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    • ARC Book Review: “Beneath the Abbey Wall” by AD Scott

      Posted at 5:07 pm by Laura, on November 5, 2012

      Beneath the Abbey Wall by AD Scott

      Expected Publication: November 13
      Publisher: Atria Books
      Goodreads: —
      Rating: ★★★

      In a small Scottish town, the local newspaper staff doesn’t see much excitement. But that all changes when their no-nonsense office manager Mrs. Smart is found murdered one dreary autumn night. For the staff of the “Highland Gazette,” the investigation becomes personal when the deputy editor, is accused of the crime.

      It’s the late 1950s, the decade of rock n’ roll and television, and change is coming, but slowly. It’s up to budding reporter Joanne Ross to step into Mrs. Smart’s shoes and keep the newspaper office running, all while raising two girls alone. But newcomer Neil Stewart proves a major distraction for Joanne.

      And what does the tragic tale of children stolen from the Travelling people more than thirty years previously have to do with this murder? In a mystery with twists and turns and no clear-cut solution, the secrets of the past must be unravelled before justice can be found.

      I am not sure what I expected from this mystery novel, and I’m still left hanging as to whether that helped my rating for this.

      “Beneath the Abbey Wall” contained all of my favorite elements for the perfect gothic mystery: historically placed, set in Scotland, small community, a mysterious death that throws everything off-balance. The characters were nothing spectacular, which is excellent: no one wants to read about the most perfect person on the planet. We have the traditional commanding McAllister, lead editor of the newspaper, who is great at divvying tasks but poor at expressing his emotions; the battered Joanne, fresh out of a violent marriage and devoted mother of two daughters; the charming Rob and aloof Hector; and the near-constant sobbing Betsy. Watching these employees interact, racing to share the stories with their town even when it’s a negative case about one of their own, was very entertaining and warming.

      The downfall could be pointed to the characters the murder centers on: Mrs Smart, Mr Smart, and Don McLeod, the one blamed for Mrs Smart’s murder. Scott surely meant for the readers to care about Mrs Smart’s death — but not once did I feel any sadness towards her character. All that was ever said about her was that she was a good woman. What made her good? Her personal story when she was young woman was revealed, and I was sympathetic to her for that situation, but I lacked sympathy for her older character. What was it about her that people liked? This question was never fully explained. I was also supposed to resent Mr Smart, but instead I found him to be the annoying character who would pop up only once in a while to remind you of his existence, and then disappear again. And Don lacked personality. He was a drunkard, and it was all people could describe him as. How am I supposed to root for his freedom from prison if that’s the only thing the characters can say about him?

      Joanne was a character that I could easily relate to It was quite eerie. I would feel bothered by her sudden fantasies over Canadian newcomer Neil Stewart — dreaming up romantic get-aways and wishing he’d say he loved her — but before I could go and judge her, I realized I’m quite similar. In fact, most women are, especially if they’ve undergone neglect. She wanted someone else to validate her existence, to make her feel wanted and cherished. When no one — apart from McAllister, which is clear to everyone else except for Joanne — offers this and a new man arrives on the scene, of course she’ll jump on the opportunity.

      As far as the plotting for the mystery, I felt it dragged. At some moments, I forgot this was a mystery novel instead of a love story. Another aspect is the lack of empathy I felt for the murdered and the accused. The writing was beautiful, the relationships between the characters entertaining and exquisite, the descriptions of life in the office and life out in the Highlands lovely. But the mystery itself was left wanting.

      [Read for a graduate course. Thank you to Atria Books for the ARC.]

      Posted in books, Reviews 2012 | 0 Comments | Tagged advance reading copy, ARC, book review, books, genre: mystery, goodreads, history, review
    • Book Reviews: “The Nutcracker” and “The Night Before Christmas”

      Posted at 4:16 pm by Laura, on November 3, 2012

      Or, in other words, “Book Reviews: Children’s Picture Book Edition!” These are classic tales, so why would we need to review them? Because there are some twists and new illustrated editions out there, and what better way to promote them than review them?

      Image

      The Nutcracker by Susan Jeffers

      Published: 2007
      Publisher: HarperCollins
      ISBN: 9780060743864
      Goodreads: 4.13
      Rating:
      ★★★★★

      New York Times bestselling artist Susan Jeffers has created a Nutcracker unlike any that has gone before, with a lovely spare text based on the ballet.

      This is the perfect gift to share with children before they see The Nutcracker. Everyone who has seen the ballet will cherish it–as will anyone who enjoys stories where love triumphs.

      Everyone knows the story of the Nutcracker. Either they’ve seen the ballet, heard the symphony, danced in the ballet, played the music, or read various books. This, however, is a unique book! Here, Susan Jeffers has combined the true Russian tale — both romantic and terrifying — with the ballet. The artwork reveals movement, the characters look like they are dancing. Play the music with each passing page and you’ve got a real experience in your hands for children to enjoy!

      Image

      The Night Before Christmas by Clement Clarke Moore, Charles Santore

      Published: 2011
      Publisher: Applesauce Press
      ISBN: 9781604332377
      Goodreads: 4.32
      Rating:
      ★★★★★

      Since it was first published anonymously in 1823, the poem “The Night Before Christmas” has enchanted children with the story of St. Nicholas climbing down the chimney and filling all the stockings before springing back to his sleigh. Many families read the poem every year, and now they have an edition to treasure. The poem, faithfully reproduced here, is accompanied by Charles Santore’s lavish illustrations.

      I love this edition! The one I grew up with, Jan Brett’s beautiful illustrations, was stunning enough. When I opened this book and gazed at Santore’s artwork, I was blown away. I especially enjoyed opening and unfolding several pages to reveal more of the poem and the accompanying artwork. One day I hope my children will be as enchanted.

      Posted in books, Reviews 2012 | 0 Comments | Tagged book review, books, genre: children, genre: classics, genre: holiday, goodreads, review
    • NY Publishing Houses Struggle to Get Back Online Post-Sandy — PW

      Posted at 8:52 am by Laura, on November 2, 2012

      New York Publishing Struggling to Get Back Online Post-Sandy — Publishers Weekly — Judith Rosen, Rachel Deahl

      Although many on the east coast are powered up once again, thousands in NYC are still managing without power and reliable transportation. Of these include several of our favorite publishing houses. Click the link to see the status report of the Big Six and others in the metropolis, not only for the function of their online presence but the condition of their warehouses as well.

      Posted in books, Link, publishing | 0 Comments | Tagged news, publishing
    • Reading 125 Titles a Year? — NPR

      Posted at 8:35 am by Laura, on November 2, 2012

      Reading 125 Titles a Year? That’s ‘One For the Books’! — NPR

      Joe Queenan reads so many books, it’s amazing that he can also find time to write them. Queenan estimates he’s read between 6,000 and 7,000 books total, at a rate of about 125 books a year — (or 100 in a “slow” year). “Some years I just went completely nuts,” Queenan tells NPR’s Robert Siegel. “A couple years ago I read about 250. I was trying to read a book every single day of the year but I kind of ran out of gas.”

      Queenan is the author of nine books on a diversity of topics: from Closing Time, a memoir about his childhood in a Philadelphia housing project, to Imperial Caddy, a humorous takedown of Dan Quayle. His latest work, called One for the Books, is a meditation on his lifelong obsession with reading. He talks with Siegel about what he reads, why he reads and how he loves books but hates book clubs.

      Definitely read and listen to the interview NPR provides. Queenan has some interesting things to say about libraries (including “most of the books you see in the library shelves are terrible”), bookstores (booksellers recommend books on his appearance), and book clubs (“there’s no theme”). Although I find his constant use of the word “stupid” annoying, he does offer some insight on how he plans what he reads next, what he considers trashy reads, and how many books he thinks the average person reads.

      Makes my goal of 50 books a year seem puny.

      (Have you voted yet for the 2012 Goodreads Choice Awards?)

      Posted in books, Link | 0 Comments | Tagged books, news, radio, reading
    • Goodreads Choice Awards Now Open for Voting!

      Posted at 11:10 am by Laura, on October 30, 2012

      Go here to vote! Some of my predictions were correct, too!

      Prepare to feel torn in the various categories. It was difficult to decide between books.

      Also, to any of my fellow east coasters, are you okay? Philly experienced near black-outs (thankfully I still have power) and hundreds of fallen trees from the winds, but the most damage is in NJ, NC and NY. Check in! Let loved ones know you’re okay!

      Posted in books, Link, Update Post | 2 Comments | Tagged awards, books, goodreads, news
    • Goodreads Choice Awards 2012

      Posted at 10:08 am by Laura, on October 29, 2012

      It’s that time of year! Goodreads will be hosting the annual Goodreads Choice Awards starting Tuesday, October 30.

      The Categories

      Fifteen books will be nominated in twenty categories, which include Fiction, Mystery & Thriller, Historical Fiction, Fantasy, Paranormal Fantasy, Science Fiction, Horror, Romance, Memoir & Autobiography, History & Biography, Nonfiction, Food & Cookbooks, Humor, Graphic Novels & Comics, Poetry, Young Adult Fiction, Young Adult Fantasy & Science Fiction, Middle Grade & Children’s Books, Picture Books, and Goodreads Author.

      The Voting Rounds

      1. Round One — October 30 – November 11 — Voting will be open to the fifteen books across the twenty categories, as well as write-in votes.
      2. Round Two — November 12 – November 18 — The top five write-in votes will join the original fifteen, making 20 options across 20 categories. Additional write-ins no longer accepted.
      3. Round Three — November 19 – November 27 — Slashed in half, voters will choose from ten books across twenty categories. Make your vote count!

      Winners will be announced December 4.

      Which Books I Predict Will Be Nominated

      I’m not a prolific reader, but I’m basing my predictions (in a handful of categories) for the nominations based on what I enjoyed and what I saw, as a bookseller, flying off the shelves.

      1. Fiction: Gone Girl by Gillian Flynn
      2. Romance: Fifty Shades of Grey by E.L. James (I really don’t want this to happen, but I predict it will)
      3. Memoir & Autobiography: No Easy Day by Mark Owen
      4. Young Adult Fiction: The Fault in Our Stars by John Green
      5. Young Adult Fantasy and Science Fiction: City of Lost Souls by Cassandra Clare
      6. Middle Grade & Children’s Books: The Mark of Athena by Rick Riordan

      Log on tomorrow and start voting!!!

      Which books do you hope to see? Which books do you predict will be nominated?

      Posted in books, Update Post | 2 Comments | Tagged awards, goodreads, personal
    • Byron Treasure Found — The Independent

      Posted at 9:19 am by Laura, on October 29, 2012

      Byron treasure found in gift to used bookshop — The Independent — Paul Gallagher

      Now a donation to the second-hand bookshop at Harewood House, in Yorkshire, has provided a unique insight into the Leigh family history and Augusta’s place in one of the biggest scandals to rock Georgian society. Although condemned to poverty for the last 33 years of her life, Augusta, the only daughter of Amelia Osborne and John “Mad Jack” Byron, the poet’s father, retained a passion for reading. Her rediscovered literary treasures, inscribed by Augusta and members of her family, belonged to a woman in her 80s who had had them for 40 years without realising their provenance. She acquired the books with a London house in the 1970s Ω the bookshelves were too large to move, so the seller left them, and their contents, behind.

      Volunteers at the bookshop were intrigued by an inscription in The Literary Life and Correspondence of the Countess of Blessington, reading: “Augusta Leigh, St James’ Palace.”

      “That raised my eyebrows,” said Audrey Kingsnorth, the Harewood volunteer who led the research. “I had no idea who Augusta was… That’s when I started looking into the family and saw the [Byron] connection.”

      I think the funny part is that the donor was so excited about what the volunteers told her that she donated more rare books (Lilliputian books, small volumes to show off printers’ ability).

      Posted in books, Link, Update Post | 0 Comments | Tagged authors, books, genre: classics, genre: gothic, genre: poetry, history, news, personal
    • Book Review: “Snowed Up” by Rosalie K Fry

      Posted at 12:03 pm by Laura, on October 15, 2012

      Snowed Upby Rosalie K Fry

      Published: 1970
      Publisher: Farrar, Straus & Giroux
      ISBN: 9780374371005

      Goodreads: 3.67
      Rating:
      ★★

      This was read for an assignment in a publishing course. We were to read an out-of-print book and then create a book proposal to bring this back in print. While my proposal will focus on the need for realistic children’s survival stories, and perfect timing with the survival theme in dystopian YA, this review will be different.

      Anna, Brian, and Verity are cousins visiting family in Wales. Their aunt slips on some ice as a terrible blizzard sets in, and Aunt Marian and Uncle Fred decide the children need to head back to London immediately. The children miss the bus that would take them to the train station, and they are stranded in a farmhouse. The next several days the three scramble to find and make food, boil water, sleep, and keep warm till they devise a plan to be rescued.

      On the surface it’s an excellent read, especially for children. As an adult reader, though, I have to admit some flaws. First, there are very little descriptors. Sometimes it was difficult to distinguish between characters, and the story is mostly dialogue driven. I was surprised when hours had passed as one character spoke two sentences, such as “I am going to pack my bags. There, now I’m done, so let’s check on Brian.” (Not an actual quote.)

      But when the children are stranded, the story became very fun to read. What sort of food would they eat? How do they plan to keep warm? How will they escape the buried farmhouse? In a time without cell phones and easy transportation, how did these children get in touch with other people in order to be rescued? Little hints are dropped throughout, a small mystery for child readers to solve as the story progresses.

      Posted in books, Reviews 2012 | 0 Comments | Tagged book review, books, genre: children, goodreads, review
    • Book Review: “Shadowfell” by Juliet Marillier

      Posted at 1:22 pm by Laura, on October 5, 2012

      Shadowfell by Juliet Marillier

      Published: 11 September 2012
      Publisher: Knopf
      ISBN: 9780375869549
      Goodreads: 4.04
      Rating
      : ★★★★

      Sixteen-year-old Neryn is alone in the land of Alban, where the oppressive king has ordered anyone with magical strengths captured and brought before him. Eager to hide her own canny skill—a uniquely powerful ability to communicate with the fairy-like Good Folk—Neryn sets out for the legendary Shadowfell, a home and training ground for a secret rebel group determined to overthrow the evil King Keldec.

      During her dangerous journey, she receives aid from the Good Folk, who tell her she must pass a series of tests in order to recognize her full potential. She also finds help from a handsome young man, Flint, who rescues her from certain death—but whose motives in doing so remain unclear. Neryn struggles to trust her only allies. They both hint that she alone may be the key to Alban’s release from Keldec’s rule.

      Homeless, unsure of who to trust, and trapped in an empire determined to crush her, Neryn must make it to Shadowfell not only to save herself, but to save Alban.

      The cover photo resembles a friend of mine, who is completely obsessed with Lord of the Rings, enjoys archery, loves fairy tales, and frequently quotes A Song of Ice and Fire.  It seemed fitting that, once I picked up this book to read the jacket, this was the first installment of a trilogy about a country under political unrest, filled with Anglo-Irish folklore, and a young girl on a journey to a faraway rebel encampment.

      I’m fascinated with the cultural transition from Irish fairies to cute little Tinkerbell pixies, and this book was completely filled with all of the good and bad characteristics of these long-forgotten creatures. The names and places — Neryn, Brollachan Brig — were extremely Gaelic in tone, and I became very nostalgic for folklore of the past. Marillier skillfully crafted Neryn’s difficult trek across the country with moments of reflection, heartbreak, illness, joy, companionship, and discovery. Like what most people say about Lord of the Rings, this first installment is “basically full of walking, eating, and sleeping,” but the characters Neryn meets along the way, the determination to survive, and the bits and pieces we learn about the world kept the pace of the story quick.

      I am very interested to see how Flint, the double agent, and Neryn continue to grow with the second book. I want to see her sculpt her talents, learn self-defense, grow with the other women in Shadowfell. I want to know what happens to Flint, how he is treated by King Keldec, and what Keldec’s court is like. It would not surprise me if the second book contains two perspectives throughout as it builds to the final battle! And finally, what about the Good Folk? Will they join the fight or watch from the edges? Will they come out of hiding?

      Posted in books, Reviews 2012 | 2 Comments | Tagged book review, books, genre: fantasy, genre: young adult, goodreads, review
    • Barnes & Noble Nook HD and Nook HD+

      Posted at 2:57 pm by Laura, on September 26, 2012

      As a Barnes & Noble bookseller, I can tell you all about the new devices, the comparisons between each other, and comparisons with other tablets in the market.  As a struggling graduate student who loves pretty shiny things, I can also tell you how entranced I was by the ads and commercials and everything these devices will offer.

      So I’m pumped and ready to give you links to all sorts of information about the HD and HD+!

      1. New York Times — “The new devices are a seven-inch tablet for $199, called the Nook HD, and a nine-inch tablet for $269, the Nook HD Plus. Company executives promoted them as being lighter and faster than comparable tablets, a market that is crowded with competitors from Apple, Amazon and Google.” There are four devices. Nook HD 8GB, Nook HD 16GB (both available in Snow and Storm), Nook HD+ 16GB, and Nook HD+ 32GB (both available in Slate). Something to note.
      2. Shelf Awareness Pro — Information on the new tablets, the new Nook Video (“This fall, B&N is launching Nook Video, which will stream movies and TV shows from a range of studios, including Sony, Warner Bros., Disney, HBO, Viacom and Starz. The material can be watched on Nooks, TVs, tablets, smartphones as well as on a video app that will be released in the near future.”), and expansion in the UK.
      3. Publishers Weekly — “B&N’s head of hardware development Bill Sapperstein showed off the Nook HD and what he described as the “highest resolution display on a 7-inch tablet,” with 243 pixels per inch and pointed to wide viewing angles on both tablets. Both devices run on a customized version of Ice Cream Sandwich, the Android 4.0 OS optimized for tablets. The devices also just seem to get lighter—the Nook HD is 315 grams and Nook HD+ 515 grams—and more powerful with the NHD offering a 1.3GHZ processor and the NHD+ offering a 1.5 GHZ processor.”
      4. Barnes & Noble — As you can see, the Nook Color, Nook Tablet 8GB and Nook Tablet 16GB have sort of…disappeared.

      I feel like a kid in a candy shop. I’m already in love with the device and I haven’t even held one yet!

      Posted in books, Link, technology | 5 Comments | Tagged barnes and noble, books, bookstores, ereaders, news, nook, technology
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    • Hello, I’m Laura!

      I'm a bookish bookworm and book hoarder. By day I'm a literary agent, and by night I'm forever rearranging my bookshelves. I could talk your ear off about Gothic literature, and in my past life people thought I'd become a professional musician. I have a fluffy black cat named Rossetti, I love to travel, tea is my drink of choice, British TV is the best, and I'm always down for chips-and-queso nights. Welcome to Scribbles & Wanderlust! Grab your favorite hot beverage and let's chat books!
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