Saturday, October 15, 2022

Book Review - Bosses and Blackjacks




Family Saga, History, Politics - You Know, All the Fun Stuff

Imagine finding out David Bennett, the grandfather you never knew, was a notorious player in Philadelphia politics at the start of the 20th century. Imagine reading about him in old newspapers. Imagine what his life was like. Imagine what brought him to his place in the world.

That’s exactly what L. C. Bennett Stern did with her fictionalized non-fiction book, Bosses and Blackjacks: A Tale of “The Bloody Fifth” in Philadelphia.

On a journey to discover a lost relative, Linda explores family, local history, and the vagaries of politics, along with the needs and emotions that drive people to do things that might not be as ethical and moral as they wish. 

A story that is accessible, believable, and compassionate, Linda invites us to learn more about life in the early 1900s from close perspectives and intimate vignettes. The book includes images from contemporary sources. 

Linda is currently working on book three of her trilogy, The Mari Mort Theater Trilogy, loosely based on another interesting ancestor that moves coast to coast with Mae, David Bennett’s older sister.  I highly recommend you check them out, too.

Stern Words - website

L.C. Bennett Stern - facebook




 

Wednesday, January 26, 2022

Book Review - Storm Portal

 



I'm working on my book review skills.

This is what I wrote in 2016 when I read this first book in the six-book Quantum Touch series. Appropriate for a time travel book.

All of the books are finished and available for all you immersion fans (or bingers, if you prefer.)

I read 


And this is the silliness I did in an attempt to do something different.






Saturday, January 16, 2021

Book Review - The Bell Jar

 

TITLE: The Bell Jar

AUTHOR: Sylvia Plath

PUBLISHER: Pharaohs and Gods; 1st edition (November 1, 2020)

PUBLICATION DATE: November 1, 2020

GENRE: Roman à clef

FROM AMAZON: The Bell Jar is the only novel written by the American writer and poet Sylvia Plath. Originally published under the pseudonym "Victoria Lucas", the novel is semi-autobiographical, with the names of places and people changed.

THE REVIEW:

  1. Summary: Esther is a scholastic prodigy. Everyone has high hopes for her, including herself. She wins a summer month-long paid internship at a fashion magazine in NYC. The year is 1953. She begins to unravel. Her mother and a longtime boyfriend are the other main characters. An assortment of other people flit through her life as she attempts to experience life while at the same time losing her desire to live. She ends up being committed by her mother in the hopes that she becomes normal again.

  2. Evaluation: The writing style was easy to read and smooth which was the only reason I was able to finish the book. The Bell Jar is a synonym for the sensory dampening Ester experienced, the cut off of sound and sensation, the idea of being an observer and separate from all around her. Despite some interesting situations, like her obsession with losing her virginity because her boyfriend was more experienced than she was, I felt no connection to Esther. Perhaps this was intentional as a way to experience her disconnectedness. If so, it was well done because I didn’t much care what happened. I read it as an autobiography and not as a novel. 

  3. Recommendation: If you are studying Sylvia Plath, then read this. I came away feeling nothing and I doubt I’ll remember much of it. I was disappointed. Maybe I just didn’t understand it.   

  4. Final Thought: If you do decide to read it, don’t get it from this publisher. It’s clear the text was scanned and no one proofed it. Errors throughout. 


Friday, January 24, 2020

Book Review - CIRCE


TITLE: CIRCE
AUTHOR: Madeline Miller
PUBLISHER: Little, Brown and Company
PUBLICATION DATE: April 10, 2018
GENRE: Ancient Historical Fiction
FROM AMAZON: “A bold and subversive retelling of the goddess’s story,” this #1 New York Times bestseller is “both epic and intimate in its scope, recasting the most infamous female figure from the Odyssey as a hero in her own right” (Alexandra Alter, The New York Times)
THE REVIEW:
This book won awards and raves, which leads me to believe that the world is nuts. 
I struggled to get through this book; it took me 14 days. I dreaded having to do it: dull drudgery.
The word that came to me consistently was sterile.
Passionate gods and passionate people doing passionate things, and I felt none of it. The overuse of similes was glaring. The story should have been amazing, but it was flat. CIRCE came across as unemotional because we were told of her feelings, never shown. She did lots of thinking. The characters lacked depth. A few chapters towards the end perked up a bit but not enough to make the effort of reading the entire book worthwhile.
HBO is doing a series based on it.
CIRCE is Madeline Miller’s second book. She is a Latin and Greek teacher. Her first book, The Song of Achilles, took her ten years to write. It was an award winner, too. I did not read it. I don’t think I will.
Granted, I am in the minority opinion; you can take your chances.
I gave it one butterfly because at least the myth was correct.
~ 20200124 ~
Next up: The Mist, by Stephen King

Friday, January 10, 2020

Book Review - Of Human Bondage


TITLE: Of Human Bondage
AUTHOR: W. Somerset Maugham
PUBLISHER: Currently in the Public Domain
PUBLICATION DATE: 1915
GENRE: Autobiographical novel, Classic, in the top 100 best English-language novels of the 20th century.
FROM AMAZON: It is the story of Philip Carey, an orphan eager for life, love, and adventure. After a few months studying in Heidelberg, and a brief spell in Paris as a would-be artist, Philip settles in London to train as a doctor. And that is where he meets Mildred, the loud but irresistible waitress with whom he plunges into a formative, tortured, and masochistic affair which very nearly ruins him.
THE REVIEW:
I like to read a book, then look up reviews about it and learn about the author afterward. This additional knowledge always colors how I see a piece of work. 
Of Human Bondage is my first classic for the year. It’s long by today’s standards: 728 pages compared to 300 - 350 for something recently published. There are lots of words, plenty of introspection, and description. The first half of the book was slow going, the second half more exciting.
This is a coming-of-age story, a hero’s journey, a philosophical quest for the meaning of life. It explores human existence. We experience the exuberance and self-importance of youth, with all its unending possibilities. We fall into the depths of despair involved in obsessions and how we are our own worst enemies. Thank the gods it had a happy ending for Phillip, but he worked at it.
Technically, one of the things I liked was that Maugham writes from Phillip’s point of view throughout, then he changes to someone else’s point of view in the very last sentence of the chapters.
While all of the characters were driven by passion and sexual appetites, it is never explicitly spoke of and so subtly alluded to you could easily miss it.
Mildred is a peach, not.
The story really makes you think about your choices, passions, and obsessions, how sometimes we really can’t help ourselves even when we know we are making a huge mistake. Life is sad, meaningless, random, exciting, worthwhile, and ultimately, the only thing we have to do.
Maugham drew heavily from his own life to create the character of Phillip. His parents died young, leaving him in the care of an emotionally cold and cruel uncle; he became a doctor and worked in the slums of London; he lived and studied in Germany and France; he had a physical issue that caused people to make fun of him. Unlike Phillip, he was able to quite doctoring and write full-time because of his popularity and success.
Maugham seems to have been driven by his passions. He was married (breaking up the first marriage of his wife) and had affairs with many men and women. At the end of his life, he considered himself homosexual.
Maugham did not believe in God, or an afterlife, which shows in this story. He found human suffering proof that God did not exist.
He wrote twenty novels, Of Human Bondage, is considered his masterpiece, dozens of short stories in collections and periodicals, over twenty published plays and more unpublished, along with fifteen works of non-fiction.

This is one story where the essence stays with you and drives you to think about your place in the universe. Well worth your time.

Up Next: CIRCE by Madeline Miller

Thursday, January 2, 2020

Book Review - Harley Merlin and the Secret Coven


I fluctuated between 2 and 3 butterflies, and landed higher because there are some interesting ideas in the story.
AUTHOR: Bella Forrest
PUBLISHER: Nightlight Press 
(From what I can see, this might be Bella Forrest’s own self-publication company.) 
PUBLICATION DATE: August 2018
GENRE: Mature YA Fantasy
FROM THE WEBSITE: When a rogue 19-year-old witch is recruited to help guard an ancient magical Bestiary, mystery and danger ensue…
THE REVIEW:
Like so many others, I tried this book because of the ads suggesting its similarity to the Harry Potter series. And they weren’t wrong. Unfortunately, those similarities slap you in the face (no spoilers.) They were so apparent that each time one came up, it took me out of the story.
I thought this was the first book for this author. It’s not. If I had known this, I don’t think I’d have finished the book. She’s been publishing books since 2012: a lot of books. She’s very prolific.
I believe all of her books are self-published. Finding information is a little tricky, and you have to read between the lines. She should spend money on a qualified editor. Or not. Based on the reviews, it doesn’t seem to have hurt her sales. 
Harley Merlin and the Secret Coven is the only book I’ve read from Forrest. I might try another someday as a comparison. 
Harley Smith (Merlin) is an orphan who grew up in the foster care system. She is 19, damaged, and so magically talented. Despite this, she’s managed to hide, survive, and grow up to be relatively well adjusted. 
Monsters (who aren’t particularly scary) show up, along with Wade Crowley (love interest,) whose job it is to capture them. 
Harley finds out she’s extraordinary, but not. Oh, and she’s gorgeous. And snarky, in a bullying way. The humor this was supposed to portray came off as mean.
I think all of the action takes place in one week, but there’s trouble with the timeline (one of the standout problems an editor could have helped with.) Forrest spent most of this time shoving information at the reader. The disaster and solution, while interesting, ended up being contrived.
If you are into the occult, you’ll like the names of some of the characters.
There’s potential here. Not sure if future books will live up to it.
There are currently 15 books in this series. Forrest has seven series, three trilogies, and a duology. 

Friday, September 24, 2010

Book Review – Infinity: Chronicles of Nick

Infinity: Chronicles of Nick by Sherrilyn Kenyon

infinity

Sherrilyn Kenyon is one of my most favorite authors. I have read ALL of her books and can’t wait for the next one to come out. 


She is a series author and has created several fantastic worlds. She lists them in reading order so it’s easy to keep track of where you are in each series. Her Dark-Hunters series is my favorite and the most popular. Infinity is the latest in this series.


These books are great for both men and women. They are packed with history, myth, fantasy, sex, evil, love, war, and searing inter-personal and internal conflicts.


Start at the beginning and enjoy hours and hours of non-stop fun.

From the website:


The world of the Dark-Hunters is unlike anything you've every seen before. It's dark. It's gritty. It's dangerous...


And it's a whole lot of fun.


My name is Nick Gautier and this is the story of my life.


First off, get the name right. It's pronounced Go-shay not Go-tee-ay or Goat-chay (that has an extra H in it and as my mom says we're so poor we couldn't afford the extra letter). I'm not some fancy French fashion designer. I'm just a regular kid... well as regular as someone with a stripper for a mother and a career felon for a father can be.


But as my mom so often says friends are what God gives us to make up for the families we're born into. And my mother, in spite of her occupation is a lady and I'll fight anyone who says otherwise. Consider this your notice. You respect Cherise Gautier or I'll learn you better.

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I give all of Sherrilyn Kenyon’s books 5 out of 5 butterflies. They are well written, interwoven and mega-fun.

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Visit my main blog The Chrysalis Stage


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