Saturday, August 13, 2011

Review: The Wild Adventures of Eli Johnson & Curly Bill (Book 1) by Dan Wright and Bill Wright

ISBN #: 9781453721049
Page Count: 107
Copyright: 2010


Book Summary:
(Taken from back cover)

In the mid 1800's many Americans headed West in search of gold and adventure.  These folks traveled on horses and buggies down perilous trails filled with bandits, wild animals, and hostile Indians in an effort to strike it rich.  Our story follows a young man from Virginia, Eli Johnson, who shares the same dream of discovering gold.  His plans are derailed as a card game goes bad in a small hotel/saloon in the mountains of Colorado, and is forced to live a life on the run with his comrade Curly Bill.  Along the way, the men encounter a host of interesting characters, battle dangerous animals, and try to stay one step ahead of a group of bandits looking for revenge.  The men learn valuable lessons about friendship, survival, and a love of the great outdoors.


Mandy's Review:

Cover

The dark brown of the edge-burnt paper with the pen drawing is reminiscent of the olden days.

Plot/Main Characters

Eli Johnson is a young Virginia kid who decides to head out West and become part of the gold rush.  Thanks to a rigged poker game with a bunch of cheaters in a saloon, Eli meets Curly Bill.  When the game ends abruptly, the two men run to Canada to escape the three men running after them.

Curly Bill is older and seemingly wiser.  It's his cabin that they go to in the Canadian woods.  While there, they decide to do some trapping so they can make money off the pelts.

Well, the Indians do not appreciate them showing up and warn them to leave.

Do Eli and Curly heed their warnings?

Overall

This book has everything you could want in an Old West tale: Indians, outlaws, bears, an old miner, etc.  I would recommend this as the perfect read suited for young pre-teen boys.

Friday, August 12, 2011

Blog Tour/Review: The Bond by Lynne McTaggart


Welcome to Literary R&R's stop on Lynne McTaggart's The Bond virtual book tour.  The tour is being hosted by Pump Up Your Book.  Below, for this tour, we have a review of The Bond by the newest member of the Literary R&R review team, Kathy.  I hope you enjoy! =)


ISBN #: 978-1439157947
Page Count: 304
Copyright: 2011



Book Summary:
(Taken from back cover)

For centuries, Western science and many Western cultures have taught us to think of ourselves as individuals. But today, a revolutionary new understanding is emerging from the laboratories of the most cutting-edge physicists, biologists, and psychologists:


What matters is not the isolated entity, but the space between things, the relationship of things. The Bond.

 By international bestselling author Lynne McTaggart, The Bond is the culmination of her groundbreaking work. It offers a completely new, scientific story of life and the human experience, one that challenges the very way we conceive of ourselves and our world. The Bond shows that the essential impulse of all life is a will to connect rather than a drive to compete.

In fact, we are inescapably connected, hardwired to each other at our moet elemental level – from cells to whole societies. The desire to help others is so necessary that we experience it as one of our chief pleasures, as essential as eating and having sex, and we succeed and prosper only when we see ourselves as part of a greater whole. Every conflict that occurs – whether between husband and wife, social or racial groups, or nations – is resolved only when we can fully see and embrace the space – the bond – between us.

McTaggart offers detailed recommendations to help foster more holistic thinking, more cooperative relationships, and more unified social groups. Blending interviews and human stories into an absorbing narrative, she shows how:

  • A simple daily practice conditions the brain to enable you to become more empathetic toward others
  • A new way of speaking and listening can overcome polarization, helping the staunchest of enemies to become closer friends
  • People who fire together wire together: Whenever a group works together for a common goal, the brains of all parties begin to get on the same wavelength, strengthening the bond within the group
  • Fairness is more powerful than unfairness: A small group of individuals committed to strong reciprocity can “invade” a population of self-interested individuals and create a fairer society.

The Bond offers a breathtaking, visionary plan for a new way to live, in harmony with our true nature and with each other, and a new way to heal our relationships, our neighborhoods, and our world.


Kathy's Review:

In The Bond, a non-fiction work that is largely comprised of descriptions of scientific and social experiments and studies, Lynne McTaggart proposes that humans are not, by nature, competitive, although our society has most certainly become that way. Backing up her premise with science, McTaggart describes the true nature of human beings as wanting to belong, to agree with one another, to give, and to take turns. She describes The Bond as the space between things that connects us, that make us less individuals and more a part of a larger collective being. Again, this is contrary to the (particularly Western) belief that champions the individual.

In the beginning of the book, McTaggart attempts to explain The Bond (it is always shown in italics whenever it is mentioned throughout the book) by using the principles of quantum biology. Not a science person? I’m not either, and at first, I was put off by this. But, most of the studies McTaggart describes in the rest of the book examine human nature and how people (and sometimes, animals) react in various social situations. One example is the Prisoner’s Dilemma, a famous “game” or experiment wherein a group of men is randomly assigned to be either prisoners or prison guards. The study found that the prisoners actually bonded under harsh conditions and became stronger as a group. The study is meant to demonstrate the power of connecting with other human beings.

Also in The Bond McTaggart suggests that environment impacts health and wellbeing – not genetics. That genes can be turned on and off depending on external factors (again, that Bond). And although I am automatically skeptical whenever I hear claims like this, she offers some compelling evidence.

Finally, as a way to unlock our true human nature, McTaggart suggests a “Pay it Forward” mentality that can spread throughout society.

I would not recommend this book for everyone. It’s a challenging read, although every page will make you think. It’s chock-full of interesting insights about human behavior, and did make me question some of my behaviors and how I look at people. Overall, the book stresses the innate human need to belong to groups. I think we’ve really lost that. So, if you want a different perspective on how to live your life, and you’re open to learning about some of the research going on, definitely check it out.

Thursday, August 11, 2011

Review: Fleeting Memory by Sherban Young

ISBN #: 978-1463602017
Page Count: 234
Copyright: 2011


Book Summary:
(Taken from back cover)

The answer lies with Keats... With these cryptic last words, the man sprawled out on the floor of the rustic cabin expires - murdered. What could he have meant? Why Keats? Which answer? (For that matter, what was the question?)

All this and more passes through the mind of the young householder who discovers the body. If only he knew the guy's name. Or anybody's name. Including his own...

Two amnesia victims, two couriers without a package, two dead bodies (or rather one body dead twice), and one cryptic message regarding the poet Keats.

When retired private eye Enescu Fleet agreed to help out his daughter and compete in an exciting new game show called Deadly Allusions, he never would have thought it would become quite so deadly.  Fortunately the unflappable detective is up to the challenge.  The show must go on and what the show needs most of all is the world’s best puzzle-solving PI.  Or two.


Charlene's Review:

The main character is having a very bad day. He encounters a strange, beautiful blonde remember his name or anything in the past. All in the first 8 pages. With the help of a stranger, Enescu Fleet, a retired PI, he embarks on a journey to solve the mysteries.
Not normally a huge fan of mystery stories, I read Fleeting Memory straight through.
Hooked from the first chapter, I love Mr. Young’s writing style. Slightly acerbic, tastefully sarcastic, and largely humorous, all combined to make this a delightful read.

The plot is straight-forward, but leaves a lot to the mystery that is wrapped up, very nicely, in the last chapter. The literary erudite will appreciate the scattered clues that they may, or may not, follow. Dead bodies that don’t always stay dead, and some that do. Fleeting Memory reminded me of an old detective show, with more than a dash of comedy. Definitely recommend this book to any mystery fans that like their reading light and fun!

Wednesday, August 10, 2011

Review: The Help by Kathryn Stockett

ISBN #: 978-0-425-23220-0
Page Count: 522
Copyright: 2009


Book Summary:
(Taken from back cover)

Aibileen is a black maid in 1962 Jackson, Mississippi, raising her seventeenth white child.  She's always taken orders quietly, but lately it leaves her with a bitterness she can no longer bite back.  Her friend Minny has certainly never held her tongue, or held on to a job for very long, but now she's working for a newcomer with secrets that leave her speechless.  And white socialite Skeeter has just returned from college with ambition and a degree but, to her mother's lament, no husband.  Normally Skeeter would find solace in Constantine, the beloved maid who raised her, but Constantine has inexplicably disappeared.

Together, these seemingly different women join to work on a project that could forever alter their destinies and the life of a small town - to write, in secret, a tell-all book about what it's really like to work as a black maid in the white homes of the South.  Despite the terrible risks they will have to take, and the sometimes humorous boundaries they will have to cross, these three women unite with one intention: hope for a better day.


Mandy's Review:

Cover

Color-wise, I like the yellow and purple together.  I think it's pretty.  The three birds, though... that's where the meaning lies.

First of all, when I saw the birds, the first thing that occurred to me was Bob Marley's song "Three Little Birds."  You know the one.  The chorus that tells you:

Don't worry about a thing
Cause every little thing is gonna be alright

After I sang Bob Marley's song (one of my faves, by the way) and began reading the story, I thought of another meaning for the cover.

The two birds that are together represent the two main maids that are telling the stories about their employers.  The bird by itself represents the white lady who is gathering and editing the maid's stories.  They are birds of a feather who cannot flock together because of the Jim Crow laws that govern 1962 Jackson, Mississippi.

Plot

The setting for this story was definitely during a strenuous and tumultuous time in our Nation's history.  It takes place in the early 1960's, where well-to-do white women participated in the Junior League and played Bridge.  It was a time where segregation was prevalent and anybody fighting against segregation were punished ... especially in the Deep South.

Every well-to-do white home employed African Americans as maids, gardeners, butlers, etc.  African Americans were looked down upon and thought to be dirty, just because their skin color was different.  It was a dark, ugly time in our Nation's history that, unfortunately, hasn't completely died in some people's minds.

In this book, the various Civil Rights' events were touched upon: Rosa Parks, the sit-in at Woolworth's, Medgar Evers, Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.'s march.  Even former President John F. Kennedy's assassination was briefly touched upon.

The author was very adept at interweaving these real social and political events with a fictional story about two maids and a fed-up white woman.  The interaction between these three main characters were dynamic.  Even the secondary characters were extremely realistic and felt as if you knew them.

The entire book leapt off the page and effortlessly created a movie in your mind's eye.

Main Characters

Aibileen - Stoic, strong, dependable.  Aibileen is the maid that all the other maids look up to.  She moves from various families a lot because she only likes to work for them while their babies are young ... before they get the minds of their parents concerning 'the help.'

Bitter, prayerful, concerned.  Aibileen had an only son who died recently.  The way his death occurred planted the bitter seed in Aibileen's heart.  Despite that, she still wrote her prayers on a regular basis for everybody the Lord set in her heart.

What will happen to Aibileen once it leaks out that she's told her story and it's being published?

Minny - Sassy and dependable.  Minny keeps losing jobs left and right because of her mouth.  She tries to keep what she's thinking inside, but often it just comes out before she can stop herself.  The results are often detrimental to her career.

Scared and self-loathful.  Minny's home life is nothing to brag about.  She has five children and an alcoholic husband who tends to become violent and abusive.  Her only safe getaway is a few houses down at Aibileen's home.

Will Minny lose her job when the people of Jackson read about the Terrible Awful thing she did to her last employer's daughter?  Will her husband finally snap and become murderous when he finds out Minny's been talking to and trusting a white lady with her stories?

Skeeter - Frustrated.  She's tall, skinny and hasn't ever had a steady boyfriend.  Did I mention she's 23 years old?  She longs to be a writer in New York where she can write about things that matter without having to worry about what the other Junior Leaguers would say behind her back.  She's tired of the Bridge meetings and writing the Junior League's newsletter.  She wants more from life ... and she wants to be out of her parent's house!

Daring.  One letter from an editor in New York begins Skeeter thinking.  She decides to write the maids' stories.  IF she can get them to open up and talk to her.  She knows there's a line drawn in everybody's minds between the blacks and whites.  Can she convince the maids she's there to help?  Can the imaginary line be erased and they join together?

Overall

I chose to read this book because the movie previews caught my attention.  For this book to be Kathryn Stockett's debut is truly astonishing.  I can see why it was made into a movie right away.  It was original, poignant, thoughtful and gripping.  I don't usually refer to a novel as "gripping," but this one will.  It did me because it talks about one of the issues I feel strongly about: racism and racial equality.

I would definitely recommend this to readers who enjoy a fictional story interspersed with actual historical and political facts.  I know one thing... This book will not be leaving my bookshelf at all.  I only hope and pray the movie does this book justice.

Tuesday, August 9, 2011

Review: Wallflower by Holly-Jane Rahlens

ISBN #: 978-1-935902-70-6
Page Count: 134
Copyright: 2010


Book Summary:
(Taken from back cover)

Wallflower is four hours in the life of Molly Lanzfeld, sixteen-year-old New Yorker in Berlin.  It's Thanksgiving Day 1989, two weeks after the fall of the Wall.  Molly, the daughter of a German-Jewish mother who fled the Nazis in 1938, is off to her mother's birth house in East Berlin.  On the subway trip from West to East, wallflower Molly meets East German wildflower Mick Maier, nineteen.  It's love at first sight, and for both, a journey into an unknown land and the labyrinth of Berlin's underground world - a fertile terrain in which to discover each other, the absurdities of the divided city, and of course, the wonder of love.


Mandy's Review:

Cover

An actual photo of what could be the Berlin Wall makes for an interesting cover.

Plot

The story begins two weeks after the fall of the Berlin Wall, which had to be a confusing time for Germans.  They were so used to being separated and having a rigid structure define their circumstances that when the Wall fell it possibly felt as if reality had suddenly ceased... opening up a dream world to them.  Of course, the privileged Germans now had to deal with the "riff-raff" having access to their side.

Okay ... enough with the sociology lesson.  Back to the book ...

Main Characters

Molly - An 11th grade American girl who came to live in Berlin with her father for one year for his job.  She desires to see her mother's ancestral home and takes a trip to go visit it.

Mick - A German boy who attaches himself to Molly on her journey to East Germany.  He's free-spirited, polite, fun and spontaneous.

Overall

Even though this book only covers a four hour period of time, you really get a sense for the characters and the way the German government behaved.  It's a quick read that I would recommend to people who are looking for something quick and entertaining.
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