Sunday, November 27, 2022

Two books I didn't finish by Emily Henry

I discovered this week that Emily Henry is not the author for me.  I started with Book Lovers and really liked it in the beginning.  The dialog was clever and snappy, but two hours in the description of their sexual attraction got too much for me.  I just don't want to hear over and over which body parts were throbbing and what each was touching when they lost control around each other. 

It just so happened that the next book on my hold list was also by Henry.  I actually didn't realize it was by the same author in the beginning but when I figured it out I was instantly on my guard.  People We Meet on Vacation was less steamy than Book Lovers, and I liked the characters a little better.  I actually listened to 8 of the 11 hours of the recording, but then got bored.  The reader learns early on that the main characters had spent 10 summers vacationing together. I had listened to the descriptions of 4 of them. They involved a lot of drinking and being silly together, and I thought, "do I really want to listen to the last  6 vacations for three more hours?" and the answer was "No."  Plus, their relationship in the "present" was heating up and I was afraid it would be as descriptive as in the Book Lovers book.

It is interesting that I put them on hold because they were some of the top requested titles on our library's e-books server.  Other people are clearly liking them better than I did.  



Saturday, November 26, 2022

The Candy Cane Caper by Josi Kilpack

 Sadie is getting ready for her children, her husband's children and all the grandchildren to come to visit for Christmas.  In the midst of her busy preparations, she takes time to visit an elderly friend, Mary, who is in a care center and dying of cancer.  During the visit Mary tells Sadie about the vintage ornaments on her Christmas tree and Sadie is astounded to find out how valuable they are.  The next day some of the ornaments are stollen, and Sadie, who used to be a private invistigator, sets aside her busy Christmas preparations to try to find them before Mary discovers that they are missing and it ruins her last earthly Christmas. 

Here is a very mild cozy mystery to start off your Christmas reading.  Nobody get's killed, nobody even yells at another person.  Kilpack sprinkles the story with some funny scenes, and some touching family reunions. Of course, there are recipes at the end of each chapter, but the audio book doesn't read through them. They are suposedly available from an attached pdf but I didn't try to find them.  This isn't the first book about Sadie, and I would be willing to read the first one, but sadly it is not available in audio on Libby. (sigh) (2019, 320 pages)

Thursday, November 24, 2022

Who Was Isaac Newton by Janet Pascal

 Isaac Newton was born to an illiterate farmer couple but when his parents wanted him to take over the farm, he purposely failed miserably.  One of his teachers recognized his academic talent and worked to get him ready for admission to Cambridge. He was accepted, but didn't get very good grades because he wasn't interested in learning Latin, Greek, and religion. Then a plague hit, and he went back home for two years to get away from the contagion.  It was during these two years that he came up with the amazing scientific ideas that he would work out the rest of his life.  He was not very easy to get along with and mostly worked as a loner, but his scientific ideas have been the foundation of macro physics ever since. 

I read this book because I was considering including it in a science kit about optics. He was the person that figured out that white light is a combination of all the other light colors. There was a chapter about that, and I will probably use it.  My main response to the book was that Isaac Newton was amazingly awesome!  He excelled in so many different things.  He was clearly aspie, but his intelligence was off the chart.  People like him and Mozart, and DaVinci are always fascinating to me.  Like the other books in this series, the writing is accessible and age appropriate. This is a good introduction to an amazing scientist for middle grade readers. (2014,112 p.)


Sunday, November 20, 2022

Quiet Power by Susan Cain

 This is the "young reader" version of "Quiet: The Power of Introverts in a World that Can't Stop Talking" (why do nonfictions always have to have long titles?).  I didn't read the adult one, but this one is excellent.  It gives both introverted and shy kids tips on how to survive, cope, and thrive in a world that often rewards extroverts.   There are different sections on dealing with teachers, peers, taking leadership roles, doing sports, and dealing with family members.  Cain doesn't portray introversion as a challenge to be overcome, but as a strength to be exercised. As I read the author's advice, I kept thinking of myself as a child, but also about the children I know who struggle with shyness.  I especially liked the part at the end when the author gives ideas to parents and teachers how to make subtle changes in home and class management to help introverted children thrive.  (2016, 288 p)


Friday, November 18, 2022

Playing the Cards You're Dealt by Varian Johnson

 Ant (short for Anthony) is excited to compete in a Spades card game tournament. His performance in the tournament the previous year was not so great, and he is eager to do better and live up to his family legacy of Spades winners. The tournament is not the only thing on his mind.  His mom is extra stressed and his father is acting oddly.  His best friend and Spades partner is acting up too, and manages to get himself expelled and grounded for fighting.  The only bright spot in Ant's life is a new girl in school, who is not only pretty and smart, but can play Spades and trash talk with the best of them.  As the competition approaches, things at home get worse, and Ant finds himself dealing with way more than he ever imagined. His dad keeps telling him to man up, and keep his secrets, but Anthony can't ignore the feeling in his gut that keeping secrets that could harm his family is not what a real man does.

I checked this book out because I was waiting for another hold and it was short, plus really liked The Parker Inheritance by the same author.  I am so glad I did.  I don't know how much I would have enjoyed reading the book in print, but the narrator of the recorded book, Dion Graham, was fantastic.  The author does a great job of depicting the different people in a closely knit urban neighborhood.  Then Graham gives each one a pitch perfect voice.  The three old men at the convenience store were my favorite.  I could imagine and picture them just as if I were standing there in person.  Johnson addresses a lot of issues about what it means to be a pre-teen male in modern society; including respecting girls, what it means to be strong, and what "consent" looks like to a 10 year old. I was impressed with how Johnson was able to bring up and address these difficult ideas in a totally age appropriate way. The sad thing is that I don't think many people in my community would even pick up this book.  The title and the cover are a little unfortunate. Our library doesn't own a physical copy. Even though I loved the book, I am not sure it would be worth while to purchase one because I don't know who would read it. (2021, 320 p)

Tuesday, November 15, 2022

The Last Musketeer by Stuart Gibbs

 Gregory has grown up in a large historic estate, and has always attended private schools.  Now his family's inherited wealth has run out and his parents have decided to sell many of the antiques in their mansion to an interested buyer in France. When they get there they find that the man purchasing their heirlooms is mostly interested in his mother's necklace, a broken piece of crystal. When he gets his hands on it, a time portal opens up and he, Gregory's parents, and Gregory himself are sucked into 17th century France where Greg meets Athos, Porthos, and Aramis, the Three Musketeers, as teenagers.  Greg enlists their help to try to free his parents who have been imprisoned in La Mort. 

I am almost always up for a new book by Stuart Gibbs.  I liked his Moon Base Alpha series, his Spy School series, and his Charlie Thorne series.  This one was OK, but I didn't like it as well and some other Gibbs books I have read.  For one thing, the story loses a lot if you are not familiar with the Three Musketeers by Dumas, or at least seen one of the movie adaptations.  How many middle grade readers are? Also, Gibbs falls back on a lot of slap-stick type physical humor. A ten-year-old boy might laugh at the schtick, but I found it a bit too cliché. I did appreciate the realistic portrayal of some of the less appealing aspects of 17th century France, like the lack of sanitation, high levels of pollution, and the intense smells that must have permeated city life in the past. Even though I didn't like this book as much of some of Gibb's others, I will still recommend it to readers looking for historical action and adventure. (2018, 272 p)



Saturday, November 12, 2022

Present Danger by Elizabeth Goddard

 Jack Tanner is former FBI but is now working as a detective in Montana.  Terra Connors is a US Forest Service special agent.  When a dead body is found in a national forest the two, who are estranged high school sweethearts, find themselves working together on the case.  The investigation leads to artifact trafficking, more bodies, and danger close to home for Terra.  Her danger triggers protective feelings in Jack and the beginnings of hope that, even though Jack and Terra have a difficult past, maybe they could have some kind of future together.

I chose this book because it had an intriguing genre description; murder mystery Christian romance.  It turned out to be mostly a murder mystery romance, with only a few token Christian elements, like prayers during life threatening moments.  I would say it was a B level read overall.  The dialog was a little stilted, though may have been accentuated by the recorded book reader.  Her reading style was a little stiff.  Still, it began to bug me that every time they talked about a car, they said "vehicle" instead of car.  Every. Single. Time.  I get it that they are supposed to be law enforcement talking in police jargon, but really?  Also, even though this is the first book in a series, I kept thinking, "did I miss a prequel?"  There is a lot of back story, and it was rolled out so slowly that I kept feeling like I had missed something. 

Ok, my commentary sounds harsh.  It really wasn't bad.  On the positive side, it was very clean and I don't think there was any swearing. I enjoyed it enough that I finished the whole 11 hours of the recorded book without turning the playback speed up to 1.25. Still, I am not really planning on reading the rest in the series. (394 p. 2021)

Wednesday, November 9, 2022

A Tale of Beauty and the Beast by Melanie Cellier

Because Princess Sophia won the Princess Tourney, she is now betrothed to cursed Prince Dominic of Palinar.  When she arrives all alone at his palace, she is dismayed to discover she no longer has a mental link with her twin sister Princess Lily.  Her betrothed is frightening and rude, but Sophia learns to hear the invisible servants who try their best to make her stay at the castle tolerable. Sophie tries desperately to find a way to break the curse over the castle and free herself from the betrothal, but none of her ramblings around the castle, nor her conversations with the servants bring her closer to a solution. When something happens and the prince is injured trying to save Sophie from some wolves, the hearts of the two lost souls start to turn toward each other instead of away. Time is running out for the prince, and Sophie must decide whether to follow her heart or continue trying to save the kingdom.

After the last book, I was eager to read this one and see how Cellier handles the story of Beauty and the Beast.  In the end I was a little disappointed.  Cellier borrows too much from the Disney version of the story, and only makes a few nods to the original fairytale. I am a little surprised she could draw so much from the Disney version and not have their legal department come down on her.  The scene where the Prince is battling wolves and the description of Sophie's hair and dress at the ball are straight from Disney.  There is the secret library that the Prince makes for Sophie, and the handsome bad guy who asks the princess to marry him, and then ends up fighting with the prince.  I am perhaps being too critical.  It was an okay book and if I wasn't comparing it to the Disney version, I probably would have enjoyed it more. Still, I might wait a while before I read another in the series. (296 p. 2017)

Sunday, November 6, 2022

I Can Make This Promise by Christine Day

 Edie's mother is part Native American but was adopted by a white couple as an infant.  Edie doesn't know much about her Native heritage, but one day she finds a box in the attic that has pictures of someone named Edith who looks a lot like her.  Edie and her friends decide to try to figure out who the woman is and how she is connected with Edie. When Edie begins to ask her parents about her family history they always dodge her questions.  Gradually Edie comes to learn about the mysterious Edith and about how Native peoples where treated in the past.

I read this book in honor of Native American Heritage Month in November, and also because I was featuring it in a display at work, and I never like to put anything in a display that I haven't read yet. It is the first book written by the author and is based on elements from her own family history.  The book is well written and Edie is a sympathetic character.  It is a good introduction for young people about some of the injustices of history.  (spoiler alert) I didn't know that for decades about 1/3 of children of Native people in the US were taken without their parent's consent and put in foster care or up for adoption. The justification was that the homes they were born into were in "indigent" conditions. It seems horrifying to us today, but I can see how people then considered it the right thing to do because poverty was a major issue among Native people. It is ironic that the government condemned them for their poverty, when a generation or two before that same government drove them off of good prosperous lands and forced them onto reservations that were in the worst, least productive regions of the country.  (288 p. 2020)