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Girl Scouts: A Celebration of 100 Trailblazing Years

Michelle came home from a trip to the bookstore in January with a present for me.

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I loved it but decided to wait til GSUSA’s 100th birthday to read it. And that’s what I did yesterday. I took short breaks throughout the work day and finished Girl Scouts: A Celebration of 100 Trailblazing Years late last night. It was fabulous and fun. The photos are terrific and I found myself nodding and smiling my head all the way through.

It was a great gift and it was a real pleasure reading it on the 100th birthday celebration.

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Born Wicked

I’ve decided I hate series’. They always end just where I don’t want them to end. Born Wicked, for example – gah! Next book! Need next book NOW. What happens to poor Maura. Are the Cahill sisters really the sisters from the prophecy or does Sachi have another sister/half-sister…? See that, see the problem. While I really enjoyed the story and am dying for the next book, I’m also looking for some unexpected twist because right now, it’s a little too easy.

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Timeless

Thank goodness – you know how a series can get kind of boring after awhile, particularly if you read a bunch of books in the series really close together? Well Timeless, the fifth book in the Parasol Protectorate series, was excellent. As TW said, just as good as the first book and certainly better than the second and third and fourth. I was glad to see that some of the things I thought should happen in order to tie everything into a neat and pretty package DID happen. But now I’m dying to know what happens next and there is no next.  I mean I know what happens because the last book tied it all up for us but I want to READ it not just picture it. And, to not know how Ivy manages. Or see Madame LeFeoux neat and tidy. And. And. And.

Darn.

I guess I can wait for Prudence to grow up a bit more, 2013 will come around soon enough. I guess.

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Do the Math: Secrets, Lies and Algebra

The little spinny thing on my library website strikes again. Do the Math: Secrets, Lies and Algebra sounded cute so I reserved it. And it was cute. Super fast read with an awesome eight grade girl who thinks about pretty much everything in math terms, theories, and problems. And she doesn’t do it in a way that causes me to roll my eyes. Even though my TBR list is long this year, I’m very tempted to reserve the next book to find out what happens next. That Richard needs someone to teach him a lesson… just sayin’… And, I don’t care what the police decided – I think Rob was more involved than we will ever know.

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Rules of Inheritance

Rules of Inheritance by Claire Bidwell Smith is one of the BlogHer Book Club books – but I did not receive a review copy and am not blogging about this as part of the book club. I’m reading it because it sounds good and because I’ve read Claire’s blog for YEARS.

I was a little nervous about reading Rules of Inheritance. I knew Claire was an amazing writer from reading her blog but I don’t always love books written by bloggers. And then there was the whole non-chronological thing – that made me nervous. I shouldn’t have been. It was excellent, in fact, I don’t think I would have enjoyed the book as much if it had been written chronologically.

I also love that this was truly a memoir without any self-helpy stuff tossed in, which often happens in grief and loss memoirs. Claire’s not preachy. She’s just really honest about how screwed up she was, how horrible it was, and how she came out on the other side.  Beautifully written, as expected.  I loved it.

(Side Note: I don’t know if she never blogged about her trip to the Philippines or if I missed that but her telling of her trip made me smile (while yelling YOU ARE CRAZY) – having lived there, it doesn’t surprise me that she found people who were kind to her along the way but it also would not have surprised me had some truly horrible things happened. That’s how it is/was there.)

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A Monster Calls

Lord. This book, A Monster Calls, should teach me to reserve books without paying any attention to a) who wrote them b) what they are about.

Patrick Ness. That should have given me at least a clue as to what we were in for when we started listening to the book on audio. But, I didn’t know he wrote it. I didn’t pay attention. It was a Cybils Shortlist and that’s all I knew.

Gah.

It started off nicely. Really nicely, actually. With a tribute to a YA author who had died. The name of the author sounded familiar but I couldn’t place it – so I looked it up when I came home that first day of listening to it and discovered … Siobahn Dowd, the author of The London Eye Mystery (which I loved), had died. I didn’t know that. So sad – but a super wonderful tribute to her starts this book off nicely.

And then there’s a Yew tree monster, which makes perfect sense and TW was nodding her head along with the story and I was smiling.

There’s a lot about stories – the power of stories – how they’re wild things and hold a lot of power.

See, great start, right?

Sure, it was obvious that this was going to be a tough read, Connor’s mom has cancer and that never ends well. His dad moved to the US and is never around, either. He’s got some bully problems at school. Pretty typical of a YA novel – throw in a story telling Yew tree monster and you’ve got one hell of a book.

And then the pain starts. The emotional and physical pain of listening to the story play out – the horrible, horrible nightmare of a story. The pain starts slowly, and works its way into your head first. And then it grabs hold of your heart and twists and does not let go until you’re a bloody, sobbing, mess.

This book – horribly wonderful. Really. Ness is a master storyteller. He is. And when he tells you a heartbreaking story, you literally feel your heart break.

Be careful with this book. If you’ve lost someone recently. If your child has lost someone or is terrified of losing someone she loves – she may not be ready for this one. Hell, it’s possible that nobody, ever, is ready for this book.  But, it’s too good to NOT read.  I would also suggest careful thought to the age of the child reading. This is on the Cybils shortlist as Middle Grade fantasy/science fiction, which in my house tends to mean 8-12. But, I’m not sure that’s right – it feels older, deeper and a whole lot scarier than some 8 year olds are ready for. It’s not the story of sex between the prince and the farmgirl, that’s tame. But it is very, very violent. And heart-wrenching, I mentioned that painful, heartbreaking horror – right?

There are books that stay with you for your whole life – this is going to be one of those books.

*Note: We listened to it on audio so we didn’t see the illustrations others speak so highly of – there is a bonus DVD in the audio book but I’m not sure I want to SEE those images. Listening may have been enough for me… We’ll see.*

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A Non-Fiction and a Cookbook

I thought Eating with Uncle Sam might be interesting for TW, retro food blog and all that. She was sort of ho hum about it but I liked it. There sure were a lot of recipes from Nixon and Bush. And General Eisenhower’s recipe for chicken soup was fabulous, not that I like soup or anything.

And then there’s Where Children Sleep, a book I kept thinking I would buy but never did. I just happened to walk down the last row of shelves of new arrivals (a row I never really walk past) and it caught my eye. I figured what the heck, I’ll get it. I’m glad I did and I still think I want to buy it. As Elly said just now – that book is really depressing. But it’s interesting and it makes you think.

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The Garden Intrigue

Damn Lauren Willig – she’s in the suburbs this evening and I can’t be there. So not fair, since I just finished The Garden Intrigue and she made me forget to be grouchy about the name of the book, made me like bad poets and bad poetry more than I should, and be grouchy that we have to wait for the next book. Thankfully, it’s a Miss Gwen book – that will be worth waiting for, since we have to wait. Almost as good as a Turnip book.

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Double Dexter

We just finished Double Dexter on audio – Jeff Lindsay does a fabulous job of reading Dexter. He really does. I think that might be why I never could get into the TV series, well that and the fact that the TV show is so different from the books. I just plain love the books.  It was nice to see Astor get a wee bit of play time in a book, that was excellent.

I have one tiny complaint – Rita is getting worse with each book and Dexter’s ridicule of her is getting a wee bit ugly. Not necessary. It just is not necessary at all.

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