Friday, December 7, 2012

Kids' Books Holiday Blog Hop and Giveaway!!


Ooooh!! So, I was super excited! My kids get a book every year for Christmas and most of my friends do the same thing so here is a way to get some for free. Oh yeah! :) Super excited! An author offered her book as the giveaway so I am very excited to give away TWO copies of Royal Prince Vince by Heidi Angell.

This is the story of a spoiled prince who must learn that perhaps always getting his way is not the best thing. Of course, he has to learn it the hard way. :) It's a very cute story. My 5 year old daughter brings it to me often and tells me the story. She knows it and tells me what's happening through the pictures. She loves it! :) So, enter to win this book. Two will receive the book and everyone who enters will receive a coupon and a book mark. Woot! :) Thank you Heidi Angell for being so generous! =o) To enter for this one then fill in the form below. Once you have entered then go to the list of books at the bottom of this post and hop on over to another giveaway! :) Good luck!



Wait!! That's not all! The host site for this give away, Outlaw Heroes is offering a giveaway to everyone who participates. Here are the rules for that giveaway.



Grand Prize Giveaway!

As part of the Kid's Books Holiday Blog Hop we are giving away a $30 Amazon Gift Card to one lucky winner. To enter, just leave a comment on this blog along with your email address and you will be in the running to win. You can enter on all of the blogs – that will give you multiple chances to win!
The Giveaway starts 12/7/12 and ends 12/10/12 at midnight. I will notify the winner on 12/11/12 after noon. Good luck!
Continue Reading...

Friday, November 2, 2012

Kids Korner: Alcatraz Versus The Evil Librarians

Genre: Auto-Biography, Children's Chapter Books, Fantasy, Sci-Fi, Adventure

Synopsis: Warning: Librarians do NOT want you to read this book. By reading this book you will be open to a world the Librarians do not want you to discover. This is the actual, factual narrative of a young hero named Alcatraz Smedry who receives a bag of sand for his 13th birthday. (Insert "I've got a jar of dirt" jokes here.) However, this is no ordinary sand but a very rare type that is valued above all else. Alcatraz, like any Smedry would, lets it get stolen by the Evil Librarians. Adventure ensues, thrusting young Alcatraz into the world of the free kingdoms, becoming a hero, and trying to find out for himself just who he is. (This is the secret that the Librarians are trying to keep from us the Hushlanders. Our world, The Hushlands, is filled with lies and is controlled by the librarians. Just FYI. Keep it to yourself, trust me you don't want Librarians to know that you know.)

Review: This book had my kids, my husband and me laughing out loud constantly. Of course, none of us should be surprised that Sanderson once again did an amazing job in writing a book. My entire family loved this book and we were sad to return it to the library. So sad, actually, that as soon as we got home we ordered the entire set from Amazon. Go get this book now; really, go get it. If you don't you should be flogged with a large fish by a Canadian Moose.

Author: To the right is a picture of Alcatraz Smedry. (from book flap) "Brandon Sanderson is the pen name of Alcatraz Smedry. His Hushlander editor forced him to use a pseudonym, since these memoirs are being published as fiction.
"Alcatraz actually knows a person named Brandon Sanderson. That man, however, is a fantasy writer- and is therefore prone to useless bouts of delusion in literary form. Alcatraz has it on good authority that Brandon is actually illiterate and dictates his thick, overly long fantasy tomes to his potted plant. Count Duku.
"It is widely assumed that Brandon went mad several years ago, but few people can tell because his writing is so strange anyway. He spends his time going to science fiction movies, eating popcorn and goat cheese (separately), and trying to warn people about the dangers of the Great Kitten Conspiracy.
"He has had his library card revoked on seventeen different occasions."

Rating: FIVE STARS ***** (This was, of course, unanimous because this is one of the best written and entertaining books any of us have read in a long time.)


Continue Reading...

Monday, October 1, 2012

Linger by Maggie Stiefvater


Hardcover360 pages
Published July 13th 2010 by Scholastic Press (first published 2010)
ISBN
0545123283 (ISBN13: 9780545123280)



Genre: Young Adult Fantasy Romance

Synopsis: This is a sequel to Shiver, which I read before I started a review blog. :) So, this could contain spoilers to Shiver so I suggest that you go and read Shiver first. :)

Grace is a 17 year old girl who lives in the quiet little town of Mercy Falls, Minnesota. The year before she met Sam, a wolf, well, a human, well.... a shapeshifter. But, they cured him of that so at the beginning of this book they are both typical humans. Sam is now responsible for the pack after the last one, and adopted father to Sam, decided to return as a wolf and may never become a human again. Sam must figure out how to make it on his own and settle into his new life of caretaker of the shapeshifting pack. Meanwhile, his girlfriend Grace is finding that her parents' new overbearing methods are suffocating. She is fighting with them and ignoring symptoms that could change her life forever. There is also a new pack member -- Cole. The first one to return to human and has a questionable past that could be detrimental to the secret of the pack. This odd trio must find a way to survive and perhaps risk everything to save one of their lives.

Review: I still love this story, this world Maggie created. It's original but still fits in the ever popular category of fantasy-romance. You know that moment you realize you are siding with the parents instead of the heroine of the story? Yeah, it's not a good sign. It means you're getting old (30 next year). That was the feeling I got while reading this story. There were a few instances where the main characters got in trouble and I thought, "DUH!" Anyways, this is young adult but I don't think I'd let my daughter read it. There is teen sex and the language is a little heavier than what I'd feel comfortable having her read.  I am not giving it that fourth star because of a couple of reasons but the main one is the romance. Ack! Sometimes it's a bit too cheesy for me. They're 17 and they're proclaiming their never ending love together in ways that made me feel entirely uncomfortable. Otherwise, it was a pretty good story.

Author: From Goodreads Author Page: All of Maggie Stiefvater's life decisions have been based around her inability to be gainfully employed. Talking to yourself, staring into space, and coming to work in your pajamas are frowned upon when you're a waitress, calligraphy instructor, or technical editor (all of which she's tried), but are highly prized traits in novelists and artists. She's made her living as one or the other since she was 22. She now lives an eccentric life in the middle of nowhere, Virginia with her charmingly straight-laced husband, two kids, two neurotic dogs, and a 1973 Camaro named Loki.

To learn more of Maggie then go to her page here: http://maggiestiefvater.com/

Rating: **** Four Stars

Continue Reading...

Saturday, September 29, 2012

Creepy Kitchen by Lee Newman

 This guest post is by Heidi Angell, author of Creative Exercises to Inspire and Royal Prince Vince. For more on Heidi, visit her website at http://angellslife.com/

Genre: Children's book

Synposis: The narrator takes us on a tour of his creepy kitchen where we get to meet such fun characters as Count Spatula, The Crummy, Dr. Forkentein, and the Phantom of the Garbage Disposal. (those were MY favorites! Can't give away ALL the fun characters you will meet!)

Review: I have been waiting for almost a year for this book to come out! I am friends with the author on Facebook and knew from the early mock ups that my kids would love this story. I didn't realize how much I would love it. I don't mean as a mom who loves things that her kids love, but as an adult! The style is reminiscent of There is a Monster at the End of This Book (the one from Sesame Street) but whereas I felt the compulsive desire to hide that book from my kids after about the 1,000 time reading it, this one will tickle adult's funny bones as much as the kid's. It will remind you of that first year you didn't live at home. (Or my house, whenever I'm too busy to clean the kitchen. All I can say is when I read about Dirty Dish Peak, I LOL'ed and thought of my husband XD We had to stop reading so I could get back under control!)

 Some of the characters I had to help my kids make the connection with because they aren't really fans of horror... yet. At the end, I asked my boys who their favorite character was and my 8 year old said "the narrator. I can totally relate!" My 11 year old  said "the Crock Mess Monster. I hate eating food from the crock pot!"

Needless to say, we read it three times and I'm still giggling even as I write the review!

Author: Lee Newman is a comic guy, having produced the highly entertaining series Burdened Vessel and working with the team at Swampfox Media.  He is also the author of Hollis Magoo and the Hot Air Balloon and you can see lots of his fun short stories for free on Figment. Currently Creepy Kitchen is available in PDF but hopefully he will have physical copies soon!
Continue Reading...

Collin's Corner: Mrs. Piggle-Wiggle by Betty MacDonals


Paperback144 pages
Published June 3rd 1994 by HarperCollins (first published 1947)

Genre: Children Chapter Book

Synopsis: Mrs.Piggle-Wiggle is a funny little woman who has very long hair, loves children and lives in a house she had built upside down. She wanted it built upside down because when she was a little girl she wondered what it would be like to live in an upside down house. She had the baths and kitchen put in the correct way but everything else is upside down. The chandelier in the dining room is imagined to be a fire by all the children. The children of the neighborhood love to go to her house and play because she has a child-like personality and a big imagination that the children thrive and respond to. She is also the woman everyone calls on for parenting questions. She has a creative cure for all the problems the children have. Here is a list of some of her cures: The Won't-Pick-Up-Toys Cure, The Answer-Backer Cure, The Selfishness Cure, The Radish Cure, The Never-Want-To-Go-To-Bedders Cure, The Slow-Eater-Tiny-Bite-Taker Cure, and The Fighter-Quarrelers Cure. This book was first published in 1947 and it is fairly obvious in the way people lived in the story, to me. My kids didn't notice anything nor ask any questions. :)

My Thoughts: This was a fun read. After each chapter Collin and I took some time to discuss the choices the children were making and if he ever does, then the consequences Mrs. Piggle-Wiggle came up with for the children and what consequences would work in our home. It was really very fun. Collin squealed, "May we please read Mrs. Piggle-Wiggle today?" Really, how can a mom possibly say no to that? My 4 year old daughter even joined in our readings. They were fun to listen to for her as well. My son said that he gives this book five stars because it was so fun and I must say, I agree with him, too. :)
Continue Reading...

Monday, September 24, 2012

Matched by Ally Condi

Good news!! My semester is over and I get to read fun books again!! Hooray!! Bad news is that my new semester starts in a week so I'm trying to read as many books as I can. hehe! ;)

Genre: Young Adult, Science Fiction, Dystopia

Synopsis/Review: The society in this book reminds me a lot of The Giver by Lois Lowry. The society has completely taken away all types of agency and independence. No one has a chance to learn who they are by breaking out of the "norm" because there is nothing but "norm". If you don't fit in then you are transferred somewhere else. They watch everything you do, even monitor your dreams. At the age of 17 you are matched with the person you are going to marry. Matched begins on the night of Cassia's matching. She is surprisingly matched with her best friend (most are matched with people from other cities whom they have never met) Xander. She is given the microcard with the dating rules and info on Xander but when it displays the face of her match she sees a different face. Not Xander's, but Ky's! Another young man from her area who has been marked for a crime his father committed and is banned from ever being married or having any type of fulfilling life. Even his career the society has chosen for him is basically a dishwasher. That is all he will be. As Cassia begins to pay attention to Ky and the way his life is handled because of decisions of other people, she begins questioning the society and the importance of having a choice.

This is another love triangle young adult novel. It is fun though because of the society. It adds a new depth to it that most of the other young adult love triangle novels lack. The author uses a lot of description in her writing as well which is really fun. It is written in first person, present tense. Anytime a book is written in present tense instead of past tense it takes me a couple of chapters to get used to. I'm not really sure why. Overall, this was a fun book!! The ending bugged me because it didn't end how I wanted it to but thankfully, I waited long enough to start it that the second book is out and the third one will be out in November. Woot!! I'll have to get my hands on the next one soon. ;)



Rating: **** Four Stars

Author: Ally Condie received a degree in English Teaching from Brigham Young University and spent a number of years teaching high school English in Utah and in upstate New York. She lives with her husband and three sons outside of Salt Lake City, Utah.











Continue Reading...

Wednesday, August 29, 2012

Lust, Money & Murder Book 1 Lust by Mike Wells


This guest post is by Heidi Angell, author of Creative Exercises to Inspire and Royal Prince Vince. For more on Heidi, visit her website at http://angellslife.com/

Genre:  Crime, Thriller, Romance

Synopsis: Lust introduces (I think) the big plot of the series with a little teaser, then spends the rest of the book giving us the background story of Secret Service Agent Elaine Brogan, why she became an agent, how she became an agent, and how becoming an agent led her to fall in love.

My Thoughts: This is really hard, because I have A LOT of thoughts about this book... unfortunately most of them are from an author's perspective. So, I am going to (try to) take a step back and go at this from a readers perspective. As a reader, I was really engaged with the opening (I believe he called it a prologue, and prologue it really was! That story I want to read!!) Then chapter one went from being a crime thriller, to really feeling more like a drama. Maybe you could even call it chick lit on the dark side. For me it was blah, blah, blah, poor Elaine. It felt like a Lifetime movie. (Don't get me wrong, I like some of those movies, sometimes. But I don't like reading lifetime movies, I like watching them!) As a reader, I did not like feeling that I was baited and switched. Prologue: awesome set up for a crime novel. Rest of book one: Lets get to know Elaine. Also (and mind you, this will probably put me in the minority compared to most readers) I didn't really like Elaine. I could not relate to her. She is the reason that I do not like to read books from the female perspective. Mad props to Mike from attempting that gender jump. For a lot of girls, maybe it will ring true, but since I'm not like most girls, it didn't work. My final complaint is that the book just ended.... the story didn't resolve at all. It felt more like the old-school serials in the newspapers, than a book in a series. I felt cheated... which really sucks because I got the book for free.

All that being said, Wells has a strong narrative. The book is grammatically sound, the details are realistic. I'm guessing he did some research into counterfeiting. If not, then he sold the plausibility of the information provided. He went into intricate details about applying for Secret Service that I found more interesting than the rest of the story. If you like The author Sandra Brown, and her typical female leads, then you may very well enjoy this. I might suggest that rather than buy this copy, you opt for the all three books in one that is currently available on Amazon.

I will be posting a review of the book from my own blog, http://anangellslife.blogspot.com/ if you want to know more on what I thought about the story!!


About the Author: Well, after about 20 minutes of research on-line, I can tell Mike Wells is a very private man! All sources say that he is a teacher in the creative writing department at Oxford, and a best-selling thriller and suspense writer. I did read a couple of his interviews and he is pretty witty and willing to talk about writing and his books, though he does not talk about his personal life at all. Despite my lack of interest in his stories, I am absolutely intrigued by his complete and utter privacy!! You can check out his blog at http://www.thegreenwater.com/ and one of his interviews that I liked best at http://www.books-writing.com/interview-with-author-mike-wells/

Rating: *** Three out of five stars
Continue Reading...

Tuesday, August 7, 2012

Angels and Warriors The Awakening by Dawn Tevy

This guest post is by Heidi Angell, author of Creative Exercises to Inspire and Royal Prince Vince. For more on Heidi, visit her website at http://angellslife.com/

Genre: Fantasy

Synopsis: Angels and Warriors The Awakening is the first book in a fantasy series following Princess Tynae as she finds her entire world turned upside down when Arona, a villainous charge of Tynae's father, plots her assassination. In Tynae's flight from death, she finds herself rescued by Prince Béo of the Greer, a sea-living mythical people. She discovers that she is a special being who will directly effect the outcome of the major battle of good and evil raging in the world.

My Thoughts: I absolutely love this book and am eagerly awaiting the rest in the series! I have a personal attachment to this book, because I helped Dawn with editing this story. I love Tynae! She is so real, despite the fact that this is a fantasy. I could relate to her shock at discovering her destiny. Her thought processes are reasonable and realistic. The passion and the emotional responses are downright visceral. Dawn has a way of painting with words, very reminiscent of Dickens (though not so dry!) Also, if you buy the book from Dawn's Website, the first 100 buyers get some awesome extra goodies, including an autographed copy!

This is a great book for older teens and adults. There is very little language, the violence is more emotional than detailed descriptions, and the romance is done tastefully.

About the Author: This is Dawn's first book, and she has worked very hard to produce a quality, independently published masterpiece. She is a very busy young woman. She runs a blog, has a blog talk show, and is eagerly working on the next books in the Angels and Warriors series!

Rating **** Four out of five stars
Continue Reading...

Monday, July 9, 2012

Kids Korner: Frankenstein by Mary Shelley

Genre: Fiction/Suspense/Horror

Synopsis: A very smart college student named, Victor Frankenstein, has this amazing idea to create life. So, by attaching body parts from the dead that he scavenged from graveyards he creates a.... monster? Well, that's what everyone thinks. He's hideous and the immediate reaction from everyone is fear and hatred. The creature only wants to feel loved. The hate he receives in return for his kind actions is enough to turn anyone in to a murderous monster.

Our Thoughts: Surprisingly, my children really liked this story. Often my four year old was the one who wanted me to keep reading. We'd read four or more chapters a night because of her. ;) There is murder in the story so you'll have to decide for yourself if you want your child reading that. It gave us lots of opportunities to discuss judgment and how important it is to get to know someone before we decide if we're going to be friends with them or not. This story really has a great message of a man who just wants to be a friend and feel love but because people don't like his looks he can't have that love and acceptance that he is in search for. My kids did not like the ending or several parts throughout. By the end of the book my six year old son was SO angry at the monster and at Frankenstein. I kept having to remind him that it is fictional. haha! So, there are intense emotions in this book so take that into account when you decide if this would be an appropriate book for your child to read.

Author: (info from Google)
Mary Shelley was an English novelist, short story writer, dramatist, essayist, biographer, and travel writer, best known for her Gothic novel Frankenstein: or, The Modern Prometheus. Wikipedia
Born: August 30, 1797, London
Died: February 1, 1851, Bournemouth

Rating: My kids had a hard time with rating it. They said it was a really good book and they want to give it 5 stars but because of all the sad parts in it they didn't like it as much so it should get 4 stars. But then, my son said, "No, it was still really good with the sad parts. Give if 5." LOL! So.... We'll go with 4.5 Stars!! :) hehe!
Continue Reading...

Saturday, July 7, 2012

Destined by Aprilynne Pike

  • Reading level: Ages 13 and up
  • Hardcover: 320 pages
  • Publisher: HarperTeen (May 1, 2012)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0061668125
  • ISBN-13: 978-0061668128
WARNING: This is a Spoiler if you have not read the other 3 books of the Laural series.  For a review on the other three then click here. If you have not read those three first then do not read this review. :)

Genre: Young Adult, Fantasy - Romance

Synopsis: Book three ended in a very bad spot, Luki is captured and they discovered she is a Winter Faerie... the strongest and rarest of all fae. Laurel and her friends must figure out what to do with her. When things don't go quite as planned, Avalon is in danger and Laurel, Tamani, Chelsea, and David are their only hope. Okay, that's kind of all I can say with giving away any spoilers.... trust me, this is hard. :)

My Thoughts: I know, being a Laural Series fan, it took me a really long time to finally get to this book. I just had so many other books that I needed to read. I finally could take it no longer and bought this book. Of course, I had to re-read the previous 3 so that I would know exactly what was happening. This book was just as good as the other three in the series and Pike was able to wrap up all the loose ends. She did leave it open for another story (oh, I hope she does!) or you get to use your imagination and figure it out yourself. I know that doesn't really make sense -- wrapped up loose ends but left it open too but, trust me. She did! Read it and you'll get it.
The biggest question I and most of my friends had was, "Does she choose David or Tamani?" I loved both of the guys but, I won't tell you who she ended up with. hehe!
The first thing I noticed about this book is the beautiful cover. I just love it! I loved re-reading the previous three books. I was able to see the amazing growth in the characters throughout the series. I love that they didn't just stay the same through out. They grew and evolved and learned from their experiences. The characters at the end of book four were not the same as the characters at the beginning of Wings. This book made me laugh and cry. It was such an emotional ride but still amazing. The story is just amazing! The writing is very simple and there is a lot of mushy romance stuff in it but the story is just so awesome that I am able to look over those. I thoroughly enjoyed this series and was sad to finish and end my adventures in Avalon.
Author: (from Goodreads) Aprilynne Pike has been spinning faerie stories since she was a child with a hyper-active imagination. At the age of twenty she received her BA in Creative Writing from Lewis-Clark State College in Lewiston, Idaho. When not writing, Aprilynne can usually be found at the gym; she also enjoys singing, acting, reading, and working with pregnant moms as a childbirth educator and doula. Aprilynne currently lives with her husband and three kids in Utah, and dreams of warmer climates.


Rating: ***** Five Stars

Purchase Book: Click on link (hover for details)

 
Destined (Wings)

Continue Reading...

Sunday, June 24, 2012

Eutopia: The Discovery by Kathy Motlagh

Genre: Children, Fantasy, Fiction

Synopsis: A mythical world is ruined and all the virtue guardians fall asleep from a poison that is released. The creatures and plants are killed and the world is destroyed. The task is then given to three Earth children to awaken all the virtue guardians and find the virtue stones by living the virtues and using the gifts given to them by Hermes, the leader of the guardians.

My Thoughts: This was an interesting story. The writing isn't my favorite -- I have a lot of questions after reading it that were not answered. The book also ends with the foreboding words of "To Be Continued". It has a good message though and one that should be taught to children today.

 Author: (info from insert author sent) Kathy Motlagh is the writer and creative force behind the Eutopia book series and products, and managing director of Think Virtues. Motlagh, a graduate of the Art Institute of Chicago, has taught art at the Montessori School of North Hoffman for the past twelve years and been an active board member of the school since its inception twenty years ago. Motlagh's business experience includes eighteen years in the mortgage banking industry, where she has been featured in business publications as one of the top female financiers in the country. Motlagh resides in Chicago and involves her family, including her sic and seven year old sons, in community service and fund raising activities for many non-profit organizations and causes. Check out her facebook page here https://www.facebook.com/kathymotlagh

Virtues: What virtues are included in this book?  Hope, peace, enthusiasm, cleanliness, honesty, forgiveness, love, grace, courtesy, helpfulness, empathy, and humility.
Continue Reading...

Kids Korner: A Dog's Life: Autobiography of a Stray by Ann M. Martin

  • Reading level: Ages 9 and up
  • Paperback: 192 pages
  • Publisher: Scholastic Paperbacks (January 1, 2007)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0439717000
  • ISBN-13: 978-0439717007

Genre: Children, Realistic Fiction

Synopsis: This story is written from the view point of the dog, years later looking back on her life. The reader starts following her as a puppy and it's all given from the view point of the dog and she loses family members, tackles starvation, packs of vicious dogs, cars, and the ultimate enemy --- human beings.

Our thoughts: My children decided this was a riveting journey as they followed the life of this poor dog. Parts of it made the kids very sad and other parts made them to be very happy. They loved this book and moaned any time we had to stop and do other things in our life. Her name changes several times throughout her life depending on who she lives with. She started off as Squirrel though. It's the name her mother gave her. It is an emotional journey for children though... be warned.

Author:  (info from Goodreads) Ann Matthews Martin was born on August 12, 1955. She grew up in Princeton, New Jersey, with her parents and her younger sister, Jane. After graduating from Smith College, Ann became a teacher and then an editor of children's books. She's now a full-time writer.

Ann gets the ideas for her books from many different places. Some are based on personal experiences, while others are based on childhood memories and feelings. Many are written about contemporary problems or events. All of Ann's characters, even the members of the Baby-sitters Club, are made up. But many of her characters are based on real people. Sometimes Ann names her characters after people she knows, and other times she simply chooses names that she likes.

Ann has always enjoyed writing. Even before she was old enough to write, she would dictate stories to her mother to write down for her. Some of her favorite authors at that time were Lewis Carroll, P. L. Travers, Hugh Lofting, Astrid Lindgren, and Roald Dahl. They inspired her to become a writer herself.

Since ending the BSC series in 2000, Ann’s writing has concentrated on single novels, many of which are set in the 1960s.

After living in New York City for many years, Ann moved to the Hudson Valley in upstate New York where she now lives with her dog, Sadie, and her cats, Gussie, Willy and Woody. Her hobbies are reading, sewing, and needlework. Her favorite thing to do is to make clothes for children. 



For more info on Ann Martin visit her websites http://us.macmillan.com/author/annmmartin and http://www.scholastic.com/annmartin/


Rating: According to my 6 and 4 year old -- ***** Five Stars

To purchase book click here (hover for details):


 A Dog's Life: Autobiography of a Stray

Continue Reading...

Saturday, May 12, 2012

Kids' Korner: Stage Fright by Meg Cabot

  • Reading level: Ages 8 and up
  • Paperback: 240 pages
  • Publisher: Scholastic Inc.; Reprint edition (August 1, 2010)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0545040469
  • ISBN-13: 978-0545040464

Genre: Children's Chapter Book - Fiction

Synopsis: (from Goodreads) Mrs. Hunter's fourth grade class is putting on a play. But Allie's theatrical hopes are crushed when she's not cast as the princess. Instead, she's cast as the evil queen. But as opening night approaches, Allie learns it's not the size of the part, it's the size of the heart that really matters.

My Thoughts: Allie Finkle is a typical girl and my kids thought she was awesome!! :) Cheyenne is a classmate of Allie's and is a complete brat. As the reader continues reading it's easy to see why. She has no rules and no consequences in her family life. I was able to stop a few times and discuss this with my kids. They ended up thanking me for providing rules and consequences. I thought that was really funny coming from my four and six year old. Cheyenne was a perfect example of the entitlement issues seen in today's children and I strive not to allow that to happen to my children. I am straying.... I just thought this book provided a great learning experience that I did not expect. Each time I had to stop reading my kids were angry at me for several minutes because they wanted to continue reading. They never wanted to stop. hehe! This one was a big hit for my kids!! :) I loved the subtle messages and lessons it had throughout and the fun storyline.

Author:
Meg Cabot is a #1 New York Times bestselling author of books for both adults and tweens/teens. Born and raised in Bloomington, Indiana, Meg also lived in Grenoble, France and Carmel, California (the setting for her bestselling Mediator series) before moving to New York City after graduating with a bachelor’s degree in fine arts from Indiana University.
After working for ten years as an assistant residence hall director at New York University (an experience from which she occasionally draws inspiration for her Heather Wells mystery series—two new books in the series will be out in 2012 and 2013), Meg wrote the Princess Diaries series, which was made into two hit movies by Disney, sold over 16 million copies, and has been translated into 38 languages.
Meg also wrote the 1-800-Where-R-You? series (which has been reprinted under the title Vanished and was made into the Lifetime series called Missing), as well as numerous other award-winning, best-selling stand-alone books and series, including All-American Girl and Avalon High (on which an original Disney Channel movie was based), and several books told entirely in emails and text messages (Boy Next Door/Boy Meets Girl/Every Boy’s Got One).
Meg’s newest series include the tween hit Allie Finkle’s Rules for Girls, the YA trilogy Airhead, and Abandon, the first book in a new paranormal series for young adult readers (the sequel, Underworld, will be in US stores in spring 2012). Insatiable, Meg’s first paranormal romance for adult readers, was followed by a sequel, Overbite, in July 2011.
Meg Cabot (her last name rhymes with habit, as in “her books can be habit forming”) currently lives in Key West with her husband and two cats.

This info came from Meg Cabot's website.

Rating: ***** Five Stars

For Purchase:  Stage Fright (Allie Finkle's Rules for Girls, Book 4)
Continue Reading...

Thursday, May 10, 2012

Percy Jackson and the Lightning Thief by Rick Riordan

This guest post is by Heidi Angell, author of Creative Exercises to Inspire and Royal Prince Vince. For more on Heidi, visit her website at http://angellslife.com/

Genre: Mid-grade, Urban Fantasy

Synopsis: The Lightning Thief introduces us to Percy Jackson, a young man who would typically be labeled a trouble maker. Percy has bad grades, suffers from ADHD, and has been kicked out of more schools than can be counted. But he has a mother who loves him and tries to assure him that he is worth more than anything to her, no matter what the world and his step-dad, smelly Gabe, think. Come to find out, Percy is pretty valuable. He is a demi-god, or half-blood, and all the trouble he has had is because of his unique gifts bestowed upon him by his father, a Greek god. He finds this out about the time that his mother disappears after being attacked by the minotaur. Then he gets sent on a quest to stop the gods from starting what would amount to the Apocalypse because they act like siblings. Fun stuff.

Review: I actually read Percy Jackson when the first movie was just coming out. This was my fix to fill the void of Harry Potter. I enjoyed it well enough, as it played on one of my oldest loves, Greek Mythology. But I recently re-read it with my kids. That was a hard decision for me. My oldest is ten, my youngest seven. I wasn't sure if they were ready for this. We had only just started reading Harry Potter and that was a bit scary for them. But my eldest was having trouble in school, was getting bullied and was developing a nasty chip on his shoulder. I originally started out reading it with him because he was frustrated how long it was taking to read Harry Potter. (His brother's attention span is shorter, so we are lucky to get through a chapter a night.)

I was nervous, but I needed him to have positive role models. He is a super smart kid, but has had so much pressure put on him to succeed that he has sort of given up in school. It hurts to be teased for being so smart. I thought it would be good for us to bond over this in the afternoons, while the family read HP together at night. Next thing I know poor Harry Potter has been abandoned and both my children are avid for chapter after chapter of Percy Jackson. I liked the book before, but watching my children's reactions has given me a whole new level of appreciation. They cry when Percy loses his mom. They are interrupting at every turn, trying to guess what will happen next. One chapter a night is not enough. And they want to know "why" about every hard issue! It has led to some great discussions!

About the Author:  Rick is an English teacher, who started out writing adult fiction. He wrote the Percy Jackson Story as a bedtime story for his son. There are Seven books in the Percy Jackson Series. Riordan then went on to publish two other wildly popular mid-grade series, The Kane Chronicles (currently on book three), and The Heroes of Olympus (currently on book four). He has won such great literary awards as the Edgar,  the Anthony and the Shamus. To learn more about Rick Riordan and his books, please visit his website.

Rating: **** Four out of five stars!

Continue Reading...

Saturday, May 5, 2012

Kids Korner: Funny Things I Heard At The Bus Stop: The Complete Collection by Angela Giroux

  • File Size: 265 KB
  • Print Length: 118 pages
  • Simultaneous Device Usage: Unlimited
  • Publisher: Red Alien Media (February 29, 2012)
  • Sold by: Amazon Digital Services
  • Language: English
  • ASIN: B007FT5086

Genre: Children's Fiction/Chapter Book

Synopsis: (from Goodreads) As my friends and I walk to the bus stop, we do lots of things to make the walk more fun. We have snowball fights in the winter. We throw acorns at the squirrels. We sing songs. We race to the stop sign. And we tell stories. Lots of stories.
Continue Reading...

Thursday, May 3, 2012

Pathfinder by Orson Scott Card

This guest post is by Heidi Angell, author of Creative Exercises to Inspire and Royal Prince Vince. For more on Heidi, visit her website at http://angellslife.com/

 Genre: Science Fiction

Synposis: This is sort of two stories interwoven, but seemingly separate until the very end. The main story follows a young boy named Rigg who was raised as a trapper by his father. His father is his educator and teaches him much more than what Rigg thinks is important to be a trapper. When his father dies in the forest, Rigg's life is sent on a new journey in which he learns why his father taught him all the lessons he had taught. This part of the tale feels more like fantasy, taking place in the past. Rigg has "special powers" and stumbles upon others who have special powers as well. The world they live in, Garden, is a pre-indsutrial revolutionized society, and he spends a lot of time walking.

The second story being told, follows Ram, a pilot on a starship sent to colonize other worlds. This is a much smaller bit of the story, usually only a page or two at the beginning of some chapters. It seems to have no relevance to Rigg's story and is much more clearly sci-fi in nature.  When the two stories converge, a whole new respect for Card's writing is achieved!

Review: Another brilliant, multifaceted story that Card shares with us. The only thing I didn't like about it was that I started it shortly after reading Lost Gate, hoping that it was a sequel. Sometimes it is not clear through the course of the story when a book is a sequel for Card. Discarding the second story, I really was thinking it might be a sort of prequel to Lost gate. It has nothing to do with Lost Gate. As long as you know that going in, I can't imagine there being any complaints! I now have second books to two series to anticipate!!

Author: Orson Scott Card is a prolific author and college professor. Most famous for writing the Ender series, (which is currently being made into a movie!) he has also created several brilliant fantasy stories including the Alvin Maker Series. The author of over thirty novels, Card is also a professor at Southern Virginia University, has written many articles for several different magazines and newspapers,  writes critiques and offers writing lessons on his website. He lives with his family in Raleigh, NC.  To learn more about Card, visit his official web page at http://www.hatrack.com/index.shtml.

Rating **** four out of five stars

Continue Reading...

Monday, April 30, 2012

Parenting with Love & Logic by Foster Cline, MD and Jim Fay


  • Hardcover: 272 pages
  • Publisher: NavPress Publishing; Rev Upd edition (April 19, 2006)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1576839540
  • ISBN-13: 978-1576839546

Genre: Parenting

Synopsis: Psychiatrist Cline and educator Fay's "Love and Logic" parenting method advocates raising responsible children through practice. "Helicopter" parents hover around their children while "drill sergeant" parents give orders to theirs, they claim. Neither of these styles permits children to learn how to make choices and learn from the consequences. The result is that as early as adolescence these children too often make bad decisions. In the context of a healthy, loving relationship, "Love and Logic" parents teach their children responsibility and the logic of life by solving their own problems, providing skills for coping in the real world. After laying out the principles of "Love and Logic," the authors provide "parenting pearls," which are strategies for applying the method to actual situations such as back-seat battles in the car, homework, and keeping bedrooms clean. The narration, performed by Tim Kenney and Bert Gurule, is clear and energetic. This is an upbeat and sensible approach to child rearing that will be popular in public libraries.

Continue Reading...

Thursday, April 26, 2012

The 5,000 Year Leap By W. Cleon Skousen

This guest post is by Heidi Angell, author of Creative Exercises to Inspire and Royal Prince Vince. For more on Heidi, visit her website at http://angellslife.com/

 Genre: Nonfiction, History, Politics


Synopsis: The 5,000 year Leap reviews the constitution of the the United States, the principles upon which it was based, how those principles allowed the world to make more progress in the last 200 odd years than humanity had made in the previous 5,000 year, and how if we do not continue to cling to those precepts, our society will backslide. The author has a wealth of quotes not only from the Founding Fathers and Americans, but also from great historical figures such as Charles de Montesquieu, John Locke (not the mystery writer, the political writer who composed the Questions Concerning the Laws of Nature) Aristotle, and other great philosophers and political writers of their times.

Review: The book is a very fascinating and in-depth review of the constitution, the influences of the time that helped to shape the Founding Father's thoughts as they wrote it, and quotes from the Founding Fathers to clarify, confirm, and warn Americans of their belief in the importance of maintaining the basic principles of the Constitution. The author rides a very fine line of guiding Americans in their implied responsibilities with the constitution, warning of the dangers of our not remaining vigilant in protecting the rights established for us through the constitution. It is, as one review on Amazon pointed out, "an incredible book that should be read by all Americans." (S. Peek, Amazon.com) But I would take it one step further, and say that this is a book that should be read by anyone who believes in freedom, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness, and wishes to protect their own freedoms in the countries in which they live. It is also a book which I feel is important to re-read as often as necessary to keep these precepts fresh in our minds. I do not know if I agree with everything the author says, but as a whole, this book is brilliant and really hit home for me!

As we enter yet another election year, I feel that it is more important than ever for people to read (or re-read, as the case may be) this book and consider these principles and take a close look at who we are voting for. We need to take our duties seriously, if we wish to maintain our freedoms. An educated people is a happy people, and sadly as Americans we have let our political education slip, not studying our candidates and their policies before we elect them. I am not promoting one candidate or another, and neither does this book. That is what I love about it. The point is not "who is right, the Republicans or the Democrats?" The point is that we as a people need to be vigilant in protecting our rights to "life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness!"


Author: (Information obtained from W. Cleon Skousen's page on Amazon.com and from wikipedia) W. Cleon Skousen (January 20, 1913 – January 9, 2006) was a popular author, speaker and teacher who lectured in every state and province in North America, and in more than 60 countries world-wide. He was a student of history and a scholar of law, specializing in the principles of Freedom, the U.S. Constitution, economics, and ancient history and scriptures.

He was invited to write a new constitution for Canada and the proposed United States of Latin America, and he published a model constitution that could be adopted by nations everywhere. He was a prolific writer and produced three national best sellers, The Naked Communist, The Naked Capitalist, and The Five Thousand Year Leap. Eight of his books were used as college texts, and several were translated and published in other countries.

Dr. Skousen was born in Canada, and returned to the U.S. with his family at age ten. He spent two years in Mexico, two years in England, graduated from San Bernardino College in California, and received his juris doctor degree from George Washington University Law School.
 He believed knowledge and understanding were key to maintaining a free country, and spent his entire adult life opening up complex issues for deeper understanding by students and audiences all around the world.

Mr. Skousen and his wife, Jewel Pitcher, are the parents of eight children, 50 grandchildren, and more than 120 great-grandchildren.

Rating **** Four out of Five Stars

Continue Reading...

Tuesday, April 24, 2012

Espionage by A.L. Sowards

Title: Espionage
Author: A.L. Sowards
Publisher: Covenant Communications
Date Released: March 2012
Genre: LDS Historical Fiction

Author's Book Description: France, 1944: Nobody expects Peter Eddy to survive his first commando mission—to retrieve a code book stolen by the Nazis—so when he does come back alive, his success is rewarded with an even more daunting assignment. Partnered with French Resistance leader Jacques Olivier, Eddy must identify which of three Allied contacts in Calais is a double agent and use the traitor to help implement a strategic Allied diversion that might win the war. Eddy and Olivier secretly cross the English Channel to confront their suspects one at a time, but what appears to be a clean assignment soon turns disastrous, and a shocking betrayal leaves Eddy in the grip of the Gestapo. With the courageous aid of Olivier and his sister, Genevieve, Eddy evades his captors with a dangerous escape plan. But as the Allied invasion approaches, treachery in the least likely places leads to fresh graves in the bloodied European soil—and only the power of loyalty and love can transform tragic endings into new beginnings.

Continue Reading...

Monday, April 16, 2012

Taste Reveal!!!

This book goes on sale today and after reading all of the information on it, I cannot wait to get my hands on a copy myself!! Who wants to play a game? Somewhere in my post is a link that will lead you to an extra excerpt that goes live today. Where could it be? Well, that's the fun of it! You get to find it!! Good luck! Let me know if you do and if you think you'll be reading Taste!! =o)

Blurb:
At Barinkoff Academy, there's only one rule: no students on campus after curfew. Phoenix McKay soon finds out why when she is left behind at sunset. A group calling themselves night students threaten to taste her flesh until she is saved by a mysterious, alluring boy. With his pale skin, dark eyes, and mesmerizing voice, Demitri is both irresistible and impenetrable. He warns her to stay away from his dangerous world of flesh eaters. Unfortunately, the gorgeous and playful Luka has other plans.

When Phoenix is caught between her physical and her emotional attraction, she becomes the keeper of a deadly secret that will rock the foundations of an ancient civilization living beneath Barinkoff Academy. Phoenix doesn’t realize until it is too late that the closer she gets to both Demitri and Luka the more she is plunging them all into a centuries old feud.

Continue Reading...

Thursday, April 12, 2012

Little Women by Louisa May Alcott

This guest post is by Heidi Angell, author of Creative Exercises to Inspire and Royal Prince Vince. For more on Heidi, visit her website at http://angellslife.com/


Genre: American Classical Fiction/ Coming of Age

Synopsis: Little Women follows the lives of the March sisters, Meg, Joe, Beth and Amy, as they grow into women. The story starts out with them being raised alone by their mother while their father is off fighting in the Civil War. There is a development of a close attachment each of the girls form with a neighbor boy, Laurie, who falls in love with Joe. Some heart wrenching love scenes which are clean all the same. It ends seeing them each off into marriage. The whole story consists of sharing silly stories, emotional stories, moral lessons each young woman has learned and ending with each of them married and "all grown up" with a less contrived "Happily Ever After" than Disney typically gives us!

Review: This is not the first time I have read Little Women, in fact I tried many times in my teens to read the story, but I always so loathed it because I couldn't help thinking how backwards these women were. Joe was scandalous for not being a proper lady (and sadly she was the one I related to the most). Each time I was left feeling bleh about the thing and wondering what was wrong with me for not enjoying such a classic. At about sixteen I had decided that it wasn't me who had the problem, it was that I could not relate to the story because I was a modern woman and let it go at that, vowing never to read the stupid thing again.

Then I got a Nook and found myself with very little money and a load of free books and went to town. Suddenly all I had left was Little Women. I figured what the heck, it was better than nothing, I was fairly sure. I was surprised how differently I felt about it this time. Now, having children, I can see the way I have tried to use some of Mrs. March's subtle techniques. Knowing other mothers, wanting a little girl, I found myself suddenly entrenched with their lives and wondering if I would have a Joe like me, or what would I do if I had an Amy! The things that seemed antiquated in my youth, now seemed nostalgic and charming. It is amazing how books change as we change! If you have read it before and weren't sure you cared for it, perhaps you should try it again!

 Author: Louisa May Alcott (November 29, 1832 – March 6, 1888) was an American author who also supported the abolitionist movement, the suffragettes movement, and never married or had children. Her first book, Hospital Sketches reflected her experiences as a hospital nurse during the Civil War. She is most notably famous for Little Women, which was loosely based on her experiences as a child. Little Women was followed up by Little Men and Joe's Boys.

Rating *** Three stars
Continue Reading...

Tuesday, April 3, 2012

Book Launch - The Most Important Catch




Today is the official launch of Jaclyn Hawkes' latest release
The Most Important Catch
An LDS fiction romance

Buy it and support a great cause!


Jaclyn will be launching The Most Important Catch on April 3rd. Both she and her publisher are going to donate 50% of the proceeds of all sales of this book from Amazon.com for that day—both e-books and paperbacks, to an account for Porter Hancock, her neighbor who was paralyzed from the neck down last October in a high school football game. You can read more about Porter at
www.helpporterhancock.bbnow.org/ or on Jacyln's blog at http://jaclynmhawkes.com/2012/03/launchfundraiser/.

Please help spread the word by posting about this on your blog, Facebook, Twitter, or other social networking sites.

And join us during the month of May for the book tour which will include several chances to win the book! (Click here for more details about the tour.)

About the Book

Run or die!

She knew too much, and she’d seen too much!

And the police refused to help.

Knowing that she was to be the next scheduled death, Kelly Campbell hid under head to toe black leather and a tinted motorcycle helmet and ran for her life.

When the weather turned cold, she turned south.

She ended up in North Carolina, home to one of the most famed and eligible NFL football stars in the whole league; only she didn’t know that. She thought he was a businessman.

Not being a huge fan, all she knew was that he was incredibly attractive, kind, generous, and that she was safe with him.

Or was she?

His brand of fame proved to be all but deadly, but his fame wasn’t nearly as lethal as his attraction. He kept her safe and protected. Except for her heart.

Click link below to purchase your own copy (hover for details)

e-book: The Most Important Catch

Paperback: The Most Important Catch (Volume 1)

I will be reviewing this book later but I wanted to get the news out so money can be raised for Porter Hancock sooner. :) I look forward to reading this book later!!! =o) 
Continue Reading...

Thursday, March 29, 2012

Charity Hopping Around the World Giveaway

This giveaways hop is hosted by I Am A Reader, Not a Writer, Reading Away the Days, and Reading a Little Bit of Everything. This one is a little bit different then other giveaways that I participate in because I get to start it off by bragging about my favorite charity.

Continue Reading...

The Lost Gate by Orson Scott Card

This guest post is by Heidi Angell, author of Creative Exercises to Inspire and Royal Prince Vince. For more on Heidi, visit her website at http://angellslife.com/

The Lost Gate is the beginning of a new series by Orson Scott Card, and I am super excited! In this thrilling new adventure, we meet Danny North. He is a young man from backwoods Virgina whose family lives in a compound, limits contact with other people, believes in killing off any young who are not good stock, and is severely inbred. They also have a cult-like belief that they are descended from gods and come from the planet Westil. Except it is all true.

Card takes on a fantastical tale that rivals Riordon's run of tales to explain ancient myths. Where as Riordon had separate tales to explain the different culture's gods, Card embraces an explanation for all the gods throughout history, focusing on the viking gods most heavily (as these are the gods Danny's family are descended from.) The North Family are the living descendents of the Norse gods, and not in the respect of a god mating with humans to create them. Nope, these guys are the real deal (hence the in-breeding!) When Danny doesn't show promise in magic, his family believes that he was not born with the gift, but early on we find out he is born with an even greater gift than they could have hoped. And because of that gift his family must kill him or end up at war with one of the other clans. Once again Card shows his mastery of using history (or in this case, legend) to weave a compelling tale for a modern era, and I cannot wait to read the next book in the series!!

Orson Scott Card is a prolific author and college professor. Most famous for writing the Ender series, (which is currently being made into a movie!) he has also created several brilliant fantasy stories including the Alvin Maker Series. The author of over thirty novels, Card is also a professor at Southern Virginia University, has written many articles for several different magazines and newspapers,  writes critiques and offers writing lessons on his website. He lives with his family in Raleigh, NC.  To learn more about Card, visit his official web page at http://www.hatrack.com/index.shtml.
Continue Reading...

Labels

1 Star 2 Stars 3 Stars 4 Star 5 Stars A. Demethius Jackson A.L. Sowards activity Adventure Alice Hoffman Ally Condie Alyson Noel Amanda Hocking Amanda McNeil Amish An Indian Andy Andrews Angela Giroux Aprilynne Pike Author Interview Banned Book Week Barbara Forte Abate Beth Wiseman Betsy Maestro Biography Brandon Sanderson C.S. Lewis Cassandra Clare Catherine Marshall Celia Rivenbark Celia Thomson Chick-Lit Children's Chapter Books Children's Graphic Novel Children's Picture Book Christian Christine's Reviews Christmas Cindy Woodsmall Classic Claudia Gray Collections Collin's Corner Daniel C. Tomas Dean Koontz Debra Sansing Woods Dennis L. McKiernan Desktop Books Dystopian educational Elizabeth Gilbert Ellen Meister Emma Donoghue Eric John Swanson Esphyr Slobodkina Essays Fairy Tales Fantasy Fiction Flashback Friday Frank Beddor Gail Carson Levine Gerard D. Webster Giveaways Guest Post Guest Reviewer Harper Lee Heather B. Moore Heidi Angell Heidi's Reviews Herman Melville Historical horror Howard Pyle Humor J.C. Allen James Alan Gardner James Lepore James Patterson James Tiptree Jr Janice Yates Jill Mansell Joanne Ryder John Perry John Steinbeck Jon S. Lewis Julie N. Ford Juvenile K.C. Grant Karen Kingsbury Kate DiCamillo Kathleen Y'Barbo Kay Lynn Mangum Kelly Armstrong Khaled Hosseini Kids Korner Kiersten White Know Me Better Kristen Heitzmann Larissa Hinton Laura Lippman LDS LDS Fiction Lewis Carroll Linda's Reviews Lisa McMann Lisa Patton Lois Lowry Louis Sachar Louise Armstrong Magic Realism Marie Ricks Marissa Meyer Mark Dunn Mark McKenna Mark Twain Mary Helen Stefaniak Maureen Johnson Meg Cabot Memoir Michael Grant Michael Mullin Mystery Nancy Campbell Allen Neal Shusterman non-fiction Novella Orson Scott Card Paranormal parenting parentingbb Paul's Review Peggy Orenstein Peter Leonard Phil Cantrill Poetry R. L. Lafevers Rachel Greer Religious Rhoden Richelle Mead Rick Riordan Roald Dahl Romance Salvatore Buttaci Sandy H. Steele Science Fiction Scott Westerfeld Self-help Serita Jakes Shannon Hale Short-Story Steampunk Stephen M. DeBock Stephen R. Lawhead Stephenie Meyer Sunday Says... Supernatural Susan Meissner Suspense Tamora Pierce Teresa M. Wilkins Tess Gallagher Thriller Tricia Springstubbs usborne Valorie Burton W.D. Newman Wanda Ga's We Both Read Winnie's Reviews Young Adult Zelda Fitzgerald

Flickr Gallery

Blog Archive

Blogroll

About