Showing posts with label romance. Show all posts
Showing posts with label romance. Show all posts

Plum Lucky - A Stephanie Plum Between-the-numbers Novel Review

Plum Lucky - A Stephanie Plum Between-the-numbers Novel
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Plum Lucky - A Stephanie Plum Between-the-numbers Novel ReviewStatisically speaking, luck has a normal distribution, that is, it has a bell shaped curve. Most people are in the middle with an average amount of luck, but some people are at an extreme point on the curve and are unlucky all the time (like that character in Lil Abner who walked around with a black cloud over his head), and some are at the other end and are lucky all the time. So goes life.
It's St. Patrick's Day and there is a rainbow in the air. Grandma Mazur stumbles into a duffle bag full of money - lots of money. She thinks that it is lucky money and hers to keep. Let the good times roll. She is off to Atlantic City. But other people have claims on the money. The story has an interesting cast of characters including an ex-jockey who thinks that he is an invisible leprechaun (he is always lucky, but manages to fumble it away); of course there are Stephi, Lula, and Connie from the bailbonds office; Diesel appears from Stephi's past - another man in her life; a short guy hired by Grandma Mazur; the gangster Delvina; and a horse to add to the adventures and misadventures. Of course there is the money.
You will have to read the novel to see how it all shakes out. The novel is not great literature, but is extremely funny. ROFL. Some scenes towards the end had me laughing so hard I had trouble continuing.
It is a short novel, and a quick read, at 166 pages with 28 lines per page somewhat widely spaced in easy reading type. It contains what a friend would call earthy language. I would personally classify it as PG-13.Plum Lucky - A Stephanie Plum Between-the-numbers Novel Overview

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Straight For the Heart Review

Straight For the Heart
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Straight For the Heart ReviewThis is the first book of her's that I have read and I was so enthralled I couldn't put it down, literally. I haven't read a story that held my interest so much that I couldn't stop to cook supper till I finished it. As it builds near the end she made me feel as though I was a part of the story and one of the characters. She is a spellbinding author and I can hardly wait to read the trilogy I bought. Thank you so much Miss Canham and I look forward to reading all your books.Straight For the Heart Overview

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Treasure Island Review

Treasure Island
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Treasure Island ReviewTreasure Island is perhaps THE classic pirate's tale. Robert Louis Stevenson, the author, created a rich story of adventure and treachery on the high seas all seen through the eyes of a boy named Jim Hawkins. Jim starts off as the son of tavern owners in a humble little port village. When an old seaman stays at the tavern, trouble soon follows him in the form of a pirate crew seeking revenge. I will not give away any more specific plot points, but events move forward to a great treasure hunt, treachery, and a surprisingly engaging story for adults as well as children.
Jim Hawkins is the hero of the story and he's a good lad with a stout heart. Long John Silver is the real star, however, and his character is a fascinating character study in moral ambiguity... or perhaps a study in amoral perfection. The pirate language is good and thick but this edition has plenty of notes to help you decipher some of the references that have become too obscure for today's readers. The plot moves along very briskly with no wasted scenes.
In short, Treasure Island well deserves its status as a beloved classic. It's a story of suspense and adventure that can be enjoyed at a child's level, but has substance for adults as well. I would recommend without reserve it to virtually anyone.Treasure Island Overview

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The Sleeping Beauty Review

The Sleeping Beauty
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The Sleeping Beauty ReviewAdrienne Sharp's First Love is a luminescent story about the fragile but undeniable links between art and self, love and control. Set in the New York ballet world of the 1980's, the novel is told by three third-person narrators. Sandra is a young and promising ballerina who aches to be recognized by the director of the New York City Ballet - George Balanchine, or Mr. B., as the dancers call him. Adam, her friend and now lover, dances with the other company in town, the American Ballet Theater, under the direction of Mikhail Baryshnikov. Finally, Balanchine himself tells a magical segment of the story; although his health is ailing, he wants to direct one more ballet - Sleeping Beauty - and he wants Sandra to be the star and his muse.
Sharp addresses with insight and compassion the artist's eternal debate - how to live in the real world with one's dreams and aspirations, and each character embodies this struggle as the story unfolds. Sandra must live with the realities of an ill father, a brilliant historian who has battled with mental illness since before Sandra's mother died when she was a child. Adam must deal with the pressure he receives from his parents, dancers themselves, who provide a stunted kind of support: they love him, but their own dysfunctional relationship and their need to turn away from romantic passion and seek only the passion they can find in art has made them poor role models for their son. He must learn how to negotiate relationships on his own. For solace, Adam has always turned to his godfather, Randall, the only one in the family who sees him as a person more than as a body. Yet Randall is failing, deteriorating from the ravages of Kaposi's sarcoma.
This book investigates in unflinching but breathtaking prose the layers of passion to be navigated by dancers. There is the romantic and sexual passion that Adam and Sandra share in their desperate attempts to meld their souls while simultaneously trying to extricate themselves from one another. There is the passion of the dance, the physical passion, in all of its rough and tactile glory. In one powerful dance scene, Adam has the opportunity to dance with his father, Frankie, in a ballet that his grandfather's lover has created for the three of them - Adam, Frankie, and Sandra. The scene details the movement of the men's bodies, the etchings that makeup creates in the lines of their faces, the film of sweat their hands slip over when they grasp one another's limbs for their intricate moves. Adam is at the top of his game, feeling at first intimidated by then energized by his father's presence; he executes his leaps and vaults with passion and precision. And when Sandra comes out of the wings, he uses that energy to create a dynamo on the stage. But the experience, Adam realizes, exhilarating as it is, taps into too much emotion since it involves the people he loves. For the reader, the scene highlights the question of how the artist, in his or her realm, can exert control - over self, over art, over love.
The final level of passion is exemplified by Balanchine himself, as he struggles to transform the vision in his head to the three dimensional world of the studio, and ultimately, the stage. For his passion, control is also an issue. He can control the vision of his art, but he can't control his deteriorating body, nor can he control the life of the woman he wants to birth as his final muse.
Adrienne Sharp's First Love offers a multitude of reads from passionate love story to real-life depiction of the dance world, to treatise on the evolution of an artist's vision. All are deeply satisfying.
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The Laird's Woman Review

The Laird's Woman
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The Laird's Woman ReviewI haven't read this yet, but I'm so put off that this "book" is actually a cartoon! *yelling* Or should I say "graphic novel."
I'm giving it 2 stars because the drawings are nice & I'm gonna give this a chance. I will revise my review when I'm done because $3.99 is a hell of a lot to pay & waste.The Laird's Woman OverviewSomewhere in Jamaica lives a woman who stands between Cochlan Stuart, billionaire laird, and his dream of building an exclusive resort on his ancestral Scottish estate. Cochlan travels to the tropical island with every intention of persuading her to remove herself as an obstacle. All his life he's overcome obstacles easily, ruthlessly. This would be no different. But when he meets the strong-willed beauty, swords clash and he learns how very wrong he is. And that love and desire can bring even the strongest man to heel.

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Sharp North Review

Sharp North
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Sharp North ReviewThis was a fast paced novel that drew me in from the very beginning. I stayed up late waiting to find out what would happen next, and would put off doing work so that I could finish it.
All in all it's a very good read, especially if you enjoy dystopias. The characters were for the most part very well drawn, and you really felt empathy for them. Mira is particularly well developed as a character, especially in the first two thirds of the book. Part of what keeps the book being five stars for me is that I feel like Mira is lost a little towards the end of the book. There are a lot of characters to keep track of, and while their individual personalities show through, I sometimes wished we had more of the story on some of them. Without giving away the plot, I really felt the motives of Pieter and Magnus could have been explained in greater depth, and that Gil and Mira's relationship could have been developed a bit more at the very beginning. These are small quibbles, and really nothing that should keep you from reading the book!
The ending was a huge shock, and I've found myself thinking about it over the past few days. This is not one of those novels that leaves readers with lots of answers and every character's story neatly wrapped up, but rather leaves room for thought about what the meaning in everything is.Sharp North Overview

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Janet Evanovich Boxed Set #4: Contains Ten Big Ones, Eleven on Top, and Twelve Sharp (Stephanie Plum Novels) Review

Janet Evanovich Boxed Set #4: Contains Ten Big Ones, Eleven on Top, and Twelve Sharp (Stephanie Plum Novels)
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Janet Evanovich Boxed Set #4: Contains Ten Big Ones, Eleven on Top, and Twelve Sharp (Stephanie Plum Novels) ReviewI ordered the Plum series of books for my wife. Every time she picks one up, the laugher and the tears come together. I always ask her if she hit on a funny. She is laughing so hard all she can do is nod her head up and down.Janet Evanovich Boxed Set #4: Contains Ten Big Ones, Eleven on Top, and Twelve Sharp (Stephanie Plum Novels) Overview

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The True Memoirs of Little K: A Novel Review

The True Memoirs of Little K: A Novel
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The True Memoirs of Little K: A Novel ReviewBallet fanatics like myself generally possess not only worn toe shoes signed by favorite dancers and piles of old theatrical programs, but a whole library on the subject --- from biographies to encyclopedias, criticism to coffee-table books. Ballet novels, however, are rare, and good ones even rarer. Among my favorites are Rumer Godden's A CANDLE FOR ST. JUDE, Colum McCann's DANCER (in which he reimagines Nureyev's life), and a few gems for kids (notably Noel Streatfeild's marvelous Shoes books).
THE TRUE MEMOIRS OF LITTLE K is Adrienne Sharp's third foray into ballet-themed fiction; her previous works include a short-story collection, WHITE SWAN, BLACK SWAN, and a novel set in the dance-crazed 1980s, THE SLEEPING BEAUTY. I must confess that I wasn't thrilled by the first two. Although the balletic details were fun and gossipy, I found the narrative and characters rather melodramatic. But here Sharp explores her fascination with dance through the lens of history, giving us prerevolutionary Russia from the perspective of Mathilde Kschessinska, prima ballerina assoluta at St. Petersburg's Maryinsky Theatre.
The setting, for a balletomane, is iconic: the wondrous era in which many of today's classics --- from Swan Lake to Le Corsaire, Don Quixote to Nutcracker --- were created and feats like the Black Swan's 32 fouettés first accomplished (Kschessinska learned how to do them from the Italian ballerinas who dominated the Russian dance scene at the time). Storied choreographers, composers and impresarios like Petipa, Tchaikovsky and Diaghilev people the pages of this novel, and backstage politicking abounds. In order to sabotage a rival, Kschessinska --- a born diva --- once let live chickens loose on stage!
Kschessinska was a survivor. She escaped revolutionary Russia and wound up in Paris, where she had a school (she taught such ballet luminaries as Alicia Markova, Andre Eglevsky and Margot Fonteyn); in 1971, before her death at 99, she wrote her memoirs. Sharp's book, based on this autobiography and other historical sources, is written entirely in the aged ballerina's voice (by turns ambitious, greedy, vain, calculating, tender and romantic). It focuses on her years as a student and then as star of the Imperial Ballet; it merely sketches her life in exile. In the end, THE TRUE MEMOIRS OF LITTLE K isn't really about ballet as such, though there are some piquant details (for example, performers then wore corsets and wigs on stage --- heaven forbid that they should show their real hair, a private thing --- as well as the lavish jewelry given to them by admirers). It is about a woman caught up in one of the most turbulent political upheavals of the 20th century.
Essentially, it is the story of the Russian revolution viewed from inside the tsarist court, for ballerinas at that time customarily had aristocratic "patrons," and promotions at the Maryinsky Theatre were clearly ruled by royalty, not solely by artistic directors. Thus, Kschessinska --- who had an intermittent but long-term affair with the man who became the last tsar, Nicholas II --- is able to maintain her preeminence not simply through her talent but by working her powerful connections.
While Sharp evinces a certain fondness for the grandeur and tradition of Old Russia, she makes it clear that the tsarist regime dug its own grave through arrogance, corruption and an unwillingness to make any sort of democratic concessions. Overshadowing the entire novel is the ultimate fate of the tsar and his family (they were sent to Siberia and executed, a grisly event you might remember from popular books and films such as Nicholas and Alexandra and Anastasia). Reading it is a bit like watching a slow-motion train wreck, or a fictionalized version of a term paper: "Causes of the Russian Revolution."
In the first half of the book, I often felt that Sharp was laboring to use every scrap of her research. The background material tends to crowd and encumber the narrative (besides, it's hard to believe that a 99-year-old woman would have total recall). Why would Kschessinska describe the wintertime balls given in St. Petersburg, down to descriptions of the floral arrangements and servants' uniforms? Why would she know or care to mention that 130,000 soldiers were involved in summer maneuvers? Sharp's accounts of such turning points as the "Bloody Sunday" massacre of 1905 are gripping, but they seem like set-pieces, disconnected from Kschessinska's intimate recollections.
As THE TRUE MEMOIRS OF LITTLE K proceeds, however, Sharp becomes more successful at integrating history and fiction. At the heart of the book is the love story between "Niki," as Kschessinska calls the tsar, and "Little K" (his nickname for her). Thus, when he marries the German princess Alexandra, she feels like the "poor girl" of several classical ballet plots (Giselle; La Bayadère) who is thrown over in favor of an aristocratic bride. (She takes her revenge by comparing her figure to the less athletic tsarina's: "Well, of course, I had not had four children and I was a dancer --- an occupation that preserves the body better than a dip in formaldehyde.") But Kschessinska isn't cut out for victimhood. Needing protectors, she attaches herself to Nicholas's cousins, the Grand Dukes Sergei and Andrei; she even draws the tsar himself back to her bed for a brief coda to their affair and bears a son, Vova (although in the novel the child is supposed to be Nicholas's, leading to dramatic plot complications, the historical evidence for this assumption is shaky, as she was not exactly a one-man woman).
Kschessinska grows on the reader. Her toughness and strong will come to the fore when she is tested by the chaos of the revolutionary years, and she evolves from a naïve, flirtatious maiden infatuated with celebrity and her royal connections into a world-weary woman honed by tragedy and motherhood. Just as Russia's character is an ambiguous mix of East and West --- part credulous, earthy peasant; part refined, elegant European --- so is Kschessinska's, and her acerbic, tell-it-like-it-is voice is Sharp's finest accomplishment. Here's my favorite passage: Disparaging the younger generation of Russian dancers, Kschessinska calls Anna Pavlova's famous solo The Dying Swan "mawkish" and adds smugly, "I've outlived her, you know."
So she had. And you can't help yelling, "Brava!"
--- Reviewed by Kathy Weissman
The True Memoirs of Little K: A Novel Overview

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Razor Sharp (The Sisterhood) Review

Razor Sharp (The Sisterhood)
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Razor Sharp (The Sisterhood) ReviewI thought Razor Sharp was a good read and I enjoyed it, it was fun to see how the ladies can do things on their own. I do hope Charles returns and that Fern Michaels continues the series. I have read all of the books in this series and I find them a good read. I would recommend this book to others but only if they have read the other books in the series otherwise you would not understand what is happening. Good BookRazor Sharp (The Sisterhood) Overview

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Twelve Sharp (Stephanie Plum, No. 12) Review

Twelve Sharp (Stephanie Plum, No. 12)
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Twelve Sharp (Stephanie Plum, No. 12) ReviewIs it funny? Yes.
Does it have a lot of romantic tension? Yes.
Does it have a good villain? Yes.
Is the mystery interesting? Yes.
Are the characters still fun? Yes.
What more do you want out of a summer beach book?
I've heard some reviewers bemoan Ms. Plum's lack of dynamic character development throughout the series. They would like to see Stephanie grow, or change, or mature, or develop, or choose between Ranger and Joe, or become a monk and move to Tibet, or join the Galactic Alliance and fight the Mucus Monsters of Planet Nostril.
I disagree. I think the formula is perfect. It's fun, fast-paced, and always good for some laughs.
You wouldn't ask Walt Disney to make Mickey Mouse more grown-up. Especially since Disney has been dead for several decades.
You shouldn't ask Janet Evanovich to change Stephanie, either. Both Stephanie, and Janet, are perfect the way they are, and I hope they stay that way for many more books.Twelve Sharp (Stephanie Plum, No. 12) Overview

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Shattered (Dream Realms Trilogy, #1) Review

Shattered (Dream Realms Trilogy, #1)
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Shattered (Dream Realms Trilogy, #1) ReviewThis book is *perfect* for the time you just want to get away from it all and be consumed in a magical world and take a romantic adventure. It's light, so don't expect Shakespearean pose or motif-heavy dialogue, and enjoy it for what it's worth: a fun trip into a charming story.
The story stars Laura, a somewhat typical 17 year old girl who's living life day by day, in a small, somewhat mundane town. Nothing exciting ever happens, that is, until a new student comes to school and circumstance dictate that she get to know him! What happens next is the crux of the story, and I won't give it away, but there's a hint of romance, a great deal of danger, exploration into an amazing, magical realm, and more. What's not to like?
Use this book as a 'stop-gap' between some of the heavier reading you do, and you'll greatly enjoy every minute of it!Shattered (Dream Realms Trilogy, #1) OverviewDescription:

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