Showing posts with label drama. Show all posts
Showing posts with label drama. Show all posts

April 9, 2012

By the Light of the Silvery Moon by Tricia Goyer

By the Light of the Silvery Moon is the first book I've ever read that is set on the Titanic. I was a die-hard Leo fan when the movie first came out and I always stop and watch it for a few minutes when it comes on TV. So when I heard about Tricia Goyer's newest book, I jumped at the chance to read it.

Amelia Gladstone has always taken care of other people so when she sees a beggar being dragged from the Titanic as she is boarding she has to go check to make sure he's okay. Lucky for both of them, Amelia's cousin Henry ended up in jail the night before and is not going to be using his ticket. So begins the journey of Amelia, Quentin, and some other unforgettable characters aboard the unsinkable Titanic.

I wanted to love this book and I got close at moments, but for me the story could have been set anywhere and it just happened to be on the Titanic since the sinking of the Titanic actually played a very minor role in the story. I really liked Amelia and appreciated her charity toward everyone around her. I also loved the dynamic relationship between Amelia and Quentin as they waded into the depths of their feelings about each other. And finally, I loved how all of the main characters allowed God to guide their lives, decisions, and feelings especially with the reader's knowledge that the ship was going down.

I won't get into any more details of the plot so I don't give anything away, but I enjoyed the book and would recommend it to anyone looking for a good read, especially for those of you who like historical fiction. 3.5 stars.

Want to know more? Watch the Video Trailer below

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March 19, 2012

Tumbleweed Heights by Joan Bird

Gilly and Luke both ended up in Briarwood, Colorado running from their past lives, hiding from mistakes that they've made in their past. They didn't know that when they ran from their pasts they would run straight into each other.

Tumbleweed Heights was predictable but cute and kept me entertained for the few hours it took to read. Gilly is a high-powered lawyer who always wanted to open a horse-ranch and Luke is a cowboy with the need to protect others, which means protecting Gilly no matter what the cost. I really liked both of the main characters and enjoyed the chemistry between the two of them, especially as they got to know each other and their secrets. 3 stars.
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March 18, 2012

Paydirt by Paul Levine

I always have trouble finding my husband a birthday gift, but I found the perfect present in Paul Levine’s novel, “Paydirt.” If you have a brother, father, or son who loves to read an upbeat novel revolving around football, then “Paydirt” is for you! In Part One, the reader meets Bobby Gallagher, a man who seems to have everything a man could want: a high-paying job, a beautiful, loyal wife, and a son who worships Bobby. Working with his father-in-law as a lawyer for the pro-football team, the Dallas Mustangs, Bobby protects the players from prison by employing not so ethical practices. While Bobby seems content, eventually one day he loses everything: his job, his wife, and his son.

Not wanting to reveal exactly what happens in Bobby, I can tell you that his solution to winning his old life back involves fixing the Super Bowl. Yep, the biggest football game of the year! Working with bookies, attempting to escape a gangster who wants his body floating in the Gulf of Mexico, and trying to hold on to custody of his son, Bobby knows that the chances of him getting out of his situation alive is slim. Fortunately, one of the teams playing in the championship is the Dallas Mustangs, a team he happens to know everything about. Having the inside scoop to this team allows Bobby to have a glimmer of hope of fixing this game and preserving his life and family.

Amidst the drama, Levine fills “Paydirt” with quotes from famous coaches, players, and sports commentators and focuses on one of the basics of football: the players. Levine allows Bobby to represent a man with a high moral code, who will stop at nothing to preserve this characteristic within him. Fighting against his crooked father-in-law, Martin Kingsley, Bobby represents the antithesis of any lawyer stereotype. Mixing football with drama, Levine creates a book that any man would love to have on his bookshelf.

4.5 stars

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November 19, 2011

No Story to Tell by KJ Steele

Have you ever wondered if you can be born into the wrong life?

Victoria is a dancer. Or she was a dancer until she got sick on the day of her big audition. Ever since that day Victoria has let other people run her life for her - her husband Bobby, her friend Rose, a former friend Billy Bassman - and hasn't had the courage to stand up for what she really wants in her life. Until one day a painter named Elliott turns up in her small town and really starts listening to her and to what she wants. And through their relationship, she begins to take small steps toward becoming the person she always should have been by opening a dance studio, standing up to her husband, and opening up to a stranger over the phone about things she hasn't told anyone. She always said that she has no story to tell but it's really just become no one would listen. Once someone starts listening, Victoria's life is changed for better or for worse.

KJ Steele does a great job in No Story to Tell of defining her characters so that you know them. The problem was that as defined as they were, I really didn't like any of the characters other than Elliott. All of the characters represented very real people in our society, but it's not what I wanted to read. Victoria was a self-pitying woman who allowed herself to be treated poorly by everyone around her, Rose was a critical and destructive friend, and Bobby was a drunk, foul, and horrible husband and person. And those were just the main characters that showed up often in the book. And when you don't like the characters, you stop rooting for them or caring about them at all.

Overall this book was okay. It had a lot of potential and I really liked the first half when I thought Victoria had promise and was going to break free of her mold. Then about halfway through the book, there was a big incident and things just spiraled downward both in the book and for me. It's written well and includes quite a bit of true emotion, but the last 100 pages were really just depressing and hard for me to read. And I wanted the ending to be a happier one, something to lift the book up at least a little and it fell short for me.

Was I glad I read the book? Yes. Would I recommend it to anyone else, probably not without numerous caveats like it has quite a bit of language and is heavy and depressing for a good portion of the book. Even the color of the cover is depressing. 3 stars.

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November 13, 2011

The Particular Sadness of Lemon Cake and Lemon Cake Pops Giveaway (Closed)

After finishing The Particular Sadness of Lemon Cake by Aimee Bender, only one word comes to mind - strange. The book is centered around Rose, a girl who can taste feelings through her food. It all starts when she's nine and the lemon cake her mother makes her for her birthday takes empty, hollow, and alone. Throughout the next 10-15 years, the book follows Rose as she learns things about people through the food that they make.

Rose's family is a little strange as well. Her grandma sends her packages of things like half-used bars of soap and empty bottles. Her mom starts projects and can't seem to stick to anything. And her brother Joseph is a genius that has an even weirder hobby than her tasting feelings through food.

Honestly, I didn't like this book. I'm not sure what the point of the book was but it felt like that initial lemon cake to me - sad, hollow, and empty. 2 stars.

Giveaway
So while I didn't like this book, I do like lemon cake. And lucky for all of you, you have the chance to win a dozen of these delicious lemon cake pops from Sugar and Spice simply by entering a comment below. These fresh and light lemon cake pops are sure to satisfy your sweet craving for lemon. Sugar and Spice's lemon cake pops are decadently moist, covered in yellow candy coating, and hand-piped elegant swirls. (value with shipping $31).



Sugar and Spice began in January 2011 and is owned by Debra Drake, a full-time business major who has made 2,000 cake pops to date. Baking and crafting are her passion, and with cake pops she is able to merge the two into a fun hobby. For more information, you can check out her Etsy store or Facebook page.

To enter:
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The Small Print:
Giveaway open to US Residents only.
Giveaway prize includes one dozen lemon cake pops and shipping.
Giveaway winner will be chosen by random using random.org.
Giveaway closes at midnight EST on Tuesday, November 15th.
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November 6, 2011

Columbine by Dave Cullen

How do you even begin to review a book like this one? To put your thoughts down in words about a book so real, so disturbing, and so well written? It's hard to figure out my own thoughts, let alone write them for you to read and analyze. But I'm going to try because this is a book that should be read and a story that should be understood.

Columbine by Dave Cullen is a non-fiction book that explains not only the how, and what happened during the Columbine High School shootings on April 20, 1999, but the why. It delves into the lives of not only the victims of the shooting but the shooters themselves, and I think that's why this book is so necessary. While the book is factual and based on years of research and interviews, it reads like fiction and at times you forget and are incredulous that this tragedy actually happened.

Cullen jumps around from the years leading up to the shooting, to the day of the shooting, to the days and years following the shooting. This type of writing structure can be dizzying and confusing in other books, but in Columbine it works in a way that allows Cullen to fit together all of pieces of this confusing puzzle. The other thing that I loved about this book was that it presented the evidence without assumptions and without placing or avoiding blame. When a tragedy occurs, people always want to know who's at fault. Cullen presents the facts in a way that they are really just that, facts. At no point in the book did I think, oh Cullen thinks that it's the fault of this person. Or that if this person did this, Columbine wouldn't have happened. Because really, you never know. No matter what anyone did, it still might've happened and I appreciate that he didn't dwell on the "what if," but rather focused on the reality.

In short, while difficult to read because of the disturbing nature of the subject, this book was one of the best I've read in a long time and I recommend it to anyone, again with the caveat that Cullen is transparent in his knowledge. He presents the facts and tells things like they are, which at times is tough to handle. But in the end, when tragedy occurs, people want to know why. And through Columbine, Dave Cullen helps readers understand why. 5 stars

Check out Sarah's thoughts on the book in her review from September 2010 here.

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October 16, 2011

Invisible by Hugues De Montalembert

What would you do if suddenly you could no longer see the world around you?  The leaves as they change from green to red and yellow, your favorite movie, or the smile of the one you love. Would you be able to overcome the obstacle and chalk it up to another one of life's lessons or would your life turn to turmoil and despair?

Painter Hugues de Montalembert's life included a little bit of both. Attacked one summer night in his New York apartment, this man whose livelihood depended on his eyes, lost his sight forever. Invisible is a memoir of his experience adjusting, growing, and at times, failing as he learned to live his new life. As he put it, "Many people think the loss of my sight has been a terrible rupture in my life. But no, it's not a rupture at all - life just went on, but in a different way."

The book is full of his own personal experiences, experiences of others, and philosophical comments on learning how to see without your eyes. The writing is randomly split up into small chunks focusing on a point or story that the author is trying to make. While it helps to keep the book moving, it also made it difficult to connect the dots on an overall idea and purpose behind the book.

Honestly, at times (especially during the philosophical moments) it was awe inspiring to learn along with him and at other times I was bored with his experiences and ready to read something else. It's a very short book (125 pages, some pages with only a few lines of text) and was worth the hour or so it took me to read, but I'm not sure I'd recommend it to a friend, possibly someone who has gone through tragedy (especially affecting their sight) and needs to read and hear about others experiences into darkness and back, but not just your average reader. 3 stars

I received a free copy of this book for review purposes.

 

September 28, 2011

The Platinum Loop by Austin Williams

Set in 1973, The Platinum Loop by Austin Williams is a new novel scheduled for release in November 2011. Desperate and broke, low-class film producer Gene saves celebrity paraphernalia hustler Floyd in Vegas as he's getting beat up for a deal gone sour. Floyd talks Gene into returning to his Hollywood accommodations to see the best item in his collection - the platinum loop, a raunchy home movie of Marilyn Monroe with some unknown man. Unfortunately the platinum loop isn't all that Floyd made it out to be and Gene and Floyd spend the next few weeks trying to put together something that their rich buyer will purchase. 

And that's your story. Two not so great guys get together to fake a home movie of one of the world's biggest stars doing unspeakable things so that they can sell it to an abusive and perverted man in Tijuana. Not only didn't like the idea behind the plot, I didn't like any of the characters. At no point while I was reading did I think, oh I want these guys to succeed. It was more like, I hate people that lie and scam others. This book may be right for someone, but it wasn't for me. 2 stars.

   

September 11, 2011

From Ashes to Honor by Loree Lough

Where were you when the world stopped turning that September day? In memory of that fateful day ten years ago, I thought it only appropriate to review a book centered around individuals affected by the events of 9/11.

Austin Finley, NYPD, ignored his twin brother's call. His twin brother who was calling to tell him to say goodbye when he realized there was no chance he would make it out of the south tower. Mercy Samara was the shrink who met with Austin to discuss his pain, regret, and disappointment. And the one who cost him his job with the NYPD.

Flash forward a few years and south a few miles to Baltimore where both Austin and Mercy moved to get away from the memories surrounding NYC. During the time since when they've last seen each other, both have hit rock bottom - using alcohol and suicide as methods of escape - and have both come out on the other side. Austin is now a paramedic, highly rooted in his Christian beliefs, and Mercy is a school counselor. They happen to meet up again when one of Mercy's students has an accident and Austin is the EMT that comes to help out. That day is the beginning of a relationship that neither of them could have imagined years ago when Austin sat in Mercy's office for roughing up another delinquent.

I won't tell you anything else other than to say that this wasn't as easy a read as I thought it would be. While this was definitely fiction rooted in Christianity, life wasn't just smooth sailing for these characters. Loree Lough adds in enough of "life's not fair," events to make this seem a lot more real life than some books. And for that reason I liked it. It was centered around these two individuals whose lives were changed on September 11th, and it wouldn't have been real to think that their lives were difficult after. It would be almost like pretending September 11th didn't happen and didn't affect every single American in one way or another.

This book also reminded me of the sacrifice that so many Americans make every day to protect us. Whether it be by fighting in the armed forces, pulling families out of burning buildings, or putting their lives on the line to stop a holdup. And for that I am extremely grateful, especially on this 10th anniversary of 9/11.



September 7, 2011

Forbidden by Ted Dekker and Tosca Lee

Forbidden is the first book in a new trilogy by Ted Dekker and Tosca Lee. I've never read The Circle Series or anything by Ted Dekker for that matter, but after reading Forbidden I will finally pull The Circle Series off my shelf.

Let's start at the beginning. In order to create peace, 480 years ago humans were given a highly contagious drug created to alter human DNA to remove all emotions other than fear. Can you imagine a life without pain and sorrow? Without joy and love? That's the only life the characters in this book have ever known until a young man named Rom is given the chance to not only experience those emotions but to bring all that's been missing back to mankind.

In an anything but classic version of good versus evil, the authors somehow bring out all levels of emotion while writing about a world void of any. It has something for everyone - romance, drama, action, mystery, and science fiction. And while the book had its fair share of violence, those moments didn't take away from the overall plot. I quickly fell in love with the characters, especially Rom, and became addicted to the story. Ted and Tosca were able to make a fantasy world come to life, and I for one can't wait to see how and if the world will ever get the chance to feel alive again.

I was lucky enough to be given a copy of this book to review before it was released, but you can pick up a copy of your own when it comes out next Tuesday, September 13th. And to get you excited, you can check out the trailer below.



 

September 6, 2011

Firefly Lane by Kristin Hannah

Have you ever had a friend that just gets you? When everyone else thinks that your fake smile is real, that friend knows there's something wrong and finds a way to either talk about it or make it better? Firefly Lane is about that kind of friendship between two women - Tully and Kate. Tully and Kate meet when they are in junior high; Kate is a nerd who just wants to be popular and Tully is popular. One fateful night they are drawn together and after that night they are never apart.

Firefly Lane follows these two women over the course of their lives as they go to college, follow their dreams, find and lose love, and share joys and losses. Like any friendship, it has its ups and downs but the root it remains the same - they love one another and are always there for each other when it matters most.

I really enjoyed this book. I completely related to Kate's character, the insecure woman who feels like she's always in the shadows of someone else when in reality she should be happy with the incredible life she has. I also really liked one of the underlying themes of the book, being happy  and content with what you have. Over and over again these two women looked at each other's lives with longing, wanting what the other woman had. I'm sure that happens more often than we can imagine and I think Kristin did a great job of exploring the idea of the grass is always greener on the other side. She definitely was able to to suck me into the story and had me feeling the joy and pain that went hand and hand in these women's lives.

I would recommend this book to any woman. My mom and little sister (18) read and enjoyed it as well, which shows it's a story that not only spans but also entertains all generations.

September 4, 2011

Wildflower Hill by Kimberly Freeman

According to Cora, there are two types of people in the world - those who do things and those who have things done to them.

Emma has always been a woman who does things, who fought her way to the coveted spot of a prima ballerina in a London ballet company. Until one dark night her career as a ballerina is cut short and her life takes on a different course, one that takes her to the home of her recently deceased grandmother, Beattie, in Tasmania. While clearing out Beattie's home, Emma finds clues to the story of Beattie's life that know one knew other than Beattie herself. A small red-haired child, a love letter that couldn't have been written to Emma's grandpa, and rumors of a scandalous poker game.

Wildflower Hill is written from the perspective of these two women - Emma and Beattie - as they tell their stories seventy years apart. The book alternates between their stories and help you piece together the puzzle and the significance of Wildflower Hill in both women's lives.

After I picked this book up, I couldn't put it down and finished it in 48 hours. Even with all of her flaws, I loved Beattie's character and had to know what happened to her and how her story played out. The book is full of heart-breaking twists that I hated but quickly saw were essential to the story. This is the first book I've read by Kimberly Freeman. She made her characters come to life, the scenery visible through her words, and the story was believable and made me want to read more. 5 stars.

 

July 13, 2011

Larkspur Cove by Lisa Wingate

Larkspur Cove is a story about a woman, Andrea, who moves home to the beautiful town of Moses Lake, Texas with her teenage son after a shocking divorce. Rather than wallow in self-pity, Andrea quickly gets a job as a counselor and moves on with her life as she jumps head first into the lives of those around her including trying to solve the "mystery" surrounding the town recluse being seen with a little girl.

The back of the book sold this to me as a mystery/thriller but other than about ten pages, there wasn't anything mysterious about this book. And to me, there wasn't anything very interesting about this book either. Even with the slight twist in the ending I was bored with how easily it all worked out. I did, however, like the strong-willed characters and feel like I was part of the lake community reading the book, but it just didn't do it for me. So while it's not bad, there is just nothing special about it.

*I received a free copy of this book from Bethany House Publishers for the purpose of this review.


July 5, 2011

Kings of Colorado by David E. Hilton

How many times do you look back at times in your life and ask what if?

William Sheppard stabbed his father in the chest when he was thirteen. What happens after is a series of incidents that beg for the age old question, what if? After stabbing his father, Will is sent to the Swope Ranch Boy's Reformatory, a prison disguised as a ranch known for breaking wild horses. Set in the middle of the Colorado mountains, no one thinks of escaping Swope, just of surviving. It takes Will just a few months before he find the best kind of friends, ones that stick with you forever. Together, these four teenage boys try to find a way to make it out of Swope in one piece in the midst of violence-happy guards, teenage gang leaders, and wild horses.

I won't tell you anything else about what happens other than to say this book was fantastic. Like Hunger Games, this is a story about boys fighting for survival, a story that while heart-breaking and a little disturbing, I just couldn't stop reading. The sense of friendship and brotherhood that David Hilton develops is almost tangible and one that I'll definitely remember. My only complaint would be that since this book is set in a boy's reformatory, there is a lot of language and violence, actually too much language in my opinion that could have been done without. Other than the language, this is an incredible read and one I thoroughly enjoyed. 4 stars (lost one star for the language).

*I received a free copy of this book to review. The review is my honest opinion of the book.


June 29, 2011

The Year We Left Home by Jean Thompson

If you look back at your life, can you think of moments that changed your life and made you who you are now?

The title The Year We Left Home is a little misleading because this book isn't about a year; it's about a series of moments, moments in a family's life that tie the family together. But from the very beginning I knew I was going to like it. The book is about a family from Iowa that goes through everything we all go through - rebellion, death, life, divorce, war - and somehow manages to come out on the other side even when you don't think it's possible.

The book is broken into chapters that are really short stories about these different moments in time. Each story is told from the point of view of one of the family members spanning three generations. The stories begin back when the kids are young and  follow them throughout their lifetime. Each story builds upon the last in a very subtle way with either just a simple mention of a past event or a tie in to another character until the end, which I won't give away. There really isn't a storyline or what we see as plot to speak of, but the way that Thompson writes this journalistic view into the moments that changed this family's life is wonderful to read.

In short, I loved the concept behind this book and enjoyed the actual almost as much as the idea behind it. Definitely worth picking up. 

I was given a free copy of this book to review. 
 

June 21, 2011

The Canary List by Sigmund Brouwer

All Crockett Grey wants is to mark the anniversary of his daughter's death alone. That's it. But after one of his students, Jaimie Piper, knocks on his window that night scared to death, his life will never be the same. Jaimie isn't your typical 12-year old girl. She's not afraid of the dark, the Boogeyman, or even an abusive family member. She's afraid of evil.

I can't tell you a whole lot of the story without giving it away, but the basic idea is that Crockett is a teacher who because of being in the wrong place at the wrong time, is now in the middle of a mess including super-hackers, demon chasers, and the Vatican mafia. And all he really wants to do is clear his name so he can be a good father to his little boy Mickey.

This book was interesting and kept me guessing until the very last page, which is hard to do. It was a little hard to follow at times with all of the Vatican history and talk about demons and witches, but I understood the general idea behind the plot and like one of the reviews on the back of the book said, "What's darkly horrifying...is the plausibility of the story." And once you read the book you'll understand that comment. Overall a decent book but not my favorite. 3 stars.

I received this book for free from WaterBrook Multnomah Publishing Group for this review.

June 2, 2011

Broken Wings by Carla Stewart Giveaway

Sometimes unlikely pairings are the best. Peanut Butter and BBQ chip sandwiches, Romeo and Juliet, Milo and Otis. Broken Wings is made up another one of those strange pairings that that just works.

Mitzi, an eighty-one year old woman who is caring for her husband with Alzheimer's, and Brooke, a young engaged legal assistant trying who is still trying to figure out who she is and what she wants to do with her life. They meet when Brooke comes into the hospital where Mitzi is volunteering and begin a friendship on what appears to be Mitzi's concern for others' well-being, but it soon turns into more than that as the two of them realize that without knowing it, they need each other.

I absolutely loved Mitzi's character. She's a famous singer, now retired, who spends her days in the same spit-fire way I'm sure she spent the rest of her life. She lives for every moment of every day and slowly teaches Brooke to do the same. I probably liked her so much because I want to be like her character, not afraid of chasing after my dreams and wearing that red sparkly dress. And then there's Brooke, who because of circumstances comes off as the weaker character of the two, but hey, Mitzi had another sixty years to live.

This book was a pretty quick and easy read. It touches lightly on a number of issues but sticks mainly to dealing with Alzheimer's and abuse and portrays them in a fairly realistic but not difficult to read way. The one main complaint I had was how the book ended. Throughout the book Mitzi tells her life story to Brooke and at one point it just stops. I actually found her history to be a better story than the present day one between Mitzi and Brooke and was intrigued to hear it how it played out. There was a little bit of closure at the very end, but I wanted to know more. Other than that, a good read.

I've also got a copy to giveaway for anyone that is interested in getting to read about this unlikely pairing. All you have to do is leave a comment on this post to be entered (US only).

I received a review copy of this book for free. This review is my honest opinion.


April 29, 2011

So Much Pretty by Cara Hoffman

I'm really struggling to find the words for how I feel about this book. I'm also struggling to write a review without first going back and reading the book a second time, but I'm going to try to give you an honest review from my first read because I may feel different after I've put the story all together.

A key to this book is that it is contemporary fiction. It's written in a style that I can only relate back to the movie Momento, except the story is being told from the point of view of dozens of people instead of one. The story is told in small pieces that take you forward and backward, up and down, as you try to piece together where each individual piece fits into the bigger puzzle. The book is divided into small "chapters," that skip among numerous characters in the book. Some characters who seemingly don't add a thing, but I'm sure again on my second read, I'd find those characters were actually game-changers. Some of the chapters have years, some of them don't. Some of them are supposed audio recordings where you can only hear one side of the conversation, some are letters, and some are third-person narratives recounting memories. And though at times it doesn't seem like it, all of those pieces somehow add up to one thrilling story.

The only thing I can tell you about the plot without giving anything away is that the story overall is centered around three girls - Wendy, Alice, and Stacy Flynn. The three lived in the same community and were physically just acquaintances but emotionally, somehow connected on a deeper level. And all three in their own way stood for and did what they thought was right, even if society would have chosen a different path.

I will say that this book was one of the most surprising, thrilling, and unique that I've read in a really long time. As many of the reviews on Amazon put it, it was one of the ugliest books I've ever read but incredible at the same time. I wish I could give it five stars and would except for the ugly "F" word that kept coming up throughout the book. For that one reason I can't recommend it to everyone but if you like contemporary lit and that's not something that bothers you, So Much Pretty is definitely a book to read. If for no other reason, to remember the beauty of being truly and utterly surprised and shocked by a book.

This is Cara Hoffman's debut novel, and I will definitely be picking up whatever she decides to write next.

I was provided with a free copy of this book for review purposes. This review is my honest opinion.

April 28, 2011

Unlocked by Karen Kingsbury

My mother lent this book to me months ago. MONTHS ago. And I only just got to it, because I just had to trudge through the 5th Outlander book (I should probably get around to reviewing that one of these days). Also because I couldn't resist signing up for review books, and the darn things just kept piling up in my mailbox. Finally I found my recreational reading narrowed down to three choices: this book, the latest Fearless Flyer from Trader Joe's, and the bumps on my bedroom ceiling. So first I read the Fearless Flyer, then I studied the bumps for awhile, then I gave in and picked up this book.

Why was I so reluctant to read it? Well, it should have been a no brainer. I am a Christian, and I love fiction, and this book is Christian fiction. But I have made no secret of my disappointment with this this genre. So I generally stick to mainstream literature and fiction and just read the Christian volumes that inadvertently fall into my lap. Usually via my mom. Karen Kingsbury is the Grand Duchess of Christian fiction though, supplanted only by Her Majesty the Queen Francine Rivers. The main difference between the two of them (in my opinion) is that Rivers is more of a heavy hitter. While Kingsbury yanks at your heart, Rivers does a number on your brain as well. Kingsbury is a wonderful and powerful writer but she sometimes gives emotion precedence over fact or reality.

Another reason I was reluctant is that Unlocked is about Autism. As a parent of small children I am well aware of the heartbreaking impact the condition is having, particularly on this generation. And I am ashamed to admit that I am among those that just plain gets bored of hearing about the same old thing all the time. But all one hears is "autism autism autism," and yes, I get tired of it. There's a difference between Awareness and Overload, and I am suffering from Autism Awareness Overload. I hope you understand and aren't now writing me off as an absolute jerk.

So I finally picked the book up, dusted it off, and cracked it open. And then, as you may have predicted, I couldn't put it down again. Unlocked is the story of Holden, a boy who had developed normally until the age of three, when after an unusually large volume of vaccinations was administered he began to regress to the point of profound Autism.

(I'd like to point out here that Kingsbury makes no claims in the great vaccination / Autism debate. She treats the issue very tactfully, noting simply that the family always wondered if there might be a connection but without demanding clinical trials or marching on Washington. This is a volatile issue, with nothing yet proven either way, but with some very strong opinions on both sides, and any writer would be hard pressed to treat it more tactfully or objectively than Kingsbury did here.)

When Holden's family and friends realized he had been essentially lost to them, it caused huge rifts. His father moved to Alaska (there are some parallels to Jonah as he fights storms and rogue waves on shrimping boats), and his parents' life long best friends friends moved to New York. He was left alone with his mother and a series of therapists and special education teachers, sometimes helpful and sometimes not, who struggled to reach the old Holden locked somewhere inside the shell of a boy that physically remained.

When Holden begins a new school year at Fulton High, he meets Ella Reynolds, the daughter of his parents' long lost best friends, who had recently moved back. Ella senses a connection with him but isn't sure why, and she becomes Holden's friend and advocate in the school. Soon she has teachers convinced to allow him to sit on on rehearsals for the Spring musical, and that's where his miracle begins. As the school year continues and the families and teachers and students witness Holden's transformation from apparent Beast to Prince, they also become aware of their own beastly exteriors that are imprisoning the beauty inside.

Yes, the book is ostensibly about Autism and the stereotypes thereof, but Kingsbury uses the condition to demonstrate that all of us lock our true selves up, so that on the outside we can be the jaded cynics the world wants us to be. An Autistic person can't control his or her condition, but the rest of us have a choice.

Another interesting feature of this book is that when writing it, Kingsbury participated in Forever in Fiction, something I've seen in a few other books from time to time, including one by Marian Keyes. When a writer participates in this program fans place bids, and the highest bidders are made into characters in the book. The money is donated to a charity. In this case the winning character is named after a little girl battling brain cancer, and the money raised went to her treatments.

I'd like to give this book five stars because it is really a great book that teaches a great truth and had me reaching for the Kleenex more than once. But there were too many stylistic and factual flaws for me to stretch it to that last star.

April 8, 2011

Room by Emma Donaghue

What do you do when everything you know is wrong? When everything you've been told your entire life is a lie? And then one day you wake up and the entire world changes.

Welcome to the life of Jack, a five-year old boy who has never left the room he was born in. A boy who has been told his entire life that the things he sees in TV are not real; they are just TV. A boy that has been taught by his mother that not only all he needs, but all that there is, is inside an 11x11 foot room. Jack is the narrator of Room, and while at times I wish I could see the story from his mom's perspective, I don't think this book could have been written any other way and have been as successful.

Room is at times disturbing because of the subject matter, but it's originality and creativity is thought-provoking, heart-wrenching, and mind-numbing all at the time same. Like any good book does, it makes you ask the tough question of what would I have done if in their situation? It's a book that will make you laugh on one page and cry on the next as you feel for both this 5-year old boy and his mom, stuck in a routine maybe forever. There are moments when I wished I could have stopped reading, but those are the same moments when I knew that I had to find out what happened to little Jack and his mom. One of the most creative and thought-provoking books I've read in a long time.

For another perspective on the book, check out Megan's February review

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