Friday 28 February 2014

Owl Babies by Martin Waddell

Owl Babies was first published in 1975 (really!)

It was recently given a new lease on life with the release of a gorgeous pop-up version at Christmas time.

During my 18 years of preschool teaching I somehow managed to miss this delightful picture book.
I only read it for the first time to my storytime groups at work this week.

It was an instant hit!

And what's not to love.
Sarah, Percy & Bill wake up in their nest to find their mother is gone.

Sarah, the eldest, is practical and responsible, keeping everyone's spirits up. Percy follows her lead, but is prone to some anxious moments. And adorable Bill just wants to be loved and cared for.

Owl Babies is a very satisfying story about patience, fears and family dynamics.
Patrick Benson's illustrations add to the emotional resonance of the story.

If you haven't read this book yet, do yourself a favour & grab a copy now. Read it aloud to your favourite 3 yr old and watch the story weave it's magic yourself.

For more picture books about facing your fears and other concepts click here.

Thursday 27 February 2014

Ophelia and the Marvellous Boy by Karen Foxlee

Every now and again it happens.

That perfect alignment of stars, fate and luck.

When you take up a story that sweeps you away with it's beauty, it's gothic horror and it's magic.
Everything is so perfect from start to finish, that you are completely enthralled. So much so, that you realise you're holding your breath - with fright, with pleasure, in anticipation and wonder - to see what happens next.

This is one of those stories.

It has only been 1 day, 23 hours and 12 minutes since I started this book & I can't get it out my mind.
Ophelia and the Marvellous Boy is a real gem. It's fantasy/fairytale with a few frights & shivers, lots of adventure and an incredibly brave but anxious heroine.

This is my second Hot Key book (the first being The Cloud Hunters) and so far their success rate with me is not only 100% but 100% with bells, whistles and balloons!

Ophelia will delight you, Yoko Tanaka's atmospheric illustrations will draw you in and Foxlee's writing will leave you spellbound.
I promise!

Perfect for mature 10+ readers who love mysterious, creepy fairy tales with a heart of gold.

A couple of scenes could be upsetting or distressing, but that's the nature of fairy tales. And this ride is definitely worth it.
I promise!

I will definitely hunt down Foxlee's two adult novels to see if the magic continues.

This book is part of Jenny's Alphabe-Thursday meme for the letter O.

Wednesday 26 February 2014

Elegy For Eddie by Jacqueline Winspear

I'm a little in love with the amazing Maisie Dobbs.

She's smart, thoughtful & reserved. She's a flawed character with a tragic past. She's strong, determined and above all, honest.
Integrity, honour and justice are traits that she tries to live by and work with.

Which can be challenging when you're a private investigator asked to check into the suspicious death of a childhood chum.

Each of Maisie's cases reveals a little more about her past and how this impacts on the way she manages her life and relationships now.

Elegy For Eddie  - book 9 in the series - is no different.

Maisie's war time experiences have had a huge impact on her. Her psychological training not only coming in handy to solve the crime, but to give her insight into her own actions and behaviours.

Part of the pleasure within this series, is the setting - between wars London.
This book is full of visits to Covent Garden in all its working class grittiness. Tea shops, costermongers, stables, factories, fog and the River Thames all feature regularly.

Having visited Covent Garden in more modern times it's hard to imagine the smells, the noise & the potential dangers that inhabited this area in times gone by. Winspear helps to bring it to life though thanks to the memories and stories told to her by her father.

Maisie Dobbs is a totally charming series. Easy to read, with no blood and gore or forensic science in sight!

I would happily recommend these books to young teen readers (as well as the usual adult target audience) who enjoy historical fiction wrapped up in gentle crime.

Elegy for Eddie counts as another book read from my TBR pile, Around the World challenge,  Eclectic Reader challenge (cosy crime) and for the What's in a Name Reading Challenge.

Tuesday 25 February 2014

The Simple Things by Bill Condon

Bill Condon has mostly written award-winning books for the teen/YA market in Australia. But I believe he has himself a winner in the younger readers area with The Simple Things.

It's a sweet story about Stephen.
He's a bit shy and a bit awkward; an only child.
During the school holidays his parents take him to visit old Aunt Lola in the country.

She's cranky, abrupt and rather scary. But Stephen quickly learns that her bark is worse than her bite and that they share many things in common.

The whole way through this book I thought that Bill Condon had sat in on the same 'how to be a good Aussie dad' lessons as my husband. They told the same jokes, tormented their children with the same knee squeezes and used excessive amounts of sarcasm whenever possible! But I guess that's partly what made this story so endearing for me. 

Stephen goes fishing, gets to know the neighbours, plays Bingo with Aunt Lola and helps to arrange her surprise 80th birthday party.

The Simple Things is a homage to the joys inherent in everyday life. It's a delight from start to finish.

Perfect for 7-10 year old readers or to read aloud with 5-6 year olds.

Sunday 23 February 2014

Andy & Terry Do It Again

Andy Griffiths & Terry Denton have almost taken over the entire kids section at our local bookshop.

Everywhere I look - Just Joking! Psychotic Bums from Uranus! Slime and Treehouses! School yard humour and cows that kapow!

And now a range of colourful rhyming books for younger readers.

Ed and Ted and Ted's Dog Fred is basically a chase and rescue drama with as many "ed" words as possible, including a couple of long shots ..."para-chut-ed" and "plumm-et-ed"!

The Cat, the Rat & the Baseball Bat reminded me of the Itchy & Scratchy segments on The Simpsons or an old Tom & Jerry cartoon!

A chase scene evolves into the chasee becoming the chaser with some violent comic book style resolutions complete with floating stars circling around their head.

Andy G, Terry D, the Brave Tea-Lady and the Evil Bee is a longer story with cumulative, repetitive elements as more people are being chased by the bee.

Brave Dave is one of the new editions to this early reader series.

Dave is a blokey, ocker kind of Aussie guy who's not afraid of anything. He fights crocs, rescues tree'd cats & catches bank robbers, just to name a few! But Dave is scared of the dark and turns to his mum for help.

Big Fat Cows is a simple, easy to read rhyming book with just a few words per page. This book is very reminiscent of Dr Seuss with "cows in space, cows in boats & cows in skirts..."!

The kids certainly seem to be attracted to the new coloured covers, but all five books have been instant hits in our neck of the woods.


Friday 21 February 2014

Freaky Friday

I haven't participated in the Friday features for quite some time. We've had such a lovely, busy, social summer that has left me little time for regular blogging habits.

But a quiet weekend looms ahead and it's time to catch my blogging breath!

I've had Paris on my mind again lately, so this week I'm going to highlight John Baxter's The Most Beautiful Walk in the World: A Pedestrian in Paris.


Book Beginning:
Flipping through the front pages is a tantalising experience.

A map of Paris with a key of things to see and visit.
A quote by Walt Whitman to whet our appetites "We must not tarry here, We must march my darlings." Three delicious pages of contents...and then,

chapter 1 "To Walk the Walk".



"Every day, heading down rue de l'Odéon toward 
Café Danton on the corner of boulevard Saint-Germain 
or towards the market on rue Buci, I pass them. 
The walkers."






 Page 56:
"Walking in Paris requires the same rhythm. 
People who lead tours or write guides crave an itinerary, 
the route A to B. 
The flâneur has no such aim."






I doubt very much that this book will make me cry. 
I suspect it will make me pine and yearn and hope. 
It will  probably make my itchy feet squirm with impatience.
But cry? No.

Parajunkee and Alison Can Read have asked the question this Friday "What was the last book to make you cry?"

I don't cry easily, but I do get teary and sentimental and gushy. Occasionally a book will cause a few tears to run down my cheeks. Only a couple have made me sob.

The two sobbers come from my childhood. 
They have caused me to sob as an adult as well. 

They are Anne of Green Gables (when Matthew dies) and Seven Little Australians (the final chapter watching them all get on without Judy!!!!!) - it gets me every time.
Little Women/Good Wives almost makes it into this category with a heaving chest and a big long drawn out sigh of sadness, but, alas, no sobs!

The last time tears ran down my cheeks whilst reading was Room by Emma Donoghue.

I also remember some tears at the end of The Power of One by Bryce Courtenay, The Bridge to Terebithia by Katherine Paterson, Looking for Alibrandi by Melina Marchetta, The Colour Purple by Alice Walker and The Book Thief by Marcus Zusak.

For those of you who don't know The Power of One, let me enlighten you with a Friday Flashback.

It was published by South African born, but moved-to-Australia author, Bryce Courtenay in 1989.

I didn't read it until the movie starring Morgan Freeman came out in 1992.

It's set in South Africa during apartheid in the 1940's and 50's - a time we now know well thanks to the memoirs of Nelson Mandela.

I don't remember a lot of the details of the book any more, but the injustices of the apartheid system were burnt onto my soul at the time.

It was my first real look at what was going in South Africa & coincided with the release of Mandela from prison. 
It horrified me that I knew so little about the world and that this kind of oppression could still exist in my own lifetime.

I surprised myself by how strongly I responded to this book. I was like the child character, Peekay, slowly having my eyes opened to the horror of apartheid. 

Of course I cried!

Red hot tears of frustration and rage. 
Bitter tears at my inability to know what to do to change things.

I'm not sure how my older, more jaded self would view this book now. 
I think somes books are meant to be read at a certain time in one's life and never again. And I suspect this may be one of those.

Happy Friday everyone


Thursday 20 February 2014

The Blue Castle by L M Montgomery

L. M. Montgomery only wrote 2 adult novels. One of them was The Blue Castle published in 1926.

I had never heard of it until last year when I wrote a post about The Ladies of Missalonghi by Australian author Colleen McCullough. McCullough was accused of plagiarism because of the number of similarities between the two books.

I have to say, that it does look incredibly suspicious.

McCullough claims no knowledge of The Blue Castle.
Perhaps it was one of those books she picked up in the library as a little girl, browsed through it, liked the idea enough for it sneak into the back reaches of her memory, only to emerge in her adult years as an 'original creative idea'?

Whatever happened, The Blue Castle and The Ladies of Missalonghi are basically the same book. One is set in Ontario, Canada, the other in the Blue Mountains, NSW.

They both describe a quiet, genteel, unlovely young woman, slowly becoming a fearful, poor relation spinster. Suffocated by her controlling family, suffering pangs & pains of the heart and finding solace in her local library.

A visit to the doctor changes everything when she finds out she has only a year to live.

What happens next in both books is a sweet, delightful romance as Missy/Valancy throws off her cares and fears to embrace life. She speaks her mind, shocks the family, changes her hair and clothes, asks a man to marry her & runs away to live happily ever after.

The various plot twists are predictable and easy to spot. There is nothing challenging about either book, but, ohhh, they are just so soul-satisfying!

Missy/Valancy stand in for every shy, insecure girl in history. They give hope that every single one of us can be beautiful when loved. That everyone can dream of love and eventually find true love if only they are brave enough and honest enough to be themselves.

The Blue Castle AND The Ladies of Missalonghi are now two of my very favourite rainy afternoon comfort reads.

The Blue Castle counts as my book for The Colour Coded Reading Challenge hosted by My Readers Block.

Wednesday 19 February 2014

Wondrous Words Wednesday

Ohhhh I'm reading the most delightfully sweet, romantic book right now and I want to share the love as loudly and as often as I can.

Last year I reviewed The Ladies of Missalonghi by Colleen McCullough.
It has been a favourite comfort read of mine for quite some time, but research for my post led me to discover the plagiarism charges against McCullough for similarities to The Blue Castle by L. M. Montgomery (of Anne of Green Gables fame).

I had never heard of The Blue Castle but my desire to read it blossomed then and there.

I'll write a longer post when I finish it, but for now here are some lovely old-fashioned words for Wondrous Words Wednesday.

pg 8 "The other picture was a faded, passe-partouted engraving of Queen Louise coming down a stairway."

Passe-Partout (or passepartout) is the French term for a mat, paper or, more usually, cardboard sheet with a cutout, which is placed under the glass in a picture frame. A picture is placed beneath it, with the cutout framing it. 
The passe-partout serves two purposes: first, to prevent the image from touching the glass, and second, to frame the image and enhance its visual appeal. The cutout in the passe-partout is usually beveled to avoid casting shadows on the picture.

pg 25 "On the steep mountain trails around her Blue Castle only gaily caparisoned steeds might proudly prance."


caparison is a covering, or cloth, laid over a horse or other animal, especially a pack animal, or horse of state.


pg 31 "Just where Lover's Lane debouched on the street, an old car was parked."


Debouch from French origin meaning to cause to emerge, and is a term used in river, stream, and glacier geography.


pg 51 "Uncle Herbert's house, a large, pretentious peppered with meaningless bay windows and excrescent porches."


Excrescence (architecture), an outgrowth of the main body of a building that does not harmonize well with the main body.

pg 155 "Some nights the whole outer world seemed given over to the empery of silence."



empery (archaic) Absolute power or authority.

(with thanks to Wikipedia for tonights definitions.)


Tuesday 18 February 2014

The Sound of the Mountain by Yasunari Kawabata

Yasunari Kawabata won the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1968 "for his narrative mastery, which with great sensibility expresses the essence of the Japanese mind"

He was born in 1899 in Osaka, Japan and died April 1972.


His work has been described as "lyrical, subtly-shaded prose" by Wikipedia.

"The novel may be interpreted as a meditation upon aging and its attendant decline, and the coming to terms with one's mortality that is its hallmark."

Literature in Translation says:  

Perhaps the Kawabata novel that demystifies Japanese culture the most is The Sound of the Mountain (1954)—which has occasionally been singled out as Kawabata’s masterpiece. 
Although The Sound of the Mountain features powerful flights of description, it also abounds in prosaic details. The main character is an elderly businessman who has become emotionally distant from his family, and this novel can be read as a commentary on the passing of an older Japanese generation. You can also check out the rave reviews for The Sound of the Mountain on Good Reads.
However, I cannot, in all faith offer up a rave review here.
Maybe I wasn't in the mood for a slow, gentle story about aging and family tensions?

Jean @Howling Frog was feeling underwhelmed last time we checked in too. 

Her comment resonated with me as I struggled to care about Shingo and his dysfunctional family. 

I normally like a good 
introspective book. And I love reading about dysfunctional families! I also believe I'm intelligent enough to appreciate and enjoy subtle & culturally sensitive, nuanced writing. 
In fact, it was the cultural references and descriptions of nature that I found the most touching and interesting.


Thanks to my Japanese studies at school I understood the complexities and rituals behind some of them, but quite a few slid by me as well. 

Only one compelled me to research it. 


On pg 67 we come across this evocative passage...


The puppy got up as if nothing had happened, and, after standing there blockishly for a second or two, walked off sniffing at the earth.


"What is it?" He felt that he was seeing the pose for the first time, and that he had seen exactly that pose before. he thought for a moment.


"That's it. The Sotatsu painting," he muttered. "Remarkable."


Shingo had glanced at Sotatsu's ink painting of a puppy, and had though it altogether stylized, like a toy; and now he was astonished to see it reproduced in life. The dignity and elegance of the black puppy was exactly like the Sotatsu.

I was taken with this vignette, having had such moments in my own life. 

This time around, though, it was my personal image that predominated. 
I was unfamiliar with this artist and this piece of work (Puppy and Grass). 
Imagine my delight, when I googled it and spotted the picture straight away as being the one that matched the picture in my mind!

This book counts towards my Around the World Challenge with Giraffe Days.


I read The Sound of the Mountain as part of the Classics Club Dare


Now that I have finished my dare book, I challenge my fellow Clubbers to read Angle of Repose by Wallace Stegner.


This dare is purely selfish. I read and loved Crossing to Safety 18 months ago and have been wanting a good excuse to read another Stegner book. This is it!


Friday 14 February 2014

Free Schools by David Gillespie

Or How To Get a Great Education for Your Kids Without Spending a Fortune.

David Gillespie first came to my attention when I began working in a bookshop 5 years. His book Sweet Poison was all the rage. Every time he spoke on the radio, we experienced a surge in sales.

The success of this book, has produced a new market for I Quit Sugar type books.
(Click on the link to take you to my other blog where you can read my review of this book.)

My doubts about the dogmatic approach to quitting all sugar, in any of its forms has not changed. But anything that helps us as a society to eat better and focus on good health is, ultimately, a positive thing.

I remain skeptical of statistics, percentages and research findings anywhere. Facts and figures can be twisted any which way to prove any argument for or against pretty much anything. Any book, theory or belief that tries to prove that it's stats, facts and figures are 'right' or the 'truth' automatically puts me on guard.

Free Schools freely uses percentages, stats, charts, and research findings. Gillespie acknowledges that almost every area he researched came up against reports, research and data that could support either argument.

Trouble is, a lot of what Gillespie says makes sense and pushes my buttons and biases towards the advantages of state education. Good, universal, well-run, professional state education.

When I was at uni, (ahem, 25 years ago) all these arguments about teaching training, class sizes, unions, private vs state, whole language, teaching to the test etc were being debated. You would have to say that very little has changed since then. The same debates, the same conclusions.

There is no evidence that sending your child to a private school will raise their academic achievements. Most private schools are able to publish outstanding HSC results simply because they groom the students who come to their schools. Those students, all things being equal, would get the same outstanding results wherever they went to school.

If you do want to spend money on private schools and you want that money to be about educational outcomes, there is some research that suggests this is better spent during the primary school years when the foundations are being laid.

If you have a child with a special skill or talent for language, music, sport, the creative arts, music or science, there may be selective high schools (state and private) that can cater to these talents.

But the main point that comes up time and time again is BE INVOLVED.

It was true when I was a student and it's still true now. Students who do well at school have involved parents. Parents who join the P&C, man the tuck shop, help out at the fete, bake cakes for the cake stall, attend assemblies and special events, cover books, ask about homework, get to know the teachers, help establish study and homework timetables, discuss school reports, set goals & get to know their kid's friends.

Balance is the key though - helicopter parents are too involved and run the risk of alienating their children from the school AND, ultimately, from themselves. Or they do so much for their children, that the kids never learn anything about responsibility, self-sufficiency or competence and they struggle to find their way in life as adults.

Gillespie boils the debate down to 2 main imperatives. A good school that can improve your child's educational outcomes has good teachers engaged in on-going professional research and mentoring programs and good school leaders.

I taught for 18 years in the early childhood sector & I can tell you there are a number of ordinary teachers out there. But there are also a lot of amazing, committed, hard-working professionals out there as well.

It's not easy to maintain that level of excellence all the time though.

Some years you get challenging children that suck all the goodness out of you. Sometimes your personal life impacts on how focused you are. Sometimes you get tired, run-down & ill. Sometimes the lack of community support & understanding wears you down. Sometimes you burn out.

Teachers are only human. They have good days and bads like the rest of us. It is a job that has a high level of accountability but very little real support or guidance on how to get there.

Smaller class sizes can make for a less frazzled teacher, but it still only takes one challenging child to throw out a whole year, regardless of the class size. (By challenging, I don't mean the average naughty child who is a bit defiant or silly. I mean the kids who come in calling you a "fu@#ing c*&t" and throw chairs across the room when angry. I experienced this with 5 year olds; I can only imagine how scary it would be with teenagers)!

And maybe that's where private schools have the advantage over state school. Privates schools can refuse these damaged kids entry so that their select students and families can go through their school lives safe from any contact with challenging, difficult people.

Australia is becoming a society where class is playing a larger role. The divide between the haves and have nots is now clearly defined by suburbs & schools. Even small country towns have a 'desirable school' & a 'less desirable school'. We give lip service to democracy and equality and a fair-go for all, but we really mean a fair-go for me and mine first!

Maybe that's the real debate at the heart of this book - our society - where we are and what kind of future do we want for all of us?

Wednesday 12 February 2014

Whisky, Charlie, Foxtrot by Annabel Smith

It is with deep gratitude and thanks to Lisa Hill at ANZ LitLovers LitBlog that I give you this book, Whisky, Charlie, Foxtrot.

Over the summer holidays I was browsing book blogs & Australian book bloggers in particular.

I found & read Lisa's review for this book and knew straight away that I had to read it for myself.

I agree with Lisa, that the cover is not great, but the story inside is a wonderful treat from start to finish.

I believe this book is officially designated as Young Adult, but it could happily be read by anyone who enjoys a book about nuanced, complicated family relationships. Personal growth, perspective and memory play a large role in this story.

Smith deftly avoids smultzy scenes. Instead she delivers a heart-felt, authentic journey through the lives of twins, William & Charlie.

I enjoyed this book so much, I have been searching for Annabel's previous book A New Map of the Universe. However, sadly, it seems to be out of print.

Tuesday 11 February 2014

Classic Spin #5


The best thing about The Classics Club blog being based in the USA, is that it is still the 10th of February there.

Which means that it is still my birthday!

Happy Birthday Me!!

I've believed for sometime now that my birthday should not be constrained to just one day.

I've been claiming the closest weekend to my birthday as my special weekend for quite some time. In fact, I'm not far off claiming the entire month of February as mine!

So imagine my delight when The Classics Club choose my birthday as their next spin date! It has given me the perfect excuse to extend my day - the 10th - by nearly 24hrs thanks to the International Dateline!

And our lucky spin number on the 10th Feb is ...... 20!!

Which means the spin has been kind to me and my cheats methods of finishing chunksters.

I started the Odyssey last year with Allie's readalong at A Literary Odyssey, but I got stuck half way. I put it on this spin in the hope that it would encourage me to finish it :-)

I will be reading along with Plethora of Books who also had The Odyssey as book no. 20.

The aim is to finish it by the 2nd April and post my review on The Classics Club.

Happy Reading.

Saturday 8 February 2014

Fire by Jackie French & Bruce Whatley

Fire is the second book that French & Whatley have done together to address the 2 major natural disasters that have affected Australians in the past few years.

According to her afterword, Fire was written in homage to all the hard-working volunteers and professionals who battle bushfires on a regular basis, saving lives, homes and properties, including hers.

Meanwhile, Whatley's illustrations are vivid reminders of the devastating bushfires that traumatised rural Victoria February 2009. 173 people died during a firestorm that is now referred to as Black Saturday. The images from this fire are seared into our memories. Whatley's paintings bring to mind these images again.

French's poem describes the colours, sounds & mood of a bushfire day so clearly that you can almost feel the air being sucked out of you by the intensity of the heat and wind.

"One small spark brought fire awake, 
Winding like a black snake,
Fire flickered, fire crept,
Flames snickered, bushfire leapt..."

Whatley's illustrations are full of the haziness, the dirtiness & the heat of the blaze. It feels dangerous & intense. Combined with French's poem, a very moving and frightening account is portrayed.

The last couple of pages, finally offer us the hope of rain, renewal and regrowth.

Flood was published late in 2011. It detailed events from the awful flooding in and around Brisbane during January 2011.

The story is very moving, especially as it is based on events as told to French by some of her family who lived through the deluge.

"The rain stopped, but the wall of water surged into the river. Hour by hour the river rose. In some places water only nibbled at the bank, but in others it burst across the river bends...up into the streets.
It sounded like a helicopter.
It sounded like a flood."

However, the thing that really amazes me about this book is that Whatley painted the pictures with his non-dominant hand.

He was working on his PhD at the time about 'Left Hand Right Hand: Implications of ambidextrous image making.' He ascertains that we are all better drawers than we think - it's just that we're doing it with the wrong hand. The majority of the population is right-handed which is great for language and words, but using our left hand can open us up to a world of spatial & emotional creativity.

Wednesday 5 February 2014

Classics Club Spin #5

I'm only half way through The Brother's Karamazov from the last Classics Club Spin, but here I am lining up for the next one!
Call me crazy.

Maybe I should add it to my list again to see if I can finish the second half with Spin #5 ?

I've managed to participate in all 5 CC Spins.
The first 3 were very successful - I read (and loved) The Magnificent Ambersons, Tess of the D'Urbervilles & My Cousin Rachel.

The Brothers K has been more difficult.

It was hard to read a chunkster over Christmas and the summer holidays. All I wanted to do was eat & drink too much, sleep in and laze by the pool/on the beach!

Dostoyevsky doesn't really go with any of these activities (unless the drinking part included vodka!)

But I am not daunted by this apparent failure.

Maybe it has something to do with the date of Spin #5?

The 10th of February is my birthday and I love anything that highlights my special day :-)

So here we go again.
Good luck one and all.

Once again I have tried to match my list with fellow bloggers so that I can read my book with at least one other. Let me know if you are reading the same book as me (at the same number) so I can add you to my list.

1. Slaughterhouse Five                     Only You
2. Agnes Grey                        Imperfect Happiness & shared author with The Blog of Litwits & Too Fond
3. Mary Barton                        The Everyday Reader    
4. Moll Flanders                shared author with Plethora of Books          
5. To the Lighthouse                All the Pretty Books  and shared author with Classics Club
6. The Brothers Karamazov (part 2)            shared author with The Things We Read & Lost Generation Reader
7. Ulysses                        Classics Club
8. Midnight's Children                      My Book Strings & LindyLit & shared author with Another Book Blog
9. Hunchback of Notre Dame                  Lit Addicted Brit & shared author with Yasmine Rose
10. Heart of Darkness                       Classical Carousel
11. Parade's End                    Books Please
12. Rebecca                    shared author with Lit Addicted Brit
13. Watership Down                Exploring Classics
14. Master & Margarita               An Armchair By the Sea
15. Absalom Absalom                shared author with What Me Read
16. Germinal                        She Reads Novels
17. One of Ours                shared author with Howling Frog Books
18. Diary of Anne Frank               Classics Club
19. The Way We Live Now                  shared author with Books and Chocolate & Behold the Stars & A New Yorker in the Country
20. The Odyssey (part 2)                   Plethora of Books

Happy Spinning & Reading

Monday 3 February 2014

My Royal Story: Elizabeth by Kathryn Lasky

I wish these books had been around when I was a younger reader.

They tick all my historical fiction/fictionalised history boxes beautifully.

Elizabeth: A Tudor Princess's Diary 1544 is my first dip into The Royal Story series and I can't recommend them highly enough for young lovers of history.

It's an easy to read diary format full of interesting facts about the time.

But the main purpose of a diary is self-reflection and emotions.

We see inside Elizabeth's heart - her complicated feelings for her father and mother, the difficult relationships with her siblings, her affection for young Dudley and her ladies.

We get glimpses of her steely character, her bravery and famous independence.

Kathryn Lasky has also written a Royal Story about Mary Queen of Scots and Marie Antoinette.

Perfect for mature 10+ readers.

Elizabeth also fulfills the criteria for my TBR Pile Challenge and What's in a Name Challenge.

Saturday 1 February 2014

An Abundance of Katherines by John Green

I've read The Fault in Our Stars and Paper Towns by John Green previously and thoroughly enjoyed both of them. So I was expecting quite a lot from An Abundance of Katherines.

I was, therefore, disappointed when it didn't 'grab' me straight off.

I found Colin annoying more than endearing and the dialogue with his friend, Hassan seemed forced rather than funny. And I can't begin to tell you how much I hated their use of the word 'fug'.


I almost gave up.

But then on pg 119 Lindsay asks the boys, "Hey, why the fuck do you and Hassan say fug all the time?"

And it turns out that they had a very good reason - I just wish the revelation hadn't come past the halfway mark!

This is not as good as Green's other books, but it still has lots of great things to say about relationships, life viewed through teen eyes and growing up.

Perhaps it's having a child prodigy as your lead?

Not many readers can identify with that. And it certainly takes a long time to warm to Colin.

Whereas, Green's other books have likeable protagonists that could be anyone, anywhere.

An Abundance of Katherines contains swearing, sexual references and one sex scene. It also contains maths equations, footnotes & an appendix!

It also counts as a book for my TBR Pile Challenge, Eclectic Reader Challenge, Literary Explorations Reading Challenge & What's In A Name Challenge.