Tuesday, April 20, 2021

Book Review: Forever This Summer

 

Forever This Summer

by Leslie C. Youngblood

Little, Brown Books for Young Readers 

 Children's Fiction 

Pub Date 25 May 2021




I am reviewing a copy of Forever This Summer through Little, Brown Books for Young Readers and Netgalley:



Georgie has no idea what to expect when she, Mamma and Peaches are plopped down in the middle of small town US, also known as Bogalusa, Louisiana, which is where Mamma grew up and Aunt Vie is in need of constant care.




Georgie wants to be able to help out at her once favorite dinner that served celebrities like the Jackson 5 and the Supremes, unfortunately everyone is too busy to show her the ropes and Mama is treating her like a baby, not letting her leave her sight.  When she is finally allowed to leave on her own, Georgie makes friends with Markie, a foster kid who'd been under Aunt Elvie's care--who has a limb difference and a huge attitude. 



After Markie asks Georgie to help her find her mom, and suddenly summer has a real purpose.  But when Georgie and Markie's histories begin to entwine, Georgie becomes more desperate to find the truth.   But after words are spoken they cannot be taken back and once Georgie knows the truth, she may even find a way to right past wrongs and help Aunt Vie and Markie out after all.




I give Forever This Summer five out of five stars!



Happy Reading!




Book Review: Fifty-Four Things Wrong With Gwendolyn Rogers

 



Fifty-Four Things Wrong with Gwendolyn Rogers

by Caela Carter

HarperCollins Children's Books 

Quill Tree Books

 Children's Fiction  |  Middle Grade 

Pub Date 19 Oct 2021 



I am reviewing a copy of Fifty-Four Things Wrong with Gwendolyn Rogers;




No one is sure what is wrong with Gwendolyn Rogers, not her mom, or her teachers, or any of the many therapists she has seen.  Gwendolyn knows that she doesn’t have just one thing wrong with her, she has fifty four.



Gwendolyn has issues with anger management, irrational thoughts and fears, she struggles with focus.  



According to the school report #13 says she is sneaky, #16 says she is impulsive.  So Gwendolyn needs to come up with a plan to get these fifty four things she has to work on.  Because if she doesn’t get them under control , she’s not going to be able to go to horse camp this summer with her half-brother, Tyler.



Tyler can’t help her  though because there’s only one thing “wrong” with him: ADHD.




Her best friend Hattie can’t help her, because she’s perfect.




Gwendolyn feels hopeless until she remembers  remembers the one thing that helped her mother when her own life was out of control. Or actually, the twelve things.  Will the twelve steps that cured her Mother somehow cure Gwendolyn too?





I give Fifty-Four Things Wrong with Gwendolyn Rogers five out of five stars!




Happy Reading!

Sunday, April 18, 2021

Book Review: God Is Your Defender

 

God Is Your Defender

Learning to Stand After Life Has Knocked You Down

by Rosie Rivera

Thomas Nelson--W Publishing 

Thomas Nelson

 Biographies & Memoirs  |  Christian  |  Multicultural Interest 

Pub Date 08 Jun 2021



I am reviewing a copy of God is Your Defender through Thomas Nelson and Netgalley:



One of our deepest instincts is for revenge, when we have been hurt in someway or have had something stolen from us we tend to want revenge, whether it is revenge for us or a loved one who has been wronged or we have been wronged.  



God is our Defender reminds us that our oppressor is Satan, and he loves to stop us from moving forward.



The author, Rosie Rivera has walked in this tension, a sojourner in the search for healing and wholeness in the light of horrific wrongs, she has had to wrestle with the desire to defend herself defend herself, her reputation, and her family while also wanting to let God be her Defender.



God is Your Defender is about helping you to understand the motives behind your thoughts and behaviors toward those who have wronged you.  This book is also about how we might put conditions on forgiveness.  It is about the importance of us fighting the urge to take over instead of trusting God.   It is also about learning how to truly rest in the Lord as the One who defends you and actively abiding in his peace.




Rosie guides you to a place of healing, backed up by personal stories, she guides you to a place of healing as you learn the difference between a heart of advocacy and a vengeful spiritstop the self-destructive cycle of an unresolved revengediscern effectively when to take a righteous stand and when to stand back and let God defend experience how to exchange an “eye for an eye” mentality to an “I for an I” by exchanging “I am hurt” for “I am healing”



If you are looking for a book that equips you with how to respond to hurtful situations from the most minor to some of the most difficult, from a place of empowerment and peace, I highly recommend God Is our Defender.



Five out of five stars!



Happy Reading!

Wednesday, April 14, 2021

Book Review: Why She Wrote

 



Why She Wrote

A Graphic History of the Lives, Inspiration, and Influence Behind the Pens of Classic Women Writers

by Hannah K. Chapman and Lauren Burke, Illustrated by Kaley Bales

Chronicle Books 

 Biographies & Memoirs  |  Comics & Graphic Novels  |  History 

Pub Date 20 Apr 2021 



I am reviewing a copy of Why She Wrote through Chronicle books and Netgalley:



Horace Walpole may have invented the gothic novel,genre with his novel The Castle of Otranto, but it was Ann Radcliffe who became the mother of the Gothic novel influencing authors such as Jane Austen, Mary Shelley and the Bronte sisters with novels such as The Mysteries of Udolpho.



Mary Shelley became a legend, A woman who was so goth, she carried around her dead husband heart until the day he died and created a monster named Frankenstein as well as a whole new literary genre.  Before she became a brand though she was a budding writer living in the shadow of her famous parents Mary Wollstonecraft and William Godwin.  Mary never knew her Mother, she had died giving birth to Mary, but she got to know her Mother through the pages of the books her Mother had written.  Mary did not receive a formal education but was tutored by her father.




Ann Radcliffe born Ann Ward on July.9.1964 in London, a few years later the family would move to Bath.  Ann was middle class and well read, and would marry Oxford graduate William Radcliffe.  William worked late into the night as an editor as well as part time owner of the newspaper The English Chronicle.  Ann wrote poetry, romance and gothic fiction which she read to him when he returned home.Her first novel The Castle of Athlin and Dunbayne a romance set in the Scottish Highlands was published in 1789 to moderate success.  Her third book The Romance in the Forest  was published in 1791 and would propel her ti fame.




Charolette Bronte is known as the author of Jane Eyre  today, but in 1849 she was Cureer Bell a mysterious unknown author with a debut novel that was shocking, and a woman the London Literatti were dying to meet. 



Frances Burney was called the Mother of English fiction.  She was born in 1752, her father was the prominent music historian Charles Burney, her Mother was Esther Sleepe Burney.  Despite the fact that Charles had academic credentials Burney’s education was sadly neglected.  At rather age of eight she did not know the alphabet.  But by the time she was ten she had taught herself to write through extensive reading  in her Fathers library, and she entertained herself by writing in her journal.  Burney had completed her first novel Caroline Evelyn when she was fifteen, but burned it along with other writings from her childhood. In 1778 at the age of  twenty seven Burney published her first novel Evelina anonymously.



Jane Austen completed six novels, and saw four of them published in her lifetime.  These four novels, Sense and Sensibility, Pride and Prejudice, Emma, Mansfield Park, Northanger Abbey and Persuasion had a large cultural impact.



From Mary Wollstonecraft to Frances E Harper, an African American Woman born free in Baltimore Maryland in 1825.  She was sent to live with her maternal aunt and uncle, Henrietta and William Watkins, Reverend Watkins was a renowned abolitionist and speaker who educated his young niece at the academy of negro youth.  Under his guidance she published her first anti slavery piece at the age of fourteen.  She would also become an advocate for women’s rights. 



Alice Dunbar Nelson has an awe inspiring resume, she was a well known figure during the Harlem Renaissance as well as a poet, a short story writer and a journalist she was also an educator.   She was a sought after speaker who fought for the rights of African Americans and Women.  She had been born in New Orleans in 1875, just ten years after the civil war.  



This compelling collection features eighteen women authors from Louisa May Alcott, to Beatrix Potter Jane Austen, Louisa May Alcott, Alice Dunbar Nelson, Anne Lister, and more—and asks a simple question: in a time when being a woman writer often meant being undervalued, overlooked, or pigeonholed, why did she write?



Learn about women writers from the 18th, 19th, and early 20th centuries, from familiar favorites to those who have undeservedly fallen into obscurity, and their often untold histories.



If you are looking for an informative as well as fun.



This unique graphic novel covers the life of women authors, spanning three centuries.



I give Why She Wrote five out of five stars!



Happy Reading!

Tuesday, April 13, 2021

Book Review: Fly Home to Me

 

Fly Home to Me

Flying in Love, #2

by Chalon Linton

Covenant Communications 

 Christian  |  Romance 

Pub Date 02 Jul 2021


I am reviewing a copy of Fly Home to Me through Covenant Communications and Netgalley:





Piper Holland has no patience for a traffic jam, the dry cleaners is going to close soon and she is going to need her luxury silk blouse when she pitches her theme to the editors of the magazine she works for.  But after seeing what caused the traffic jam, she can’t help but feel a little guilty a man in a military uniform is gallantly pushing a stalled vehicle off the road.  After that her rush to the dry cleaners seems far less important.  But when the handsome Good Samaritan crosses her path again, she realizes fate is giving her a chance to redeem herself.






Gabriel Orsini is a fighter pilot stationed at Luke Air Force base and he seems to be the perfect man, and an assignment at the magazine offers Piper the perfect chance to get to know him better.  She knew her Day in the Life: Hometown Heroes article was tailor made for the big hearted pilot.  It doesn’t take long for the interviews for the article enter the territory, Piper soon realizes she has fallen for Gabriel, but her tragic past has taught her one thing: everyone leaves. And the transient lifestyle of a military man leaves her no doubt that Gabriel will eventually abandon her too. With her heart on the line, Piper must decide: is the risk of loss worth the possibility of forever?




I give Fly Home to Me five out of five stars!



Happy Reading!


Monday, April 12, 2021

Book Review: A Chance in the World (Young Readers Addition)

 

A Chance in the World (Young Readers Edition)

An Orphan Boy, a Mysterious Past, and How He Found a Place Called Home

by Steve Pemberton

Thomas Nelson: CHILDREN'S 

Thomas Nelson

 Children's Nonfiction  |  Christian  |  Middle Grade 

Pub Date 20 Apr 2021



I am reviewing a copy of A Chance in the World (Young Readers Addition  through Thomas Nelson Children’s and Netgalley:




This is the story of Steve Pemberton, who endured abusive foster homes, one of which he had to endure intense physical, emotions.  Steve refuses to let this abusive family who for years has everyone fooled, and then he finds his voice to speak up, and after eleven years with a horribly abusive family, he finally is able to get out of there.







During this time he becomes determined to find his real family, while attending college, making a career for himself and having three children.  He refused to let what the family he had been with let him beat him down, no matter how many times they told him he was worthless, he worked to get a good education, from the time he was young he had found his escape in books.




If you are a young person looking for a inspirational book about overcoming against all odds, and not letting words beat you down.




I give A Chance in the World five out of five stars !




Happy Reading!

Thursday, April 8, 2021

Book Review: The Paris Children

 

The Paris Children

A Novel of World War 2

by Gloria Goldreich

SOURCEBOOKS Landmark 

Sourcebooks Landmark

 Historical Fiction  |  Women's Fiction 

Pub Date 01 Sep 2020



I am reviewing a copy of The Paris Children through SourceBooks Landmark and Netgalley:



In 1935 A dark shadow falls over Europe as Adolf Hitler's regime gains momentum, leaving the city of Paris on the brink of occupation.   Madeline Levy  a young woman who was theGranddaughter of Alfred Dreyfus, a Jewish World War I hero.  Madeline Levy steps bravely into a new wave of resistance and becomes the guardian of lost children.



After Madeline meets a small girl in a tattered coat with the hollow look of one forced to live a nightmare a young Jewish refugee from Germany named Anna she knows that she cannot stand idly by.  Madeline knows that Paris is full of Children like Anna, children who were terrified and starving, they were innocent casualties of a war that had only just begun.  




Madeline offers the children comfort and strength while working with other members of the resistance to smuggle them into safer territories.   As the Paris Madeline loves is transformed into a theater of tension and hatred, many people are tempted to abandon the cause and the country.  




Even amidst the impending horror and doubt, Madeleine's relationship with Claude, a young Jewish Resistance fighter, as passionate about saving vulnerable children as she is, deepens.  With a future with them in question all Madeleine can do is continue fighting and hope that her spirit and the nation's won't be broken.



If you are looking for a powerful World War 2 novel, one that draws you in and  doesn’t let you go.



I give The Paris Children five out five stars!



Happy Reading!