Tuesday, 10 January 2012

The Angel over the Right Shoulder

Welcome to my little Niche within the library. So grab a coffee and let's review some books.

The Angel over the Right Shoulder The Beginning of a New YearThe Angel over the Right Shoulder The Beginning of a New Year by Elizabeth Stuart Phelps

My rating: 5 of 5 stars


A stressed and unfulfilled housewife and mother is asked by her husband to try an experiment; she's to have an hour or so each day just to do things for herself. The woman agrees and tries the experiment but everytime she goes into her room for a little 'me' time she is interrupted.
Unfulfilled and highly stressed out, the woman moans about how meaningless and mundane her life is until she gets a wake-up call and new lease on life by two Guardian Angels. This is a short story that can be read in one sitting. I truly enjoyed this inspirational book and identified with the main character. I thought the title ought to be 'A Woman's work is never done' until I read the ending.




Monday, 9 January 2012

The Christmas Angel

Welcome to my little Niche within the library. So grab a coffee and let's review some books.


The Christmas Angel (Focus on the Family Great Stories)The Christmas Angel by Abbie Farwell Brown





 On  Christmas Eve,  a miserable old Spinster sets out to destroy a box of old childhood toys; but before throwing each toy into the Library fireplace she conducts an experiment to prove that there is no Christmas Spirit left.  She  throws four old toys into the streets to see what becomes of them only to find that these old forgotten toys, which she calls rubbish,  bring out the worst in those who finds them........until she stumbles upon an old family ornament......a Christmas Angel from Miss Terry's childhood whom she and her brother often put on top of their Christmas Tree.   The Angel  helps Miss Terry see the error of her ways and reveals the truth behind each of her  'experiments', revealing the true outcome of each toy that Miss Terry threw out onto the pavement with a very different outcome from what Miss Terry assumed happened to each toy. 

          Each toy that Angelina Terry throws out touches the life of a person in a very special way.

  • A little sick boy is given the gift of a Jack-In-the Box that was found by two Jewish Boys.
  • An arrogant Millionaire turns over a new leaf  when he rescues a little boy who was about to be run over  by a truck when the toy Flannel Dog that Miss Terry threw out was crushed under a car.....when the arrogant Millionaire threw the dog unto the street in a haughty manner.
  • An embittered mother who lost her child finds the true meaning of Christmas and has a change of heart when she finds Miss Terry's brother's  Noah's Ark.
  • An abused child finds the true meaning of Christmas and a warm home when she finds Miranda, Miss Terry's old doll.
  • A drunken old sinner finds a Guardian Angel who helps him mend his ways on Christmas Eve.

        
       This is a charming story full of the Christmas Spirit.  Abbey Farbel Brown has written a modern twist to Dickens's  A Christmas Carol in an original way.  I absolutely loved this story!  The story is short enough to read in one sitting and full of the true meaning of Christmas.

Abbey Farbell Brown, a descendant of the earliest New England settlers, was born on Beacon Hill,  in 1871 in Boston.  Brown attended the Boston Girl's Latin School and became intimate friends with  Prescott Peabody.  Abbey graduated from Radcliffe  College  in 1894. 
Also by this Author:

A Pocketful of Poesies (1902). The Curious Book of Birds (1903). The Star Jewels (1905). Brothers and Sisters (1906). Friends and Cousins (1907). Fresh Posies; Rhymes to Read and Pieces to Speak (1908). The Christmas Angel (1910). Their City Christmas; a Story for Boys and Girls (1912). Songs of Sixpence (1914). Kensington Town (1915). Surprise House (1917). The Gift; a Christmas Story (1920). Heart of New England (1920). The Rock of Liberty; a Pilgrim Ode (1920). What Luck! A Study in Opposites (1920). The Green Trunk; a Masque (1921). Round Robin (1921). The Lights of Beacon Hill; a Christmas Message (1922). The New England Poetry Club; an Outline of Its History, 1915-1923 (1923). Our Christmas Tree (1925). The Silver Stairs; Poems (1926). Under the Rowan Tree (1926). The Lantern and Other Plays for Children (1928). The Little Friend (1960).





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Saturday, 12 November 2011

November Reviews

Welcome to my little Niche within the library. So grab a coffee and let's review some books.

I took a break in October but I'm back this month with another review. I am still reading The Ghosts of Sleath by Herbert and it will be a few weeks before I finish the book.

I have read  The Story of Solomon Bear, a cute little fairy-tale about a bear and his Princess:

The Story of Solomon BearThe Story of Solomon Bear by Phillip Laird

My rating: 5 of 5 stars


I really enjoyed this cute story about a bear and his relationship with 'his Princess', a little orphaned girl living with her step-family. The bear and the girl make a promise to always love each other no matter what in a loveless house. One night, the little girl has an altercation with her step mother and runs out of the house into the outside world. Solomon wonders where she has gone and is devastated about losing his Princess before going on an adventure to find her.

The story is a modern twist to the story, The Velveteen Rabbit, by Margery Williams. Although it bears a few similarities to The Velveteen Rabbit, Laird has written this enchanting book using a fresh modern twist. The book can be further enhanced by a few illustrations which will add to its enchantment, but as it is the book is very lovely. In this delightful book, Laird addresses such issues as loneliness, sadness, hope, courage, forgiveness and more importantly, love, and determination. There is a universal lesson not only for children but for parents to learn from this heart-warming tale.

Saturday, 8 October 2011

Halloween Books

Welcome to my little Niche within the library. So grab a coffee and let's review some books.

To put you into the Spirt of Halloween, I've round up a few Howl-oween books guaranteed to chill your bones.


Halloween Books

Bibliography

Adult Fiction: Horror

Aris, M. (2011). The Curse of Anna Greene. Lulu.com.  ISBN: 978-1-4477-5841-9
Gordon, J. (2011). The Horror at Halloween (Part One) (Kindle ed.). Robinson. (2007). Kindle
Blatty, P. The Excorcist. Corgi. ISBN: 978-0552156882
Herbert, J. (1998). The Ghosts of Sleath. Book Club Associates.
Howe, K. (2009). The Lost Book of Salem. Penguin. ISBN: 978-0141038117
Irving, W. (2007). The Legend of Sleepy Hallow. Filiquarian. ISBN: 978-1599869308
Lawrenson, D. (2011). The Lantern. Harper. ISBN: 978-0062088727
Poe, E. A. (1987). The Fall of the House of Ushers & other Stories. Marshall Cavendish.
ISBN:0-86307-6700-X
Rowling, J. K. (2008). Harry Potter Adult collection Box set. Bloomsbury Publishing PLC; UK open market ed edition.  ISBN: 978-0747595847
Fiction—comedy-Horror

Geary, D. (2011). A Modern Witch (Kindle ed.). Fireweed Publishing.  ISBN: 1937041034
Haig, M. (2011). The Radleys. Canongate Books Ltd.  ISBN: 978-1847678614
Navarrette, V. Donaldson, J. (2002). Room on the Broom. McMillan.
 (2008) Dear Dracula. Image Comics; illustrated edition edition. ISBN: 978-1582409702


Non-Fiction


Barth, E. (1981). Witches, Pumpkins, and Grinning Ghosts (The story of the Halloween Symbols). Houghton Mifflin Company.  ISBN: 978-0613301954
Dewherst, C. (1993). My Tricks & Treats: Halloween Stories, Songs, Poems, Recipes, Crafts, and Fun for Kids. Smithmark Pub.  ISBN: 978-0831751722
Dunwich, G. (2007). A Witch's Halloween: A Complete Guide to the Magick, Incantations, Recipes, Spells and Lore. Adams Media Corporation. ISBN: 978-1598693409

Sunday, 4 September 2011

Welcome to my World

Welcome to my little Niche within the library. So grab a coffee and let's review some books.





Thursday, 1 September 2011

September Reads

Welcome to my little Niche within the library. So grab a coffee and let's review some books.


The LanternThe Lantern by Deborah Lawrenson

My rating: 5 of 5 stars


Deborah Lawerenson

In a little Hamlet in Provence lies Les GenÉvriers, an old run- down farmhouse in the Luberon valley of Provence. When Eve met Dom she thought she met her match. Dom and Eve decide to build a future in Provence in the Luberon Valley of Southern France. At first Eve is enchanted by the cottage and surrounding farmhouse when they first purchased it from the Estate Agents and went to live in it. But soon, as summer ends, Eve discovers secrets and ghosts in the cottage...secrets that haunt her. With each day Dom begins to withdraw within himself and Eve is left on her own to ponder the strange shadows and flickering lights that emerge throughout the house and garden.

Eve, an avid bookworm discovers a children's book in one of the wardrobes of the house and soon begins to delve into Le Genevries's history and previous owners....the Lincel family. When Eve and Dom meet a strange woman at a dinner party....a woman who claims to know about Dom's past and several legends surrounding Les GenÉvriers, Eve begins to question Dom....is he really the man he says he is. What became of Rachel, his first wife? Each day a new mystery unfolds and Eve is caught in a web of mystery, deceit and lies. What secrets does the house hold? Who is Benedict and Marthe?

The Lantern is a well-written story about how dangerous a wild imagination can be. It is a ghost story, a romance novel, a mystery, a Crime story and a Gothic Novel rolled into one. I fell in love with the story and couldn't put it down. As the story unfolded I wanted to find out what happened to Rachel. Was she murdered? Did she vanish without a trace like Marthe Lincel? The answers to all these questions are revealed within the descriptive pages of this wonderful book. The characters are well-rounded and I identified with the character of BÉnÉdicte. I disliked the character of Pierre Lincel. I was shocked by a scene in the book where Pierre strangles a cat and quarters it before Benedict’s eyes for being betrayed by his sister when their father, discovers a revolver which Pierre had asked BÉnÉdicte to hide for him. Yet, this story is well-written and highly descriptive. I love the plot twist in the end. I commend the author for a great story.










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The RadleysThe Radleys by Matt Haig

My rating: 5 of 5 stars


The Radleys by Matt Haig


The Radleys is a book by Matt Haig. It is a book about Vampires, but with a twist. Meet the Radleys, four seemingly normal members of modern society living on 19 Orchard Lane in Bishothorpe, a very mundane village in York. The family is composed of Peter Radley, a doctor, his wife, Helen, Rowan...their son who suffers from a skin disorder and insomnia and his sister, Clara.....a sickly girl who is a vegetarian. On the surface, this is a normal family living in suburbia but on closer look this family is hiding a guarded secret..........a very dark and Gothic secret. Pete and Helen try to suppress this secret not only from society, but from their children whom they try desperately to protect.

One night, Clara is attacked by a boy whom she met at her friend Eve’s party. Pinning her on the ground the boy tries to have his way with her; but then something strange happens and Clara’s true colours bursts out leaving the boy dead. Confused, Clara phones her parents and they are forced to tell her and her brother the truth about who they really are.
The book isn’t just about vampires; it is a book about families and how they cope and come together as a family unit when dealing with crises. It is a book about facades and stigmas of family life....how people learn to suppress their true identity from society and hide it from their children in an effort to conform to society and normality. Within the book is another book called the Abstainer’s Handbook...a handbook for vampires to abstain from their cravings for blood. I thought this was funny and very original.

The book is well written and funny. Haig takes the overrated subject of Vampires and weaves it into a modern farce with humourous undertones; giving this overrated genre a human twist to it. I enjoyed reading this light but entertaining book. The characters are well-rounded and rich. One of my favourite characters is Uncle Will. He strikes me as a young version of Leslie Nelson in Dracula--Dead and Loving it. LOL The book ends on a positive note.





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Monday, 1 August 2011

August 2011 Reviews

Welcome to my little Niche within the library. So grab a coffee and let's review some books.



Here are my book reviews for August 2011


The first book I finished on the 31st of July was Jenny Colgan's book, Meet Me at the Cupcake Cafe, a sweet little fiction book with loads of Cupcake recipes in it.


Meet Me at the Cupcake CafeMeet Me at the Cupcake Cafe by Jenny Colgan

My rating: 5 of 5 stars


To Issy Randall baking was in her genes; it was in her blood. Growing up in Grandpa Joe's Bakery helped. Issy would sit beside Grandpa Joe as he baked his bread and iced each bun with the utmost dedication. "Bread is the Staff of Life!" he'd often say to Issy. Fast forward twenty odd years or so when Issy is thirty-one; she now lives with her roommate Helena, a nurse in London. She often visits Grandpa Joe in the Nursing home and he promised to write down all his recipes for Issy. Issy loved to bake cupcakes; she would turn up at work with a Tupperware box full of cupcakes much to her colleagues delight. In a word, Issy Randall can create stunning, mouth-watering cupcakes that are lighter than air...she doesn't even measure her ingredients but waltzes around the kitchen, throwing ingredients into her bowl and whizzing it with her electric mixer.



After being made redundant from her office job at Stoke Newington Municipal office and dismissed by her boss and lover, Graeme, Issy became depressed. Encouraged by her roommate Helena, Issy decided to open up her very own Cupcake Cafe. " How hard could it be?" she thought to herself. Opening her own Cupcake Cafe would show that no good lover of hers a thing or two about her determination and skills. She found a nice little shop on Pear Tree Court that was on sale which she made an investment on with her redundancy money from her admin job, and turned it into the business of her dreams. Nothing could be easier than opening your own cafe, right? What's there to do but bung some cake in the oven, feed a few customers and reap the profits? Wrong. Issy didn't count on the gazillion forms and applications she had to fill and then there were the builders to contend with the bank managers, the auditors and the cantankerous old snobbish ladies from the cooperative who confronted Issy about her baking junk and stealing their customers; but Issy Randall was determined and she met each obstacle head on!



The Cupcake Cafe opened for business and thanks to Pearl, a recently unemployed single mother whom Issy met at the Resettlement courses meeting held on Oxford Street, London, Issy and Pearl turned the Cafe into a warm and cosy little place to sit, enjoy a sweet morsel , a good cup of coffee and chat away whilst watching the world go by. But Issy didn't know what was behind the corner threatening to shut up Shoppe.



I fell in love with the book from the start and couldn't put it down. I, too, identified with Issy, being a home baker myself. I envisioned the role of Issy being portrayed by Anne Hathaway should it ever become a movie. The author throws in many delightful recipes throughout the book and delights her audience with tiny morsels of information of baking.



The characters are very true to life and the reader can identify with them. I fell in love with Grandpa Joe and cried my eyes out when he passed away! Another character that is strange but endearing is the Ironmonger who strangely creeps behind the shadows under certain scenes. He is a dark but very real and human character which the author slowly reveals to the audience towards the end.



Meet Me at the Cupcake Cafe is the type of book a person can read many times in their lives and never get bored with it. It is a light and pleasant read. Like a decadent chocolate cupcake, this Novel will tickle anyone's taste buds. The author does have the habit of overextending her fondness of the word 'had' throughout the book which I found annoying; other than this, I should say, this is a tastefully good read. I praise the author for a great piece of fiction.

My True EssenceMy True Essence by Shawneda Marks

My rating: 5 of 5 stars


My True Essence is a book about three different women who are connected by Faith and their battle with breast cancer. This is the story of Rebecca, a woman who has it all and lives with a care-free attitude; Danielle whose beauty salon is booming but is struggling to come to terms with her diagnosis; and Jenessa whose diagnosis moves her to delve into the cloud that has been hovering over her since childhood.

The author delves into the emotional issues and turmoil that women undergo when they are diagnosed with breast cancer and their choices to whether they should have a mastectomy or chemo. I love how the author draws awareness to this devastating disease and how she makes it clear that any woman can be diagnosed with breast cancer regardless of family history. The author does this quite delicately and gracefully, delving into the many issues and avenues that a woman undergoes once she learns she has this terrible disease. I enjoyed reading this and was moved by the personal stories of each woman and their battle with breast cancer. I would like to read more of Ms Mark's work.






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A Visit from the Goon SquadA Visit from the Goon Squad by Jennifer Egan

My rating: 3 of 5 stars


I cannot get into the book. Although there are a lot of great reviews about ths book and it seems to be well-written, I just feel the book is not for me. This isn't to say it is a bad book; I just think it deals with too many unrelated characters and goes backwards and forwards in time. This is a book of short stories that are related to the topic of Music and the music industry. The book mostly deals with two main characters, Bennie Salazar, a record producer (who puts gold flakes in his coffee and lice spray under his armpits) and his assistant, Sasha and the other stories relate to their assossiates and friends who lead distructive life-styles. This book deals with the typical sex, drugs and rock-in-roll issues. In one review from the Washington Post, Egan's A Visit from the Goon Squad is described as a medley of voices in first, secon and third voices. :http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2010/06/15/AR2010061504751.html

The book will be adapted into a HBO series soon. A Visit from the Goon Squad

Pet NoirPet Noir by Pati Nagle

My rating: 5 of 5 stars


I truly enjoyed this story about a cat named Leon who is sent into outer space to solve a mystery. Leon is a genetic breed of cats who is designed to be stationed in a security base in outerspace. Leon loves to tease his human friends and is fond of a certain Burmese cat. Pet Noir is Leon's story and his travels through the galaxies solving crime. This is a cute little book to read when you want to read something lite. I was drawn to this story because I am a cat lover and love stories about cats.



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Something Borrowed (Darcy & Rachel, #1)Something Borrowed by Emily Giffin

My rating: 2 of 5 stars


I don't condone affairs or cheating on your best friend or infidelities of any sort. I found the book a bit too predictable and found the character of Rachel a bit too whiney and neurotic. She was supposed to be a Lawyer. The book's theme centred on relationships, whether between friends or lovers.

Rachel White is a proverbial do gooder; a lawyer. Her childhood friend, Darcy threw Rachel a Birthday party at a popular New York bar on Rachel's 30th birthday. Rachel and Darcy were best friends since elementary school....they shared everything together. Darcy was the pretty one who often snatched Rachel's school girl crutches. Then, in their twenties, Rachel met Dexter in college. They started to click; but then Darcy met Dexter and the two of them hit it off. Within a month Dexter and Darcy were engaged. The only problem was that on the night of Rachel's party, Darcy left early and the last thing Rachel knew when she woke up the following morning was that she and Dexter slept together. How was she going to explain to her best friend, Darcy that she, Rachel White, slept with her best friend's fiance? But surprise, surpise...Darcy has a dark secret to reavel as well. This is a novel about toxic relationships and how they destroy people's lives.



Perhaps the author was trying to get the audience to see how toxic relationships deterriorate over time and about the outcome of infedelites and how they affect the people invovled. I thought the book was something different. I was interested in reading it because my cousin said it was one of her favourite books; but I thought it was a positive chick-lit about girl meets boy, have to sort out a few discrepancies in their courtship; they get engaged and marry. But when I started reading it I thought, This is a book about toxic relationships and their demise. I don't think I would bother reading Something Blue....which is Darcy's side of the story. From what I could surmise from reading an excerpt.

This book is now a film. I wonder who would portroy Rachel and Darcy.



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