Monday, August 29, 2016

Review: The Couple Next Door

The Couple Next Door The Couple Next Door by Shari Lapena
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Secrets, secrets and more secrets. This book is full of them -- and twists. They all make for a book I could not put down.

Anne and Marco Conti are at a dinner party when their 6-month-old daughter Cora is kidnapped. About halfway through the book we find out who was involved in the kidnapping and why but, it also gets juicier as the culprit tries to keep the secret even though this person has a feeling people know.

The police are treating Anne and Marco as suspects and, as they are questioned numerous times, secret upon secret is revealed.

I'm not going to say any more about the story because I really don't want to spoil it. But, I will say ... This is a debut?!? Holy smokes, Shari Lapena, I wish you'd started writing sooner. Keep it up. I'm looking forward to the next one.

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Tuesday, August 23, 2016

The Widower's Wife by Cate Holahan
Harmony by Carolyn Parkhurst


These are two very different -- but very satisfying books.

You can listen to my interviews with both authors HERE.

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Review: Luckiest Girl Alive

Luckiest Girl Alive Luckiest Girl Alive by Jessica Knoll
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

I bought this book after I asked a book club full of fantastic members what they were reading. It didn't take me long to see why it's a great book club read. There are so many issues to discuss -- rape, date rape, consent, bullying, peer pressure, teacher/student relationships, friendship, and so much more.

The story is told from Ani's point of view and we learn very early on that something awful happened to her when she was 14 years old and going to a small private school near Philadelphia. Now 28 and a successful magazine editor, she's been asked to participate in a documentary about an incident at the school. We're led to believe -- or, at least I was -- it's about the incident involving Ani that we already know about. Turns out that it's not and the incident it is about is simply horrific and that -- not the first incident -- has had more of an effect on Ani's life.

One thing about her adult life is that she's engaged to a guy from -- as her mother would say -- a hoity toity family. But she's questioning whether he really is everything she ever wanted. She comes to what I believe is the perfect decision for the perfect reason.

I highly recommend this book, whether you belong to a book club or not.

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Monday, August 22, 2016

Review: Behind Closed Doors

Behind Closed Doors Behind Closed Doors by B.A. Paris
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

Psychological thrillers are my favorite kind of book and -- WOW! -- this one really did it for me. I do have to wonder, though, how the author came up with such a sick, twisted villain. Jack Angel is right up there with the worst of the worst of all time.

One of the things that makes him so bad -- and I'm not giving anything away but outing him as the bad guy. I got a Sleeping With the Enemy vibe very early on. -- is that he's so charming. George Clooney-esque, even. (You'll get it when you read it.)

It's hard to write much about the plot without giving a lot away, but I will say I hope everyone loves Millie -- Jack's sister-in-law with Downs Syndrome -- as much as I do. And, I hope the books gives everyone a lot of issues to discuss at book clubs or with friends -- things like spousal abuse, disabilities, mental illness, and more.

I highly recommend this book!

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Wednesday, August 17, 2016

Pitt-Bradford Announces Spectrum Series Offerings

The University of Pittsburgh at Bradford’s fall Spectrum arts series will offer area residents fine arts, funk and even horror. Spectrum is the university’s oldest art series. Artists are selected by Pitt-Bradford faculty to enhance the arts curriculum.

Events are open to the public and free unless otherwise noted. For more information or tickets, contact the Bromeley Family Theater box office at 814-362-5113 or www.upb.pitt.edu/TheArts.

 The first event of the season will be an art exhibition celebrating America’s National Parks Centennial by local artist Denise Drummond. The show will take place from Sept. 6 through Oct. 2 in the KOA Gallery in Blaisdell Hall. Gallery hours are from 8:30 a.m. to 6 p.m. Monday through Friday. A reception will take place at noon Sept. 9. Drummond will share a collection of drawings and paintings inspired by years of travel to the National Parks across the United States, from Acadia to the Redwoods to Florida’s Everglades. Drummond works in graphite and watercolor to create nature scenes and has a special love for national parks and wilderness areas.

 The first musical offering of the year will be a piano trio of Susan Waterbury, violin, Elizabeth Simkin, cello, and Miri Yampolsky, piano, at noon Sept. 23 in the Studio Theater in Blaisdell Hall. The program will showcase favorites from the heart of the classical repertoire.

  October will begin with a visit from unjustly imprisoned former death row exoneree Anthony Ray Hinton, who is one of the subjects of civil rights attorney Bryan Stevenson’s book “Just Mercy: A Story of Justice and Redemption.” Hinton’s story was also featured on the television show “60 Minutes.” “Just Mercy” will be read by students in freshman seminar, writing, criminal justice and economics classes at Pitt-Bradford. The book is the Bradford Area Public Library’s One Book Bradford selection as well. Hinton will speak at 7:30 p.m. Oct. 4 in the Bromeley Family Theater in Blaisdell Hall. 

Wyoming artist Rebecca G. Weed will open an art exhibition, “No Over Night Parking: A Field Guide,” with a reception at noon Oct. 7 in the KOA Art Gallery and KOA Speer Electronics Lobby in Blaisdell Hall. The exhibition will continue through Nov. 4. On Oct. 14, Family FUNKtion and the Sitar Jams, a trio of brothers on sitar, bass and drums, will bring a psychedelic musical experience to the studio theater at noon as the second installment in the Noon Tunes series. The Padmanabha brothers play a fusion of rock, funk and Indian classical and folk styles.

 During the Halloween season, Dr. Kevin Ewert, professor of theater, will direct “Apparition: An Uneasy Play of the Underknown,” a play of the horror genre by Anne Washburn. The student production will have four showings – three at 7:30 p.m. Oct. 27-29, and a special late-night 10:30 p.m. performance Oct. 28, all in the Studio Theater. The cost for the public is $6. The cost for all students is $2.

Writer Crystal Wilkinson (pictured), the author of “The Birds of Opulence,” “Blackberries, Blackberries” and “Water Street” will read from her work at noon Nov. 1 in the Mukaiyama University Room of the Frame-Westerberg Commons. Her short stories, poems and essays have appeared in numerous journals and anthologies, including most recently in the Oxford American and the Appalachian anthology “Walk Till the Dogs Get Mean.” She currently teaches at Berea College, where she is the Appalachian Writer in Residence.

 The final event of the semester will be a Noon Tunes holiday concert by the Vocal Arts ensemble at noon Dec. 6 in the KOA Speer Electronics Lobby. For disability needs related to Pitt-Bradford Arts events, contact the Office of Disability Resources at 814-362-7609 or clh71@pitt.edu.

Friday, August 5, 2016

Tami Hoag!

I get to add another best-selling author to the list of the amazing people I've had the pleasure of chatting with over the last few years.

You can browse through Tami's books here ...

Tami Hoag books on Amazon

... and listen for my interview with Tami Hoag after September 7!

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Review: The Little Paris Bookshop

The Little Paris Bookshop The Little Paris Bookshop by Nina George
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

If I could give this book more than five stars I would. I couldn't put it down, and didn't want it to end.

The story centers around Monsieur Perdu, who runs a bookstore on a barge on the Seine River in Paris, and considers himself a literary apothecary. How can you not love a book when the main character believes the right book can cure your ills -- and knows exactly what book you should read?

Ironically, though, Monsieur Perdu can't cure himself. His true love left him, leaving behind a letter which, after decades, he still has not opened.

Finally opening the letter sets Monsieur Perdu and a wacky (for the most part) cast of characters on a journey that will change all of their lives.

If you love books -- I mean really love books! -- you won't be disappointed with The Little Paris Bookshop

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Thursday, August 4, 2016

Book Explores AI, Theology

A St. Bonaventure University faculty member’s research on religious and ethical questions about artificial intelligence is the subject of a new book by a Spanish priest and educator.

“Anne Foerst: The Religious Dimension of the Search for Artificial Intelligence,” by Francisco José Génova Omedes, has been published in Spain.

The intersection of theology and artificial intelligence has been a lifelong research interest of Dr. Anne Foerst, an associate professor of computer science and director of the Individualized Major program at St. Bonaventure. Foerst, who’s also a theologian and an internationally known expert on human-robot interaction, is the author of “God in the Machine: What Robots Teach Us About God and Humanity,” a book that examines what robots can teach us about being human.

During a postdoctoral fellowship at Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), Foerst was a researcher at the institution’s Artificial Intelligence Laboratory and director of MIT’s God and Computers project, where she served as theological adviser to scientists who tried to build robots with social skills.

Génova’s analysis and book, based on Foerst’s time spent at MIT, looks at what challenges developments in artificial and robotic intelligence mean for theology.

He places technology in the center of what it means to be human from a philosophical and theological perspective and, in doing so, writes how AI and robotics were not born in the 20th century but are rooted in the origin itself of humankind. Génova also explores how many of the challenges theologians face today converge in the fields of AI and robotics.

“We are confronted with the fact that robots can have social skills,” said Foerst. “My research has focused on the question: Can robots be persons?”

Foerst hopes that readers of Génova's book will be “encouraged to think more profoundly about the relationship between us and the beings that share our life — especially the artificial ones.” She believes there is a need for theology that explains the realities that unfold in the boundary between faith and science.

When Génova began studying theology he had an engineering degree and was teaching electronics and electricity in a technical institute in Spain. As his theological studies progressed, he began connecting the fields of technology and theology. He was working on his master’s thesis about the relationship between theology and technology when he found references about Foerst and her theological approach to robotics and AI.

Later, when he was considering subjects for his doctoral thesis, he recalled Foerst’s work.

“Gradually I was forming the thought that … the fields of AI and robotics were a very important challenge to the future of humankind, and I was perceiving, too, the profound religious grounds that were present in all that… I could see the challenge to the idea of what means to be human,” Génova said.

He has since completed his doctorate at Facultat de Teologia de Catalunya (Catalunya Divinity School), and his thesis was published in July. Génova is now a Catholic priest in the Archdiocese of Zaragoza and chaplain of San Valero Foundation, a vocational institute and high school. In addition to his pastoral activities, he teaches electronics at San Valero Vocational Institute and religion at San Valero High School. He is also a professor of ecumenical theology at the Catholic Seminary of Zaragoza.

Thanks to Foerst, Génova said he “dared to introduce myself to the study of the challenges of AI and robotics so I could study their theological implications. Now I continue working on that, and I try to transmit the importance of all this for the future of humankind and religion, especially for the future of Christianity.”

“What I do appreciate about Francisco’s work is that he criticized me – in particular that my understanding of ‘personhood’ is too vague.’ There is nothing better than for a researcher to be challenged, that’s what we live for,” Foerst said.

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Good 'Til the Last Sentence

How often do you read a book that keeps you rapt until the very last sentence? I can't give an exact amount of time but I'm going to guess that happens every now and then, which isn't to say I don't enjoy the ends of books. It's just rare that I'm on the last page and there's actually more story to read.

With that said, how rare is it to read two books in less than a week that don't end until the very last sentence? (I know that sounds weird, but book nerds know what I mean.)

Linda Fairstein's "Killer Look" and Camilla Way's "Watching Edie" couldn't be more different, the stories held my attention during the entire length of each book. You can go to the previous two blog posts to read my review of the books. You can also go to http://wesb.com/on-demand to hear my interviews with both writers.

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Review: Watching Edie

Watching Edie Watching Edie by Camilla Way
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

What girl friends will do for -- and to -- each other is amazing. Camilla Way explores many aspects of female friendship as Edie and Heather tell their story from high school through their mid- to late thirties.

Edie tells the current story -- of her pregnancy by a married man; post partum depression; Heather showing up to help her; and more. Heather tells the story of their past and the circumstances leading up horrific event that kept them from speaking to each other and their family members for years.

Throughout Edie's telling of the story she references the horrific event, but never actually tells us what it is, or event gives a clue. I wondered what could be so awful to cause the damage and rifts it did. Once the secret was revealed, I got it, and understood why Way wrote it the way she did.

This is a gripping book that holds on 'til the very last sentence, which is surprising but very satisfying.

You can hear my conversation with Camilla Way at WESB.com/on-demand.



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Review: Killer Look

Killer Look Killer Look by Linda Fairstein
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

Linda Fairstein starts this book about three weeks after the last Alexandra Cooper books ends, which means Coop is still reeling from being kidnapped and ... Well, in case you didn't read the last one, I'll stop there. Anyway, she is suffering from PTSD and is also drinking more than her police detective/friend/boyfriend thinks is good for her. She's also on leave from the DA's office, which gives her too much time inside her own head.

But, thanks to an old high school friend who asks for a favor, she finds herself helping in the investigation of a high profile murder case involving a fashion industry icon.

One of the things I like about this book -- and all of Linda's books -- is the tour of New York City given by someone who's lived and worked there. She provides so much detail it's as close to being there as you're going to get.

This book will keep you guessing 'til the end -- And, oh, what an ending! I had 80 pages to go and still had no idea who the killer was. When I'm reading I like to guess, but I like it even more when I don't have a clue.

In a word, Killer Look is brilliant.

You can listen to my interview with Linda at WESB.com/on-demand.

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Monday, August 1, 2016

Coming Soon ...

Jane Green, Linda Fairstein, Carolyn Parkhurst, Camilla Way, and more.

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Learning About Compassion

Lara Naughton could have given up, shut herself off from the rest of the world when she was kidnapped and raped. She did not. What she did do is extraordinary. You can hear part of her story here: WESB.com.

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Friday, July 29, 2016

Children's Author/Illustrator at
Bradford Area Public Library

Don't miss author/illustrator Jennifer E. Morris!

Jennifer E. Morris on Amazon

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Look What I Got in the Mail!

It's Nancy McCabe's newest book!

I'm not only excited to read it, I'm excited to talk to her about it. I'll let you know when she'll be on LiveLine, and I'll also keep you updated on her book signing events throughout the region.

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It Took a Bullet

If you’re in or around Jamestown on Thursday, you may want to stop by the Prendergast Library for Claudia Bowker’s book signing. “It Took a Bullet” tells the story of Doris Butler, who transformed an elementary school into one of the highest performing schools in Nevada before getting shot by a distraught parent.

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Wednesday, July 20, 2016

What I'm Reading Now ...


This is my reading "list," but I'm actually not reading them all at the same time -- only four of them.

Think you can read them faster than I can? Follow the link to get the books, and then let me know how you did.

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Who Gets What and Why
By Alvin E. Roth

If you were ever confused about the economy and markets and what it all means, Nobel Prize winner Alvin Roth can help clear it all up.

Actually, he even found a way to make it fun for me during our interview, which you can find here: wesb.com/on-demand

Tuesday, July 19, 2016

Review: Guilty Minds

Guilty Minds Guilty Minds by Joseph Finder
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

It's hard to talk about this book without giving spoilers, but I will say it's about a Supreme Court Justice whose life is about to come crashing down around him if an online tabloid -- Slander Sheet -- runs with a story they have about him going to a prostitute three times. The Justice's powerful friend hires Nick Heller to get to the bottom of the story before it goes to print. He doesn't quite keep it from getting to print but, because of what he learned, Slander Sheet must take the story down and issue an apology.

As for getting to the bottom of it? Not even close!

You can hear my interview with Joseph Finder (and Ace Atkins) here: http://wesb.com/on-demandwesb.com/on-....

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Book Shots

I'm a big fan of James Patterson, in case you can't tell by this photo. And there are more Patterson books all over my apartment. Now, that includes books from the "Book Shots" collection, too.

I love Book Shots for so many reasons. Two of them are that nobody can say anymore that they don't have the time or money to read. (They're only about 4 bucks.)* With Alex Cross, for example, I didn't have to wait a whole year for the next book. It's a little fix -- or shot, if you will -- right when I start getting antsy waiting for the next one.

The only problem is that because they're a different size than other books, I may have to buy another bookshelf. Ah, book nerd problems.

James Patterson's Book Shots style=

*The library, people!

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Monday, July 18, 2016

Review: Siracusa

Siracusa Siracusa by Delia Ephron
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

I couldn't put this book down! I got attached to four of the five major characters and wanted to see where this story was taking them. And then it got really interesting when the fifth major character became a key player. Snow is the young daughter of Taylor and Finn, who are on vacation in Italy with Lizzie and Michael, and her actions drive the last third of the story.

We know from the beginning of the story that Finn and Lizzie used to be a couple, and that Michael is having an affair and plans to leave Lizzie. But he ends up falling in love with Lizzie all over again, which makes his girlfriend's Kath's surprise appearance even more awkward that it would have been had he not regained feelings for his wife.

Michael also develops an odd and confusing relationship with Snow. I don't mean odd and confusing to me. I mean to the other characters. The end of the story will really show how odd -- actually, more than odd -- Snow really is.

While a lot of the book is serious and looks deeply into the relationships of the four people (who tell their own stories in alternating, separate chapters) there is quite a bit of comedy as well, especially from Taylor who, God bless her, doesn't mean to be funny.

If I tried to get into the story's specifics I would be giving away to many of the fun and interesting parts. That's why I'm being rather vague. But if you want to hear Delia Ephron talk about it herself, you can go to WESB.com/on-demand and click on today's "LiveLine."

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Monday, July 11, 2016

Review: After Alice

After Alice After Alice by Gregory Maguire
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

This is such a fun book, but it also made me think about some serious issues.

One issue that really stuck out for me was that Lydia, Alice's 15-year-old sister, has a couple of problems she can't discuss with anyone. Their mother died recently and, Lydia knows, if her mother was still alive she would have all the answers she needed.

The story follows Ada, Alice's friend, as she falls down the rabbit hole and realizes that this must be where Alice is, and starts looking for her. She comes across some familiar characters -- the Cheshire Cat, the Mad Hatter, and Queen of Hearts, among others -- and they are just as wonderful as they were when Lewis Carroll created them and Wonderland 150 years ago.

Maguire's imagery is spectacular. It's rarely that I get totally lost in a book and feel as if I'm really in the place that's being described. Strange that it was fantasy land that swept me away.

The day after finishing the book I had the privilege of speaking with author Gregory Maguire. That was just as much fun as the book. You can find the interview here: http://yourbradfordradio.com/wesb/wp-content/uploads/sites/2/2015/01/LiveLine-07-11-16-Author-Gregory-Maguire-talks-about-his-book-After-Alice.mp3

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Sacred America, Sacred World
By Stephen Dinan

If we think the United States of America has gotten off track, and you want to know what we can do to get back on track this a book you need to read.

For more information you can go to Sacred America.net or Stephen Dinan.com

And, you can also listen to my chat with him here: http://wesb.com/on-demand. Click on the July 5 LiveLine.

Monday, July 4, 2016

What I'm Reading Now ...

I usually have more than one book going at a time. And sometimes I have even more than four going at a time. It just depends on what kind of mood I'm in and what I feel like reading.

I'll be speaking with two of these authors soon: One on Wednesday; the other next Tuesday. As always, I'm excited about the interviews.

I'm hoping that I am caught up enough at home and at work to keep up with Anne's Book Club because I really enjoy passing along news and information about all kinds of books, as well as information about authors and other book-related news.

Also coming up this month I have Delia Ephron (I already finished "Siracusa." Loved it!), Ace Atkins and Joseph Finder. Stay tuned!

By the way, here's part of what's been keep me so busy for the past three months. See that pile in the middle? The one with the Stephen King book in it? Those are the majority of the books I read from April through June. Add a few for the ones I gave away and the couple I borrowed from a friend.

Geraldine Brooks at Chautauqua

Did you miss lovely and talented Pulitzer Prize-winning author Geraldine Brooks during her visit to Chautauqua Institution last week?

I know this doesn't make up for missing her, and it certainly can't get your copy of her book signed for you, but maybe it'll ease the pain a little bit. Last fall, shortly after "The Secret Chord" was released, she was one of my special guests on LiveLine.

If you missed that, too, I can help you. Follow the link for my interview with Geraldine Brooks:

http://wesb.com/geraldine-brooks-the-secret-chord/

Chautauqua Institution photo

Friday, March 25, 2016

Review: "Most Blessed of the Patriarchs": Thomas Jefferson and the Empire of the Imagination

"Most Blessed of the Patriarchs": Thomas Jefferson and the Empire of the Imagination by Annette Gordon-Reed
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

If you're looking for a biography in the strictest sense of the word, this is not the book for you. But if you would like to delve deeper in the dichotomy that was Thomas Jefferson -- dig in!

It goes well beyond what we've read in history books, and devotes one of its three parts to the time he spent in Paris after his wife died.
The books also explores his views on, among other things, slavery and how he could write "all men are created equal" and justify having slaves himself.

Any history lover should like this book.

*I received this book as a Goodreads Giveaway in exchange for an honest review.*

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Monday, March 21, 2016

Review: The 14th Colony

The 14th Colony The 14th Colony by Steve Berry
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

In exchange for getting an ARC of this book in preparation for an author interview I agreed to not post a review until the book's release date. But I think a simple "WOW!" wouldn't be considered an actual review.

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Review: All Dressed in White

All Dressed in White All Dressed in White by Mary Higgins Clark
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

Adding new authors to my list of favorites is one of the exciting aspects of my life. More people on the list means more satisfying reads and less disappointment, especially if I’ve “discovered” an author who is a few books into a series because I have to catch up.

But sometimes I don’t want excitement. Sometimes I want to be in my most comfy pjs with my favorite tea and a warm blanket around my shoulders reading an author I know will deliver.

That’s Mary Higgins Clark. Reading her – after finding so many new people to read – is like coming home.

“All Dressed in White” is the second book in her “Under Suspicion” series written with Alafair Burke.

“Under Suspicion” is a TV show that’s something like a cross between “Unsolved Mysteries” and “Dateline.” Laurie Moran is the producer and, when the mother of the media-dubbed Runaway Bride shows up in her office, she’s intrigued but not quite sure the case fits their criteria. The show needs a crime to solve, not a search for a young woman with cold feet.

The mom eventually does convince Laurie that the case would be perfect for the show – after Laurie does a little sleuthing on her own.

During the filming of the show almost the entire wedding party – especially the almost-groom – and a photographer are considered suspects at one time or another. And for good reasons, not some contrived plot mover.

“I couldn’t turn the pages fast enough” has become such a cliché in book reviews but – I’m tellin’ ya! – the last hundred or so pages were enthralling and I couldn’t turn them fast enough.

After 40 years, Mary Higgins Clark has still got it.



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Thursday, March 10, 2016

Review: Ten Prayers That Changed the World

Ten Prayers That Changed the World Ten Prayers That Changed the World by Jean-Pierre Isbouts
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

You don't have to be religious, or even spiritual, to love this book. It's really a history lesson surrounded by 10 prayers just about everyone knows.

They include "The Prayer of St. Francis" (Make me an instrument of your peace ...) as well as prayers from Ghandi, George Washington, Mother Teresa, Martin Luther and even Jesus.

I'd recommend this book to anyone who wants to look at history from a different perspective.

I received a free copy of this book in preparation for an interview with the author.

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Review: Imbeciles: The Supreme Court, American Eugenics, and the Sterilization of Carrie Buck

Imbeciles: The Supreme Court, American Eugenics, and the Sterilization of Carrie Buck Imbeciles: The Supreme Court, American Eugenics, and the Sterilization of Carrie Buck by Adam Cohen
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

This is a fascinating book, not just for the Carrie Buck aspect of it, but for the interrelated history.

With the controversy and debates over immigration today, it's interesting to take a look back to the early 20th century when there was a move to keep Italians, eastern European Jews and other "undesirables" from entering the U.S. because they were inferior in a number of ways, and they may even manage to pollute the US gene pool.

Did you know that during the Nuremberg Trials the Nazis used policies in the US -- and the Carrie Buck case itself -- to justify their crimes?

And, unless you've done extensive research on him, throw out everything you think you know about Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr. This may make you think even more about how important the choice of a Supreme Court justice really is.

Adam Cohen explains these and many more related issues so well it's almost like reading a novel. It shines a light on a very dark time in US history that should be a must-read for people interested in history, and especially human rights.

I received a copy of this book from the publisher in preparation for an interview with the author.

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Wednesday, March 9, 2016

Review: The Love Song of Miss Queenie Hennessy

The Love Song of Miss Queenie Hennessy The Love Song of Miss Queenie Hennessy by Rachel Joyce
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

Sometimes I love a book. On rare occasions I fall in love with a book. "The Love Song of Miss Queenie Hennessy" is one of the rare books, and its characters will be with me for a long time.

It goes from being laugh-out-loud funny to tear-jerkingly sad -- sometimes on the same page! -- and everything in between as Queenie, who is dying of cancer in a hospice run by nuns, writes a letter to man she's in love with, although she hasn't seen him in 20 years. When he says he's going to walk across England to see her, she realizes she must confess something to him regarding the relationship she had with his son. The letter includes how and why she fell in love with Harold; how she got involved with his son, David; why she left town; why she started her beloved sea garden; and the relationships she has with the other patients in the hospice, as well as the nuns.

Every page is filled with such emotion. I could not put this book down! OK. I did a couple of times, but I couldn't wait to get back to it when I did.

I have about 500 books in my home. Before this morning I had six on my "I'm love with this book shelf." Now I have seven.

I received a free copy of this book from Goodreads giveaways and Random House in exchange for an honest review.

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Monday, March 7, 2016

Review: Cross Justice

Cross Justice Cross Justice by James Patterson
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

I didn’t get into this latest installment of the Alex Cross series as quickly as I usually do, and it took me longer to read than usual. But it was Alex Cross, after all, so I stuck with it and the reward was worth the journey.

The story starts with Alex and his family heading to his hometown in North Carolina, where he hasn’t been for more than 30 years. He’s agreed to help his niece Naomi, a lawyer, work on a murder case. Alex’s nephew Stefan Tate is accused of brutally – and I mean brutally! – raping and killing a teenage boy. It’s clear fairly early on how the case will turn out but the “how” and the “why” remain the big questions.

While Alex and his wife Bree are investigating the murder case (unofficially, of course) Alex also learns things about his parents and their deaths that he didn’t know before, and it really shakes him up. If you don’t cry when this part of the story reaches its conclusion there’s something wrong with you. (Not really, but it is very emotionally charged.)

While Alex is looking into the circumstances surrounding his father’s death in Florida he also runs into a couple of cops working on a bizarre murder case and helps them with that.

Also, Alex’s 15-year-old daughter Jannie gets a bigger role in this story than she’s had in quite a while. She’s a budding track star being courted by at least one college already. Something that happens to her ties into the Stefan Tate case, and goes a long way toward the solving of it.

As I said, I didn’t get into this book as quickly as I usually do. Patterson usually grabs me on Page 1 and I’m hooked until then end – more often than not staying up all night to finish. I’d say I didn’t really start getting into this one until about Page 120. But I’m so glad I stuck with it, and now I’m anxiously awaiting the next Alex Cross book.


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Friday, March 4, 2016

Review: The Vanishing of Flight MH370: The True Story of the Hunt for the Missing Malaysian Plane

The Vanishing of Flight MH370: The True Story of the Hunt for the Missing Malaysian Plane The Vanishing of Flight MH370: The True Story of the Hunt for the Missing Malaysian Plane by Richard Quest
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

Fascinating! Richard Quest is CNN's Aviation Correspondent and followed the story of Malayasian Airlines flight 370 from the very beginning. He details everything that happened from the plane's disappearance to the search effort (to the time of the printing. But I interviewed him the day after it was revealed that a search team may have found part of the plane. Very interesting!) and everything in between.

He describes the scientific parts of the search in layman's terms so it's very easy to understand. As he told me in the interview: His job to help people understand difficult issues.

His descriptions of how the families of the plane's passengers were treated are so good that it brought make most of the feelings I had two years ago. I couldn't imagine how they felt then. Now, two years later, it's unfathomable that they still have no answers.

Quest also writes about his experiences with CNN, which is very interesting as well. And, yes, he explains why the network wanted to "own the story."

Now, even more than I did two years ago, I hope they find out how and why this plane disappeared.

I received a copy of this book from the publisher in preparation for a interview with the author.

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Monday, February 29, 2016

Review: The Steel Kiss

The Steel Kiss The Steel Kiss by Jeffery Deaver
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

This is the most deliciously twisty story I’ve read in quite some time.

Lincoln Rhyme and Amelia Sachs are back trying to solve the case of “The People’s Guardian,” who writes to newspapers after his crimes denouncing commercialism and the people he calls the “Shoppers.” (You will love why he gave them that name! It’s actually a big “Ah ha!” moment.)

The first crime involves a death on an escalator. We also see what he does with ovens -- microwave and conventional – cars, and even a baby monitor.

We also get the story of Sachs’ old boyfriend ex-cop Nick Carelli, who has been released from prison and asks for Amelia’s help in clearing his name. Also, Officer Ron Pulaski is going undercover – and off the clock – trying to prove that the reason Rhyme quit working for the police department wasn’t what it seemed. His quitting, though, led to his meeting Juliette Archer who he has made his intern and who brings a new aspect to the Rhyme/Sachs series.

This book is so fast-paced and exhilarating you might wonder if you had an extra shot of caffeine before you picked it up. You won’t be able to read or turn the pages fast enough.

I received a copy of this book from the publisher in preparation for an interview with the author.


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