Everyone Worth Knowing by Lauren Weisberger

I’ve been thinking about it all day, and I think in the last year I have spent about $150 on clothes, and that is only if you include both a new pair of running shoes and a pair of rubber boots.  Therefore I find books like everyone worth knowing completely fascinating, ($20,000 for a bag!?!).  I have no desire to join the party world of New York or the fashion world, or really any world that would require me living in New York city. The clothes I wear barely meet rural Wisconsin acceptability, I can’t even fathom what would happen if I were to suddenly move east.  My lack of fashion aside  I do enjoy reading books like these in a  “seriously people do that?” sort of way!


Would I recommend it? Yes, it’s a fun, quick and easy read!

Ready, Set, Go! by Nina Laden

We brought home Ready, Set, Go! after a recommendation that if we liked Peek-A-Who! we’d like this one too. And it’s true,Clara loved it and my favorite part was that Ivy loved “reading” it to her.

Ivy would read it like this:

“Ready, set, go! Ready, set, throw! Ready set, blow! Ready, set boat! Ready, set, snow! ect.”

Row was a tricky one for her, but it was a boat in the picture,  and Clara didn’t seem to mind at all!

Would I recommend it? Yup, Peek-A-Who? seems to be a bit better for really young ages.  After all I think we start playing peek-a-boo with babies when they are about 3 days old,  takes a bit longer before we can teach them ready, set go and I think the familiarity of the word pattern is what made Clara laugh.

Alice I Have Been by Melanie Benjamin

Look at this cover, I love it!

The little Alice, the two different fonts, the girl in the mirror, seriously how can you NOT choose a book for it’s cover when it looks like this one!

Even more exciting than the cover (which is much better in person without my poor photography skills messing with it), the book was great! As I’m sure you have already guessed it is a historical fiction about the real Alice from Alice in Wonderland.

I was hooked when the first chapter started with this:

“Off with their-legs. That was the curious notion I had as a child.

That certain people-queens, generally-lost their heads was understood to be a historical fact.

But in my world, legs were missing with alarming regularity as well. The men in their long academic robes, the women in their voluminous skiers; everyone skimming, floating, like puffs of cotton in the air – that is the first, and most vivid memory of my childhood.”- Melanie Benjamin, Alice I Have Been

In case a great cover and awesome writing isn’t quite enough to sway you the author includes historical facts she worked from in the back. I love that!

Would I recommend it? Definitely!

Moon Shell Beach by Nancy Thayer

They say you can’t judge a book by it’s cover,  I say that’s where the title is and you have to start somewhere.

When I read a book I hate reading the dust flap, the reviews, the summary’s, anything that tells me what is going to happen. If I do read one of those I always have that info lurking in the back of my mind while I’m reading. For instance had I read the whole dust flap of this book I would have read something like this:

“Lexi Laney and Clare Hart grew up together swimming in the surf, riding remote bike trails, and having wondrous adventures across picturesque Nantucket. And when it was time to share intimate secrets and let their girlish imaginations run free, they escaped to their magical private hideaway: Moon Shell Beach.

But nothing stays the same. With the complicated pressures of adulthood, their intense bond is frayed, hurtful words are exchanged, and Lexi flees Nantucket to a life of luxury while Clare stays behind.

Ten years later, a newly divorced Lexi returns to make amends with those she left in her wake. Living at home with her father and dating a gorgeous carpenter, Clare still simmers with resentment toward her glamorous friend. And when Lexi opens an upscale clothing boutique next door to Clare’s chocolate shop, their paths are fated to cross.

Their emotional reunion is beset with major challenges: Lexi’s return sets off a series of startling events that fracture the status quo and set the town gossips’ tongues wagging. And as Clare’s life takes an abrupt detour, Lexi wonders if the happiness and peace they once knew on Moon Shell Beach will, in the end, prove to be as fleeting as time and the tide. In the turbulent adult world, awash in failed loves and romantic disappointment, can childhood dreams still come true?

Irresistible reading, Moon Shell Beach explores the evolution of a tumultuous lifelong friendship, the power of forgiveness, and the rewards of believing in miracles.” (-product discription from the hardcover copy)

Then I start a book waiting, waiting for Lexi to leave, knowing she’ll come back, expecting loves to fail, waiting for Clare’s abrupt detour and having no surprise when Lexi opens up her clothing store. I hate reading like that. I like to let the book unfold as I go with minimum information before hand, and no idea what is going to happen next. I firmly belive that’s the way books are meant to be read. It is one of the reasons you may have noticed a minimum of plot details on this site, if you want to spoil the surprise of your next  book feel free to check out Amazon and their plethora of reviews and editorials. Here you will find general impressions, writing style and hopefully just enough of the content to know if it might be something you’d like to pick up. Of course reading books this way I have run into some doozys.

Speaking of doozys, it wouldn’t matter if anyone told you what was going to happen in this book it is, predictable, predictable, predictable. Made all the more irritating by the fact that the author has periods of really great writing that would then dissolve into cheesy predictable mush. Did I mention it’s predictability?  Before you go off thinking I’m all difficult with my non-predictability needs let me also say this. There are cheesy books I love, there are predictable books I love, but there’s got to be a little something extra in those books, and this one was didn’t have it.

Would I recommend it? No.   As much as I hate being wrong I must concede that sometimes people are right and you shouldn’t judge a book by it’s cover…but only sometimes!

Practical Magic by Alice Hoffman

“…You put the lime in the coconut …”

I thought I had seen this movie so long ago that I would have forgotten it  even though it was one of my collage roommates’ favorites.  But that coconut song, which is in the movie ,has been stuck in my head for days!  I don’t think I can actually give this book a fair review because ” ..I said DOCTOR…” between the limes and the coconuts and hearing in my head the narrator of Pushing Daises reading it “...she drank them both up…” I was completely distracted. Clearly this book should be narrated by a woman’s voice, and clearly my head was addled by the “…and call me in the morning…”‘s

This is reason number 15 we no longer have a TV. Movies and TV shows ruined what I think may have been a perfectly good book. As a rule I don’t watch movies of books I have loved. But this is one of the first times a movie and a completely unrelated TV show have ruined a book for me!

Would I recommend it? Ummm no, but my view is completely skewed, don’t trust me on this one.  I have to get it back to the library even looking at it sets off the singing in my head.

“…then you’ll feel better…”

Wrinkle by Scott Alan Ross

This book was lent to my by my Granny, it is a book her dermatologist wrote! Wrinkle is  a sort of crazy mystery involving botox, laboratories, plastic surgery, sex, murder, gambling and of course wrinkles.  My favorite part was learning a tiny bit more about botox, plastic surgery, lab mice and drug testing. Not that I have any personal plans for such things I just always like a book that gives you a glimpse into a profession I don’t know anything about. Very starkly different from Blue-Eyed Devil in that Blue-Eyed Devil is very sparse with words and Wrinkle is not. Granny said it’s got quite a few editing errors, I’m bad a noticing those (maybe you’ve noticed that about me) but I did pick up one or two.

Would I recommend it? Conditionally.  Not the best book ever, but certainly not the worst.  Don’t read it if it’s your only book you’ll have time for this summer, but if it sounds interesting and won’t kill three months of your free reading time pick it up!

People of the Book by Geraldine Brooks

If you love, religious history in particular Jewish history, old artifacts, particularly books, or book restoration. Then you should defiantly read this book and you will love it. If these topics are only of passing interest to you, then I’m not so sure. The author is a wonderful writer, tons of research must have gone into it, following the life of an ancient book is a really neat story, truly there is nothing wrong with this book, I just didn’t love it.

Would I recommend it? If  you have one of those interests listed above, yes. Otherwise  I’d recommend her book  Year of Wonders (about the plague) to anyone that was a great book!

Blue-Eyed Devil by Robert B. Parker

As you can see the pre-screening process is still working out!

Book four of the Virgil Cole books by Robert B. Parker was just as good as the first three.  Still short on words and long on action it was another quick read!  This was the final book with these characters and I really liked how the author ended things, to say more would be to give away too much you’ll just have to trust me!

Would I recommend it? Yes sir! Start with Appaloosa, Resolution, Brimstone and then finish up with Blue-Eyed Devil!

Stella, Fairy of the Forest by Marie-Louise Gay

Ivy in her best Reading Rainbow pose!

First off I will say that the illustrations in this book are really wonderful, I love the soft colors and all the detail. Ivy likes the book and I think it’s mostly because she likes to find all the hidden animals and bugs in the pictures.

There I said something nice, now lets talk about the text. There is nothing wrong with it exactly, just that yellow butterflies don’t eat butter, blue butterflies don’t eat sky, and please don’t make me accidentally read a book to my girl that says little snakes only swallow little people and that sheep are scary. Granted, Stella is trying to reassure her younger brother who is apprehensive about sheep and snakes but Ivy and I still had to have a talk about how sheep were nice and snakes are cool, and that butterflies drink nectar from flowers.  I also think this book has poor word flow.  Add to that two kids named Stella and Sam and the combination creates something that is both challenging to read out loud (almost a tongue twister) and that misses the lyrical quality that many books have when spoken.

The back flap says that “Marie-Louise Gay is one of Canada’s leading children’s book author-illustrators.” and that her first two books about Stella “…have been sold in more than ten countries.”  This lead me to wonder if I’m just a grump about books sometimes but in quick online search I found a few people who said that the first two were much better than this one. Maybe so but I hope the publisher spared the eight other countries!

Would I recommend it? Nope. I’d love to know if anyone has read her other books and liked them.

America Alone: The End of the World As We Know It by Mark Steyn

I think my biggest surprise picking up this book was when I checked out the back dust flap, it turns out that Mark Steyn is not an old English man with thin gray hair, big ears and wearing a cardigan, as I had  pictured him.  Instead he is one of those tater tot head guys, who knew?

If you have heard Mark Steyn on the radio like I have, (hence my completely wrong mental image of him) you’ll know what I mean when I say he writes like he talks.   He  sort of reminds me of a funny, intellectual, auctioneer…that’s either the best analogy ever or really awful, someone else who knows him is going to have to help me out.

In a nut shell the book covers current events (2006) focusing on Islamic terrorism and how it is affected by demographics. It also delves into world history as it relates to demographics. For instance, the reason the English were able to run around the world creating their empire?  Demographics, they were the first to conquer infant mortality so they had a surplus of young flag waving men ready to ship out.

Would I recommend it? Yes. Unless you have a problem calling an Islamic terrorist an Islamic terrorist, then you will be irritated by the book, end up throwing it across the room and come yell at me for ever recommending it. Though before the book hits the wall I’d be willing to bet it gets at least one begrudging snort of laughter out of you!

*Despite what I’ve said this book isn’t all giggles, Steyn paints a fairly grim picture of the future, especially for some countries, like Russia, Japan, Italy, Spain, Germany…

**  Does combining Eddie Izzard and Mark Steyn threaten the stability of this blog post? Will my whole site implode from the incongruity of it all?