Category ArchiveBook
Book 22 Apr 2010 09:00 am
Wow, what an albino beauty.
We just got in a new book called, BIG FISH by Ellis.

Yeah, gorgeous.
But on the page with the Whale Shark (my favorite shark), there was a link to a photo online. It is of an Albino Whale Shark from the Galapagos.
Here is the link from the book. And here is what is written there:
On August 25, 2007, Antonio Moreano, a naturalist in the Galapagos, photographed an albino whale shark at Darwin, the northern-most island of the Galapagos. Below are some images that Antonio sent us. Antonio is a naturalist for the M/V Deep Blue, and for private yachts in the Galapagos.
Have you ever seen anything more beautiful? It is breath-taking.
Another article here at Divernet.com.
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Book 03 Jun 2009 08:26 am
Jillian Hunter
I borrowed two of Hunter’s books from a friend, and now have a pile of 7 more! They are fun historical romances, all based around the Boscastle family.
Head over to Jillian’s website for more information on her series. For the Boscastle family, her first book is “Seduction of an English Scoundrel” and was a good time.
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Book 01 May 2009 06:49 am
Promise Not to Tell
Jennifer McMahon wrote a DOOZY.
Seriously, I finished this novel and said aloud (to an empty room barring two dogs), “WOW.”
Promise Not To Tell was amazing. Here is the book description from the HC website.
Forty-one-year-old school nurse Kate Cypher has returned home to rural Vermont to care for her mother who’s afflicted with Alzheimer’s. On the night she arrives, a young girl is murdered—a horrific crime that eerily mirrors another from Kate’s childhood. Three decades earlier, her dirt-poor friend Del—shunned and derided by classmates as “Potato Girl”—was brutally slain. Del’s killer was never found, while the victim has since achieved immortality in local legends and ghost stories. Now, as this new murder investigation draws Kate irresistibly in, her past and present collide in terrifying, unexpected ways. Because nothing is quite what it seems . . . and the grim specters of her youth are far from forgotten.
The book alternates between the 2002 current storyline and Kate’s memories from the 1970′s of her childhood with Del. You could have a year-long monthly meeting book group on just this one book, because you can just talk about so many things; dealing with an elderly parent, alternative lifestyles, child abuse, child sexual abuse, teasing, bullying, and childhood fears.
A very VERY compelling read.
Here is the Publisher’s weekly review:
From Publishers Weekly
Part mystery-thriller and part ghost story, McMahon’s well-paced debut alternates smoothly between past and present. In the fall of 2002, 41-year-old Kate Cypher, a divorced Seattle school nurse, returns to New Hope, the decaying Vermont hippie commune where she grew up, to visit her elderly mother, Jean, who’s suffering from Alzheimer’s. Kate has avoided New Hope since the grizzly, unsolved murder of her fifth-grade friend, Del Griswold, 31 years earlier. Kate fears she betrayed Del, a free-spirited farm girl. Did her betrayal cause Del’s death? Who killed Del? Another local girl is murdered in a similar manner at the time of Kate’s return. Could the killer be loose again? Meanwhile, Jean appears to be possessed with Del’s spirit and may have the answers to these questions. As Kate investigates, she learns stunning truths about many events and people from her youth. McMahon does a particularly good job of portraying the cruelty of school children.
Also head over to Jennifer’s website for more info on her and her other novels! I have Dismantled in my stack to read next, and I’m PSYCHED.
I am also very excited (even more so now that I have read and LOVED her book) to be able to say that Jennifer will be coming to my bookstore for a signing in June.
CANNOT WAIT!
*GIDDY*
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Book 29 Apr 2009 08:27 am
Can You Keep a Secret?
I have blogged about Sophie Kinsella in the past, but I wanted to make sure everyone knows that she writes more than just the Shopaholic Series. Her official page at Random House gives a bunch of information about Sophie and her books, but I want to point you in the direction of one specifically.
Can You Keep a Secret? came out in 2004 and I have been enjoying it ever since. I have probably reread it once a year because it is just so FUNNY. You cannot read this book without laughing, probably out loud like I have.
It is one of those great books that just CHEERS you up (at the cost of a little misery for poor Emma Corrigan). It is available in paperback at your favorite independent bookshop so go check it out.
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Book 24 Apr 2009 09:52 am
The Little Pink House
Here is a book definitely a book worthy of being read- slowly, quickly, with enthusiasm, with tears and tissues, however you read. READ THIS BOOK.
Little Pink House: A True Story of Defiance and Courage by Jeff Benedict was PHENOMENAL.
Susette Kelo wants a home. She has had a hard life and wants something of her OWN. She finds the perfect house right on the waterfront in New London and is happy.
Then everything changed. This book is the amazing and shocking journey that Susette goes through. It starts on 8 East Street in New London and goes all the way to the US Supreme Court.
This is the starred Publisher’s Weekly review.
Benedict has taken a complicated court case centered on eminent domain and turned it into a page-turner with a conscience. In 1997, an EMT named Susette Kelo left her husband, bought a cottage and started over in the economically depressed Ft. Trumbull neighborhood of New London, Conn. In February 1998, the New London Development Corporation began trying to muscle the neighborhood into selling homes to make way for a Pfizer research complex. Benedict’s passionate account is rife with heroes and villains – he delights in pillorying Kelo’s foil, Claire Gaudiana, the president of Connecticut College who lured Pfizer to consider New London. The fight escalated when the city tried exercising eminent domain to seize the homes of Kelo and others who refused to sell, leading to the case, Kelo v. the City of New London, reaching the Supreme Court in 2005. Raising important questions about the use of economic development as a justification for displacing citizens, this book will leave readers indignant and inspired.â€
Here is a YouTube video from his site.
This is an IMPORTANT book to read. Eminent Domain is changing. The Kelo vs New London case shows this. So everyone, please read this book, and go to www.JeffBenedict.com for even more information and reviews.
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Book 20 Apr 2009 08:43 am
Jessica’s Guide to Dating the Dark Side
I know I know, another teen vampire romance. Yeah no.
So much more than a cheesy vamp novel. This was sweet and painful and analytical and racy! All in one young-adult novel!
Jessica’s Guide to Dating the Dark Side is Beth Fantaskey’s first novel. And it is a pleasure!
A bit more info at Fantastic Fiction and from Beth’s website, here are two reviews:
“Jessica evolves nicely with each new shocking revelation, becoming, over the course of the novel, an intriguing and strong protagonist . . . romance buffs will find the ultimate pairing of Lucius and Jessica absolutely irresistible, and it’s downright swoonworthy once their elaborate courting ritual begins in earnest.”— The Bulletin
and from Publishers Weekly, a Starred Review.
A romance involving a high school girl and a handsome vampire may sound a little too familiar, yet this first novel quickly bursts ahead of the pack of Twilight-wannabes. Down-to-earth mathlete Jessica Packwood is completely horrified when, a few months shy of her 18th birthday, a Romanian named Lucius Vladescu shows up on her doorstep, claiming that he and she are vampire royalty betrothed to each other since infancy—what’s worse, her adoptive parents verify the betrothal story and explain that her birth parents identified themselves as vampires, too. Fantaskey makes this premise work by playing up its absurdities without laughing at them, endowing Jessica with a coolly ironic sensibility and Lucius with old-world snobberies that Jessica’s girlfriends find irresistible. Jessica’s laidback parents serve as foils for imperious Lucius (Can I ever again be happy in our soaring Gothic castle after walking the halls of Woodrow Wilson High School, a literal ode to linoleum? he asks sarcastically); a scene at a steakhouse where the vegan Packwoods meet the carnivorous Vladescus is first-rate comedy. The romance sizzles, the plot develops ingeniously and suspensefully, and the satire sings. Ages 14–up.
While the story is told from Jessica’s viewpoint, Lucius gets his opinions known through his letters to his uncle. My coworker Katherine felt that they were the highlight of the book. They show his self-confidence, insecurity, incredulity, disgust, awe, jealousy, love and pain but with humor at the same time. I know it sounds hard, but yeah. Its all there.
It is definitely a fun read, though I wish there was a second by Beth for me to jump to next!
Head out and ENJOY it!!!
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Book 17 Apr 2009 08:31 am
What Would Emma Do?
So. This book, you think is going to be weird and silly and throwing in religion as a way to prevent the characters from having sex. Yeah, YOU WOULD BE WRONG.
Head over to Eileen Cook’s website and read the first chapter. It is FUN. But there is still weight to the story. She has interpersonal relationship problems with… pretty much everyone, but when the crap hits the fan, does she speak up for what is right?
I think you will be surprised how it ends up.
While juggling friendship issues (her best friend isn’t speaking to her), a love triangle-turned-square (okay, maybe she shouldn’t have kissed her best friend’s boyfriend…but it was totally an accident!…sort of), and escalating mayhem in her small religious town (uh-oh…what would Jesus do?), Emma realizes she has to stop trying to please everyone around her and figure out what she wants for herself. It’s time to start asking, “What would Emma do?”

(don’t you love that she is stepping on his feet in the picture? it looks so “in the bushes” and a little bit racy, but then you see the feet and giggle)
Again (I think I like this Becky girl), head over to People who looked at this item also looked at…
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Book 13 Apr 2009 08:24 am
The Dust of 100 Dogs
One of the Kids’ Next List from Indie List.
TOTALLY deserves that accolade. This was an awesome Book. Head over to the author’s website for the book and familiarize yourself.

There is a trailer here at YouTube
Some fun reviews at Good Reads, Flux Now, and some great points at Becky’s Book Review’s.
I want to focus on Becky’s for a second. From her review,
But the animal abuse introduced into the book by the presence of Fred in addition to the foul and abusive language (a bit stronger than I personally like) make these passages unpleasant….for me.
I am RIGHT there with her on the animal abuse. The character Fred and what he did to Rusty was… hard for me to get through. He was obviously unstable, and I didn’t mind the language or his comments about his “aide” but his treatment of Rusty was heinous. Now, I am following A.S. King on Twitter and she assured me (as the author she can do these types of assurances) that Rusty gets love at the end.
Honestly, that is why I was able to finish. So if you are worried about Rusty like I was (and no this doesn’t spoil the book for you), rest assured, he is OKAY.
That all said, yeah, go read it. It’s awesome. A bit different from what you might be used to, but still, AWESOME.
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Book 08 Apr 2009 08:52 am
The Secret Life of Prince Charming
I just finished Deb Caletti’s The Secret Life of Prince Charming and I loved it!
I was about a half hour in (at the end of my lunch period) and was not really getting into it. But it was my first attempt at one of her books, so what the heck, lets give it another half hour. Yeah, so glad I did. Once she starts finding the stolen items, it really picks up, and then the road trip. Super fun.
Okay, so head over to Deb Caletti’s website for more info on her and her other books!
Reviews here: at Fantastic Fiction and Good Reads.
I also need to quote two sections because I was so amazed by their beauty.
“A jar is just a jar except when it was in your kitchen growing up. An umbrella is an umbrella, except when the man you love stood under it during a hailstorm when he asked you to marry him,” Olivia said and sipped her tea.
and
She said a marriage is like a well-built porch. If one of the two posts leans too much, the porch collapses. So each post must be strong enough to stand on its own.
I was just amazed by those two quotes. I hope you enjoyed them too, and that you will go out and read this book! (Available on April 7th 2009. That’s almost here!!)
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Book 06 Apr 2009 09:02 am
The Similarities are Endless…
Covers can look similar. There are eyes, wellies, knee socks, and those are just to name a few of the similarities.
But there is a major difference between similar covers and two covers with the SAME IMAGE.
Yeah, the exact same image.
I know.
weird.
Find out more about Joy Fielding’s Still Life and Natasha Mostert’s Keeper of Light and dust here.
Do you have any examples of repeated cover use?
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