Morning Meanderings… A Fun Week Ahead!

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Good morning!  Happy Sunday!  Today I will spend a lot of time prepping our agenda for our first ever Friends Of The Library Fall Retreat.  This will be a recap of 2014 and planning dates for 2015.  We have had many exciting things happen this year and I am looking forward to this event!

Then, on Wednesday I leave for Mankato Minnesota (yes yes, Mankato like the Ingall’s did in Little House on The Prairie) for the Minnesota Library Association Annual meeting where I will be speaking on Thursday about Wine and Words and this even is up for an award along with two other groups in Minnesota for Best New Event for a Minnesota Friends Group.  I am sooooo looking forward to this!  I also want to hear the other ideas that groups are doing.

 

Here are the books and audio that came into the house this week:

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How We Learn by Benedict Carey (audiobook)

Be The Message by Kerry and Chris Shook (audiobook)

Dataclysm by Christian Rudder (audiobook)

The Moonlight Palace by Liz Rosenberg

Naked and Marooned by Ed Stafford

Crooked River by Valerie Geary

Desert God by Wilbur Smith

Bohemians, Bootleggers, Flappers, and Swells by Graydon Carter

 

Lats night I read Spun by Catherine McKenzie…. and then I followed that up by reading Hidden by Catherine McKenzie… more on that later 🙂

Off to working on tomorrows agenda!  Have a super day!

 

Morning Meanderings… Guess Who Chose My Next Read?

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Good morning.  Another super windy day here today… cold and wet… ugh.  I am helping to haul bees back to Brainerd today to be prepped to go to Florida so I anticipate a wet cold day.

Earlier this week I posted my book sale findings and offered you to choose which book you would love to read.  I will read that book and then send it to you.  SO using random.org, the winner is:

 

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Elizabeth of Silver’s Reviews!

Congratulations Elizabeth!  I too enjoy Ruth Reichl and I believe this is the only one of hers I have not read yet.  Looking forward to digging in.  Watch again for another posting of Choose My Next Read… I have two books to add to the picture that missed out on the first round as they had fallen out of the bag and were still in my car.

Have a super Saturday everyone!  Hope you are reading or listening to something awesome.  I am listening to Cemetery John, The Story Of The Lindbergh kidnapping, something I know little about and the Lindbergh childhood home is about 30 minutes from me in Little Falls Minnesota. Something I fully plan to tour when it is open again next year.

This Is Where I Leave You….Book VS. Movie

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By now you have probably heard the hype…Jonathan Tropper’s book This Is Where I Leave You was made into a movie!

I love it when books are made into movies!  I love to see the director’s vision of the story compared to mine… honestly, I think in recent years the movies made from books are pretty good.  So lets begin with looking at my thoughts on this book… and then the movie.

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Recently I read and reviewed This Is Where I Leave You.  When I heard the movie was coming out, I knew I had to read the book first.  (1 point for movie, as that is why I read the book).  I really enjoyed the book.  It was witty and laugh out loud funny at times.  The opening scene of Judd finding his wife on her birthday…. seriously, horribly funny… I could not wait to see that scene in the movie, I knew it was just going to be fantastic!

Book received 5 shiny points for being a page turning-laugh out loud-tell your friends about it-kind of read.  That’s right, a page turning-laugh out loud-tell your friends about it-kind of read.  I loved it, I gushed about it, I passed it to a friend and she gushed too.

Then, me and my gushing invited girls from my book club to go and see the movie… and…

 

The movie starring the funny Jason Bateman as Judd, and also funny Tina Fey as Wendy his sister AND Jane Fonda as the mom looked to be a great line up.  I had my popcorn and I was ready to laugh and laugh…

and I really didn’t laugh too much at all.

That opening scene I could not wait for, was there and it wasn’t.  The funniest part of that whole scene was not in the movie.  Then, the movie felt forced.  I found myself thinking how the acting did not seem natural, it felt like they were acting – which I know, I know, they are… but usually you can fall right into the movie and feel like it happened.  This one – not so much.  (I take away 1 shiny point from the movie for not keeping to the opening scene).

Overall, the movie was ok, but not great.  The book club gals that were with me all agreed.  The movie fell flat.  I may have been a bit critical because I had just finished reading the book, but I think it is more than that.  Watching it kind of felt like this:

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and afterwards I felt like this:

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The winner of this battle is….

The Book.

Read the book.  If you want to see the movie, wait until you can pick it up at Redbox.  You will thank me for saving you the box office price, the annoying person talking on their phone in the row behind you and the popcorn kernel that will no doubt get stuck to the roof of your mouth and distract you from really paying attention anyway.

 

Have you read the book?  Have you seen the movie?  What are your thoughts?

Morning Meanderings… Much Ado About September

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Good morning.  Windy morning here in Central Minnesota.  I heard the wind before I got out of bed this morning.  A great day to stay in read or plug away on the laptop but duty calls me outside yet this morning.  I will change out the window at the Library from Banned Books to Fall into Reading… great fall reads to enjoy.  Then my co-hert in crime, Gail and I have an appointment to talk to a lady about a possible different and BIGGER venue for Wine and Words in 2015.  This is exciting as I would love to see how big this event could get, and scary also as this would pull our event about 15 minutes out of town and not everyone likes change.  We will see.

Today I thought I would do a little review of the books I managed to read in September.   I am LOVING the Good Reads 2014 Reading Challenge.  I had set my goal this year to read 120 books and I am currently on this site at 98.  I have two more completed and yet to review, so really at 100, and running about 8 books ahead of schedule.  That is dorky exciting!  Here are the September reads:

 

  • Ruin Falls by Jenny Milchman
  • In Cold Blood by Truman Capote
  • Go Ask Alice by Beatrice Sparks
  • Hatching Twitter by Nick Bilton
  • Lord of the Flies by William Golding
  • Invisible by James Patterson
  • Early Decision by Lacy Crawford
  • Mr. Penumbra's 24-Hour Bookstore by Robin Sloan
  • This is Where I Leave You by Jonathan Tropper
  • Diary of a Mad Diva by Joan Rivers
  • Provence, 1970 by Luke Barr
  • The Good Girl by Mary Kubica
  • Making Habits, Breaking Habits by Jeremy Dean
  • Top Secret Twenty-One by Janet Evanovich

 

A nice fun mix of reads.  I love it.  And really, now as the weather gets colder, this is my big reading season.  We will see how that pans out this year between the writing and the reading.  🙂

How was your September reads?  Do you find that you read more in some seasons and less in others?

 

PS…. I posted a movie tie in giveaway yesterday.  Be sure and check it out 😉

P.S.S… I have a post up today at my friend Jill’s Friday Fiction Read where I recommend a book I really enjoyed this year!  (Jill is on the Friends Of The Brainerd Public Library Team!  She is also a writer 🙂  )

Ruin Falls by Jenny Milchman

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Liz Daniel along with her husband Paul, and their two children, Reid (8) and Ally (6) are going on a rare vacation.  Tired from travel they decide to stop and stay over in a hotel and start again fresh in the morning.  Exhausted from the long travel day everyone is soon asleep.

When Liz awakens feeling refreshed and ready to go, she finds that her children have left the room.  In fact, as Paul and Liz search the hotel frantically they find that the two young children are nowhere to be found.

As life spins dizzily out of control and the police are called; Liz suddenly discovers that her children were not taken by a stranger at all.  Someone she trusts with her life, has committed the ultimate betrayal… and Liz will stop at nothing to get her children back.

 

 

Ruin Falls has that intriguing type of synopsis that pulls you in.  Where did the children go?  Who has them?  And what does that mean that they are with someone the mother knows?  Why would someone you trust take your children?

And all of this…

I can not tell you.

What I can tell you is that Ruin Falls has just enough creep factor skimming along it that you find yourself engaged in what is about to happen.  Walking right alongside Liz as she searches… finding clues along the way that make this read go from a thriller to a chiller.

I listened to this one on audio with Cassandra Campbell narrating and she is always a good listen!

 

 

  • Audible Audio Edition
  • Listening Length: 11 hours and 53 minutes
  • Program Type: Audiobook
  • Version: Unabridged
  • Publisher: Random House Audio
  • Audible.com Release Date: April 22, 2014

 

Morning Meanderings…. The Best Of Me Film Release (Giveaway)

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Good morning.  *sips coffee*

How you doing?

It is a hazy day here in central Minnesota.  I am sitting at my kitchen table, sipping coffee, and contemplating life.  I know I know… thems loaded words 😉

 

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Anyhoo…

The Book The Best Of My by Nicholas Sparks has been made into a movie!  I love that!  Here is the trailer:

 

 

The Best of Me – In Theaters October 17

Watch the Trailer | Facebook | Instagram | Tumblr | Twitter | #TheBestOfMe

Based on the bestselling novel by acclaimed author Nicholas Sparks, The Best of Me tells the story of Dawson and Amanda, two former high school sweethearts who find themselves reunited after 20 years apart, when they return to their small town for the funeral of a beloved friend. Their bittersweet reunion reignites the love they’ve never forgotten, but soon they discover the forces that drove them apart twenty years ago live on, posing even more serious threats today. Spanning decades, this epic love story captures the enduring power of our first true love, and the wrenching choices we face when confronted with elusive second chances.

Also…

Want Nicholas Sparks to join your Book Club?

Calling all book clubs! You and your club could win a visit from a professional moderator & special guest appearance from Nicholas Sparks via Skype.  All you have to do is tweet a question you’d like answered using #BestOfMeBookSweeps!

Tavia Gilbert

Two commenters on this post will win a copy of the movie tie in edition of the book!

 

Tell me… have you read Nicholas Sparks?  Have you read this book?  Do you have a favorite of his books?  If you have not read him, would you like to?

 

Courtesy of Relativity Media

Open to US mailing addresses only

In Cold Blood by Truman Capote (Banned Book – True Crime)

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In November of 1959 a family who lived in Holcomb Kansas was brutally attacked, killed and left.  The murders of the Clutter family were senseless. The family was well-respected humble farmers and had no enemies as far as anyone knew.

It turned out it was two ex convicts from the Kansas State Penitentiary had heard from another inmate who had worked for the Clutters at one time that the farmer had a safe of money.  As it turned out, this was untrue and the convicts left with $43 after they killed the family.

One thing went wrong after another.  The foiled crime did not give the two men the money they thought they would have to escape and start new lives.  Instead they stayed in hiding, writing out bad checks to survive until they were captured and tried for the murders.

Author Truman Capote heard about the crimes and traveled with his fellow author friend Harper Lee to investigate the crimes.  This book is the true account of the murders.

Richard Hitchcock (left) and Perry Smith were executed on April 14th, 1965 for the slaying of a Kansas family.
Richard Hitchcock (left) and Perry Smith were executed on April 14th, 1965 for the slaying of a Kansas family.

 

Initially this book was chosen by our book club to read for our October Classic.  To me, it was also a bonus that it is a banned book.  While I am not sure how a true crime book will go over in book club (it has been many years since we have read one as a group), I however enjoy a true crime now and then.  Enjoy?  That sounds awful.

I listened to In Cold Blood on audio mainly because I was not sure when I would get to it in book format.  Narrator Scott Brick was a good voice for this style of read.  Informative and crisp in his words, he read like a detective novel unfolding its story page by page.  I While this is a true crime book, it reads as fiction.  Truman Capote wrote this book in a story format where it is easy to slip into a fiction state of mind and forget that you are reading about horrible senseless murders.

I did enjoy (there’s that word again!) the book and learning about the crime novel that made it to a classic.  There is a lot of information about the two killers before, during, and after the crime.  At 14 hours and 27 minutes on audio, it felt a little drug out.

Over all… happy to say that I have read this one, but will more than likely not be revisiting it.

 

Why was In Cold Blood Banned?

2012

Some Glendale (CA) Unified School District officials and parents attempted to block a request by a high school English teacher to add the text to the district’s advanced English curriculum because the nonfiction book was “too violent for a young audience;” the school board voted 4-0 to approve the book for Advanced Placement students.

2001

Banned, but reinstated in an English Advanced Placement class in Savannah (GA) after a parent complained that it contained sex, violence, and profanity.

 

You will hear from the Bookies Book Group in October about their thoughts on the book.

 

 

  • Audible Audio Edition
  • Listening Length: 14 hours and 27 minutes
  • Program Type: Audiobook
  • Version: Unabridged
  • Publisher: Random House Audio
  • Audible.com Release Date: January 3, 2006

 

Go Ask Alice by Anonymous (Banned Book… BUT Was It Real?)

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Being a teenager is not easy now… and it wasn’t then.

Told in the first person perspective of an unnamed teenage girl, who is just trying to fit in.  When she is invited to a popular girls party she can not believe her luck!  They play a game called “Who’s Got The Button”, which our narrator later learns that several of the cokes they are served at the party are laced with LSD… the question is who will get them?  Our narrator of course is one that does, and she experiences her first high.

As time goes on, she becomes more willing to try other drugs to find out what they will feel like.  She becomes not only popular in her school, but also a drug dealer to pay for her habits.

Written in diary form, Go Ask Alice walks you through the drug use and the terrible happenings associated with her highs such as sex, leaving home, in with the wrong so-called “friends” and then leads to her trying to come clean and be the girl she knows deep down inside she is.

 

 

WOW.  I picked up this book at our recent Friends Of The Library sale.  I am always on the look out for classics and banned books (often one and the same) when I seen a copy of this book. Go Ask Alice is small, 224 under size pages and written in diary format so is a quick read.  My plan was to read this for banned book week, and although I did not finish it during the week I meant to, I did finish it.

Go Ask Alice, written originally in 1971 is still relevant today.  I am not sure why it is called Go Ask Alice, there is a small encounter with a girl named Alice… but nothing worthy of naming the book after her (although I did momentarily wonder if the “Alice” she seen in the book, was indeed our narrator thinking of herself as another person…)

The book is sad.  You find our narrator trying to break free of the circle of drugs and those involved, but it is a struggle in many ways.  Even when she does get clean, she is pursued by the users as well as nightmares and well… read the book.  There is more to this story.

Go Ask Alice is said in the front of the book that is the actual diary of a teenage girl.  If you look on-line, you will find there is much discrepancy about this claim.  Snopes.com calls it out as fiction.  Merely a cautionary tale.  It also calls out that the book is not really anonymous, although this is pretty common knowledge now – the author is actually Beatrice Sparks who had written a number of teen books dealing with topics such as AIDS, teen pregnancy, cults, drugs, and eating disorders.

True story or not, it made for an interesting read and truly can put the fear of drugs and the dangers of hanging with the wrong people in you.

Recommended.  So you too can say you read it.

 

Go Ask Alice… WHY Was It Banned?

Since it’s publishing in 1971, Go Ask Alice has become one of the most challenged and banned books of all time. Due to its frequent and strong references to sex, heavy drug usage, and teen pregnancy, libraries and schools across the country have banned the novel as it sits at number 23 on the American Library Association (ALA) “100 Most Frequently Challenged Books” from 1990-2001.  In Charleston, South Carolina, Dr.Chester Floyd, Berkeley County school district’s superintendent, pulled the novel off the shelves of all public schools within the district.

 

 

  • Paperback: 224 pages
  • Publisher: Simon Pulse; Reprint edition (January 1, 2006)

 

Have you read this book?  What are your thoughts?

 

 

Morning Meanderings… Lots Of Winners To Announce!

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Good morning!  Tuesday already!  It is a dreary overcast day here and I would like nothing more than to sit here and work on my deadline and later curl up with a good book…

but…

I do have to go out there.

Anyhoo…

Winners.  I have some winners to catch up on from the This Is Where I Leave You Contest to Banned Book Winners.  SO let’s do this!

 

This is where I Leave You was a contest for a $25 Visa gift card to see the film in theaters & copy of the book (movie tie-in cover) .  Our winner using random.org is:

 

Vicki from I’d Rather Be At The Beach

 

Banned Book Week Giveaways:

 

A copy of Mice and Men by Steinbeck goes to:

 

Hannah at Wordlily!

 

A copy of Lord Of The Flies by Golding goes to:

Brooke from Brooke Blogs

 

And my big Banned Book Week winner who will win choice of the Banned Book Cup, The Banned book socks, or the $10 gift card goes to……

Lois from You, Me, and a Cup Of Tea

 

Yippy!  Thanks all!  If winners see this post before I get a chance to email them later today, please send me your address (email it to:  journeythroughbooks@gmail.com) for shipping (and Lois I would need what you choose as well!) and I will get the items out to you 🙂

Ok all… off for more coffee!  Have a SUPER Tuesday!

 

Hatching Twitter … by Nick Bolton

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Out of a failing companies ashes,  a few employees took on a project that seemed at the time just a little fun on the side.  That project, was a site that allowed you to give a brief update to your life in 140 characters or less…

this “project” became known as Twitter, and through much the same sort of anguish Facebook went through… fought its was to an 11.5 billion dollar company by 2013, and attempted to be bought out by such as Oprah Winfrey, Ashton Kutcher, Al Gore, and Google.

Now with over 300 million active users, the story is shared about the hard making of Twitter… the firing of CEO’s.. and the making of Twitter with the same guy who created Blogger….

this is quite the story.

 

 

 

I adored the movie Social Network.  I did.  It is the story of the making of Facebook and I ate up every minute of the story of the young creator who took an idea that was meant to be a college meet up site to a place where people f all ages share their lives, relationships… and yes, even whats for dinner.  *Guilty*

When I came across this audio of Twitter I was excited to learn of its climb to status and the audio was every bit as interesting as I hoped it would be.

With information of the start-up of Blogger and the popularity of “blogging” being at the core of Twitter, it was interesting to learn of how a team of hackers came to hind these brief 140 character updates to be as big a deal as it is.  What I found even more interesting was how Twitter changed the face of social media by being able to report major events as soon as they happened in such detail – that this site is used by many agencies to capture time lines of events and accuracy.

Really… it is mind-boggling how much Twitter has changed our society.

For myself, I find it had to find time to use Twitter.  I am an occasional sporadic user, not able to keep up with the day-to-day use and solely use it for bookish conversations.  However, after listening to this audio, I know I need to give Twitter more credit than I do.

Fascinating stuff.  Really.

 

 

  • Audible Audio Edition
  • Listening Length: 9 hours and 35 minutes
  • Narrator:  Daniel May
  • Program Type: Audiobook
  • Version: Unabridged
  • Publisher: Penguin Audio
  • Audible.com Release Date: November 5, 2013