Monie over at Reading with Monie tagged me for the "Random Facts" tag - Book Edition.Unfortunately today is crazy on the home front, so I can't play. I think it's a fun idea though, so click back to her site and join in!
Monie over at Reading with Monie tagged me for the "Random Facts" tag - Book Edition.
The winner of the giveaway of The Heretic's Daughter, courtesy of Hachette Books was picked using random.org. And that person is:Congratulations! I know you'll love it as much as I did - you can read my review here.
I just turned the last page.... Wow.... What a really, really good book!
Just released today is M. Ann Jacoby's debut novel Life After Genius.
--Challenge Yourself to Spot the Differences--
Okay I admit it - I love puzzles, jumbles, crosswords, sudoku, spot the differences, any game that keeps your mind active. Does anyone else remember the hidden picture puzzle in Highlights Magazine from their younger years?
This new release from Ulysses Press features 148 different puzzles. There are two of every photograph, all in full colour with up to twelve differences between the two images. They range in difficulty from starter to advanced, something for all ages. And if you're really stuck - the answers are in the back. There are a series of boxes to check off the differences as you spot them. I was a bit loath to mark up the book, as it is so nice.
I was thinking that this would be a good book to have on hand to give as a gift - birthday or Christmas.
Thanks to Mini Book Expo for the opportunity to review this book!
Join Miriam from Hachette Books on Wednesday, October 29/08 at 1:00 pm ET for a Blog Talk Radio interview with Katheleen Kent - author of The Heretic's Daughter.
I have long been a fan of Canadian Giles Blunt and his John Cardinal crime series. Blunt is another one of those authors I just know is going to be a good read.
-- A Forensic Handwriting Mystery--
--The Secret Lives of Grocery Shoppers --
Murder Takes the Cake is a brand new series from Gayle Trent, just released by Bell Bridge Books.
The Gifted Gabaldon Sisters begins in Los Angeles in 1966. We meet the four sisters - Loretta, Rita, Sophia, Bette and their brother Cary - all named by their late mother after movie stars. The girls are still mourning their mother. Their beloved housekeeper, Fermina, becomes ill as well. She has always promised that when she passes on she will give the girls each a gift. When she dies, the girls try to discover what each gift is. They aren't tangible items, but maybe the gifts are abilities......
---A Zits Retrospective You Should Definitely Buy For Your Mom ---
Okay fellow readers - learn from my mistake! I started Linwood Barclay's newly released suspense novel Too Close to Home too close to bedtime. I couldn't put it down! ( And I was very tired at work the next day.)
And the winner is....
Jane Singer is a published Civil War scholar. Booth's Sister is her first fiction foray from Bell Bridge Books.
Ohh, it was with great happiness and anticipation that I settled in on the couch with All the Colours of Darkness, newly released from McClelland!Steve Lopez writes for a Los Angeles newspaper. One day he hears someone playing violin in the street. It is an older, disheveled obviously homeless man playing a violin with only two strings. He stops to listen, as the music is beautiful, speaks the man and heads back to the paper to write a column about the homeless violinist. And so begins an unusual relationship.
The violinist is Nathaniel Ayers. He was a very promising musician in his youth, winning a scholarship to the prestigious Juilliard School. Although he excels, his ends up dropping out his second year - he is diagnosed with schizophrenia. He spent the next 35 years on the streets, still in love with music. Lopez becomes caught up in Ayer's life, determined to help him back into mainstream society. Along the way he discovers that his idealistic goal is not reality. Nathaniel is mentally ill. Ayers declares that he is happy with his way of life. The next two years are a fascinating story as Lopez spends nights with Nathaniel on Skid Row, fending off sewer rats with sticks and traverses the minefield of mental health issues, problems and solutions. Nathaniel becomes not a project but a friend to Lopez.
The Soloist was born from the series of columns that Lopez wrote. It is a fascinating read and should be a great movie as well. Slated for release in November 2008, it will star Jamie Foxx and Robert Downey Jr.