of their necks. Once they’re part of the Society, things begin falling into place for them. Week after week, their ambitions are fulfilled. It’s all perfect—until a body is found in Central Park with no distinguishing marks except for an ankh-shaped tattoo.

I seriously am loving this cover and this story line!  Thanks to Luxury Reading for first introducing me to this book!  I had to purchase it!

The world is changing: the government has seized control of every aspect of society, and now, kids are disappearing. For 15-year-old Wisty and her older brother Whit, life turns upside down when they are torn from their parents one night and slammed into a secret prison for no reason they can comprehend. The New Order, as it is known, is clearly trying to suppress Life, Liberty, and the Pursuit of Being a Normal Teenager. But while trapped in this totalitarian nightmare, Wisty and Whit discover they have incredible powers they’d never dreamed of. Can this newly minted witch and wizard master their skills in time to save themselves, their parents–and maybe the world?

I am so into James Patterson these days and I love the diversity in his books.  I was interested in this YA read the moment I seen it.  This one I bought two of – one for me and one for my son.  I have read mysteries, suspense, and even romance from Patterson…. this one will be a new adventure!

Author Jonny Bowden looks at what he calls “The Four Horsemen of Aging”—free radicals, inflammation, glycation, and stress—and shows how they can harm your health and shorten your life. Bowden then unveils an arsenal of anti-aging strategies culled from cutting edge research and lessons learned from the longest lived people on the planet. He examines how the major organs, such as the heart and the brain, age and how you can prevent damage to these vital parts of the body. In total, readers learn what they can eat, do, and take to feel great, avoid illness, and live a long life.

I enjoy interesting books on keeping fit and eating right.  I am always up for new ways to keep the workouts fresh and fun.  When this book was offered up for review I jumped at the chance!

When SPC Anthony joined the Army at 18, he went in with high hopes and sterling ideals; coming from a family with a proud military background, Anthony expected to meet mentors, heroes and lifelong friends while earning money for college and becoming a man. What he discovered was a disenchanting web of mundane corruption and self-serving lies. Unlike accounts exposing the military’s most shameful iniquities, Anthony’s memoir focuses on an endless parade of petty offenses-the cowardice, drug addiction, thievery, adultery and rampant hypocrisy-he found while working in a base hospital. Relentlessly honest and reflective, Anthony’s record communicates perfectly the stranglehold of sadness, fear and disappointment that came with his lost innocence; just as worse is his eventual acceptance of the pointless, dysfunctional bureaucracy maintaining the status quo. Avoiding the intensity of the battlefield and the OR itself, Anthony’s frustrations resonate with the feelings of any young man learning about the nature of authority and his helplessness before it. Readers curious about the human side of the ongoing Iraqi conflict will be struck by Anthony’s strong voice, direct storytelling and stark honesty.

No – I am not a war buff, but I do like true stories and when I first heard about this book I knew I wanted to know more.

She’s Back, and edgier than ever. In her debut narrative, Drunk, Divorced, & Covered in Cat Hair, blogger extraordinaire Laurie Perry, aka ‘Crazy Aunt Purl,’ gave women everywhere a hilarious yet heartfelt glimpse into her misadventures as a recent divorcee with a herd of cats, a slight wine and Cheetos problem, and scores of unfinished and uneven knitting projects.

Now, in her second installment, she’s no longer drunk-dialing her ex. She is well on her way to divorce recovery and has embraced a new-found philosophy: To make the best out of the ‘extra odd bits’—both in knitting and in life. Discovering how she accomplishes this will make you laugh and cry as she navigates new territory, from dating in a weird, wired world to vacationing solo for the first time. On the cusp of the big four-O, she ventures to the most exotic, foreign locations—the gym, a therapist’s office, a self-tanning emporium— on a search for enlightenment and happiness in— where else?—downtown Los Angeles.

As usual… my reading pallet takes me all over the board and this review looked a little to funny to pass up.  I think what really caught my eyes is that this book includes 12 knitting recipes.  I know…. I don’t knit… but I am curious anyway!  🙂


Readers are in for a delightful romp with this award-winning debut from a British author who dances in the footsteps of P.L. Travers and Roald Dahl. As the story opens, mysterious goings-on ruffle the self-satisfied suburban world of the Dursleys, culminating in a trio of strangers depositing the Dursleys’ infant nephew Harry in a basket on their doorstep. After 11 years of disregard and neglect at the hands of his aunt, uncle and their swinish son Dudley, Harry suddenly receives a visit from a giant named Hagrid, who informs Harry that his mother and father were a witch and a wizard, and that he is to attend Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry himself. Most surprising of all, Harry is a legend in the witch world for having survived an attack by the evil sorcerer Voldemort, who killed his parents and left Harry with a lightning-shaped scar on his forehead. And so the fun begins, with Harry going off to boarding school like a typical English kid?only his supplies include a message-carrying owl and a magic wand. There is enchantment, suspense and danger galore (as well as enough creepy creatures to satisfy the most bogeymen-loving readers, and even a magical game of soccer like Quidditch to entertain sports fans) as Harry and his friends Ron and Hermione plumb the secrets of the forbidden third floor at Hogwarts to battle evil and unravel the mystery behind Harry’s scar. Rowling leaves the door wide open for a sequel; bedazzled readers will surely clamor for one.

I have recently been reading book one again and I have to say it is bringing me right back to the brilliance it once was.  It never grows old for me.  I love right from the start how J K Rowling is simply brilliant!  I heard through a conversation on Twitter that the audios of the books were fantastic so I set out to see for myself.  This one arrived this week, a used copy I purchased on line but see now I have goofed as it is in cassette and not DVD.  Oh well….  hopefully it is just as wonderful.


About three things I was absolutely certain. First, Edwart was most likely my soul mate, maybe. Second, there was a vampire part of him–which I assumed was wildly out of his control–that wanted me dead. And third, I unconditionally, irrevocably, impenetrably, heterogeneously, gynecologically, and disreputably wished he had kissed me.

I had never heard of this book prior to me opening it up as a gift from my son on Christmas.  The cover made me think it was another vampire like series hanging on to the coat tales of Twilight.  In a way, I was right…  when I turned the book over to read the back… I laughed out loud.  I am currently reading this and it is pretty fun.

There’s something achingly familiar about Daniel Grigori.

Mysterious and aloof, he captures Luce Price’s attention from the moment she sees him on her first day at the Sword & Cross boarding school in sultry Savannah, Georgia. He’s the one bright spot in a place where cell phones are forbidden, the other students are all screw-ups, and security cameras watch every move.

Even though Daniel wants nothing to do with Luce–and goes out of his way to make that very clear–she can’t let it go. Drawn to him like a moth to a flame, she has to find out what Daniel is so desperate to keep secret . . . even if it kills her.

This is a book I fell totally in love with from the reviews on line.  I think I first spotted it on Kristi’s Story Siren post… and then it snowballed from there.  This one also showed up under the tree for Christmas from my wonderful husband who sees first hand all the books I am surrounded by and yet has the heart to purchase me another!

“Empowering, motivating, and inspiring, The One-Day Way artfully weaves the story of Chantel Hobbs’s weight struggles and triumphs with practical strategies. Chantel shows readers how to change their thoughts and habits to move toward long-term, sustainable weight loss. The key messages–taking each day as it comes and turning negative, sabotaging thoughts into positive ones–are powerful.”

Yes, another book on healthy habits.  It is that time of year where many people take a good hard look at where they are at physically and decide to make a change.  For me, I made that change over a year ago and try to keep healthy habits in my path by surrounding myself with people who want to eat healthy and who challenge me to be the best I can be.

With startling transparency, Joshua Harris shares how we can rediscover the relevance and power of Christian truth. This is book shows a young man who rose quickly to success in the Christian evangelical world before he realized his spirituality lacked a foundation—it rested more on tradition and morality than on an informed knowledge of God.

For the indifferent or spiritually numb, Harris’s humorous and engaging reflections on Christian beliefs show that orthodoxy isn’t just for scholars—it is for anyone who longs to know the living Jesus Christ. As Harris writes, “I’ve come to learn that theology matters. It matters not because we want to impress people, but because what we know about God shapes the way we think and live. Theology matters because if we get it wrong then our whole life will be wrong.”

I have read Josh before and enjoyed his writing.  This is a book I am thrilled to review.

Set in 1907 Wisconsin, Goolrick’s fiction debut (after a memoir, The End of the World as We Know It) gets off to a slow, stylized start, but eventually generates some real suspense. When Catherine Land, who’s survived a traumatic early life by using her wits and sexuality as weapons, happens on a newspaper ad from a well-to-do businessman in need of a “reliable wife,” she invents a plan to benefit from his riches and his need. Her new husband, Ralph Truitt, discovers she’s deceived him the moment she arrives in his remote hometown. Driven by a complex mix of emotions and simple animal attraction, he marries her anyway. After the wedding, Catherine helps Ralph search for his estranged son and, despite growing misgivings, begins to poison him with small doses of arsenic.

Does this look super or what?  What a great story line and I love my cover much better than the one on Amazon!

. . dramatic, tender, funny, frightening, earthy, quirky, wise and heart-warming. The tale of young Christa and her family as they leave a comfortable home to become penniless immigrants in their quest to survive the collapse of the Third Reich and flee the horrors that it has unleashed, opens up to universal themes of suffering, loss, love and hope.

Another book I am anxious to read!

From Mayo Clinic, a leading authority on health and nutrition, comes The Mayo Clinic Diet, the last diet you’ll ever need.

Get a quick and gratifying start with Lose It!, the phase of the diet designed to help you lose up to six to ten pounds in just two weeks. Eat the foods you love – in moderation – in the Live It! phase, which is designed to help you continue to lose one to two pounds a week (and keep them off!).

This is exciting and my review copy came with the journal as well!  I am going to look this over this next week and see if I can implement some of the habits for the review.

Yes! It is a Barnes & Noble Gift Card!!!  I cant decide what it will be……

There it is!  That’s what was in my mailbox this week.  How about you?  Did fabulous reads come your way?  Be sure to connect over at Story Siren’s blog.  I would love to see what you got!