Interesting mix of various designs including some Halloween oriented ones 40 designs printed one side of the page

Nocturnal Magic – Adult Coloring Book: Step into the World of Night Creatures

By: Julia Rivers

Rating: 4 of 5

This is a coloring book by Ksenia Spirina. The designs all have a sketch-like quality to them. By the title, I was expecting designs which were related to the night or nocturnal creatures. While I found that to be true for many of the designs, it is not applicable to all of them per se. The subtitle on Amazon refers to Halloween. Some of the pictures are Halloween related but again, not all of them.

It appears that Okami Coloring and Storytroll publishing companies are somehow connected as they list both publishers books at the end of this book. I really appreciate the quality of their artists though the CreateSpace paper always leaves something to be desired. I also appreciate that they have included the actual artist’s name though they seem to be developing a specific name (Julia Rivers) to cover the coloring books they deliver. This is similar to what another publisher has done with the name Jade Summer.
The designs are detailed but do not, for the most part, include intricate elements with lots of tiny spots to color.
This is what I discovered while coloring in this book and testing my coloring medium on the paper:
40 different designs with most showing nocturnal creatures.
Printed one side of the page
Paper is typical inexpensive quality by CreateSpace printing: white, thin, slightly rough and non-perforated.
The designs do not merge into the binding. While there is only one design with a framing line at the outer edges, the other designs have the elements at the edges finished so it is easier to color.
Glue Binding
Alcohol-based markers bleed through the page quickly.
Water-based markers bleed through in spots.
Gel pens and India ink pens leave shadows on back of the page. India ink can bleed through if you apply heavily or multiple coats.
Coloring Pencils work well with this paper. I found that I could layers the same color for deeper pigment or multiple colors and I could blend easily using a blending stick. I tested both oil and wax based pencils. I also found that hard lead pencils leave dents through the paper.
I like to use a blotter when working in the book. I use a page of card stock or several sheets of heavyweight paper under my working page. It keeps seeping ink and marring dents from ruining the pages below.

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A Wonderful Cookbook – it’s like inheriting a prized book of family recipes

The Home Cook – Recipes to know by heart

By: Alex Guarnaschelli

Rating: 5 of 5

I’ve been a fan of Alex Guarnaschelli from watching her as a judge on the “Chopped” television show. I lost track of her once she became an Iron Chef and never really got to see her style of cook except for the special “judge cooks” show on “Chopped”. What little I saw of her style of cooking, I thought highly of. Enough so that I bought “The Home Cook” sight unseen.

I have a decent collection of cookbooks, most of which sit on a bookshelf in my game room and get pulled out for specialty recipes. I have a few tried and trusted cookbooks which get shelf space in my kitchen. After both looking through this cookbook and trying several recipes, “The Home Cook” has its place in my kitchen and will be a cookbook that I use frequently. Along with the wonderful recipes, the cookbook has many beautiful photographs of the finished dishes (some of which I will include in my review on Amazon.)

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A well written historical romance Christmas novella

With This Christmas Ring

By: Manda Collins

Rating: 5 of 5

This is the first book (albeit a shorter one) that I have read by author Manda Collins. I was impressed with her ability to convey the characters depth in a shorter form book as well as laying out a plot that made sense.

The story is set at Christmas time and Merry Parks has just left the deathbed of her best friend Charlotte. Charlotte has tasked Merry with uniting Lotte (her newborn and now motherless daughter) with the William, the husband who abandoned her months before.

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Another great entry in this humorous and fast-paced mystery series

The Ninja’s Illusion (A Jaya Jones Treasure Hunt Mystery) (Volume 5)

By: Gigi Pandian

Rating: 5 of 5

I have read all of the books in the Jaya Jones Treasure Hunt series and “The Ninja’s Illusion” is another fun and fast-paced story to enjoy. I’ve thought, from my first reading one of the books in this series, that Jaya Jones was a perfect mash-up between various Elizabeth Peters sleuths and Indiana Jones.

Jaya is an art historian who specializes in Indian history. She’s become somewhat famous for being able to find lost treasures and is often called upon by others in this specialty. In this story, however, she goes to Japan to assist her best friend, Sanjay, when he calls for help. Sanjay is a magician of some renown and is known as The Hindi Houdini. He’s been invited to assist a famous Japanese magician in performing a virtually impossible feat but is very much afraid that someone has nefarious plans which will cause him serious harm if not worse.

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Cute Doodle Creatures plus feel good messages 32 designs printed one side of the page

Lovin’ the Good Vibes! A Happiness Coloring Book: Adult Coloring Book (Improve Confidence, Self Worth, Positive Messages)

By: Julia Rivers

Rating: 5 of 5

I enjoy coloring in both doodle creature coloring books and in positive thoughts coloring books. Until now, I had never come across a book that was both in one. Lovin’ the Good Vibes has lots of cute little doodle guys that put a smile on my face surrounding a message that makes me feel happy as well.

It appears that Okami Coloring and Storytroll publishing companies are somehow connected as they list both publishers books at the end of this book. I really appreciate the quality of their artists though the CreateSpace paper always leaves something to be desired. I also appreciate that they have included the actual artist’s name though they seem to be developing a specific name (Julia Rivers) to cover the coloring books they deliver. This is similar to what another publisher has done with the name Jade Summer.
The designs are detailed but do not, for the most part, include intricate elements with lots of tiny spots to color. By the nature of doodle creatures, there is a lot to color and you can use a lot of different colors it’s one of the things I like most about the genre.
This is what I discovered while coloring in this book and testing my coloring medium on the paper:
32 Unique Feel Good Message designs with lots of cute little doodle creatures.
Printed one side of the page
Paper is typical inexpensive quality by CreateSpace printing: white, thin, slightly rough and non-perforated.
The designs do not merge into the binding. While there is no framing line at the outer edges of the designs, most of the elements at the edges are finished so it is easier to color.
Glue Binding
Alcohol-based markers bleed through the page quickly.
Water-based markers bleed through in spots.
Gel pens and India ink pens leave shadows on back of the page. India ink can bleed through if you apply heavily or multiple coats.
Coloring Pencils work well with this paper. I found that I could layers the same color for deeper pigment or multiple colors and I could blend easily using a blending stick. I tested both oil and wax based pencils. I also found that hard lead pencils leave dents through the paper.
I like to use a blotter when working in the book. I use a page of card stock or several sheets of heavyweight paper under my working page. It keeps seeping ink and marring dents from ruining the pages below.

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45 More Designs in this Vol. 2 – based on original Buffy Series (plus intro page design) printed on one side of the page

Buffy the Vampire Slayer: Big Bads & Monsters Adult Coloring Book

By: Fox

Rating: 5 of 5

Attached to this review, I will include a silent flip-through video (and a few photos) so you can see if the book will work for you.

This is the second coloring book volume of Buffy inspired designs. I liked the first and really like the second one, perhaps even more. I appreciate that the illustrators provided the quotes and episode/season information to put each design in context. While the artwork is focused on the bad guys, the heroes are well represented, too.
The designs are quite detailed with only a few areas that are intricate and small to color. The artwork is done by a group of illustrators rather than by one individual. I found the artwork in this volume to flow better than that of the first one (not that it was bad but it was obvious that many designers were at work on it. A listing at the back of the book gives the name of each illustrator and on which pages they did the artwork.
This is what I found when I colored in this book and tested it with my coloring medium:
45 Buffy Bads and Monster designs inspired by the original television series plus a great intro/title page designs
Designs printed on front of page and quotes and episode/season information printed on back of pages
Paper is heavyweight, white, slightly smooth and non-perforated
Glue bound
Designs merge into the binding; if you cut pages out you will lose portions of the design
Book lays fairly flat for coloring if you heavily crease/break the spine
Alcohol-based markers bleed through the page. For this use, I suggest a blotter page of card stock or heavy weight paper under your working page. That will keep ink from seeping through to the next design.
Water-based markers, India ink pens and gel pens do not bleed through or leave shadows on the back of the page.
Colored pencils work well with this paper. It is slightly smooth to the touch but still has enough tooth for pigment. I was able to layer the same color for deep pigment, layer multiple colors and blend easily using a blender stick. I tested both oil and wax based pencils.

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Funny and Heartfelt Christmas novel

Merry and Bright: A Novel

By: Debbie Macomber

Rating: 5 of 5

I so enjoy reading a Debbie Macomber novel and her Christmas oriented ones are some of the best. “Merry and Bright” warmed my heart and gave me some chuckles and laughs along the way.

Merry Knight is a young woman who has set most of her dreams aside while she struggles to help out at home. She has a wonderful mother and a younger (though adult) brother with Down’s Syndrome to help support.

At work, she has a semi-tyrant of a boss (thank goodness the job is a temporary one that is coming to a close following Christmas.) What she doesn’t have is a social life. Her mother and brother decide, much to her initial dismay, to give her an early gift by signing her up for a dating site.

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Disappointing with lots of wall-paper designs, figures filled in black and tiny areas to color printed both sides of the page

Art of Coloring: Mickey & Minnie: 100 Images to Inspire Creativity

By: DBG

Rating: 2 of 5

Attached to this review will be a silent flip-through of the entire book and some photos so you can make an informed decision as to whether or not it will work for you.

My family and I are all huge Disney fans with many years of season passes to Disneyland. I was so looking forward to this coloring book even though I had been discouraged by other recent Disney Art of Coloring books.
Turns out that the group behind this book has done exactly the same with this coloring book as they have with other recent books. The coloring book has an inordinate amount of wall-paper (repeating pattern) designs and has many of the figures in the designs pre-filled in with black. What is even worse with this book is that the use of cartoon strips was done in really small format which makes them virtually impossible to color.
So why two stars instead of one? Because there are a few designs (less than a third of the over 100 images) that I think will be fun to color. There are even a very few wall-paper designs I will enjoy but on the whole, most of these designs either don’t pertain specifically to Minnie and Mickey, have lots of black already printed, and/or are too small for even my micro-point coloring medium.
Also, given the number of wall-paper designs, it is very disappointing to me that they were not placed on the backside of well-done character designs. It could easily have been done if the publisher had given it proper attention. This is something that I had noticed and mentioned in previous books by this group.
I would have liked to have had my choice of colors I could use for my Minnie and Mickey. Just because they are traditionally done in black doesn’t mean that I want to do that for my coloring projects. I want to use my imagination and create my own unique vision of Minnie and Mickey. Unfortunately, this is not the coloring book that will allow me artistic freedom.
The use of cartoon strips was quite nice in concept; however, in the actual use, many of the strips were reduced so small, they could not be colored. It would have been better to bring the size up and have less repetitive iterations of them across the page.
This is what I found while coloring in the book and testing my color medium on the paper.
Over 100 Mickey and Minnie Mouse inspired designs
Includes many pages of wall-paper style repeating designs
Printed on both sides of page with some designs which spread across two pages.
Paper is medium weight, white, very slightly rough, and perforated
Glue binding
Many designs extend across the perforations, some into the binding. I was able to break the spine to get into the binding area a bit easier. If you remove pages, you will lose some portion of the designs, especially on those which are two page spread designs.
Alcohol-based markers bleed through the paper,
Water-based markers either bled through or left colorful shadows on the back of the paper.
Gel pens and India ink pens left anywhere from colorful shadows to indistinct shadows on the back of the page but even at best, where still noticeable.
Colored pencils worked well with this paper. I was able to get good, deep pigment. I could layer easily (both same and different colors.) Blending was okay though the tooth of the paper was not optimal. I was able to blend with a pencil style blending stick.

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A lovely follow-on story in the Tailorstown series

The Godforsaken Daughter

By: Christina McKenna

Rating: 5 of 5

thegodforsakendaughterI have read the prior two books in this series, “The Disenchanted Widow” and “The Misremembered Man”. It was delightful to once again touch base with the characters in the Tailorstown series.

The story revolves around two story lines, although woven in are, to others who have read the series, the familiar characters of Jamie McCoone and Paddy and Rose McFadden.

Ruby Clare, at 33, is the oldest of three sisters. The other two are twins May and June who are in their twenties and who treat Ruby poorly. Ruby has been crushed by the recent death of her loving father. Her mother is not so loving, to say the least. Mammy seems to be doing her best to crush Ruby – especially with threats of having her institutionalized, while at the same time, being the loving and nurturing mother to her other two daughters. Ruby has become the stay at home dogsbody daughter who cares for an uncaring and petulant mother. She is at a transitional period in her life and she tries to deal with her overwhelming grief.

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Beautiful Artwork and Inspiring Thoughts and includes traceable art, paste-able art, and full color stickers

Bible Journaling – Everlasting Hope

By: Karla Dornacher

Rating: 5 of 5

I own two God-centered coloring books by Karla Dornacher and hope that she will release more coloring books in the future. Everlasing Hope is not a coloring book nor is it a step-by-step how-to for journaling in your own Bible. It is, firstly, an explanation of how Ms. Dornacher journals in her Bible. What makes up the bulk of the book are the pre-printed aids for you to use when you journal.

Those aids are in the form designs by Ms. Dornacher: eight traceable pages of designs, four pages of vellum designs which can be cut out and pasted into your Bible, and four pages of full color stickers.
I wasn’t sure quite what to expect from the book when I pre-ordered it, but I am very pleased to have something so different from other books I have on Bible Journaling. It appears that the publisher has a number of similar books by different artists, so choosing the one(s) whose art appeals to me will be the hardest decision.
I will certainly use all of the components in this book in journaling Bible that I recently purchased. It will be very different from the Bibles that I have which either had printed designs for coloring or which I used my own artwork (inspired by how-to books) to do my own journaling.

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