Archive for the Book Reviews Topic


In the News: “Peter Pan” Mystery, Best University Presses

President Obama was spotted leaving the Martha’s Vineyard bookstore Bunch of Grapes with an advance copy of Jonathan Franzen’s novel “Freedom.”

Peter Pan paraphernalia found in the same trunk as the mummied remains of two infants has led to speculation that the babies, who died in the nineteen-thirties, may have been relatives of the author J. M. Barrie.

For when you feel like wallowing in those late-summer blues: ten novels about suburban ennui.

One professor of management at Texas Tech University has replaced business school textbooks with graphic novels.

The Huffington Post on the most innovative university presses—and what to expect from each.

Is the New York Times fair in its choices of which books to review, and who should review them?

Seventy bookstores in twenty-five states have raised forty-eight thousand dollars in a fundraiser for the American Booksellers Foundation for Free Expression.

On shame, depression, and humor: read an extract from Sarah Silverman’s memoir, “The Bedwetter.”

The Nigerian publisher Farafina Books is one of a growing number of houses dedicated to publishing books by African authors for African readers.

Have e-readers made the bookworm’s life more fashionable?

Posted on Aug 23rd, 2010 by Eileen Reynolds in Barack Obama, Book Reviews, Bunch of Grapes, Huffington Post, In the News, J.M. Barrie, New York Times, Peter Pan, Sarah Silverman, Summer reading, Texas Tech University, The Bedwetter,, censorship, e-readers, fashion, graphic novels, textbooks, university presses |

Sea Escape by Lynne Griffin

Book Cover Sea EscapeSea Escape by Lynne Griffin is the story of a mother and daughter set around a beautiful beach home, Sea Escape, on the New England coastline.

Laura, a devoted wife, mother and nurse has always been trying to get her mother’s attention.  But Helen, her estranged mother, seems uninterested in anything to do with her daughter.  Instead, she spends all day reminiscing and reading old love letters that her deceased husband wrote while serving in the Korean War and later as a war correspondent during the Vietnam War.

Helen seems only interested in the past and not what’s right in front of her nor the future.  When Helen suffers a debilitating stroke, Laura believes that she can not only make her mother happy again but also close the gap that has grown between them through the years.  Laura has never been privy to her father’s letters but with her mother unable to speak, Laura dives deep into the letters hoping that she’ll finally understand her mother.  In doing so, she discovers buried family secrets and that her own buried secret is shocking similar to that of her own mother.

The story alternates between the present with Laura haggardly trying to maintain a sense of normalcy with her two young children while spending each day at the hospital taking care of with her ailing mother and in the past with Helen’s love story to Joseph, their marriage, and attempts at creating a family despite his constant overseas absences.  I do enjoy books with alternate storytelling and time lines – giving us bits and pieces, slowly revealing key plot points and character insight.

Laura’s husband, Christian is a landscape designer and I loved the references to his beautiful gardens.  Sea Escape, Helen’s home on the beach, felt very real to me.  The book has a very strong sense of place and I appreciate that.  Time as well.  Helen’s role as a mother and housewife in the fifties is strikingly different from that of Laura’s.  It’s easy to see why they so often misunderstood each other.

Ultimately, the novel didn’t live up to it’s potential.  I was bogged down with my disbelief of Helen’s and Laura’s relationship.  As this relationship is the entire basis of the book, everything else just fell for me.

Laura keeps telling herself over and over how much she loves her mother and she desperately wants to make her happy, but nothing is given to show me why she should love her mother.  While her father was alive, her mother only seemed to live for his infrequent coming homes and after he died, Helen pretty much ignores Laura for the rest of her childhood.  Although Laura is the child that Helen took years to conceive, I needed at least one moment of a good solid connection between the two to understand why it was that Laura could continue to give so much when she received so little in return.

As Laura reads her father’s letters she comes to know that both her mother and her father have kept family secrets hidden away from her.  We know that Laura has a secret of her own as well, that she wants to tell her mother before it’s too late.  Because Laura didn’t feel an immediacy to uncover these secrets, reveal her own secrets,  nor read all of her father’s letters, the book didn’t feel very tight.

Truths were revealed without the packing punch that I would expect to accompany them.  Everything was set up really well, and I imagine a second reading would show how carefully crafted Griffin’s story really is, but it lacked the emotional aspect that I would think a book like this would give.  I needed to be shown rather than told how characters felt.  I didn’t believe in the mother-daughter reconciliation (nor that of her brother’s as well) nor the emotions that they were feeling.

For example, one line from Laura: “After years of longing for her presence full and whole, I’d found her laugh, her touch, and her love.  They were hidden behind my lie.”  What laugh, what touch, what love?  I still felt as though this hadn’t quite happened yet.  Plus, I don’t think they were hidden behind Laura’s lie.  Helen emotionally abandoned Laura as a small child, years before Laura’s lie would present itself at age 17.  It wasn’t Laura’s fault, it was Helen’s fault.  Not believing how the characters felt, made it difficult to empathize with them.

I enjoyed the plot line, sense of time and place, the alternate storytelling, and the struggle to attend to an ailing family member but the characters fell flat for me.  Not a perfect read.  It was simply okay when I was hoping for fantastic. Readers who enjoy women’s fiction on the exploration of mothers and daughters may very well give this one a try. Perhaps you’ll feel differently than I.

Links of interest: Lynne Griffin website, Facebook and on Twitter. Visit TLC Book Tours for additional stops on the Sea Escape blog tour.
Genre: Fiction
Publisher: Simon and Schuster. July 6, 2010
Hardcover, 304 pages. ISBN 1439180601
Sea Escape is available from your favorite independent bookstore, Powell’s, and Amazon.

__________________________________________________

Copyright 2009. Maw Books Blog

Maw Books has an affiliate relationship with several bookstores, including Indiebound, Powell’s, and Amazon . When you buy a product (not just books – any product), via one of my links, Maw Books earns income from the sale and as always, it’s much appreciated as all affiliate income is used to support the blog. There is no cost to you.



Posted on Jul 21st, 2010 by Natasha Maw in Adult, Book Reviews, E-H Author, Fiction, Publisher: Simon and Schuster, Q-T Title, TLC Book Tour, blog tour, female author, published 2010, review copy |

Scaredy Squirrel at Night by Melanie Watt

Book Cover:  Scaredy Squirrel (large)Well, I think that it’s pretty safe to say that anything Melanie Watt writes is pretty much perfection and gold.  Scaredy Squirrel at Night is no exception.  I love this picture book! Melanie Watt is incredibly clever and her books are so much fun to read.

Scaredy Squirrel never sleeps, he’d much rather stay awake for days at a time rather than risk having a bad dream in the middle of the night. A few of the things that Scaredy Squirrel is afraid of?  Ghosts, unicorns, dragons, fairies, vampire bats, and polka-dot monsters.  I mean, come on, isn’t everybody?!  But when Scaredy Squirrel can’t avoid the inevitable -  pure exhaustion and sleep – he has a plan that should put all his fears to rest.  But things may get a little messy.

So many little details in the illustrations that it’s a lot of fun to read this one withbo my kids.  But what Melanie Watt book isn’t?   If you haven’t discovered her picture books yet, you should!

Links of interest: Melanie Watt website, more book blogger reviews.
Genre: Fiction Picture Book, approx age 4-8.
Publisher:
Kids Can Press.  February 10, 2009.
Source:
Review copy for Cybil’s for which I was a panelist.
Hardcover, 32 pages. ISBN 1554532884
Scaredy Squirrel at Night is available from your favorite independent bookstore, Powell’s, and Amazon.

__________________________________________________

Copyright 2009. Maw Books Blog

Maw Books has an affiliate relationship with several bookstores, including Indiebound, Powell’s, and Amazon . When you buy a product (not just books – any product), via one of my links, Maw Books earns income from the sale and as always, it’s much appreciated as all affiliate income is used to support the blog. There is no cost to you.



Posted on Jun 19th, 2010 by Natasha Maw in Book Reviews, Cybils picture book nomination, Fiction, Picture & Board Books, Q-T Title, U-Z Author, published 2008, review copy |

Firefighter Ted by Andrea Beaty and Pascal Lemaitr1

Firefighter Ted (large)My little boys are four and three so it pretty much goes without saying that a book about firefighters in our house is going to be a hit. And Firefighter Ted by Andrea Beaty and Pascal Lemaitre is a hit with them.

Ted wakes up one morning and smells smoke.  And because Ted couldn’t find a firefighter he became a firefighter!  And what a fantastic firefighter he is – he helps put out breakfast fires, rescues kittens, and puppies.  And that’s all before he gets to school in the morning! And there is danger everywhere at school.  But thank goodness Ted has everything under control otherwise things could go from worse to disastrous in  no time.

My kids got a real kick out the principal’s pants catching on fire.  As a parent, I loved how the book embraces imagination and creativity.  Ted can pretend to be anything he wants to be.  And when the day is over, he’s on to a new adventure and a new vocation.

I now need to go hunt down Doctor Ted.

Links of interest: Andrea Beaty website, Pascal Lemaitre website, more book blogger reviews.
Genre: Fiction Picture Book, approx age 4-8.
Publisher: Margaret K. McElderry.  September 1, 2009.
Hardcover, 32 pages. ISBN 1416928219
Source: Review copy for Cybil’s nominee for which I was a panelist.
Firefighter Ted is available from your favorite independent bookstore, Powell’s, and Amazon.

__________________________________________________

Copyright 2009. Maw Books Blog

Maw Books has an affiliate relationship with several bookstores, including Indiebound, Powell’s, and Amazon . When you buy a product (not just books – any product), via one of my links, Maw Books earns income from the sale and as always, it’s much appreciated as all affiliate income is used to support the blog. There is no cost to you.



Posted on Jun 19th, 2010 by Natasha Maw in A-D Author, Book Reviews, Cybils picture book nomination, E-H Title, Fiction, Picture & Board Books, published 2009 |

In the Garden by Peggy Collins (plus more of my garden photos!)

In the Garden (large)How could I not love In the Garden by Peggy Collins?  I LOVE gardening.  And please, nobody remind me that it’s June already and I haven’t planted my veggies yet.

In this adorable picture book, a little boy (to tell you the truth, the character could easily be interpreted as either a boy or a girl) has a huge garden.  Not only does he plant seeds but a truck, bus, and a bulldozer.  He waters everything and the rain and sun make the flowers and vegetables grow big.  Nothing is better than juicy green peas, tomatoes, strawberries, butterflies, bumblebees and kisses.  A fun book  that captures a child’s special point of view as he digs into the dirt and watches the world around him grow.

The illustrations are really awesome.  Bold, bright, and fun they are a delight to look at.  My two little boys have their own raised vegetable box that they can call their own.  Last year, they planted radishes. I’m going to read this book to my boys and then head outside to enjoy our own time in the beautiful garden.

This is an easy book to love!

You may remember the last time I posted photos of my garden.  Here’s how it’s looking now (well – about two weeks ago):

On the other side of the driveway (not seen here) I have a fairly large perennial garden.  When we moved in, we ripped out all the grass.  Wondering now why I don’t have a photo of it . . .

Links of interest:  Peggy Collins website.
Genre: Fiction picture book. Approx ages 4-8.
Publisher: Applesauce Press.  March 3, 2009
Hardcover, 40 pages. ISBN 1604330260
Source copy:  Review copy for Cybils in which I was a panelist.
In the Garden is available from your favorite independent bookstore, Powell’s, and Amazon.

__________________________________________________

Copyright 2009. Maw Books Blog

Maw Books has an affiliate relationship with several bookstores, including Indiebound, Powell’s, and Amazon . When you buy a product (not just books – any product), via one of my links, Maw Books earns income from the sale and as always, it’s much appreciated as all affiliate income is used to support the blog. There is no cost to you.



Posted on Jun 7th, 2010 by Natasha Maw in A-D Author, Book Reviews, Cybils picture book nomination, Fiction, I-L Title, Picture & Board Books, review copy, woman author |

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