Not Lost Forever by Carmina Salcido and Steve Jackson

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On April 14th, 1989, Ramon Salcido came home and murdered his wife, Angela, her two sisters, and his mother-in-law.  He took his three young daughters; Sophia (4), Carmina (3), and 22 month old Teresa and drove around for hours eventually taking them to a county dump and slashing their throats one at a time.

Miraculously, more than a day later, the three children’s bodies were discovered and 3-year-old Camina was still alive.

You would think that Carmina had enough trauma to last a life time, but her run of unhappiness continued from there.  Now with no family who could care for her, Carmina is adopted by a highly dysfunctional family that changes her name claiming that “Carmina” had died that day and has now been reborn as someone new.  The bizarre behavior does not end there.  Eventually she winds up at a girls camp for troubled girls which was both mentally and physically damaging. Meanwhile, Carmina’s father is still alive in prison… and he would like to see her…

 

 

Oof ta.  You may wonder why this book, now 5 years after being published, I decided to read it now.  Interestingly, I found this audio by narrator.  Xe Sands has an amazing narrative voice and while looking for good audio and coming up with nothing that was catching my attention I tried looking up books by narrators (yup… you can do that).  When I read the synopsis on this book, on a true crime that I had never heard of, I knew I wanted to know more.

My heart breaks for Carmina.  What a devastating life she has led.  This book,written by Carmina, tells the events that surrounded the tragedy in her life starting at a very young age.  With the assistance of friends, relatives, and co-workers to her parents, Carmina is able to piece together what seems to have happened that fateful day that her father killed her entire immediate family.  Will Carmina every know all the answers?  No, but she seem to have a pretty good idea.

The audio, is smooth and the story line if well paced.  I was horrified to listen to what happened to this family.  Recommended.

 

Naked by David Sedaris

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Naked is David Sedaris’s 2001 take on his life at the time… reminiscing about teachers, camp, his sexuality, family life you name it David probably has covered it.

 

I started listening to David Sedaris last year with his Let’s Explore Diabetes With Owls.  His matter of fact humor left me wanting more and I have followed up with a couple more of his books on audio (he narrates them himself which makes them even more fun). 

Naked is a short three-hour listen and while it has its moments,

 

“We were not a hugging people. In terms of emotional comfort it was our belief that no amount of physical contact could match the healing powers of a well made cocktail.”

 

While I did enjoy David, the addition of his sister in this audio I found to be a harsh contrast as she handled the voices of teachers and I think at times herself to David’s steady rhythmic tone.  I have found I enjoy his narration alone much better.

Still… looking for a fun quick laugh…. give it a try. 🙂

We Were Liars by E. Lockhart (Smoking Good!)

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Tall, blond Cadance Sinclair Eastman is the apple of her grandfather Harris’ eye as the oldest granddaughter. The Sinclair family come from money and each summer the Aunts (Cadance’s mother and her two sisters) gather with their children off a private Island in Massachusetts owned by Harris.  The children, or really teens (all around 15) fondly refer to themselves as “The Liars” and consist of Cadance, Johnny, Mirren, and Gat, who is a friend of the family. 

During that 15th summer, Cadance finds she has a crush of Gat; and really – he on her as well.  It is a summer of new love until an accident leave Cadance with a concussion and no memory as to what happened.  She misses the next summer at the Island but returns her 17th year still knowing little of what happened.  Her cousins had not responded to her emails over the past year, and even Gat seems to have been avoiding her; no one wanting to tell her the details of what happened those two summers ago as her doctor has said it was best if she remembered on her own. 

As Cadance slowly begins to remember snippets of what happened she starts to piece together a horrible truth.

 

 

We Are Liars blew me out of the water.  And shoot…. I didn’t even know I was in water! This is a book of friendships and first love.  I enjoyed the imagery of these four friends hanging out on an island together each summer, reconnecting, swimming, having fun, and largely having the place to themselves except for meals with the adults and the occasional chores. 

Cadance was a likable protagonist; even after her injury as her messed up mind tried to put it all back together I rooted for her… wanting to know just as much as the next person what had happened and why all the secrecy! 

There are few books that truly shock me, but We Are Liars sent me shooting high above the ground and then spiraling down at break neck speed. I read somewhere that this was a book to read in one sitting.  I listened to this on audio from start to finish, not wanting to stop. 

A book full of tiny pebbles of clues that after all was said in done I was all “Whoa…” and “oh that makes sense” and “nicely played” as well. 🙂

I highly recommend this book – fantastic on audio and I imagine the book would play out just as well.

 

Creativity INC. Overcoming the Unseen Forces That Stand in the Way of True Inspiration by Ed Catmull and Amy Wallace

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Ed Catmull, Co-Founder of Pixar Animations (along with Steve Jobs and John Lasseter) tells about creating winning teams and taking your team to the next level.  Ed takes us behind the scenes of Pixar and shares the inner workings of how they created movies (such as Toy Story 2) by trusting in their teams, striving towards excellence every time but also bringing their teams to a point of trust and support that is unheard of in most companies. 

Pixar has been the name to strive for in animated movies due to this attitude by their lead team of being real with the employees, not separating yourself as a leader as “better” or “above” others and making themselves accessible for ideas lie “braintrust” the team that takes each movie as it begins and breaks it down to what they like and what they do not and repeats this process over and over with the creative team. 

From the wins, to the expensive fails, Et Catmull gives advice from his own experiences and shares ideas to build work teams that become as one, and treats them with the respect that creates long-term relationships.

 

 

I read this (listened to it actually) because I love to work on winning teams.  That may sound like a weird thing to say, but it is true.  If you have worked with a group of people for a job or career, you know what I mean.  There are great teams to work with that feel safe to bounce ideas off each other without being shut down and then there are not so great teams that you feel “thumbed over” watched every move – and creativity….

fails.  There is no room for it.

There is a section towards the end where Ed talks about his working relationship for Steve Jobs.  I loved this as Steve Jobs, while clearly having his faults was a brilliant mind.  Ed said Steve would walk into a meeting, listen, and say something like, “I am not a movie maker, but what if….” and whatever he said would be brilliant advice and then he would walk out and let the team work their magic. 

I really enjoyed this listen and this is one I will look for in book format as well.  What Ed describes here with his working relationship with the teams as well as the co-founders of Pixar is the way to find the right people for the job and how to treat them.

 

I believe the best managers acknowledge and make room for what they do not know—not just because humility is a virtue but because until one adopts that mindset, the most striking breakthroughs cannot occur. I believe that managers must loosen the controls, not tighten them. They must accept risk; they must trust the people they work with and strive to clear the path for them; and always, they must pay attention to and engage with anything that creates fear. Moreover, successful leaders embrace the reality that their models may be wrong or incomplete. Only when we admit what we don’t know can we ever hope to learn it.”
Ed Catmull, Creativity, Inc.

“If you give a good idea to a mediocre team, they will screw it up. If you give a mediocre idea to a brilliant team, they will either fix it or throw it away and come up with something better.”
Ed Catmull, Creativity, Inc.

 

“If you aren’t experiencing failure, then you are making a far worse mistake: You are being driven by the desire to avoid it.”  ― Ed Catmull, Creativity, Inc.

 

 

Honestly, I strive for this kind of work environment.  I am a creative person and when I am placed with great teams that share ideas and lift each other up instead of pulling them down- I thrive.  In a way I think I feed off their energy and excitement; it is like fuel to my soul.  I find that when I looking for creative outlets I am drawn to the ones that allow me the most freedom to be who I am and create in ways that will inspire others to join in.  I want the teams I work with to do an amazing job and have fun along the way by doing it. 

Creative minds, people in management or Leadership positions that want to build winning teams, this is a great read for you.

Don’t Even Think About It by Sarah Mlynowski

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When a homeroom of New York Sophomores receive their mandatory flu shot they get a little more than a sore arm.  Apparently the batch of the flu vaccine was a little off, and now this group has discovered that they can hear each others thoughts.

Super cool right?

They all know now that Mackenzie cheated on Cooper last summer.  They now all know what people really think of them.  They know now what their teachers are really thinking about while they are taking tests and they know what their parents are thinking about while in their bedrooms.

Ugh.  Maybe not so cool….

Nothing.  NOTHING is a secret anymore.

 

 

Don’t Even Think About It is a fun concept.  What if something that was supposed to keep you healthy… actually had a freaky side effect?  The results as related in this book are sometimes funny, sometimes hurtful, and definitely something that this group had to come terms with as nothing is sacred. 

A fun easy read I think YA readers would enjoy… after all as a teenager, what could be worse than someone knowing everything you think about?  While I personally enjoyed the read, I think Young Adults would probably find this even more entertaining.

Sharp Objects by Gillian Flynn

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Camille Preaker would have been just fine if she had never stepped foot in her hometown again.  Yet working as a reporter comes with its nasty bits.

When two young girls are murdered where Camille grew up, her boss finds this to be a good opportunity to go back and investigate the story, after all these people know her and will open up to her.  Camille, knows better.

Back in her neurotic mothers home with her step dad and half-sister, Camille has unpleasant memories rush back.  As she investigates the story behind the two little girls, Camille is finding things to be too close to her own demons she carries… and what she is about to find out, may very well be the thing that unravels life as she knows it.

 

 

 

I listened to this audio for several reasons.  1.  A friend of mine recommended this book a few years back before Gone Girl ever existed.  2.  This is the author of Gone Girl which blew me away.  3.  Sharp Objects is going to be a movie and I had to take the time to know the story.

Results? Sharp Objects, if you can believe it – is a darker story than Gone Girl.  There are not very many likable qualities in Camille and her actions along the way felt jumbled for me and took away from the story line.  I personally feel that this protagonist could have been written in a completely different way and come out better.  But, that is just my opinion.

The creepy dark nature of many of the cast in this book left me with a bit of an uneasy feeling.  I didn’t love that feeling.  I wanted to know what was going to happen but over all I think if I would have been reading this book instead of listening to it I probably would have given up on it, or at least skimmed through some very strange parts.  (I will not even get started on Camille’s 13-year-old half-sister whose actions I felt were far-fetched and unbelievable.)

Sharp Objects has its mind-blowing moments.  Especially towards the end of the book I am tossed upside down and Gillian Flynn pulls an amazing flip of what I thought to be true and left me going…. “Holy Smokes”.  The woman can write amazing stories… this one just wasn’t for me.  Jury is still out if I will see the movie, I think some of the main subject lines will make this one a pass.

 

 

 

Straight Flush by Ben Mezrich

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When a group of College Frat boys in Montana stumble across an idea from taking their weekly poker game to an online game where people all over the world can play for real stakes, they had no idea what they were about to unleash.

Absolutepoker.com became one of the biggest online poker sites in the world, at one point making nearly a million dollars a day.  The group of misfit college boys took the business to Costa Rica where they lived a high life of booze, women, and cars dodging accusations of the United States of illegal handing of the games and new laws coming in to play for online gambling. 

Nothing that grows that big that fast can stay on top forever….

 

 

 

I wanted to listen to this audio because I really enjoyed and recommend the movie 21, which is based on this same story.  A group of college guys create something they think will be fun and maybe bring them in a little spending money and of course what happens in much bigger than any would have dreamed.

While based on a non fiction take of what happened, many online articles and reviews grumble at the accuracy of this book.  I for one enjoyed the listen, finding it interesting, just as I did with Social Network.  If not for the move 21, and this book, I would know nothing at all of this scandal that all came crashing down in 2007.

Sleep Donation by Karen Russell

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Our world is in crisis.  Sleep is no longer the luxury it once was.  In fact a large portion of the population has lost the ability to sleep.  Slumber Corps is the place to find relief, boasting that they can take sleep “donations” from those who sleep with ease, especially young children who do not carry yet with them the realities of life into their rest time.  In fact Slumber Corps is discovering that the younger the child… the better the donation.  Of course you need to be able to convince families that their child will not be harmed at all, will not even notice the sleep that has been ebbed away from them.

Enter Trish Edgewater.  Trish has been an employee of Slumber Corps as a recruiter.  Trish has a way with potential donors as her own sister Dori died a horrifying death  when she was diagnosed with the lethal insomnia.  Once potential donors here Trish tell what happened to her sister, “If only someone would have donated sleep to her….”, they tearfully agree to become part of the project.

Underneath it all, Trish knows the truth of those who donate and the side effects of this treatment that will show up eventually.  Yet wearing her sister’s memory on her heart she repeats her story time and again to help Slumber Corps, to help.. ease her guilt. 

When “baby A” comes along, Trish starts to waiver… wondering if what she is doing is really the right thing to do, and if not, what can she do to change things right under the companies ever watching eye.

 

 

 

Sleep Donation was an engaging listening experience on a frightening subject of a world which is losing its ability to sleep.  Karen Russell is on to something pretty amazing (and scary) in her short 3 hours and 40 minute audio.  I could easily imagine this being a TV series.

My only gripe is that it was so short and I feel that the story could have been more powerful if it slowed down and took time to develop the story more.  Still, although a quick listen it left me wishing there was more.

The Fault In Our Stars by John Green (just as good the second time around)

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It was two years ago when I last listened to this book.  It was my first John Green.  It was the Fourth Of July. I was on the back of a motorcycle with my ear-buds in and tears streaming down my face… ~Sheila

16-year-old Hazel Grace has stage three cancer.  She is depressed and has little to do with anyone besides her parents and a couple of friends.  When encouraged to go to a support group for other kids with cancer, Hazel meets Augustus Waters, the once adorable basketball hero who has lost a leg to cancer and is now in remission. The two quickly form a friendship, drawn to each others quick wit and the way they look at the hand they have been dealt in life.

As the two teens get to know each other Hazel shares that her favorite novel of all time is a book called Imperial Afflictions, a book that has left her with questions she has always wished she knew.  She has written the author who lives in Amsterdam several times but has never heard back from him. When Augustus asks Hazel is she has used her make-a-wish yet, Hazel says she has.

“Please, please tell me it wasn’t on Disney World.” Augustus groans.

Hazel remains silent,

“Oh no!  You didn’t!!!!  Disney World?  Really?  It is so cliché!”

Hazel shrugs… “I was 13”

Turns out though, Augustus has not used his wish.

Why did I choose to listen to this book again?  If you have to ask…. clearly you have never read or listened to this book. 🙂 John Green writes a powerful story of two young people with cancer brought together by circumstance but soon it gowns into something more. 

This story is written so beautifully you just fall into it and I listened to the 7 hour audio in one day during the recent on-line read-a-thon.  It is beautifully narrated by Kate Rudd.  And while yes it is a book about two kids with cancer, it is also very witty, very funny, very passionate….  as a reader you do not drown in sorrow, instead you embrace the lives of these two amazing people.

A quote from the book:

“Sometimes, you read a book and it fills you with this weird evangelical zeal, and you become convinced that the shattered world will never be put back together unless and until all living humans read the book.”  

That’s the way I feel about this book.  If you have not read it… READ IT.  If you have read it…. READ IT AGAIN.  The movie is coming out this year… I can not wait! 

Fun fact about author John Green:  After announcing he would sign all 150,000 copies of this title’s first print run, it shot to the top of Amazon and Barnes & Noble’s best-seller lists six months before publication.

The Unbearable Book Club For Unsinkable Girls by Julie Schumacher

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Summer was here and 16-year-old Adrienne Haus’s best friend was off with her family for summer and Adrienne was left at home stuck with her knee in a brace.  Adrienne’s mom signed them both up for a mother daughter book club to give them something they could do together.

Popular girl Cee Cee was signed up for the book club as well with her mother after Cee Cee ruined the family car and had her summer trip to Pris cancelled as a result.

Jill and her mother joined as well, as did a quiet outcast of a girl names Wallis who’s mom never was available to join in.

The four girls were not friends, instead they referred to themselves as “literary prisoners” and named the group “The Unbearable Book Club”.  Yet through the summer, and through the discussion of 5 books…

anything can happen.

 

 

Why did I choose this book?  Honestly, two reasons, one was, I am always drawn to books with certain words in the title.  ‘Book Club’ happens to be one of those catch words for me.  Second reason, the audio length.  This book on audio is just over three hours and I wanted something light and fun.

The Unbearable Book Club is both light and fun.  Some of my favorite parts in the book was when the girls would discuss the book they were reading… (honestly it drove me to the internet so I could look up some of the titles!)  Yellow Wallpaper, Frankenstein, The Left Hand Of Darkness, The House On Mango Street, and The Awakening.  Quite the selection of books for one summer. 

While the girls were not written very deep, I did like their differences in personalities which lends itself well to the book.  Perhaps my favorite character is Adrienne’s single mom who never married or discusses Adrienne’s dad, but works hard at having a good relationship with her daughter.  She is both patient and witty and puts up with a lot of teenage (dare I say crap?) angst throughout this read.

The book is not perfect – the books they read as a group surprised me a bit, a couple of them quite mature for the age of the girls reading them.  There are a few things left unfinished in the book and while I loved the narrators bubbly voice, I found her voice to seem younger than the teenage girls she was portraying.

Overall, it makes for a good “sit on the deck with a cold glass of ice tea and dont take too seriously” read.  It is quick and at times delightful, and when I thought I knew for sure how it was going to end it surprised me.  I like to be surprised by a book. 🙂