Sunday, September 14, 2014

Early Reader Series - Cam Jansen by David Adler

Cam Jansen Series
by David Adler
Illustrated by Susanna Natti
(new cover art by Joy Allen)
For: 6-10 year olds
(Reading Levels 2.2-2.7, 480-500 Lexile, Level L, DRA 28)

Cam Jansen is a fifth grader with a photographic memory. She and her best friend Eric solve mystery after mystery using her talented mind.

1. Mystery of the Stolen Diamonds
2. Mystery of the U.F.O.
3. Mystery of the Dinosaur Bones
4. Mystery of the Television Dog
5. Mystery of the Gold Coins
6. Mystery of the Babe Ruth Baseball, 1982
7. Mystery of the Circul Clown
8. Mystery of the Monster Movie
9. Mystery of the Carnival Prize
10. Mysteryof teh Monkey House
11. Mystery of the Stolen Corn Popper
12. Mystery of Flight 54
13. Mystery of the Haunted House
14. The Chocolate Fudge Mystery
15. Triceratops Pops Mystery
16. The Ghostly Mystery
17. Scary Snake Mystery
18. Catnapping Mystery
19. Barking Treasure Mystery
20. Birthday Mystery
21. School Play Mystery
22. First Day of School Mystery
23. Tennis Trophy Mystery
24. Snowy Day Mystery
25. Valentine Day Mystery
26. Secret Service Mystery
27. Mystery Writer Mystery
28. The Green School Mystery
Specials: (3 Stories in One Book):
The Summer Camp Mysteries
Sports Day Mysteries

Illustrator Spree Overview

Any reader of children's picture books has their favorite illustrators.  Many of mine, I've discovered, are the author of their books as well!  In gratitude for their work, I'm going to devote some pages on just a few of the illustrators I love.

Bryan, Ashley
Diaz,, David
Gudeon, Karla
Halperin, Wendy Anderson
Jeffers, Oliver
Katz, Karen
Kleven, Elisa
Lehman, Barbara
Parr, Todd
Paschkis, Julie
Polacco, Patricia
Van Dusen, Chris
Winter, Jeanette

Illustrator Spree - Patricia Polacco

Birthday: July 11, 1944
Lives: in Michigan, I'm guessing.  She was born in Lansing.
          I have been a huge fan of Ms. Polacco for many years.  She's been writing - and illustrating - children's books for over 25 years and has written dozens and dozens of them.  Her stories are in-depth and fascinating, many based on true events from her own life. They are delightful and complete short stories, which I like to use to introduce my short story unit to my fourth graders as well as when I'm teaching both my memoir and historical fiction genre units.

Born and raised in Michigan, Patricia Polacco had a serious learning disability that prohibited her from learning to read until she was 14.  Hah!  Look at her now!  Bravo!

Her website includes all sorts of stuff for teachers and kids as well as an address and instructions about sending books for her to sign!  What a wonderful woman.

I've read a lot more than I've actually written a review for, so I think one of my goals for 2014 is to reread/read as many as I can find and add them to my blog.  That's a goal I'm really looking forward to!

Wow!  And every single one of them is AMAZING!!! I've read almost all of them, but I haven't reviewed too many.  So here I go!

Applemando's Dreams (1991)
Art of Miss Chew, The (2012)
Aunt Chip and the Great Triple Creek Dam Affair (1996)
Babushka Baba Yaga (1993)
Babushka's Doll (1990)
Babushka's Mother Goose (1995)
Bee Tree, The (1993)
Betty Doll (2001)
Blessing Cup, The (2013)
Boat Ride With Lillian Two Blossom (1989)
Bully (2012)
Bun Bun Button (2011)
Butterfly, The (2000)
Chicken Sunday (1992)
Christmas Tapestry (2002)

Clara and Davie (2014)  It's always fun to curl up with a new Patricia Polacco.  This one is a biography!  It's an insightful look at Clara Barton as a child, based on first hand knowledge from Polacco as she is related to the Bartons and is retelling a story that she knows. 


Emma Kate (2006)
Fiona's Lace (2014)  Polacco chronicles another family story - that of her great-great (I think) grandmother, who came as a child from Ireland knowing how to make beautiful lace.  It's an immigration story as well as the story of a family's love and perseverance in really tough times.



For the Love of Autumn (2008)
G is for Goat (2003)
Gifts of the Heart (2013)    A new Patricia Polacco!  As Christmas approaches, Trisha and Richie discover they have no money to purchase gifts for their family.  Enter Kay Lamaty, the new housekeeper, who teaches them that making your own gifts - and the amount of love that goea into it - makes Christmas even more special.A s much as I liked this, the story didn't "enchant" me as hers usually do.  That's not to say I didn't like it, but it didn't grab me and yell "hurrah".

Ginger and Petunia (2007)
Graves Family, The (2003)
Graves Family Goes Camping, The (2005)
I Can Hear the Sun (1996)
In Enzo's Splendid Gardens (1997)

In Our Mothers' House (2009) Told in the first person by the eldest of three adopted children, we watch her (she happens to be African American), Will (Asian American) and Millie (red-haired and freckled) grow up being raised by two mothers - Meema, a short, stout, pediatrician who loves to cook and sew and Marmee, a tall, thin organized fixer-upper who is a paramedic. Through 48 pages we watch the family grow, thrive, have fun, and love each other. It handles a neighbor-woman, unhappy with their relationship, lightly and well (because, unfortunately, the world has to deal with bigots and homophobes). This is a totally delightful story of a wonderful family and two mothers that will...and DO....do anything for their children. 


Junkyard Wonders, The (2010)  Patricia Polacco does it again - and of all her books - I do love 'em all - this is at the very top of my list. Why? It's about a very special teacher, which I think (as a teacher) is very cool. It's about a group of kids who are who they are -- they've had no choice in the matter. Whether they've got diabetes, tourettes, visual and/or physical handicaps, learning difficulties, they are all put into the same class. And they bond. They shine. They care about each other. And they're smart and special.
          This story is about how five kids - our author; Patricia Polacco, Thom, Gibbie, Jody, and Ravanna, prove the genius definition. It applies to all of them.  At the end - as an afterward - PP tells what became of her "tribe."  Simply wonderful storytelling.


January's Sparrow (2009) This story begins and ends in the voice of January, a black runaway slave that was captured, tortured, and put to death for his actions. Two days later, his adopted family, the Crosswhites, decided to run when they discovered their sons were to be sold away from them. The youngest was a girl named Sadie, and most of the story is told from her point-of-view. It's not an easy story. It tells of violence and hatred and ridiculous laws. It also tells of compassion and caring that travels well beyond the usual bonds of friendship.
          The Crosswhite family makes it safely to Marshall, Michigan, which is free. However, they are still runaway slaves and can be arrested and returned to their owners if they are caught. Marshall is a friendly town of blacks and whites living together, so they decide to stay and rest for awhile. Seasons come and go until they'v been there for four years, and a new baby girl has been born to the family. But then....yup....they are found by their viscious owner.

John Philip Duck (2004)
Just In Time, Abraham Lincoln (2011)
Just Plain Fancy (1990)
Keeping Quilt, The (1988)
Lemonade Club, The (2007)
Luba and the Wren (1999)
Meteor! (1987)

Mommies Say Shhh!! (2005)
I read the board book of 17 pgs, wonder if there's a 32-page companion?  This is a book about a farm and farm animals and the things that farm animals say.  Hardly any words (which is not the "usual" Patricia Polacco, but full of her illustrated masterpieces!





Mr. Lincoln's Way (2001)

Mr. Wayne's Masterpiece (2014)
      I wonder if Patricia Polacco has journals she kept from her childhood and young adult years?  Her memories seem so strong!  However, even with a flickering memory, a clever writer can embellish the remembered details and craft a story...and Polacco is the master of this.  So many of her wonderful picture books are based on her own memories, and here's another.  
     I love the idea that PEOPLE can be masterpieces, which is the premise of this story - taking a very shy girl and teaching her how to come out of herself on stage, and ultimately speaking in front of a very large crowd.
     This is a great model for teaching writing to kids, AND for kids with stage fright.

Mrs. Katz and Tush (1992)
Mrs. Mack (1998)
My Ol' Man (1995)
My Rotten Redheaded Older Brother (1994)
Oh, Look! (2004)

Orange for Frankie, An (2004) What a moving Christmas story!  I was actually a little teary at the end.  Based on a true story, as many of Ms. Polacco's are, this one was told by her grandmother and based on her grandmother's youngest brother.  It is a story from a hundred years ago, still being kept alive and honored by her entire family.  It is full of pictures of America's past. A large, hard-working family enjoys a simpler Christmas than we're used to, one steeped in traditions and hard work.  A completely lovely "short story," illuminated by Patricia Polacco's incredible art.  Loved it.

Picnic at Mudsock Meadow (1992)
Pink and Say (1994)
Rechenka's Eggs (1988)
Rotten Richie and the Ultimate Dare (2006)
Some Birthday! (1991)

Someone for Mr. Sussman (2008)  A young man tells the story of his Bubbie, who is a matchmaker in New York City. One of her clients is Mr. Sussman. But Mr. Sussman has no idea what he wants in a wife. He comes up with idea after idea, and after each one Bubbie complies - herself. But nothing makes him happy - perhaps because Bubbie goes so overboard. At the end, of course, Mrs. S. realizes his perfect wife was right there under his nose the whole time - Bubbie

Something About Hensley's (2006)
Thank You, Mr. Falker (1998)
Thunder Cake (1990) Another wonderful memory from Polacco - this time when an approaching storm at her grandmother's farm in Michigan terrorizes her, her Babushka shows her how to make a thunder cake, all the while assuring her and calming her through her fears.

Tivkah Means Hope (1994)
Trees of the Dancing Goats, The (1996)
Another memoir, told about "Trisha's" growing up on a farm in Michigan, when one winter all their neighbors, all Christian, came down with scarlet fever.at Christmastime.  Since they were unable to chop down and decorate trees, and even unable to cook for themselves, Grampa and Babushka cut down trees and decorated them with the handmade painted animals that Grampa had made for Hanukkah and delivered baskets of food containing chicken and latkas.  On the eighth night of Hanukkah, when the neighbors were finally back on their feet, they arrived with thanks and a hand-carved menorah, decorated with some of Grampa's carved animals.

Tucky Jo and Little Heart (2015)
     Based on a true story, we follow a 16 year old Kentucky boy go off to the Pacific during World War II.  While there he meets and takes care of a small native girls with whom he creates a strong attachment and remembers for all the rest of his life.

Uncle Vova's Tree (1989)
Welcome Comfort (1999)

When Lightning Comes in a Jar (2002)
     A young Patricia Polacco recalls their annual family reunion that includes jello salads and meatloaves, baseball games and croquet matches, photo albums and picture taking, stories told by the elders, catching fireflies, and spending special time with cousins, aunts, and uncles.  Then we see how those same family traditions continue as an older Patricia Polacco becomes one of the elder storytellers.  Lovely story: as usual with tots of text.

Patricia Polacco's Fantabulous Website

Patricia Polacco Curriculum Guide

Patricia Polacco on FaceBook

Series Synopsis - John Sandford

John Sandford (Camp)
Virgil Flowers
(I have such a crush on you, Virgil!)
Virgil is a one-man investigator that works for some sort of bureau in Minnesota.  His boss is Lucas Davenport (of the Prey series).  He always wears tee shirts - of obscure bands  - gets along great with the ladies - and uses methods that are....unusual....to get answers.  He's funny and very, very cute (at least in my head).

Although John Sandford (real name: John Camp) sets his Virgil Flowers (and his Lucas Davenport) books in Minnesota, he appears to reside in New Mexico for part of the year, And whenever I read his Facebook entry, he's listening to another musician I've never heard of.  He's definitely given the same musical attributes to Virgil!

1 - Dark of the Moon (2004) This is about multiple murders in small-town Bluestem, Minnesota.

2 - Heat Lightning (2008) This is the one about guys being shot in the head and left to be found with lemons in their mouths - the first one, at least, found at the base of a Veteran's Memorial.

3 - Rough Country (2009) Virgil's investigations take him this time to an idyllic resort beside one of his favorite fishing places - a resort that caters primarily to lesbians.

4 - Bad Blood (2010) Virgil helps small-town southern Minnesota Sheriff Lee Coaklee investigate murders that seem to be tied to a secretive, religious-cult-like church, where men marry women that are barely past girlhood.

5 - Shock Wave (2011) This is the one about Pyemart coming into a small town and building a new store...and someone keeps setting up deadly explosions to thwart it.  We're able to get into the mind of the bomber every few chapters.  This one totally keeps you guessing all along the way.

6 - Mad River (2012) Once the first murder is committed, three teenagers decide they're already in so deep, what do they have to lose, why not keep on going?

7 - Storm Front (2013) A terminally ill minister steals a stela from Israel and brings it back to Minnesota to try to sell it for millions to pay for the long-term care his Alzheimer-ridden wife will need after he dies.

8 -  Deadline (October 7,  2014)

John Sandford website
John Sandford on Facebook
Here's an article from July, 2014 that gives a great look inside some of John Sandford's "personal" stuff....


Saturday, September 13, 2014

Series Synopsis - Marissa Meyer

Marissa Mayer
The Lunar Chronicles
In a futuristic world, the people of Lunar (the moon) are ruled by an extremely cruel and horrible woman, Queen Levana.  She wants to take over Earth.  Years before, she murdered her niece, the Princess Selene, who was supposed to become the next ruler.  However, the niece did not die.  She came very close, but she is alive and hasn't a clue who she really is.  She lives on Earth with little or no memory of her past, being raised as a more-or-less servant with a "wicked stepmother" and two stepsisters.....

The entire series is based loosely on fairy tales.  It's fun to notice the similarities.
1 - Cinder (2012) Based on Cinderella. Cinder is being raised by a guardian who despises her in New Beijing.  She is part cyborg - and hated by anyone who knows it.  She is an excellent mechanic and because of this meets handsome Prince Kai who has just become king. Sparks fly. (Literally.....)  Cinder discovers who she REALLY is and then has to run for her life.

2 - Scarlet (2013) Based on Little Red Riding Hood. Although some of the book keeps taking us back to Cinder and her plight, we now meet Scarlet, whose grandmother has been kidnapped.  Scarlet is distraught and in her quest to find her meets a handsome young fighter named Wolf who is not who or what he says he is. The setting goes from the French countryside to Paris.  At the end of the story, Scarlet and Wolf join up with Cinder....

3 - Cress - Currently reading

4 -Winter - not yet published

5 - Fairest

She has also written a number of short stories, all based on fairy tales, and all taking place within the setting of the Lunar Chronicles.

Glitches (prequel to Cinder)
The Queen's Army (prequel to Scarlet)
The Little Android (Based on the Little Mermaid)

Marissa Meyer lives in Spokane, Washington with her husband and three cats.  She was born in 1984.

Marissa Meyer's website.
Marissa Meyer on Facebook
The Lunar Chronicles on Facebook

Series Synopsis - John Verdon

Jon Verdon's writing is mesmerizing.
Dave Gurney
Retired NYPD homicide detective now living in upstate New York with his wife, Madeline. I don't know why he retired...very young...because all he really wants to do is solve mysteries.  He's quite brilliant when it comes to solving any puzzling murder, although his wife is never very happy when he takes them on - after all, he's supposed to be retired!

1 - Think of a Number (2010) Mark Mellery, an old college friend of Dave Gurney, approaches him with a perplexing problem.  He's been receiving threatening poems in the mail.....

2 - Shut Your Eyes Tight (2011) Beautiful Jillian Perry is discovered, by her new husband, decapitated at her own wedding reception.  This one's a real puzzler...

3 - Let the Devil Sleep (2012) Gurney is talked into helping the daughter (Kim) of a friend as she prepares a tv show about families left behind after their loved ones are killed in unsolved murders.

4 - Peter Pan Must Die (2014) Gurney's annoying sometimes-sidekick, Jack Hardwick, pulls him into  a murder that has already been "solved" - wrongly.  Kay Spalter supposedly shot her husband, a senator-to-be, as he was about to give the eulogy at his mother's funeral.

John Verdon's webpage
John Verdon's Facebook page

Series Synopses OVERVIEW

There are several series out there that just keep on getting better and better!  (Unfortuantely, the opposite is also true.)

My own personal favorites are YA Dystopia and Adult Murder Mysteries.  I also read a number of children's book series, to be able to recommend to my fourth graders.

I'm going to try, once a week or so, to reflect on some of them...good and bad.  I'll list the ones I'm interested in creating, and once they become BOLD and UNDERLINED, they will be linked to the review!  Fun stuff.....

Black, J. Carson - LAURA CARDINAL and CYRIL LANDRY (Arizona)
Castillo, Linda (my favorite, at this very moment....) KATE BURKHOLDER (Amish Ohio)
Crais, Robert - ELVIS COLE & JOE PIKE (LA)
Meyer, Marissa - THE LUNAR CHRONICLES (YA Dystopia)
Sandford, John - VIRGIL FLOWERS (Minnesota Bureau of Criminal Investigation)
Verdon, John - DAVE GURNEY (Upstate New York)

Series Synopsis - J. Carson Black

J. Carson Black, Tucson writer
Laura Cardinal
Arizona Dept. of Public Safety Investigator
Bisbee/Tucson

1 - Darkness on the Edge of Town (2005) TPPL has (READ and rated a 5 - but this was before I started keeping track of my reviews and I only remember a little bit about it.  Time to reread!)
2 - Dark Side of the Moon (2006) TPPL has
3 - The Devil's Hour (2007) (Kindle)
4 - Cry Wolf (2013) (Kindle only?)
Flight 12 (Part of a Flight 12 Series by 12 famous mystery writers) a novella (2014 Kindle edition)

Cyril Landry
ex-Navy Seal now mercenary

1 - The Shop (2011) TPPL has, both in HC and CD - I listened
2 - Hard Return (2014)

Other books by J. Carson Black (according to Goodreads)

2013 - The Survivor's Club (standalone paperback) TPPL has
2013 - Roadside Attraction (Maggie O'Neil Mystery Book 1 - probation officer in Tombstone, AZ, Kindle))
2012 - Icon (standalone paperback) TPPL has
2012 - Superstitions (an historical novel written under the name Annie McKnight about 1901 Superstition Mountains - near Phoenix)
2011 - Dark Horse
2011 - The Desert Waits (I'm pretty sure she wrote this using the pseudonym Margaret Falk and that I've got a copy of it somewhere.  It's also on Kindle)
2011 - The Blue Light Special (2 Short Stories on Kindle with only mediocre reviews)
2011 - Pony Rides (18 pgs. short story, Kindle)
2010 - Darkscope -(Bisbee full-length ghost story, Kindle)

J. Carson Black website.
J. Carson Black blog

Series Synopsis - Linda Castillo

Linda Castillo lives in Texas
Kate Burkholder, Amish Thriller series 
Police Chief of an Amish community called Painter's Mill, in Amish Country (Holmes County) Ohio.
          Kate was born and raised Amish, but left the order as a teenager because of traumatic events in her life.  She's a really likable person, a smart - and tough - cop, and wily investigator.  Her slowly developing relationship with John Tomasetti is a part of the stories.  His past is incredibly troubled (his wife and two daughters were murdered to get back at HIM), and their relationship goes through all sorts of ups and downs.  However, they're so beautifully interwoven that her current murder investigation and her relationship really, really work together well..

1 - Sworn to Silence (2009) It appears that a serial killer has returned to Painter's Mill after a 16-year absence.  And a grizzly murder becomes very personal for Kate Burkholder.
2 - Pray for Silence (2010)  A whole Amish family, tortured and murdered. The investigation eventually settles around the 15-year old daughter, Mary Plank, through her diary.
3 - Breaking Silence (2011) Four Amish children are orphaned when their parents and uncle are murdered in their manure pit. When other Amish are targeted in cruel ways, Kate finds all sorts of obstacles because of the silence of the Amish community.
4 - Gone Missing (2012)  Kate and Tomasetti examine the lives of four or five Amish teenagers who have g,all one missing in recent years or weeks, knowing that the answers are NOT that they ran away.
5 - Her Last Breath (2013)  Kate's childhood best friend's husband and two of her three children are killed when their buggy was creamed in a tragic hit-and-run.  Kate soon discovers it was not an accident, but murder and begins unearthing the clues.
5.5 - Long Lost - a short story (2013) While Kate and Tomasetti are relaxing in a small Bed-and-Breakfast outside of town, they solve the mystery of the ghostly disappearance of a teenager twenty years before.
6 - The Dead Will Tell (2014) Kate and Tomasetti are living together, which makes this reader very happy. In 1979 an Amish furniture-maker was murdered and his home burned down, killing four of his five children.  His wife was kidnapped by the murderers (never to be seen again), and his 14-year old son was the only one to escape.  The abandoned Hochstedder farmland has been said to be haunted ever since. The crime was never solved.  Now, almost 35 years later, someone is murdering the murderers.

In 2013 there was a TV movie made of the first book called An Amish Murder.  It would be GREAT if there were more!  Neve Campbel made a very believable Kat Burkholder. It still appears, once in awhile, on Lifetime.

Linda Castillo's Facebook page.
Linda Castillo's Website.

Thursday, September 11, 2014

56. Dangerous Passage - Lisa Harris

Supposedly Book #1 in a series called Southern Crimes
2013 Revell Publishing
311 pgs.
Romantic Christian Murder Mystery (HA!)
Finished 9/9/1014
Goodreads rating: 4.01
My rating:    1/Yuck
Acquired TPPL
Setting: Contemporary Atlanta (although I got no particular feel for the city)

1st sentence/s:"After another grueling weekend wrapping up another homicide, Detective Avery North was not about to let anything get in the way of her one nonnegotiable indulgence on her first day off in two weeks."

My comments:  My favorite genre is murder mystery, but this only falls softly into that genre.  This is much more a romantic novel.  There is no information about the nitty-gritty of the investigation, anything vital, the little details that I particularly enjoy, were not even mentioned.  The protagonist, a female detective, was an unbelievable character for me.  She spent most of her time on the job fretting about whether or not she was ready for a relationship, worrying about her teenage daughter, or sending little prayers upward. The mystery itself wasn't even particularly believable to me.  The question of motive was never fully examined and I was left with a huge question mark over my head.  I applaud the author for trying to bring to the forefront human trafficking, but this book just didn't do it for me. It might for others, though.

Goodreads book summary:  When two Jane Does are killed on the outskirts of Atlanta, Georgia, detective and behavioral specialist Avery North discovers they share something in common--a tattoo of a magnolia on their shoulders. Suspecting a serial killer, Avery joins forces with medical examiner Jackson Bryant to solve the crimes and prevent another murder. But it doesn't take long for them to realize that there is much more to the case than meets the eye. As they venture deep into a sinister world of human trafficking, Avery and Jackson are taken to the very edge of their abilities--and their hearts. 
"Dangerous Passage "exposes a fully-realized and frightening world where every layer peeled back reveals more challenges ahead. Romantic suspense fans will be hooked from the start by Lisa Harris's first installment of the new Southern Crimes series

September Roses - Jeanette Winter

Illustrated by the author
2004 Farrar, Strauss, Giroux
HC/ $14.00
32 pages )book is small: perhaps 5" x 6")
Goodreads rating: 3.87
My rating: 4/I like it more with each reading
Endpapers:The rose motif she's used throughout the book, in black on white
Title Page: a 2 x 2 inch square painted with the motif roses in color
Prologue:  "At 8:50 am September 11, 2001, I looked up from my drawing table and saw in the distance an enormous plume of smoke rising high above and beyond the Empire State Building.  I soon learned that the smoke covering the city came from the twin towers of the World Trade Center.
          After a few days, I went to Union Square - to be closer to the communal outpouring of anguish in the city.  I saw the roses, and learned how thy came to be there.  Relying on memory and imagination, I wrote and illustrated September Roses the following spring."
1st line:  "Far away in South Africa, he said, across the ocean, over mountains, beyond the desert, two sisters lived together and grew roses." (Spread over three pages with four illustrations)


My comments:  This is a lovely book that memorializes this terrible occurrence with a connected story.  I now use it in my classroom each year, but fourth graders now, 13 years later, don't yet know much about this day.  So I have to talk to them about what happened before I share the book  I keep it simple.  After reading the book we talk about gratitude.  Nine year olds have enough time in the future to talk about the nitty gritties of the day as well as the repurcussions, but I've found this gentle, simple book is a really nice way to talk about this day with my kids.
I wrote a review last year, BEFORE sharing the book with my class.  It's a bit different.....Read it here.

(I wrote this last year):  This is a simple book, based on a true story that took place on 9/11. I'm going to share it in school with the kids today - kids that were born three years after that fateful day. It's been 12 years. It was a day that not only affected American greatly, but changed the way that we live and think each and every day. That said, the book itself doesn't flow smoothly enough for me. The words and illustrations are wonderful, but seem somewhat disjointed..... I'll see what my fourth graders think.

Goodreads: A tribute to the memory of September 11
          On September 11, 2001, two sisters from South Africa are flying to New York City with 2,400 roses to be displayed at a flower show. As their plane approaches the airport, a cloud of black smoke billows over the Manhattan skyline. When they land, they learn of the terrorist attack on the World Trade Center. All flights are canceled; the sisters cannot go home, and they are stranded with boxes and boxes of roses.
          In the days that followed September 11, Jeanette Winter was drawn to Union Square and saw, among the hundreds of memorial offerings, twin towers made of roses. In the pages of this small and vibrant book, she tells a moving story.

Saturday, September 6, 2014

55. Peter Pan Must Die - John Verdon

#4 David Gurney
2014 Crown Publishers
442 pgs.
Adult murder mystery
Finished 9/5/2014
Goodreads rating: 3.90
My rating:  4.5 Loved it
TPPL
Comtemporary upstate New York
  
1st sentence/s: (from prologue)  "There was a time when he dreamt of being the head of  a great nation.  A nuclear power."
(from Ch. 1) "In the rural Catskill Mountains of upstate New York, August was an unstable month, lurching back and forth between the bright glories of July and the gray squalls of the long winter to come."

My comments:  Ah, yes, another satisfying John Verdon mystery.  I love his intricate plotlines and the way you really do need to keep guessing the whole way.  I'm still unhappy with the relationship between Gurney and his wife, Madeleine.  It's not like any relationship I can relate to.....and I guess it's because I don't really like her.....at all!  I realized it's not a major part of the story, but it is a large minor part (ah, semantics!).  This creepy killer reminds me of some of the characters that M. E. Kerr has written about in her fabulous YA stories a few years back - not at all "normal" or "average" in appearance.  Which keeps me thinking about the evil in this guy - how much does odd appearance mold our personality?

Goodreads book summaryIn John Verdon’s most sensationally twisty novel yet, ingenious puzzle solver Dave Gurney brings his analytical brilliance to a shocking murder that couldn’t have been committed the way the police say it was.
          The daunting task that confronts Gurney, once the NYPD’s top homicide cop: determining the guilt or innocence of a woman already convicted of shooting her charismatic politician husband -- who was felled by a rifle bullet to the brain while delivering the eulogy at his own mother’s funeral. 
          Peeling back the layers, Gurney quickly finds himself waging a dangerous battle of wits with a thoroughly corrupt investigator, a disturbingly cordial mob boss, a gorgeous young temptress, and a bizarre assassin whose child-like appearance has earned him the nickname Peter Pan.
          Startling twists and turns occur in rapid-fire sequence, and soon Gurney is locked inside one of the darkest cases of his career – one in which multiple murders are merely the deceptive surface under which rests a scaffolding of pure evil. Beneath the tangle of poisonous lies, Gurney discovers that the truth is more shocking than anyone had imagined.
          And the identity of the villain at the mystery’s center turns out to be the biggest shock of all

Wednesday, September 3, 2014

MOVIE - Blended

PG-13 (1:31)
Wide release 5/23/2014
Viewed last week of August, 2014 at cheap theater
RT Critic:  14   Audience:  66
cag: 3 As ridiculous as it was, I liked it
Directed by Frank Coraci
Warner Brothers Studio

Adam Sandler, Drew Barrymore

My thoughts:  I knew exactly what this movie was going to be - stupid and silly and funny and mostly pointless.  It was all of that.  But it was Adam Sandler and it was funny, yup, stupidly clever all over the place.  It was a waste of time and it was just what I needed.  Both.

RT Summary:  After a disastrous blind date, single parents Lauren and Jim agree on only one thing: they never want to see each other again. But when they each sign up separately for a fabulous family vacation with their kids, they are all stuck sharing a suite at a luxurious African safari resort for a week in "Blended," the third comedy collaboration between stars Adam Sandler and Drew Barrymore.

MOVIE - Hundred-Foot Journey

PG (2:02)
Wide release 8/8/14
Viewed 8/31/2014 at the Ahwatukee 24 in Phoenix (comfiest seats ever!)
RT Critic: 65  Audience: 85
Cag: 4 Liked it a lot
Directed by Lasse Hallstrom
Walt Disney Pictures

Helen Mirren

My comments:  Cute, fun, a taste of India, and a happy ending.  What's not to like?

RT Review:  In "The Hundred-Foot Journey," Hassan Kadam (Manish Dayal) is a culinary ingénue with the gastronomic equivalent of perfect pitch. Displaced from their native India, the Kadam family, led by Papa (Om Puri), settles in the quaint village of Saint-Antonin-Noble-Val in the south of France. Filled with charm, it is both picturesque and elegant - the ideal place to settle down and open an Indian restaurant, the Maison Mumbai. That is, until the chilly chef proprietress of Le Saule Pleureur, a Michelin starred, classical French restaurant run by Madame Mallory (Academy Award (R)-winner Helen Mirren), gets wind of it. Her icy protests against the new Indian restaurant a hundred feet from her own, escalate to all out war between the two establishments - until Hassan's passion for French haute cuisine and for Mme. Mallory's enchanting sous chef, Marguerite (Charlotte Le Bon), combine with his mysteriously delicious talent to weave magic between their two cultures and imbue Saint-Antonin with the flavors of life that even Mme. Mallory cannot ignore. At first Mme. Mallory's culinary rival, she eventually recognizes Hassan's gift as a chef and takes him under her wing. 


Tuesday, September 2, 2014

54. Never Coming Back - Tim Weaver

#4 David Raker
2013 Viking Penguin
374 pgs.
Adult Murder Mystery
Finished 9/2/2014
Goodreads rating:
My rating:    (5) Awesome - a terrific read that I stayed up LATE to read....
Acquired TPPL
Contemporary  Las Vegas and Dorset, England (on the coast)

1st sentence/s:  "When the night came, it came fast.  The sky yellowed, like a week-old bruise, and then the sun began its descent into the desert floor, dropping out of the clouds as if it were falling.  The further it fell, the quicker the sky changed, until the sun was gone from view and all that remained was a smear of red cloud, like a bloodstain above the Mohave."

My comments:  Hot damn, this was GOOD!  A twisty-turny plot, two great settings (Las Vegas and the coast of England0, an ultra-interesting protagonist, lots of clues and hints to ponder, and a couple of surprises.  A perfect book that I devoured in just three days!  Although this was the fourth in a series and I had never heard of David Raker, it was pretty easy to pick up on.  Of course there are always questions, especially about Raker's relationship with the dark-and-doomed Healy....but that means more to look forward to figuring out in the future.  The fifth book in the series was just published two weeks ago, but I'm not sure if it's yet available in the U.S. Tim Weaver is a great new find for me!

Goodreads book summary: A bestseller in the UK, this gripping thriller of a family that vanishes into thin air is Tim Weaver’s American debut
           Emily Kane arrives at her sister Carrie’s house to find the front door unlocked, dinner on the table, and the family nowhere to be found—Carrie, her husband, and two daughters have disappeared. When the police turn up no leads, Emily turns to her former boyfriend David Raker, a missing persons investigator, to track the family down. As Raker pursues the case, he discovers evidence of a sinister cover-up, decades in the making and with a long trail of bodies behind it.
           Tim Weaver’s thrillers have been hugely popular in the UK, and now Never Coming Back will introduce his beloved character David Raker to American audiences. Set in Las Vegas and a small fishing village in England, the novel is a smart, fast-paced thriller sure to keep readers guessing until the very end.