In My Mailbox

What an extremely super fab (yes I said super fab) week for the mailbox! A few long awaited treasures made their appearance this week.  I am so excited I have to share with you right now!  Right now!!  🙂

Thank you to Kristi at Story Siren for this wonderful weekly meme!

Books To Review

The Magicians Book by Laura Miller: Check out that cover!  This book is about Laura’s love hate relationship with the Chronicles of Narnia.  I am so pro Narnia and CS Lewis, I am curious to read what this is all about.  If you are curious too, I have copies of this book to giveaway – enter here!


Primal by Mark Batterson: LOVE Batterson!  I have read all of his books and this is one I have waited for anxiously as well.  Look for this tour here on December 15.


American Rust by Phillip Meyer: A novel on the restlessness of the Great Depression this books subject matter caught hold of my heart and hasn’t let go.  A beautiful hard cover too!


Thirsty by Tracey Bateman: I have read the reviews of this book and I am found so curious I can hardly stand it!  A vampire style book written by a Christian author…. cant wait to sink my teeth into it!  😉


The Wonderful Demise of Benjamin Arnold Guppy by Gina Collia-Suzuki: When Gina (the author) approached me to read her book I was unsure what this was about.  However reading the brief bit on line I had to say yes so I could know about Benjamin and his wonderful demise.

A Blue and Gray Christmas by Joan Medlicott: YAY!  A Christmas read thanks to Pocket books!


Conflicts With Interest by Michael Ruddy: Its a little about gambling… a little about business… a little about lawsuits… and a lot about mystery.  Why oh why do I always seem to be hungry for a mystery?  I don’t know but I am eager to see if this book can satisfy that hunger.


Collision of Evil by John LeBeau: Another fabulous looking mystery that leaves me with visions of conspiracy just by reading the jacket cover!


Books I won

Saffron Dreams by Shaila Abdullah: Can you hear me squeal with excitement?  This book has been on my wish list and then I won it!!!  It came directly from the author and it is signed!


Always My Brother by Jean Reagan: Natasha at Maw Books reviewed this lovely book and interviewed author Jean Reagan.  There was a contest to win a signed copy of this book and I was one of the winners.  I am so excited to review this book and then I am going to donate it to my grade school here in Brainerd, Harrison Elementary.

7th Heaven by James Patterson: Oh yes – I am so into Patterson these days!  I won this one and will get tothis after the holidays….


Book Purchases

The Lost Symbol by Dan Brown: I had to do some on line shopping this week and purchased this one off my wish list as a little treat to myself!  I loved Davinchi Code and Angels and Demons and can not wait to read this one!


Home For The Holidays by Rebecca Kelly: This is my December book club read AND it will fit nicely into the holiday reading challenge.  🙂


Read, Remember, Recommend: This is for our Christmas book club Christmas gift exchange we will do this coming Tuesday.  I found this at Amazon and I LOVE it.  Pages of book suggestions, places for notes, books you want lists and books you have loaned.  In fact I think I need one for myself!


Climbing The Stairs: This one is on my wish list but it is not for me but sent off how the holiday gift exchange as it was on their wish list too!


Shelf Discovery: Is for the other Christmas exchange I signed up for and this book is on its way to its new home as well.


Holiday Swap Gift!

And last but not least – this week I received The Forgotten Garden by Kate Morton!  This was sent to me by Helen of Helen’s Book Blog.  She was my secret swap aprtner and I love the gift!!!!  Love it!


Be sure to stop in at the Story Siren blog and share what you got in your mailbox this week!

Gilmore Girls Reading Challenge

If you are ever in a radio contest and you have a chance to win big bucks if you can answer the question, “What is Sheila’s all time favorite tv series”?  You will win the bucks if you answer Gilmore Girls.  I am a total Gilmore Girl addict….. to the point that:

  1. I own all seven seasons and have watched them at least three times all the way through
  2. I have often wished like Loreli that I could run a bed and Breakfast
  3. Have paused the DVD’s to look closely at the screen to see what book Rory is reading
  4. Would pack up tomorrow if I could live in Stars Hollow

Ok…. so now you know.  Gilmore Girls is my comfort show…. it plays this time of year in the background on evening that I am downstairs curled up with a blanket and my lap top…. I root for Dean…. I get angry at Jess….

ANYWAY… when I seen that Lisa from Lit and Life was hosting a Gilmore Girl Reading Challenge…. lets just say that being lab partners with Paris for three years would not have kept me from joining.  🙂

Before you think that you could not do this challenge know that the list of options (all nicely displayed at the Gilmore Girl Reading Challenge blog) are in all categories and are books you know and if you have not read – there are many you should.  You can enter the challenge at different levels….

Emily: Read 5 books from at least two different categories.
Lorelai: Read 10 books from at least three different categories.
Rory: Read 20 books from at least four different categories.

I personally am going to go for the Rory!  With choices from childrens to YA reads, to classics, to modern fiction…. these are the books we read anyway!  Go check out the post and join…. it would be great to share reviews with you!

1. Harry Potter and The Sorcerer’s Stone by JK Rowling (Children/YA Category)

2.  To Kill A Mockingbird by Harper Lee

3.  The Bell Jar by Sylvia Plath

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Curse of the Tahiera by Wendy Gillissen

A fictional fantasy  where the past becomes part of the adventure!  ~  Sheila

journey through haunted forests, through dreams and time.
A story of love, magic and the power of forgiveness.
A Tzanatzi outcast and an Einache shaman are on the trail of an ancient curse.
Will they save their people from destruction?


In My Opinion:

I like a good fantasy adventure.  Following Rom and Yldich through the pages of this book looking for an ancient curse was a wild adventure that I slowly picked up on the rhythm of the book.  Sometimes language can throw me off and words such as erstwae and Daydach proved to be stumbling blocks for me and in the beginning of the book I had a hard time with these words.  Thank goodness author Wendy Gillissen put the definitions (any many more words like them) in the back of the book for reference!

As our two characters travel North together there are a series of dreams that deeply trouble Rom and cause quite a plot for this read.  I found it interesting how Wendy wove a deeper meaning into these dreams and how a troubled past can truly effect your present if not dealt with.  For what I would call a YA read, this book was a bit deeper than I had anticipated.


About the Author:

The urge to write and her love for the world of castles, elves and ghosts stem from the time she was five years old and her parents first took her to the ancient hills of England, Scotland and Wales.

Inspired by a journey to the Greek island of Kefalonia in 2005, Wendy began writing ‘Curse of the Tahiéra’.

I received my copy for review from the author, Wendy Gillissen

Morning Meanderings…

This is my favorite day of the week.  Rarely on a Saturday morning do I have a pressing commitment so I am allowed a bit of luxury time in a quiet house with Coffee Cup and Lap Top…. tiptoeing through the blogesphere and seeing what everyone else is doing this morning.  This is also my favorite time of the day.  Pre – rush.  Sure the day will soon hold for me a workout session, returning to the ugly sweater search (see yesterdays post), a little bit of Christmas shopping as I haven’t even started yet, picking up my meatballs for making my appetizer for tonight’s party, and maybe a quick trip to J C Penneys as I am in that rare mood where I want to shop.

This morning while drinking Cameron’s Holiday Charm Peppermint Stick coffee (had to try it – it sounded so festive!) I found a couple points of interest at blogs I like to visit.

Jennifer over at Rundpinne has a wonderful post up about a book called Pearl Girls, encountering grit, encountering grace.  The cover is super fabulous and it is written by 60 authors telling short stories!  Anyway – stop over and see Jennifer, say hi, and take a look at this review.  All proceeds of the books are going to two charities and that is really a wonderful thing!

AND

For the YA lover in me (addict is probably not too harsh a word…) I found a book that has my attention over at Between The Pages.  The book is called Just Breeze and the girl on the cover with the fabulous long red hair really caught my attention.  The storyline did as well.  This is another spot I encourage you to stop over and check out.  Between The Pages blog header is fantastic so be sure to take a look at that as well.

So on that note…  I am off to prep my review for later today…. and would like to leave you now with the song that will not leave my head. Sorry – but I think this is fitting.  🙂  Have a great day everyone!

The Readers Choice by Victoria Golden McMains

I have always loved books and books!  ~ Sheila

Here are two hundred reader-tested answers to the question “What have you read that’s good?”  The Readers’ Choice is the first book to feature titles based on the recommendations of numerous book clubs.  Victoria McMains has collected two hundred favorites of more than seventy reading groups nationwide, ideal for book group members looking for a “good read,” busy people seeking enjoyable books outside the bestseller lists, or anyone who wants to read more but isn’t sure where to start.

Combining her skills as a book reveiwer and a veteran book group member, McMains provides brief, captivating profiles of a diverse mix of fiction and nonfiction.  There are love stories and war stories, fantasy and political intrigue, biography and nature-and much more.  Each profile highlights the unique traits of the book and ends with a few questions for group favorites as well as little-known gems that have been discovered and treasured.  Indexes organize the entries by title and subject matter, helping readers find books that appeal to their interest. For anyone wanting to learn the easy essentials of starting a book club, check out McMains’s introduction.


In My Opinion:

In my reading room I have one shelf dedicated to books such as this one.  They are books that recommend must reads before I die, book club companions, how to organize and run a successful book discussion…. the titles go on and on.  I am thrilled to add this one to that shelf.  The Readers’ Choice is 200 Book Club Favorites that have been the top picks from more than 70 reading groups nationwide.

I couldn’t wait to pop my head into this one and see what other groups are reading and recommending!

It opens to information on how to start a bookclub answering questions as to how often to meet, how big, will you serve food, how will you choose books…  All of this I love to read as even though my group has been meeting wince August of 2001, I am always interested in ways to tweek our discussions so we can get more out of them, with 18 active members now in our group – that tweeking becomes more important.

Here are a few of the book suggestions that were made:

Tuesdays With Morrie by Mitch Albom(I have to agree, while I didnt read this with my book club, I can see where it would be a greta one to discuss with a group!)


The Robber Bride by Margaret Atwood (this sounds good and uhhhh….. AWKWARD….  I havent read anything by this author yet!)


Talk Before Sleep by Elizabeth Berg (I have read Berg but not this particular book)


The Diary of Mattie Spencer by Sandra Dallas (Interesting… I have read this book and several others by this author and while I enjoy the reads, I would not have thought of this to be a top book club pick – it must be that this book reads like a fictional diary and the voice of our main character Mattie is done in a way that makes you want to believe it is non fiction…. )


Cold Mountain by Charles Frazier (On my shelf… still unread.  A book about a soldier who decides to leave his hospital bed and walk home even as the war rages on…. )


Cleopatra’s Sister by Penelope Lively (Hmmm… I have read Cleopatra’s Dughter….  In The Readers’ Choice this recommendation comes with a warning that it is easy to become a Penelope Lively addict… her book Heat Wave is also in this list of top book club reads)


The English Patient by Michale Ondaatje (would you believe I have not read the book or seen the movie?)


The Reader by Bernhard Schlink (Translated from German this is another one sitting on my shelf waiting on….me)


The Ginger Tree by Oswald Wynd (Oh!  Yet another I have not read nor do I own…)


What I have put here in this review is only a tiny sampling of the recommended book club reads.  While I have read probably a little more than a handful of the titles offered, sadly none of them were with my book club.  As our group is so big we tend to stick to newer releases (unless it is classic month) so we are able to find enough copies for everyone without anyone having to work hard to find the book or pay a lot of money.

I really enjoyed this book and would recommend it as a gift to the reader in your life.  As I read the book descriptions of the ones I was not too familiar with I was finding I wanted to read them, if not with my group then at least for me.

About The Author:

Combining her skills as a book reviewer and a veteran book group member, McMains provides brief, captivating profiles of a diverse mix of fiction and nonfiction. Since 1997, Victoria Golden McMains has chaired the Bay Area Book Reviewers Association (BABRA). Her popoular “Book Club Favorites” column is published monthly in the Press Democrat, the New York Times–owned daily newspaper serving northern California. Several of her short stories have been publihsed in literary magazines. She lives with her family in Healdsburg, California.

My Amazon Review

I received my review copy of this books from Harper Collins

Morning Meanderings…

Second cup of coffee this morning and trying to get functional enough to take the dogs down the road to where they get their hair cut.  The snow is falling lightly outside and there is now a light dusting covering my world.  While I am not excited about the snow, I know it is inevitable and I am thankful that it took this long to start falling as we will be in snow mode now until around April.

I am a little melancholy this morning and I think it is due to the fact that next weekend we see  our oldest son off to boot camp in the Navy.  A bitter sweet moment.  On one hand I am excited for him as he is moving forward and doing something positive with his life.  On the other hand… I am his mom, and he will be leaving two days before his 22nd birthday and this will be our first Christmas without him.

Ok – on a lighter note (MUCH LIGHTER) I have to go and find sweaters today for Al and I for the annual Ugly Sweater party we are invited to annually at our friends home.  Nothing like a good ugly sweater to cheer you up…LOL

Here is last years picture of Al and I…

I felt like a character in a Dr Suess book….. 😉

The Smart One And The Pretty One by Claire Lazebnik

Just the right read to relax into over a weekend… ~ Sheila

When Ava Nickerson was a child, her mother jokingly betrothed her to a friend’s son, and the contract the parents made has stayed safely buried for years. Now that still-single Ava is closing in on thirty, no one even remembers she was once “engaged” to the Markowitz boy. But when their mother is diagnosed with cancer, Ava’s prodigal little sister Lauren comes home to Los Angeles where she stumbles across the decades-old document.
Frustrated and embarrassed by Ava’s constant lectures about financial responsibility (all because she’s in a little debt. Okay, a lot of debt), Lauren decides to do some sisterly interfering of her own and tracks down her sister’s childhood fiancé. When she finds him, the highly inappropriate, twice-divorced, but incredibly charming Russell Markowitz is all too happy to re-enter the Nickerson sisters’ lives, and always-accountable Ava is forced to consider just how binding a contract really is . . .

In My Opinion:

A light read about two sisters that really did keep me turning the pages.  I enjoyed the sister relationship between Ava and Lauren and found I could relate to each of them in different ways.  While the book is clearly chick lit and the topics are somewhat serious in parts (a mother battling cancer) there were also relationships brewing for each of the sisters.

While Ava was too high strung and work focused we have Lauren who is too fun focused.  Ava’s issues are she takes no personal pride in her appearance and feels as long as she is clean, that is good – where Lauren puts too much into her appearance.  You can probably see where I am going here….

While the book had no wonderful message in it or even really a deep plot… it was enough to keep turning the pages and wanting to know how it was all going to come together.

About Claire:

She grew up in Newton, Massachusetts, went to Harvard and moved to LA. (Her name was Claire Scovell for a large part of all that.) She lives in the Pacific Palisades with her husband Rob (who writes for “The Simpsons”), her four kids (Max, Johnny, Annie and Will) and too many pets to keep track of.


I received my review copy from Hachette Book Group

Reading Group Guide

The Last Day by James Landis

A fictional faith journey that I was glad to be a part of… ~  Sheila

I meet Jesus on the day I get home from the war. I’m on the beach, but I don’t know how I got here. My mind is as dark as the night. . . . I spend the whole night on the beach. But when the sun’s faint light begins to bend around the Earth, I see him. . . . There, coming toward me, out of the light, is a man. . . . Behind the man a faint curtain of light rises to the sky out of the ocean. He wears the light like a robe, though I see he’s dressed like me. Jeans and a T-shirt, no shoes. And that he’s older than I am, a lot older, maybe mid-thirties. He walks right toward me. He walks right into my eyes.

So begins the spellbinding story of Warren Harlan Pease, a young U.S. Army sniper freshly returned from the Iraq War to his native New Hampshire. What follows is a page-turning adventure that is also a powerful meditation on religion and war, love and loss.

The Last Day answers questions and asks many more. Armed with a sniper’s rifle and his deeply held faith, Specialist Pease travels across ideological borders and earns an appreciation for his enemy’s culture and for what connects us all as human beings. “War doesn’t test your faith in Jesus,” Warren comes to realize. “It tests your faith in yourself.” Upon returning home, he spends an entire day with Jesus visiting and contemplating his own life with fresh eyes, and a willing heart. He examines his relationship to those he loves, and grapples with the pain he has been carrying inside since the death of his mother when he was just a boy.

In My Opinion:

Iraq war (or any war really) would not hit my favorite topics in any format, especially in reading.  However, I dipped a cautious eye into this novel and found myself reading it as a memoir.  And it is not a memoir, but a character, not a real person, but Warren Harlan Pease.  And…. I find out …. I like Warren.

I enjoyed the banter back and forth between Warren and Jesus.  The book mainly swirls around the theme of faith and takes us from Warrens life as a young child to his relationships with parents and into the war.  I had moments of tears and moments of laughter as I read.  In some parts of the book the war topic goes over my head but the basic message of the book was interesting and I found the book overall a good read.

I received my ARC from LibraryThing

Morning Meanderings…

Morning all.  I think it is quite possible I am….blogless…. postless?  Speechless?  I am just here this morning with Coffee Cup and really nothing witty or not so witty to say.

The movie we went to last night?  Couples Retreat?  yeah…. not so good.  However the company of my two friends Suzette and Karol made it laugh out loud funny where I constantly had to keep asking, “are we sure this is PG13”?  Seriously frightened me a bit about what they consider acceptable in a movie of that rating.  And yes, Suzette laughed at me and said I must be getting old….  GAH!  (All three of us are the same age).

I really want to see Blindside!  How about you any movies coming up that are “a must see“?  I obviously need the recommendations.  😉

the possibility of everything by Hope Elderman


In the autumn of 2000, Hope Edelman was a woman adrift, questioning her marriage, her profession, and her place in the larger world. Feeling vulnerable and isolated, she was primed for change. Into her stagnant routine dropped Dodo, her three-year-old daughter Maya’s curiously disruptive imaginary friend. Confused and worried about how to handle Dodo’s apparent hold on their daughter, Edelman and her husband made the unlikely choice to take her to Maya healers in Belize, hoping that a shaman might help them banish Dodo—and, as they came to understand, all he represented—from their lives.

An account of how an otherwise mainstream mother and wife finds herself making an extremely unorthodox choice, The Possibility of Everything chronicles the magical week in Central America that transformed Edelman from a person whose past had led her to believe only in the visible and the “proven” to someone open to the idea of larger, unseen forces. This deeply affecting, beautifully written memoir of a family’s emotional journey explores what Edelman and her husband went looking for in the jungle and what they ultimately discovered—as parents, as spouses, and as ordinary people—about the things that possess and destroy, or that can heal us all.

In My Opinion:

Hope describes herself as a “I have to see it to believe it” type of person.  She begins her memoir without having faith in anything  other than the possibility of everything – but not without visual proof.  My belief system is so much in contrast to Hope’s that I hungered to see her know there is more.

Getting deeper into the book, while I enjoyed Hope’s writing style I just had a hard time getting fully into the book.  I tried to place myself in her shoes…. doing whatever I could for my child no matter what.  I  of course would…. yet the direction they go still surprises me.  There are points of this book where I simply have a hard time relating to the authors thoughts.

While Hope Elderman has a way with words,  parts of this book seems to drag out the details and I found myself passing over pages quickly to find the heart of the memoir.   I did enjoy the details about Belize but by the time I finished the book I was still not in agreement with the actions this family took for their daughter.

I have read some wonderful reviews on this book so be sure to check out other opinions.

About The Author:

Most of the year I live outside of Los Angeles with my husband, two daughters, and a growing menagerie of beloved pets. You can also find me every July in Iowa City, where I teach in the summer writing festival and never miss the Johnson County Fair. I’m a New Yorker by birth, a Californian by circumstance, but a Midwesterner at heart.

Here are the rest of the tour stops – be sure to check them out!

Thursday, Dec. 3
Book reviewed & giveaway at Luxury Reading

Friday, Dec. 4
Book reviewed at Readaholic
Guest blogging at As the Pages Turn

Monday, Dec. 7
Interviewed at Blogcritics
Book reviewed at My Reading Room

Tuesday, Dec. 8
Interviewed at The Hot Author Report
Book reviewed at The Life of an Inanimate Flying Object

Wednesday, Dec. 9
Reviewed at Review From Here
Reviewed at Rundpinne

Thursday, Dec. 10
Guest blogging at Blogging Authors
Guest blogging at Carol’s Notebook

Friday, Dec. 11
Book reviewed at A Sea of Books

Monday, Dec. 14
Interview l Chat l Book Giveaway at Pump Up Your Book!

Tuesday, Dec. 15
Book reviewed at Brizmus Blogs Books
Book reviewed and guest blogging at My Book Views

Wednesday, Dec. 16
Book reviewed at Buuklvr81


I received my review copy of this book from Pump Up Your Book Promotion