Sunday, October 30, 2011

Act of Deceit by Steven Gore

Book Description
From the author of Final Target and Absolute Risk, here comes the first book in a thrilling series featuring a compelling new hero, former San Francisco homicide detective Harlan Donnally.

With Act of Deceit, Gore enters the crime fiction domain of Harlan Coben, Robert B. Parker, Stuart Woods, and Robert Crais, and immediately proves he can stand tall with the best of them. A heart-racing masterwork of mystery, thrills, and suspense, Act of Deceit plunges Donnally into a deadly morass of murder, sex trafficking, and church corruption as he seeks the dark truth about the death of a sister of a dying friend.


My thoughts
Harlan Donnally is asked by a dying friend to locate the sister he placed on the doorstep of a commune many years ago and show her the letter of the crime he committed and why he did what he did. But, in his words, Donnally isn’t going to be anyone’s postman. Yet, he goes and takes it upon himself to locate this girl, Anna. Turns out she was murdered some years ago and nobody was ever convicted for the crime. The investigator in Harlan kicks in. It leads him into worlds never expected.

This criminal mystery started out slow, but I liked the character of Harlan and his relationship with his father. The other characters were also well developed and the story somewhat intriguing as the premise was based on truth.

Disclosure: I received this book for review through the amazon.com vine program. I received no compensation for my thoughts.

Friday, October 28, 2011

The Uruguay Amethyst by J.A. Jernay

Book Description
Dumped by her husband just as he finishes law school, and disillusioned by her loss of another unsatisfying office job, Ainsley Walker is approaching thirty with nothing to show for it.

THEN

She accepts an offer from an elderly art dealer to travel to the country of Uruguay—the forgotten jewel of South America—to purchase a valuable amethyst treasure, El Árbol Negro.

In a runaway adventure that propels her from historic auction houses to remote villages, from beef ranches to elite beach resorts, Ainsley finds joy, pain, friendship, duplicity, and murder—and, most importantly, a new purpose in life.


My thoughts
Ainsley Walker has been hired to travel to Uruguay and bid on, then find the stolen amethyst treasure. Ms. Walker didn’t think her life was exciting enough until she traveled to Uruguay. This entertaining and fun read has a ridiculous but enjoyable plot and the character of Ainsley is so adorable to read. This is a quick and adorable mystery to cuddle up and enjoy.

Disclosure: I received this book for review through bookrooster.com. I received no compensation for my thoughts.

Thursday, October 27, 2011

Rain Falls Like Mercy by Jack Todd BOOK GIVEAWAY

Thanks to Ashley and Simon and Shuster, I have two copies of RAIN FALLS LIKE MERCY by Jack Todd to give away. This book will be released on November 8th.

This giveaway is open to US residents only. Sorry, but I will be mailing out the copies.

The contest ends on Friday, November 4th and that’s my birthday. I will be turning the big 50!

So to enter, leave a comment stating what the best birthday gift you ever received (plus your e-mail address) and you are entered.

Wednesday, October 26, 2011

The Stranger You Seek by Amanda Kyle Williams

Book Description
The papers have called me a monster. You’ve either concluded that I am a braggart as well as a sadist or that I have a deep and driving need to be caught and punished.

In the sweltering heat of an Atlanta summer, a killer is pushing the city to its breaking point, preying on the unsuspecting, writing taunting letters to the media, promising more death. Desperate to stop the Wishbone Killer before another victim meets a shattering end, A.P.D. lieutenant Aaron Rauser turns to the one person he knows can penetrate a deranged mind: ex–FBI profiler Keye Street.

And you must certainly be wondering if I am, in fact, the stranger you seek.

Keye was a rising young star at the Bureau until addiction derailed her career and her life. Now sober and fighting to stay so, Keye picks up jobs where she can get them: catching adulterers, serving subpoenas, chasing down bailjumpers, and dodging the occasional bullet. With multiple victims, little to go on, and an entire police force looking for direction, the last thing Keye wants is to be pulled into the firestorm of Atlanta’s worst nightmare.

Shall I convince you?

And then it suddenly becomes clear that the hunter has become the hunted—and the stranger she seeks is far closer than she ever dared imagine.

An electrifying thriller debut, The Stranger You Seek introduces a brash, flawed, and unforgettable heroine in a complex, twisting novel that takes readers deep into a sultry Southern summer, a city in the grips of chaos, and a harrowing cat-and-mouse game no reader will ever forget.

My thoughts
Keye Street, a former FBI agent turned PI, due to her problems with alcohol is asked by a former colleague to help find a serial killer nicknamed the Wishbone Killer. Although, the main character could be interesting, the plot is typical and not that unique from other crime stories. Belongs more to episodic television as I found it to be mundane and the twist didn’t seem real.

Disclosure: I received this book for review through the amazon.com vine program. I received no compensation for my thoughts.

Tuesday, October 25, 2011

Artisanal Bistro in Manhattan, New York

Artisanal Fromagerie & Bistro on Urbanspoon

My wife and I recently had lunch at Artisanal on Park Avenue in NYC. It is a fromagerie, bistro and wine bar. We went early on a Wednesday afternoon and it was empty. We thought maybe they were closed, but they weren’t and we were quickly seated and we sat close to the cheese shop.

What I heard of the place I wanted to try their grilled cheese and thought they had more than one type of sandwich but they didn’t. It was called the big cheese but wasn’t big at all. It was made with four cheeses and grilled on French bread. I was expecting something spectacular (especially at that price) but could have made this at home.

With just a few tables, I expected more from the waiter. Although courteous and answered all our questions, he could have been more attentive.

The fromagerie had many types of cheeses, many that you would find in your local supermarket. Although, I am not sure if they make it there. We didn’t purchase an though. We also didn’t try the wine bar.

Overall, the food, atmosphere and service were just okay. The prices a little high (but probably the norm for Park Avenue).

Monday, October 24, 2011

Laughing Through Life by Connie Corcoran Wilson

Book Description
"Laughing through Life" is a collection of humorous essays and anecdotes, (including the author's coverage of the 2004 and 2008 presidential campaigns), that critics have compared to "Erma-Bombeck-Meets-David-Sedaris."

My thoughts
Connie Corcoran Wilson’s Laughing through Life is a collection of short stories that leaves a smile, if not a smirk on your face. Although this reader didn’t laugh out loud, this was still an enjoyable, fun quick read.

Disclosure: I received this book for review from the author. I received no compensation for my thoughts.

Saturday, October 22, 2011

Fathermucker by Greg Olear

Book Description
A screenwriter, fledgling freelancer, and stay-at-home dad of two, Josh Lansky has held everything together during his wife Stacy's week-long business trip--until this morning's playdate, when he finds out through the mommy grapevine that Stacy might be having an affair. What Josh needs is a break. He's not going to get one.

My thoughts
This is the story of Josh Lansky, screenwriter and freelance writer and stay at home dad. This is but one day in the mostly frustrating and very busy in his life. He has two children he has to take car e of when his wife is out of town on business. He deals with a son with Asperger’s, a girl who is a toddler, mommy groups, come-ons and innuendos and also trying to meet and aging rocker who is a stay at home dad also (possible writing gig).

I found this book to be funny and sometimes exasperating as Josh tries to be a father to his children and trying to keep his marriage intact. A fascinating take on fatherhood in today’s world.

Disclosure: I received this book for review from the publisher. I received no compensation for my thoughts.

Friday, October 21, 2011

Ltd. Art Gallery in Seattle, WA

I’ve discovered another art gallery that specializes in pop art. – Ltd. Art Gallery. They are located in Seattle so if I ever go there, I will certainly check them out.

Ltd. Art Gallery is a premiere gallery destination for Contemporary and Pop Fine Art. Ltd Specializes in showcasing the talents of many of today's top artists who combine the worlds of modern, pop, surrealist, and low brow art with iconic universes created in Pop Culture. Ltd also showcases original art from a wide range of contemporary artists.

One painting I enjoyed is "Easy Being Green It Is Not" by Peter de Seve.

Peter de Seve brings his amazing style to the worlds of Star Wars and The Muppets in this amazing portrayal of Yoda and Kermit. This piece appeared in the Star Wars Vision Book.


Here is a link to it on the gallery website. If I weren’t unemployed, I may have purchased a print myself.

Thursday, October 20, 2011

It's So Easy and Other Lies by Duff McKagan

Book Description
A founding member of Guns N’ Roses and Velvet Revolver shares the story of his rise to the pinnacle of fame and fortune, his struggles with alcoholism and drug addiction, his personal crash and burn, and his phoenix-like transformation via a unique path to sobriety.

In 1984, at the age of twenty, Duff McKagan left his native Seattle—partly to pursue music but mainly to get away from a host of heroin overdoses then decimating his closest group of friends in the local punk scene. In L.A. only a few weeks and still living in his car, he answered a want ad for a bass player placed by someone who identified himself only as “Slash.” Soon after, the most dangerous band in the world was born. Guns N’ Roses went on to sell more than 100 million albums worldwide.

In It's So Easy, Duff recounts GN’R’s unlikely trajectory to a string of multiplatinum albums, sold-out stadium concerts, and global acclaim. But that kind of glory can take its toll, and it did—ultimately—on Duff, as well as on the band itself. As GN’R began to splinter, Duff felt that he himself was done, too. But his near death as a direct result of alcoholism proved to be his watershed, the turning point that led to his unique path to sobriety and the unexpected choices he has made for himself since. In a voice that is as honest as it is indelibly his own, Duff—one of rock’s smartest and most articulate personalities—takes readers on his harrowing journey through the dark heart of one of the most notorious bands in rock-and-roll history and out the other side.


My thoughts
Another young man makes it big in the music business, spends money on drugs and alcohol and almost kills himself in the process. Then after finding no solace in the music he is playing, cleans. Up, finds love and goes to business school. Not really an uplifting tale, but still one of hope and promise.

Although, I was not a follower of Guns N Roses, I do enjoy reading memoirs and since this one that is in an area I know little about, I thought I would give it a try. I found Duff’s storytelling to be interesting and although, they are points in his life that he skims over then comes back to, I did enjoy how he explained what his life was like and how he was able to overcome many obstacles. I am sure fans of the band will enjoy the book as much as I did.

Disclosure: I received this book for review from the publisher. I received no compensation for my thoughts.

Wednesday, October 19, 2011

Crystal Light Margarita Mocktail

Product Description
Crystal Light is a low-calorie powdered beverage mix that offers naturally and artificially sweetened beverage options in multiple flavors. Crystal Light is available in naturally and artificially sweetened varieties, and is gluten free. They released a sugar-free (and alcohol free) cocktail, aka "Mocktails: Margarita, Mojito or Appletini.

My thoughts
After trying the Crystal Light Appletini Mocktail, I wasn’t’ sure about the Margarita Mocktail. But from Crystal Light it can’t be half bad. Easy to mix; just add water and stir. This one comes out a cloudy green color and definitely has the strong smell of a margarita. This would be a turn=-off to those who don’t like the drink. Otherwise, when drinking it, it has a slight citrusy taste and is sweet. I don’t know if I would try it again; not even with alcohol.

Disclosure: I received this product for review from the amazon.com vine program. I received no compensation for my thoughts.

Tuesday, October 18, 2011

Lassiter by Paul Levine

Book Description
Eighteen years ago, Jake Lassiter crossed paths with a teenage runaway who disappeared into South Florida’s sex trade. Now he retraces her steps and runs head-on into a conspiracy of Miami’s rich and powerful who would do anything to keep the past as dark as night and silent as the grave. In this tale of redemption and revenge, Edgar-nominated author Paul Levine delivers his most powerful thriller yet.

Jake Lassiter, second-string linebacker turned low-rent lawyer, is cynical about the law, but if you hire him, he’ll take a punch for you . . . and maybe a swing at the prosecutor, too.

Amy Larkin—beautiful, angry, and mysterious—accuses Lassiter of involvement in the disappearance of her sister eighteen years earlier. What does Lassiter know about Krista Larkin, the runaway teen turned porn actress? More than he’s saying.

Seeking to atone for his own past, Lassiter follows the cold trail of the missing Krista and butts head with the powerful men who also knew her: a former porn king turned philanthropist, a slick Cuban-born prosecutor who’d love to be governor, and an aging mobster who once worked for the infamous Meyer Lansky.

The evidence leads to a long-ago night of kinky sex, designer drugs—and possible murder. But before Lassiter can nail the truth, a gun goes off, a suspect falls dead, and Amy is charged with murder.

The state has an eyewitness and a slam-dunk case. Lassiter has a client he doesn’t trust and a case he can’t win. Did Amy shoot the man who killed her sister? Or the wrong man? And what really happened to Krista? The answers, buried under years of deceit and corruption, are revealed in an explosive courtroom finale proving that rough justice is better than no justice at all.


My thoughts
Jake Lassiter is back. Amy Larking blames Jake of not helping her sister Krista when she ran away from home eighteen years earlier. Krista has been gone all these years and presumed dead and Jake is beginning to feel guilty when he realizes she was part of a teenage-prostitution ring and he didn’t do anything to help her. But he was young and horny in those days. Life has changed and so have the characters. Now, Jake is determined to help Amy get the justice her sister deserves.

Although, it has been over a decade since Paul Levine has written about Lassiter, he hasn’t lost his touch. The characters come alive and the story is so captivating that I couldn’t put the book down.

Disclosure: I received this book for review from the publisher. I received no compensation for my thoughts.

Sunday, October 16, 2011

The World As We Know It by Joseph Monninger

Book Description
A lifetime of friendship begins the day brothers Ed and Allard save Sarah from drowning in an icy river near their rural New Hampshire home. Though their paths diverge through the years, the connection between the three endures until a heartbreaking tragedy in the remote mountains of Wyoming forces Sarah and Allard to confront the unthinkable. In their grief, they find themselves on separate journeys that test the enduring bonds of their relationship and time’s unremitting power to heal. Poignant and transformative, The World as We Know It is subtle and heartrending—a love story of friendship, nature, and the surprising twists that can alter our destinies forever.

My thoughts
This book is the story of brothers Ed and Allard and the girl they save from drowning one winter day in New Hampshire. It is the tale of their friendship and the love that Al and Sarah (the girl) have for one another. It follows them as they raise pigeons in their barn, start filming them and become documentary filmmakers. It also shows the development of the true love that Sara and Al feel for one another. And then one day a tragic event occurs that chances everything.

This is an inspirational novel of love and friendship in the same vein as Nicholas Sparks. It will leave you teary-eyed.

Disclosure: I received this book for review from the publisher. I received no compensation for my thoughts.

Saturday, October 15, 2011

Green Mountain Fair Trade Certified Coffees

Product Description
At Green Mountain Coffee®, they are dedicated to providing the richest aroma and flavor, for the highest quality coffee experience. They travel the globe to purchase the finest coffees, batch roast them to peak flavor, and vacuum package them fresh for your enjoyment.

They create the ultimate coffee experience in every life they touch from tree to cup – transforming the way the world understands business.

Fair Trade Certified means farmers who are given a fair price for their harvest are better able to support their families. They can afford to use time-honored traditions that produce better quality beans.

My thoughts
I had the opportunity as a Bzzagent to sample two blends of Green Mountain Fair Trade Certified Coffee.

The first; a favorite of mine was Pumpkin Spice, a seasonal coffee enhanced by creamy pumpkin spice flavors. For some reason, we are not able to buy pumpkin spice coffee where I live and I look every autumn. I was very excited to see this flavor in the box.

This coffee has a nice aroma and you can smell it brewing through the house. It is a light roasted coffee and has a nice combination of pumpkin and spices to enhance the morning ritual. We have been drinking every morning this week! I would certainly recommend this one to all coffee drinkers.

The second is there organic house blend, which is a medium roast and is full-bodied. It does certainly open your eyes and awaken you on those rough mornings! It is hard to compare after having the pumpkin spice, but have no complaints with either one.

Disclosure: I received this product for review as a member of bzzagent.com. I receive no compensation for my thoughts.

Friday, October 14, 2011

Fatal Exchange by Russell Blake

Book Description
Fatal Exchange chronicles the story of Tess Gideon, a female Manhattan bike messenger with an appetite for the wild side, who becomes embroiled in a rogue nation's Byzantine scheme to destabilize the U.S. financial system.

From the sweltering streets of Seoul to the sex-and-drug-driven underbelly of Greenwich Village, attempts at silencing a leak in an international counterfeiting operation leave a trail of butchery that leads inevitably to Wall Street, and pit a counter-culture heroine against a ruthless state-sponsored assassination team that will stop at nothing to achieve its lethal ends.

As the body count climbs, Tess is assisted by Detective Ron Stanford, a NYPD homicide specialist tracking a brutal serial killer whose ritualistic cycle of murder and mutilation targeting bike messengers is escalating to fever pitch.

Tess’s battle to survive propels her into a deadly underworld where she must become judge and executioner, challenging her core beliefs about morality, justice and love. Characters include her musician boyfriend Nick, Gordon Samuels, a powerful commodities trader who will stop at nothing to join the ranks of the city’s billionaires, Saul Balinsky, a paranoid ex-Treasury Department currency expert, Duff, a former gang banger whose torso is stitched with bullet scars, and a cast of iconoclastic messengers living on the fringes of mainstream society.


My thoughts
Russell Blake’s debut novel certainly gives you a run for your money. It is a faced-paced, action –packed thriller with what seems like two stories in one. First, there is the counterfeiting story and then the one about Tess, the female bike messenger living in the city trying to make ends meet and get entangled in a conspiracy. Although quite graphic (and not for the faint of heart), I found the story to be intriguing and intense!

Disclosure: I received this book for review through bookrooster.com. I received no compensation for my thoughts.

Wednesday, October 12, 2011

GUEST POST: Author Christopher Meeks

Thanks for inviting me in, Dan. You asked if I might write a guest post about how to find time to write amid a busy schedule. As you said, “How do you find time to write, market, and teach your classes?”Add to that, how do I spend time with my family, correct all those English papers, and have time to garden, too?

It ain’t easy. Still, your question made me think about my journey and how I fit writing into my schedule. One answer is that I’m compelled to do so. Writing helps me make sense of this crazy trip we’re on.

I reviewed books once for a newspaper, then switched to reviewing theatre. It was all that reviewing, actually, that led me to writing plays then novels. As a reviewer, I was challenged in analyzing many new works. Most were not truly great but few were truly terrible, either. They were somewhere in the middle. A mixed review is the hardest to write—yet that’s what most reviews are.

After a while, I asked myself what made most of them not reach the highest heights? It also made me ask what made compelling stories so involving? That led me to focus on storytelling and what’s in a good story. Part of it is to offer a dramatic question that needs answering. Will Luke Skywalker save Princess Leia, defeating Darth Vader? In my new novel, Love At Absolute Zero, I implicitly ask, “Why is Gunnar near death at the start and will he survive?”

Another benefit of being a reviewer was that I wrote on a tight deadline. You must experience this, Dan. If I saw a play Saturday night, I often had to have a review in by Sunday. Later, as a writer at an arts college, CalArts, I was under deadlines nearly every day—not only conducting interviews and writing stories for an arts magazine but also for a quarterly news journal. Now that I write a weekly blog and a monthly newsletter and always a novel in progress, I put myself under deadlines.

Publishing and marketing one’s own book is certainly a time-sucker, and a hugely challenging one. There’s press releases to write as well as letters and emails to possible reviewers. There’s publicists to consider—and bookstores to contact not only for sales but also for possible readings. Do you tour your book at all? How will you pay for that? There’s so much to do, I wrote an article on how to market your book or watch it die. (Click here for that.)

It’s nice to know I don’t feel alone in the challenge. I happened to interview author Darcie Chan recently (click here for that), and I was curious about how she fit time in for writing, considering she’s an attorney writing legislation for the U.S. Senate. She’s also a mother and a wife, and she loves to garden. She says, “I will tell you that, this summer, my modest vegetable garden has been completely overtaken by weeds!”

She writes at night. Myself, I’m a morning person. I write the first thing before I start having to deal with other responsibilities.

The thing that showed me I could do this happened when I was in a particular writing group. In the group was a neonatal doctor who every fourth week was on call in neonatal ER and intensive care, and that week she’d always work 90 hours. She also said there would always be babies that died, and it took its toll emotionally on her. She said at first she didn’t think she could be a writer because dealing with those deaths was hard, and she didn’t have the time everyone else had. Yet, she learned that if she wrote just even 15 minutes a day on the weeks she worked on call, she kept up her momentum. She wrote more than many people in that group. I thought if she could do it, so could I. And I have.
-------------------
Christopher has also lowered the price of the Kindle and Nook versions of the book to .99 cents for the duration of the tour.

Tuesday, October 11, 2011

Love at Absolute Zero BLOG TOUR

Back again with another blog tour.  This one for Christopher Meeks' Love At Absolute Zero.  Come back tomorrow for a guest blog by Mr. Meeks.

Book Description
Love At Absolute Zero is the story of Gunnar Gunderson, a 32-year-old physicist at the University of Wisconsin. The moment he's given tenure at the university, he can only think of one thing: finding a wife. This causes his research to falter. With his two partners, Gunnar is in a race against MIT to create new forms of matter called Bose-Einstein condensates, which exist only near absolute zero. To meet his soul mate within three days--that's what he wants and all time he can carve out--he and his team are using the scientific method, to riotous results.

My thoughts
Gunnar Gunderson just wants to find love. Being a physicist, he tries to do it scientifically. Will he find love this way? That’s what he hopes to achieve. This is a boy-meets-girl, boy-loses-girl, boy-finds-hope love story, with a lot of science and laughter thrown in. Gunnar is a likable character and the story is enjoyable with bright moments and some sad ones thrown in. I did chuckle at times, so that means I enjoyed the book.
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Christopher has also lowered the price of the Kindle and Nook versions of the book to .99 cents for the duration of the tour.

Monday, October 10, 2011

UNO Roboto Game

Product Description
Game Meet the Interactive “Wild Card” That Brings UNO® To Life! Customizable game play begins with recording each player's name and creating a totally unique “House Rule.” As you start playing cards into the head of this unpredictable little robot, he'll surprise you by calling out Random Rules and funny phrases that change the way you play! He'll call on you by name and tell you what to do next! He'll announce your House Rule then everyone must race to complete it! You never know what UNO Roboto™ will say next…but no matter what he says, you still have to say “UNO!”Includes 1 UNO Roboto™ figure, 108 cards and instructions.

My thoughts
UNO Roboto gives a little electronic twist to the old card game, UNO. We’ve have played UNO for many years and this little guy keeps you on your toes, as he randomly tells the players who goes next, change nick names and tossing in a hose rule when you least expect it. For those who have never played, each player tosses down a card to match what is on the toss pile either by color or number. There are wild cards and reverse cards. Now with the robot added to the mix, it certainly made the game more exciting, but is better off with 3 or more players. Makes a family game night that more electrifying!

Disclosure: I received this product for review through the amazon.com vine program. I received no compensation for my thoughts.

Saturday, October 08, 2011

The Prophet Motive by Eric Christopherson

Book Description
San Francisco Homicide detective John Richetti spent part of his childhood living inside an infamous cult known as the People’s Temple. As a boy he’d lost his parents to cult-instigated mass suicide. The memories come flooding back when he investigates the bizarre suicide of a former member of Earthbound, a New Age cult—and suspects murder instead. To uncover the truth he infiltrates the group, along with police psychologist Marilyn Michaelsen.

The new recruits find themselves pushed to their physical and mental limits by a series of sophisticated brainwashing techniques as well as by a cult leader, known only as The Wizard, who appears to possess psychic and paranormal powers. Even the psychologist's expert knowledge of cults can't explain The Wizard’s feats, and it isn’t long before John, like his parents before him, surrenders his independence to another . . .

My thoughts
This book delves into the world of cults and the people involved with them. When an undercover agent goes missing in such a cult, his partner, psychologist Marilyn Michaelsen tries to find out the truth.

The characters are well developed and although, some of the story is predictable, it still a page turner as we find out the truth behind “Earthbound” and it’s leader. This book certainly grabs your attention.

Disclosure: I received this book for review through bookrooster.com.  I received no compensation for my thoughts.

Friday, October 07, 2011

Ronald McDonald

Here's another painting I just completed while taking a break from job searching. I always wanted one of those statues that used to be at McDonald's. Have you seen how much they go for on eBay?!

Thursday, October 06, 2011

Crystal Light Mocktails Appletini

Product Description
Crystal Light is a low-calorie powdered beverage mix that offers naturally and artificially sweetened beverage options in multiple flavors. Crystal Light is available in naturally and artificially sweetened varieties, and is gluten free. They released a sugar-free (and alcohol free) cocktail, aka "Mocktails: Margarita, Mojito or Appletini.

My thoughts
I like the idea of having a no-alcohol drink with low calories and zero points. The Crystal Light Appletini is like drinking liquid Apple Jolly Ranchers; just delightful. My wife though it was a little sweet (this from a woman who puts multiple Splenda packets in her coffee), but I found it to be just right. This is certainly a big chance from the usual low calorie powder drinks. Can’t wait to try the other flavors!

Disclosure: I received this product for review from the amazon.com vine program. I received no compensation for my thoughts.

Tuesday, October 04, 2011

The Walking Dead: Rise of the Governor by Robert Kirkman and Jay Bonansinga

This book will be released on October 11, 2011

Book Description
In the Walking Dead universe, there is no greater villain than The Governor. The despot who runs the walled-off town of Woodbury, he has his own sick sense of justice: whether it’s forcing prisoners to battle zombies in an arena for the townspeople’s amusement, or chopping off the appendages of those who cross him. The Governor was voted “Villain of the Year” by Wizard magazine the year he debuted, and his story arc was the most controversial in the history of the Walking Dead comic book series. Now, for the first time, fans of The Walking Dead will discover how The Governor became the man he is, and what drove him to such extremes.

My thoughts
Even if you are a not a viewer of the television series or a reader of the graphic novels it is based on, this novelization is a very good zombie story. It is action-packed, fast-moving, scary and yes, graphic (but isn’t that what we liked about zombie stories).

The story itself is about a small group of survivors after the zombie outbreak and how they try and love in this new world. One of the characters will become the Governor that is in the title and a major character in the original stories. This didn’t deter from this story.

Each chapter leaves you wanting more and therefore you don’t want to stop reading. I think now I will have to check out the TV show and/or the comics!


Disclosure: I received this book for review through the amazon.com vine program. I received no compensation for my thoughts.

Sunday, October 02, 2011

Dael and the Painted People by Allan Richard Shickman

Book Description
A prehistoric adventure, this is the third of the Zan-Gah young adult books. When Dael, guilty and tormented, came to live with the tribe of the painted people, he longed for peace and restoration; but without knowing it, he made a powerful enemy. Luckily, Dael had friends-including a troop of crows-and his own mystical powers. The disturbed and violent hero learns from the Children of the Earth, and from his submissive wife, a new way of life that is peaceful and generous. Dael and the Painted People is a story of conflict, healing, hate, and love by the winner of the Eric Hoffer Award, a finalist for the ForeWord magazine Book of the Year Award, and the Mom's Choice Gold Seal for Excellence in a family-friendly book series.

My thoughts
This book is the third in the series of prehistoric novels and begins with where the previous one ends. Dael leaves his tribe to find the tribe of the Painted People. He takes along Sparrow, his companion who is mute. Together they find and live with the new tribe

With all three books, Shickman has created a believable world with real characters that can be enjoyed by not just the young but by the whole family.

Disclosure: I received this book for review from the publisher. I received no compensation for my thoughts.
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