Genre: Children's Fiction
Taking place on the coast, Benny Shaw is on summer vacation at the lighthouse where his grandfather is the keeper. He soon makes himself some new friends, one of which is the tomboy, Babe Meara. Throughout the book we follow Benny, and sometimes Babe, as they hunt for fishing flies, weights and baits to resell. They make an enemy. Someone develops a crush. The rules are broken and the price is paid. Along with several other escapades are covered in this novel.
It is a wonderful story and was quite captivating although I didn't enjoy it as much as Benny and Omar. It was well worth the read and the space on my bookshelf. And even though the main character is a boy, I feel that it will speak to both boys and girls and offer the same enjoyment that I drew from this book.
Bibliophile (noun) - a person who collects or has a great love of books That's me! Hoping to spread a love for reading by sharing thoughts, views and reviews of books here.
12 July 2015
05 July 2015
Benny and Omar - Eoin Colfer
Genre: Children's Fiction
Benny Shaw loves Hurling and he likes Ireland. And then his dad gets a job... In Tunisia... Which just so happens to be in Africa. It's not Ireland and there is no Hurling. He does not want to be here, but despite this fact, he finds himself making friends and becoming a troublemaker along with a local boy.
This is a heart warming story about two boys who, despite a language barrier, become friends and brothers. We follow their adventures and antics and we see how these two make every moment count.
If this book teaches you only one thing it would be that spoken language is not important, but rather the language from the heart that counts.
This is a must read for Colfer fans!
Benny Shaw loves Hurling and he likes Ireland. And then his dad gets a job... In Tunisia... Which just so happens to be in Africa. It's not Ireland and there is no Hurling. He does not want to be here, but despite this fact, he finds himself making friends and becoming a troublemaker along with a local boy.
This is a heart warming story about two boys who, despite a language barrier, become friends and brothers. We follow their adventures and antics and we see how these two make every moment count.
If this book teaches you only one thing it would be that spoken language is not important, but rather the language from the heart that counts.
This is a must read for Colfer fans!
28 June 2015
The C-Word - Lisa Lynch
Genre: Non-fiction - Biography
Lisa Lynch is 28 years old. She is perfectly healthy. Except for the lump in her left breast. The Grade 3 breast cancer lump. With no history of breast cancer in her family, this diagnosis surprises the hell out of Lisa Lynch.
This book follows Lisa's [mis]adventures while she copes with cancer, From the diagnosis through to the mastectomy, chemotherapy and radiation. The horror of losing her hair and having to pick a wig.
This book gives insight into the life of a cancer patient, fighter and survivor. Lisa cuts right through the candy-coated 'everything-will-be-okay' bullshit and deals with the cold hard facts of this life changing illness. It is funny, sad and amazing all-in-one type of book.
Lisa's story had me laughing and crying on every page as I followed her journey and I all I could do was hope and wish and dream that she was in remission and that her and her husband could lead the life they both dreamed of... But I won't spoil it for you... Read it for yourself and see where Lisa takes you...
Lisa's story had me laughing and crying on every page as I followed her journey and I all I could do was hope and wish and dream that she was in remission and that her and her husband could lead the life they both dreamed of... But I won't spoil it for you... Read it for yourself and see where Lisa takes you...
Lisa kept a blog, the link can be found below:
After this book was published, there were further developments with Lisa's illness:
October 2012: Lisa is diagnosed with Grade 4 bone and brain cancer. Although incurable, it is manageable.
November 2012: Lisa receives Gamma Knife Treatment
25 December 2012: Lisa is rushed to hospital for emergency chemo.
January 2013: Lisa receives chemo and transfusions. The CT scan shows a subdural bleed.
11 March 2013: Lisa passes away peacefully.
11 March 2013: Lisa passes away peacefully.
19 June 2015
Haven of Obedience - Marina Anderson
Genre: Smutty Rubbish/Mommy Porn/Erotica
The main character is a high powered magazine editor who likes to be in control, in all aspects of her life, even the bedroom. This often leaves her lonely. She is invited to 'The Haven', a country retreat where she learns to hand over control and there she meets Simon. And who really cares about the rest? This book was absolute trash.
The story line is pathetically flimsy. The editor was lazy (or distracted) and the layout, spelling and grammar mistakes are abundant. I wasn't particularly interested in the book but at this point it just lost me completely. It basically starts and ends with sex and is actually rather boring.
This book is utter crap and I won't ever read anything by this author again, not for an infinite amount of money or any other reimbursement, If you like these types of 'books', you might enjoy it but I don't recommend them at all. Stick to something a little more classy.
The main character is a high powered magazine editor who likes to be in control, in all aspects of her life, even the bedroom. This often leaves her lonely. She is invited to 'The Haven', a country retreat where she learns to hand over control and there she meets Simon. And who really cares about the rest? This book was absolute trash.
The story line is pathetically flimsy. The editor was lazy (or distracted) and the layout, spelling and grammar mistakes are abundant. I wasn't particularly interested in the book but at this point it just lost me completely. It basically starts and ends with sex and is actually rather boring.
This book is utter crap and I won't ever read anything by this author again, not for an infinite amount of money or any other reimbursement, If you like these types of 'books', you might enjoy it but I don't recommend them at all. Stick to something a little more classy.
19 October 2014
The Shadow of the Wind - Carlos Ruiz Zafón
Genre: Fiction
"When a Library disappears,. or a bookshop closes down, when a book is consigned to oblivion, those of us who know this place, it's guardians, make sure that it gets here. In this place, books no longer remembered by anyone, books that are lost in time, live forever, waiting for the day when they will reach a new reader's hands. In the shop we buy and sell them, but in truth books have no owner. Every book you see here has been somebody's best friend. Now they only have us..." ~On the Cemetery of Forgotten Books [Page 4]~
"Every book, every volume you see here, has a soul. The soul of the person who wrote it and of those who read it and lived and dreamed with it. Every time a book changes hands, every time someone runs his eyes down it's pages, it's spirit grows and strengthens." [Page 3 - 4]
Set in Barcelona, the novel plays out over eleven years (1945 - 1956) and follows the story of Daniel Sempere and his loyal friend, Fermin Romero de Torres.
Daniel's mother died when he was very young and, in 1945, his father, the owner of a book store, takes him to The Cemetery of Forgotten Books. At this very magical mystical place Daniel is given the choice to remove one book for himself and so he discovers The Shadow of the Wind written by an author he does not know, Julián Carax. And so the adventure begins.
This unknown author sparks Daniel's curiosity and soon the reader is drawn into a world filled with love, mystery and betrayal as Daniel tries to learn more about this strange author. Over eleven years we see Daniel fall in and out of love, make a new friend or two, come terribly close to dying and getting himself into a few very sticky situations.
This story is beautifully and exceptionally written and each character, no matter how minor or insignificant, is perfectly sculpted by the author. I fell in love with this book from page one, and the two quotes above had me in tears, prompting the people around me to inquire whether I was alright. Telling them that the book had made me cry earned me quite a few weird glances... Once I had finished chapter one I wanted to stop reading, not because there was anything wrong but because if I continued to read then the book would end and then I would have nothing. And I was right... Now that it's done I have nothing because I will never be able to read it for the first time again... Unless I suffer memory loss and that idea looks very tempting to me on a regular basis.
It was a beautiful read and should appear on every one's "Top 5 Books to Read Before I Die" list.
Translated from the Spanish by Lucia Graves, daughter of the poet Robert Graves.
"When a Library disappears,. or a bookshop closes down, when a book is consigned to oblivion, those of us who know this place, it's guardians, make sure that it gets here. In this place, books no longer remembered by anyone, books that are lost in time, live forever, waiting for the day when they will reach a new reader's hands. In the shop we buy and sell them, but in truth books have no owner. Every book you see here has been somebody's best friend. Now they only have us..." ~On the Cemetery of Forgotten Books [Page 4]~
"Every book, every volume you see here, has a soul. The soul of the person who wrote it and of those who read it and lived and dreamed with it. Every time a book changes hands, every time someone runs his eyes down it's pages, it's spirit grows and strengthens." [Page 3 - 4]
Set in Barcelona, the novel plays out over eleven years (1945 - 1956) and follows the story of Daniel Sempere and his loyal friend, Fermin Romero de Torres.
Daniel's mother died when he was very young and, in 1945, his father, the owner of a book store, takes him to The Cemetery of Forgotten Books. At this very magical mystical place Daniel is given the choice to remove one book for himself and so he discovers The Shadow of the Wind written by an author he does not know, Julián Carax. And so the adventure begins.
This unknown author sparks Daniel's curiosity and soon the reader is drawn into a world filled with love, mystery and betrayal as Daniel tries to learn more about this strange author. Over eleven years we see Daniel fall in and out of love, make a new friend or two, come terribly close to dying and getting himself into a few very sticky situations.
This story is beautifully and exceptionally written and each character, no matter how minor or insignificant, is perfectly sculpted by the author. I fell in love with this book from page one, and the two quotes above had me in tears, prompting the people around me to inquire whether I was alright. Telling them that the book had made me cry earned me quite a few weird glances... Once I had finished chapter one I wanted to stop reading, not because there was anything wrong but because if I continued to read then the book would end and then I would have nothing. And I was right... Now that it's done I have nothing because I will never be able to read it for the first time again... Unless I suffer memory loss and that idea looks very tempting to me on a regular basis.
It was a beautiful read and should appear on every one's "Top 5 Books to Read Before I Die" list.
11 October 2014
Vanishing Acts – Jodi Picoult
Genre: Fiction
Delia Hopkins’s whole
life has been a lie and this lie is suddenly ripped from underneath her with
very little warning. Once the truth is
revealed, is it really what Delia wants?
Is her mother the idea she used to picture when she was young? And is
her father really such a bad person for what he did?
I love Jodi Picoult’s
books and this one was no different. It
was beautifully written and each moment was perfectly captured and described on
the page. As a reader you are drawn into
the story and start to think for yourself about what was right and what was wrong. This is one of the things that I
love most about Picoult’s work, as every story has an underlying moral or
lesson. From this book I learnt that not
everything is always as it seems and that even though something may be wrong,
it may be what is right for the person who does it.
I was a little bit
shocked because the novel also mentions, to the very bare minimum, how to make methamphetamine (Crystal Meth/Tik). I did not realise that something like this would
be allowed to be published as it might give people ideas, although I suppose the type of people who would get these ideas would not be caught dead reading this book.
05 October 2014
Alfred Hitchcock’s A Brief Darkness – Edited by Cathleen Jordan
Genre: Mystery / Horror
Short Stories
From a man who fakes a
botched armed robbery to be rid of his wife, to an abandoned home with dark
secrets, this is quite a wonderful collection of ‘scary' short stories well put
together. I didn't find them quite as
scary as one would have thought but I definitely did enjoy them. Each story provided it's own little thrill
for the day, complicated enough not to be boring, but easy enough to finish within an hour. It's a wonderful book if you're looking for a little bit of a thrill everyday without having to focus too much on what is actually happening.
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