September 11, 2011

Stay



This was one of those books that I picked up off the shelf randomly. Sometimes it is a fun and great adventure doing that and sometimes it can be such a let down. SO are you wondering which this book was? Sitting on the edge of your seat awaiting my verdict!!!


Well, the story was amazing, the characters so well developed that I actually cared about what happened and that everything would turn out as it should. BUT it reached the swear word quota early on in the book. I was so sad about that but after ready a few chapters and hit that quota I was already way too involved in the book and the characters. I just couldn't set it down. So that makes it hard for me to scream "THIS WAS A GREAT BOOK READ IT" since there were too much foul language. I mean, really do people in real life talk like that? How sad.

Before you start to think that every other word on the page was foul, it wasn't.


So the story: Clara is now graduated from high school and running away with her dad to a beach. No one knows where she is going or for how long. That is how the story starts. With Each chapter we learn more about Clara and her father in their present situation and then the next chapter will have a flash back to the "beautiful" relationship she is literally running away from. On top of that Clara's dad is keeping a HUGE secret from her that changes things she knows and believes about her mother that passed away years before. It is a touching story about forgiveness, friendship, love and moving forward.

It is a gripping story, so well written and full of all the great things that make great books....well except the swearing. I am not sure if I would put this among the other teenager books. However, I think more and more teenagers are finding themselves in abusive relationships and perhaps this is a topic that they should be aware of more fully....you know without the swearing.


Quote: "But you are naive. The mostly good in your life has made you that. You've spend so much time seeing the bright side that you don't even believe the other side exists. You are wrong about that."


GRADE: A- (if you don't mind the swearing)

D+(if you do mind the swearing)

September 10, 2011

Saving Madeline



This was a nice story. Nothing more. Nothing Less. It was better than the last Nunes book I read though so that was good.

This is a story about a lady lawyer who defends the bad guys: the killers, drunks, rapist, thieves, kidnappers. What a difficult job to defend those who are most often guilty. But everyone deserves a fair trial...right? Well, then she was asked to take on a certain kidnapping case where the kidnapper is so handsome and seems so honest. He couldn't possible be guilty...especially after meeting his ex-wife. The woman he (the kidnapper) feels will eventually kill his little girl because of her drug addiction.

Of coarse at the same time the lady lawyer starts hooking up (aka dating...it is a very clean book after all) with a couple of guys at the office all the while falling for the one guy she shouldn't be falling for. Like my mom always says "when it rains it pours."

It is a nice story.

Quote: oops returned the book already.

GRADE: C+/B- (depending on how you want to look at it.)

September 3, 2011

Chasing Yesterday

One of the perks of not feeling awesome all the time is the amount of reading one can get in. When I am feeling a bit on the sick side I am able to rest for a bit with a book...which is helpful for the nausea I am feeling these days, but not so awesome for my messy kitchen. Oh well, I can't win them all!


It has been years...really decades since I last picked up a Rachel Nunes novel. Remember are Ariana series? Totally awesome! So I was excited to try her again when I came across the Nunes Row at the library. Seriously I didn't realize the woman had written so many books.


Chasing Yesterday is about a young woman who after coming home from her mission and finding her best friend dating someone else Savvy (what kind of name is that?) ran away to California to finish school and forget about the old BFF. While there her step sister shows up on her doorstep and turns things upside down and inside out for Savvy.


It was an okay story. Kind of predictable but still plenty of love story for the girl in me to enjoy. I think what bugged me the most was her name "Savvy" and the title and cover of the book. Neither had anything to do with the story. At all. I mean really shouldn't the title have something to do with the story?


Favorite Quote: I feel too sick right now to go find it. Sorry.


Grade: C

Mr. Darcy's Diary





What a great book! I mean seriously...great.


This is obviously Mr. Darcy's side of the epic love story between Elizabeth Bennett and himself. It was so fun to see and hear his thoughts and to get to know the characters that were close to Mr. Darcy better. This book made me excited to re-read Pride and Prejudice and I desperately want to watch the movie which I can't seem to find now (awful I know)


If you have already read Pride and Prejudice then this is a MUST read. And if you have...well than what are you waiting for?


I returned this book to the beloved library before coping my favorite quote. But that is okay...I loved the whole book.


Grade: A

August 27, 2011

the summer of firsts and lasts



This is a story that follows three sisters (all named after flowers) at summer camp. Seeing as how they are all a few years apart they are at different stages of camp life. One sister is in the 2nd year, another sister in her last year and the 3rd sister is a staff member. They are all struggling with different parts of camp this year from bullies, to boys, to making new friends. Each sister takes a turn narrating her part of the story, which is kind of fun to see some of the same even from different points of view.


I didn't care for this book at all.


Well, that might be harsh, I did enjoy the sisterly love that went on...made me want to call my sister. And the story line showed promise, but in the end I was turned off by it. I did learn a few things from reading this book:

1-boys and girls should never go to camp together with out parental supervision (DUH). it is like you are asking for kids to be stupid and make poor choices.


2- Parents shouldn't send their kids away to camps that are longer than a week. I mean really that is far too long. Unless you are a bunch of stinky boys up in the mountains with nothing else to do but tie knots and build fires while wearing matching outfits that are a weird shade of green or brown (I can never tell).


3- I am so glad that my kids will go to girls camp or scout camp or EFY...none of this summer camp business for weeks on end.



So yeah, the cover of this books is awesome and under the awesome cover is a yellow book! YELLOW. But that is it. I can't even find a favorite quote.

Grade: D

what happened to goodbye



I was in need of some very light easy summer reading this week so I went to my awesome local library and checked out a few newly published young adult books. Ahhh there is nothing better than teen love stories right?


What happened to Goodbye was supposed to be about a high school girl who moves around a lot with her father changing her name and identity with each move until she hits one town and she can't help be be herself...but at this point she isn't sure who that is anymore...until she meets the good looking neighbor boy who helps her figure it out. A love story AND a self discovery story. What can be better? Oh lets see, as it turns out this girl (Mclean) is a senior in high school her parents had gotten a divorce several earlier because the mom cheated and left the dad (awful). So the story was really about this poor girls struggle to deal with such a terrible divorce and a mom who wouldn't admit fault at all.



It was an nice story, I think I enjoyed the writing more than the actually story though. My favorite parts were when the narrator (Mclean) would mention that her knee bumped into the cute neighbor boy on the car ride and neither one moved their knee, or their hands touched but just a little, or his arm brushed her in the hall. squeal and giggle. I loved those parts the author put in there because it is so true to a girls thinking...so funny how excited a girl will get about something that a boy is probably not even thinking about. There were also times it was a little bit random, she would be in one moment and then the next paragraph should would be telling a memory from her past and then BAM just like that she is back in the moment. At first it was annoying, but then I realized that it is true to how a teenage girl, or any girl for that matter, is going to think and talk. So it seemed fitting.

This is a story about a girl figuring out who she is and where she really belongs, she is trying to forgive her mother for being selfish and leaving the family she made to create a new family. It is about making friends and sticking around to support each other. It was a nice story...nothing amazing or life changing, but an easy read with more to it than just a love story-in fact it is a very little love story but a HUGE emotional story.


Favorite quote: "I mean, it's not surprising really. Once you love something, you always love it in some way. You have to. It's, like, part of you for good" AND But in the real world, you couldn't really just split a family down the middle, mom on one side, dad the other, with the child divided equally between. It was like when you ripped a piece of paper into two: no matter how you tried, the seams never fit exactly right again. It was what you couldn't see, those tiniest of pieces, that we lost in the severing, and their absence kept everything from being complete.


GRADE: C

August 2, 2011

The Happiness Project




A few years ago I noticed this book had been published about the same time I noticed Eat, Pray, Love. I wanted to read both of them, but after reading Eat, Pray Love I was a little worried that it would be another woman's selfish search for "inner peace" or whatever it was called in that book. Finally this last year I picked up the Happiness Project and I am so glad that I did. It has taken me about 6 months to read...or so. But it has given me a lot to think about and I hope to eventually pick it up again and instead of just reading the book I want to work my way through the book.



Gretchen Rubin (the author) is already a happy person. She is married to a nice man and has two daughters, she wasn't searching for some lost happiness that she gave up when she married or had her kids, she was simply wanting to be happier and make sure she remained that way in the years to come living life to the fullest. As she did her research, made her resolutions (not goals-goals are something you reach and resolution is something you continue working and striving for) and implemented both she realized that happiness came when we focused on others. During the year of her project she had a lot of different areas of focus from Boosting Energy to Remember Love to Contemplating the Heavens. Through the whole project she tried to always "stay true to Gretchen" meaning that she didn't want to develop habits or resolutions that she wouldn't enjoy or make her happy, for example in the Contemplating the Heavens chapter she was encouraged to meditate but she knew that it would have driven her nuts and she would have hated ever minute of thus creating an unhappy Gretchen.



I am excited to eventually revisit this book, hopefully making a project year for myself. Mine probably wouldn't be as intense-but I like the thought of focusing on something new each month. Although this book is all about her experience it will be easy to apply the chapters and ideas in my own life staying true to Angela instead of Gretchen. It is worth a read, or a skim at least. I will admit that there were times when I read this book thinking "if was reading the Ensign or The Book of Mormon I bet it would have the same results (maybe even better)." It is a good book, thoughtful and encouraging and realistic. Also in the back is a list of books Rubin used in researching for her project and book. I can't wait to read some of those.


Take a look for yourself...and then go read the Ensign.



Quote: The Year is over, and I really am happier. After all my research, I found out what I knew all along: I could change my life without changing my life. When I made the effort to reach out for them, I found that the ruby slippers had been on my feet all along; the bluebird was singing outside my kitchen window.




GRADE: B