Welcome to my blog!

"The more that you read, the more things you will know. The more that you learn, the more places you'll go." -Dr. Seuss

Thanks for stopping by. I really hope that you take something away from this blog, even if it's just a book recommendation that leads you to a new series or new author that you will enjoy. I know that by keeping this blog, it's encouraging me to try new genres and to expand my horizons as far as reading new books, rereading old, and I'm even inspired to read the classics that I've missed. Because I'm a mom of four, I'll also be adding children's books into my reviews as I try to spend time reading with my kids on a regular basis. So why not review those as well and share them with you?

Books, for me, have always been great escapes. I remember being stranded on the island with the Swiss Family Robinson when I was 10 years old and it was a great place to be as I was having a rough childhood at the time. I flew away with Peter Pan and traveled with Meg through wrinkles in time, in Madeleine L'Engle's A Wrinkle in Time. Now that I mostly read 'grown up' books, I don't travel to islands but I do live in someone else's world (or mind) for a while and it's a great way to get away from it all even if for a short time every day.

Enjoy my blog and as always, happy reading!

Karen

New England is home

Friday, July 31, 2009


The Gunslinger (The Dark Tower, Book I)
Author, Stephen King
Wow. That is my initial reaction having just closed this book. The entire book was written with an air of suspense...waiting for an event that was big, an explanation, an answer. But while you are waiting, you are taken through many horrific events, thrilling and suspenseful. The Slow Mutants in the train tunnels, The Preacher woman in Tull...the entire town of Tull. The life of Jake.
My favorite quotes? I cannot write them here...I will just say that the vision the Man in Black gives Roland, along with the explanation of that vision. It ties us to the book...to the world, the universe, and to what may lay ahead for all of us. It opened up a new line of thinking for me...and let's just say that "Going Green" and recycling isn't going to help.
My favorite part of this book? Okay maybe it's because I'm a HUGE Stephen King fan and he can do no wrong in my eyes, but I really enjoyed the Afterword. To understand where this book is coming from, to know that it just is...and it will be whatever it is, makes me want to hurry up and read the next in the series...to find out where it's going, as Stephen King himself found out while writing the book. And to know that this story has been alive in King's life from the beginning...and will go on till the end...but as Roland says, it's only the end of the beginning...because is there really ever an end or a beginning? That's the questions this book rouses in me.
I loved it. Creativity, Thoughts, visuals, etc...
The Critical Librarian gives this book 5 Stars and highly recommends this for an excellent read!

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K

Tuesday, July 7, 2009

Fear Nothing - Review


FEAR NOTHING
Author, Dean Koontz
Hmmmm. This book was an odd book. I went through a lot of different feelings about this book while reading it. At one point, I was amazed and scared out of my mind, another time, I started thinking...okay this plot seems to be heading to the corny side. I will say Mr. Koontz saved it in time and turned things around a little bit...but I also felt there was alot left unexplained. I may have missed it...I did not go back through to ensure that it was actually left out...the explanations...and then one of the characters seemed to know things just because he suddenly knew them...rather than someone telling him...so for a character to be completely in the dark about something on page one and then to have medical, scientific knowledge towards the end without someone actually spelling it out seemed to be a little far fetched.
There was also some things never solved...the attic at the rectory, for instance.
Dean Koontz did give his writing his usual flair...this was a page turner regardless of the plot and there was one scene so scary in the upstairs of the Ferryman residence, I had to put the book down and go talk to people to escape the scene...but only for a few because I wanted to plow on to get through the scene so it wouldn't haunt me. ...so there is definitely a great CREEP factor in this one.
So if you want to be scared...but walk away with a tiny bit of confusion...this is a great book. The confusion isn't so much that this book is lacking as a satisfactory read though. I appreciated Mr. Koontz's style of writing as usual and even more so as he came up with some things in this one that I never really thought about. I was looking at my cats in a whole new light last night...wondering.
One item that deserves special mention and kudos is some of the thoughts that go through the characters' minds in Mr. Koontz's books. I would like to share one in particular though there are many that I found profound enough to flag.
"How strange this world is. Those things that we can so readily touch, those things so real to the senses--the sweet architecture of a woman's body, one's own flesh and bone, the cold sea and the gleam of stars--are far less real than things we cannot touch or taste or smell or see. Bicycles and the boys who ride them are far less real than what we feel in our minds and hearts, less substantial than friendship and love and loneliness, all of which long outlast the world." Page 60
That statement says so much. How fleeting are the moments in the physical in our lives...but the feelings we live and survive and cherish...go on endlessly. Amazing.
For chill factor, I would give this book a 4.5 star rating. For character development, 3.5 stars, for conclusion, 3 stars (because I know what he was trying to do, it's my personal dislike of this sort of ending that causes me to rate this way). This is still a rough draft of my rating system but for the time being, it will do.
So that leaves this book with an overall rating of 3.5 stars.

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Sunday, July 5, 2009

Salem Falls-Review


(image courtesy of Amazon.com)
Salem Falls
Author, Jodi Piccoult
This is my second trip into the world of Jodi Piccoult as she seems to be a very popular NH author. I do like that her books are set in New England towns...gives me that warm sense of home. Typically her books are about small towns...but big happenings in those small towns.
Salem Falls is about a small town in which a stranger moves in...and people begin to judge based on past histories without seeing the actual truth. At some points in the story, you question what the truth will be...but all in all you sort of, in the back of your head, know how it's going to come out. It's a story of people learning to love again, to trust, to heal, and of course, attention seeking teenagers thrown in for some dramatic effect. The reason for the title? Those attention seeking teenagers like to dabble a little in witchcraft. However, this is not a supernatural thriller or a book involving magic...it is just something kids are playing with and the witchcraft stops there.
Jodi gives us good pictures of her characters. You love them, you hate them, you feel for them, you understand why they do what they do and you get aggravated with their lack of communication with the other characters. So she really puts you into the drama that is unfolding. What I don't like...the lack of justice in this book. Perhaps that isn't a good description of what it is that bothers me.
This book left me with a little bit of an itch that was not scratched when it all came to an end. I guess one could give Jodi Piccoult kudos in writing "real life" because after all, in real life, not every issue is resolved, not every person knows the outcome, and sometimes life is left hanging in the balance for some.
But at the same time, that is real life, and I was reading this book to get away from those unresolved issues...we have those daily in the news and on crime TV. She definitely doesn't leave you hanging like Danielle Steele does (or used to as I haven't read a Danielle Steele book in about 15 years or more) but when I'm reading someone else's story, I prefer that justice be served and that I am left with a feeling of resolution.
So if you don't mind walking away with a feeling of frustration, aggravation of horrible people getting away with horrible things and suffering continuing in the back of your mind (for the characters) then this would be a good story for you. If not, walk away.
I would like to get more technical in my star giving and will eventually be coming up with a rating system but for now, I will say, great writing, great plot, great characters, unnerving ending and for the sake of the feeling I walked away with....
the Critical Librarian gives Salem Falls 3.5 Stars (out of 5).

Reading List

My Summer Reading List

Vanishing Acts, Jodi Piccoult
Duma Key, Stephen King
Sense and Sensibility, Jane Austen
Salem Falls, Jodi Piccoult
The Pact, Jodi Piccoult
Fear Nothing, Dean Koontz
The Pact, Jodi Piccoult
The Reader, Bernhard Schlink
The Testament, John Grisham
Frankenstein, Mary Shelley
Odd Thomas, Series, Dean Koontz

More to come....

Odd Thomas FYI

I am currently reading the next Odd Thomas novel but decided to read other books as well in order to break up the monotony of one character reading.

The House of Thunder - Review


The House of Thunder



Author, Dean Koontz


(image courtesy of Amazon.com)

Wow, this book was a page turner. I was never a big Dean Koontz fan until I read Odd Thomas. As far as I was concerned, no one could live up to Stephen King's ability to terrorize me through the written word. Everyone else paled in comparison. But seeing as how the Stephen King novels aren't coming out weekly, I have had to find other ways to entertain myself. So after reading Odd Thomas which is a book near and dear to my heart for personal reasons, I decided to peruse the used bookstores for a few other Koontz novels to see what I could see.




This being the first one, I was pretty amazed. I had NO idea how this book would turn out...which kept me intrigued throughout the entire book literally until the last chapter.




A patient (Susan Thornton) wakes up in a hospital not knowing at first who she is or why she's there. Though most of her memories come back quickly, there are huge gaping holes in her memory, and unfortunately, the most terrifying memories she holds from a long time ago...have come to the forefront of her brain to physically or perhaps psychologically haunt her. Of course, you won't know what the real deal is until the very last chapter of the book.




If you like a good creep factor...this is the book for you. Why I liked this book...A page turner, this brings forth, horror, twilight zone and a little bit of conspiracy theory, rolls it all up and serves it up in a great novel called The House of Thunder.


What I didn't like about this book...it is hard to say without creating a spoiler alert...but there's a bit of complicating stuff at the end that you never see coming. If that had been written on the sleeve of the book, I probably wouldn't have picked this one...so I'm glad it wasn't because I would have missed out on a great read. So even though it contained some subject matter, I don't particularly care for...it wasn't enough to spoil the book for me. This book is a great ride.




A quick read and very enjoyable should this be your cup of tea!


The Critical Librarian gives this book four out of five stars.


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