Karen Ziemba Books

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So many twists & turns, you couldn't make it up!Review Date: 2008-05-01
yet another competent effort by Ann Rule...Review Date: 2008-04-26
The book doesn't earn five stars because the nature of the crimes in 'Too Late...' are not quite as convoluted or are heinous compared to what is found in other Ann Rule books. And I was disappointed not to be entertained with any sort of courtroom drama. On the plus side, I found this book to be less 'gushy' in flowery descriptions of the victims, or their kids, or anything which Ann Rule can blather on about in hopes of making the crimes sound even more heinous than they are. Is murdering a beautiful woman with adorable children any more tragic than killing an average woman with brats??? It's a bit irrelevant.
Bottom line: a entertaining slice of true crime drama. Recommended.
Ann Rule knows her subject well and does not disappoint!Review Date: 2008-04-21
Too Late to Say GoodbyeReview Date: 2008-04-17
WHEN PAST AND PRESENT COLLIDE...Review Date: 2008-05-16
The first woman to die was Dolly Hearn, a beautiful, vivacious, dental student, who met Bart Corbin in dental school, where he, too, was a student. They eventually became a couple but the relationship was quite rocky. Then Dolly met an untimely death by virtue of a gunshot wound to the head, which the police classified as a suicide, despite her parents' belief that she had been murdered.
The second woman to die was Jennifer Corbin, Bart's wife. Bart Corbin, now a dentist, though not particularly successful in his practice of dentistry, was still able to live the American dream. He had a lovely wife, two wonderful children, and a nice home in a great neighborhood in Atlanta, Georgia. There were cracks in that facade, however, and his wife finally decided that she was going to leave Bart, as he was not the man that she had thought he was. Then she, too, met her maker through a gunshot wound to the head. This time, however, the police did not rush to judgment to classify this death as a suicide.
A careful and thorough investigation, fueled by an unexpected lead, led to the police to connect the dots between the deaths of these two young women, resulting in the re-opening of the investigation into Dolly Hearn's death. What the police were to discover and what lead to the arrest of Bart Corbin in connection with these two tragic deaths makes for riveting true crime drama.


LOVE IT!!!Review Date: 2008-04-08
Singer of all SongsReview Date: 2008-03-16
The Singer of All SongsReview Date: 2007-11-08
Enjoyable, fun fantasy readReview Date: 2007-06-02
Your standard fantasy story done fairly wellReview Date: 2007-10-28
feels trapped
gets in trouble often with harsh priestess
runs away with mysterious older man/wizard
crush on him
dresses like a boy
fighting evil wizard who used to be good wizard's pal
rag-tag band of adventurers with different powers
captured by pirates
escape
travel through the "waste"
tired of eating stew
to the city of the ancients
their battle seems hopeless but then . . .

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Wonderful sequel......Review Date: 2008-01-01
Great ending to a great story!Review Date: 2007-08-31
Worth ReadingReview Date: 2007-07-20
highly recommended!Review Date: 2007-06-23
Perfect Follow-Up to SUMMER'S CHILDReview Date: 2007-05-14
I loved SUMMER'S CHILD, but was sometimes irritated at the slow pace of the storyline starring Liam and Lily. Although the abuse she'd suffered at the hands of her first husband, Edward, forced the progression to be a slow one, nine years is a really long time!
Thankfully, things move faster in SUMMER OF ROSES, and I treasured each scene as it unfolded. Although the book can stand alone, I highly recommend reading Summer's Child first, because the background information you'll gain on each character will make you appreciate this current offering even more.

why do authors re-package their old novels and sell as new?Review Date: 2004-02-21
Good story about an adopteeReview Date: 2003-12-18
Trying to please her father, she has a one-night stand with her long time friend and business partner which her father also wants her to marry. Unfortunately, they are better friends than lovers but Chelsea becomes pregnant. The day she plans to tell him is the day she finds out he is going to marry a former girlfriend.
Without telling him she is pregnant, she throws herself into the granite business and renovates a farmhouse in her birth town. But all is not well. There are those who don't want an outsider in their town. But Chelsea is determined to find her heritage. In the process, she finds a half of her she never knew existed and a man who is willing to stand beside her through it all.
One of my favoritesReview Date: 2005-02-08
A classicReview Date: 2004-01-08
She becomes pregnant but before she can tell Carl, he informs her he is marrying the woman who is carrying his twins. Needing a place to escape to and wanting to find out about her biological roots, Chelsea moves to the small conservative village of her birth, buys into a business and meets Judd Streeter who is Chelsea's foreman on the quarry site. While the two fight their growing feelings for one another, someone in town attempts to scare her into leaving, going so far as to trying to run her over and burning down her home.
It has been over eleven years since THE PASSIONS OF CHELSEA KANE was published but classics such as this stand the test of time and remain a strong read when reprinted. The relationship between the heroine and her love is so dynamic and explosive, sparks fly off the pages. The townsfolk are an interesting group who give color and atmosphere to the plot and demonstrate that even in a small hamlet, there remains a huge gap between the classes.
Harriet Klausner
Too much s-e-x distracts from the story!Review Date: 2003-07-11
However, it gets irritating after awhile. Central character Chelsea Kane casually sleeps with her childhood friend, just to see if they are compatible. They are not. Oh well. Chelsea then moves to a small town in New England where the whole rest of the novel seems to be pre-occupied with Chelsea's lusty thoughts for one of the granite workers at the town quarry she has just bought. Scene after scene of gratuitous sex, even during Chelsea's pregnancy, yuck. And, even hints at sex during her breast-feeding, double yuck. Chelsea had arrived in the small New England town pregnant, and doesn't even bother having her new lover take an AIDs test, which could have injured her unborn child, I would think. There was AIDs in 1992, so I feel author, Barbara Delinsky was very irresponsible making pregnant Chelsea Kane so promiscuous, whether it serves the plot or not.
Why did Chelsea purchase a granite factory in a small-town of New England? Chelsea was adopted as a child and she is now looking for her birth-parents who came out of that town. She is an architect and granite gives her a reason to get involved with the small town to see if she can find her parents amongst the townspeople.
All the quarrying for granite stuff is about as interesting as the maple-sugaring stuff in Delinsky's "Accidental Woman" novel. The problem with writing so technical about these crafts is that if the reader is simply not interested in maple syrup, gardening, grape-growing, or quarrying........the whole novel will be a big bore.
Delinsky is not so great at suspense and mystery either. The reader can easily guess who Chelsea's surprise parents will be. The ending of this long-drawn out novel is pretty lackluster as too many clues were handed out long before and there really aren't much surprises.
What is good here is the narrow-mindedness of the small-town attitudes. Delinsky is an expert at capturing the feel of small New England towns and the petty and small attitudes of the townspeople towards urbane Chelsea Kane. There are some great scenes of the long-time denizens of small-town Norwitch Notch arguing with city-dweller, Chelsea, as the townspeople simply do not want her there and try to run her out of town. In fact, I would go so far as to say that author Barbara Delinsky's small town "Norwich Notch" in this novel, which she custom-created, is about as expertly defined as "Empire Falls" was in Pulitzer Prize winning novelist Richard Russo's "Empire Falls" novel----which won the Pulitzer in 2001.
Both Richard Russo "Empire Falls" and Barbara Delinsky are perhaps the best in all of fiction at creating accurate New England small towns.
However, I'm still going to take one star off for the bizarre sex scenes. And, one star off for all the boring stuff about granite and quarrying.

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Weiner's bestReview Date: 2008-02-01
Another enjoyable Jennifer Weiner bookReview Date: 2007-11-26
It's very easy to warm up to and enjoy Rose early on in the book, despite her her lack of self-confidence. Maggie takes a lot longer to warm up to - you really have to get to know her more in depth and watch her transform to be able to like her better, as she starts out fairly badly. However, the book does a good job giving you background on both sisters and their personalities. And it's fun to watch both sisters develop into "better" people and ultimately develop a better relationship.
Yes, you will occasionally want to yell at one (or both) of the sisters. But you will also laugh, cry, and cheer for them as well. This is a great read, and one I would highly recommend.
decent womens fictionReview Date: 2007-10-31
For the first third to half of the book, Maggie is a total beyotch. I had a very hard time going past her abuse of everyone around her. Only the hints that there was something more, below the surface, kept me reading.
And there is a catharsis. There's an awakening on the part of each sister. And of course there's a happy ending.
I have not seen the movie, but a friend who has says that a very important part - Maggie's rebirth - is removed from the movie. It's the one thing that makes the book worth finishing, watching Maggie grow.
In all, a decent story about how women hurt each other, and how we support each other.
(*)>
In Her Shoes - great!Review Date: 2007-10-27
Much more indepth and therefore better than the movieReview Date: 2007-10-16


quite magicalReview Date: 2008-04-29
It's definitely written in a muted tone. The protagonist, the assistant of the title, is sunk in depression after the death of her two gay friends, one of whom was her husband. She sleeps a lot -- but she has sleepwalked through most of her life, settling for the illusion of love instead of the real thing. Her role as the assistant has been to stand there and smile sweetly while he does all the real living and loving.
Surprisingly, only when she travels to snow-bound Nebraska to bond with her dead husband's famly does the book come truly to life. It becomes clear this is a book about family and about the possibility of love -- the love that holds families together and the love that binds two people together, true love, the real thing, not the illusion.
Worth persisting with.
Patchett's Writing is MagicReview Date: 2008-01-16
There is a hint of magic in Patchett's writing, and not just the tricks and illusions she recalls in The Magician's Assistant. She writes relationships and dialogue in a manner that seems effortless. Her characters are entirely human - flawed and lovable. This was a great read and a touch of magic amongst the ordinary.
Dragged on and on.....Review Date: 2007-10-28
The magic of love ........Review Date: 2007-10-18
Were I sitting beside Ann Patchett when she wrote the conclusion to her novel, I would have urged her to draw out the ending a bit more and give us a better glimpse of things to come for Sabine. On the other hand, Patchett's ending allows each of us to project our own hopes, dreams and fears into Sabine's future.
The true magic of The Magician's Assistant is that it enabled me to see in my own life a dimension that I have left unobserved and to realize that we all have the ability to pull rabbits of one form or another out of a variety of hats.
It's always thrilling to find an author who resonates with your soul. Ann Patchett does just that and I can't wait to curl up with a stack of her novels and meet her characters and hopefully learn more about her, them and me.
Great RabbitReview Date: 2007-11-03

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Not worth your timeReview Date: 2008-01-02
I was "led astray" when I thought I was about to read a good bookReview Date: 2007-04-25
Whenever I see such an author published, it gives me hope that maybe it's not as difficult as I thought to break into the elite world of "The Published."
I lost count of all the times I rolled my eyes and breathed an "Oh, please" while reading this. The plot was VERY weak, Jenny was VERY pathetic, and Cage was VERY cliche.
I agree 100% with the commenters that mention Cage raping Jenny. That's how their whole love affair starts. Is that not terrible?! Not to mentioned that they were raised practically as siblings. *shudders*
I must have missed somethingReview Date: 2007-06-06
I'm not going to waste any more time on this review. The book just isn't worth it.
A 20 year old story that was entertaining!Review Date: 2006-12-14
Pretty good for one of Brown's early novelsReview Date: 2007-03-21
The interesting storyline was marred by really clunky and cheesy dialogue (a common early trait of Brown's writing that she has thankfully lost). The chemistry between the two characters is immense, the secondary characters well drawn, both brining the story from a dated soap opera to a pretty dramatic read.

Very timelyReview Date: 2007-10-17
I've read betterReview Date: 2007-10-03
I find it hard to believe lots of things about this book.
1 - that there are people in this day and age named Zebulon and Sixtus.
2 - that an accident in space would not have been reported on the news so that it is left as some unknown traumatic event in Zeb's life.
3 - that astronauts are recognizable celebrities.
4 - that 2 people as connected as Rumer and Zeb wouldn't have talked about the misunderstanding that she stood him up to have sex as teenagers, and this was the 100% ending of their relationship. (The book makes it sound like he went straight from the woods to NY to be with Zee)
5 - that Zee would be interested in having sex with someone younger than her whom she watched grow up and was obviously in love with her younger sister.
I could go on - and trust me - reading this review will not diminish your enjoyment of the book - these items are pretty quickly apparent.
Despite these things - it took me a while to get into the book - but I did read it and enjoyed it at the time (until I started analyzing it)
Not my favorite - but certainly not the worst book I've ever read.
Great story, sloppy editing!Review Date: 2007-02-06
A Little too Blue For My Taste But..Review Date: 2006-09-09
It is a sweet tug at your heart strings book though. Once again, one of my signature comments; a good quick weekend read. Best on a rainy weekend.
A True Blue BookReview Date: 2006-07-28

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More subplots do not make for a better bookReview Date: 2008-03-23
An Annoying BookReview Date: 2008-02-07
I did feel sorry for Dylan and all he had been through and perhaps Jane could have been good for him if she hadn't lied and deceived everyone. She was supposed to be there helping with her mother and instead she was always sneaking off to see her daughter and leaving her sister to handle everything. I was just disgusted with her through the entire book and of course this being a work of fiction, the author made it all come out okay. In real life it could have been and probably would have been a disaster!
I have liked some of Luanne Rice's books like The Secret Hour, Summer of Roses, and Dream Country and some have been a bit annoying but this one was so annoying from start to finish that it will take me awhile to try another of her books!
An Excellent Multigenerational StoryReview Date: 2006-09-25
Then, we get into the head of a 15-year old. But not just any 15-year old. Chloe is adopted and knows it. She longs for her real mother, but loves her adopted parents dearly. At one point we, the readers, must feel the pain she goes through when she first learns she might be pregnant. This is especially hard if you are a parent of a teen yourself.
In the middle are Sylvie, Jane, and Dylan (Chloe's uncle). Sylvie, who has put her life on hold to care for her mother until her sister Jane helps her find a way to find happiness for herself. Jane, mother of Chloe, is steadfast throughout. She must have suffered throughout the years before the story begins, but now she is okay with it. It is not until the end of the book that we learn enough about Chloe's father to understand Jane.
I would recommend this book to anyone who loves a good story guided by excellent characters. It is a book you won't want to end.
This book was not for meReview Date: 2007-07-01
I would not recommend this book at all.
DisappointingReview Date: 2007-02-12

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Murder and evilReview Date: 2008-04-23
Ali Reynolds is grieving for a wandering eyed husband. The wealthy family that offered her a college scholarship wants to see her but a friend's daughter goes missing just as the meeting was requested. Ali steps in to help her friend find his daughter and gets entangled in a web of evil that is more than a quarter of a century old.
The daughter witnesses a brutal murder and is afraid to go to the police because of what she was doing at the time. Ali's parent's have a friend who has gone missing as well. Is all of this tied to the wealthy family in some way? Murder and child molestation are involved but in what way?
Karen Ziemba reads HAND OF EVIL and has a clear and easy voice to listen to. You are able to tell who is talking with her various inflections.
WONDERFUL BOOKReview Date: 2008-03-28
Slow readReview Date: 2008-03-18
A missing teen and an attack on a friendReview Date: 2008-02-25
In the meantime, Arabella Ashcroft summons Ali to her house. Arabella and her mother provided Ali with a scholarship to college years ago, so Ali feels compelled to appear. Turns out Arabella wants Ali to read her diary from many years ago explaining about the abuse she endured by her stepbrother. His son has recently threatened to bring these acts to light in order to extort money from her. Even though Ali is reluctant to get involved, she feels obligated to help out.
In the course of the investigation, Ali also finds out that she has been out of touch with her son and needs to catch up.
Can Ali help uncover the killer and the attacker without putting herself and others in harm's way?
I really enjoy this series. I like Ali and feel the author has done a great job of creating a character that the reader cares about. I did find the subject matter of this book to be a little harder to read, being the mother
of a teenager. But I know there are so many people who have had these subjects touch their lives, that I know it needs to be discussed. I thought the author did a good job of getting the information out there without making it too graphic.
I thought Crystal was a well-written character. She came across as a stubborn teenager but when you removed the layers, you found she was just a scared and confused girl. I felt she was very believable.
I see that others have complained that Ali didn't have enough of a reason to be involved in these mysteries. I disagree. I think Dave put her in the middle of Crystal's situation, and Arabella did the same. I like how the author weaves the stories together and intertwines some of the people.
Even though I found the subject matter a little tough to read, I really enjoyed this book and HIGHLY RECOMMEND it.
Loved It!Review Date: 2008-02-29
This installment finds Ali in a slump after dealing with the events of the previous two books. This book deals with several different plots, but Jance weaves them together well. Have you ever read a book, and after the climax thought, "I wish there was more?" This book has it. One of the plots came to a suspenseful conclusion and there were still lots of pages left in the book. There is a butler introduced in this book who I just love and I hope he will be in future books. I can't wait for the next one.