Brand New at the Library!

Monday, January 28, 2013

Crimson Frost by Jennifer Estep


 
 
 

Reading Level: (Young Adult)
(4 out of 5)

I was so excited to find out that the library finally purchased this awesome series by Jennifer Estep.  The Mythos Academy series is full of Greek myth, romance, danger, action and humor.  Book one is Touch of Frost, book two is Kiss of Frost, book three is Dark Frost, and book four is Crimson Frost.  Book five Midnight Frost will be out in August.  I can't wait.  Just so you know all four books are only available at LCPL through e-book.  If you are a die hard print fan put in a purchase request!

Gwen Frost is a gypsy and she has the gift of being able to touch an object or a person and feel their emotions and see things.  After her mother dies she is enrolled in Mythos Academy a school of myths, magic and warrior whiz kids, where even the lowliest geek knows how to chop off somebody's head with a sword and Logan Quinn, the hottest Spartan guy in school, also happens to be the deadliest. 

By book four Gwen has been in many battles, made many friends (Daphne, Carson, Kenzie, Oliver), and has finally snagged Logan the hottie Spartan.  I don't want to talk much about what happens because it will give away a lot of what goes on in the previous books and I want you to read them.  I think these books are great and I think you will too.  So check them out today!

Tuesday, January 22, 2013

Eat More of What you Love by Marlene Koch

Don't you wish you could just pull the food right off the page?  Some of this stuff just looks so good!  What makes this cookbook a plus is that all Ms. Koch's recipes are healthy.  She has trimmed off the calories and the fat on all our favorite recipes without sacrificing the taste.  How great is that? 

I can't wait to try: Strawberry Cheesecake Pancake Stacks (pg. 90), coconut coconut shrimp (pg. 107), Knife & Fork Chicken Caesar "Salad" Sandwich (pg. 133), Chicken Enchilada Bake (pg. 254), and Impossible Cheesecake Pie (pg. 289).

What will you try first?

Ten Dollar Dinners by Melissa d'Arabian

I'm not sure if I have an unhealthy obsession with cookbooks or a healthy one!  I love cookbooks.  I probably have over 100 at home.  In order to curb my obsession and be nice to be wallet I try and preview the cookbooks first by checking them out at the library. 

I didn't watch the season that Ms. d'Abrian was on The Next Food Network star but I can see why she won.  Her food all looks really yummy and it isn't that complicated to make.  I hate when a recipe sounds really good and then you have have 20 ingrediants to buy and you don't know what half of them are.

I tried her chicken meatball recipe (pg. 161) and they were really good.  I can't wait to try her creamy any veggie soup (pg. 74) and chicken taquitos (pg.165), and shrimp pad Thai (pg. 118).  Let's not forget about dessert!  Her buttery shortbread (pg. 309) and the double chocolate pound cake (pg. 304) are calling my name.  This is one cookbook I may just have to add to my personal collection!

Learn to Knit Cables on Looms

Knitting has always been a craft that I was not good at.  For some reason my hands and brain would never connect to make the stitch correctly and I always have to count and count and count to make sure I wasn't skipping a stitch.  About a month ago I discovered knitting looms which makes knitting so easy!

Learn to Knit Cables and Looms by Isela Phelps contains 9 patterns that can be made on a knitting loom.  Patterns range from a baby sweater to a backpack and a throw.  My two favorite are the slipper socks and the hand warmers.

Each pattern comes with a color picture and easy to follow instructions.  There is also a skill level gauge for each pattern, although each pattern seemed to be at a more advanced level.  If you are just a beginner other books might be able to help you more. I also watched videos on YouTube which was helpful.

If you are curious about knitting but don't know where to start check out the loom knitting books at the library.

Friday, January 18, 2013

The Statistical Probability of Love at First Sight

Four minutes does not seem like much time-but it was just four minutes that changed Hadley Sullivan's life.

In the book The Statistical Probability of Love at First Sight by Jennifer E. Smith Hadley is four minutes late for her plane.  A plane she wasn't to excited to get on in first place since it is taking her to London to her dad's wedding to the woman he left  her mother for. 

As she waits for the next flight she meets Oliver, whose British and perfect of course.  They connect instantly after a long night on the plane next to each other.  After loosing each other at arrival will there be a chance for them to meet again?

This is a great teen read.  Although it just seems like a harmless romance, Hadley has to deal with her feeling toward her dad who she hasn't seen in over a year.  The scenes with Hadley and her father are heartbreaking and I think he is really selfish man.  On the other hand her and Oliver definitely have some swoon-worthy scenes. 

Definitely check out The Statistical Probability of Love at First Sight if you are a fan of teen romances.

Thursday, January 17, 2013

The Phantom Tollbooth by Norton Juster

This book was given to my son by my friend Steve (my age), who said it was one of the best books he had ever read. Now I consider that friend a pretty clever fellow, but even with a buildup like that, it still took me a few years to pull this book off the shelf and read it. But now that I have, I'm glad I have, although it hasn't been a life changer. 

The book involves a young fellow named Milo, who has a bad case of ennui. He is bored by practically everything he does in his normal life. But then he gets a mysterious package with the phantom tollbooth in it; he puts it together before using his toy car to drive through it. That's when his adventures start. On the order of Tolkein's map of Middle Earth, this book contains a map with the strange new places Milo discovers. It includes a city called Wisdom, a place where words are very important called Dictionopolis, and a place where numbers are king, called Digitopolis. The latter two places are run by feuding brothers, who can 
agree on nothing except that they disagree with everything the other says. 

Milo meets a new friend, a watchdog built from a clock, named T ock (even 
though he goes "tick"), a bee who literally spells, and Humbug, a very 
disagreeable fellow who nonetheless joins Milo and the dog on an impossible 
mission to rescue the lovely princesses Rhyme and Reason, who have been 
exiled to the Castle in the Air. During their journey, they meet other allegorical characters like the Mathemagician, Chroma the Great, the Soundkeeper and the Senses Taker, all of whom have very specific and humorous jobs in the story. I can see now why it was compared by early critics to Bunyan's "Pilgrim's 
Progress"! 

It was published as a children's book in the 1960s, and is filled with what Maurice Sendak calls "linguistic acrobatics". He considers "The Phantom Tollbooth" to be pure gold, so that recommendation from the famous children's author is certainly better and stronger than this one. I'm not big on allegory, so when I started reading the book, I didn't like it as much as Sendak, my friend or my son did. 
 
However, the cleverness and the puns did end up charming me. It was a quick 
and easy read - I probably finished it in about 3 hours, and got severai good 
chuckles and some interesting life lessons out of it. 

Still, I wish that my library had a copy of the libretto and musical adaptation of this book, so the drama teacher could put it on at my kid's school. I am curious how it would go. but omehow I have the feeling it would have all the charm of John Adams modern opera, "Doctor Atomic." 
 
Submitted by Gerti 

Ilium by Dan Simmons

Ilium is a fantastic exploration into a Wide range of topics, and a fresh new writing style that makes you want to finish the book from the first moment you start. Combining science fiction with so much more, it amazed me and instantly became one of my favorite books. However: be warned, the story is very complicated, and at times you struggle to comprehend the brilliance of it all. 

You might be wondering, what makes this story so great? Well, first of all, it's a story about a professor who was resurrected by the "Greek Gods" to study a real version of th'e Iliad, being acted out on the plains of a not-so-real Troy. Now, the gods are not really the "gods" of ancient times. They are nano-tech wielding "post-humans" which have long since left Earth behind. Meanwhile, on Earth, the real "old­ style" humans are happy in their ignorance; all their work is done by robotic "servitors" and they "fax" (instantaneously teleport) from city to City, unaware of the universe of events which are about to unfold. 

Now the gods are causing quite a problem. You see, when they "quantum teleport" between Mount Olympus (actually the one on Mars, which is terraformed) and the ancient reality of Ilium, they essentially rip holes through the universe. The moravecs (intelligent bio-robots) that live on the moons of Jupiter pick up this activity and decide to send a mission to Mars to find the source of the ruckus. I don't want to spoil the book, because just when you think you know the whole story, Simmons blows it up in your face. Enjoy! 
 
Submitted by Max 

Miss Peregrine's Home for Peculiar Children by Ransom Riggs

I don't know how I managed to pick up this book. Perhaps it was the word "peculiar" in the title, a word for which I have a certain affinity. Perhaps it was the creepier than normal black and white cover picture of a little (dare I say it, ugly?) girl wearing a crown and levitating off the ground. Both of those factors made the book interesting to me where I wouldn't normally gravitate to this genre of YA fiction. But now that I've finished it, I am glad that I read it. Still, that doesn't mean the book is without its flaws. 

I find the story entertaining. Even though I'm not a teen, I can relate to the feelings of 16 year old Jacob as he tries to discover whether the relationship he had with his grandfather was based on lies or the truth. Then the grandfather is killed in a brutal way, and Jacob sets off for an island off the coast of Wales where his grandfather lived during WW II. His father goes along in order to bird watch, but Jacob is slowly drawn into a time loop, where the children who knew his grandfather still live, unchanged by the passage of time. Jacob finds out how he is peculiar, like his grandfather, and why his father never had as close a 
relationship with the old man as he had. He also finds out that his grandfather 
was telling him the truth, about the home, about the children, and even about the monsters that exist in this world. 

I'm not a reader of science fiction, so the time loop business was not a" that easy to understand for me. I also felt that Jacob's special power didn't seem special at a" (compared, for example, to the girl who can make fire or the boy who can bring dead things back to life), as the other children seemed able to see the monsters pursuing them as we". However, I do find the end dramatic and 
interesting, and I like the author's style of writing. Some aspects of the story are hackneyed and predictable, but I especially like the voice that Jacob has, with his teenage angst coming through in the narration as he finds his way to truth and love. 

Would I recommend it? I already have. My husband is reading "Miss Peregrine's 
Home for Peculiar Children" right now, and I'm curious to see if he likes it more or less than I do, since he's a frequent reader of science fiction. I hope my teenagers might read it as we", although I have a large print edition, which may not be cool enough for them. 
 
Submitted by Gerti 

Jane Boleyn by Julia Fox

Even though it has taken me any extra 10 days over my allotted time to read this biography of Jane Boleyn, I feel that it was totally worth it. Over the last 20 years or so, I have read many biographies of people at the court of Henry VIII, but this is the first I've seen about Jane Boleyn, who was certainly at the very heart of it. I could not stop reading till I had read every last word and end note. 

For those less familiar with English history, Jane Boleyn was the sister-in-law of Anne Boleyn, Henry VIII's doomed second queen, for whom he threw over 
Katherine of Aragon and the Catholic Church. Jane was married to Anne's brother George, for whom Anne had a particular, some would call it unnatural 
affection. Jane's fortunes rose with Anne's ascension to the throne as Henry's Queen, and fell again when Anne failed to produce the living male heir necessary to the Tudor succession. Although Anne and George Boleyn would meet their deaths at the hands of an executioner, Jane was spared the ax, that time. 

Exiled from court for a time, Jane reappeared at the side of Henry's 3rd wife, 
Jane Seymour, who was lucky enough to bear Henry a male child, but unlucky 
enough to catch puerperal fever and die about two weeks later. Fortunately for 
Jane, Henry quickly picked up wife #4, whom he just as quickly dropped, and 
then #5, a Boleyn cousin named Catherine Howard. Jane became a great confidante to Catherine Howard, and that would be her undoing, as Catherine was a bit loose in her morals, both before AND after her marriage to the king. And while profligacy in an unmarried girl is not wise, after marriage to Henry VIII, it was downright deadly. In this case, Henry had both former lovers of Catherine, 
the Queen herself, and her lady-in-waiting Jane Boleyn executed. 

What I find most interesting is that most biographies of Henry and his many 
wives vilify the Lady Rochford, as Jane Boleyn was called after her husband 
gained a title because of his social climbing sister. But this biography shows 
clearly how Jane's reputation shifted over time, from that of a woman who had 
little to do with the persecution and death of her husband in contemporary 
writings, to later historical accounts where she becomes a woman motivated by 
jealousy who was glad to see her perverted husband and his sister die. 

If that story makes this book sound interesting, well it really isn't. The history contained in this painfully researched book is only rarely titillating, but more often dry and exhaustive. Still, since I've read so much Tudor history, I very am impressed by the amount of research and thought Fox has put into this biography of a woman not even important enough in the court's eyes to have her portrait painted. While a slow, difficult, read, "Jane Boleyn" is worth it for the true student of Tudor history. 
 
Submitted by Gerti 

Brainiac by Ken Jennings

I picked up this book based on a good review from a quizzer friend of mine whose son and my son go to school together. I was interested in "Brainiac" 
because I had already taken the "Jeopardy!" Test in Chicago, and had this odd feeling, since "Jeopardy!" was having more female contestants on, that I just 
might need to know more about the quiz show world ... 

Author Ken Jennings, for those who do not follow" Jeopardy!" closely, was a contestant on the popular Sony quiz show who a few years ago won more games 
than anyone else in "Jeopardy!" history. For the record, he won 74 games, although he took part in 75. And it's just that sort of minutia with which this book concerns itself. 

Ken was always someone who loved trivia, so while the book recounts his time on the "Jeopardy!" stage, it also shows how a game show like "Jeopardy!" came 
to be. Jennings details the history of trivia itself, and then progresses to radio and TV game shows, of course mentioning the "Twenty-One" scandal back in the '50s that showed how some contestants were getting the correct answers to questions by producers who viewed the genre as more entertainment than was legally allowed. 

Ken also visits with other gamers who play in various circuits around the country, from the trivia tourneys played in our nation's bars, to college quiz bowls of various stripes, and finally to die-hard fans at the annual trivia fest that takes place in a small Wisconsin town. While I found the most interesting part of the book to be the information on Jennings' "Jeopardy!" winning streak, his writing is always entertaining, and his facts are bottomless. "Brainiac" was an always amusing and frequently educational look at a part of Americana that I had never seen before, but is slowly becoming more interesting to me. And hopefully, this book will help when I play the game! 
 
Submitted by Gerti 

Prisoner of Trebekistan: A Decade in Jeopardy by Bob Harris

Bob Harris spent some time as a stand-up comedian. That background comes through clearly in his non-fiction account of his Jeopardy! days, "A Prisoner of Trebekistan," which is filled with his unique and off-kilter (although not off-color) 
brand of humor. I remembered the author's multiple appearances on the show from seeing his picture on the cover, as Harris is a man who definitely made an 
impression on the famous game show for both his quirky looks and unusual commentary. 
 
That personality is why he was chosen to come back on so many Jeopardy! Champions Tournaments, chosen even before those contestants who made more money, because he was just so much fun. 

Besides the show, Harris talks candidly about his failed relationships with various women, and his world travels, although I find that those final chapters of the book were the most tedious for me to read through, despite his humor and his frequent 
references to odd trivia that he learned while abroad. Where the book really sings, however, is where he recounts his time on the show, his study methods, and the other Jeopardy! contestants he met and befriended. Luckily, that's most of the book. 

Other reviewers have found the final bits interesting, where Harris philosophizes about how Trebekistan (a fictional land named after Jeopardy! host Alex Trebek) is the world, and how everything is tied together in a web of knowledge. But I knew that going in~ what I enjoyed about Harris most is his stories about Cleveland (having lived there) and its losing ways. Most helpful for other Jeopardy! hopefuls is his teaching how he memorized impossible facts by making mental pictures, and I found his advice in keeping with other books on 
memory tricks of the champions ("Moonwalking with Einstein", for example.) 

So what is this book? Autobiography? Memory guide? Advice for the world 
traveler? It's a little bit of all those, with a touch of humanistic philosophy thrown in for good measure. So my advice would be, for those like myself who only wanted to know about Bob's time on Jeopardy! and how he managed to win 
against some of the show's greatest champions, stick to reading the first % of the text. Like the Beatles in the late '60s, Harris takes a spiritual journey near the end of the book that would have been better if it had been more personal and less public. 
 
Reviewed by Gerti 

Friday, January 4, 2013

Breathe Book Trailer



I think book trailer's are fun.  You get a little glimpse into your favorite books.

Long Shots books 1-3 by Christine D'Abo

Cover image for Long Shots: Books 1-3: Double Shot\A Shot in the Dark\Pulled Long

Reading Level: Adult
(4 out of 5)

This is an e-book that you download from Overdrive. I have stepped over to the downloadable dark side people. I love the instant gratification of it. I still love the feel, heft, and smell of a book but you can't hate me for loving how you buy a book that you want and it just appears like manna from heaven. Anyhoo I digress.

I debated on whether or not I should blog about these books because well *blushes* uncontrollably they are naughty. But in a good way. If you totally got behind the Fifty Shades bandwagon then get behind this writer. Because even though I haven't read the Fifty books I'm going to say that these books were probably better on the naughty scale. The stories were really good too.

 Let's just say that there are three siblings. Book one is about Sadie, Book 2 is about Paige, and Book three is about Ian. Throw in a coffee shop, a sex club, gorgeous partners, and lots of fun and you get three great books. If you enjoy these books check out the 4th book Calling The Shots about the sex clubs owner Josh. It is also available on Overdrive.

 Have Fun!!!

Breathe by Abbi Glines




 Reading Level: Young Adult
(4 out of 5)

I have found a new author! The best part is she writes both paranormal romances and realistic romances. I will get the best of both worlds and hopefully both series will be good. The paranormal series is a trilogy with the first book called Existence. The library has it on order. Breathe is the first in a series called Sea Breeze. There are four so far. I'm not sure if the author is writing more. Breathe is on order for the library and if you want to read it put yourself on hold for it because the second book called Because of Low has six holds and I'm sure the people who have read it will want to read Breathe. I'm going to see about getting books three and four.

Anyway Breathe is about Sadie White and Jax Stone. Sadie and her mother have been on their own for most of Sadie's life. Sadly Sadie has been more of a mother than her mother has. Now at 17 Sadie's mother is pregnant and bringing another life into their dysfunctional family. When the pregnancy becomes too much for her mother Sadie takes over her cleaning job that turns out to be at Jax Stone's house, one of the hottest teen rockers in the world.

Sadie isn't impressed by the fame, she just wants to keep a roof over her head and food on the table. Jax is drawn to Sadie even though he knows a relationship would probably never work. Then there is also Marcus, who is also very crush worthy and a great guy. You can tell this is Ms. Glines first book but I thought she did it well and I can't wait to read Marcus's story in Because of Low. Now she has several novels under her belt and I just know they have gotten better and better.