Morning Meanderings… Technology Fail… But There Are Books!

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Good morning!  YAY!  Sunday!

Yesterday I mentioned I was having trouble uploading pictures from my phone.  When taking pictures for Book Journey I usually take them on my phone and then email them to myself to nab off my laptop.  Yesterday morning I took several pics for the morning post but could not get them to upload.

This morning I tried again, rebooting my phone and everything.  Still didn’t work.  Then I went to the magic of all things Google and Googled my problem.  All sorts of things came up about MMS… blah blah blah, stuff over my head.

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I stared at my phone filled will reminders that the message had failed…

and then I knew what had happened.

I never use my phone to check email.  I receive too much email on three different accounts and it is a huge battery suck.  Only if I am super desperate to check for an email will I use it and then it usually needs about 5 minutes to sync as the last time I checked it was months prior…

Well…

on Tuesday I needed to print an email for book club and I do not have a printer hooked to this laptop.  I do however have one hooked to my office laptop.  When I went to retrieve the email downstairs somehow I had been logged out on my main email.  AND… I could not for the life of me recall the password.  In order to retrieve the email I needed to print, I had to…

you guessed it…

CHANGE THE PASSWORD.

Bingo.

clicking-your-heels-smiley-emoticon

My phone could not send to the email as it no longer had the correct password.

GAH.

A quick fix and I received my photos no problem. 🙂

And just in time too as here are the books that came in this week:

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The Girl On The Train by Paula Hawkins (audio)

Molly’s Game by Molly Bloom

Night Is The Hunter by Steven Gore

The Forgetting Place by John Burley

The Boy Who Loved Rain by Gerald Kelly

Two Moons by Thomas Mallon

The Snow Globe by Judith Kinghorn

Splinters Of Light by Rachael Herron

 

I am pretty caught up around here, house cleaning is done, errands complete… I have been working freelance projects for the past 4 days and think today is an official reading day.  I look forward to a comfy chair and a good book or two.

What are you doing with your Sunday?

I Was Here by Gayle Forman

I Was Here, Gayle Forman, If I Stay, Book JOurney

Cody and Meg were best friend.  Considered inseparable all through their school years the girls were constantly together until Meg receives a full scholarship and goes away to college.  They still communicated by email and phone calls but life gets busy… and the calls are more infrequent…

Then Cody is shocked when an email arrives from Meg telling Cody that by the time she read the message, it is already too late.

And it is.

Cody is confused by her friends suicide.  What signs did she miss?  When Cody goes to Meg’s college to collect her things she learns a lot more about the girl she thought she knew.  As Cody looks through Meg’s laptop she finds things that may be clues, including an encrypted file in the recycle bin that may hold more that Cody bargained for.

 

 

 

I enjoyed listening to I Was Here on audio.  This book deals with the hard subject of suicide and what happens after to those who are left behind.  Jorjeana Marie was an excellent narrator for this book, she held the right voice.

The basic story line of this book is good and I think author Gayle Forman in on the right track with Cody discovering a side to her friend she didn’t know existed, however some things did not work for me in the story.

Meg’s parents come off as distant and I get grief, but the fact that they did not go to the college themselves to pick up Meg’s things seemed odd.

Cody’s actions throughout the book are off as well.  I felt as though in the end I knew Meg more than I knew Cody.

Do not get me wrong, I did like I Was Here as a whole.  It tells a good story of a major loss.  I was very impressed with the epilogue which included the author giving a statement on suicide as well as help lines(including phone numbers!) for those who are having suicidal thoughts.

While I did not fully connect with the book, it was a good listen.

Gayle Forman is also the author of the book If I Stay which this last year was a major motion picture.

 

 

  • Listening Length: 7 hours and 42 minutes
  • Program Type: Audiobook
  • Version: Unabridged
  • Publisher: Listening Library
  • Audible.com Release Date: January 27, 2015

 

Morning Meanderings…. 50 Shades Of… AWESOME!

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New coffee cup pic to come… I have one but for some reason can not get it to upload this morning and tired of waiting 😉

 

Happy Saturday!  I have the best weekend ahead of me here…. no plans!!! I love it!  I might have lunch with a friend, visit my aunt, try out the snow shoes finally… the possibilities are endless 🙂

As you probably know, today is the official release day of the 50 Shades Of Grey movie.  It’s Valentines Day… aren’t they cute?  I have not read the book and do not plan too and will more than likely be passing on the movie as well.  However, I would be neglect if I did not say the play on the title (mush as I have done today) has been fun. 😀

Today for Saturday Snapshot, I thought it would be fun to post pics of my book club through the years because they really are 50 shades of AWESOME!  I was going through pics on Facebook the other day and thought it was fun to see all the crazy things we have done through the years.  Granted, this is not all of the craziness… this is just some.

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This was for our review of Garlic and Sapphires by Ruth Reichl. We disguised ourselves like she did in the book. Can you find me in this group? 😉

 

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Pride and Prejudice was the classic we were reading…. we dressed the era.

 

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A little fun with this pic.

 

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Sharon’s birthday. We surprised her and wore our “Bookies” shirts

 

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The review for The Wizard Of Oz.

 

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Our 100th meeting celebration! YAY!!!

 

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When one of us was diagnosed with breast cancer we wore pink to the meeting in support of her.

 

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Our first SKYPE with author Sandra Brannan. Sandra had sent us a care package for our review.

 

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Our current Queen and her coronation.

 

 

This has been fun for me to look back through these pics of a book club I adore.  Going strong since August of 2001!  There are a lot more pics, but now I think I am on a mission….. more on that later 😉

 

 

 

One Step Too Far by Tina Seskis

One step too far, Tina Seskis, Book Journey, Sheila DeChantal

Emily and Caroline are surprise twins.  By surprise, I mean that their mother did not know that she was going to have twins until… they were here.  Emily slips from her mother perfect and easy, shortly after along comes Caroline, blue and not breathing… a struggle from the moment she is born.

As the girls grow to adults, Caroline who knows she is not loved by her mother as Emily is, lashes out in her own ways with respect for no one’s time and a liking to the shocking as well as to alcohol.

Yet as the story opens, Emily is fleeing her life and her husband.  She is changing her name, picked up a new job, and remaining hidden… although we do not know why.  What has happened to this girl who by all outward looks seemed to be the one that had it together?

Told in alternating voices and in flash backs, slowly the puzzle begins to clear… and that one step too far… means so much more than you think.

 

 

 

Side story.  I love the Renaissance Festival.  My very first time I went as I walked down a narrow wooded dirt path to the entrance with my friends a costumed man sitting up in a tree above me hollered down with an accent, “DO NOT STEP IN IT!”

I of course stopped and looked at him.  Then I glanced around.  There was nothing there but trail.  “What?” I responded.

“DO NOT STEP IN IT!” he cried again more urgently.

I giggled, this being my first introduction to the Renaissance and it was a fun exchange.  I do not see anything to step in, I responded.

“IT!  IT”, he said loudly with anxiety in his voice and pointing at the ground.  DO NOT STEP IN IT!”

I then looked down and seen right where I stood in the trail, the word “IT” was scratched into the dirt.

I was not even in the front gate yet and already loved the Renaissance Festival.

 

That may seem like a random story for a review, but it actually fits.  I thought of that story as I listened to this book on audio, mainly because as I listened I could not help but feel as though I had stepped in IT.  And… like that day at the Renaissance, I loved it.

One Step Too Far starts out with a lot to take in.  You have the girls and their mother… you see that Caroline is a bit of a struggle.  So when Emily is the one who seems to go a bit nutty… it is shocking and you spend much of the book learning what has happened.

And when you know…

whoa.

I really enjoyed listening to One Step Too Far.  I admit I was a bit nervous when the audio started and it seemed as though I had found my way to yet another read that is told from multiple perspectives, flashes back and forth… and quite honestly, I have had enough of that style for a bit.  Yet, One Step Too Far pulled away from that format by engaging me fully into the story.  In the end, I was impressed.

Elizabeth Knowelden and Paul Fox are excellent narrators for this book.  Flawlessly, they complimented each other.

 

 

  • Audible Audio Edition
  • Listening Length: 9 hours and 8 minutes
  • Program Type: Audiobook
  • Version: Unabridged
  • Publisher: Harper Audio
  • Audible.com Release Date: January 27, 2015

 

 

Morning Meanderings… A Day In The Life of a “Want To Be” Writer

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Good morning. I think I need a new Meandering pic… the one I have been using prior to today I do not believe is accurate.  My hair is not as wild as that pic, it is more like the one above.  Anyhoo… that was random. 🙂

Since returning from our vacation in January I have been playing catch up on projects, but also trying to set some sort of routine that works for working from home.

Currently it looks something like this:

Up around 7 am.

Coffee.

Emails.

Coffee.

Facebook.

Think about working out.

Shower instead.

Coffee.

Check calendar for any writing projects I should be working on – magazine articles, freelance work…

Coffee.

Start writing, either for me… or for a project.

Around 9:30 am make any phone calls I need to make.

Back to writing.

Break around 11 am, if I did not do the workout earlier, do it now.

Lunch.

Water.

Run any town errands (optional)

Check emails.

Back to writing.

Water.

Writing.

Around 3:00 pm, take a look at any non profit projects I am working on (lately that has been authors for Wine and Words and lining up the July bike ride for Camp Benedict.)

Make phone calls surrounding the non profit stuff.

Think about what is for dinner.

Around 5 pm either go back to writing, work on no profit, or put it all away and read for a bit.

5:30 – 6:00 pm start dinner.

Al in the house around 7 pm, catch up with him and have dinner.

7:30 pm we either watch tv together, he watches tv and I read upstairs, or I continue to play around with a project.

8:30 pm – Al is in bed, I read or watch something mind numbing on tv (currently I am addicted to a series I found on Amazon Prime called AWKWARD.)

It is not down to a science and as anyone’s day goes, it does not always work that way.  Occasionally I have a meet up with a friend, or I run to the library, or I work on laundry or dishes or tackling a closet.

It is a different feel for someone who is used to be going going going out in the public.  I hope eventually to find my groove, but for now this is it 🙂

 

 

 

American Sniper – The Movie

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Just this weekend I had the opportunity to go and see American Sniper with my husband.  You may think that he picked the movie, but it was actually my pick.  I am not a fan of war movies, however this is a true story and an incredible one at that.  I want those of you who think like me that a war movie is a guy thing… let me just say not always.  Do not write this movie off.

The basic synopsis is that Chris Kyle (Bradley Cooper) has always been an overachiever.  When he sets his mind to do something he fully plans to do it right and go all the way.  When he joins the Navy Seals he does it because he wants to protect his country.

Before he leaves to be part of the war efforts on Iraq after 911, he meets his future wife Taya,(played by Sienna Miller).  They fall in love, get married and start a family.  While Taya is pregnant, Chris is fighting for his life and his country.

Chris in all does, 4 tours.  While this is the source of many arguments with his wife who feels he has given enough to his country and it was time for him to give to his family, Chris finds he can not let go.  As in his obsessive nature, he knows that he can save lives.  And he knows he can not do that form the comfort of his couch and home.

 

 

You may know the rest of the story.  In fact it is in the news right now.  It is a powerful story about love and loss and truly giving it all.  It honestly broke my heart.  The movie is about the war yes, but it is also about one man’s desire to save every life he can.  Chris Kyle becomes known as the deadliest sniper in America with 255 kills.

Yes you do see some graphic details of the war, yet coming from someone who is sensitive to things like that, the movie as a whole far out weighs that.

I highly recommend seeing this movie.  I recently purchased the audiobook and plan to listen to that soon.

 

 

 

 

Morning Meanderings… I LOVE Author Events

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Good morning!  Happy Thursday!  THURSDAY!  Does anyone else feel like the week flew by?  I know I have two days left but, the weekend is almost upon us!  (I have an open weekend so imagining the possibilities!)

Yesterday while corresponding with a publishing house they were letting me know of an author who will be in Minneapolis next Tuesday the 17th. Arwen Alys Dayton will be at the Red Balloon Bookstore promoting her book SEEKER, which has already been snatched up to be a movie.  OOH!  I just received SEEKER on audio, it is a beautiful looking book and being compared to the likes of Hunger Games and Divergent.

Arwen Alys Dayton, SEEKER, Bed Ballon, Minneapoils, Book Store, Book JOurney

That is one I would like to go to and have already put the bat signal in the sky for the Bookies to see if anyone wants to go along.

Also, later next week on the 20th at the same book store, Amanda Hockings will be there! That is kind of cool too, she wrote WAKE, and is the first author to sell more than a million copies of her book that was self published!  Crazy cool!!!  I also did not know that Amanda Hockings was a Minnesota author.  (Now the wheels are turning….)

Amanda Hocking, Frostfire, WAKE< Book JOurney, Minneapolis, Red Ballon

I usually have my eye on Magers & Quinn, another book store in the cities that holds a lot of good author events.  Now I know I need to keep an eye on two!

 

The drive to the cities is about 2 hours and 10 minutes for me.  The going is not hard, it is the fact that most of the events start at 6:30 pm, and I am driving back around 8 or 8:30 pm in the dark.  Still… it doesn’t stop me 🙂

 

Do you have any author events in your area?  Do you like to attend them?  How far would you drive?

Book Club Thoughts and Ideas: The Silent Sister by Diane Chamberlain

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The Silent Sister by Diane Chamberlain was our Bookies Book Club read for February 2014.  I had listened to this one on audio and had reviewed it in November.

Basic synopsis:  Riley MacPherson was just a little girl when her older sister Lisa died.  That moment defined the MacPherson families lives… her brother Danny became distant, her mother turned to grief, and later it was cancer, and her father just kept on trying to be himself.

Twenty years later after her fathers passing, Riley finds evidence in her father’s home that seems to lead to the fact that Lisa did not die after all.  In fact, Riley seems to have stumbled across disturbing facts that change everything she ever knew to be true.  And if Lisa had not died all those years ago… what did happen?  And if she is still alive… where is she?

 

 

For most of the Bookies this was their first time reading Diane Chamberlain.  We found her to be an amazing author who writes in a manner that keeps you guessing.  A few in our group had an idea about the big surprise in the book, but no matter what we had guessed ahead of time or not, we all enjoyed the read.

 

Why does this book make for good book club material?

Silent Sister has excellent discussion points in the book.  There are decisions made in the book that are worth discussing.  Each member of the MacPherson family plays a different role and it is fun to see what book club members think of each part.

There are opportunities to go over, “what would you do,” if given the circumstances that happen in the book as well as discussion of the law and how things could have went.

Another great discussion topic is what people turn to for comfort and each book club member can share what their answer is.

 

Food and Theme

There is not much to talk about for food in the book.  In fact when I went to make something for book club I could not recall any food discussions or drink for that matter other than coffee.  Cookies in the shape of people (sisters) would be fun to do.

Food could be centered around “Open House” food items as int he book they are trying to sell a house… or even funeral food to represent the loss of Lisa.

Random keys could be used where each book club member draws one and at some point during the discussion shares something that perhaps they had kept quiet during a point int here life (as a child, teen, etc…)

 

Book Club Discussion Questions Link

 

 

Morning Meanderings… Book Club… The Morning After

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Good morning.

Coffee. Coffee. Coffee.

Yes… it is a Gilmore morning…

Ok that was random but I laughed.  I love the ending of this one.

Book club was uber great last night but it really usually is.  14 of the Bookies made it last night in what was like our first real snow that I have seen this season.  Roads were slick, but the girls made it to my house.

We discussed Silent Sister by Diane Chamberlain over tasty Kielbasa, mini meatloaves, fruit salad, cheese, crackers, and wine.  I handed out our books from Harper Collins and we chose our next read for March:

 

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The Rocky Mountains have cast their spell over the Courtlands, a young family from the plains taking a last summer vacation before their daughter begins college. For eighteen-year-old Caitlin, the mountains loom as the ultimate test of her runner’s heart, while her parents hope that so much beauty, so much grandeur, will somehow repair a damaged marriage. But when Caitlin and her younger brother, Sean, go out for an early morning run and only Sean returns, the mountains become as terrifying as they are majestic, as suddenly this family find themselves living the kind of nightmare they’ve only read about in headlines
or seen on TV.

As their world comes undone, the Courtlands are drawn into a vortex of dread and recrimination. Why weren’t they more careful? What has happened to their daughter? Is she alive? Will they ever know? Caitlin’s disappearance, all the more devastating for its mystery, is the beginning of the family’s harrowing journey down increasingly divergent and solitary paths until all that continues to bind them together are the questions they can never bring themselves to ask: At what point does a family stop searching? At what point will a girl stop fighting for her life?

Written with a precision that captures every emotion, every moment of fear, as each member of the family searches for answers, Descent is a perfectly crafted thriller that races like an avalanche toward its heart-pounding conclusion, and heralds the arrival of a master storyteller.

 

Sound good?  I think so!

Today I have work to catch up on.  I have been hanging out with friends and family since Saturday and now I need to get something done 🙂

And just in case you have not had enough coffee…

The Unlikely Pilgrimage of Harold Fry by Rachel Joyce – Audio Review

The Unlikely Pilgrimage of Harold Fry, Rachel Joyce, Book Journey, Narrator, audio, Jim Broadbent book,

Harold Fry now in his 60’s, retired and living with his wife in their English village home has come to expect…

nothing.

Life is quiet and unsurprising.  Each day his mere existence and his wife’s avoidance makes the silence between them earth shattering loud.  Retirement is not awesome.

Then one morning a letter comes in the mail.  It is from a co-worker that Harold once had named Queenie Hennessy.  She has terminal cancer and has written to say good-bye.

Harold is struck by this message with a deep sadness.  He quickly writes a response to her, tells Maureen his wife that he is heading out to the mailbox and walks out of the house.  As Harold passes his own mailbox, and heads into town where he passes two more, he has an encounter with a young girl at a restaurant who inspires him (unaware) to deliver Queenie’s letter in person.  Harold believes that as long as he is walking to Queenie, she can not die.  With only his boat shoes and a light jacket, Harold starts the 600 mile walk from Kingsbridge to the hospice in Berwick… meeting along the way kind people who take him in.  As Harold’s pilgrimage continues he has a lot of time to think about his past, his wife, his son… losses and regrets… and of course, what he has never told Queenie.

 

 

You know those books you always mean to read but never seem to get around to doing it?  That is what The Unlikely Pilgrimage of Harold Fry was to me.  When recently it was on a sale at Audible.com, I snatched it up on audio.

Harold Fry was a likable protagonist who had carried a lot of memories both good and bad, throughout his 60+ years.  As life tends to do, Harold stayed busy moving forward and never dealing with his past.  His Pilgrimage gave him the time he needed, alone to sort through what his life has been… and what it could still be.

This book is brilliant.  While on one hand you could say an elderly man trucking 600 miles with no plan is a bit ridiculous – it works.  When you understand that Harold needs to have a mission in his life and this is the moment he chooses… it works.  It really does.

Jim Broadbent was an amazing narrator, he handled  the different characters in the book smoothly.  His tone made for an excellent listen, very well paced and fit for what I would imagine Harold Fry sounding like.

Overall this book is surprisingly deep and one that really makes you think about your own life.  Thoroughly enjoyed.

 

Update:  I recently acquired an audio version of the follow up to this book, The Love Song Of Miss Queeny Henessy.  I am so excited to get to this listen and am curious about the narration of Celia Imrie who I believe is a new narrator to me.

 

 

  • Audible Audio Edition
  • Listening Length: 9 hours and 57 minutes
  • Program Type: Audiobook
  • Version: Unabridged
  • Publisher: Random House Audio
  • Audible.com Release Date: July 24, 2012