Books in Bed

Water for Elephants

Wow. Just wow. I expected Water for Elephants to be good but not this good. The circus lore was excellent (I’ve heard a good bit of circus lore in my life, my ex’s grandfather was with Ringling for a good long while) and the characters wonderfully written. The animal scenes were handled nicely – sometimes writers give animals too much personality, or too many “human” traits, not these animals!

I love, love, love this book. What else has Sara Gruen written? Are her other books this good?

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The Other Side of the Bridge

The Other Side of the Bridge started a little slowly but ended up being a pretty darn good book. An awful lot happened at the end and I wish the author would have expanded those last few chapters a bit more. I also wish there had been more story regarding the fringe community that Pete belonged to. I know the story really wasn’t about the “Indians and the white man” but it would have been nice to flesh Pete and his life out just a little bit more.

Good book. I was surprised to find I liked it.

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Why couldn’t I have found this in a tube station?

Some hapless Penguin staff member left Jeanette Winterson’s next book (or a portion of the book) on a bench in a London train station. Can you imagine?

I wonder what the lucky woman thought of The Stone Gods… I wonder if Winterson will send her a signed preview copy, she should – don’t you think? Is it a new children’s novel or adult? Does anyone know?

(Thank you Reading Matters!)

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I love First Look and bathrooms, too!

Just as I was about to give up on ever getting a preview book from Harper Collins First Look, I discover an email saying “congratulations! you were selected!” Yeaaaaaaaaa! I read further, wondering which book I am going to receive and I start to laugh – out – loud! Perfect. It just doesn’t get any more perfect.

The Men’s Guide to Women’s Bathrooms

Heh. Who better to review a book about bathrooms than me? Nobody! I have strong feelings about bathrooms. I have a collection of photographs that I have taken in bathrooms all over the world. I firmly believe that all of the world’s problems could be solved within 5 years if we did away with the men’s room and women’s room and went unisex! Also, my s/o spends a lot of time in the bathroom and of course, with six children there have been a lot of interesting bathroom experiences.

So yea, Harper Collins was smart to send this little book to me. Their timing was good too because it arrived when I was just about to finish Stanley Park. In fact the arrival of the bright and shiny new preview copy was enough to push me to finish that last chapter. Without this book, I’d probably still be reading Stanley Park. But this isn’t about Stanley Park, it’s about The Men’s Guide to Women’s Bathrooms so let’s talk about that.

First, it’s chick lit. Pure and simple chick lit. Which is good. Those people who bash chick lit, they know nothing about relaxing with a book and just letting your mind go with the flow. They know nothing about laugh out loud sillyness. They know nothing about, well, anything. I like chick lit. So there.

As is the case in many books for women (aka chick lit!) the featured character, Claire St John, is newly divorced. She’s also a lawyer who has left New York City and headed home to Austin, Texas. She’s living in her mom’s rental house and she has no money to speak of. She also doesn’t have a job and she doesn’t REALLY want to be a lawyer. She has good friends, including the token gay boy. She also has great shoes.

Claire gets the brilliant idea to write a book about women’s bathrooms. Which is a good idea. But an even better idea is to explain women’s bathroom to men, because men are clueless. More clueless than people who rag on chick lit.

As you might expect, newly divorced ex-lawyer and aspiring writer has some issues with her ex-husband that she needs to resolve. She has single friends who are looking for “the one” and finding themselves with “the wrong one”. She has a mom who is just kooky enough to remind you of your own mother (or in my case, my ex mother in law). I already mentioned gay guy friend, right? Last but not least, Claire has a new guy in her life – a guy she’s falling for, too hard and too fast. That’s never good, as everybody knows.

Don’t worry, there’s a happy ending! Oh, I almost forgot, I loved the salsa and tortilla chips and brie – excellent move. Excellent.

Fun chick lit. Even more fun if you have any fondness for Austin, Texas or SXSW or ummm Duck Tours!

Thank you Harper Collins First Look – and Jo Barrett!

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A weird foodie book

Stanley Park was one strange foodie book. I liked the foodie part but the whole storyline about the homeless people and the “children” in Stanley Park was just weird. Though I do understand the underlying theme and I realize that without the homeless storyline, the twist that occurred on “opening night” wouldn’t have happened. And that was pretty brilliant. No I’m not telling you what happened, read it for yourself and see.

I’ve been to Stanley Park, have you?

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Lisey’s Story

It’s been so long since I read a Stephen King novel, I’d forgotten just how LONG they can be (and usually are). Lisey’s Story seemed longer than most because of the whole writing and language thing. It was good, but LONG, LONG, LONG.

Something it made me wonder about – has King’s wife, Tabitha King, written anything besides that book about the girl basketball player? That was good and I remember I used to check the library occasionally to see if she’d written anything else. (I just looked – good grief, she’s written a lot of books. I’m going to have to reserve a few at the library.)

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Tales of a Female Nomad

Oh! I want to be a nomad! But I can’t do it. Darn it. That whole leaving your kids and being totally out of their lives except for occasional visits – no thanks. Maybe in my next life when I’m childfree by choice, I’ll give the whole nomad thing a try.

Tales of a Female Nomad was interesting. Slow in places but very interesting. Imagine ditching life as you know it, as a woman over 50, and wandering the world – and doing it with a backpack, in the jungle and stuff. Interesting, right?

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Miss Garnet’s Angel

Miss Garnet’s Angel started out as a disappointment but improved as the story went along… Much like Miss Garnet herself.

Julia Garnet starts out as a pretty unlikeable retired, spinster, British school teacher. Heck she’s not even a dyke to give her some interesting quality. She’s a stick in the mud, a little too high and mighty and just plain boring. Until she goes to Venice. Until she discovers the Angel, Raphael.

The parallel story about Tobit helped move Miss Garnet’s story along. Not a bad book, if you give it time to develop.

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