Contemporary Books


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Contemporary Books sorted by Average customer review: high to low .

Contemporary
Murder Boogies with Elvis
Published in Mass Market Paperback by Avon (2002-11-01)
Author: Anne George
List price: $6.99
New price: $2.50
Used price: $0.73
Collectible price: $10.00

Average review score:

The Last ONE
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-13
Being an Elvis fan, the title caught my eye. Realizing it was a series I began with the first book - Murder on a Bad Hair Day. Yes, these are humorous mysteries. I'm reading at work in the breakroom and I just laugh out loud. Ms. George is funny, she creates a storyline and a plotline and her Alabama sisters are far from amateur sleuthes, they are just two retirees who are at the wrong place at the wrong time and making the most of it as they invite the police in for coffee and orange rolls. Sadly, it stops with this book as Ms. George, a retired schoolteacher has passed on. But I am eternally grateful to have joined her and "Vulcan" for the great ride, stepping over the dead bodies they happen upon.

not 'as common as pig's tracks'
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-06
This final book in the Southern Sisters mysteries was a delightful book as they all were. Bitter sweet in the reading as I continued to enjoy the antics of Mouse and Sister, all the while knowing there would be no more. The 8 book series was a delightful read and I so enjoyed sitting down to romp through the Birmingham area with an unlikely pair of sleuths. I will forever wonder what happens to them all and what other troubles the two sisters could have worked their way through Had Ms George continued with us. She and her delightful characters will be missed.

senior humor
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-05
I love Anne George. Too bad she didn't write more of these before she died. I truly enjoyed reading this book to the very end. In the back of the book it states that she is an award winning writer and poet. I suggest reading them all - they really are entertaining, especially if you are a senior!

Murder Makes Waves
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-30
If you like a mystery book that is light and does not go into gory details then Anne George is for you! I read all types of mystery stories but have enjoyed the Souther Sisters Mysteries emensely. It is a shame that Ms. George passed away in 2001.

Sisters Books by Anne George
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-10-17
I cannot go to my grave without sharing the delight I have found in Anne George's books about Murder...., starring the two sisters. I am happy to say that they bear a great resemblance to my sister and I! I have laughed so hard that, yes, I really did wet my pants. But that's not hard to do these days ( I am 64 and obviously not Southern 'cause I just told you my age!). Anyway, I have read ALL of the books. I know because I searched so hard for more that I found out Anne George had DIED! 'Course I was sorry - I mean, real sorry - because by that time, I had gotten addicted to those I have come to consider my true blood sisters! I am so sorry I didn't discover her books before her untimely demise. Maybe I could have convinced her that she owed it to her public to write some more. Anyway, you have a treat in store for you if you like to laugh like I do. Best readings from my house to yours! PRH

Contemporary
A New Day
Published in Mass Market Paperback by St. Martin's Paperbacks (1999-04-15)
Author: Margaret Johnson-Hodge
List price: $6.99
New price: $2.97
Used price: $0.01

Average review score:

Keeping things very real and alive.
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2001-12-01
I enjoyed this book very much. The author has the ability to write in a way as to allow you to truly feel the characters. It is a great and exciting read!.. The female character Carol-Anne was very believable and her trials and tribulations were very believable. I consider the story a modern day, urban cinderalla story, which includes true and valuable lessons. I suggest this book to both male and female readers.

love it!!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2002-10-12
I loved the Carol-Anne and Max characters. I think they were developed well. I also like the storyline that was going on. This is a inspirational and uplifting book for single mothers. Where are the Max's in real life? It also lets you see how observative your young one's are and you don't even realize it. This book is an eye opener, you deserve to be happy, but you have to respect your young ones as well. Carol-Anne had serious issues she had to deal with first before she could even imagine finding happiness. The book was uplifting. Good job Ms. Johnson-Hodge. Keep up the good work.

Yes, this one is worth your time.
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2002-03-03
I love the familar feel of these characters. I enjoyed the way this author took her time to paint these images...every sound they make, every tear they shed will seem real. This story of Carol Ann, a poor working class mom, doing her best under incredible odds drew me in almost immediately. Don't dismiss this as another "victims" book. This lady's a fighter and the story as moving as any you'll read.

A NEW DAY....A NEW FAN....
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2002-10-02
I loved this little book (read the paperback version)...it held my interest...the characters were very well developed and the intimate scenes....made the pages of the book.....steam up! Margaret....please add me to your list of fans...you are an awesome story teller. I started this book on vacation...and really enjoyed it. Sometimes I wanted to jump in the story and hit Carol Ann over her head with a tree...but it was very well written story. Thanks for also sharing how the daughter acted once she started...."feeling grown"....as we know our kids can act. I loved it! keep up the good work. I celebrate your God given talent...only He (God) can create such a fine gift....storytelling!

Killing Me Softly
Helpful Votes: 9 out of 9 total.
Review Date: 2002-08-04
The words of Roberta Flack come to mind as I recall the pages of "A New Day". I felt the author (MJH) looked into my life, and told my story. While there was no disclaimer in the front that the characters were fictional, I was confident that she wrote AS IF she knew me. While I didn't appreciate MJH telling my business, making me cry, and keeping me up all night to read this amazing novel, I was drawn into the deep well of lyrical words used to describe the characters and their emotions. Like the musician of Roberta's song, MJH was 'singing my life with her words'. Unlike Roberta, I was not 'embarassed by the sound'. Instead, I read on with astonishment because I fell in love with this book and its dimensional characters.

This story is intense from its beginning expressions of yearning to its happy ending of self discovery and true love. "A New Day" begins with a new approach - taking readers into the life of a real 'man crying in the dark'. Max Scutter is a sensitive, intelligent, stable and handsome man longing for a new day. He finds it in Carol-Anne Phyllis McClementine. As if seeing a ghost, there were several occasions when I closed the book while gasping for air because the passionate words literally took my breath away!

Though I have not met Max yet, almost everything else from the novel is a page from my life. Beginning with Carol-Anne's middle name being my first, Phyllis. Her last name, McClementine, is uncanningly similar to mine, McLaughlin. Add to that, her single mamahood to daughter, Nadia (who has glistening eyes), vs my daughter, Dasia (whose eyes sparkle when she laughs). If the names can be written off as sheer coincidence, how do you explain why Carol-Anne (like myself) quiets her passions, fears, and LOUD Thoughts with mellow jazz music and books late at night in her comfortably, worn chair? And here I sit confessing even more in this review at 3:46 am EST. As I savor every word of this delectable read, I wondered is MJH psychic or is this coincidence? I couldn't let my skepticism stop me because my heart was already consumed, and my eyes were already soaked.

When Max meets Carol Anne and almost immediately pours out his wealth upon her poverty, I thought to myself, get real Margaret. Who would believe such nonesense? What man would do so much for a woman he just met? Not even a hopeless romantic like me will fall for that. Then I was reminded when I turned back to pages 1-3, 11, 90, and many pages throughout that unveil Max's uniqueness.

After reading more, I thought again... Aha! I caught the diva of romance with her pen down:-)! Feeling somewhat victorious at the discovery that MJH never gives an explanation of why, how or when Max comes to love Carol-Anne, I could not deny Max's strong emotions that permeate the pages. The author convinces readers that Max is distinguishable from all others. So, don't bother trying to compare Max to your Dad, your best lover, and not even Superman. Just accept him because he is very real and real compassionate. Though Max is not the primary focus of the novel, I learned to love him too... just like I love myself, Carol-Anne, and Nadia. MJH makes sure you feel him and all the characters as they jump off the pages and into your heart!

With amazement and sheer ecstasy, MJH entices readers with details of fiery love scenes throughout. Not being satisfied with a brief declaration of the couple's love, MJH drowns readers in unbelievable passion as she lusciously describes the scenes with such grandeur.

Eeew wee! If the detailed love scenes are not enough, prepare yourself for the intense account of Max's anguish over being without his family, Carol-Anne and Nadia. The breathtaking account begins on page 133 and literally climaxes on page 135 as he is 'seduced by memory'. Oh my goodness, I 'wept out loud' with this man and stopped breathing too.

MJH knows how to cleverly evoke intense emotions that will make you wonder how she got into your heart and mind to create such an ache and inevitably, tears. Makes me marvel at how MJH is able to contain the creative talents that God has poured into her. Then I realize, she manages by writing and dumping on hopeless romantics like me... poetic justice, I guess.

"A New Day" is very enlightening and will encourage readers to search within for the new day that makes every day more beautiful than before. This is a must read for those bold ones who dare to dig deep within themselves. I HIGHLY recommend this novel!

Contemporary
Old Fashioned Girl
Published in Paperback by Yearling (1987-03-01)
Author: Louisa May Alcott
List price: $4.95
New price: $1.99
Used price: $0.01

Average review score:

Every Girl Should Read This Wonderful Book
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-10-09
Although I think it may be a bit advanced for my 9 yr. old, I'm still glad I purchased this book for my most recent book club choice. A gentle book that flows easily, and the characters change for the better in wonderful ways. The one thing that bugged me was Mrs. Shaw and her smelling salts. It almost seemed to me that Polly Milton was the better 'mother' to the Shaw family. All in all, this is truly a memorable classic.

An Old Fashioned (and really good) Story!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2006-07-22
This book started off a bit slow, but if you read more than a page or two at a time, I think you will like it. This story is about a girl from the country who goes to visit her cousins in New York. Polly's cousin, Fanny, and her friends find Polly "coutrified" and "old fashioned". Everyone falls in love with her because of her quiet manner along with the fact that she dresses and acts her age. Although their are multiple hardships along the way, you couldn't have wanted the book to end any other way. I recomend that you don't read the book until you are at least 11 or 12 because some of the wording is odd because it was writtedn so long ago. Happy Reading!

Alas for Flo
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2005-12-06
Alas. In my opinion, both "An Old-Fashioned Girl" and "Eight Cousins" audio versions would benefit by having a much younger narrator. Despite her long and illustrious career in audio, Flo Gibson is now too old to bring these novels to life. They are books about young girls, and they are obviously being read by a grandmother. Rather than illustrating the timeless quality of these fine books, an elderly reader makes the books simply sound old and out-of-date. What were the publishers thinking?---CaroJ11

A Good Read
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2005-08-05
An Old Fashioned Girl begins with a teenage girl, Polly who visits her cousins in the city. There, she realises that they are exactly the opposite of the old fashioned girl that she is, and this causes some distress on both sides. Being a modern woman, I expected that this book would be a wonderful read but the initial chapters where Polly was a teenager were hard to take in. Alcott created what she felt to be the "perfect" teenage model in Polly, but I found myself wishing that this "perfect teenage model" would loosen up a bit and do something for herself instead of serving everybody else, which was the "proper thing to do." Ironically, Alcott herself wrote in the book "excessive virtue doesn't last long ...except with little prigs in the goody storybooks." She should have taken herself more seriously because her main character came very close to becoming exactly that! Compared to other classics like Tom Sawyer, The Secret Garden and The Railway Children, the teenagers in the book were very unrealistic, I dare say even for that time. Alcott wrote too much of what she wanted children or teenagers to be, opposed what they actually were, which can get exasperating. However, that is less than half the book, which follows into young adulthood. In here the characters become more realistic, and Polly begins to be truly affected by her poverty and to long to be different. To avoid spoilers, it morphed from an exasperating read into a very good read. Overall, the valuable lessons in the book make it good addition to any collection, especially for children.

Simple Good Clean fun
Helpful Votes: 9 out of 9 total.
Review Date: 2005-08-10
Do you ever feel like you are tied up in our times? Worrying too much about cell phones, fashions, and the latest whatevers? This book can set you straight. It gives you a peace of mind and fills you with simple pleasures.

The stories main character, Polly, we meet at the age of 14. She has come to stay with rich friends for a while. THey do everything so differently from she. The family has two daughters. One that is two years older than Polly called Fan, who cares for fashion, balls, and beaus. The author daughter is six and she is fixed onoo having her own way about everything. THe young man in the family Tom is a trouble maker, who no matter how hard he tries can't seem to stay out of trouble very long.

Polly is a gentle, kind, loving, caring, selfless, practical, and sensible girl. SHe becomes a great service to this family, touching each of them in a special way. She moves in the same town six years later and gives piano lessons. The family needs her more than ever and she helps them all in the end. This book has heart, romance, and realness to it that we can all relate to, rich or poor, young or old. It will make you feel warm fuzzies. Read on a rainy day underneath a flanel blanket!

Contemporary
Three Tales of My Father's Dragon: Includes My Father's Dragon, Elmer and the Dragon, Dragons of Blueland (My Father's Dragon)
Published in Library Binding by Random House Books for Young Readers (1997-12-02)
Author: Ruth Stiles Gannett
List price: $17.99
New price: $8.00
Used price: $1.35

Average review score:

Fantastic Three Tales
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-26
This is a wonderful three-in-one storybook. We are reading it as a family and it is so clever and beautifully written. I would highly recommend; you will not be disappointed.

Three Tales of my Fathers Dragon
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-05
Excellent children's book! I highly recommend it to all
people young and old. Great illustrations and wonderful
imagination!!! A classic!

Fabulous for reading together!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-02
My wife bought this on recommendation from another Amazon parent and we have enjoyed it very much! We curl up in bed together with our 4.5 yo son and 7+ yo daughter and read a couple of chapters each night. The children adore the story line, Elmer's cleverness and everything about this charming, delightful, classic series. Absolutely get this trilogy to share with your children and your grandchildren; it's wonderful!

Kindergarten read-aloud
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-28
I could have purchased each book individually, but bought the three in one version. I read the book in record time to my class in daily read-aloud sessions because every day they would BEG me to read just one more chapter in the story! They were engaged each day. It is an amazing read-aloud with excitement, adventure and thrilling parts that kept imaginations running and waiting for the next chapter then book~! I know these books will become a part of my read-aloud for years to come.

My 3 year old's favorite!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-26
This book is my three year old's favorite book. He loves chapter books right now and this book includes three in one. He also loves maps and this book includes a map that connects to the story on the inside of the cover. After reading each chapter he enjoys going back to the map and retelling the story to me. I highly recommend this great family time book!

Contemporary
Years
Published in Paperback by Jove (1986-03-01)
Author: LaVyrle Spencer
List price: $7.99
New price: $2.95
Used price: $0.01
Collectible price: $10.00

Average review score:

4 1/2 stars...
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-08-09
I pretty much loved this book. Very heartwarming. I was glued to this book. The difficulties that these people went through really touched my heart. I can't tell you how many times I cried in this book. It was so hard to put down. If you're a LaVyrle Spencer fan I think you'll love this book & if you are new to this author I think this would be a great start. Highly recommended.

Lifetimeromancefan
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-26
Lavryle Spencer is my all time favorite romance writer. When she retired in 1997, I seriously mourned. Pick up any of her books and it will leave you with tears, joy, laughter, and a full heart. It's hard for me to choose which is my favorite book from her, but Years has to be right there at the top (along with Bitter Sweet, Vows, Bygones, Family Blessings, Separate Beds, Forgiving). The movies in my opinion doesn't do her books justice at all. I read her book over and over again and they will never leave my library. I have yet to find a writer that matches her skill in spinning an emotionally-driven romantic story.

Ho hum
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-11-13
I purchased this book because of the high number of very good reviews here and was in need of something new and engaging to read. This was my first Lavyrle Spencer book and I didn't really care for it all that much. I thought the development of love between the characters was bumpy and their constant fights (which, I know are supposed to masquerade as their resistance to their irresistible love) were just annoying and I found Teddy's unwavering focus on the difference of 16 years incredibly senseless - I just didn't get that.

The characters were all rather weakly developed and I had trouble following and understanding their motivations for their actions: Why was Linnea suddenly throwing herself at Teddy? Why did Kristian want to join the army? Why was Linnea so angry and worked up about the older boys not attending school immediately? Why was Teddy so angry about the baby? Also, I thought Linnea's character underwent an abrupt change once she married Teddy - she became very subdued, very different from the chipper person at the beginning. It was almost as though she disappeared from the book. Very strange.

There were parts of the book that I liked - the sudden snowstorm was a surprise - the detailed descriptions of horse tack and saddling were interesting and the heated, enclosed wagon was something new. It was set in an interesting time and place - with some "modern" conveniences (cars and airplanes), but much still so primitive (wagons and chamber pots). But overall, not a draw for me to want to read it again.

Wonderful Book!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-11-09
Read this book right before I read Morning Glory, which I found to be a horrible read. Years is the complete opposite--wonderful story, interesting characters, sparkling dialogue, an absolute joy to read. I can't believe the same author wrote both books! I'm buying this for a Christmas gift for my mother, I loved it so much! My only two complaints about it are that the heroine is almost too pure and loving to be believable, and too many characters were killed off at the end of the book--but that's like saying that you loved the movie but the popcorn was a pinch too salty. READ THIS BOOK!! You will love it!

Breathtaking !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-07-18
I absolutley loved this book, from start to finish. Lavyrle Spencer has a way of writing two people falling in love, that you feel as if you're falling in love too. My heartstrings were tugged, pulled and squeezed countless times over while reading this book. It was paced perfectly and remained interesting throughout. I couldn't turn the pages fast enough.

This book is about Linnea and Teddy. Linnea, 18 and fresh from her parents home, has traveled a long way for her first job. She is the new school teacher in Alamo North Dakota who is to room and board with Theodore Westgaard and his family. She has high hopes about her future and is constantly daydreaming about what her new life will be like. Parties, operas, romance.... Then she meets Teddy, a 34 year old, bitter and cynical wheat farmer, who's been badly wounded in the past and cannot bear to even be around women, much less this young and hopeful girl.

Teddy picks her up at the train station expecting not a woman, but a man and refuses to allow a woman, or this "girl" as he calls her, into his home. But because of no other alternatives, she's forced to stay there, against his wishes. Linnea's hopes and "daydreams" are shattered when she discovers she isn't very welcome in his home as she'd expected to be and also becomes bitter towards Teddy for his reactions to her. Bickering and small battles ensue as they spend more time around eachother, but at the same time, neither can understand why they both think of eachother all the time.

Teddy's 17 year old son, Kristian takes an instant liking to Linnea against his father's wishes, because she's his teacher and more importantly because his father recognizes he has feelings for her as well. This makes him uncomfortable, to say the least, but understands his son's heart and tries to stay away from Linnea as much as possible. Linnea notices Kristian's attraction and does her best to keep him at bay and remind him, that even though she's only one year older, she is his teacher and those boundries musn't be crossed.

Over time, Linnea and Teddy get to learn small things about eachother and begin to see eachother in a different light. But there is one thing that is keeping Teddy from giving in to his attraction to Linnea...the years between them. He is 16 years older, and sometimes feels like a pervert for even looking at Linnea in a romantic way. He is constantly battling with himself and refuses to give in to his feelings. Linnea on the other hand, does want to give into these new feelings she's having, she doesn't care about the years separating them, only about her heart and her heart keeps coming back to Teddy.

Overcoming their hurdles is the best part of the book and you'll have to read it to find out what happens. I'll just say....it's perfection. You will NOT regret reading this book! A true romance indeed!

Contemporary
Art of Modern Rock: The Poster Explosion
Published in Hardcover by Chronicle Books (2004-11-04)
Authors: Paul Grushkin and Dennis King
List price: $75.00
New price: $34.95
Used price: $22.99
Collectible price: $75.00

Average review score:

bizarre, weird and cool
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-15
Art of Modern Rock features some incredible art drawn from great artists and is a must not just for a rock aficionado, but for an art enthusiast, an artist, a designer or even a writer. The tremendous amount of variety and unique and powerful imagery makes looking through this book a great pleasure.

My All Time Favourite
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-30
I've had this book for several years now and this is my all time favourite art book, and I own far too many to even be considered in the realm of normal. The Art of Modern Rock is a huge book (almost 500 pages) and the art diverse and inspiring. I just love this book!!

excellent
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-01-25
I purchased the Art of Modern Rock online for my son and his wife for Christmas. I usually have a difficult time finding a gift I think they will like. They have a rock band themselves, and my daughter-in-law is also interested in art, so I gave this book a try. Not only did they love it, but they are in it! I wish now that I had opened it and looked through it before I mailed it to them. I was pleased with the book, and the service from Amazon is always excellent!

Terrific book!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-05-06
This is one of the greatest books I've read in the last ten years about rock posters. All kind of rock music is here. If you really like rock'n'roll music, you must get this one.

Fantastic
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-01-10
This book is THE bible for poster art. Fantastic collection of art, with great interviews and history accompanying. Obviously a lot of hard work by a lot of people passionate about poster art. Highly recommended.

Contemporary
Grindin' (Thorndike Press Large Print African American Series)
Published in Hardcover by Thorndike Press (2007-09-19)
Author: Danielle Santiago
List price: $30.95
New price: $30.95
Used price: $19.95

Average review score:

OFF THE HOOK......
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-18
GRINDIN WAS OFF THE HOOK I KNEW THIS BOOK WOULD NOT LET ME AND IT DIDN'T THE AUTHOR PUT HER FOOT IN THIS ONE THIS A MUST READ GO GET IT.

Grindin is hard......
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-20
I'm not going 2 write a long drawn out review b/c anyone who's read Mrs. Santiago's work knows how she get down. This book is great. I read "Little Ghetto Girl" first and have been hooked on Mrs. Santiago's work every sense. Grindin is an excellent read and kind of a continuation from "Little Ghetto Girl" it gives past readers a chance 2 revisit Kisa Kane. If you haven't read any of her books, pick this one up, I promise you'll love it.

Danielle is Back
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-28
Meet Kennedy, she's beautiful, multi-talented, family oriented, and a hustler. She's out there on the grind trying to take care of her family and secure her future. She faces a lost that sends her life into another direction, and she's forced to grind harder.

As she gets deeper into her hustle, she unexpectedly meets Chaz. Chaz is a man who will forever change her life. He understands her grinding mentality and together they have an unmistakenable chemistry. They find themselves falling head over heels for one another.

In between their evolving relationship, chaos tries to drive a wedge between them. Chaz's crazy baby mama tries to stake her claim on him, but Kennedy's not having that. His baby mama underestimates her, and Kennedy let's her know what's up. A wound from an earlier lost opens up and is linked to a current situation that Kennedy hides for everyone.

Take a ride with Kennedy and you'll witness the true meaning of gridin for the sake of loyalty, trust, and family. Danielle Santiago gives you a well illustrated portait of the definition of grindin.

Good comeback
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-05
I was highly disappointed with Little Ghetto Girl,but this one was much better.I thoroughly enjoyed this book and I'm actually looking forward to the next one.

GRINDIN FOR HERS!!! (token)
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-01-29
I was sleeping on this book for a very long time, this book was so good, I could not believe there wasn't one dull moment in the book, the plot was thought out and flowed smoothly, characters were described and developed well, and the story had a unique grind of it's own. Danielle Santiago you deserve those 5 stars, because you know you was Grindin when you wrote this one, and I'm get on my grind and anxiously wait for the next one!!

Contemporary
Damaged!
Published in Paperback by Waverly House Publishing (1998-12-01)
Author: Bernadette Y. Connor
List price: $14.95
New price: $4.95
Used price: $4.00

Average review score:

DAMAGED! by Bernadette Connor
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2005-08-25
This book is excellent! I read it in 1998 and just re-read it in July '05. It never ceases to amaze me at the way the author portrayed Adrena Reynolds. Poor soul of a girl who actually get hers in the end even though she really had no control over her early childhood. This book creates a great discussion about what goes around comes around!

An Impressive First Novel
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-08-15
As I read this debut novel (published in 1998) by Bernadette Connor it dawned on me about half way through that not since I ran across Henry Van Dyke's novel BLOOD OF STRAWBERRIES way back in 1969 had I read a novel by an African American writer who says practically nothing about race or racism. Occasionally the author describes a character's skin tone-- Adrena Reynolds, for example, is described as a "milk chocolate beauty"-- but that's about the extent of any reference to color. Furthermore, I do not believe we are ever told where the action takes place although it appears to be in a major metropolitan northern city. What we do have, however, is a story that often almost tells itself, taking on a life of its own. Part romance, part mystery, DAMAGED is about Adrena Reynolds who suffers horrendous sexual abuse at the hands of her awful parents but who finds much love through her psychiatrist Dr. Vivian Matthews and the doctor's family.

Ms. Connor is a tremendous storyteller and is at her best when she shows readers rather than tells them what is happening or what to think about what is happening. Occasionally she gilds the lily with phrases like "silent stillness." But she more than compensates for such with appropriately descriptive language. For example, Vivian sees herself when she is suffering from depression as having fallen into a hole "filled with different shades of black." At one point Adrena says that she and Vivian are in the same boat and offers her one of her oars. One character is described as pretty "but there's no one home." When Vivian muses over the difficulty she is having with her husband, Ms. Connor says in perfect prose: "Simply said, Vivian missed her marriage."

Simply put-- to borrow a phrase from the author-- you will care desperately for Adrena and you hope against hope that her life will turn out well. Ms. Connor's themes are serious: the irreparable harm that parents inflict on their innocent children, the fragileness of life, the importance of love even when it is not enough.

DAMAGED is certainly an impressive first novel.

A MUST READ..PUT THIS ON YOUR LIST
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2003-03-04
This was a great book. You should definitely get this one. I've shared it with many people and now that I have it back, will reread it.

THERE ARE NO WORDS!!!!!!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2002-10-12
This book was off the hook. I couldn't and wouldn't put it down. I would recommend this book to all my avid readers.

Thought-provoking and worth the read
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2005-11-05
Author Bernadette Y. Connor spins a thought-provoking tale of abuse, survival, redemption, and the need for forgiveness in her novel Damaged! The novel centers around the relationship of teenager Adrena Reynolds and her psychiatrist Vivian Matthews. As a child, Adrena was raped and beaten by her violent father while her drug addicted mother sat by and watched. After being rescued from her abusive home, the girl is assigned to Dr. Matthews for treatment and placed in foster care. But Dr. Matthews' inexperience in her position is evident, as she allows herself to become overly attached emotionally to her young charge, and Adrena's own sociopathic tendencies readily become evident as she manipulates her relationship with Matthews like some emotional vampire.

Connor has a wonderful eye for detail and a gift for providing the reader with a strong sense of place. Her descriptions of sessions between Matthews and Adrena almost leave the reader feeling as if she as broken some doctor-patient privilege, the detail is so clear. And the heart-wrenching scene involving the actual assault on Adrena was so intense I had to put the book down and collect my thoughts before continuing.

The true power of this novel is hampered, however, by the authors tendency to overly explain to the reader what they should be feeling. She often makes statements of the obvious that take away from the story. There are times when I almost felt as if the writer was making excuses for Dr. Matthew's inability to handle her patient. There is also a tendency to dictate events, as opposed to allowing them to blossom on their own. This is particularly true at the beginning of the novel, when we are given a laudry list of crimes committed by Adrena against her foster parents, including two arsons, and attempts to poison her foster family members.

Because of this, Adrena comes across more as a sociopath than a sympathetic character. Instead of slowly descending into a madness that culminates in a final act of aggression, Adrena's pattern of behavior makes the ending almost anticlimactic. After seeing the troubled youth commit so many atrocities, the ending doesn't carry the punch it otherwise could.

Overall, however, the book is well worth the read. Connor writes with an exciting energy that delivers a moving psychological drama that is sure to captivate the reader.

Contemporary
On The Banks Of Plum Creek (Little House (Original Series Paperback))
Published in School & Library Binding by Topeka Bindery (2003-04-30)
Author: Laura Ingalls Wilder
List price: $14.65
New price: $14.65
Used price: $12.49

Average review score:

The Best of the Series
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-21
The Little House series are great read aloud books.

Our daughter is five and this series is perfectly age appropriate, even though an older child would enjoy them equally as well. For younger ones (three or so), there is a great picture book series called "My first little house books," or something like that. One of these is a story based of a chapter in this book and is called "Christmas in the Big Woods."

These CD's are great for long trips in the car. The narrator's voice is wonderful. The adults will find themselves enjoying listening themselves.

"One the Banks of Plum Creek" is the best of the series. It is the one where Mary and Laura go to school and where the character of Nellie Olson is introduced. Her brand of spoiled rotten meanness is nothing short of tantalizing to a five year old. Also, there are the wonderful Christmas chapters.

Just excellent, all around. I highly recommend the books to read alound and the CD's.

Fabulous!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-03-20
Whether you have read the Little House books or have never heard of them, this book on tape is wonderful for everyone from small children to adults. The narrator who reads it does an amazing job of capturing the childhood wonderment and emotions Laura was trying to convey. It is also so interesting to hear the way families lived back in the 1800's. I could listen to this book on tape over and over again.

On the Banks of Plum Creek
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-01-23

Book review
I did my report on the book called On the Banks of Plum Creek.
The author of this novel is Laura Ingalls Wilders. It is also historical fiction.
This story is about a family that is very close. There is baby Carrie the littlest, the middle child was Laura but her nick name was Little Half Pint, and the oldest is named Mary. Mary was such a little lady she always did what her mother told her to do. But Laura was the rebel in the family she was always getting dirty or getting into trouble. But Carrie is too little to have a background. Pa traded his horses and bunny for a dugout from Mr. Nelson. There was a creek close to the house and they played there often but they must never go into the deep waters with out Pa or Ma (Laura learned that lesson fast).
I loved this book because I love the time period it was set in and I have read many stories by the same author like Little House in the Big Woods. It would suit some one who loves Family stories and the time period and his farm world it is more like a fun book to read but it is Historical fiction as well.

A can't-miss addition to the series!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-09-07
Laura Ingalls is now eight-years-old, her sister Mary is nine, and Carrie is still just a tiny tot. While they are all still quite young, they are expected to help out with the chores around the house - from sweeping to dusting, cooking and setting the table. But this year, the girls are in a strange new place. Looking to settle in an area where a school and church are close by, and the Ingalls' have a chance to grow a wonderful crop that will provide quite a profit, the family heads to Walnut Grove, Minnesota. Traveling by covered wagon, the family, along with all of their belongings, travels all the way through Indian Territory, across Kansas, Missouri, and Iowa, stopping at their destination in Minnesota. There, they are surrounded by Norwegian's who speak very little English. However, they are good neighbors who assist them in times of trouble. Trading their horses for a home located under the ground, Laura's family begins to call Minnesota their home. And, before long, Pa has built a lovely home by the banks of Plum Creek. He believes that his wheat crop will provide enough funds to pay off their debts when the time comes. But when locusts invade in cloud-like swarms, eating everything in their sight, the family must endure hardships that were unexpected.

But things are not all bad. Having never attended school before, Laura and Mary are finally near enough a schoolhouse where they can attend daily lessons that help them develop reading, writing, and arithmetic skills. It is at this particular school where the two older Ingalls girls are exposed to children - both male and female - who are close to their age. Some of whom title Mary and Laura "country girls." But the label does not affect how the two sisters view themselves, or their family; and only gives them the courage to befriend various girls who love to spend time with them. It is at school, however, that Laura encounters the spoiled, yet oh-so-pretty, Nellie Oleson, who goes out of her way to give both Laura and Mary a hard time. But Laura isn't having any of it, and resolves to get even with the vicious Nellie, even if it upsets her Ma and Pa. Luckily, with Ms. Beadle - the schoolteacher - around, Laura and Mary have the confidence to stand up for themselves, and receive the education that their Ma always wanted them to have; while getting the socialization they deserve. But even attending school doesn't excuse them from having to assist their family when the going gets tough.

Up until last year, I had been a diehard fan of the LITTLE HOUSE ON THE PRAIRIE TV series, but had never had the opportunity to delve into the wonderful tales told by Laura Ingalls Wilder herself. Upon reading the introduction novel, LITTLE HOUSE ON THE PRAIRIE, I quickly fell in love with the Ingalls family all over again; and, since then, they have taken up residence in my heart, and kept me fascinated with the various adventures they experienced throughout their lives. Laura is such a lively, brave, fun-loving character; whose ambition, kindness, and, oft-times, naughtiness, make her appealing from start to finish. Her relationship with her family is hard to resist, as she manages to please and displease them on a daily basis, all to the jovial laughter of her father. I believe that Pa (Charles) is one of the most important characters in the series, as he is such a kind, loyal man; who rarely scolds, and spends his downtime entertaining his family with music from his fiddle, and stories that leave you chuckling. The family, as a whole, are the type of people you would absolutely love to have the chance to know. They are kind to strangers, helpful to neighbors, and both Ma and Pa are two of the most selfless people in literature. The information regarding Rocky Mountain locusts was both interesting, and frightening; but truly provides a wonderful history lesson for the young reader. While the introduction of the devilish Nellie Oleson provides quite a bit of humor, as she and Laura trade insults with one another at almost every meeting between the two. Ingalls did a marvelous job of penning such a cheerful addition to the series; and, thus far, ON THE BANKS OF PLUM CREEK has become my favorite LITTLE HOUSE book yet. A can't-miss addition to the series!

Erika Sorocco
Freelance Reviewer

Pa Loves Ma, Ma Loves Pa, and All's Right With the World!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-04-18
ON THE BANKS OF PLUM CREEK -- Who could forget the plague of grasshoppers, or spoiled Nellie's encounter with the crab, or Pa's sojourn in the blizzard, among other adventures?

We -- my three homeschooled grandchildren and I -- are going through the Laura Ingalls Wilder series of books for the second time. We read them aloud during story time, and love every minute. These are books written about an American pioneer family in the 1800s with a strong moral compass. In an unsentimental style, the author writes simply of the day-to-day life she experienced firsthand growing up. As the title of this review suggests, a central theme, not only of this book, but the entire series, is that "Pa loves Ma, and Ma loves Pa, and all's right with the world," including in the face of all kinds of adversity and opportunity alike.

I enrich this time for my grandchildren by stopping occasionally to explain and discuss what we are reading about, be it an unusual word usage, a custom no longer practiced, how to do something by hand, historical facts... We have even stopped to do some research and measure out the height of a bear. Our family tradition is that the eldest grandchild (now 11) reads the last page of these books. Otherwise, I usually do the reading. We also try to get started right away on the next book in the series, the same day as we finish the one before, so as not to lose our momentum.

After going through the series the first time, we discovered (almost by accident at the local library) several other series of books, written by other authors, about Laura's great-grandmother Martha in Scotland, her grandmother Charlotte in Boston, and her mother Caroline in Wisconsin, so we decided to start over with the first of those books and carry on through. There is also a series about Laura's daughter Rose which we have not gotten to yet.

Reading through the other series in order has been time well invested. Like Laura, we have strong family roots in Scotland. We have four generations of our family living within close proximity, so my grandchildren know my father, their beloved great-grandfather, quite well, and this series helps them gain a feel of family and historical continuity, generation to generation. (Check for related book series under: Martha Years, Charlotte Years, Caroline Years, Rose Years).

I am investing in and building our own set of all these books in hardcover, having told my grandchildren that I plan to be around to read them to *their* grandchildren!

Contemporary
The Grand Sophy
Published in Mass Market Paperback by Harlequin (2003-03-01)
Author: Georgette Heyer
List price: $6.50
New price: $35.11
Used price: $13.34
Collectible price: $25.00

Average review score:

Heyer's boldest, happiest heroine-- one of Heyer's best
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-15
This book features Heyer's bravest, strongest, happiest, and most spirited heroine. One of the best Heyer tales.

Required reading
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-09-09
I had carefully avoided anything to do with Regency Romances, formula romances, and the like, until a friend (who knew me pretty well, as it turned out) insisted I give 'The Grand Sophy' a try. What a hoot--I loved this book. It really should be required reading for any student of comic literature. The final scene is classic kaleidoscopic comedy at its best. I then went on to read other Georgette Heyer books, but I think this is her finest hour. As it turned out--Heyer, along with Margery Sharp, Angela Thirkell, and others, proved to be inspirational for my own work, 'Composing Molly'. I hope that someday Georgette Heyer gets the credit she deserves for her clever, innovative style.Composing Molly

A Georgette Heyer "Keeper"
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2006-03-11
The Grand Sophy is one of my favorite Heyer books - funny, touching sometimes, with a keen discernment of the absurdities of the Regency world. Heyer used a detailed knowledge of the manners and thinking of the day, even to the slang currently in use or deplored, as the case might be.

Sophy is Grand
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2006-07-03
This is one of the best of Georgette Heyer's novels. For anyone unfamiliar with her works, she is Jane Austen with an even strong sense of the absurd and the wit to see through people's pretensions. Sophy is the "not-so-little any more" niece of Lady Ombersley, whose arrival promptly sets the family's well ordered world on its ear. Her cousin, Charles, is at first infuriated and then gradually charmed by her no-nonsense ways, and it is clear that the family is in dire need of someone like Sophy to get them out of the doldrums. Charles' intended fiancee, Eugenia, who has a very fine opinion of herself and a very low opinion of everyone else, is one of those prim and proper young ladies who delight in point out others faults "so that they may improve". His younger sister, Cecilia, is in the midst of forming a disasterous relationship with a pretentious young man who writes very bad poetry, and his brother, Hubert, is into gambling debts up to his eyebrows. Sophy, very much the managing female she's accused of being, decides she's arrived in the nick of time to save the family from a disasterous ruin.

This is one of Heyer's most delightful books, full of fun and amusing characters, including Sophy's soon to be mama, Sancia, who seems to be straying from her desire to marry Sophy's papa. Through it all, Sophy maintains a firm hand on the reins, steering the family from the brink of disaster until all of them, most especially Charles, realize what a prize they have in Sophy. For anyone who's never read a really well-written Regancy novel, I highly recommend they start with The Grand Sophy. It's one of the very best.

An ugly run of antisemiticism ruins this lark.
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 12 total.
Review Date: 2007-08-30
Much as it grieves me, I can't recommend this book for the insulting description of the Jewish moneylenders which is the big ugly elephant in the room. It is simply a racist chapter in an otherwise delightful book.


Books-Under-Review-->Arts-->Literature-->Short Stories-->Contemporary-->6
Related Subjects: Chandra, Anil Englander, Nathan Krouse, Erika
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