Friday, January 30, 2009

12. Danger's Hour; The Story of the U.S.S. Bunker HIll

By Maxwell Kennedy
Rated 4.5 Stars
From:  Library

The only reason I rated this 4.5 stars instead of 5 stars was that a lot of the photographs in the book were troubling to me.  In fact, the only reason I have not purchased this book and sent it to my ten year old Great Grandson are those pictures.  He has an interest and knowledge of WWII that is exceptional for his age.



BOOK REVIEW FROM PUBLISHERS WEEKLY:  The U.S. aircraft carrier Bunker Hill and the Japanese kamikazes that struck her on May 11, 1945, embodied two fundamentally different approaches not only to war but to life, according to Kennedy. The Bunker Hill manifested American material power, and its civilian sailors reflected the determination of a nation to punish Japan's aggression with total victory. The pilots of the Divine Wind (or kamikaze) , on the other hand, represented a philosophical and spiritual response, an epic of pride, honor and virility. And when the kamikazes struck the Bunker Hill, it seemed for a time that a few determined men could frustrate American power, killing almost 400 Americans and wounding another 250. In what he views as a relevant lesson for the age of terror, Kennedy (Make Gentle the Life of This World) explores "how an individual's desire to live can be so successfully suppressed" that he will train for certain death. The author combines extensive archival research with interviews of American and Japanese participants in a spellbinding account showing that much more than geopolitics was at stake in the Pacific war. Photos. (Nov. 4) Copyright 2008 Reed Business Information.

Wednesday, January 28, 2009

11. Just Breathe

By Susan Wiggs
Rated 2.5
From:  Library

The only thing that kept me reading and not throwing this book at the wall was the fact that the story was pretty good.  It was the Will Bonner character who ruined what would have been a pleasant read.  He was just way too good to be true.  Made me want to gag.

FROM LIBRARY BOOK SUMMARY:  With Chicago and her marriage in the rearview mirror, cartoonist Sarah Moon flees to the small northern California coastal town where she grew up. As she comes to terms with her lost marriage, Sarah encounters a man she never expected to meet again: Will Bonner, the high school heartthrob she'd skewered mercilessly in her old comics. Now a local firefighter, he's been through some changes himself. But just as her heart is about to reawaken, Sarah discovers she is pregnant. With her ex's twins.

Saturday, January 17, 2009

10. The Kitchen Boy

By:  Robert Alexander
Rated 4 1/2 Stars
From:  Library

FROM AMAZON:  The final days of the last Russian tsar, Nicholas II, and his family are still a fascinating mystery. There is no one left to bear witness to what happened at the execution. Or is there? Alexander takes a very real, but forgotten and overlooked, potential witness, a young kitchen boy, and creates an amazing fictional account of what may have transpired. Leonka was working as a kitchen boy to the Romanov family when the Bolsheviks captured them, exiled them to Siberia, and imprisoned them in their house. Because of his lowly position in the household, Leonka was able to see and hear secret things. And he does keep them secret until decades later, knowing he is ready to die, he reveals all he knows about the imperial family and their horrific death. Alexander includes as much historically accurate information into his fiction as possible, and he includes actual letters and notes attributed to the Romanovs, which add a touch of authenticity. He also renders the plot beautifully with one final jaw-dropping and satisfying twist.

Thursday, January 15, 2009

9. The Fought in the Fields

By:  Nicola Tyrer
Rated 4 Stars
From:  Library

I was impressed by this book and its content - not only does it give personal accounts of the girls that were on the farms it povides unknown information ( to me ) about how the Womans Land Army was set up.

The stories that were given portray unfathomable fortitude of such young girls in the face of adversity, adherence to such hardships on minimal rations and general get-up-and-go attitude the girls held right to the very end makes our lives of waiting an extra 5 mins for a bus shameful when they used to have to dodge bombs.

However the friendships that were formed and the love for their work adds an extra glow to this extraordinary story of their calling.

8. The Language of Threads

By:  Gail Tsukiyama
Rated 4 Stars
From:  Library

The sequel to "Women of the Silk, " Pei leaves for Hong Kong in the 1930s, arriving with a young orphan, Ji Shen, in her care. Finding a new life with Mrs. Finch, a British expatriate who welcomes them as the daughters she never had, Pei finds herself once more struggling during the Japanese occupation of Hong Kong.

Monday, January 12, 2009

7. Women of the Silk

By Gail Tsukiyama
Rated 4.5 Stars
Library

This book was a very fast read.  It's listed as YA and I think that must translate into fewer pages (268) slightly larger font (although I don't know why young adults should need larger fonts ) and 1.5 line spacing.   I  enjoyed it and recommend it highly.  I have it's sequel, The Language of Threads and will be starting it this afternoon.  Between them they make one average size book.  Well, average for me that. is.


Why do reviewers say every book about China is reminiscent of Pearl S. Buck?  Is she the worlds standard for books about China?  She was certainly good but there have been other good authors who have written about China.  Why can't they say it's reminiscent of Lisa See (Snowflower and the Secret Fan) or can't they be bothered to try to remember anyone else's name who writes about China.  Hrrrumpf


LIBRARY REVIEW:When Pei Chung is eight years old, her father leaves her at the house of Auntie Yee so that she can work in the silk factory. Her grief at the unexplained abandonment is softened by the kindness of Yee and the other girls, and slowly she begins to thrive in her new independence. The friendship between Pei and Lin, who is the support of her once wealthy and powerful family, is forged with the lives of the silk workers who begin to demand better conditions. The China of 1919-1938, when the Japanese threat became a reality, is woven into the threads of factory life and that of families faced with ruin. The characters are drawn with fine detail. Small village life contrasts vividly with an exciting visit to Canton, and ceremonies are exquisitely described. This fascinating story is beautifully written and slightly reminiscent of Pearl Buck's The Good Earth .

Sunday, January 11, 2009

6. The Independence of Miss Mary Bennet

Rated 4.5
From Library

When I saw this book my first thought was "why in the world is Colleen McCullough writing fan fiction?" I didn't get very far into the book before I figured it out. Having a good time is what she was doing. There is no law that says a writer, even one of Colleen McCullough's caliber can't stick her tongue firmly in her cheek and take a group of characters, loved by legions of Jane Austen fans, of which I am one, give them a good shaking up and come up with a completely new take on the story.

Interview with Colleen McCullough

I would have given this book a 5 star rating instead of a 4.5 if she had stuck to her guns and not tidied everything up so neatly at the end and tacked on a sticky sweet ending. Since she had already made most of the characters wonderfully dysfunctional I would have preferred that she left them still shooting (metaphorically of course) at each other at the end of the book. Except for Miss Mary Bennet. It was about time someone gave Mary a life, a grand adventure and a HEA.

From the Library Website:


Everyone knows the story of Elizabeth and Jane Bennet inPride and Prejudice. But what about their sister Mary? At the conclusion of Jane Austen's classic novel, Mary, bookish, awkward, and by all accounts, unmarriageable, is sentenced to a dull, provincial existence in the backwaters of Britain. Now, master storyteller Colleen McCullough rescues Mary from her dreary fate withThe Independence of Miss Mary Bennet, a page-turning sequel set twenty years after Austen's novel closes. The story begins as the neglected Bennet sister is released from the stultifying duty of caring for her insufferable mother. Though many would call a woman of Mary's age a spinster, she has blossomed into a beauty to rival that of her famed sisters. Her violet eyes and perfect figure bewitch the eligible men in the neighborhood, but though her family urges her to marry, romance and frippery hold no attraction. Instead, she is determined to set off on an adventure of her own. Fired with zeal by the newspaper letters of the mysterious Argus, she resolves to publish a book about the plight of England's poor. Plunging from one predicament into another, Mary finds herself stumbling closer to long-buried secrets, unanticipated dangers, and unlooked-for romance.Meanwhile, the other dearly loved characters ofPride and Prejudicefret about the missing Mary while they contend with difficulties of their own. Darcy's political ambitions consume his ardor, and he bothers with Elizabeth only when the impropriety of her family seems to threaten his career. Lydia, wild and charming as ever, drinks and philanders her way into dire straits; Kitty, a young widow of means, occupies herself with gossip and shopping; and Jane, naïve and trusting as ever, spends her days ministering to her crop of boys and her adoring, if not entirely faithful, husband. Yet, with the shadowy and mysterious figure of DarcyÕs right-hand man, Ned Skinner, lurking at every corner, it is clear that all is not what it seems at idyllic Pemberley. As the many threads of McCulloughÕs masterful plot come together, shocking truths are revealed, love, both old and new, is tested, and all learn the value of true independence in a novel for every woman who has wanted to leave her mark on the world.

Saturday, January 10, 2009

5. Honey Moon

Rated 4 Stars
From:  My Shelves

While I liked it a lot, this is the darkest book that Phillips has written.  Honey Jane Moon is only 16 but has been her family's commanding force for years when she decides to drive her pretty cousin Chantal Booker from South Carolina to California to audition for TV's Dash Coogan Show. Dash, "the last of America's movie cowboy heroes" is indeed impressed--but by Honey, whom he picks to play his daughter. Although suddenly tossed into life's fast lane, Honey still wants just what she always wanted: a close-knit family and some affection. Her South Carolina kin live with her, but their closeness resembles the adhesion of leeches. Dash, who learned about relationships from his ex-wives, turns a cold shoulder to Honey, who desperately needs him to be a real-life father figure, while Eric Dillon, Honey's "dark, sullen, and gorgeous" co-star, stomps on the puppy love she has to offer. Yet it is only through their complicated relationships that Honey, Dash and Eric can finally exorcise their personal demons.

Tuesday, January 6, 2009

4. Glitter Baby

By Susan Elizabeth Phillips
Rated 3 Stars
Purchased from Amazon

I am not sorry I bought this book because it was the one book that SEP has written that I don't have.  So it rounded out my collection.  Also it show very clearly just how far she has come as an author.  Sometime around Fancy Pants or maybe it was Honeymoon she broke out of the pack of mediocre authors and started writing really outstanding romance novels.  So if for no other reason you might call this an inspirational novel that shows how much an author can improve over time.


Product Description

Welcome to the world of the Glitter Baby
Fleur Savagar is the most beautiful woman in the world . . . to everyone but herself. With her oversized hands and paddle-boat feet, her streaky blond hair and funny green eyes, she lives a life filled with secrets that began before she was born. That was when her bewitching mother left home to find James Dean and met Errol Flynn instead. Now Fleur has to grow up quickly, and life won't make that easy.
Jake Koranda is both New York's most brilliant playwright and Hollywood's hottest actor. Difficult, talented, and tormented, he has no patience for international glamour girls, not even ones with beautiful bodies and smart-aleck mouths. But there's more to the Glitter Baby than shine, and Fleur's tougher than Jake expects. Even with the odds stacked against her, she's fiercely determined to discover the woman she's destined to be.
An ugly duckling who can't believe she's turned into a swan . . . A tough-guy movie star with a haunted past . . . In a land of broken dreams, can two unlikely lovers trust their hearts?

Sunday, January 4, 2009

3. Time of my LIfe

By Jillian Westfield
Rated 4 Stars
From Library

This book is one of those "if I could go back in time and change one thing" kind of books.  Jillian has the perfect suburban life straight out of the upscale women's magazines that she obsessively reads. She’s got the modern-print rugs of Metropolitan Home, the elegant meals fromGourmet, the clutter-free closets out ofReal Simple, and the elaborate Easter egg hunts seen inParents. With her successful investment banker husband behind the wheel and her cherubic eighteen-month-old in the backseat, hers could be the family in the magazines’ glossy Range Rover ads. Yet somehow all of the how-to magazine stories in the world can’t seem to fix her faltering marriage, banish the tedium of days spent changing diapers, or stop her from asking, “What if?” Then one morning Jillian wakes up seven years in the past. Before her daughter was born. Before she married Henry. Suddenly she’s back in her post–grad school Ikea-furnished Manhattan apartment. She’s back in her fast-paced job with the advertising agency. And she’s still with Jackson, the ex-boyfriend and star of her what-if fantasies. Armed with twenty-twenty hindsight, she’s free to choose all over again. She can use the zippy ad campaigns from her future to wow the clients and bosses in her present. She can reconnect with the mother who abandoned her so many years before. She can fix the fights at every juncture that doomed her relationship with Jackson. Or can she? With each new choice setting off a trajectory of unforeseen consequences, Jillian soon realizes that getting to happily ever after is more complicated than changing the lines in her part of the script. Happiness, it turns out, isn’t an either-or proposition. As she closes in on all the things she thought she wanted, Jillian must confront the greatest what-if of all: What if the problem was never Henry or Jackson, but her? Sharp, funny, and heartwarming,Time of My Lifewill appeal to anyone who has ever wanted to redo the past and will leave readers pondering, “Do we get the reality we deserve?”

Saturday, January 3, 2009

2. Katherine


By Anya Seton
Rated 5+ Stars
From my shelves

This is a reread for me as it's one of my favorite books and it was time to revisit it.  Also, Alison Weir has a new book about Katherine Swynford coming out on January 27, 2009 titled Mistress of the Monarchy: The Life of Katherine swynford, Duchess of Lancaster

Katherine, by Anya Seton tells the true story of the love affair that changed history—that of Katherine Swynford and John of Gaunt, Duke of Lancaster, the ancestors of most of the British royal family. Set in the vibrant 14th century of Chaucer and the Black Death, the story features knights fighting in battle, serfs struggling in poverty, and the magnificent Plantagenets—Edward III, the Black Prince, and Richard II—who ruled despotically over a court rotten with intrigue. Within this era of danger and romance, John of Gaunt, the king’s son, falls passionately in love with the already married Katherine. Their well-documented affair and love persist through decades of war, adultery, murder, loneliness, and redemption. This epic novel of conflict, cruelty, and untamable love has become a classic since its first publication in 1954.

Friday, January 2, 2009

1. The Wednesday Wars

By Gary Schmidt
Rated 4.5 Stars

From Booklist
*Starred Review* On Wednesday afternoons, while his Catholic and Jewish schoolmates attend religious instruction, Holling Hoodhood, the only Presbyterian in his seventh grade, is alone in the classroom with his teacher, Mrs. Baker, who Holling is convinced hates his guts. He feels more certain after Mrs. Baker assigns Shakespeare's plays for Holling to discuss during their shared afternoons. Each month in Holling's tumultuous seventh-grade year is a chapter in this quietly powerful coming-of-age novel set in suburban Long Island during the late '60s. The slow start may deter some readers, and Mrs. Baker is too good to be true: she arranges a meeting between Holling and the New York Yankees, brokers a deal to save a student's father's architectural firm, and, after revealing her past as an Olympic runner, coaches Holling to the varsity cross-country team. However, Schmidt, whose Lizzie Bright and the Buckminster Boy (2005) was named both a Printz and a Newbery Honor Book, makes the implausible believable and the everyday momentous. Seamlessly, he knits together the story's themes: the cultural uproar of the '60s, the internal uproar of early adolescence, and the timeless wisdom of Shakespeare's words. Holling's unwavering, distinctive voice offers a gentle, hopeful, moving story of a boy who, with the right help, learns to stretch beyond the limitations of his family, his violent times, and his fear, as he leaps into his future with his eyes and his heart wide open. Engberg, Gillian