Ever wanted to know what would happen if Darth Vader was a loving father to Luke? The book Darth Vader and Son will answer that for you.
Written as a comic, author Jeffrey Brown takes the reader on a journey of small segments in the life of Darth and Luke. It shows everything from the two taking a trip to the zoo to look at a Bantha to Darth telling Luke to pick up his toys. My favorite shows a happy Darth Vader as Luke receives a medal which is quite far from the menancing Vader that I knew when I was little.
The colorful illustrations are adorable and full of other popular characters from Star Wars (the little Han Solo was my favorite!) This book is great for young and old Star Wars fans.
Brand New at the Library!
Tuesday, August 28, 2012
Wednesday, August 22, 2012
300 and Fifty Shades of Grey Series
While I was speed blogging a few days ago I happened to notice that we were about to churn out the 300th post! Wow! I started this blog on February 27, 2008. So the Book Nook is 4 years old. I'm going to have to do something super special next February for it's 5th birthday. I want to thank the Book Nook followers. You guys are awesome. I want to thank my guest book reviewer, Gerti. I know she does it for the free books but she has recruited her family. How great is that? I want to thank my fellow library staffers for their help as well. Sometimes it takes a village. And I think I am done with my acceptance speech now.
In honor of our 300th post I think it is only fitting to leave you with 2 reviews submitted from Gerti on the first two Fifty Shades of Grey books. These books are so popular the waiting lists are in the 300's. I think that is some kind of record. Gerti's reviews are very well written and while she isn't raving about them her reviews do make me want to read them. As a librarian I really should know about the story, right? Right? :)
Although I waited a long time on the library's waiting list to get this book and find out what all the media hoopla was about, there were a number of times when I felt like putting "Fifty Shades of Grey" down for good. At the beginning, it doesn't seem different from any other novel about an adolescent girl's fantasy boyfriend. In this book, a rich, handsome billionaire named Christian Grey begins to romantically pursue the wallflower protagonist - Anastasia Steele - after she has to interview him when her journalist roommate is ill. James' book follows all the age-old romantic formulas as well - her heroine is innocent but intelligent, poor but honest, gorgeous but doesn't know it. Up to that point, I'm reading a Barbara Cartland novel from the '70s. The twist in this novel is that the protagonist~Prince Charming, Grey, wants to do things with her that are very out of step from the usual Silhouette Fire romance, things that would be more suited to a Penthouse forum or the diary of the Marquis de Sade.
James writes the sex scenes well, and there are A LOT of sex scenes. But I shudder to think of all the sweet, young things who might pick up this book, thinking this is how their first sexual experience/partner will be. While titillating, Christian and Anastasia's constant need for sex and each other, despite Anastasia's inexperience with men (she is a virgin when they meet), speaks more to their youth and James' need for a salacious page turner than to reality. James makes each sex scene modern and different, and there is none of the awkwardness that a reader finds sometimes in other bodice-rippers on the market. But when the "romance" turns dark, and sado-masochism becomes the
word of the day, the book begins to lose its appeal for me. I wonder how many women would be reading (and raving about) this book if the heroine was a 40-year-old mother of five who becomes the sadistically beaten sex slave of her new boyfriend?
Bottom line for me, what two consenting adults do in privacy of their own homes is fine, but I'm not thrilled about a book where beating women for pleasure is the subject matter. I feel for Anastasia, and to her credit, James does discuss all her character's conflicted emotions regarding this fellow she has fallen in love with. But for me, it's always going to be wrong to beat somebody up, even if they let
you do it because they love you. It's always going to speak of women's shelters and restraining orders, not of riches and romance. Steele leaves Grey at the end of this book, but since there are sequels, I can't help but think that they'll get back together in the coming (no pun intended) two books. Reminds me of Anne Rice's naughty fiction, and for me, is just as disposable.
"Fifth Shades Darker" is the second of EL James wildly popular novels that I have read, as well as the second book in the trilogy, and I have to admit, I like it better than the first book in the set because in this book, the heroine begins to express her likes and dislikes, and the "hero" lets her do that. What I don't like is that this book reads more like a soap opera than the first, which was pretty ground-breaking in terms of content and subject matter.
The characters from the first book return in this effort. We meet lovely young heroine Anastasia Steele, who is beginning her adult life in Seattle after graduating from college, and her some time boyfriend, billionaire Christian Grey, who alternates between being the good guy and the villain of the story. New in this book is a crazed former "girlfriend" of Christian's, Leila, who had evil intentions toward the couple. Anastasia is disturbed by how much this ex looks like her, and that observation leads Christian to make a startling revelation. Another villain in the piece is Elena Lincoln, whom Ana calls "Mrs. Robinson" because this old friend from Christian's past is the woman who introduced him to the BDSM lifestyle. These two have quite a dust up at Christian's birthday party.
Also introduced to bring trouble to Christian and Ana as they reconcile is her new boss at the publishing house, Jack, whom Christian rightly thinks is trying to make his relationship with his new hire sexual. But being the powerful billionaire he is, Christian has Jack fired when he tries to touch Ana, and puts his lover into the bosses old job. Seems Christian has bought the company to keep an eye on Ana. But somehow Ana is all right with this arrangement. Finally, Christian has to survive a helicopter crash, which may have been caused by the vengeful Jack, but Christian survives, much to the relief of Ana and his family. His accident brings the couple even closer. By the end of the book, the pair have already bought a house and are planning their wedding.
Those dramatic elements aside, I like the book better because in this book, compared to the first, the pair become equals, despite the fact that Christian is so wealthy, he is constantly undermining Ana's ability to make her own choices. This includes ordering her food, buying her the car he wants her to have, and even buying her a house he wants for his own reasons. Still, in this book, Ana is only beaten by Christian when she wants to be, and she begins to break down the limits he has set for their relationship. She refuses to be hog-tied by his controlling personality, and starts making her own decisions, like insisting on meeting with an old male friend of hers, and wearing the dress she wants to the store, over his objections.
There is still a ton of sex in this book, and like in the previous "Fifty Shades," it is well written and of a varied nature so it is never boring or ridiculous. The only wrong note for me is how dramatic the pair's life is. with someone always trying to shoot, kill or seduce them. I can't wait to see if in "Fifty Shades Freed" the pair can finally spend some time living in the real world.
In honor of our 300th post I think it is only fitting to leave you with 2 reviews submitted from Gerti on the first two Fifty Shades of Grey books. These books are so popular the waiting lists are in the 300's. I think that is some kind of record. Gerti's reviews are very well written and while she isn't raving about them her reviews do make me want to read them. As a librarian I really should know about the story, right? Right? :)
Although I waited a long time on the library's waiting list to get this book and find out what all the media hoopla was about, there were a number of times when I felt like putting "Fifty Shades of Grey" down for good. At the beginning, it doesn't seem different from any other novel about an adolescent girl's fantasy boyfriend. In this book, a rich, handsome billionaire named Christian Grey begins to romantically pursue the wallflower protagonist - Anastasia Steele - after she has to interview him when her journalist roommate is ill. James' book follows all the age-old romantic formulas as well - her heroine is innocent but intelligent, poor but honest, gorgeous but doesn't know it. Up to that point, I'm reading a Barbara Cartland novel from the '70s. The twist in this novel is that the protagonist~Prince Charming, Grey, wants to do things with her that are very out of step from the usual Silhouette Fire romance, things that would be more suited to a Penthouse forum or the diary of the Marquis de Sade.
James writes the sex scenes well, and there are A LOT of sex scenes. But I shudder to think of all the sweet, young things who might pick up this book, thinking this is how their first sexual experience/partner will be. While titillating, Christian and Anastasia's constant need for sex and each other, despite Anastasia's inexperience with men (she is a virgin when they meet), speaks more to their youth and James' need for a salacious page turner than to reality. James makes each sex scene modern and different, and there is none of the awkwardness that a reader finds sometimes in other bodice-rippers on the market. But when the "romance" turns dark, and sado-masochism becomes the
word of the day, the book begins to lose its appeal for me. I wonder how many women would be reading (and raving about) this book if the heroine was a 40-year-old mother of five who becomes the sadistically beaten sex slave of her new boyfriend?
Bottom line for me, what two consenting adults do in privacy of their own homes is fine, but I'm not thrilled about a book where beating women for pleasure is the subject matter. I feel for Anastasia, and to her credit, James does discuss all her character's conflicted emotions regarding this fellow she has fallen in love with. But for me, it's always going to be wrong to beat somebody up, even if they let
you do it because they love you. It's always going to speak of women's shelters and restraining orders, not of riches and romance. Steele leaves Grey at the end of this book, but since there are sequels, I can't help but think that they'll get back together in the coming (no pun intended) two books. Reminds me of Anne Rice's naughty fiction, and for me, is just as disposable.
"Fifth Shades Darker" is the second of EL James wildly popular novels that I have read, as well as the second book in the trilogy, and I have to admit, I like it better than the first book in the set because in this book, the heroine begins to express her likes and dislikes, and the "hero" lets her do that. What I don't like is that this book reads more like a soap opera than the first, which was pretty ground-breaking in terms of content and subject matter. The characters from the first book return in this effort. We meet lovely young heroine Anastasia Steele, who is beginning her adult life in Seattle after graduating from college, and her some time boyfriend, billionaire Christian Grey, who alternates between being the good guy and the villain of the story. New in this book is a crazed former "girlfriend" of Christian's, Leila, who had evil intentions toward the couple. Anastasia is disturbed by how much this ex looks like her, and that observation leads Christian to make a startling revelation. Another villain in the piece is Elena Lincoln, whom Ana calls "Mrs. Robinson" because this old friend from Christian's past is the woman who introduced him to the BDSM lifestyle. These two have quite a dust up at Christian's birthday party.
Also introduced to bring trouble to Christian and Ana as they reconcile is her new boss at the publishing house, Jack, whom Christian rightly thinks is trying to make his relationship with his new hire sexual. But being the powerful billionaire he is, Christian has Jack fired when he tries to touch Ana, and puts his lover into the bosses old job. Seems Christian has bought the company to keep an eye on Ana. But somehow Ana is all right with this arrangement. Finally, Christian has to survive a helicopter crash, which may have been caused by the vengeful Jack, but Christian survives, much to the relief of Ana and his family. His accident brings the couple even closer. By the end of the book, the pair have already bought a house and are planning their wedding.
Those dramatic elements aside, I like the book better because in this book, compared to the first, the pair become equals, despite the fact that Christian is so wealthy, he is constantly undermining Ana's ability to make her own choices. This includes ordering her food, buying her the car he wants her to have, and even buying her a house he wants for his own reasons. Still, in this book, Ana is only beaten by Christian when she wants to be, and she begins to break down the limits he has set for their relationship. She refuses to be hog-tied by his controlling personality, and starts making her own decisions, like insisting on meeting with an old male friend of hers, and wearing the dress she wants to the store, over his objections.
There is still a ton of sex in this book, and like in the previous "Fifty Shades," it is well written and of a varied nature so it is never boring or ridiculous. The only wrong note for me is how dramatic the pair's life is. with someone always trying to shoot, kill or seduce them. I can't wait to see if in "Fifty Shades Freed" the pair can finally spend some time living in the real world.
Lovely Things to Make for Girls of Slender Means by Eithne Farry
This is a fun book. It has projects on how to make fun hair accessories to making your own clothes. I liked how to make your own fabric flowers and did indeed make myself some. I actually made one like on the cover. I do want to try making the ping-pong ball necklace.
But there are instructions for making bags, earrings, bows, skirts, shorts, shirts, and much more. If you like to sew and get crafty and are of slender means then check out this book. Even if you aren't check it out anyway!
But there are instructions for making bags, earrings, bows, skirts, shorts, shirts, and much more. If you like to sew and get crafty and are of slender means then check out this book. Even if you aren't check it out anyway!
In the Bag by Kate Klise
I got a sneak peak of this book before the library even has it. I love when that happens. Don't worry the library has it on order but I got an Advanced Reader's Copy from when one of my co-workers and I went to sunny California for a library conference. I have never read anything before from Kate Klise and I have to say I did enjoy it. Some parts are believable, while others are a little over the top but that's why it's a fiction book.
In the Bag is about a luggage mix-up at an international airport, one teenage boy, one teenage girl, his father, her mother, and a note slipped into a carry on. It really isn't all that complicated. Webb grabs Coco's bag at the airport and vice versa. Both are pretty bummed because you know Webb isn't a petite girl and Coco isn't a six foot something guy that likes to wear half washed clothes. Webb is in Spain with his Dad for his Dad's work thing, while Coco is in Paris with her mom on vacation. While their parents are trying to figure out how to get the the luggage straightened out Webb and Coco get in touch online. One thing leads to another and they have a love connection.
What Andrew (dad) and Daisy (mom) don't know is that they may have a love connection as well because Andrew slipped a note into Daisy's bag on the airplane. Talk about a tangled square. Anyway each chapter is narrated by one of the characters. It alternates. I think I would have liked this book more if it would have been narrated exclusively by Webb because YA is my first love and while the parents were cute I could have done without them. All in all I enjoyed this book.
In the Bag is about a luggage mix-up at an international airport, one teenage boy, one teenage girl, his father, her mother, and a note slipped into a carry on. It really isn't all that complicated. Webb grabs Coco's bag at the airport and vice versa. Both are pretty bummed because you know Webb isn't a petite girl and Coco isn't a six foot something guy that likes to wear half washed clothes. Webb is in Spain with his Dad for his Dad's work thing, while Coco is in Paris with her mom on vacation. While their parents are trying to figure out how to get the the luggage straightened out Webb and Coco get in touch online. One thing leads to another and they have a love connection.
What Andrew (dad) and Daisy (mom) don't know is that they may have a love connection as well because Andrew slipped a note into Daisy's bag on the airplane. Talk about a tangled square. Anyway each chapter is narrated by one of the characters. It alternates. I think I would have liked this book more if it would have been narrated exclusively by Webb because YA is my first love and while the parents were cute I could have done without them. All in all I enjoyed this book.
Labels:
Adult Fiction,
Adult Romance,
Teen Reads,
Young Love
Flowers for Algernon by Daniel Keye
"Flowers for Algernon" is about a 32-year-old retarded man, Charlie Gordon. He can't read or write, and he is clumsy, but likeable. He works at a bakery lifting bags of flour. He wants to
become smarter because he thinks that if he is smarter, more people will like him and his family
will be proud of him. He is chosen to be the subject of Dr. Nemur and Dr. Strauss' experiment.
They want to make him smarter by performing a set of surgeries on his brain. This has only
been done on animals, such as Algernon, a small, white mouse, and the results have been
positive so far.
Charlie agrees to the experiment and it works. It takes time for him to get smarter and once
he does get very smart, he is happy. Then Charlie realizes that he is growing apart from the
people he loved. His friends at the bakery and his teacher Alice no longer like him as much
because he is so smart. He gets fired from his job and gets very lonely. He is able to beat
Algernon in mazes now and the doctors are happy with the results. Charlie is becoming more
and more rude, selfish, and intelligent as the days go on.
Algernon starts to become angry and erratic as well. Instead of trying to solve mazes when
he gets something wrong, he smashes his head into the wall. Charlie starts to work at the lab as
well so he can figure out what is happening to Algernon. He finds out that the rate at which you
lose intelligence is proportional to the rate at which you gained the intelligence. Algernon soon
dies and Charlie's brainpower is fading rapidly as well. Charlie buries his friend Algernon in his
backyard. He does get his friends from the bakery back, but he must leave because he can no
longer take care of himself. He is going to stay at the Warren Home for Retarded Adults. At the
end of the book, he reminds whoever is reading his note to put some flowers on Algernon's
grave.
I didn't particularly like the book. The beginning was nice because I got to hear about
Charlie's quest for knowledge and how he was mistreated by others, but loved by his friends. I
didn't like that Charlie was arrogant when he was smart. I also didn't like that I had to hear
about Charlie's intimate relations. I didn't think it was necessary and I skipped over it. I did like
Algernon and how Charlie cared for him and how Charlie became sweet again. Although it was
sad to see how disappointed Charlie was that the experiment had failed, he was grateful for the
time he had to learn.
Submitted by Stephanie
become smarter because he thinks that if he is smarter, more people will like him and his family
will be proud of him. He is chosen to be the subject of Dr. Nemur and Dr. Strauss' experiment.
They want to make him smarter by performing a set of surgeries on his brain. This has only
been done on animals, such as Algernon, a small, white mouse, and the results have been
positive so far.
Charlie agrees to the experiment and it works. It takes time for him to get smarter and once
he does get very smart, he is happy. Then Charlie realizes that he is growing apart from the
people he loved. His friends at the bakery and his teacher Alice no longer like him as much
because he is so smart. He gets fired from his job and gets very lonely. He is able to beat
Algernon in mazes now and the doctors are happy with the results. Charlie is becoming more
and more rude, selfish, and intelligent as the days go on.
Algernon starts to become angry and erratic as well. Instead of trying to solve mazes when
he gets something wrong, he smashes his head into the wall. Charlie starts to work at the lab as
well so he can figure out what is happening to Algernon. He finds out that the rate at which you
lose intelligence is proportional to the rate at which you gained the intelligence. Algernon soon
dies and Charlie's brainpower is fading rapidly as well. Charlie buries his friend Algernon in his
backyard. He does get his friends from the bakery back, but he must leave because he can no
longer take care of himself. He is going to stay at the Warren Home for Retarded Adults. At the
end of the book, he reminds whoever is reading his note to put some flowers on Algernon's
grave.
I didn't particularly like the book. The beginning was nice because I got to hear about
Charlie's quest for knowledge and how he was mistreated by others, but loved by his friends. I
didn't like that Charlie was arrogant when he was smart. I also didn't like that I had to hear
about Charlie's intimate relations. I didn't think it was necessary and I skipped over it. I did like
Algernon and how Charlie cared for him and how Charlie became sweet again. Although it was
sad to see how disappointed Charlie was that the experiment had failed, he was grateful for the
time he had to learn.
Submitted by Stephanie
Tuesday, August 14, 2012
I'd Tell You I Love You, But Then I'd Have To Kill You
What could be more exciting for teen girls seeking
adventure and romance than reading about an exclusive girls school that trains their students to be high level spy's? Author Ally Carter has created a series of books about Cammie Morgan, student of the Gallagher Academy for Exceptional Young Women and daughter of the head mistress. Cammie is extremely intelligent but with the amazing talent of being able to blend into any situation; a valuable talent for a spy in training. Cammie, along with her friends, can handle computer hacking, various languages and counter surveillance classes, but when it comes to interpreting boy language, the girls are at a loss. 
Never fear as the girls love a challenge. This quick, quirky, funny and exciting story is an enjoyable read for girls ages 12+.
adventure and romance than reading about an exclusive girls school that trains their students to be high level spy's? Author Ally Carter has created a series of books about Cammie Morgan, student of the Gallagher Academy for Exceptional Young Women and daughter of the head mistress. Cammie is extremely intelligent but with the amazing talent of being able to blend into any situation; a valuable talent for a spy in training. Cammie, along with her friends, can handle computer hacking, various languages and counter surveillance classes, but when it comes to interpreting boy language, the girls are at a loss. 
Never fear as the girls love a challenge. This quick, quirky, funny and exciting story is an enjoyable read for girls ages 12+.
In Ally Carter's second book, Cross My Heart and Hope to Spy, Cammie Morgan returns from
Christmas break refreshed and debriefed and ready to tackle a new semester without boys. Her mom, the headmistress, has other plans, as a group of boys from the secret Blackthorne Academy come to visit and study with the Gallagher Girls. This only leads to more hilarious escapades for Cammie and her friends as they try to concentrate on their classes while making sure their hair and makeup are perfect at all times.
Christmas break refreshed and debriefed and ready to tackle a new semester without boys. Her mom, the headmistress, has other plans, as a group of boys from the secret Blackthorne Academy come to visit and study with the Gallagher Girls. This only leads to more hilarious escapades for Cammie and her friends as they try to concentrate on their classes while making sure their hair and makeup are perfect at all times.
Fahrenheit 451 by Ray Bradbury
My husband is an enormous fan of science fiction, an~ I have to say that I have never been one. So it has taken me through high school, through college, and well into middle age before I ever picked up a Ray Bradbury novel. But seeing that my children will have to be reading it soon for school, I thought I'd check this science fiction classic "Fahrenheit 451" out at last. Let me say, that it is not the easiest book I've ever tried to read. When my 12-year-old told me
he was having a hard time with it, I gave HIM a hard time about not reading it, but there are times
when the verbage is so thick you have to cut through it with a machete. I know it will make my
English teachers weep when I say that I wish I had a Reader's Digest version of this, because
there is a lot in here (RIP Ray Bradbury, no offense meant. .. ) that could have been edited out to
make it easier to read.
That said, however, I DO like the plot. It is an old-fashioned one, like we used to read when I
was in school in the '70s. You have characters, and they have names that MEAN things. The hero
in this book, who starts out as a villain, is named Guy Montag. To me, that means that Bradbury
wanted his lead character to represent just a guy, an everyman, trying to survive in this dystopian
world. It was not a name picked out of a hat, and I like that about the author. He has a reverence
for books, and for the words within them.
But back to the plot. .. Our everyman, Guy, is married to a woman named Mildred (baby name
book says that means "Mild Counselor" or "Mild Power") who does in fact exert a little influence on
her husband. It is her drug overdose, along with several other events, that turns Guy from a
working stiff to a rebel of the first order. Another influence on him is his young neighbor, "Clarisse,"
which my book says means "little brilliant one." She expands his world by making him slow down
and look at the world around him, trying to get him to smell the flowers, as the cliche says. But his
life begins to truly change one day at work, when he sees a woman who would rather die than live
without her books.
And that is at the heart of the story - that "firemen" in this future world start fires, instead of
stopping them, and they start them because their job is to bum books, along with the homes of the
people who dare to keep them. Books have been pretty much outlawed in that time, and we realize
the path that Guy is on when he starts reading from a book during a party his wife is having at his
house. Of course, her friends turn him in, and his fate is sealed at that point. The fire brigade arrive
at his house to bum the place down, but Guy goes rogue, and instead sets fire to Captain Beatty,
his chief antagonist at the station, and the man who knows he has been stealing books from the
houses they bum down. Then the evil death machine, the Mechanical Hound, has to chase Guy
through town, but Guy cleverly jumps into the river and escapes from "the city" itself, leaving his old
life, wife and job far behind.
In an ironic twist, the city itself is soon liquefied in a bombing, as the country has recently gone
to war, so Guy is actually lucky to escape the city when he does. But he finds a band of like
minded individuals along the railroad tracks who have all memorized parts of books, so that the
knowledge found in books will never be lost. Guy finds that he has memorized a part of the Bible,
Ecclesiastes, and so he is accepted as part of the group.
As Bradbury's introduction to the novel shows, "Fahrenheit 451" is a function of its time, a time
when books (ideas, political views, etc.) were being surpressed, and taken out of libraries across
the world. But it still has relevance today, with the constant need to conform that we see most
recently in the scandal over Chick-Fil-A.
Submitted by Gerti
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