Category Archives: Book Reviews

Fun, fast-paced and exciting read

Jack: The True Story of Jack and the Beanstalk

By: Liesl Shurtliff

Rating: 5 of 5

jackthetruestoryThis is a fresh new take on the classic stories of “Jack and the Beanstalk” as well as “Jack, the Giant Killer”. In this story, Jack still has both mother and father, as well as a pesky, younger sister. When all sorts of devastation abounds, Jack suspects giants and gets laughed at. I guess he gets the last laugh when he has to go to the land of giants to save the town. He also finds out his sister is not so pesky after all.

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Long and slow mystery

The Lady from Zagreb (Bernie Gunther)

By: Philip Kerr

Rating: 4 of 5

theladyfromzagreb“The Lady from Zagreb” is the first book I have read by Philip Kerr. I was hoping for a fast-paced whodunnit with lots of twists – which is my favorite type of mystery. Instead, the book has a lot of information about the atrocities and the lack of morals which abounded in Germany and surrounding countries during both World War II and the time leading up to it. The characters were both fictional and real (though used in a fictional manner to progress the story.) As I am not a student of WWII, I wasn’t able to easily determine which was which.

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Another great new book in the Bizzy Bear series

Bizzy Bear: Knights’ Castle

By: Nosy Crow (Author), Benji Davies (Illustrator)

Rating: 5 of 5

bizzybearsknightsI have purchased a number of the Bizzy Bear board books and was happy to find this new one. As with the others, this one has a number of fun activities for my grandson to play with. The book is filled with knights and dragons – even jousting. At 18 months old, he is easily able to move the levers to make the fun activities happen. He especially likes the one that moves the sword up and down.

The story is very simple and easy to read. When kids are interested in doing the activities, they really aren’t listening all that hard. I read this one to him several times a day and neither he nor I have gotten tired of it. A little one can be a bit tough on these books – my grandson tries to “open” the pages where the movement actually is house. He has only destroyed one as I figured out how to reinforce the books so he can’t pull them apart. I use a big of clear packing tape on the corners and edges of each page. Just enough to reinforce without hampering the flow of the activity. He hasn’t damaged another since I starting using this method.

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Excellent book full of twists and turns

Signal: A Sam Dryden Novel

By: Patrick Lee

Rating: 5 of 5

signal“Signal” is the first book I have read by Patrick Lee. I will shortly rectify that by purchasing at least four of his prior books, including “Runner” which is the first in the Sam Dryden series. I had no problems whatsoever picking up the action in this second book in the series. I had no idea there was a prior book and nothing in this book appears to have relied too heavily on “Runner.” I often read books in the middle of a series and most of the time, it takes a considerable part of the book to catch up. I was extremely pleased that that was not the case here.

I read this book in a single afternoon/evening – not because it was short – but because I simply could not put it down. The main character, Sam Dryden is ex-military and ex-special ops. He has left that world behind and is trying to pick up the pieces of his life after personal events that almost crushed him. He gets a call from an ex-comrade, Claire Dunham, and is asked to drop everything and meet her at a certain place. As he trusts her implicitly, he does has asked. At that point, everything starts to go haywire. I don’t want to provide any spoilers to the plot as I feel it is so unusual and compelling. While there are elements of almost science fiction thrown in, they are written into the plot in a way that makes you feel that the unbelievable can actually be true.

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Compelling read in the second of a series

Early Warning: A novel

By: Jane Smiley

Rating: 4 of 5

earlywarning“Early Warning” is the second book of a trilogy. I high recommend that you read “Some Luck”, the first in the trilogy before reading this book. The set of books is about a family that start out as farmers and how and where they end up. The end of the first book is 1953 – which is also where the second book picks up.

Where the first book focused on a little more than a handful of characters – telling the story via each of their standpoints (from third person narrative), the second book covers many more people from the same sort of point of view. I found myself constantly referring to the genealogy listed at the beginning of the book to try to keep track of how each of them were related. Without having read the first book, I really would have felt lost.

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Cute story about a slightly spoiled kitty

Glamourpuss

By: Sarah Weeks (Author), David Small (Illustrator)

Rating: 5 of 5

glamourpussThis is an adorable children’s book about a kitty who lives the life of leisure. Her owners don’t have children and lavish their love and attention on her. Before you know it, there is a little dog who is suddenly vying for attention – and she does tricks and can wear cute clothes instead of striking glamour poses all day.

The story is cute and the illustrations even cuter. They remind me of a kitty I once had who was also a bit of a glamourpuss. My grandson loves when I pull this book out as he has a kitty at his house, too.

I received a complimentary copy of this book via the publisher.

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Wonderful read about women in Science

Headstrong: 52 Women Who Changed Science-and the World

By: Rachel Swaby

Rating: 4.5 of 5

headstrong52“Headstrong: 52 Women Who Changed Science – and the World” was a very interesting and information book to read. I found myself wishing that the biographies contained a tad more information – maybe at the expense of less individuals covered or by increasing the book size.

I have two daughters who have recently received their degrees in STEM fields (one is a mathematical scientist and the other is a mechanical engineer), so the idea of the struggle these 52 women went through in getting started was a bit of an eye-opener for me. I can say that neither of my daughters have difficulty getting into their fields of study and have been able to find meaningful employment, so a tremendous amount of change has occurred in the last 100 years. This is, no doubt, to the great work done by these and other women.

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Great suspenseful police procedural

Badlands: A Novel

By: C. J. Box

Rating: 5 of 5

badlandsI recently discovered C. J. Box and his Joe Pickett series so I was thrilled to get an opportunity to read “Badlands”. This is a stand-alone novel but one which I hope will be developed into a series of its own.

The story revolves around two individuals, Kyle Westergaard and Cassie Dewell. Kyle is a small for his age twelve year old who has some learning issues due to fetal alcohol syndrome. People are inclined to think of him as somehow slow when in truth, he just doesn’t see the point of talking as most people don’t understand him. Cassie is a detective who has been on the trail of the “Lizard King” for years. This criminal has been involved in the abduction and murder of many women over the years. Cassie takes a new job as Chief Investigator in the new wild west of the North Dakota oil boom country in Grimstad in Bakken county. Turns out that Kyle is a resident of Grimstead, too.

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Interesting book about the beginnings of the Modern Art movement

In Montmartre: Picasso, Matisse and the Birth of Modernist Art

By: Sue Roe

Rating: 3.5 of 5

inmontmarte“In Montmartre Picasso, Matisse, and the Birth of Modernist Art” was an interesting read for someone like me, who took an art history class in school but who did not have a solid grounding in history of the actual artists (Picasso and Matisse) not much knowledge about the Modernist Art movement.

The book reads almost like a novel, giving very intimate details about the title individuals but also many of their contemporaries. It explained how their art was influenced by one another and by the current events of their day (a huge impact was made by the rapid development of photography and cinema which bothered Picasso greatly.)

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First book in a trilogy about an American family

Some Luck: A novel

By: Jane Smiley

Rating: 3.5 of 5

someluck“Some Luck” is the story of an American family over a period of 33 years, beginning in 1920 and finishing in 1953. It is the first of a trilogy about the family. Walter and Rosanna are the parents of a young baby boy, named Frank, when the story begins. The story is told from the perspective of each of the members of the family (even Frank as a six month old.) As the story goes along, the individuals who tell the story (in third person) are: Walter, Rosanna and their children: Frank, Joe, Mary Elizabeth, Lillian, Henry, and Claire. The family farm the land that Walter bought in his early twenties. We hear the history of their family along with the social and world events that were occurring during that time period.

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