I read Sounds Like Crazy by Shana Mahaffey for a Pump Up Your Book Tour.
From Goodreads:
Though she doesn't remember the trauma that caused it, Holly Miller has Dissociative Identity Disorder. Her personality has fractured into five different identities, together known as The Committee. And as much as they make Holly's life hell, she can't live without them.
Then one of those identities, the flirtatious, southern Betty Jane, lands Holly a voiceover job. Betty Jane wants nothing more than to be in the spotlight. The rest of The Committee wants Betty Jane to shut up. Holly's therapist wants to get to the bottom of her broken psyche. And Holly? She's just along for the ride...
This was such an interesting book. The book was written in such a way that I felt like you could really get inside Holly's head and see what was going on. I felt so bad for her. And yet it was so intriguing to read about how she lived her life through different identities.
And the Committee (as the different identities are called) are a hoot! My favorite was Ruffles, an overweight woman who was constantly eating Ruffles potato chips. I felt like she was the protective personality.
This was such a deep book, yet there were still humorous moments. And while I don't want to give anything away, it definitely captures you towards the end when you realize just why Holly has all of the identities.
I gave this book a rating of 3.5/5.
This book fulfills items in the following challenges:
2011 A to Z Challenge: M
2011 100+ Reading Challenge:4
*FTC Disclosure: I was sent this book a part of Pump Up Your Book Promotions for a honest review.
Showing posts with label pump up your book. Show all posts
Showing posts with label pump up your book. Show all posts
Thursday, January 13, 2011
Wednesday, August 18, 2010
Book Review- With Friends Like These
Very early this morning, I finished reading With Friends Like These by Sally Koslow for a Pump Up Your Book Virtual Book Tour.
From Goodreads:
Have you ever been a less than perfect friend? To whom does your first loyalty belong—your best friend or your husband? With her trademark wit and empathy, Sally Koslow explores the entangled lives of women in this candid, fast-paced novel.
Quincy, Talia, Chloe, and Jules met in the early nineties after answering a roommate ad for a Manhattan apartment. Despite having little in common, the women became fast friends. A decade later, their lives have diverged, though their ties remain strong.
Quincy, a Midwestern introvert, is trying to overcome a set of tragedies by hunting for the perfect home; Talia, a high-energy Brooklyn wife and mom with an outspoken conscience, is growing resentful of her friends’ greater financial stability and her husband’s lack of ambition; timid Chloe, also a mother, is trying to deflect pressure from her husband, a hedge fund manager, to play the role of trophy wife; while Jules, a fiercely independent actress/entrepreneur with a wicked set of life rules, is confronting her forties alone.
When Jules gives her new boyfriend the inside scoop on the real estate gem Quincy is lusting after, and Talia chases a lucrative job earmarked for Chloe, the women are forced to wrestle with the challenges of love and motherhood. Will their friendships and marriages survive? And at what price? Punchy yet tender, a high-five to sisterhood, this book will hit an emotional bull’s-eye for anyone who has had—or been—less than a perfect friend.
I had a hard time really getting into the book at first. For some reason, the writing just strike a cord in me. But then about halfway through, I got really invested in the characters and I wanted to see what was going to happen to them.
I found it interesting to read about four women who were friends in college but in such different places in their lives. While I am not as old as these women, I can definitely identify with going separate ways from friends after graduation.
All four women were so different. And yet I honestly can't pick out which one was my favorite. I loved Chloe's innocene. I loved how real it seemed that Talia lived in New York and struggled to make ends meet. I love how Quincy was with Jake and how bad she wanted a baby. And I love's Jule's Rules.
There are some definite surprises in store for the women that I didn't see coming. But I liked the way that it all played out and the ending was good and made me happy :)
I gave this book a rating of 3.5/5.
This book fulfilled an item in the following challenge:
2010 100+ Reading Challenge: 108
ARC Reading Challenge 2010: 75
About Sally Koslow

Sally Koslow is the author of The Late, Lamented Molly Marx and Little Pink Slips. Her essays have been published in More, The New York Observer, and O, The Oprah Magazine, among other publications. She was the editor in chief of both McCall’s and Lifetime, was an editor at Mademoiselle and Woman’s Day, and has taught creative writing at the Writing Institute of Sarah Lawrence College. The mother of two sons, she lives in New York City with her husband. You can visit Sally Koslow’s website at http://www.sallykoslow.com/
*FTC Disclosure: I was sent this book a part of Pump Up Your Book Promotions for a honest review.
From Goodreads:
Have you ever been a less than perfect friend? To whom does your first loyalty belong—your best friend or your husband? With her trademark wit and empathy, Sally Koslow explores the entangled lives of women in this candid, fast-paced novel.
Quincy, Talia, Chloe, and Jules met in the early nineties after answering a roommate ad for a Manhattan apartment. Despite having little in common, the women became fast friends. A decade later, their lives have diverged, though their ties remain strong.
Quincy, a Midwestern introvert, is trying to overcome a set of tragedies by hunting for the perfect home; Talia, a high-energy Brooklyn wife and mom with an outspoken conscience, is growing resentful of her friends’ greater financial stability and her husband’s lack of ambition; timid Chloe, also a mother, is trying to deflect pressure from her husband, a hedge fund manager, to play the role of trophy wife; while Jules, a fiercely independent actress/entrepreneur with a wicked set of life rules, is confronting her forties alone.
When Jules gives her new boyfriend the inside scoop on the real estate gem Quincy is lusting after, and Talia chases a lucrative job earmarked for Chloe, the women are forced to wrestle with the challenges of love and motherhood. Will their friendships and marriages survive? And at what price? Punchy yet tender, a high-five to sisterhood, this book will hit an emotional bull’s-eye for anyone who has had—or been—less than a perfect friend.
I had a hard time really getting into the book at first. For some reason, the writing just strike a cord in me. But then about halfway through, I got really invested in the characters and I wanted to see what was going to happen to them.
I found it interesting to read about four women who were friends in college but in such different places in their lives. While I am not as old as these women, I can definitely identify with going separate ways from friends after graduation.
All four women were so different. And yet I honestly can't pick out which one was my favorite. I loved Chloe's innocene. I loved how real it seemed that Talia lived in New York and struggled to make ends meet. I love how Quincy was with Jake and how bad she wanted a baby. And I love's Jule's Rules.
There are some definite surprises in store for the women that I didn't see coming. But I liked the way that it all played out and the ending was good and made me happy :)
I gave this book a rating of 3.5/5.
This book fulfilled an item in the following challenge:
2010 100+ Reading Challenge: 108
ARC Reading Challenge 2010: 75
About Sally Koslow

Sally Koslow is the author of The Late, Lamented Molly Marx and Little Pink Slips. Her essays have been published in More, The New York Observer, and O, The Oprah Magazine, among other publications. She was the editor in chief of both McCall’s and Lifetime, was an editor at Mademoiselle and Woman’s Day, and has taught creative writing at the Writing Institute of Sarah Lawrence College. The mother of two sons, she lives in New York City with her husband. You can visit Sally Koslow’s website at http://www.sallykoslow.com/
*FTC Disclosure: I was sent this book a part of Pump Up Your Book Promotions for a honest review.
Sunday, August 15, 2010
Book Review- Seven Year Switch
Late las night I finished reading Seven Year Switch by Claire Cook for a Pump Up Your Book Virtual Tour.
From Goodreads:
Jill is a single mother who’s a master of cultural etiquette with a flair for exotic cuisine. She has a beautiful 10-year old daughter and steady career as an advisor at Great Girlfriend Getaways, a fabulous no-boys-allowed travel agency, perfect for a woman now leading a no-boys-allowed lifestyle. She thinks she finally has her life together, and there’s even a cute, free-spirited bicycle entrepreneur in the picture. For once, the dust in Jill’s life is starting to settle. But when Seth, the deadbeat husband who abandoned Jill and her then three-year old daughter Anastasia for the Peace Corps, comes back into her life, Jill finds herself utterly furious – and flabbergasted. He’s interested in getting to know his daughter, who’s dreamt of having a father, and Jill is powerless to say no. A spunky, worldly Jill of All Trades who has mastered the art of communication can’t seem to hold herself together in front of him. And on top of that, Great Girlfriend Getaways might be up for sale. Jill must make a choice – not necessarily between the two men in her life, but between the woman she is and the woman she wants to be.
I really enjoyed this book. Even though I've never been married, and I don't have any kids, I felt like I could identify with Jill. With having a man just leave and give no reasons. Jill was such an engaging character. I could really feel her emotions--both good and bad. And I liked that she was so smart. I actually learned a lot of fun facts, cultural-wise from this book.
And I love the idea of the Great Girlfriend Getaways. I want to find a real company like that for my friends and I to go on adventures with.
The ending of the story could have gone either way between the two men, and I was torn as to which way I wanted it to go. I wanted her to end up with Seth, her ex-husband, so that they could all live in a happy little family. But I wanted her to end up with Billy because he seemed so sweet and into her. I liked how the story ended. It ended with hope and happiness.
I gave this book a rating of 4/5.
This book fulfills items in the following challenges:
2010 100+ Reading Challenge: 105
About Claire Cook
Claire Cook is the bestselling author of seven novels, including Must Love Dogs, which was adapted into a Warner Bros. movie starring Diane Lane and John Cusack, The Wildwater Walking Club, Life’s a Beach, and her latest, Seven Year Switch. Her reinvention workshops have been featured on The Today Show, and she has been a judge for the Thurber Humor Prize and the Family Circle fiction contest. Her books have been featured on Good Morning America and in People, Good Housekeeping, Redbook and more. She has two kids, seven brothers and sisters, and one husband. She lives in Scituate, MA.
Visit her website and find reinvention and writing tips at http://www.ClaireCook.com. Friend her on Facebook at http://facebook.com/ClaireCookbooks/. Follow her on Twitter at http://twitter.com/ClaireCookbooks/.
*FTC Disclosure: I was sent this book a part of Pump Up Your Book Promotions for a honest review.
From Goodreads:
Jill is a single mother who’s a master of cultural etiquette with a flair for exotic cuisine. She has a beautiful 10-year old daughter and steady career as an advisor at Great Girlfriend Getaways, a fabulous no-boys-allowed travel agency, perfect for a woman now leading a no-boys-allowed lifestyle. She thinks she finally has her life together, and there’s even a cute, free-spirited bicycle entrepreneur in the picture. For once, the dust in Jill’s life is starting to settle. But when Seth, the deadbeat husband who abandoned Jill and her then three-year old daughter Anastasia for the Peace Corps, comes back into her life, Jill finds herself utterly furious – and flabbergasted. He’s interested in getting to know his daughter, who’s dreamt of having a father, and Jill is powerless to say no. A spunky, worldly Jill of All Trades who has mastered the art of communication can’t seem to hold herself together in front of him. And on top of that, Great Girlfriend Getaways might be up for sale. Jill must make a choice – not necessarily between the two men in her life, but between the woman she is and the woman she wants to be.
I really enjoyed this book. Even though I've never been married, and I don't have any kids, I felt like I could identify with Jill. With having a man just leave and give no reasons. Jill was such an engaging character. I could really feel her emotions--both good and bad. And I liked that she was so smart. I actually learned a lot of fun facts, cultural-wise from this book.
And I love the idea of the Great Girlfriend Getaways. I want to find a real company like that for my friends and I to go on adventures with.
The ending of the story could have gone either way between the two men, and I was torn as to which way I wanted it to go. I wanted her to end up with Seth, her ex-husband, so that they could all live in a happy little family. But I wanted her to end up with Billy because he seemed so sweet and into her. I liked how the story ended. It ended with hope and happiness.
I gave this book a rating of 4/5.
This book fulfills items in the following challenges:
2010 100+ Reading Challenge: 105
About Claire Cook
Claire Cook is the bestselling author of seven novels, including Must Love Dogs, which was adapted into a Warner Bros. movie starring Diane Lane and John Cusack, The Wildwater Walking Club, Life’s a Beach, and her latest, Seven Year Switch. Her reinvention workshops have been featured on The Today Show, and she has been a judge for the Thurber Humor Prize and the Family Circle fiction contest. Her books have been featured on Good Morning America and in People, Good Housekeeping, Redbook and more. She has two kids, seven brothers and sisters, and one husband. She lives in Scituate, MA.
Visit her website and find reinvention and writing tips at http://www.ClaireCook.com. Friend her on Facebook at http://facebook.com/ClaireCookbooks/. Follow her on Twitter at http://twitter.com/ClaireCookbooks/.
*FTC Disclosure: I was sent this book a part of Pump Up Your Book Promotions for a honest review.
Monday, May 24, 2010
Book Review- Immortalis Carpe Noctem
I just finished reading Immortalis Carpe Noctem by Katie Salidas for a Pump Up Your Book Virtual Book Tour.
About Immortalis Carpe Noctem
Walking back home through the badly-lit campus of UNLV, twenty-five year old Alyssa is brutally attacked by two savage men. By the time a handsome stranger intervenes, Alyssa has almost bled to death, and doesn’t even struggle as her new protector sinks his sharp teeth into her neck.
Alyssa wakes to a harsh new reality, and to a raging thirst she’s never felt before. Lysander, the sexy yet aloof man who turned her, must now teach her the way of the immortals – and with such a desirable teacher Alyssa starts to realize that her fate is not as dark as she first feared.
But, just as sparks begin to fly between the pair, Lysander is alerted that his enemies are on the move and determined to destroy them both.
Led by the cunning and ruthless, Santino Vitale, the fanatical Acta Santorum have vowed to hunt down and destroy every last immortal in God’s name, and they have the vampires of Las Vegas in their sights.
Meanwhile, after seeing that Lysander has taken a new mate, the beautiful and pitiless Kallisto, is out for revenge. Alyssa soon finds out that hell hath no fury like a vampire scorned.
This was the first book in the Immortalis series and I enjoyed it. This book was a little darker, and not as light as the paranormal books that I tend to read, but that didn't stop me from liking it.
I really liked Alyssa. She seemed like a real college student, and someone I probably would have been friends with. Plus I feel like her transformation into her new life was real (well, as real as I imagine it would be.) And I liked her relationship with Lysander. I wasn't too sure if I liked him or not at the beginning, but he slowly grew on me.
There were some differences in this story and other vampire stories that I have read--I won't tell you what though. But I enjoyed reading about this version. And I enjoyed reading about how vampires in this story came to be. It was a neat sort of mini history lesson.
Random note--I also enjoyed reading about Las Vegas. I am going on a trip there next weekend, so there were a lot of things that I added to my "To Do" list while I am there :)
I look forward to reading the next book, Immortalis: Hunters & Prey when it comes out next year!
I gave this book a rating of 3.5/5.
This book fulfills items in the following challenges:
2010 100+ Reading Challenge: 63
About Katie Salidas
The youngest of four children, Katie has always had a desire to entertain. Since, early childhood, she’s dreamed up fantastical characters and scribbled them into pages of various journals and notebooks. Taking an interest in vampires at an early age, she devoured every book, featuring those blood sucking creatures, in any genre she could find. She claims that, of all the monsters out there, vampires had always been the most interesting.
It was only natural that a love of reading about vampires, and a love of writing, turned into a desire to write her own stories. Thus, Immortalis Carpe Noctem was born.
A Las Vegas native, having grown up in the famed City of Sin, Katie loves to feature it as a recurring setting for many of her stories. You can find Katie at her blog, My Immortal Stories and Rising Sign Books.
Katie Salidas Virtual Book Tour Schedule, May 17 – 28, 2010
May 17th
Just One More Paragraph
May 18th
Cheryl’s Book Nook
May 18th
Just One More Paragraph
May 19th
Writing Daze
May 20th
Book Marketing Buzz
May 20th
Paperback Writer
May 21
The Wayfaring Writer
May 25
Readaholic
May 26
Books R Us Online
May 27
The Life and Lies of an Inanimate Object
May 28
Books R Us Online
May 28
Down Under Views
*FTC Disclosure: I was sent this book a part of Pump Up Your Book Promotions for a honest review.
Saturday, May 15, 2010
Book Review- My Sister's Voice
I just finished reading My Sister's Voice by Mary Carter for a Pump Up Your Book Virtual Book Tour. Yes, I was supposed to have this posted yesterday..sorry I suck!
From Goodreads:
What do you do when you discover your whole life was a lie? In Mary Carter’s unforgettable new novel, one woman is about to find out. . .
At twenty-eight, Lacey Gears is exactly where she wants to be. An up-and-coming, proudly Deaf artist in Philadelphia, she’s in a relationship with a wonderful man and rarely thinks about her difficult childhood in a home for disabled orphans. That is, until Lacey receives a letter that begins, “You have a sister. A twin to be exact…”
Learning her identical, hearing twin, Monica, experienced the normal childhood she was denied resurrects all of Lacey’s grief, and she angrily sets out to find Monica and her biological parents. But the truth about Monica’s life, their brief shared past, and the reason for the twins’ separation is far from simple. And for every one of Lacey’s questions that’s answered, others are raised, more baffling and profound.
Complex, moving, and beautifully told, My Sister’s Voice is a novel about sisterhood, love of every shape, and the stories we cling to until real life comes crashing in…
I have always been fascinated with twins. Growing up, I loved reading the Sweet Valley Twins and Sweet Valley High series. I did several research projects in high school on twins. And I am currently dating a twin. And I also have a best friend who is fluent in American Sign Language and has taught me several signs. So I couldn't wait to read this book.
There were several twists and surprises in this book, a couple of which I saw coming. But I definitely didn't predict one of the last ones. It came out of the blue for me!
The two main characters, twins Lacey and Monica, were okay for me. I didn't really love them. Lacey, who was Deaf, just seemed so cold and off-putting (although I could see why she was that way--it just didn't appeal to me). And Monica seemed a little, I don't know how to put it nicely, psycho. The whole wanting to be exactly like her twin thing, as a full grown adult, was a little too much. Although at the end she does go to therapy.
All in all, it was an interesting story and I could definitely see this being made into a movie for the Lifetime channel.
I gave this book a rating of 3.5/5.
My Sister's Voice will be released on May 25, 2010.
This book fulfills items in the following challenges:
About Mary Carter
MARY CARTER is a freelance writer and novelist. My Sister’s Voice is her fourth novel with Kensington. Her other works include: She’ll Take It, Accidentally Engaged, Sunnyside Blues, and The Honeymoon House in the best selling anthology Almost Home. She is a graduate of the American Academy of Dramatic Arts, and the National Technical Institute for the Deaf, which is part of the Rochester Institute of Technology. She has just completed A Very Maui Christmas, a new novella for Kensington that will be included in a Christmas of 2010 anthology. She is currently working on a new novel, The Pub Across the Pond, about an American woman who swears off all Irish men only to learn she’s won a pub in Ireland. Readers are welcome to visit her at marycarterbooks.com.
*FTC Disclosure: I was sent this book a part of Pump Up Your Book Promotions for a honest review.
Friday, May 14, 2010
Book Spotlight--My Sister's Voice
Okay, I'm a bad blogger. I was supposed to post my review of My Sister's Voice by Mary Carter today, but I am still reading it. But I didn't want to not post anything for the book, so I am going to at least post the summary and cover. Sorry!
From Goodreads:
What do you do when you discover your whole life was a lie? In Mary Carter’s unforgettable new novel, one woman is about to find out. . .
At twenty-eight, Lacey Gears is exactly where she wants to be. An up-and-coming, proudly Deaf artist in Philadelphia, she’s in a relationship with a wonderful man and rarely thinks about her difficult childhood in a home for disabled orphans. That is, until Lacey receives a letter that begins, “You have a sister. A twin to be exact…”
Learning her identical, hearing twin, Monica, experienced the normal childhood she was denied resurrects all of Lacey’s grief, and she angrily sets out to find Monica and her biological parents. But the truth about Monica’s life, their brief shared past, and the reason for the twins’ separation is far from simple. And for every one of Lacey’s questions that’s answered, others are raised, more baffling and profound.
Complex, moving, and beautifully told, My Sister’s Voice is a novel about sisterhood, love of every shape, and the stories we cling to until real life comes crashing in…
Wednesday, March 17, 2010
Book Review- The Girl Who Chased the Moon
I finished reading The Girl Who Chased the Moon by Sarah Addison Allen for a Pump Up Your Book Promotion Virtual Tour.
About The Girl Who Chased the Moon
In her latest enchanting novel, New York Times bestselling author Sarah Addison Allen invites you to a quirky little Southern town with more magic than a full Carolina moon. Here two very different women discover how to find their place in the world…no matter how out of place they feel.
Emily Benedict came to Mullaby, North Carolina, hoping to solve at least some of the riddles surrounding her mother’s life. For instance, why did Dulcie Shelby leave her hometown so suddenly? Why did she vow never to return? But the moment Emily enters the house where her mother grew up and meets the grandfather she never knew—a reclusive, real-life gentle giant—she realizes that mysteries aren’t solved in Mullaby, they’re a way of life.
Here are rooms where the wallpaper changes to suit your mood. Unexplained lights skip across the yard at midnight. And a neighbor bakes hope in the form of cakes.
Everyone in Mullaby adores Julia Winterson’s cakes. She offers them to satisfy the town’s sweet tooth and in the hope of bringing back the love she fears she’s lost forever. In Julia, Emily may have found a link to her mother’s past. But why is everyone trying to discourage Emily’s growing relationship with the handsome and mysterious son of Mullaby’s most prominent family? Emily came to Mullaby to get answers, but all she’s found so far are more questions.
Is there really a ghost dancing in her backyard? Can a cake really bring back a lost love?
In this town of lovable misfits, maybe the right answer is the one that just feels…different.
My Review
Although I have heard lots about books by Sarah Addison Allen, this is the first book I have read by her. And the best way to descibe the book would be "enchanting".
The characters were endearing. Win Coffey seemed sweet and I thought he and Emily made a cute couple. I really wanted to know what his secret was and while I had my own predictions, they were way off. In fact, I have never ready a story where this "secret" was part of the story. I love new things! I also like Julia and Sawyer. Sawyer seemed the like all-around-good-guy and without saying whether or not they ended up together, I will say that I definitely wanted them to.
My only complaint about this book is that I felt it was too short. I want to know more. I want to know how Win and Emily's relationship pans out. And I want to know what happens with Julia and Sawyer's secret!
There is just a touch of magic in the book and it was definitely the sweet kind. I look forward to reading other books by Sarah Addison Allen!
I gave this book a rating of 3.5/5.
This book fullfills items for the following challenges:
2010 100+ Reading Challenge: 34
ARC Reading Challenge 2010: 23
2010 Chick Lit Challenge: 4
Sarah Addison Allen is the New York Times bestselling author of Garden Spells and The Sugar Queen. She was born and raised in Asheville, North Carolina, where she is currently at work on her next novel. You can visit Sarah Addison Allen’s website at www.sarahaddisonallen.com.
About The Girl Who Chased the Moon
In her latest enchanting novel, New York Times bestselling author Sarah Addison Allen invites you to a quirky little Southern town with more magic than a full Carolina moon. Here two very different women discover how to find their place in the world…no matter how out of place they feel.
Emily Benedict came to Mullaby, North Carolina, hoping to solve at least some of the riddles surrounding her mother’s life. For instance, why did Dulcie Shelby leave her hometown so suddenly? Why did she vow never to return? But the moment Emily enters the house where her mother grew up and meets the grandfather she never knew—a reclusive, real-life gentle giant—she realizes that mysteries aren’t solved in Mullaby, they’re a way of life.
Here are rooms where the wallpaper changes to suit your mood. Unexplained lights skip across the yard at midnight. And a neighbor bakes hope in the form of cakes.
Everyone in Mullaby adores Julia Winterson’s cakes. She offers them to satisfy the town’s sweet tooth and in the hope of bringing back the love she fears she’s lost forever. In Julia, Emily may have found a link to her mother’s past. But why is everyone trying to discourage Emily’s growing relationship with the handsome and mysterious son of Mullaby’s most prominent family? Emily came to Mullaby to get answers, but all she’s found so far are more questions.
Is there really a ghost dancing in her backyard? Can a cake really bring back a lost love?
In this town of lovable misfits, maybe the right answer is the one that just feels…different.
My Review
Although I have heard lots about books by Sarah Addison Allen, this is the first book I have read by her. And the best way to descibe the book would be "enchanting".
The characters were endearing. Win Coffey seemed sweet and I thought he and Emily made a cute couple. I really wanted to know what his secret was and while I had my own predictions, they were way off. In fact, I have never ready a story where this "secret" was part of the story. I love new things! I also like Julia and Sawyer. Sawyer seemed the like all-around-good-guy and without saying whether or not they ended up together, I will say that I definitely wanted them to.
My only complaint about this book is that I felt it was too short. I want to know more. I want to know how Win and Emily's relationship pans out. And I want to know what happens with Julia and Sawyer's secret!
There is just a touch of magic in the book and it was definitely the sweet kind. I look forward to reading other books by Sarah Addison Allen!
I gave this book a rating of 3.5/5.
This book fullfills items for the following challenges:
2010 100+ Reading Challenge: 34
ARC Reading Challenge 2010: 23
2010 Chick Lit Challenge: 4
About Sarah Addison Allen
Sarah Addison Allen is the New York Times bestselling author of Garden Spells and The Sugar Queen. She was born and raised in Asheville, North Carolina, where she is currently at work on her next novel. You can visit Sarah Addison Allen’s website at www.sarahaddisonallen.com.
*FTC Disclosure: I was sent this book a part of Pump Up Your Book Promotions for a honest review.
Monday, February 22, 2010
Book Review- The Things That Keep Us Here
I just finished reading The Things That Keep Us Here by Carla Buckley for a Pump Up Your Book Promotion Virtual Book Tour.
From Goodreads:
How far would you go to protect your family?
Ann Brooks never thought she’d have to answer that question. Then she found her limits tested by a crisis no one could prevent. Now, as her neighborhood descends into panic, she must make tough choices to protect everyone she loves from a threat she cannot even see. In this chillingly urgent novel, Carla Buckley confronts us with the terrifying decisions we are forced to make when ordinary life changes overnight.
A year ago, Ann and Peter Brooks were just another unhappily married couple trying–and failing–to keep their relationship together while they raised two young daughters. Now the world around them is about to be shaken as Peter, a university researcher, comes to a startling realization: A virulent pandemic has made the terrible leap across the ocean to America’s heartland.
And it is killing fifty out of every hundred people it touches.
As their town goes into lockdown, Peter is forced to return home–with his beautiful graduate assistant. But the Brookses’ safe suburban world is no longer the refuge it once was. Food grows scarce, and neighbor turns against neighbor in grocery stores and at gas pumps. And then a winter storm strikes, and the community is left huddling in the dark.
Trapped inside the house she once called home, Ann Brooks must make life-or-death decisions in an environment where opening a door to a neighbor could threaten all the things she holds dear.
Carla Buckley’s poignant debut raises important questions to which there are no easy answers, in an emotionally riveting tale of one family facing unimaginable stress.
Wow. This book really makes you think. And it can definitely make you paranoid. Working in a school, we had several kids (including one of my own students) that got the H1N1 virus and I know the slight panic that came with it.
Carla Buckley wrote this story so efficiently that I was totally engrossed in the story. I am one of those readers that when I'm reading, I am so involved in the story, that if I am interrupted, it takes me a couple of seconds to realize where I am. And with this story, it took me a couple of seconds to remember that the pandemic was only in the story, not in our real life. But the horror---and the possibility of it happening! It easily read like a thriller movie. I didn't want to put the book down and was hooked right until the end--and there is a shocking confession in the epilogue that I definitely didn't see coming. This was a suspenseful read and will have you wondering if you would have what it takes to survive a pandemic.
I gave this book a rating of 4/5.
This book fulfills items in the following challenges:
2010 100+ Reading Challenge: 23
ARC Reading Challenge 2010: 17
About Carla Buckley
Carla Buckley was born in Washington, D.C. She has worked in a variety of jobs, including a stint as an assistant press secretary for a U.S. senator, an analyst with the Smithsonian Institution, and a technical writer for a defense contractor. She currently lives in Ohio with her husband and children. The Things That Keep Us Here is her first novel. Bantam Dell will publish Buckley’s next novel in 2011. You can visit Carla Buckley’s website at http://www.carlabuckley.com/.
FTC Disclosure: I was sent this book a part of Pump Up Your Book Promotions for a honest review.
From Goodreads:
How far would you go to protect your family?
Ann Brooks never thought she’d have to answer that question. Then she found her limits tested by a crisis no one could prevent. Now, as her neighborhood descends into panic, she must make tough choices to protect everyone she loves from a threat she cannot even see. In this chillingly urgent novel, Carla Buckley confronts us with the terrifying decisions we are forced to make when ordinary life changes overnight.
A year ago, Ann and Peter Brooks were just another unhappily married couple trying–and failing–to keep their relationship together while they raised two young daughters. Now the world around them is about to be shaken as Peter, a university researcher, comes to a startling realization: A virulent pandemic has made the terrible leap across the ocean to America’s heartland.
And it is killing fifty out of every hundred people it touches.
As their town goes into lockdown, Peter is forced to return home–with his beautiful graduate assistant. But the Brookses’ safe suburban world is no longer the refuge it once was. Food grows scarce, and neighbor turns against neighbor in grocery stores and at gas pumps. And then a winter storm strikes, and the community is left huddling in the dark.
Trapped inside the house she once called home, Ann Brooks must make life-or-death decisions in an environment where opening a door to a neighbor could threaten all the things she holds dear.
Carla Buckley’s poignant debut raises important questions to which there are no easy answers, in an emotionally riveting tale of one family facing unimaginable stress.
Wow. This book really makes you think. And it can definitely make you paranoid. Working in a school, we had several kids (including one of my own students) that got the H1N1 virus and I know the slight panic that came with it.
Carla Buckley wrote this story so efficiently that I was totally engrossed in the story. I am one of those readers that when I'm reading, I am so involved in the story, that if I am interrupted, it takes me a couple of seconds to realize where I am. And with this story, it took me a couple of seconds to remember that the pandemic was only in the story, not in our real life. But the horror---and the possibility of it happening! It easily read like a thriller movie. I didn't want to put the book down and was hooked right until the end--and there is a shocking confession in the epilogue that I definitely didn't see coming. This was a suspenseful read and will have you wondering if you would have what it takes to survive a pandemic.
I gave this book a rating of 4/5.
This book fulfills items in the following challenges:
2010 100+ Reading Challenge: 23
ARC Reading Challenge 2010: 17
About Carla Buckley
Carla Buckley was born in Washington, D.C. She has worked in a variety of jobs, including a stint as an assistant press secretary for a U.S. senator, an analyst with the Smithsonian Institution, and a technical writer for a defense contractor. She currently lives in Ohio with her husband and children. The Things That Keep Us Here is her first novel. Bantam Dell will publish Buckley’s next novel in 2011. You can visit Carla Buckley’s website at http://www.carlabuckley.com/.
FTC Disclosure: I was sent this book a part of Pump Up Your Book Promotions for a honest review.
Thursday, January 21, 2010
Book Review- Alice I Have Been
I just finished reading Alice I Have Been by Melanie Benjamin for a Pump Up Your Book Promotions Virtual Book Tour.
ABOUT ALICE I HAVE BEEN
Few works of literature are as universally beloved as Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland. Now, in this spellbinding historical novel, we meet the young girl whose bright spirit sent her on an unforgettable trip down the rabbit hole–and the grown woman whose story is no less enthralling.
But oh my dear, I am tired of being Alice in Wonderland. Does it sound ungrateful?
Alice Liddell Hargreaves’s life has been a richly woven tapestry: As a young woman, wife, mother, and widow, she’s experienced intense passion, great privilege, and greater tragedy. But as she nears her eighty-first birthday, she knows that, to the world around her, she is and will always be only “Alice.” Her life was permanently dog-eared at one fateful moment in her tenth year–the golden summer day she urged a grown-up friend to write down one of his fanciful stories.
That story, a wild tale of rabbits, queens, and a precocious young child, becomes a sensation the world over. Its author, a shy, stuttering Oxford professor, does more than immortalize Alice–he changes her life forever. But even he cannot stop time, as much as he might like to. And as Alice’s childhood slips away, a peacetime of glittering balls and royal romances gives way to the urgent tide of war.
For Alice, the stakes could not be higher, for she is the mother of three grown sons, soldiers all. Yet even as she stands to lose everything she treasures, one part of her will always be the determined, undaunted Alice of the story, who discovered that life beyond the rabbit hole was an astonishing journey.
A love story and a literary mystery, Alice I Have Been brilliantly blends fact and fiction to capture the passionate spirit of a woman who was truly worthy of her fictional alter ego, in a world as captivating as the Wonderland only she could inspire.
First of all, let me say that the only thing I know about Alice in Wonderland is from Disney (and while I own the Disney movie, I haven't seen it yet. I am also looking forward to the new movie coming out soon). That said, who doesn't love the idea of Alice, and I wanted to read more about her.
Melanie Benjamin wrote a fascinating historical fiction novel about the life of Alice Liddell, the little girl who inspired the Alice's Adventures in Wonderland story by Lewis Carroll (real name Charles Dodgson). And while I found that the mysterious relationship between the Alice and Mr. Dodgson bothered me, I enjoyed the rest of the story. I especially enjoyed the part of her life when she was in her young twenties and I could feel her pain about the way that part of her life turned out.
I am glad that Melanie Benjamin wrote author's notes at the back of the book to let us know what was real and what she took liberties with. If you like historical fiction and/or are a fan of Alice in Wonderland, then this book would be right up your alley!
I gave this book a rating of 3/5.
This book fulfills items in the following challenges:
A to Z Challenge: B
2010 100+ Reading Challenge: 9
TwentyTen Reading Challenge: Bad Blogger's #2
ARC Reading Challenge 2010: 8
Melanie Benjamin lives in the Chicago area with her husband and two sons, where she is working on her next historical novel. Visit her website at www.melaniebenjamin.com.
View more stops on the blog tour here.

FTC Disclosure: I was sent this book a part of Pump Up Your Book Promotions for a honest review.
ABOUT ALICE I HAVE BEEN

But oh my dear, I am tired of being Alice in Wonderland. Does it sound ungrateful?
Alice Liddell Hargreaves’s life has been a richly woven tapestry: As a young woman, wife, mother, and widow, she’s experienced intense passion, great privilege, and greater tragedy. But as she nears her eighty-first birthday, she knows that, to the world around her, she is and will always be only “Alice.” Her life was permanently dog-eared at one fateful moment in her tenth year–the golden summer day she urged a grown-up friend to write down one of his fanciful stories.
That story, a wild tale of rabbits, queens, and a precocious young child, becomes a sensation the world over. Its author, a shy, stuttering Oxford professor, does more than immortalize Alice–he changes her life forever. But even he cannot stop time, as much as he might like to. And as Alice’s childhood slips away, a peacetime of glittering balls and royal romances gives way to the urgent tide of war.
For Alice, the stakes could not be higher, for she is the mother of three grown sons, soldiers all. Yet even as she stands to lose everything she treasures, one part of her will always be the determined, undaunted Alice of the story, who discovered that life beyond the rabbit hole was an astonishing journey.
A love story and a literary mystery, Alice I Have Been brilliantly blends fact and fiction to capture the passionate spirit of a woman who was truly worthy of her fictional alter ego, in a world as captivating as the Wonderland only she could inspire.
First of all, let me say that the only thing I know about Alice in Wonderland is from Disney (and while I own the Disney movie, I haven't seen it yet. I am also looking forward to the new movie coming out soon). That said, who doesn't love the idea of Alice, and I wanted to read more about her.
Melanie Benjamin wrote a fascinating historical fiction novel about the life of Alice Liddell, the little girl who inspired the Alice's Adventures in Wonderland story by Lewis Carroll (real name Charles Dodgson). And while I found that the mysterious relationship between the Alice and Mr. Dodgson bothered me, I enjoyed the rest of the story. I especially enjoyed the part of her life when she was in her young twenties and I could feel her pain about the way that part of her life turned out.
I am glad that Melanie Benjamin wrote author's notes at the back of the book to let us know what was real and what she took liberties with. If you like historical fiction and/or are a fan of Alice in Wonderland, then this book would be right up your alley!
I gave this book a rating of 3/5.
This book fulfills items in the following challenges:
A to Z Challenge: B
2010 100+ Reading Challenge: 9
TwentyTen Reading Challenge: Bad Blogger's #2
ARC Reading Challenge 2010: 8
View more stops on the blog tour here.

FTC Disclosure: I was sent this book a part of Pump Up Your Book Promotions for a honest review.
Thursday, September 10, 2009
Guest Blog- Bill Walker
I am honored to have Bill Walker, author of A Note from an Old Acquaintance, writing a guest blog for me today!
I hear a lot about authors who outline their novels before they start writing, outlines that can often be quite extensive. I'm not one of them, at least not with the books I've written thus far. For me, if I had to sit down and ponderously map out every little move my characters make and every twist and turn of the plot, I would more than likely lose interest in taking it any further. To then sit down and write the book would be like repeating myself. At worst, it would be excruciating. At best--anti-climactic. And I need that catharsis that comes with discovery. More about that in a minute.
The method that works for me is to first have an idea so compelling that it seizes my imagination and won't let go. Call it an obsession if you like, because I won't deny that it has the feeling of one, and for me I need that unrepentant passion to carry me through the months of work to get to a first draft. The next requirement is discipline, having the will to sit and type at least three pages per day. If I want to do more, fine, but that doesn't get me off the hook for the next day.
Because I'm a film school graduate, I have always tended to see my stories as movies on a big screen in my mind. And that is the way I write, in a sort of cinematic trance. While I have a firm grip on where the story is going, the characters will often assert themselves and take the story in a different direction. Sometimes I have to rein them in and, at other times, I'm delightfully surprised to find them taking me in a fresh direction I'd never previously considered. These are the moments for which all writers live, and an outline will kill it. Not because those moments will elude you if you've outlined your book, but because you've put so much work into that outline, you won't want to deviate from it to go somewhere else with the characters and the story.
My advice, then, is to take that basic idea and just start writing it. Once you get the first draft down, THAT will be your outline. You will then be able to see what needs to be changed with a much clearer vision and you will not have hampered your creativity at the outset by creating a rigid roadmap.
Thanks to Tracee at Pump Up Your Book Promotions for setting this up!
I hear a lot about authors who outline their novels before they start writing, outlines that can often be quite extensive. I'm not one of them, at least not with the books I've written thus far. For me, if I had to sit down and ponderously map out every little move my characters make and every twist and turn of the plot, I would more than likely lose interest in taking it any further. To then sit down and write the book would be like repeating myself. At worst, it would be excruciating. At best--anti-climactic. And I need that catharsis that comes with discovery. More about that in a minute.
The method that works for me is to first have an idea so compelling that it seizes my imagination and won't let go. Call it an obsession if you like, because I won't deny that it has the feeling of one, and for me I need that unrepentant passion to carry me through the months of work to get to a first draft. The next requirement is discipline, having the will to sit and type at least three pages per day. If I want to do more, fine, but that doesn't get me off the hook for the next day.
Because I'm a film school graduate, I have always tended to see my stories as movies on a big screen in my mind. And that is the way I write, in a sort of cinematic trance. While I have a firm grip on where the story is going, the characters will often assert themselves and take the story in a different direction. Sometimes I have to rein them in and, at other times, I'm delightfully surprised to find them taking me in a fresh direction I'd never previously considered. These are the moments for which all writers live, and an outline will kill it. Not because those moments will elude you if you've outlined your book, but because you've put so much work into that outline, you won't want to deviate from it to go somewhere else with the characters and the story.
My advice, then, is to take that basic idea and just start writing it. Once you get the first draft down, THAT will be your outline. You will then be able to see what needs to be changed with a much clearer vision and you will not have hampered your creativity at the outset by creating a rigid roadmap.
Thanks to Tracee at Pump Up Your Book Promotions for setting this up!
Wednesday, September 9, 2009
Blog Tour- A Note From An Old Acquaintance
I just finished reading A Note From An Old Acquaintance by Bill Walker for a book review for Pump Up Your Book Promotions.
ABOUT THE BOOK

Brian Weller is a haunted man. It's been two years since the tragic accident that left his three-year-old son dead and his wife in an irreversible coma. A popular author of mega-selling thrillers, Brian's life has reached a crossroads: his new book is stalled, his wife's prognosis is dire, and he teeters on the brink of despair.
Everything changes the morning an e-mail arrives from Boston artist Joanna Richman. Her heartfelt note brings back all the poignant memories: the night their eyes met, the fiery passion of their short-lived affair, and the agonizing moment he was forced to leave Joanna forever. Now, fifteen years later, the guilt and anger threaten to overwhelm him. Vowing to make things right, Brian arranges a book-signing tour that will take him back to Boston. He is eager to see Joanna again, but remains unsure where their reunion will lead. One thing is certain: the forces that tore their love asunder will stop at nothing to keep them apart.
Filled with tender romance and taut suspense, A Note from an Old Acquaintance is an unforgettable story about fate, honor, and the power of true love.
MY REVIEW
I have mixed feeling about this book. On the one hand, its a love story, and I love a good love story. I love a romance that lasts forever, and in the case of Joanna and Brian, it lingered for years even when they were apart. But in this story, Joanna cheats on her fiance and then shares a brief kiss with Brian after she and Ruby are married (To me, this is still cheating since there are such strong feelings behind it). * I can understand that she and Brian had feelings for each other that never went away, but I just don't condone cheating.
That said, I liked the characters, even Erik Ruby, who did questionable things to keep his wife (you'll have to read the book to find out what!). Even though Ruby was controlling, he seemed to be truly in love with Joanna. I would have liked to know more about the life between Brian and his wife Penny. If he was so in love with Joanna the whole time, how did he end up married to Penny.
Overall, I thought the book was well written.
I gave this book a rating of 3.5/5.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Bill Walker is a graphic designer specializing in book and dust jacket design, and has worked on projects by Ray Bradbury, Richard Matheson, Dean Koontz and Stephen King. Between his design work and his writing, he spends his spare time reading voraciously and playing very loud guitar, much to the chagrin of his lovely wife and two sons. Bill makes his home in Los Angeles and can be reached through his web site: http://www.billwalkerdesigns.com/
Thanks to Tracee at Pump Up Your Book Promotion for the review copy!
* edited as requested by the author to add that the cheating part after Joanna and Ruby were married was a brief kiss, but that I still feel this is cheating.
ABOUT THE BOOK
Brian Weller is a haunted man. It's been two years since the tragic accident that left his three-year-old son dead and his wife in an irreversible coma. A popular author of mega-selling thrillers, Brian's life has reached a crossroads: his new book is stalled, his wife's prognosis is dire, and he teeters on the brink of despair.
Everything changes the morning an e-mail arrives from Boston artist Joanna Richman. Her heartfelt note brings back all the poignant memories: the night their eyes met, the fiery passion of their short-lived affair, and the agonizing moment he was forced to leave Joanna forever. Now, fifteen years later, the guilt and anger threaten to overwhelm him. Vowing to make things right, Brian arranges a book-signing tour that will take him back to Boston. He is eager to see Joanna again, but remains unsure where their reunion will lead. One thing is certain: the forces that tore their love asunder will stop at nothing to keep them apart.
Filled with tender romance and taut suspense, A Note from an Old Acquaintance is an unforgettable story about fate, honor, and the power of true love.
MY REVIEW
I have mixed feeling about this book. On the one hand, its a love story, and I love a good love story. I love a romance that lasts forever, and in the case of Joanna and Brian, it lingered for years even when they were apart. But in this story, Joanna cheats on her fiance and then shares a brief kiss with Brian after she and Ruby are married (To me, this is still cheating since there are such strong feelings behind it). * I can understand that she and Brian had feelings for each other that never went away, but I just don't condone cheating.
That said, I liked the characters, even Erik Ruby, who did questionable things to keep his wife (you'll have to read the book to find out what!). Even though Ruby was controlling, he seemed to be truly in love with Joanna. I would have liked to know more about the life between Brian and his wife Penny. If he was so in love with Joanna the whole time, how did he end up married to Penny.
Overall, I thought the book was well written.
I gave this book a rating of 3.5/5.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Bill Walker is a graphic designer specializing in book and dust jacket design, and has worked on projects by Ray Bradbury, Richard Matheson, Dean Koontz and Stephen King. Between his design work and his writing, he spends his spare time reading voraciously and playing very loud guitar, much to the chagrin of his lovely wife and two sons. Bill makes his home in Los Angeles and can be reached through his web site: http://www.billwalkerdesigns.com/
Thanks to Tracee at Pump Up Your Book Promotion for the review copy!
* edited as requested by the author to add that the cheating part after Joanna and Ruby were married was a brief kiss, but that I still feel this is cheating.
Labels:
3.5 rating,
blog tour,
Book Review,
pump up your book
Tuesday, August 25, 2009
Blog Tour- Laced With Magic
I am happy to host the blog tour for Laced With Magic by Barbara Bretton for Pump Up Your Book Promotions.

*edited to add--I emailed Barbara Bretton wondering if there would be more books about Sugar Maple and this is what she wrote back "Hi, Andrea! I'm so glad (and relieved!) that you loved LACED WITH MAGIC. I apologize for the cliffhanger but I have some good news: yes, there will be more Sugar Maple in the future. Books #3 and #4 are under contract and Sugar Maple will return some time next year when Chloe, Luke, Janice and Penny the Cat embark on a road trip in Chloe's old Buick (stuffed with yarn!) to Salem in search of a way to bring Sugar Maple back to life again." Great news!
I gave this book a rating of 4/5.
Barbara Bretton is the USA Today bestselling, award-winning author of more than 40 books. Her most recent title, Laced With Magic, received a starred review from Publishers Weekly. She currently has over ten million copies in print around the world and have been translated into twelve languages in over twenty countries.
ABOUT THE BOOK
Knit shop owner and sorcerer's daughter Chloe Hobbs felt the Fates finally got it right when she met Luke MacKenzie. And no one could have convinced her otherwise—including the trolls, selkies, or spirits who also call Sugar Maple, Vermont, home. But then out of nowhere Luke's ex-wife suddenly shows up, claiming to see the spirit of their daughter, Steffie—a daughter Chloe knows nothing about.
Steffie's spirit is being held hostage by a certain Fae leader. And if Chloe weaves a spell to free her spirit, her nemesis will also be free—free to destroy her yarn shop and all of Sugar Maple. But if she doesn't, Steffie won't be the only one spending eternity in hell. Chloe'll be joining her, cursed with a broken heart.
MY REVIEW
Right from the very beginning, this book grabbed me and kept my attention throughout the whole story. I didn't know this was a sequel to a book called Casting Spells (although I will now be searching for a copy!). I loved the way the story was written. I found myself flying through the story..it was written almost as if being told by a friend.
I really liked the characters. I could totally understand how Chloe was unsure of "the ex" but still wanted to fight on her behalf. And as much as I wanted to hate Kare, "the ex", I couldn't because she wasn't a hate-able (is that a word?) character. I was sympathetic to her pain as a mom losing her child and hope I never have to go through that. And I loved Luke. I loved that he still seemed slightly protective of his ex, but you could clearly tell that he was in love with Chloe. And the cast of secondary characters--from Fae, to vampires, to werewolves, to all sorts of other things, was fun as well.
The end of the story somewhat caught me off guard and was sad. And the story ended on a cliff-hanger. I want to know what happens next! This was a great read and I will definitely be looking for books to read by Barbara Bretton!
*edited to add--I emailed Barbara Bretton wondering if there would be more books about Sugar Maple and this is what she wrote back "Hi, Andrea! I'm so glad (and relieved!) that you loved LACED WITH MAGIC. I apologize for the cliffhanger but I have some good news: yes, there will be more Sugar Maple in the future. Books #3 and #4 are under contract and Sugar Maple will return some time next year when Chloe, Luke, Janice and Penny the Cat embark on a road trip in Chloe's old Buick (stuffed with yarn!) to Salem in search of a way to bring Sugar Maple back to life again." Great news!
I gave this book a rating of 4/5.
This book fullfills items in the following challenge:
Paranormal 999 Challenge: Sorceress (can also be used for Fae)
EXCERPT
Chloe
Did you ever have the feeling that you were exactly where you were meant to be, that the Fates had finally got it right and the rest of your life was going to be clear sailing? That was how I felt the first time Luke MacKenzie and I kissed: like I was seeing the world through new eyes.
The first time our hands touched over a basket of alpaca roving, sparks flew. Bright silver-white sparks that shot from our fingertips and lit up the night. It was every love story I had ever read, every romantic movie I had ever wept over, all of my hopes and dreams wrapped up into one tall, dark, and handsome package. It didn't even matter that he was one hundred percent human and I was the daughter of a sorceress. I believed that now that I had finally found love, the rest would fall into place like magick.
Crazy? I wouldn't bet against it. Despite all of the evidence to the contrary, I still believed I was on my way to the storybook happy ending none of the women in my family had ever managed to achieve.
I mean, I even made a sweater for him and every knitter on the planet knows you never knit a sweater for the one you love until you had the ring on your finger.
What was I thinking?
I guess the truth is I wasn't thinking at all. All those romantic movies and novels I had devoured over the years hadn't prepared me for the real thing. Luke and I had gone from zero to sixty in a nanosecond, from strangers to lovers to living together in less time than it took most people to shake hands.
But then this wasn't the real world. It just looked like it.
By the way, I'm Chloe Hobbs, knit shop owner and de facto mayor of Sugar Maple, a tiny little town tucked between two mountains in the northwest corner of Vermont. We're a classic New England hamlet, famous for scenic views and great shopping but, trust me, there's more going on in Sugar Maple than meets the eye.
Up until Luke, a former police detective from Boston, showed up in early December to investigate the drowning death of his friend Suzanne Marsden, I had been the only resident human. Well, half human to be precise but without magick the sorceress side of my lineage hardly mattered.
Remember the old TV show The Munsters? Marilyn was the all-American blonde who stuck out like a sore thumb in her family of irregulars. I guess you could say that was the part I played here in Sugar Maple. When the real world came calling, I was the one who answered.
And even I had to admit I was the logical choice.
A tenth generation witch owns the Cut & Curl across the street from my knit shop. The hardware store is run by the sweetest family of werewolves you'll ever meet. The Sugar Maple Arts Playhouse is under the direction of shape shifters who serve as their own repertory company. Faeries keep the Inn's restaurant fully booked and I guess it wouldn't surprise you to learn that the town funeral parlor belongs to a happily married couple who happen to be vampire.
And that doesn't count the trolls, selkies, goblins, sprites, spirits, and mountain giants who call our town home.
The unexpected success of my yarn shop had brought even more attention to Sugar Maple than our white picket fences and picturesque village green. My shop had been rated New England's number one knitting destination two years running and if the blogosphere had anything to do with it, we were about to make it three for three. A protective spell cast over our town by one of my ancestors made it possible for us to hide in plain sight but when that spell started wearing down last year—well, that was when the troubles really started.
My ancestor Aerynn had fled Salem during the infamous witch hunts and found sanctuary here with other outcasts in search of a home. Aerynn was a sorceress, and she expressed her gratitude by casting a protective charm over Sugar Maple designed to keep the village safe from the sharp eyes of the real world as long as one of her female descendants walked the earth.
I was the last descendant of Aerynn and, in the eyes of almost everyone in town, pretty much of a loser. Oh, they loved me but I don't think even my closest friends believed I would ever come through for Sugar Maple. I mean, I was almost thirty years old with no husband, no kid, and no magic. Even worse, I had no prospects of any kind. The only thing I had going for me was the ability to knit and spin like my foremothers, but even I didn't think I could stockinette my way out of the mess the town was in.
And then Luke showed up and everything changed.
Who would have guessed that love would trigger my inner sorceress and awaken powers I didn't know existed. Suddenly I had everything I had ever dreamed about: magick and love and enough yarn to last ten lifetimes.
And who would have guessed it wouldn't be close to enough to save us.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Barbara has been featured in articles in The New York Times, USA Today, Wall Street Journal, Romantic Times, Cleveland Plain Dealer, Herald News, Home News, Somerset Gazette,among others, and has been interviewed by Independent Network News Television, appeared on the Susan Stamberg Show on NPR, and been featured in an interview with Charles Osgood of WCBS, among others.
Her awards include both Reviewer's Choice and Career Achievement Awards from Romantic Times; Gold and Silver certificates from Affaire de Coeur; the RWA Region 1 Golden Leaf; and several sales awards from Bookrak. Ms. Bretton was included in a recent edition of Contemporary Authors.
Barbara loves to spend as much time as possible in Maine with her husband, walking the rocky beaches and dreaming up plots for upcoming books.
You can visit Barbara’s website at http://www.barbarabretton.com/, her blog at http://bmafb.blogspot.com or connect with her on Twitter at http://www.twitter.com/barbarbretton.comter.com/barbarbretton.com.
Thanks to Dorothy at Pump Up Your Book Promotions for setting this up!
Monday, July 27, 2009
Blog Tour- First Night
I am happy to host the blog tour for First Night by Tom Weston for Pump Up Your Book Promotions.
ABOUT THE BOOK

Alexandra O'Rourke, aged 16, is not a happy camper. It's New Year's Eve. She should be partying in San Diego with her friends, but instead she is stuck in Boston, with just her younger sister, Jackie, for company. As if that wasn't bad enough, she is being haunted by Sarah, the ghost of a seventeenth century Puritan. Oh, and there is the small matter of the charge of witchcraft to be sorted out.
Armed only with big shiny buttons and a helping of Boston Cream Pie, the sisters set out to restore the Natural Order. Can Alex solve the mystery of the Devil's Book? Can Jackie help Sarah beat the sorcery rap? And can they do it before the fireworks display at midnight? Because this is First Night - and this is an Alex and Jackie Adventure.
MY REVIEW
This was a cute story. I really liked the characters. I found a little bit of myself in both Alex and Jackie--at times I can be moody like Alex and other times I can be outgoing like Jackie. And I really liked the character of Sarah--I felt for her. And it was fun to read about Sarah not understanding the culture of today. While you are reading it, you can tell that the book was very well researched. I think people from Boston would definitely enjoy the book. I think there might have been a little too much history involved for me, as I found myself spacing out during some of it. And I had a hard time following the end--what happened to Sarah and why, but overall I enjoyed it.
I gave this book a rating of 3/5.
This book fullfilled items in the following challenges:
Paranormal 999 Challenge: Ghosts
EXCERPT
“And to drink?” asked the waitress.
“I’ll have a beer, if I may?” replied Sarah.
“Can I see some ID please?” asked the waitress. “Sorry, but we have to check.”
“She’s just joking,” interrupted Alex. “She’ll have some water, like us.”
“Surely, you are not going to drink the water?” asked Sarah. This world differed so greatly from her world, but even these people must know the danger of drinking the water?
“Yes, why not?”
“Do you want to die of the colic or worms of the brain?”
“We have something called sanitation now,” sniped Alex. “If you’d had it in the seventeenth century, you might still be alive.”
“Or dead!” offered Jackie.
“Or dead, yes, absolutely,” amended Alex.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Originally from England, Tom now hangs his hat in Boston, Massachusetts; with occasional spells in such faraway places as London and Luxembourg. Tom has a degree in Computer Science, and he claims to speak three languages: English, American, and Visual Basic. Before turning his hand to fiction, Tom had a successful career as the CEO of a systems consulting company, conference speaker, and writer of industry articles and business books.
As well as the novel, First Night, Tom has also written the screenplay, Fission, based on the true story of scientist, Lise Meitner, and the race for the atomic bomb. While Fission has yet to find a home in Hollywood, it garnered enough critical acclaim, including being named as a finalist at the London Independent Film Festival, that Tom was encouraged to keep on writing, resulting in his latest work which is, of course, First Night.
You can learn more about Tom and First Night by going to his website: http://www.tom-weston.com/
Thanks to Jaime at Pump Up Your Book Promotions for this opportunity.
ABOUT THE BOOK

Alexandra O'Rourke, aged 16, is not a happy camper. It's New Year's Eve. She should be partying in San Diego with her friends, but instead she is stuck in Boston, with just her younger sister, Jackie, for company. As if that wasn't bad enough, she is being haunted by Sarah, the ghost of a seventeenth century Puritan. Oh, and there is the small matter of the charge of witchcraft to be sorted out.
Armed only with big shiny buttons and a helping of Boston Cream Pie, the sisters set out to restore the Natural Order. Can Alex solve the mystery of the Devil's Book? Can Jackie help Sarah beat the sorcery rap? And can they do it before the fireworks display at midnight? Because this is First Night - and this is an Alex and Jackie Adventure.
MY REVIEW
This was a cute story. I really liked the characters. I found a little bit of myself in both Alex and Jackie--at times I can be moody like Alex and other times I can be outgoing like Jackie. And I really liked the character of Sarah--I felt for her. And it was fun to read about Sarah not understanding the culture of today. While you are reading it, you can tell that the book was very well researched. I think people from Boston would definitely enjoy the book. I think there might have been a little too much history involved for me, as I found myself spacing out during some of it. And I had a hard time following the end--what happened to Sarah and why, but overall I enjoyed it.
I gave this book a rating of 3/5.
This book fullfilled items in the following challenges:
Paranormal 999 Challenge: Ghosts
EXCERPT
“And to drink?” asked the waitress.
“I’ll have a beer, if I may?” replied Sarah.
“Can I see some ID please?” asked the waitress. “Sorry, but we have to check.”
“She’s just joking,” interrupted Alex. “She’ll have some water, like us.”
“Surely, you are not going to drink the water?” asked Sarah. This world differed so greatly from her world, but even these people must know the danger of drinking the water?
“Yes, why not?”
“Do you want to die of the colic or worms of the brain?”
“We have something called sanitation now,” sniped Alex. “If you’d had it in the seventeenth century, you might still be alive.”
“Or dead!” offered Jackie.
“Or dead, yes, absolutely,” amended Alex.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Originally from England, Tom now hangs his hat in Boston, Massachusetts; with occasional spells in such faraway places as London and Luxembourg. Tom has a degree in Computer Science, and he claims to speak three languages: English, American, and Visual Basic. Before turning his hand to fiction, Tom had a successful career as the CEO of a systems consulting company, conference speaker, and writer of industry articles and business books.
As well as the novel, First Night, Tom has also written the screenplay, Fission, based on the true story of scientist, Lise Meitner, and the race for the atomic bomb. While Fission has yet to find a home in Hollywood, it garnered enough critical acclaim, including being named as a finalist at the London Independent Film Festival, that Tom was encouraged to keep on writing, resulting in his latest work which is, of course, First Night.
You can learn more about Tom and First Night by going to his website: http://www.tom-weston.com/
Thanks to Jaime at Pump Up Your Book Promotions for this opportunity.
Tuesday, July 14, 2009
Blog Tour- Summer House
I am honored to be able to participate in the blog tour for Summer House by Nancy Thayer.
Nancy Thayer is the New York Times-bestselling author of The Hot Flash Club, The Hot Flash Club Strikes Again, Hot Flash Holidays, The Hot Flash Club Chills Out, and Moon Shell Beach. She is also the author of a new June release, Summer House. She is the mother of Samantha Wilde, whose debut novel, This Little Mommy Stayed Home, comes out on June 23. Nancy lives on Nantucket. You can visit her website at http://www.nancythayer.com/.
At thirty, Charlotte Wheelwright remains the dreamer she’s always been. But when she begins an organic garden on a portion of her grandmother’s land, Charlotte learns to plant her feet in solid ground and begins to build a new life.
More often than not, ninety-year-old Nona Wheelwright contentedly spends her time reminiscing about days gone by. But with her family’s annual reunion and financial meeting looming, Nona must give up her days of quiet solitude to soothe her easily riled up family.
For decades Charlotte’s mother, Helen, who married into the illustrious Wheelwright family, has been pressured to adhere to their way of life. But when, during the course of the family’s annual summer retreat, she discovers her husband’s betrayal, Helen wonders if she sacrificed her dreams for the wrong reasons.
Artfully written and set on the glorious island of Nantucket, Nancy Thayer’s Summer House is a vibrant and stirring novel about family, love, and daily choices that affect entire lives.
New York Times calls it, "a Nantucket family-reunion story...well-wrought, appealing book will come as a pleasant surprise...packed with literally down-to-earth charm, what with a central character who escapes her family of starchy bankers by lovingly tending her vegetable garden."
MY REVIEW
I enjoyed reading the twists and turns of the Wheelwright family (and it made me think that maybe my own family isn't so crazy after all). This book shows you that although a person may seem to be "perfect", he or she most likely has secrets from the past.
The story is told from the different viewpoints from three women from differnet generations of the same family. I found it interesting to read about the forties from Nona, the grandmother. I felt sorry for Helen, the mom. And I really wanted to connect with Charlotte, the daughter, but I just never really got a lot of warmth from her. She told you the whole time that she had started working in the garden because she felt she had made some huge mistake and needed to pay for it. And when I found out at the end what that mistake was, I definitely had never even thought of it!
I would have like to have been able to connect more with the characters, but never-the-less, it was an enjoyable read.
I gave this book a rating of 3/5.
EXCERPT
Charlotte had already picked the lettuces and set them, along with the bunches of asparagus tied with twine and the mason jars of fresh-faced pansies, out on the table in a shaded spot at the end of the drive. In July, she would have to pay someone to man the farm stand, but in June not so many customers were around, and those who did come by found a table holding a wicker basket with a small whiteboard propped next to the basket. In colored chalk, the prices for the day’s offerings were listed, and a note: Everything picked fresh today. Please leave the money in the basket. Thanks and blessings from Beach Grass Garden. She hadn’t been cheated yet. She knew the customers thought this way of doing business was quaint, harkening back to a simpler time, and they appreciated it.
Perhaps it helped them believe the world was still a safe and honest place. The day was overcast but hoeing was hot work and she had been up since four-thirty. Charlotte collapsed against the trunk of an apple tree, uncapped her water bottle, and took a long delicious drink. Nantucket had the best water on the planet: sweet, pure, and clear. It was shady in this overgrown spot, so she lifted off the floppy straw hat she wore, in addition to a heavy slathering of sunblock, and sighed in appreciation as a light breeze stirred her hair.
She couldn’t linger, she had too much to do. She took another long drink of water, listened to her stomach rumble, and considered returning to the house for an early lunch.
When she heard the voices, she almost jumped.
People were talking on Bill Cooper’s side of the fence, just behind the green tangle of wild grapevines. Hunky Bill Cooper and his gorgeous girlfriend. From the tense rumble of Coop’s voice and Miranda’s shrill whine, they weren’t happy.
“Come on, Mir, don’t be that way.” Bill’s tone was placating but rimmed with an edge of exasperation.
“What way would that be?” A sob caught in Miranda’s throat. “Truthful?”
The moment had definitely passed, Charlotte decided, when she could clear her throat, jump up, and call out a cheerful hello. Vague snuffling sounds informed her that Bill’s dogs, Rex and Regina, were nearby, nosing through the undergrowth. She thought about the layout of Bill’s land: along the other side of the fence grew his everlasting raspberry bushes. The berries wouldn’t be ripe yet, so Bill and Miranda must be taking the dogs for a walk as they often did.
She was glad the berry bushes grew next to the fence, their prickly canes forming a barrier between Bill’s land and Nona’s. A tangle of grasses massed around barberry bushes was wedged against the fence, and then there were the tree trunks. They would pass by any moment now. She would keep very quiet. Otherwise it would be too embarrassing, even though she had a right and a reason to be here.
“I never lied to you, Miranda. I told you I wasn’t ready for a long-term commitment, especially not when you’re in New York all winter.”
“You could come visit me.”
“I don’t like cities,” Bill argued mildly.
“Well, that’s pathetic. And sleeping with that—that slut—is pathetic.” Miranda was striding ahead of Bill. She cried out, “Rex, you stupid, stupid dog! You almost tripped me.”
“Mir, simmer down.” Bill sounded irritable, at the end of his patience.
Miranda didn’t reply but hurried into the orchard of ancient apple trees. Bill followed, crashing through the brush. Charlotte could hear a few more words—I’m not kidding! It’s over, Bill!—then she heard the hum of their voices but no words, and then they were gone.
“Gosh,” Charlotte whispered to herself.
Charlotte had had a crush on Bill Cooper for years. Coop was a hunk, but so easygoing and funny that when you talked with him you could almost forget how handsome he was. She seldom saw him, even though he lived right next door. Of course, “right next door” was a general term.
Nona’s property consisted of ten acres with fifty feet of waterfront on Polpis Harbor, and the Coopers’ land was about the same size. With all the plantings, you couldn’t see one house from the other, even in winter when all the leaves had fallen.
Like the Wheelwrights, the Coopers mostly summered on the island, the Wheelwrights coming from Boston, the Coopers from New York. Eons ago, when they were all little kids, Coop had played a lot with Charlotte’s brother Oliver, even though Oliver was younger, because Coop was an only child, and the two families got together several times over the summer for cocktails or barbecues. Then came the years when they rarely saw each other, everyone off in college and backpacking in summer instead of coming to the island.
Coop lived in California for a while, but three years ago his parents moved to Florida and Coop moved into the island house, telling everyone he wanted to live here permanently. He ran a computer software business from his nineteen-sixties wandering ranch house, mixed his plasma TV and Bose CD player in with his family’s summery bamboo and teak furniture, and was content. Mostly he allowed his land to grow wild, except for a small crop of butter-andsugar corn famous for its sweetness. At the end of the summer, he held a party outdoors, a clambake with fresh corn, cold beer, and icy champagne.
Charlotte had seen Coop and Miranda about town now and then, when she went in to catch a movie or pick up a prescription at the pharmacy. It was obvious why any man would fall in love with Miranda Fellows. She was a dark-eyed beauty hired to run Luxe et Volupté, an upscale clothing shop on Centre Street. She was British, and her accent thrilled the young, beautiful, rich, social-climbing set, men as well as women. She was such a snob, and Coop was such a genuine good guy, they seemed like an odd pair, but Charlotte hadn’t allowed herself romantic thoughts about Coop.
She hadn’t allowed herself romantic thoughts about any man for quite a long while.
Her own move to Nantucket had not been a lighthearted, impulsive act. She’d thought about it a lot. She’d searched her soul. She came to Nantucket to get away from men—at least from one particular man—and to somehow balance with good acts the wrong she’d done. Her organic garden was her own self-imposed penance and repentance, and she’d been diligent and hardworking and nunlike for three years. She didn’t know when her penance would be over . . . but she knew she would find out when the time came. Until then, she forced herself to work hard, every day.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Nancy Thayer is the New York Times-bestselling author of The Hot Flash Club, The Hot Flash Club Strikes Again, Hot Flash Holidays, The Hot Flash Club Chills Out, and Moon Shell Beach. She is also the author of a new June release, Summer House. She is the mother of Samantha Wilde, whose debut novel, This Little Mommy Stayed Home, comes out on June 23. Nancy lives on Nantucket. You can visit her website at http://www.nancythayer.com/.
Thanks to Dorothy from Pump Up Your Book Virtual Book Tours for setting this up!
Labels:
3 rating,
blog tour,
Book Review,
pump up your book
Tuesday, June 16, 2009
Book Review- The Accidental Bestseller
I just finished reading The Accidental Bestseller by Wendy Wax for the Pump Up Your Book Promotion Virtual Blog Tour.
I gave this book a rating of 4/5.

From the back cover:
Once upon a time four aspiring authors met at a writers conference. Ten years later they're still friends, veterans of the dog-eat-dog New York publishing world.
Mallory St. James is a workaholic whose novels support her and her husband's lavish lifestyle. Tanya Mason juggles two jobs, two kids, and a difficult mother. Faye Truett is the wife of a famous televangelist and the author of bestselling inspirational romances: no one would ever guess her explosive secret. Kendall Aims's once-promising career is on the skids--as is her marriage. Her sales have fallen, her new editor can barely feign interest in her work--and her husband is cheating.
Under pressure to meet her next deadline, Kendall holes up in a mountain cabin to confront a blank page and a blanker future. But her friends won't let her face this struggle by herself. They collaborate on a novel none of them could write alone--using their own lives as fodder, assuming no one will ever discover the truth behind their words.
No one is more surprised than they are when the book becomes a runaway bestseller. But with success comes scrutiny and scandal. Now all bets are off as these four best friends suddenly realize how little they truly know each other.
I enjoyed reading this book. This was an interesting look at the writer's life (I've never read a book about this before). I found myself wondering how much of it was true. It was also a great story about deceit and friendship. The characters were all warm, and I couldn't tell you who my favorite was--I liked them all (even the secondary characters like Lacy Samuels, the editorial assistant!) I found myself rooting for them and wanting them to have their happily ever after. I would classify this as hen-lit and definitely a great beach read.
I gave this book a rating of 4/5.

Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)