Thursday, December 31, 2015

The Gates of Evangeline by Hester Young FIC Hes

   
This was an interesting mystery.  Charlie (aka Charlotte) is a woman in the depths of depression.  When she was very young her mother left her.  When her father is killed in an accident she goes to live with her paternal grandma at the age of 14.  She grows up and marries - she didn't pick a good one and ends up a single mother.  Charlie works as a journalist and loves being a mother to her son, Keegan.  When he dies suddenly she can barely hold on.  She has been working from home but changes are afoot and she has to return to the office.  But she finds she can't do it.  Then she hears from her old boss who works a True Crime publication.

Desperate to get away she takes an assignment.  It involves going to Louisiana and the case involves the kidnapping of a young boy decades before.  Charlie will be living at the estate where it happened.  Did I mention that Charlie has been having very weird dreams?  It is about a little boy who is asking for her help.  Are they random dreams or is she becoming psychic?

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The 6:41 to Paris by Jean-Philippe Blondel FIC Blo

   
To be upfront, this book is not for everyone.  It is very short and it is translated from French.  Which means it was written by a Frenchman.  French books (and movies) tend to be different from American ones.  Here is the premise of the book:  Cécile (47, married with children and very successful in a business) is taking a train back to Paris after spending the weekend with her parents (not a very pleasant experience - ever!).  She is happy to find a seat with no one next to her.  Of course that doesn't last long.  A man sits down.  Immediately she recognizes him.  He is Philippe Leduc - someone from her past.  She doesn't say anything to him.  He recognizes her also but says nothing.  The book goes back and forth between what the two characters are thinking and glimpses into their pasts - and what happened in London to change their lives.

I really enjoyed it - and it doesn't take long to read.  Try it!

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Saturday, December 26, 2015

Escape Points by Michele Weldon 362.1969 Wel

 
This memoir has three themes - wrestling, breast cancer and being a single mom.  Weldon is a journalist and a published author so she knows how to write a book.  The chapters take their titles from wrestling terms.  I recognized that and I was pretty proud of myself because I don't know much about the sport.  The wrestling part of the book has to do with her three sons who all participated in the sport.  It is less about the sport per se but more about what it takes for these young men to be a part of it.  And equally important what it takes for a single mom to be a 'wrestling mom'.  It wore me out just reading about it.

To make things a bit more interesting she is diagnosed with breast cancer.  This is a lot to deal with - and she does it totally on her own.  She left her husband when her kids were still young.  (She wrote the book "I Closed My Eyes: Revelations of a Battered Woman" so I guess we know why the marriage didn't last).  He was an absentee father who broke the hearts of his sons over and over.  And financially responsible?  Not at all.

It was an interesting book and I imagine a lot of people can relate to things she has gone through.

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Christmas Bells by Jennifer Chiaverini FIC Chi

It's that time of year when I like to read books with a Christmas theme.  There are two stories going on within the novel.  What they have in common is the poem "Christmas Bells" by Henry Wadsworth Longfellow and the Christmas carol "I Heard the Bells on Christmas Day".  Longfellow's part of the story is what was going on in his world (the Civil War, a son who insists on joining up, the loss of his wife and his struggle to learn how to live with all of this).  I enjoyed learning about Longfellow because I couldn't have told you anything before I read this book!

The other story line takes place in present-place Boston.  Sophia teaches music in the public schools but her Christmas isn't going to be very merry because she finds out there are budget cuts coming and she will be unemployed at the end of the year.  She still has to maintain some Christmas spirit because she also volunteers at a church and they are practicing for the Christmas Eve concert.  Do you want to guess what they are going to be singing?????

It was an entertaining book and perfect for the season.

Had I known: a memoir of survival by Joan Lunden 616.99 Lun

I remember Joan Lunden from her days on morning TV.  I wasn't aware that she had been diagnosed with breast cancer until she made the brave decision to appear on the front of People Magazine - with no hair.  If you read the book you will find out that she didn't intend to do that when she agreed to the interview but decided (after getting the okay from her kids) that she should bravely show the world her battle.  Then I was diagnosed with the disease also and found myself doing a lot of reading on the subject!   Being a journalist, Joan did a great job of telling her story.

She neither understates or overstates what she went through - she just tells the truth.  Some parts of the books made me teary and other parts made me laugh.

Joan's story is not everyone's story.  Having money, connections and a very supportive family made it easier (but not easy!) for her to go through the treatments.  But none of those things help with the mouth sores, lack of appetite, fatigue, etc.   She did give lots of little tips throughout the book for people to try.

I think it is a great book for anyone fighting breast cancer and for anyone who is close to someone going through it.

Host by Robin Cook FIC Coo

This novel is similar to others by Cook - but that's okay because I like his medical thrillers!  In his latest Lynn Peirce is finishing up medical school.  She is in a committed relationship with her boyfriend Carl.  He becomes a patient in her hospital when he has to have some routine surgery.  When she can she slips away to go check on him and expecting to find him groggy but fine.  Instead she discovers that he has not regained consciousness after the procedure.  According to the MRI he has suffered brain death.  She is devastated.  When she finally excepts the prognosis she wants to learn more about what went wrong.  Her lab partner, Michael, is drawn into the mystery.

What they uncover is that there are a lot of people having complications from anesthesia.  As they dig deeper and deeper they start getting death threats - hmmmm I think they might have discovered a deep dark secret.  The story line will remind you a bit of Coma from Cook's earlier days.

An entertaining read - as long as you don't have any surgery planned!!!

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Playing with Fire: A Novel by Tess Gerritsen MYS Ger

I have read most of Gerritsen's Rizzoli and Isles novels.  This one is a stand-alone novel and it was quite different than her others - and I loved it.  The story moves between two periods of time.  It begins in modern times when Julia Ansdell goes shopping after performing at a music festival in Rome.  She has bought something for her husband and her three-year-old daughter Lilly but is still looking for her own souvenir.  When she wanders into an antique store she finds the perfect momento for herself.  It is music for a waltz called the Incendio Waltz.  She reads the notes and can hear them in her head.  She knows it is complex but she is eager to learn how to play it when she returns home.

The first time she tries to play it at home she is interrupted when Lilly comes up to her and she has blood all over her hands.  The cat is dead and Julia knows that Lilly did it but her husband insists that it was an accident. When Julia begins to believe that Lilly is trying to hurt her she begins to connect it to the times that she was playing the waltz - and thus begins many tests and visits to various doctors.

The other part of the book takes place in Europe.  The Nazi's are beginning to ramp up their persecution of the Jews.  Lorenzo is a young man who is only interested in his violin and looking forward to entering a music competition.  He planned to do a solo but finds himself playing a duet with a young woman named Laura.  They make beautiful music together and of course they fall in love.  Lorenzo is Jewish and Laura is not.  You can tell this isn't going to end well!

Julia is convinced that she needs to find out more about the waltz to be able to help her daughter and she begins to research where it came from and finds herself in a dangerous situation.

I loved it!

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Rosemary: The Hidden Kennedy Daughter by Kate Clifford Larson 362.1968 Lar

    
Rosemary Kennedy was the third child and oldest daughter born to Rose and Joseph Kennedy.  She died in 2005 at the age of eighty-six, which is a long time to live - but when you read about Rosemary's life you quickly realize that it was an eternity.  I knew a bit about Rosemary's life before I read this book but I found this book to be fascinating.  What happened to her was most certainly not unusual for the times.  In fact she surely had it better than most because of her family's money.  But everything about her story is so sad.

It begins with why she was unable to learn like her siblings.  What a horrific story.  She was a beautiful girl (the best looking of the Kennedy girls) but she was not allowed to have any sort of a normal life.  To hide her intellectual disabilities she was closely watched so that no one would notice. Of course eventually that doesn't work.  She was moved from place to place in an attempt to find a school that could help her.

Rosemary might have been the family secret but eventually she became a secret even from her family.  She ended up in Wisconsin and her siblings were told she had gone there to become a teacher's assistant. An operation is performed on Rosemary when she was in her twenties and the essence of Rosemary was gone forever.

A powerful book.  It is not the usual Kennedy book because Rosemary was not the usual Kennedy.

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Tuesday, December 15, 2015

Corrupted by Lisa Scottoline MYS Sco



Bennie Rosato is back. As Lisa Scottoline herself would say, Yay! 
Scottoline’s newest offering in the Rosato and DiNunzio series features the law firm’s founder and mother-figure taking on a rare capital murder case, where all the evidence points to her client’s guilt. Why does Bennie sign on to defend Jason Lefkavick without even a second thought? She has a 13-year-old debt to pay off.

Corrupted begins with Bennie heading to the Roundhouse to meet with her client, someone she hasn’t seen since he was 12. Then the story jumps back to 2002, to fill in the history that these two characters share. Bennie, who prides herself on keeping personal and professional lives totally separate, stumbles when she meets 12-year-old Jason, who’s been incarcerated in a juvenile detention facility for fighting at school. All of a sudden feelings of motherhood protectiveness seep under her professional façade. Once that first crack opens up, she also finds herself involved in a personal relationship which her brain tells her she should avoid.

Scottoline’s better novels, in my opinion, are the Bennie Rosato stories. They have well-developed characters, focus on the law – an area Scottoline knows well, and offer the mystery and intrigue that keeps the reader turning the pages. I bet we’ll see another Rosato and DiNunzio fairly soon, because Scottoline has given us a peek at Bennie’s more human, vulnerable side and a hint at more romance to come for the leading lady. Write on, Lisa. I’m waiting.

Sunday, December 13, 2015

The Death's Head Chess Club by John Donoghue (FIC Don)

In 1962, Emil Clement, a French Jew and chess champion now living in Israel, is a player at the World Chess Federation Interzonal tournament in Amsterdam.  Emil is a survivor of Auschwitz and carries with him every day his belief that there are "no good Germans."

After his first game he is approached by a Catholic bishop who seems vaguely familiar.  To his horror he realizes it is SS-Obersturmfuhrer Paul Meissner.  He is immediately catapulted back to Auschwitz in spring 1944, a time he has struggled to forget.

Emil resists the overtures from Paul to meet and talk.  He wants nothing to do with this man who was so instrumental in his imprisonment.  But Paul is persistent and explains to Emil that all he wants is forgiveness.  Imagine Emil's puzzlement when Paul explains that he doesn't want Emil's forgiveness but rather for Emil to forgive himself.

In Auschwitz, Paul was charged with improving the flagging morale of camp personnel.  He organizes a chess club and tournament for Nazi officers.  When word gets to him of a Jewish prisoner called "the Watchmaker" who is considered unbeatable at chess, he is instructed to demonstrate German superiority by pitting this Jew (Emil) against the best Nazi players.  As the matches progress, the stakes are raised and a curious relationship develops between the two men.

This book came highly recommended to me by a patron.  I was intimidated - at 376 pages and with small print it didn't seem like a book to dive into.  But only a few pages in I was hooked and those 376 pages flew by.  It is the story not only of the atrocities committed by man against man but also the story of surviving in an almost impossible situation.  And ultimately it becomes the story of forgiveness (as Paul wanted) and finding a way to move forward in life.

I second the recommendation - this is a wonderful book.

Monday, November 23, 2015

Little Tree by Loren Long JJ Lon



Loren Long’s newest picture book works on so many levels for readers of all ages. Little Tree is afraid to let go of his leaves in the fall. He’s afraid of what might happen to him without them. So year after year, he hugs his dead, brown leaves tight. Soon Little Tree can’t feel the warmth of the sun, because all of the trees around him have grown and branched out. What will Little Tree do? Well, I could tell you, but I really think you should pick up this book and read it for yourself. In what ways does it speak to you?
I asked a colleague to read Little Tree. He came away with a slightly different message than I did, and he’s right, too.
Much of children’s literature is more than just a good story. There are life lessons all through the children’s book industry. And it’s a shame that these lessons, so eloquently depicted in word and picture, are overlooked by those who have “outgrown” picture books. Personally, I don’t think anyone outgrows picture books, and even if you’re an adult, a college student, or someone else older than about seven, you need to occasionally browse the picture book shelves to experience some of the wonderful literature contained in a mere 32 pages.
(Brief pause while I mount my soapbox.) Today’s society places a huge emphasis on reading progress, and I don’t have a problem with educating children to be good readers. So often, though, there is so much emphasis on reading books at a child’s tested level that wonderful books are precluded. Children should be encouraged to read good books regardless of their designated reading level, and teachers should incorporate the use of picture books in their literature curricula. What a great way to introduce elementary students to the concept of theme.
Out of curiosity, I searched online for information about the reading level of books by some of the most popular adult authors. Does your precocious second-grader need a book at fourth-grade level? Hand him/her Hemingway. The fifth-grader who tests out at college-level? Forget fiction; the best bet is The Affordable Care Act. (Pity the person who has to create the AR test for that!) These examples are taken from a very interesting article about grade-level reading. Here’s the link: https://contently.com/strategist/2015/01/28/this-surprising-reading-level-analysis-will-change-the-way-you-write/
Don’t get me wrong: encourage your child to improve his/her reading by tackling challenging material; be realistic about what is out there for your child and be aware that reading level does not mean age-appropriate. (Steven King books top out at sixth-grade level, Danielle Steel at about 8.5.) Allow and encourage them to explore literature at all reading levels. Just as content may be inappropriate in a book written at a low level, the reverse is also true. A book with a readability score of second or third grade may challenge a child intellectually. There is so much more to a book than what a reading test can evaluate.
(Stepping down from soapbox.)  Loren Long’s Little Tree is just such a book. It will make the reader think. I encourage you to pick this one up, sit down right in the library or the bookstore, and read it. Let it speak to you. In my opinion, this book is genius. Thank you, Mr. Long.

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The Rogue Lawyer by John Grisham FIC Gri

Sebastian Rudd is a criminal lawyer who takes the cases other lawyers won't touch with a ten-foot pole. As a result, his circle of clients and acquaintances aren't exactly the type you'd want your daughter to bring home -- which makes Rudd a target, a less-than-solid father, and a big risk as a potential love interest.
In Grisham's newest novel, the focus is more on characters than on plot. Okay. Grisham is a good writer and I enjoy reading his offerings. In The Rogue Lawyer, Rudd tackles several cases that are mostly independent of each other, giving the feel that the book is a collection of short stories linked by a common, off-beat character. Personally, I like Grisham's tight plot lines better. This book left me a little flat. I didn't even develop a strong like or dislike of Rudd. So if you like Grisham a whole lot -- and lots of people do -- I'm certainly not one to discourage you from reading The Rogue Lawyer. Just be aware that it won't offer what you've come to expect from this storyteller.

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Thursday, November 12, 2015

After the Storm by Linda Castillo FIC Cas

It amazes me how many murders are committed in the small town of Painters Mill which is populated by a lot of Amish!  Of course if there weren't any I wouldn't be able to read Castillo's novels and I love them.

The storm referred to in the title is a tornado which rips through the community.  When a troop of Boy Scouts is taken out in the country to help do clean up they are shocked to find part of a skeleton.  Kate Burkholder, the Chief of Police, starts researching whose remains it might be since the bones have been there for decades.

Also going on in the story is the relationship between Kate and John Tomasetti (who is a state agent).  They are basically living together and things are getting very serious.  Things become complicated with a surprise complication - and then there is the problem that someone seems to want to kill Kate as the murder investigation progresses.  It's an entertaining series of novels.  If you haven't read any of them go back to the beginning to get more of the back story of Kate - how an Amish girl became the Chief of Police.

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Monday, November 9, 2015

Keeping Christmas by Dan Walsh FIC Wal

Every year at this time I keep my eyes open for Christmas stories.  I know that they are going to be sugary and often romantic - not the kind of book I generally choose.  But it is the season and it is good to read a warm fuzzy book.

This story is about Judith and Stan Winters.  For the first time since they had children Thanksgiving will be a quiet affair.  It is just the two of them - no children or grandchildren. It is also the day that the tree goes up and the decorations come down from the attic.  But this year Judith can't bring herself to do any of it.  Stan has done everything he can to encourage her but her depression is too overwhelming because she also finds out that none of their three children are going to make it home for Christmas.  This was the one part of the book that really bothered me.  In all of these years why have the kids always come home - they never had to visit with the in-laws?

This is a story of a husband who will do anything to bring back some Christmas cheer to his wife.  It is a short book and just right for providing a feel-good couple of hours during these days when the days are short and the political news can drive you crazy!

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Sunday, November 8, 2015

The Woman Who Stole My Life by Marian Keyes FIC Key

Stella Sweeney is a rather normal person (in her opinion).  She has been married to Ryan since a young age.  They have two teenagers - a son and a daughter.  The marriage isn't the greatest but it is okay.  Stella's life can be divided into three stages.  There is the ordinary stage when she was simple a wife, mother and beautician.  Stage two finds her confined to a bed for months because of Guillain-Barrë Syndrome which leaves her unable to move anything and she can only communicate by blinking her eyes.  Then there is the third stage.  Some time after she recovers from her illness she finds out that her neurologist, Manix Taylor, turned their blinked "conversations" into a self-published book.  That leads to a book deal and she moves for a year to New York.

As the book begins she is actually back in Ireland and the story of those stages is told in bits and pieces.  It is a story of love and loss, success and failure, and a family trying to be happy.

An entertaining book and I loved the audiobook - I just love those accents!

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How To Write A Novel by Melanie Sumner FIC Sum

This was a quirky entertaining novel.  It is narrated by a 12 1/2 years old girl named Aristotle but called Aris.  Her father is dead and she lives with her mother, Diane, and her autistic brother, Max.  Diane's life isn't always easy.  Money is always an issue.  She is an adjunct professor (which means she doesn't get paid a lot!).  She has a man in her life - well, sort of.  His name is Penn and he comes with a lot of emotional baggage - including not wanting to be touched.  Mostly he is a handyman for the family and a male role model for Max.  Aris never gives up on trying to get Penn to become her new father.

When the money issue becomes more critical Aris decides to take matters into her own hands.  How can she earn money?  Easy.  She gets a book called How to Write a Novel in 30 Days.  Aris thinks she has lots of material as she looks around at her crazy family.

During that month she finds out about a dark family secret.  She takes off some time from novel writing to take her mom's machete and go right a wrong.  The characters are all flawed but lovable!

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Friday, November 6, 2015

The Nurses by Alexandra Robbins 362.173 Rob


Having more experience in medical offices than I ever wanted during the past few years I have learned one thing - nurses are extremely important to those of us who are patients!  My experience has all been positive as far as the medical staff.  This book blew me away.  I know that nurses are underpaid but I am really shocked at what some of them go through for their salaries.

Of course the identities of these nurses and hospitals have been well-masked I am sure, but the stories are real.  We are welcomed into the subculture of the nursing world. The stories of four nurses are told.  In-between their stories we are presented with some in-depth information about the state of nursing.  All of these nurses worked in hospitals.  And all of them had issues with the working conditions.  How would you like to be told that you could no longer park close to the hospital?  Instead you have to go to a parking lot and take a shuttle - which adds another half-hour onto the beginning and the end of your day.  How would you like to work in a climate where people are bickering all the time and taking you back to those awful days of Junior High?  I could go on and on but if you are interested read the book!  It is not an easy book to read (because of the story it tells, not because of the writing!).  What I learned will stay with me forever and I will be even more appreciative of the great nurses who have taken care of me.

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Monday, November 2, 2015

The Last Midwife by Sandra Dallas FIC Dal

I enjoy reading historical novels and especially those written by Sandra Dallas.  I have read several by her that were based on real events.   This one isn't but it is obvious that she has been meticulous in her research.  It is a very entertaining book.

The story takes place in 1880 and it is centered around the life of Gracy Brookens.  Since she was a young girl she has been involved in midwifery.  Of course she has lost a few mothers and some babies over the years but the people trust her.  Gracy lives with her husband Daniel who is a miner in Colorado.  They have a son named Jeffery but he left home a few years back and they haven't heard from him.

One day the sheriff shows up at their home to arrest Gracy for the murder of a baby.  Gracy wasn't actually there for the birth of the baby boy born to Edna, the wife of an influential miner named Jonas Halleck.  No one even knew that Edna was pregnant but she had been out of circulation for a while.  Their daughter, Josie, showed up at Gracy's door and begged her to come help the baby who was struggling.  Gracy was able to remove the mucous from the baby's mouth and he was fine when she left.

The book tells the story of Gracy waiting for the trial and trying to decide if she is willing to let go of some secrets to save herself.  A good read!

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Life is Short by Jennifer Arnold and Bill Klein 791.45 Arn

One of my guilty pleasures is reality TV.  And The Little Couple is one of my favorites.  It began several years ago when Dr. Jen Arnold and Bill Klein were beginning their married life.  They are both little people who have been very successful in life.  It was interesting to watch how they cope with a big world.  The years have gone by and now they have two children they have adopted.  I pretty much know what their life has been like since their show began.

This book is the story of what happened before they became a family.  Bill and Jen take turns telling about their childhoods and the challenges they have faced.  I was amazed at all of the things they went through from an early age.

This was an easy read and a great story of love and determination.

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Thursday, October 29, 2015

The Rocks by Peter Nichols FIC Nic



Although Lulu and Gerald were once madly in love and were even married for a very short time, they managed to live in the same village on the island of Mallorca for 60 years, without ever crossing paths, until one day . . .
Author Peter Nichols opens the tale of this couple in 2005, when a chance (or is it?) meeting between Lulu and Gerald ends in an argument and unfortunate fall that leads to their demises. He then takes the reader back through time, a decade more or less at a time, to learn how events in their lives brought them to their ultimate fate. It isn’t until the end of the book that the reader finds out why this marriage did not survive the honeymoon.
Along the way, Nichols introduces a colorful cast of characters including Lulu’s son Luc and Gerald’s daughter Aegina, who are both still seeking their real adult identities and at the same time are sorting through feelings for each other. Regular summer residents at The Rocks resort owned by Lulu, a smattering of locals, and a couple of friendly, unscrupulous strangers round out the cast of this trip back through time.
It is a journey worth taking.

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Saturday, October 24, 2015

The Book of Lost and Found by Lucy Foley FIC Fol

Kate Darling was raised by her mother June, a celebrated ballerina, and her grandma, Evie.  Kate always had the feeling that Evie wasn't always happy having to share her daughter with her grand-daughter.  Kate adored her mom and when June was killed in a plane accident she is heart-broken. Evie is all she has left and Kate makes regular visits to the nursing home to visit.  Evie has many days when she is totally out of it and sometimes she has moments of lucidity.  On one of her visits Evie wants to give something to Kate.  They are letters and programs from June's career.  Kate takes them home but it is a while before she can look at them. She wants to talk to Evie about them but she waits too long.  When Evie dies Kate goes into a deep depression.  When she finally begins to look through the box she discovers a picture.  At first she thinks it is a picture of her mother when she was young.  But as she studies it she realizes it was from a different era.  It had to be June's biological mother who gave her up when she was just a baby.  This picture leads Kate on a quest to find out more about this woman when she finds letters in the box that she is sure were written by this unknown woman.  A very entertaining book!

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Bald, Fat & Crazy by Stephanie Hosford 362.1969 Hos

If you can't read the small print on the picture of the cover I will type it so you can read it.  "How I Beat Cancer while PREGNANT with One Daughter and ADOPTING another".

I was tired just reading the front of the book.  I love non-fiction because it is often hard to believe the things that happen to people.  As with most breast cancer stories you see how quickly your life is turned upside-down.  It begins in 2007 with a conversation between Stephanie and Sara, her best friend since high school.  They are discussing going to their high school reunion the following year.  When she pictures what she will look like then she has no idea that a hairstyle will not be given much thought - because she won't have any hair.

Stephanie will be your new hero when you read this book.  She found out that she had cancer before she found out she was pregnant.  Her husband insisted on visiting more than one doctor.  And because of that they found one who felt she could get treatment and have a healthy baby.  Quite the story!  You can tell from the cover of the book that there is also plenty of humor in this book.  It was a fast and interesting read.

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Bald is Better with Earrings by Andrea Hutton 616.99 Hut

This is a very quick read.  The subtitle is "A Survivor's guide to Getting Through Breast Cancer."  So now you know what the book is about!  Being six months into a fourteen month breast cancer 'journey' myself I probably have a different take on the book than others might.  First of all you have to remember that when people write books like this it is usually because they have a long story to tell - I could write mine in about one chapter.  Ms. Hutton had a lot of things happen to her that did not happen to me.  So if you are newly diagnosed don't get freaked out!  That being said she does a wonderful job of sharing the emotional ups and downs that she went through (and still does).  Her description of appointments and procedures is spot on.  There are many moments of levity throughout the book.

I would really recommend this book for people who have a spouse, family member or friend.  It will give you a good perspective of what it is all about.  For someone who is going through this, you will pick up some good suggestions.  Well worth reading!

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Tuesday, October 13, 2015

Did You Ever Have A Family by Bill Clegg FIC Cle

I read this book over the weekend and I really liked it.  I will warn you that it is rather intense because it is filled with the agony of people who lost loved ones.  The story is like a jigsaw puzzle.  It starts with a tragedy and then we learn about the background of the people involved.  It is told through the eyes of many characters and I will admit that there were times I had to pause and remember who that person was!

A singular event can have far-reaching consequences.  It was early morning of the day that Lolly and Will were supposed to get married.  June Reid, Lolly's mom, was outside.  Inside there were four people sleeping - Lolly, Will, Luke (June's boyfriend) and Adam (June's ex).  Then there was an explosion.

The way Clegg wrote about the pain of the survivors was unbelievable.  You will feel the sympathetic pain in your own soul.  Powerful book!

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