Oh my heck! This is great. Now all my books I read and buy on Amazon will be linked to Goodreads. I already have an account with Goodreads and share my reviews with readers everywhere. This is big news for book lovers everywhere.
Archive for the ‘Reading’ Category
Nathan Bransford, Author/ Amazon Acquired Goodreads
Posted in Literary works, Reading, tagged Amazon Kindle, Amazon.com, books, children's books, Goodreads on March 30, 2013| 2 Comments »
Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein
Posted in Literary works, Reading, tagged art, Charles Dickens, Frankenstein, great reads, Literary Works, literature, Mary Shelley, philosophy, religion, Romanticism, Victor Frankenstein, World Literature on March 15, 2013| 1 Comment »
My rating: 5 of 5 stars
Mary Shelley is profoundly an inspiration to writers that came after her. Reading Frankenstein was hard to understand with the words she used. It is written in comparison to something Charles Dickens wrote. There was prose and style of the time era. Imagination wasn’t closeted to just a small area but encompassed a whole theology of religion and philosophy of the universe. She brought about the question of where a soul comes from. The horrors in the book grip you until the very end when you sigh with relief it is over.
What Role Should Libraries Have in an Electronic World? | Nathan Bransford, Author
Posted in Reading, tagged books, Business, Children, e-books, electronic world, IPad, libraries, Nathan Bransford, publishing, readers, reading on March 5, 2013| 9 Comments »
English: This is a picture of bookshelves in a tiny library in upper New York State. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)
What Role Should Libraries Have in an Electronic World? | Nathan Bransford, Author.
I have said this before about libraries. But I like how Nathan Bransford puts it. That libraries could be going the way of the dinosaurs.
The only issue I have is that if I don’t want to buy a book but I have to read it then I want to borrow it from the library. I would hate to lose an institution that provides a big service to those of us who just wants to read a book and give it back.
Only time will tell what will happen to the libraries in the world. What are your thoughts on this issue? Do you support your local library? Do you use a library to check out an author’s books before deciding on buying?
On the Horizon
Posted in Literary works, Reading, tagged Book, Children, Children's literature, E-book, IBooks, IPad, literature, Shopping on February 23, 2013| Leave a Comment »
Be on the lookout for a feature story. Starring (hopefully) someone from this writing world …. 
Also the news on e-books doesn’t look great according to some. Authors could be hit with the crazy price cut of their ebooks by companies who want to sell used e-books. Is it possible? Could readers really tell the difference between used and new digital books? Read the full article here: Used e-books or at What the…
Three children, with bare feet, stand waiting on the hot sand. My middle-grade fictional book is now ready for editing. Hunting for the right editor at the right price is a gamble. Anyone who knows a good editor for children’s literature, please shoot me a line.
Editing, illustrating and writing tirelessly on my picture book. I am getting closer to self-publishing, or cutting the cord, with this baby.
Great Literature is Not Dead
Posted in Literary works, Reading, tagged Coraline, Graveyard Book, Henry Selick, Liza, Neil Gaiman, Newbery Medal, Owens, Ron Howard on February 13, 2013| 2 Comments »
The Graveyard Book by Neil Gaiman
My rating: 5 of 5 stars
A book is good when you finished reading it quickly within a couple of days. But a book is great when after falling in love with the main cahracter you are sad to see him leave you. Nobody Owens is one of those characters who leaves you wondering. Wondering about life, people, and whether you lived life to it’s fullest. One of my favorite quotes is near the end of the story and is said by Liza, “Truly, life is wasted on the living, Nobody Owens. For one of us is too foolish to live, and it is not I. Say you will miss me.” (“The Graveyard Book”, by Neil Gaiman)
This story is beautifully written and poetic to the end. It is obvious why this book won the Newberry Award. Literature is not dead, and is found in “The Graveyard Book”.
The latest “Odd” installment
Posted in Literary works, Reading, tagged art, Dean Koontz, Hunger Games, Koontz, literature, Odd Thomas, Shopping, Thomas on February 7, 2013| Leave a Comment »
My rating: 3 of 5 stars
I really enjoy reading a Dean Koontz novel. And I especially enjoy the Odd Thomas series. Except for this last installment. There was no humor like the first books so this novel left a bad taste in my mouth. It was dark and dreary. Which I can understand just from reading the title. But there was no real happy ending, just a chapter closed, and the bad guys dead. The character Annamarie is still not resolved in this latest book. And Odd keeps hinting at the fact that we are reading his memoirs. So is he dead? When do we come to the conclusion of this monumental event?
The literature side left me wanting. I know I have seen some better writing and there were a few good lines in the book when Odd was reflecting on his situation and became philosophical. But overall the language of the bad guys and the few parts of the dialect were poor at minimum.
The plot was interesting but hard to understand until the very end when Koontz explains in more detail what the heck is going on. It took me longer to read because of a slow start and Odd always reflecting back to the past. Skip those parts and get right to the meat of the book. I wish I could have liked it more.
A Novel Review
Posted in Literary works, Reading, tagged books, Florida, Grisham, John Grisham, Law, Law firm, Lawsuit, Lawyer, novels, reading, reviews, United States on January 31, 2013| Leave a Comment »
In John Grisham‘s novel “The Litigators” he takes the dark world of lawyers and brings some light to it. While reading other Grisham novels, they all feel the same, but this one stands above the rest.
It starts with the main character, David Zinc who finds himself suffocating at the law firm he works for. He arrives at work one day and immediately leaves. David discovers himself drunk at a bar when he hears a wreck down the road. He notices some lawyers running to the scene and then fighting over the victim. This somehow gives him the inspiration to switch to a small boutique of ambulance chasers.
At Finley and Figg, David sees that Oscar Finley is ready to retire and just counting the days and Wally Figg seems to find the most unlikely cases. They handle everything from divorces to estate settlements. The two lawyers “fight like a married couple” or two drama queens. The secretary they have in the office and the dog, who barks when an ambulance is coming, add humor at all the right moments.
David left a huge law firm where they made millions. But he worked more than 70 hours a week. With no time for his new wife and a job where he was drowning he felt that F&F was the answer he was looking for.
Money is running low and now all three lawyers are feeling the pinch. Until Figg discovers a class-act against a drug company. He talks his partners into signing up and taking on cases in the Chicago area. The drug company they are up against doesn’t play nice though. The other class acts in Florida and other areas drop out when they hear about stipulations against the lawyers. Now with Finley in the hospital and Figg on a bender it is all left up to David. When some say they have a hero most people think of superheroes not lawyers. David Zinc was a hero that day. He opened a door which led him to present evidence that the defense could not dispute. Even though they lost the case, David had made a name for himself. With their first litigation case behind them and Finley saying he is retiring now, David announces that he has another litigation case against a toy manufacturer. The toy company though doesn’t want the publicity of the damage the toy caused to a young boy. So they settled out of court with David and the family. The heartbreaking thing was that the boy died days before the papers were filed. The President of the toy company amazingly said he didn’t want anything to change and would still give them the money. It is nice to see in a novel the bad guy do the right thing for once. This small family went through so much and David had promised them that even if they didn’t win he would still help them with medical bills. David and his wife later had a baby and named him after the boy who died. David expanded his law firm and has no problem litigating cases.
Grisham uses a lot of lawyer jargon but doesn’t dumb it down to help you understand. Readers of all levels can read this novel without feeling that they were talked down to. The story is believable enough to be a non-fiction novel. Something that could be seen in the news or read about is drugs that have class-act law suits against them. Grisham’s characters were not over the top or too dramatic either. At first I thought there was no way a lawyer would leave a big law firm where there are company perks like cars, vacation pay and a fixed salary. After reading David’s problems about working more than 70 hours a week and having no time with his wife you start to understand why he snapped one day.
This novel brought tears and laughter, which makes it to the top of my list.
Goodreads | Jessica Wilson’s review of The Kite Runner
Posted in Literary works, Reading, tagged Goodreads, Kite Runner, rebels, Recreation, taliban, War torn country on November 26, 2012| 1 Comment »
Goodreads | Jessica Wilsons review of Hard Times
Posted in Literary works, Reading, tagged Charles Dickens, classic reads, literature on September 19, 2012| 1 Comment »
Goodreads | Jessica Wilsons review of Hard Times.
Even though Charles Dickens makes for heavy reading it is also thought provoking.





