Summerhouse – Take Ten (TEN???)

One of my all time favorite reads is Summerhouse by Jude Deveroux.  I just adore the writing, the images that come to mind as I read about this incredible house – but even more than the house – much more than the house, it is about friendships and second chances. The title speaks to me.

Earlier this week I seen a great feature by Kay at The Infinite Shelf about different books with the same title.   I found that fascinating.  Tonight I decided to try that with Summerhouse and I am amazed at what I found!  Here are the books called Summerhouse that I found in a quick search:

Summer 1My Fav…. so we shall call this Summerhouse #1:

Synopsis: Three best friends, all turning forty, celebrate at a summerhouse in Maine — and take stock of their lives, loves, and choices. A mysterious “Madame Zoya” now arrives, offering them a chance to relive any three weeks from the past.

summer-house 2summerhouse 10This is Summerhouse #2….this one I have seen everywhere on book blogs.  New release, summerhouse 11looks good.  And check it out!  Three great covers!

Synopsis:  After years of wandering from whim to whim, thirty-year-old Charlotte Wheelwright seems to have at last found her niche. The free spirit enjoys running an organic gardening business on the island of Nantucket, thanks in large part to her spry grandmother Nona, who donated a portion of land on the family’s seaside compound to get Charlotte started. Though Charlotte’s skill with plants is bringing her success, cultivating something deeper with people–particularly her handsome neighbor Coop–might be more of a challenge.

sUMMER HOUSE 5This one, #3… was released to the US in 1997

Synopsis:  When successful industrialist Alfred Dunstan arrives in the Lake District to build his family a mansion, it seems to fifteen-year-old Chrissie Ascham that something new, exciting, and more than a little unnerving has entered her life. For nothing in her carefully governed childhood – not even an amateur botanist mother or an abstracted Renaissance-obsessed father – has prepared her for the sheer raw energy of the Dunstans. Before long, she has been drawn into a world dominated by Alfred’s tyranny and his implacable war with his son, Jack – not to mention his daughter Beatrice’s passionate lust for the good things in life and the childlike gentleness of his neglected and beautiful wife, Letty. A trip to view the cultural glories of Venice turns into a sensual awakening – not only for unworldly, reflective Chrissie, but for Letty Dunstan also – setting off a spiraling sequence of passion, tragedy, and betrayal involving wartime treachery, slow and seductive blackmail, and thirty of the world’s most fabulous pearls…during the last sultry, unheeding summer before the outbreak of the Great War.

summerhouse 6Summer House #4…. this one looks good

Synopsis:  She made a life with one man—but always loved another at…The Summer House.

Jean Stone captured readers’ imaginations with the “graceful prose, vivid imagery and compassionately drawn characters” (Publishers Weekly) of novels like Tides of the Heart and Places by the Sea. Now, in her latest novel, she reveals the public scandals of a family destined for political greatness—and the private secrets of a woman who traded her childhood dreams for a role she was born to play….

summerhouse 7Summerhouse #5… what a cute looking book!

Synopsis:  When Grandma laughs, everybody laughs! Everyone, that is, except Ella. She’s a very serious girl. Until the day when Grandma says to her, “You have to find some sunshine inside yourself–even when it’s winter”. And she gives her granddaughter the key to the summerhouse–a world of warmth and sunshine. Full color.

summerhouse 8Summerhouse #6…. I love this cover!

Synopsis:  1918. Young Lady Helen Barstairs, the dutiful daughter of Lord Hardingham, believes everything her mother and father tell her. So when her parents say she will never find a better husband than Richard – ‘brave, handsome, wealthy, such a charming man and quite a catch’ – she believes them, and agrees to marry him before his return to the Front. Helen hopes the letters they exchange will allow them to get to know one another but over time, Richard’s correspondence becomes increasingly cold and distant, and Helen begins to wonder just who this man she has married really is. And that’s when Oliver Donovan enters her life.Helen knew embarking on an affair was not a wise decision but, for the first time in her life, Helen knew what it felt like to be in love. With the war continuing on foreign shores, Oliver had to return to his regiment – and was never seen again. Learning she is with child, Helen confesses all to her shocked parents, who force her to give up her baby. She vows to find her child again one day. Over twenty years pass and it seems history is about to repeat itself; a new war has begun, and another young woman is about to lose her heart to a serviceman – Can lessons of the past save the heartache of a new generation?

summerhouse 9Summerhouse #7:  This one is in Ukraine… hmmm… I have friends who are in Ukraine right now….

Synopsis:  Rose Fell’s friends think she’s taking a big risk when she leaves the security of home and career to move to the beautiful but isolated village of Grosso, near Genoa. But after a year of emotional turmoil Rose no longer has any ties back home, and she relishes the challenges of a new start.Making a home, however, in the ravishing, haunted landscape of Italy’s Riviera coast turns out to be lonelier than Rose had anticipated.

summerhouse 12Summerhouse #8:  I just dont like the cover on this one

Synopsis:  Helen is persuaded to take a fellow actress home with her to the sprawling, crumbling summer house in Scotland where her ailing father lives in self-imposed isolation. Will Ruth, this new-found friend, be the answer to Helen’s problems….?

Summerhouse 13#9 Ok…. this one is really Summer’s House so not an exact match….

Synopsis:  In Eric Gabriel Lehman’s luminous and compelling novel, Summer’s House, three characters who each inhabit a very different aspect of New York City each find themselves searching for a place where they truly belong. Raymond, an overly cerebral seventeen-year-old, has decided it’s time for him to fall in love yet struggles with his own desires. Jerome is an unrecognized poet obsessed with the woman who threw him out when he uncovered her past. Raymond’s Uncle Lester, an uncomfortable suburbanite, is tormented by his failing business and his wife’s obscene caller. One hot summer in the 1970’s, their lives intersect, collide, pull apart and irreversibly change.

summer house 13#10 I dont think I would like this one…. but it is part of the Summerhouse set

Synopsis:  Margaret and Syl are getting married. Alas for Margaret, who views her impending union with the odious Syl in the same way a ship must view a shipwreck. Alas for Mrs. Monro, Syl’s mother, who harbors severe doubts about the entire male gender–not least of all her son. Alas for Lili, the high-spirited temptress who is willing to do anything to prevent this disastrous misalliance, even if that means sacrificing herself.

Ok so this whole post was pretty random.  I thought it would be fun to look at all the different Summer House books.  It is amazing how many share the same title.

Do you know any books out there that share the same title?

Which of these Summerhouse books would you like to read and why?

*Note – I am out of town this weekend until Saturday evening.  I will respond to all comments when I return and visit blogs on Sunday!  Thanks for visiting!  Come again soon!


Bookies Reads

Bookies recommended memeAt our last Bookies meeting, we chose our August Book Club Read as well as our classic read for October. We always read a classic every October and choose the book in July to give people time to:

1. Find it in the format they like
2. Get through the book

Our choices are:

The Wednesday Sisters by Meg Waite Clayton for August (I have already read this and reviewed it)

and

A Tree Grows in Brooklyn by Betty Smith as our classic read for October

Winner of This Weeks Freebie Friday: The Wedding Nicholas Sparks

I am heading out of town in about an hour here so as I had announced last week, I would be posting weddingthis Freebie Friday winner a day early.

Our winner for this weeks giveaway (using random.org) is:

(drumroll please…)

Julie H

her response to the question of what they consider to be the best wedding gift was:

One of our best wedding gifts has wound up being something we use the most, sets of our towels! A lot of people don’t think they’re special enough to give, but we use them everyday!


Thanks everyone as always for playing!  I do not have time to post another Freebie Friday this week however this feature will be back next week!

Note that although I will be gone the next couple of days… posts have been written and will be posted here so keep coming back and seeing what is new!  Have a super awesome weekend!!!

BBAW: Book Blogger Appreciation Week Sept. 14 -18

This post will stay at the top of my blog for the duration of the nominating period.  New stuff from me BBAW favis all below!  😉

To the right of my blog here you will see the BBAW link to vote for your favorite blogs.  My suggestion would be to print out the list of categories so as you travel the blogesphere you can write your choices down then go back and plug them into the form.   August 15 is the deadline for nominations.  Have fun!

Morning Meandering..

a big improvement

I was hoping to have a review ready to go this morning…. but man I was tired last night.  I hope to get it up before I leave this afternoon for my girls weekend at our cabin.  I am excited for the chance to get away with the girls and catch up!


This morning I wondered into a great little spot called Book Nook Club.  While I was enjoying reading several of their posts, there was one that got me thinking.  They have a great post on The First Born Series by Karen Kingsbury.

What got me thinking was that I have had two of her books on my book shelf for years.  One Tuesday Morning and Beyond Tuesday Morning.  A friend recommended them and I being the bookie that I am, purchased them…. and … uh… shelved them.  A couple weeks ago I loaned them to a friend who asked if I had any Kingsbury.  I did.  They are brand new.

The post at Book Nook Club made me wonder if any of you have authors out there that you know are good… you may even have their book(s) but for one reason or another have just never made it to those books.

I know these books will be good.  Just this morning while looking them up I discovered there is a third to this series, Every Now and Then.

So two questions really….

1)  Is there an author out there that you have wanted to read but as of yet… have not?

2) Who has read Kingsbury?  I know she has a lot of books out there.

I plan to post a review later today before I leave.  I have posts scheduled for the weekend so please keep stopping back… there will be something new every day!  :)

Morning Meanderings…

bookjourney

I was up extremely early…. I even beat Coffee Cup today... the automatic brew didn’t kick in until an hour after I was awake.  So caffeine free this morning (How unusual!) I found a great read at Virginie Says called The Sidewalk Artist by Gina Buonaguro and Janice Kirk.

I quote Virginie,

Sidewalk artistI think, at one time or another, every girl has wished they could be in Tulia Rose’s shoes and travel to Paris and Italy alone, meet a handsome artist and fall in love (and if the truth be told, I fell in love with Raffaello, too).

This blog site gives a sense of peace to it.  it was a great place to wonder into early this morning….  Take a moment and stop on over to Virginie Says and see this beautiful book and review.

Have a wonderful day!  If you were not here yesterday, be sure to see yesterday’s Morning Meaderings as I posted a wonderful giveaway and a few great reads as well!

Blast from the Past: Three Sisters Trilogy: Dance Upon The Air, Heaven and Earth, Face The Fire by Nora Roberts

I am in the mood to review this morning and as I sit in the reading room I have a direct line to my book shelf that holds my all time favorites.  Before I blogged, I used to journal everything I read.  I have years worth of notes in three ring binders.  Eventually I hope to transfer them here…. ~ Sheila

Dance Upon The Air by Nora Roberts:

Leaving you spellbound every step of the way, bestselling author Nora Roberts takes you to Three Sisters dance upon the airIsland, where a fabled lighthouse beckons three young women to seek their true destinies.

Meet Mia, Nell and Ripley, all witches, and the enchanting descendants of the island’s founding trio. Nell has just found a new love with Zack Todd; but she’s haunted by her abusive husband, Evan, the man she fled from eight months ago. With the help of her “charmed” confidantes, Mia and Ripley, will Nell be able to stop Evan from destroying the happiness she’s finally found?


My thoughts:  This book will always hold a special place in my heart.  It is the book that started The Bookies Book Club in August 2001.  At the time I had not branched out into a lot of new authors (thus the book club) and so Nora seemed safe for a start.  I have to tell you, this is not your typical Nora Roberts book.  The story line is fantastic!  I love our three characters – Nell, Ripley, and Mia.  This book is about Nell and the abusive husband she finds a way to leave… at least she believes she has.  Nell escapes to the Three Sisters Island where whe meets the strong willed Ripley who works at the ploice station and the magnificent Mia who owns the local book store and coffee shop.

These three together have a bond that Nell knows nothing about, Ripley denies with a vengence,and Mia feels to her core that they are the three sisters of the island.

Heaven and Earth by Nora Roberts (book 2)

heaven earthRipley Todd just wants to live a quiet, peaceful kind of life. Her job as a sheriff’s deputy keeps her busy and happy, and she has no trouble finding men when she wants them-which, lately, isn’t all that often. She’s perfectly content, except for one thing: she has special powers that both frighten and confuse her-and though she tries hard to hide them, she can’t get them under control….

Distraction soon arrives in the handsome form of MacAllister Booke-a researcher who’s come to investigate the rumors of witchcraft that haunt Three Sisters Island. Right from the start, he knows there’s something extraordinary about Ripley Todd. It’s not just her blazing green eyes and her sultry smile. There’s something else. Something he can detect, but she’ll never admit. Fascinated by her struggle with her amazing abilities, he becomes determined to help her accept who she is-and find the courage to open her heart.

But before Ripley and Mac can dream of what lies in the future, they must confront the pain of the past. For Three Sisters shelters centuries of secrets-and a legacy of danger that plagues them still….

My Thoughts:  This book is centered around Riley.  I love how Nora Roberts trilogys take one character for each book and focuses on them.  Riley is strong and independent and hates the heritage of the abilities she caries within her.  She fights it and ignores it all all times.  I like that too as Nell comes to the island not knowing she is anything special, and Mia embraces the powers.  While Ripley is my least favorite of the three , I have to admire her strength and love her in dependency.


Face The Fire by Nora Roberts (book 3)

After being abandoned by her lover 12 years before, white witch Mia Devlin has developed a face the firecharming bookstore and cafe, a spectacular garden and a close circle of friends, all of whom share her involvement in the Craft. Only an age-old curse mars Mia’s idyllic existence and threatens the future of the island itself. Then her former flame, Sam Logan himself a witch returns to the island, determined to win Mia back.

My thoughts:  This description of the third book does not do it justice.  In this book, centered around Mia, the three women must battle together to not only save the Island, but their very lives.  As Nora Roberts takes this final installment and skillfully wraps it all into a masterpiece I found myself not wanting it to end.

I wondered if it was possible to want these women as friends or if I had just had my nose buried in a book too long?  I would love to own a coffee shop like Mia on a great little island that brings in tourists in the summer but is quiet inthe winter.  I have actually considered through the years dropping an email to Nora asking her to bring them back.  They were young… there is more that could be told…

If you have not had the opportunity – I highly recommend these books.  If you are not a Nora Roberts fan, let it be known, I really am not either.  These books however are not her usual writing style and I think you may be surprised on what you find.

If you have read these, please share your thoughts.  If you have not and decide too, come back and let me know what you thought.  I stand by this one – these are great summer reads.

These books are from my personal library, I have had them for years

My rating for these books is PG

Morning Meandering

a big improvementIt is a rainy day here.  I wish all I had to do today is curl up with a blanket in a big comfy chair with a book.  That is not the case though…. I am due in the office in about 22 minutes but I have to get this find out of my head and onto the page…

Coffee Cup and I were strolling through the blogs this morning…. looking for that one book or review that would make me stop in mid space (literally).  And….

It happened.

It started at Boarding in my Forties when I found the review on Wednesday Sisters by Meg Waite Clayton.  I read this book and reviewed it recently and loved it!  (My review here) and my book club, The Bookies, are currently reading it for our August review.  What I found at Boarding in my Forties, was within the review she mentions another book, The Girls From Ames by Jeffrey Zaslow.  What is this?  It sounds wonderful!!!  Off I go in another direction, careful not to spill my coffee…

From The New York Times, I found an article called The Power of Friendship, about this book and a quote from the amesauthor,

“I’ll drive carpool with my 13-year-old, and I’ll listen to the kids in the back seat,” Mr. Zaslow says. “They’re arguing and laughing and talking and gossiping. It feels like all those interviews with the Ames girls, and I know where they’re going and how they’re going to get there. I know a few secrets now. When I see my daughters struggling with friends, I can reassure them thgirls from amesat the conflicts can be resolved. If you find friends you can hold onto forever, that’s a great gift.”

My final travels took me to a blog called Every Day I Write The Book, where they are talking about this book.

So that’s it.  Decided.  I am on a mission.  Today I am picking up Pope Joan as well as this book, Girls From Ames at our local book store.

Has anyone read Girls From Ames and reviewed it?


redcarpetPope Joan

Update to this post:  I had first hear about this from Natasha at Maw Books Blog and earlier today Mike from A Few Minutes with Michael sent the link to the amazing Pope Joan contest going on!  Mail your receipt of this book by August 9, to the address provided and you can win tickets for two to walk the red carpet and go to the premiere of this movie with the author, Donna Woolfork Cross!

Click on the logo above to go to the website and check it out for yourself!

How exciting is that???

Jantsens Gift by Pam Cope – Giveaway!

Jantsens giftThis giveaway is closed.  Winners have been announced on September 9.  Thank you!  🙂

I am so excited to be offered not only a review copy of this book but 5 copies to give away to you the readers!

For Cope, life in her small Missouri town seemed perfect; she ran a hair salon, enjoyed a happy family life and lived in a beautiful home. Yet, she explains, I have to say, I put on a hell of a performance. For a long time, I even had myself convinced of how good and right everything was in my life. Her ideal was shattered in 1999 when Jantsen, her 15-year-old son, died suddenly from a heart ailment; this moving memoir recounts Cope’s transformation and growth after her world collapsed. Her metamorphosis began after she accepted an invitation from a friend to visit Vietnam. Though Cope was wrapped in personal grief following the death of her son, the trip illuminated for her the superficial environment she inhabited. After visiting a local orphanage, Cope found for the first time in her life a sense of wholeness and purpose. Soon she stepped outside her own circumscribed world and began creating better lives for the abused, neglected and at-risk children she encountered, first in Vietnam then in Cambodia and Ghana. This is a wonderful story of a woman whose personal tragedy gave birth to a gift and how she fulfilled that legacy to make the world a better place.

To win a chance for one of these books:

1.  Receive one entry for commenting here with if you could help anywhere in the world and money was not an object, where would you go and what would you do?  (actually – that’s such a great question you get two entries for answering.)

2.  A third entry (optional) and by blogging about this giveaway or twittering about it

3.  And a fourth entry is available for commenting on any one of my other reviews… please be sure to let me know here that you did.

Remember to please leave different comments for each entry – it is easier to count out the winners that way.  No po boxes and please USA entries only.   Make sure I also have a way to contact you in the event that you are one of the winners.

Giveaway ends on August 16th EXTENDED to 26th.  Thanks everyone and good luck!  🙂

The Light The Dark & Embers Between by J.W. Nicklaus

A book that really makes you feel things directly from the heart….  ~  Sheilaembers

The Book Says:

This book is a collection of uplifting images that delve into the reflections of the human condition. These stories will cause you to think, laugh, and even cry at the beauty of emotional memories. You will smile at the thought of love lost and found again in “Paper Doll.” You will think about your life’s choices in “10:18.” You will cry tears of joy while reading about the hidden gift in “Winter Rose.” This is a must-have collection of thought-provoking reflections perfect for your bedside or the beach.

I say:  J. W. Nicklaus has taken 15 short stories and combined them in this read.  While the back cover says this is a perfect beach read, I for one find it more of a bedside or camp fire read.  To me, it is a book to read alone so you can really absorb the words and get the full meaning behind each story… and each story is chock full of meaning.

Each warm mist of breath hung in the air like temporary lace, for seconds – not moments – seconds.~ from Winter Rose page 163

I was planning to pick out one story that touched me more than the others but as I sat to write this review I found that many of the stories touched me in different ways, for different reasons.  Requiem for Linny was a bit close to home for me and I felt Bucks immense sorrow so much that I could feel myself sinking with him.  In Winter Rose I imagined the small child afraid during time of great war and it takes my breath away to think of what some people have seen and experienced in their lifetimes.

This book will go with me to our cabin this next weekend.  I am putting it in one of the guest rooms for friends to enjoy.  What a great conversation piece and every time I go in to dust or put clean sheets on the bed and my hands graze across this cover, I can smile and remember my first time through a book called The Light, The Dark, and Embers Between.

See my friend Melissa’s incredible review of this book here at Reminder list

J W Nicklaus’ Blog

See The Trailer Here

*I received this book as a ARC (Advanced Reader Copy) from Bostic Communications

I give this book a G rating