Oh, dear. I've only reviewed four of these so the descriptions are a bit longer than my normal "Month in Review" blurbs. In some cases this may be the extent of what I end up writing.
122.
The Tiny Book of Tiny Stories 3 by HitRecord - Loved
this third installment of the "Tiny Book of Tiny Stories" series. The first was great, second
was kind of meh and the third was back up to snuff. This is the
book that pulled me off the "not requesting" wagon. I'm climbing back on, honestly.
123.
The Prodigal: A Ragamuffin Story by Brennan Manning and Greg Garrett - The
story of a TV evangelist who makes a big mistake but refuses to
apologize. He's thrown out of the church he founded, his wife is
paid off (to keep her from speaking to the press) and
he ends up being taken home by his father, who is dying but would
have forgiven his son, anyway. A modern retelling of the
Biblical "Prodigal's Son," not a perfect book
but I particularly loved the fact that the minister learns his lesson yet not everything works out as he'd like it to, in the end.
124.
Mousekin's Lost Woodland by Edna Miller - Mousekin's
home is razed by the lumber industry and he and the other animals
must find another place to live. I decided this one was too sad --
was looking for secondhand books for my sister's grandson -- so I didn't bring
it home and then I decided it was actually the best of the three
books I read (I didn't log the other two). Naturally, I bought the
others and decided I'm just going to take them back. I took Sister
a stack of pretty books I reviewed, instead.
125.
The Emperor's Nightingale and Other Feathery Tales by Jane Ray - My favorite children's book of the month, a book of
collected tales and poems about or featuring birds, some familiar,
some not. I absolutely loved the author's personal touch. She
retold many of the stories and they sound a lot like the fairy tales
of my childhood. I wasn't as enamored of the illustrations as the stories but I
liked them, some more than others.
126.
Death Wish by Lindsey Menges - My niece's first book, a
dystopian tale about a woman who works as a "Fairy Godmother" for a
corporation that provides the death wishes of people who are tired
of living in a world where disease has been eradicated. I was so impressed with this book -
great pacing, skilled writing, excellent plot. It needs a bit of
editing but I hope someday this book will find its way to
traditional publication. Lindsey has labeled it YA but since the
heroine is slightly older I think it's probably best classified as
New Adult but the story is very clean, lacking sex and bad language
and the heroine is in an established relationship (all of which I
really, really appreciated).
127.
The Inimitable Jeeves by P. G. Wodehouse - Bingo falls
in love repeatedly, Bertie finds himself engaged to a woman who
gives him the shivers and Jeeves continues to save the day. The Jeeves and Wooster stories are faultlessly
entertaining. So much happens that they feel more like short
stories cobbled together, which is fine. Wodehouse makes me smile and
sometimes laugh out loud. I needed an upper and I got it.
128.
Transparent Things by Vladimir Nabokov - A man recalls repeated visits to the same village in Switzerland over a span of 20 years.
As I closed the book, I felt like I was left with quite a few
questions and then suddenly I realized Nabokov answered them all . .
. and understanding made the story twice as creepy. Not long after
reading
Transparent Things and feeling completely blown away by
Nabokov's writing, as always, I read that he wrote a limited number
of words per day and his goal was to make every sentence perfect.
Well, that explains a lot.
129.
A Good American by Alex George (reread) - I suggested
that my F2F group read and discuss
A Good American after
immigration came up in discussion of another book (can't remember
which one). I enjoyed revisiting the family saga of the Meisenheimer
family as much the second time as the first. Everyone in my reading
group loved it and we had a huge turnout so that's quite a
recommendation. We used the questions from Alex's website as
prompts for discussion and I kind of wish we hadn't. Some provoked
interesting conversation and led to thoughts beyond the initial
question but others fell flat.
130.
A Great and Complicated Adventure by Tellegan and Ahlberg (reread) - Cute stories, reread specifically to review and
loved it as much the second time.
131.
Hyperbole and a Half by Allie Brosh - I grabbed a copy
of
Hyperbole and a Half on the way to Oklahoma and actually
read a good portion of it in the car, even though I normally cannot
read in a moving vehicle (I still looked up frequently). Loved blogger
Allie Brosh's memoir about childhood, depression, life with her
dogs, a strange experience with a goose, etc. I've only been to her
blog once, when the second part of her depression story went viral
and I followed a link. It made me laugh and I purchased the book
solely on the basis of that single post. I'm glad I did. I
absolutely loved the book and was particularly enamored of the
stories about her dogs. She is the best kind of pet owner. Although
her pets are far from perfect, when she adopts they're
forever
pets. I love her for that alone.
132.
Labor Day by Joyce Maynard - A prison escapee asks
a lonely, depressed woman and her son, who is unaware of how much
he's missing in life, to take him home with them and they agree.
Over the Labor Day holiday, he changes the direction of their lives
and leaves a lasting impression. Such a raw, surprising book. I
absolutely gobbled it up and cannot wait to read more by Joyce
Maynard.
133.
The Clockwork Scarab by Colleen Gleason (YA) - A
steampunk mystery starring two young females. Mina Holmes (niece of
Sherlock) and Evaline Stoker (Bram's younger sis) are asked to solve
the mysterious deaths of two young socialites and find another who
is missing. A time traveler from the future, Egyptian scarabs,
missing girls, a person who wants to bring back an Egyptian goddess
. . . there's an awful lot going on in this book, a bit too much for
me and the story was not wrapped up enough to suit me. Eventually,
I got into the story but it took a while to get used to that
strange, alternate world and in the end I was disappointed.
©2013 Nancy Horner. All rights reserved. If you are reading this post at a site other than Bookfoolery or its RSS feed, you are reading a stolen feed. Email bookfoolery@gmail.com for written permission to reproduce text or photos.