Tuesday, August 7, 2012

Review of "Guilt by Degrees" [65}


Guilt by Degrees by Marcia Clark
Mulholland Books, ISBN 978-0316129534
May 8, 2012, 448 pages



"Someone has been watching D.A. Rachel Knight--someone who's Rachel's equal in brains, but with more malicious intentions. It began when a near-impossible case fell into Rachel's lap, the suspectless homicide of a homeless man. In the face of courthouse backbiting and a gauzy web of clues, Rachel is determined to deliver justice. She's got back-up: tough-as-nails Detective Bailey Keller. As Rachel and Bailey stir things up, they're shocked to uncover a connection with the vicious murder of an LAPD cop a year earlier. Something tells Rachel someone knows the truth, someone who'd kill to keep it secret.

Harrowing, smart, and riotously entertaining, GUILT BY DEGREES is a thrilling ride through the world of LA courts with the unforgettable Rachel Knight."

The book opens with the very memorable, quite attention grabbing murder of a respected LAPD officer in his own home and then moves on quickly to introduce us to D.A Rachel Knight, a member of L.A's elite Special Trials Unit...two things which would seem to have no connection. But as we quickly learn, appearances can be very deceiving.
When a fellow prosecutor seems to have botched a case, Rachel takes over the case of a nameless homeless man who was stabbed on the street and left to die as people stepped over him. But again, things are not quite as they seem and before she knows it, Rachel is in the middle of a quite complicated and layered investigation. Happily, she is one smart cookie, packing heat as they say, and with the able assistance of her friend and L.A. police detective Bailey Keller.
Because we all have secrets to hide and some are ready and willing to kill to protect theirs.

I can remember when Ms. Clark's first book, Guilt by Association, came out and I must say, I was a little conflicted about reading it. Yes, I imagine few people know the law enforcement world of LA better than Clark, famous for her prosecution in the OJ Simpson case. But just because someone is well known, and maybe can get a book contract, does not mean they can actually write and I feared that was the case here. Well, I never did read that first book, but when I received a copy of her second, Guilty by Degrees, through Library Thing's Early Reviewer program, I was happy to check it out.
And I will admit, my fears were totally unfounded.
Ms. Clark is a very good writer and this is a very good, very entertaining legal/police thriller.

The plot is clever and smart, full of suspense and moves along at a steady pace, a pace that will make it hard to put the book down. The dialogue is very well done, smart and often with a touch of humor. The characters, especially Rachel, are very good, very believable. But as we hope with a good character, she is far from perfect, with a few hidden secrets of her own than she will go to great lengths to protect, even ending a relationship with the man she loves when he gets a little too nosy about her past. So maybe that gives her a little more insight into our villain in this book, and a very good villain it is, every bit as smart and clever as Rachel, a very worthy adversary with their own dark, very dark, past. And I assume it a villain we might see more of in the future, since that is left a bit open-ended at the book's end.

I do have a few small issues with the book. I could not help but wonder how a prosecutor had so much time, days and days, to be on the road, doing her own investigation. Doesn't she have a desk full of other cases to be working on? Yes, there is a little mention of that, a few late nights at the office, 'cleaning up', but it still seemed rather unbelievable. And the frequent restaurant name dropping, while interesting at first, got a bit tiring as it went on and on. Do these people never eat at home? Do they never end a day without drinking a few martinis?
Still, I must admit that Clark was able to make Los Angeles, a city I have never had much interest in, seem rather intriguing. And that is doing something!

Guilty by Degrees is a well written, quite well done book, one that mystery fans, especially fans of legal and police thrillers, will want to pick up.


My thanks to Library Thing and the publisher for providing a copy for review.

Monday, August 6, 2012

Musing Monday..Why Not Take All of Me?


How exciting! Seems we are going to get to answer some of the questions people offered up last week..The week Miz B picked one from everything distils into reading...

This week’s musing asks:
What attracts you to a book blog? What puts you off in a book blog? Do you share personal stuff on your book blog?


What attracts me to a book blog?
Well, there is content and appearance.
Let's tackle appearance first. Personally, I like a blog that has a clean look, not all cluttered up.
And I will tell ya what will make me click away in a second.
Music.
I find any noise on a blog totally unacceptable. I will not go searching, looking for a way to shut it off. I am already gone.

But...I will admit that I can be persuaded to read a blog whose appearance I do not like if the content is appealing enough. Good reviews of some good books and it will go on my reading list. I understand what I might consider 'good' books is totally subjective and that is fine. I am sure there are many great blogs, well written, lovely blogs, out there reviewing books I would never want to read. So they will not be on the reading list. But if we share some beloved author, a favorite genre, then I will hang around to see what else you think is worth my time..or not worth my time.
Something for everyone, not every one for every body.

Now, the second part of the question is very interesting, about sharing personal things on my blog.
Actually, I think everything on my blog is personal.
I read books I think I will like and tell you what I think of them.
I go places I like and then share images of them with you.
I cook things I think sound interesting and then tell you about them.
I share pictures of the critters in my life with you, ones I think are cute and I hope you do too.
That is, in my mind, personal stuff.

No, I don't usually share facts about my family or my job. I don't post pictures of them, don't even use their names. OK, there might have been one photo of the Niece once. And if you are very diligent about reading the comments, you could possible figure out the name of the Bro, Sil, and Niece...not that they comment very often. (as we have discussed..you know who you are!) But that is not what this blog is about and quite honestly, I have concerns about putting too much information out there on the World Wide Web, to be floating around for all eternity, accessible to anyone. It just seems a tiny bit dangerous and a wee bit creepy.

But my blog is all me, if not all OF me.
Someone I know..yes, you are reading this aren't you?..recently said that the person on my blog is not me, that it is a created, 'fake' person. I answered that it was not true, not true at all..maybe she just not actually know me.
First, why would I bother?
Second, it sounds like too much work, and if anything, I am lazy. That I have mentioned.

If you have a blog...and really, how any blogs do you think there are in the world? millions no doubt...the whole point is to create something you like, something you find interesting first. And then hope someone else might find something of interest too, a few poor souls perhaps. A book..a photo..a puppy.
I mean really, trying to keep some sort of image of this fake person in my mind and then write as them... It give me a headache just thinking about it.
No folks, this is the real me, what I like and hate and think and find interesting.

Speaking of all of me, let me share a video of this classic song.
"Hey, isn't she the one complaining about music on a blog??"
Well, this is a video and you can choose to listen to it or not. ;-)
But I hope you do, because it is Louie..and no one can sing it and play it like Louie!!

Sunday, August 5, 2012

Sleeping Larry Sunday





Sleeping...


sleeping....

still sleeping.

Perhaps you notice a theme!
Sssshhh..
Larry is sleeping!



Saturday, August 4, 2012

Weekend Cooking...The Perfect Chick-Fil-A (Like) Chicken Sandwich?



I am sure most of you have heard about the recent Chick-Fil-A controversy.
This is not about that!

No, I don't do politics here.
That would be a different blog.
However, I will just say I am a huge fan of the U.S. Constitution, especially that bit about free speech, whether I personally agree with something that is said or not. Which is sort of the whole point of free speech....

No, this post is about the chicken goodness that is the Chick-Fil-A sandwich and the possibility of making a very good copy of the recipe in your very own home. If you do not have a Chick-Fil-A near you and have never tasted one, it is in my opinion the best fried chicken sandwich out there, puts MickyD's to shame, crunchy and a bit salty, with just two little pickle slices as it's accoutrement.

Well, I am not smart enough to figure such things out, but happily the folks at Serious Eats have worked and worked on it and came up with one. Not surprisingly, it is not so much about the ingredients, which are probably things you already have on hand.
No, the secret is in the technique, including the idea of adding a sprinkle of the wet ingredients to the dry, something I saw on America's Test Kitchen before. Oh, leave it to my friends at ATK to come up with that idea for an extra crunchy coating with lots of nooks and crannies. And then there is the brining of the chicken in a salt, sugar and water brine, something that adds flavor, keep the chicken juicy and changes the texture..or yes, I first read about that in ATK too!
If you want to read how they went about figuring it out, head over to the link and read the details.
I will be over here having a crispy 'chikin' snack!

Yes, I copied the setup of that pic but it is my sandwich.
erious Eats Chick-Fil-A Sandwich

Makes 4 sandwiches

Ingredients
  • Kosher salt, 1/2 cup plus 1/2 Tbs.
  • Sugar, 1/4 cup plus 2 tsp.
  • 2 large boneless skinless chicken breasts, split horizontally into 4 cutlets
  • 2 teaspoons paprika
  • 2 tablespoons black pepper
  • 1/2 teaspoon cayenne pepper
  • 1 teaspoon powdered MSG (optional)
  • 1 cup milk
  • 2 large eggs
  • 1 1/2 cups all-purpose flour
  • 2 tablespoons powdered non-fat milk
  • 1 tablespoon baking powder
  • 2 quarts peanut oil
  • 4 soft hamburger buns, toasted in butter
  • 8 dill pickle chips
Procedures

Dissolve 1/2 cup kosher salt and 1/4 cup sugar in 2 quart of cold water. Place chicken breasts in a zipper-lock bag and add brine. Transfer to refrigerator and let sit for at least 6 hours and up to overnight.

Meanwhile, combine paprika, black pepper, cayenne pepper, and MSG (if using), in a small bowl. Set aside. Whisk together milk and eggs in a medium bowl. Set aside.
Combine flour, non-fat milk powder, baking powder, 1/2 tablespoon kosher salt, 2 teaspoons sugar, and 2 tablespoons of spice mixture in a large bowl and whisk until homogenous. Drizzle 3 tablespoons milk/egg mixture into flour mixture and rub with fingertips until the flour mixture is coarse like wet sand.

In a large wok, deep fryer, or Dutch oven, preheat oil to 350°F.
Remove chicken breasts from brine, rinse and pat dry with paper towels. Season on all sides with remaining spice mixture. Transfer to milk mixture and turn to coat. Working one cutlet at a time, allow excess milk mixture to drip off then transfer to flour mixture. Turn to coat, pile extra mixture on top of cutlet, and press down firmly to adhere as much mixture as possible to the meat. Lift cutlet, shake off excess flour, then slowly lower into hot oil. Repeat with remaining breasts.

Cook, turning breasts occasionally until golden brown and crisp on all sides, and chicken is cooked through, about 4 minutes total. Transfer to a paper towel-lined plate.
Place 2 pickles on each bottom of a toasted bun and a fried chicken cutlet on top. Close sandwiches, then cover with an overturned bowl or aluminum foil and allow to rest for 2 minutes to steam buns. Serve immediately.


OK, I think they went a little crazy with the salt. Be careful, they specify KOSHER salt, which is about half the density of regular table salt. Is you are using table salt, cut the amounts in half. As it is, I already cut the salt in the flour mixture in half (called for 1 Tbs, in original recipe).
I also doubled the water in the brine to cut the salt ratio and I rinsed my chicken in water when I took it out of the brine, and then patted dry. Again, otherwise it is just too salty.
And if you look carefully, you will notice sesame seeds on my buns. Hey, I like sesame seeds! 
But otherwise, it was a classic Chick-Fil-A (Like) sandwich..it was very good, very crisp, very juicy.




This is my contribution this to this week's Weekend Cooking.
"Weekend Cooking is open to anyone who has any kind of food-related post to share: Book (novel, nonfiction) reviews, cookbook reviews, movie reviews, recipes, random thoughts, gadgets, fabulous quotations, photographs. If your post is even vaguely foodie, feel free to grab the button and link up anytime over the weekend."
Be sure to check out the other entries this week. As always, hosted by Beth Fish Reads.


Friday, August 3, 2012

Review of "Murder Takes Time" [64]

Murder Takes Time: Friendship & Honor Series, Book One 
by Giacomo Giammatteo
Inferno Publishing, ISBN 978-0985030209
April 12, 2012, 438 pages


"There was only one rule in our neighborhood--never break an oath. But oaths are easy to take and damn hard to keep."

"A string of brutal murders has bodies piling up in Brooklyn, and Detective Frankie Donovan knows what is going on. Clues left at the crime scenes point to someone from the old neighborhood, and that isn’t good.

Frankie has taken two oaths in his life—the one he took to uphold the law when he became a cop, and the one he took with his two best friends when they were eight years old and inseparable.

Those relationships have forced Frankie into many tough decisions, but now he faces the toughest one of his life; he has five murders to solve and one of those two friends is responsible. If Frankie lets him go, he breaks the oath he took as a cop and risks losing his job. But if he tries to bring him in, he breaks the oath he kept for twenty-five years—and risks losing his life.

In the neighborhood where Frankie Donovan grew up, you never broke an oath."

Frankie “Bugs” Donovan, Nicky “the Rat” Fusco and Tony “the Brain” Sannullo were best of friends as kids, playing together, stealing cigarettes together and fighting together..until the fight one day that left someone dead and Nicky in prison for a decade. When he finally gets out of prison, having never broken the code of loyalty they swore to as kids, everything is different, the old life gone. The love of his life is married to someone else, and has a child that is not his. Frankie has taken a different path and become a cop and Tony, the smart one, has moved to NYC and is involved with the Mob. And Nicky is a very different man from the one he once was, willing to do things he would have once thought beyond him. But will he break the oath that once tied them together?

I must say at first I did not know where this book was going at the beginning and the first part, where we first meet the boys, learn about each of their lives and how their friendship first developed, was a bit too long, a bit too detailed for my taste. But once things got rolling, when Nicky get sent to prison and we start to see the different threads start to come together, things really start to pick up! And I must admit that I love a story that has a great nun character, as his book does, something you do not see much of these days.

I will admit, I was a bit conflicted with this plot. Who to pull for, a cop who is trying to catch a murderer or a seemingly ruthless killer who is not quite what he seems? And can this possibly all work out in some fair and just way? Well, I will let the reader decide if that happens. I have my own opinion...which I will not share because it would spoil it for you. 



My thanks to the author and Pump Up The Book Tour for providing a copy of this book for review.

Head over to the tour site to check out some other links to more reviews, author interviews and to enter giveaways for an iPad2 , a Kindle Fire and a $50 gift card!



Thursday, August 2, 2012

Winners!! Winners!! Chicken Dinners!!

Time to pick two winners for The Line Between Here and Gone, and Larry was, as usual asleep, so I enlisted the help of 
Cat Bot
along with Random.org, to pick the winners....


So, Cat Bot, who is it?

Drum Roll Please....


Daryl and Nise!!

Tuesday, July 31, 2012

Wordless Wednesday...Farmer's Market plus..

It's a beautiful day...let's go to the market.
And stop at the beach!



 



 



 



 



The Cape May Ferry heading into the Delaware Bay






The Cape May Lighthouse



...as always, for more Wordless Wednesday, 
check these out.


Review of "XO" [63]


XO: A Kathryn Dance Novel 
by Jeffery Deaver
Simon & Schuster, ISBN 978-1439156377
June 12, 2012, 400 pages



California Bureau of Investigation's Kathryn Dance is on vacation, heading down to Fresno to pursue her hobby of "songcatching", recording local folk music, and also catching the concert of a friend, young country singer Kayleigh Towne. But shortly, it becomes very questionable that the concert will go on. One of Kayleigh's crew is killed in a horrible stage 'accident' which is, of course, no accident at all and the number one suspect is a man named Edwin Sharp who has been stalking Kayleigh and has also shown up in town for the concert. And the killing seems to have a connection to the words of one of Kayleigh's songs, "Your Shadow", which Edwin thinks was written just for him. But Edwin is one clever stalker...and perhaps murderer...staying just barely on the right side of legal and giving investigators quite a run for their money. He always seems to be one step ahead of the cops and it almost seems like he can read minds.

When a second body turns up, again tied to the song, police are even more sure it is Edwin...well, unless, as he suggests, he is being framed..or he wants them to think he is being framed and is really guilty...you get the idea.
Can local police, with the assistance of Dance, figure it all out before someone else, even Kayleigh herself, is a victim?

I read a glowing review of this book in the NY Times and have heard good things about Deaver's books in the past but never read one, so this seemed like the book to read!
How did that work out? Hmmmmm, OK, but not great.
So, where to start....

I actually like country music, so having that as a large element of the story was rather interesting. And you know I love a strong female lead character, so that should have been a plus but oddly did not pan out in this case. Dancer's name is in the title, so you might think she is at the center of the book, but there is something rather weak about her character, not enough to support this book. It does not help that she has to admit that her specialty, kinesics, the study of body language, is useless with Edwin. So the point of her being there is...what? And I will not even mention her personal life, where she, a supposedly smart woman, a trained investigator, makes a stupid assumption based on very limited information that has her doing something quite foolish...ok, yes, I did tell you after all, didn't I? And why the heck did she not have her gun with her or get one really quickly when the bodies started to drop. Oh, I hate characters that act in a stupid way.

But the major problem for me is probably our villain..or framed innocent man...Edwin. OK, he is weird but are we suppose to hate him..or feel sorry for him? Is he suppose to be creepy or just odd and misunderstood. It keeps changing back and forth and after a bit, I was not sure I cared that much. What was suppose to be a clever twist, on top of another clever twist, on top of another clever twist were not actually that clever, since I saw them coming a mile away. And the fact that there were a lot of pages left when the villain had supposedly been found. Bit of a giveaway, that.

And then there was the totally out of place sub-plot of a political assignation..what that was doing in this book made no sense. Editor please!Red pen!

OK, yes, I had a few problems with this one. I could go on. But really, it was not a bad book, more a very middling book, which is not what I hoped for from a best selling writer. Maybe if I had went in with lesser expectations I would have been a little happier with it. Maybe if I had checked the reviews on Amazon first, which are, to put it kindly, not great, not even good.
As it is, I really cannot see running out to get my hands on any of Deaver's other books. And that tells the tale.


Monday, July 30, 2012

Musing Monday...Questions, Questions, Questions!



This week’s musing asks…
What question(s) would you like to see asked in future Musing Mondays posts? I’m running out of ideas, and figured this might be the best way to get some more. ;)
The trick here will be to NOT answer anyone else’s questions just yet! LOL. You are only allowed to share questions, this week, but not answer them. ‘Kay? Go!

MizB, over at Should Be Reading is pulling a fast one this week. No Musing allowed indeed.

Oh, I hate this! I have a terrible imagination...what to do, what to do?
Gosh, how many question do you think I need to think of? One..two?
But honestly, the worse part of this 'question' is the prohibition from answering it. I think of a question, it starts rattling around in my brain and my opinion just bubbles up.
I might not have much imagination, but I have an opinion on just about everything and I ache, just ache, to share it.
But OK, I will play along
Questions, no answers.
Guess if you really love the question, you will just have to hope MizB uses it for a Musing Monday question in the near future!

  • So...If you were Book Czar of the world, is there one book you would like to require every kid to read?
  • Do you have a favorite place to read..a favorite chair, the bus, a hammock, a beach chair as the little waves tickle you toes, an umbrella drink in your hand.....? (Ooops, is that too close to an answer? I will try to do better)
  • If you had no other obligations, no need to work, no chores, to spouse or kids to care for, how many hours..or minutes...a day would you spend reading?
  • Do you have a Book Fantasy..to own a bookstore, work in a library, be an editor or publisher, to be an author with a NY Times best seller, a national tour and a book deal?...you get the idea. If you do, have you achieved it to any degree?
  • Do you have a favorite character from a book, maybe someone who seems oddly real to you, about whom you find yourself thinking, "Gee, I wonder what Mr/Ms ???? would do in this case?" Ooops, may be giving too much away again.  ;-)
OK, my imagination has reached it limit..my very limited limit.
How about you? Do you have some book related question that you are just dying to ask?
Well, if you do, go ahead and share!


Sunday, July 29, 2012

Bandit Sunday...All By Himself

What do you mean this is not my couch?
Can't you just let a guy play with a few of his toys in peace??
Gee wiz!

Saturday, July 28, 2012

Wordless Wednesday...Southern Style Pickled Shrimp

Say what you will about the America South...and I would only say the very nicest things...but you must admit they are a culture that takes food and cooking seriously. And they are also a place that takes their steamy hot temperatures seriously. So when the mercury rises (for those of you old enough to remember when they use the deadly dangerous mercury) where to look for food ideas but Down South.Yes, we are having the oh, so easy shrimp again! But this week we are going to pickle them.

Now I must say, I never made Pickled Shrimp before, I never even tasted Pickled Shrimp before, but from what I read, they are one of those quintessential southern dishes, a popular summer appetizer, and they involved very little cooking, so they seemed a win, win.
And I was curious.

As I tend to do, I searched the Internet, reading recipe after recipe, taking something from Martha Stewart, something from Saveur, something from Southern Living and something from Sam Hoffer at My Carolina Kitchen.

You clean and cook the shrimp, this time in some Old Bay seasoning, and then, as Ms. Hoffer suggests, add the hot shrimp to the rest of the ingredients, to encourage them to absorb the flavorful liquid. Layer them in a container, cover and refrigerate overnight or up to several days, because they will just get more pickled and more tasty.
I did add one step...don't I always?
I heated the oil and added the spices to it and cooked them for a minute to two before adding the rest of the ingredients, to let them bloom, something many spices benefit from.

Southern Style Pickled Shrimp

2 tbsp. Old Bay seasoning
1 1/2 lb. shrimp, peeled and deveined

1/2 cup extra-virgin olive oil
1 tsp. celery seed
1 tsp. fennel seed
1/2 tsp. crushed red chile flakes
4 cloves garlic, finely chopped
1 tsp. sugar
1 Tbs. peppercorns, cracked
1 tsp. coriander seeds

1/2 cup fresh lemon juice
1/4 vinegar
1 tbsp. kosher salt
1/4 cup packed flat-leaf parsley leaves, chopped
2-4 dried bay leaves

1/3 cup capers, with the liquid
1 medium onion, thinly sliced
2 lemons, thinly sliced

In a pot, heat the oil and then add the celery seed, fennel seed, coriander seed, red pepper flakes, peppercorns and garlic and cook for just a minute.
Take off the heat and add the sugar, salt, bay leaves, onion and sliced lemons and the lemon juice, capers and vinegar and stir well.

While that is sitting, prepare the shrimp.
Add the Old Bay to about 8 cups of boiling water, and then add the shrimp, cooking a couple of minutes, depending on size, until just done, pink and curled.
Add the hot shrimp to the spice/lemon/onion mixture and spoon into a container. A jar with a tight lid is good because you can turn it over to spread the goodness around evenly while they are pickling in the frig, where they should remain at least overnight before eating.


I think this is one of those recipes you can play around with, taking some of the ingredients and measurements as just a suggestion. I will tell you every recipe I say is different in some way. If you like them hot, add some little dried peppers or if you don't like things hot, leave out the peppers altogether.
I love capers, but if you don't, don't add them. A number of fresh herbs would be nice in there if you happen to have some on hand. You could add a couple of coins of fresh ginger or some dried mustard or some Worcestershire.
I think the lemons, the onions, the oil and vinegar, the salt are required and then go from there.

I understand these are traditionally served as appetizer, just picked up with a toothpick or served on a cracker, and that would be excellent. But I can see other uses for them. They would be lovely on a salad, wouldn't they, or made into a shrimp sandwich or a little taco? Or how about in some pasta salad? Yum!
Use your imagination!
Zip up your shrimp!



This is my contribution this to this week's Weekend Cooking.
"Weekend Cooking is open to anyone who has any kind of food-related post to share: Book (novel, nonfiction) reviews, cookbook reviews, movie reviews, recipes, random thoughts, gadgets, fabulous quotations, photographs. If your post is even vaguely foodie, feel free to grab the button and link up anytime over the weekend."
Be sure to check out the other entries this week. As always, hosted by Beth Fish Reads.


Friday, July 27, 2012

Review of "Jana Bibi's Excellent Fortunes" [62]




Jana Bibi's Excellent Fortunes: A Novel 
by Betsy Woodman
Holt Paperbacks, ISBN 978-0805093490
July 17, 2012, 336 pages.



Janet Laird, fondly known as Jana Bibi, is Scottish by heritage, but in her heart and on her passport she is Indian.
Her parents were in the civil service before Indian independence, she was born there, and except for a few unhappy years in Scotland after their death, she has lived all her life in her beloved India. She returned as the wife of a missionary, and after his death, supported herself and her son as a musician (seems to be more to that story) and a violin teacher. But her life is turned on it's head when she gets a letter informing her that she has inherited her grandfather's house in a faraway Indian hill station, Hamara Nagar, the historic Jolly Grant House. So she packs up her housekeeper Mary and one of the stars of the book, the charming and very talkative Mr. Ganguly, and off they head for a grand adventure. Happily we get to go along!

But not all is rosy. The house has been taken over by monkeys, but not to worry. All you have to do is hire the friendly local Gurkha to drive them off with the sound of his bagpipes. And then there is the matter of the dam that the government plans to build right where they stand, wiping out their village. So the locals hatch a plan to put the town on the map, make it famous and save it. Jana Bibi, reborn as the local fortune teller, is in the center of the plan to make it a tourist attraction. She is joined in the endeavor by her new friends, like Ramachandran, whose Treasure Emporium store will furnish her salon, Feroze Ali Khan of Royal Tailors who will make her costume, and Rambir, editor of the local newspaper who will publicize the new venture. And they are just a few of the wonderful characters we will meet in this delightful book, along with a cast of American, Europeans, Muslim and Hindu and Christian Indians, one very corrupt police chief and a convention of 'futurists'.
Everyone must rally together if the town is to be saved!

As I turned the last page, my opinion of this book was clear...it is utterly charming and a totally enjoyable read! Charming! I promise you will put this book down with a smile on your face.

The book touches on a few serious topics as well as the danger of the dam, such as the problems, the bloodshed, that arose from the road to Indian independence and the separation of India and Pakistan, the concerns for a child that does not want to follow their parents path in life...the disappearance of our dear parrot friend. But yes, you just know that somehow everything will turn out OK and we will have a happy ending. Perhaps everything is just a tiny bit idealized, but I guarantee you will be delightfully swept away with the exotic setting and the wonderful cast of characters in this book.

For a brief time, we get to share the fond memories the author has of her 10 years growing up in India and I must say I was happy to hear that this is the first book in a proposed series. I can not wait to see what adventures Jana Bibi, her new friends and especially that totally wonderful parrot, Mr. Ganguly, may get into.



My thanks to Henry Holt and Company for providing a copy of this book for review.


Thursday, July 26, 2012

A Giveaway! The Line Between Here and Gone



Did you read my recent review of The Line Between Here and Gone?

"The man she loved is gone forever. The child she lives for could be next. Each day is a struggle for Amanda Gleason's newborn son as he battles a rare immune deficiency. Justin's best chance for a cure lies with his father, who was brutally murdered before Amanda even realized she carried his child.

Or was he?

One emailed photo changes everything, planting a seed of doubt that Amanda latches on to for dear life: a recent photo of a man who looks exactly like Paul. Could Justin's father be alive? The mother in her is desperate to find out. But tracking down a ghost when every second counts is not for amateurs.

Forensic Instincts is the one team up for the challenge."

Well, if you didn't read my review, go ahead, read it now.
I'll wait....

Ok, sounds good, doesn't it?
I assume now you would just love to have your very own copy to read, right?
Well, two of you can do just that because, thanks to Erin at Meryl L. Moss Media Relations, I have two lovely copies to give away.

And by the way, the book is still on tour out there in Blogland and you can follow along.
Head over to the BookTrib and check it out. "We’ve organized another scavenger hunt blog tour to celebrate THE LINE BETWEEN HERE AND GONE. Click on the dates below to find that day’s excerpt. The additional links lead to even more reviews, author Q&A’s and giveaways!"
What, there are other Giveaways? What if you win two? Well, I guess you can have your own giveaway!

Here is today's little excerpt...
"But she battled her way through them. Because one thought eclipsed all the rest.

What could this mean for Justin?"

Wonder what that is about? Well, follow the links and check out the rest of the excerpts.
But of course, be sure you leave a comment right here first...WITH YOUR E-MAIL...and be entered for a chance to win.
The contest is open to readers in the USA and Canada.
It starts...hmmm...right now! And will end in one week, at the stroke of midnight on Thursday, 8/02.
Once again, Larry the Wonder Cat(he loves giving stuff away) and Random.org will be in charge of picking the winner.


Wednesday, July 25, 2012

Wordless Wednesday...Home Again, Home Again



To market, to market, to buy a plum bun,
Home again, home again, market is done.


 











...my house is just left of that steeple.



Poor feller has seen better days



...as always, for more Wordless Wednesday, 
check these out.


Monday, July 23, 2012

Winners!! Winners!! Chicken Dinners!!




Finally, I was able to wake Larry the Wonder Cat up and with the assistance of Randon.org, he picked the two lucky winners.
They are...drumroll please......

Tina and Vonnie Rivera!

I will be e-mailing you for your mailing info and hopefully the publisher will have it on the way shortly so you can start enjoying it.