Meme, What Are You Reading?

What are you Reading? Monday, Aug. 10, 2009

What are You Reading on Mondays

For It’s Monday! What are you reading this week? is a weekly event to celebrate what we are reading for the week. Post the books completed last week, the books currently being read, and the books to be finish this week. Feel free to pile on a little extra.

If you’d like to join in this weekly event, please include a link to this post. That way others can find it and join in.

~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~

What I finished this past week:

  1. Dancing with Ana by Nicole Barker
  2. The Piper’s Sons by Bruce Chandler Fergusson

What I’m currently reading:

  1. Swimsuit by James Patterson & Maxine Paetro
  2. The Criminalist by William Relling, Jr.
Meme, Musing Mondays

Monday Musings – Aug. 10, 2009

Musing Mondays (BIG)_thumb[3]

Today’s MUSING MONDAYS post is about publishing houses …

Do you have a favourite publishing house — one that puts out books that you constantly find yourself wanting to read? If so, who? And, what books have they published that you’ve loved? (question courtesy of MizB)

Okay, so this is an interesting question. I will have to say that I’ve never really paid all that much attention to publishing houses. Sure, it’s something that I tend to look at when I’m looking at a book, but it’s not something that makes me pick the book up. I really prefer to read books based on my previous experience with certain authors that I’ve enjoyed, or even recommendations from people in real life and the blogger world. To be honest with you, I dont think I could even tell you the publishing houses that are responsible for some of my favorite books, it’s just not something that I’m concerned with in general. However, now that this questin has been asked, I will probably be a little more aware of the publishing houses when looking at books.

Mailbox Monday, Meme

Mailbox Monday, August 10, 2009

Mailbox Monday

Mailbox Mondays

Monday, August 3
Dancing with Ana by Nicole BarkerDancing with Ana by Nicole Barker

Beth is a lucky girl … She comes from a loving family. She has three best friends. She loves to surf and lives five minutes from the beach. She also recently discovered that the boy she’s grown up with has the most amazing green eyes … Beth has every reason to smile. Every reason to be happy. Every reason to feel blessed. Then why is she sticking her fingers down her throat?

I was contacted directly by the author of this book about receiving a review copy. I received it on August 3rd and read it that night in one sitting. It’s a really good book that I simply cannot say enough good things about. Please read my review here.

The Lie by Fredrica WagmanThe Lie by Fredrica Wagman

Ramona Smollens has a chance meeting on a park bench with an older man, Solomon Columbus. The two become lovers, and soon Ramona is leaving the home of her mother and recently deceased father for marriage and the trappings of adult life. She takes with her a dark family secret, the sort of secret one simply did not talk about, one that would stalk her as she matured into her role as wife and mother. Coming of age in 1950s America, Ramona gets her cues about a woman’s role from the world around her, and about female sexuality form the silver screen. But when experience teaches her that Hollywood’s ideal is in fact “the lie,” truth and desire collide with a force that is deeply moving and unforgettable.

I received this book as a review copy from FSB Associates. The blurb intrigues me. I’m definitely looking forward to getting around to this one quickly!

Tuesday, August 4
Blueberry Muffin Murder by Joanne FlukeBlueberry Muffin Murder by Joanne Fluke

Preparations are underway for Lake Eden, Minnesota’s annual Winter Carnival – and Hannah Swensen is set to bake up a storm at her popular shop, The Cookie Jar. Too bad the honor of creating the official Winter Carnival Cake went to a famous lifestyle maven Connic Mac – a half-baked idea, in Hannah’s opinion. She suspects Connie Mac is a lot like the confections she whips up on her cable TV cooking show – sweet, light, and scrumptious-looking, but likely to leave a bitter taste in your mouth. Hannah’s suspcions are confirmed when Connie Mac’s limo rolls into town. Turns out America’s “Cooking Sweetheart” is bossy, bad-tempered, and downright domineering. Things finally boil over when Hannah arrives at The Cookie Jar to find the Winter Carnival cake burnt to a crisp – and Connic Mac lying dead in her pantry, struck down while eating one of Hannah’s famous blueberry muffins. Next thing Hannah knows, the police have declared The Cookie Jar’s kitchen crime scene off-limits. She’s a baker without an oven – and the Carnival is right around the corner. Hannah’s only alternative is to cook up a plan to save her business – by finding the killer herself….

I received this one from a MBS buddy, Stephanie, for my birthday. I haven’t read any in this series, but just wanted to try one out before I committed to the whole series (sometimes if I start with book 1 I feel compelled to finish the whole series).

Valhalla Rising by Clive CusslerValhalla Rising by Clive Cussler

It is July 2003. In the middle of its maiden voyage, the luxury cruise ship Emerald Dolphin suddenly catches fire and sinks. What caused it? Why didn’t the fire-control systems work? What was its connection to the revolutionary new engines powering the ship? NUMA Special Projects Director Dirk Pitt races to rescue the passengers and investigate the disaster, but he has no idea of the bizarre events that are about to engulf him. Before the next few weeks are over, Pitt will find himself confronted by an extraordinary series of monsters, both human and mechanical, modern and ancient. He will tread upon territory previously known only to legend. And, at the end of it all, though many lives will be lost, and many saved, it is Pitt’s own life that will be changed forever…

I chose this one as part of a 2 book BOB from PBS. I’ve only read one Clive Cussler book before, but I really enjoyed it, so I’m always on the look out for more of his books.

The Poe Shadow by Matthew Pearl The Poe Shadow by Matthew Pearl

Baltimore, 1849. The body of Edgar Allan Poe has been buried in an unmarked grave. Quentin Clark is a young lawyer and ardent admirer of Poe’s who puts his own career and repuation at risk in a crusade to find out the truth behind the writer’s death. After discovering that accounts of Poe’s last days are riddled with unanswered questions the police are ignoring, Quentin finds himself enmeshed in sinister machinations involving international political agents, a female assassin, and the corrupt Baltimore slave trade. In order to unchain his now imperiled fate from Poe’s, Quentin must turn master investigator.

This was the second book the the BOB from PBS, and the one I was really wanting. I also have The Dante Club on my shelf and I’m looking forward to reading both of them. (Eventually, lol – I have WAY TOO MANY BOOKS!)

Thursday, August 6
Atlantis by David Gibbins Atlantis by David Gibbins

Marine archaeologist Jack Howard has stumbled upon the keys to an ancient puzzle. With a crack team of scientific experts and ex-Special Forces commandos, he is heading for what he believes could be the greatest archaeological find of all time – the site of fabled Atlantis – while a ruthless adversary watches his every move and prepares to strike. But neither of them could have imagined what awaits them in the murky depths. Not only a shocking truth about a lost world, but an explosive secret that could have devastating consequences today. Jack is determined to stop the legacy of Atlantis from falling into the wrong hands, whatever the cost. But first he must do battle to prevent a global catastrophe.

This is the first book in a two book BOB from PBS. I have had this one on my reminder list for a while and was pleased to see it available in a box. I like adventure type books and am looking forward to this one.

Privileged Information by Stephen White Privileged Information by Stephen White

A successful psychologist in Boulder, Colorado, Alan Gregory has a bright future – until police find one of his female patients dead. In her apartment, they discover a diary describing her sexual obsession with Gregory and his willing involvement. Obligated to keep his patient records confidential – even from the police – Alan faces disgrace and ruin unless he reveals what he knows about her fantasies and his own innocence. But when more of his patients die and Alan becomes the prime suspect, he is desperate to clear his name. Unable to turn to anyone for help, he begins the painful search for the explanation on his own – and soon discovers the terrible truth. Now, only he knows how to stop the killing … if he doesn’t wind up dead himself.

This is the second in the BOB from PBS. I have been wanting to try this series for quite some time, so I went ahead and got the first in the series to see how it goes.

Friday, August 7
An Ice Cold Grave by Charlaine Harris An Ice Cold Grave by Charlaine Harris

Harper Connelly heads to Doraville, North Carolina, to find a missing boy – one of several teenage boys who have disappeared over the last five years. And all of them are calling for Harper. She finds them – buried in the frozen ground. All Harper wants is to get out of town before she’s caught in the media storm, until she herself is attacked. Soon, Harper will learn more than she cared to about the dark mysteries and long-hidden secrets of Dorawville – knowledge of the dead that makes her the next in line to end up in an ice cold grave…

This one I used a credit on at PBS. I have read the first two in this series so far this year and am looking forward to getting to this third one, and hopefully the fourth when it is scheduled to come out later this year 🙂

Booking Through Thursday, Meme

Booking Through Thursday, Aug. 6, 2009 – Recent Serious

btt button

What’s the most serious book you’ve read recently?
(I figure it’s easier than asking your most serious boook ever, because, well, it’s recent!)

Okay, so after last week I was pleased to see this question. I guess because as I think I said last week, I tend to read more serious books. But then I get stuck … how does one really define serious in regards to a book? Is serious considered something among the classics (which I tend to want to run away from) or is serious something non-fiction, or is serious a mystery/thriller that is NOT cozy?! I really think it all has to do with how you really define serious. So this issue brings to me to the point where I must define serious in my own terms. I would like to consider serious a non-fiction read. But seeing as how I’ve only read one non-fiction book this entire year (I know, bad Tara … I try and do better than that usually), I’m really going to classify serious as a fiction book that really touches on a serious subject.

Now, as everyone who follows my blog knows that I recently read and reviewed Dancing with Ana by Nicole Barker. Now, I realize that this is technically a YA read, and it wasn’t very long. However, I’m going to call this my recent serious read and here’s why: Beth is a sixteen-year-old high school student. She recently begins a diet. This diet gets out of control before she realizes what has happened. Besides all this going on, she also is feeling the effects of being abandoned by her father after he left the family for a younger woman, not to mention the fact that one of her best friends has a pretty rough home life and she deals with it by cutting herself. Now taking all of what is going on in this book, you really had to admit that it is a serious read simply because of what all Beth experiences. (Plus the fact that I can’t seem to quit raving about this book – seriously give it a chance if you can!) So there’s my answer 🙂

Meme, Musing Mondays

Monday Musings – Aug. 3, 2009

Musing Mondays (BIG)

Today’s MUSING MONDAYS post is a library habits meme…

This week we have a library meme courtesy of MizB:

Library Habits meme:
1) If you don’t frequent your local library, why not?
N/A
2) If you do visit the library, how often do you go? Well, I don’t really have a set schedule of when I go to the library. If it’s not when I get a notice that a book on hold has become available for me or if I have something to return, it’s usually pretty random when I decide to head to the library.
3) Do you have a favorite section that you always head to first, or do you just randomly peruse the shelves? Um, most of the time I am there with a list of books to get. However, I always browse the stuff up front that they randomly place there to attract readers first. Then I will browse through the fiction area, then hit the mystery area, then sometimes I’ll take a stroll through the biographies then the true crime and finally the cookbooks before heading out. Now this is when I really want to browse the stacks … normally I have a list and I just go straight to what I’m looking for.
4) How many books are you allowed to check out at one time? Do you take advantage of this?
At our library we can have 20 items checked out at one time; I have never had this many checked out (although when I was in college my senior year writing a huge paper I kid you not, I had 50 books checked out from the universities library … there was no limit there!) but when I go to the library, I usually pick up 2-3 books. I don’t like to pick up a whole lot of different stuff because I have a bad habit of returning books un-read!
5) How long are you allowed to have the books checked out? Three weeks unless there’s a hold on that particular book, and then it’s two weeks.
6) How many times are you allowed to renew your check-outs, if at all? If there’s no hold on the book, I think we have two renewals.
7) What do you love best about your particular library? Well, I don’t really know. Recently I’ve really been taking advantage of hold option online for books that have a waiting list.
8) What is one thing you wish your library did differently? Um, to be honest … I’d really like to know why certain books that I would consider mystery are in the fiction section and not the mystery section and then others are in the mystery when I would put them in the fiction …. I’m not sure I understand their system.
9) Do you request your books via an online catalogue, or through the librarian at your branch? Well, if something has a wait list, I always use the online catalog.
10) Have you ever chosen a book on impulse (from the online catalogue OR the shelves) and had it turn out to be totally amazing? If so, what book was it, and why did you love it? Hm … to be honest, Sweetheart by Chelsea Cain was like that for me. I happened to notice it on the shelf one day and I picked it up on impulse. I hadn’t cared much for Heart Sick and wasn’t sure I wanted to give this one a try, but I ended up absolutely loving it and was very pleased that I picked it up at the library, because I definitely would not have used a PBS credit on it based on my opinion of Heart Sick.

Today’s MUSING MONDAYS post is a library habits meme…

This week we have a library meme courtesy of MizB:

Library Habits meme:
1) If you don’t frequent your local library, why not?
2) If you do visit the library, how often do you go?
3) Do you have a favorite section that you always head to first, or do you just randomly peruse the shelves?
4) How many books are you allowed to check out at one time? Do you take advantage of this?
5) How long are you allowed to have the books checked out?
6) How many times are you allowed to renew your check-outs, if at all?
7) What do you love best about your particular library?
8) What is one thing you wish your library did differently?
9) Do you request your books via an online catalogue, or through the librarian at your branch?
10) Have you ever chosen a book on impulse (from the online catalogue OR the shelves) and had it turn out to be totally amazing? If so, what book was it, and why did you love it?

Friday Fill-Ins, Meme

Friday Fill-Ins #135

1. It’s time for me to stop being so lazy.

2. Kentucky; it’s not a bad place for us to have settled.

3. I must be crazy

4. Love is the best thing I have ever known.

5. My life is simply in a wonderful place right now.

6. The last time I laughed really loudly was last night with my grandma.

7. And as for the weekend, tonight I’m looking forward to going out to eat with my mom and grandma, tomorrow my plans include reading and playing with Buster and Sunday, I want to relax!

Booking Through Thursday, Meme

Booking Through Thursday, July 30, 2009 – Recent Funny

btt button

What’s the funniest book you’ve read recently?

Okay so I’m late on this question, but I ended up not going home last night and instead stayed at my grandma’s house because Nathan was gone for a couple of nights and I didn’t want to go all the way home just to be by myself (and Buster of course!) Anyways, on to the question.

I hate to admit it, but I haven’t read anything laugh out loud funny here lately. However, what I read is very similar to what I prefer to watch on TV and/or movies ….. and that usually doesn’t have any comedy involved. I don’t know why. It’s not like I don’t have a sense of humor, or that I don’t find things funny. But I just don’t really care anything about humor in a book for some reason. Sure, I enjoy a good chuckle every once in a while, and I will say that I’ve only read the first three Stephanie Plum books, but I just LOVED Grandma’s character! She’s a hoot. But really, humor isn’t something I need in a book to keep me going …. I prefer blood and guts, lol. Talk about morbid, huh?!

Mailbox Monday, Meme

Mailbox Monday, July 27, 2009

Mailbox Monday

Mailbox Mondays

Monday, July 20
A Taint in the Blood by Dana StabenowA Taint in the Blood by Dana Stabenow

Thirty-one years ago in Anchorage, Alaska, Victoria Pilz Bannister Muravieff was convicted of murdering her seventeen-year-old son, William. The prosecution convinced the jury that she set fire to her home while both of her sons were trapped inside. William died and the other, Oliver, narrowly escaped. Victoria was sentenced to life in prison, and though she pled not guilty at the trial, she never again denied her guilt. Now Victoria has been diagnosed with terminal cancer, and her daughter, Charlotte, who’s always believed in her mother’s innocence, wants her free. Kate Shugak is the only PI Charlotte can find who’s willing to take such a long-shot case. Kate figures it can’t be bad to do a favor for the Bannister family, one of the wealthiest and most prominent families in Alaska’s short history. As she begins her investigation, Victoria refuses to cooperate. But it seems she isn’t the only one who wants to leave the past in the past, as Kate finds herself caught in a web of deception, secrets, and danger….

I received this one from another MBS buddy as a birthday book. I’m looking forward to this one, it sounds interesting!

Tuesday, July 21
The Double Eagle by James TwiningThe Double Eagle by James Twining

Somehow, impossible, someone has invaded Fort Knox and stolen five of the world’s last remaining Double Eagles – the $20 gold coin ordered destroyed by President Roosevelt during the Great Depression. Now, one has resurfaced during an autopsy in France – in the stomach of a murdered priest. Disgraced FBI agent Jennifer Browne needs to recover the priceless coins to resuscitate her stalled career – and her investigation is pointing her toward Tom Kirk, a brilliant international art thief who wants to get out of the game. But Kirk’s only chance for freedom – and survival – is to find the missing coins, joining Browne, an unlikely ally, on a breakneck race across the globe and into the lethal heart of a shocking conspiracy of greed and power .. and death.

I’ve had my eye on this for a while now. Actually for at least 2 years when a co-worker’s wife told me about her reading it at the company Christmas party. But lately I’ve been lucky enough to build up some credits over at PBS and I finally used one to order this book (I hope it’s good!) So I’m looking forward to reading this one finally!!

Wednesday, July 22
Time Bomb by Jonathan KellermanTime Bomb by Jonathan Kellerman

By the time psychologist Dr. Alex Delaware reached the school the damage was done: A sniper had opened fire on a playground, but was gunned down before any children were hurt. While the TV news crews feasted on the scene and Alex began his therapy sessions with the traumatized children, he couldn’t escape the image of a slight teenager clutching an oversized rifle. What was the identity behind the name and face: a would-be assassin, or just another victim beneath an indifferent California sky? Intrigued by a request from the sniper’s father to conduct a “psychological autopsy” of his child, Alex begins to uncover a strange pattern of innocence, neglect, and loss. Then suddenly it is more than a pattern – it is a trail of blood. In the dead sniper’s past wsa a dark and vicious plot. And in Alex Delaware’s future is the stuff of grown-up nightmares: the face of real human evil.

I got this one from another BOB swap off PBS, I’m just trying to get as many of the early Delaware books as I can so I can start the series.

New York Dead by Stuart WoodsNew York Dead by Stuart Woods

Everyone is always telling Stone Barrington that he’s too smart to be a cop, but it’s pure luck that places him on the streets in the dead of night, just in time to witness the horrifying incident that turns his life inside out. Suddenly he is on the front page of every New York newspaper, and his life is hopelessly entwined in the increasingly shocking life (and perhaps death) of Sasha Nijinsky, the country’s hottest and most beautiful television anchorwoman. No matter where he turns, the case is waiting for him, haunting his nights and turning his days into a living hell. Stone finds himself caught in a perilous web of unspeakable crimes, dangerous friends, and sexual depravity that ahs throughout it one comnon thread: Sasha.

I got this one as the second in the BOB swap. I’ve been wanting to start this series from the beginning so I was pleased to see this one available.

Thursday, July 23
The Aztec Heresy by Paul ChristopherThe Aztec Heresy by Paul Christopher

In search of a Spanish galleon in the Caribbean, Finn Ryan and her partner, Lord Billy Pilgrim, find evidence of a lost Aztec Codex. The invaluable book, created by fifteenth-century explorer and accused heretic Hernan Coretz, is said to reveal the secret location of the lost City of Gold. Finn and Billy soon realize they are not alone in their quest. Also on the trail is the head of a menacing religious cadre, who would kill to get teh Codex first, as well as a sociopathic billionaire, with his own sinister reasons for wanting to possess it. But while trying to find the Codex – and stay alive – Finn and Billy come upon an even greater and more explosive secret. This mystery will take them from the jungles of the Yucatan to the Sonoran Desert, where the stakes are life and death – and the game is just beginning.

I ordered this off of Frugal Reader. I bought Rembrandt’s Ghost at the used bookstore and wanted to get the rest in the series before I started. This is the 4th in the series.

The Lucifer Gospel by Paul ChristopherThe Lucifer Gospel by Paul Christopher

Young archaeologist Finn Ryan and charismatic pilot and photographer Virgil Hilts are scouring the Sahara for the long-lost tomb of an apostle. But they find somethign they weren’t looking for: signs of a decades-old murder, along with an ancient Roman medallion bearing the infamous name of a fallen archangel. It doesn’t take long for them to realize that they’ve found a piece of a much bigger puzzle – and a trail of clues that could get them killed. Forced to flee from a relentless enemy, Finn and Virgil are pursued across the globe. From the sinister ruins of an ancient monastery to a sunken ship in the Caribbean, the two desperately search for a truth that can save their lives, but might shake the foundations of history…

This is the second in this series. I now have 2-4 … I still need to find 1 before I can start (I was hoping it would pop up on a Boxer’s account at PBS or on FrugalReader because I really didn’t want to waste a PBS point on it…. I guess we’ll see)

Friday Fill-Ins, Meme

Friday Fill-Ins #134

1. Not reaching my goal of reading 100 books this year is not the end of the world.

2. Sitting here, listening to the sound of rain falling, I am content.

3. Black raspberry ice cream from Big Olaf’s on Longboat Key, FL tastes so good!

4. Sometimes, putting others first is something that leaves me with a really good feeling.

5. The ocean is breathtaking, really.

6. Well, maybe there is some hope for me to meet my personal goals this year.

7. And as for the weekend, tonight I’m looking forward to taking care of Buster once I pick him up from the vet (he’s getting fixed today), tomorrow my plans include laying around the house and hopefully cleaning and reading and Sunday, I want to go up to my parents for dinner!

Booking Through Thursday, Meme

Booking Through Thursday, July 23, 2009 – Preferences

btt button

Which do you prefer? (Quick answers–we’ll do more detail at some later date)

  • Reading something frivolous? Or something serious? – As a general rule, I prefer serious … however, sometimes frivolous reads are a break for me.
  • Paperbacks? Or hardcovers? – It’s almost always a paperback unless it’s from the library.
  • Fiction? Or Nonfiction? – For the most part I read fiction, but I would like to change that.
  • Poetry? Or Prose? – Prose
  • Biographies? Or Autobiographies? – Biographies
  • History? Or Historical Fiction? – I enjoy both, but sometimes historical fiction is easier to read
  • Series? Or Stand-alones? – I tend to be a series girl 🙂
  • Classics? Or best-sellers? – Without a doubt, best-sellers
  • Lurid, fruity prose? Or straight-forward, basic prose? – Basic for me
  • Plots? Or Stream-of-Consciousness? – Plots, gotta have plots.
  • Long books? Or Short? – Neither bother me, but call me weird, sometimes I enjoy really long books (as long as they’re good and keep my attention)
  • Illustrated? Or Non-illustrated? – Non-illustrated
  • Borrowed? Or Owned? – Either, I’m not picky, I just like to read
  • New? Or Used? – Sometimes I prefer used because it’s already been broken in

(Yes, I know, some of these we’ve touched on before, and some of these we might address in-depth in the future, but for today–just quick answers!)