Contemporary Books


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

Contemporary
Saved
Published in Hardcover by Thomas Dunne Books (2008-01-08)
Author: Jack Falla
List price: $23.95
New price: $13.39
Used price: $13.82

Average review score:

Really great hockey book
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-09
I loved this book! Parts of it are laugh-out-loud funny and all of it gives great insight into the minds and hearts of hockey players. Lots of good stuff that you know had to happen to someone, although I know names and locations have been changed. Also, a lot of interesting and informative bits of hockey lore. But, above all, the story is great and the characters are all three-dimensional ones. You care about them and want to know what happens next. I hope to see more hockey fiction from Mr Falla.

Good book
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-07
This book is a MUST for any hockey fan.Anybody looking for any behind the scenes expose of life in the Nhl should go elsewhere. The book took me two days to read.JP Savard is a goalie determined to hang on to his job and continue playing in the Nhl.Throughout one season we follow him through the highs and lows and how he deals with them. Jp is a very likeable protagonist as well as the rest of the characters. I really liked the way Falla includes hockey history throughout the book without bogging the story down.

A Book Worth Saving for Your Reading List
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-11
The summer season is rapidly approaching and many travelers will be compiling a list of books to read while on vacation. The hockey fan should consider Saved, by Jack Falla. It follows the season of Jean Pierre Savard, a goalie for the Bruins and his quest to win the Cup as his career is winding down. There are no surprises here but the book is loaded with hockey history and behind the scenes looks at the life of a professional hockey player. Falla covered the NHL for many years for Sports Illustrated and he brings the reader into the locker room, the rink and lives of these fictional characters.
At first Jean Pierre (JP) appears to be the main character as the first thirty pages focus on his background information, how he became a goalie and his college career then launches into present day. We are introduced to his best friend and teammate Cam Carter, get a glimpse of JP's personal life which includes a Ferrari and a lot of sex, which should entice the male reader to pick up the book. However, as the book progresses the real main character becomes evident, the hockey culture and game. Hockey is all JP has ever known and as the end of his career looms, he is terrified by the prospect of not knowing what to do with the rest of his life. Three concussions during the season cannot deter him from his need to keep playing, even with a warning from his fiancée Faith McNeil, a former college classmate and hotshot basketball player, now a dotcom millionaire and doctor.
My husband obviously has done a good job over the past eight years because I was familiar with the majority of the names, terms and events mentioned in the book and some basic hockey knowledge does make the book more pleasurable. Falla does provide a lot of detail, so that the new hockey fan will not be completely lost while reading this book. An example is the description of the Vezina Trophy. The reader learns for whom the trophy is named and why, and the details about Vezina's final game and untimely death. Sports metaphors run amuck in the book, which at times was cumbersome to this reader. It may be a gender difference, as the book is told from a male point of view, because while a sports fan I certainly don't answer every question directed to me with a sports reference.
As JP moves through his season and a trade from the Bruins, he gives details about the games he playing, what they mean during the different points of the season, what needs to happen for his Cup run to continue and how it feels to have someone else gunning for his job the entire time. Most readers cannot identify with being a professional athlete and being paid millions of dollars a year. But they can relate to being in their thirties, not knowing what to do next in their lives and struggling to hold onto their youth. This, coupled with the hockey history woven throughout the book makes it an enjoyable and quick read. (Provided the reader does not have a four year old and six month old vying for his or her attention.) As you pack your bags for the beach, mountains and beyond make sure you include Saved.

heykay
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-22
Jack Falla has written the ultimate book about hockey, its characters, its culture and its athletic charm. It's like being dropped down into "hockey world" and allowed to be an invisible observer. Falla's style conveys the feeling of the sport without slowing it down with extraneous detail. You get to appreciate the characters and I wished it would just go on without end. It is the most enjoyable story that I can remember. Get yourself a copy to read whenever you feel the world around you sucks.

Great book about hockey and life
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-15
I really enjoyed this book as a hockey fan. The characters and relationships are well-drawn, and the choices and struggles of life are not short-changed.

Definitely recommended for anyone who enjoys sports (especially hockey) and is looking for a fun and fast read.

Contemporary
See Under: LOVE: A Novel
Published in Hardcover by Farrar, Straus and Giroux (1989-04-01)
Author: David Grossman
List price: $22.95
New price: $22.00
Used price: $1.89
Collectible price: $51.88

Average review score:

The most magnificent book I have ever read
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-07
If I would only have the joy to read one book in my lifetime, it should be See Under: Love.

See Under: Love took my breath away, moved me to tears and touched me in the tenderest reaches of my soul. It is brilliant, imaginative, engaging and humane. The way characters, themes and time wind into each other transport the reader to a place far beyond the mundane. I loved every word. Immediately upon finishing, I went back to the first page to reread. My second reading was more deliberate and careful, and I caught much that I had overlooked in my first pass. I am sure that I will reread it again and again.

I originally bought this book after Jonathan Safran Foer enumerated it in his "Five Most Important Books" for an August 2007 Newsweek piece. Foer called it, "The novel of the 21st century" though it was first published in English in 1989. I thank Jonathan Safran Foer for his own works and, here, this recommendation. And in turn, I hope that I can pass this rare jewel on to others. This is my first review (well, not really a review which is elsewhere on Amazon but a recommendation) but I am compelled to do so. Months after the reading, I find myself thinking about See Under: Love and feeling grateful that I experienced it. This is not an easy book to read but the rewards are multifold. And when you are done, read the transcript of a talk that the author gave for a San Francisco Symposium at http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m0411/is_1_51/ai_85068470 for even greater insight.

David Grossman has taken the worst that man has to offer and spun it into a magical, magnificent ouevre which will touch you with the human spirit and make you proud to be alive.

Magnificent
Helpful Votes: 14 out of 16 total.
Review Date: 2005-03-25
Words fail. I beg anyone who has been considering buying into Jonathan Safran Foer's hype to instead find themselves a copy of this, the book from which he appears to have stolen most of his ideas, instead.

All hyperbole aside, this wonderful book has few equals. It demands attention, and reflection, and time, and it rewards those willing to invest those things in it beyond compare. Nothing short on a meditation the way our lives are impacted by the moral calculi of others, and the way our own actions reverberate throughout the generations.

A monument of Israeli literature
Helpful Votes: 27 out of 31 total.
Review Date: 2002-11-10
As an Israeli who have read it in Hebrew, I would like to add a few words. One thing: this book is entirely different if you read it in Hebrew. It losses a lot in the translation, and not because the translation is bad, rather that the combination of different layers of very special Hebrew combined with Yiddish, along with the cultural context, makes it a book that is an impossible mission for the translator. Of course, you can't ask someone to learn Hebrew just for this book (and this still won't be enough, because he has to be born again as an Israeli and grow up here to understand everything...), but the book has numerous universal aspects that can be translated, and it's still, even after the translation, a must-read.
And now, for the book itself (if there is such a thing the book itself...).
This is by-far the greatest Israeli book that I have ever read. I had one feeling that went along with me throughout the journey: I don't know how the hell he did. I just don't know. Like a magician that makes a trick you just can't figure. The scope. The depth. I cannot describe this book. It defies space and time. It is a masterpiece.

Impossible to describe
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-16
I don't think I am qualified to write a review of this piece of art. Think Toni Morrison on LSD, or maybe Falkner writing in Hebrew as Isaiah, composing in a way never before conceived, about of all things, The Hollocaust! I guess this most twisted example of human depravity requires such a book. However, if I had not read Mr. Grossman's beautiful love narrative, " Someone to Run With" I would not have known at first if it was a work of genius or a tale told by an idiot, and might not have hung in there long enough to declare it the former - 5 stars! However, a second reading may be required to understand the nuances.

Fantastic!!
Helpful Votes: 8 out of 13 total.
Review Date: 2003-01-19
One of the best novels I have ever read. Don't miss it!

Contemporary
The Sista Hood
Published in Kindle Edition by Atria Books (2007-03-02)
Author: E-Fierce
List price: $11.99
New price: $9.59

Average review score:

Great Story for Young Girls
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-09-03
The Sista Hood: On the Mic is a great book for young girls on so many levels. For starters, it's set within a hip hop background, a place that is hugely populated by men. Second, the novel shows that young women can obtain any dream they have as long as they work hard and persevere. Third, and just as important as the first two and the others not discussed, The Sista Hood illustrates that sometimes, girls (and women) accomplish their goals because of their "sistas," those girlfriends that are beside them through the good and bad times.

Hip Hop & Teens
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-08-30
A fresh perspective on the urban novel--written by a Latina author, chronicling the struggle of young Latinas struggling to achieve their dreams of reaching the top of the hip-hop world. (summary by the Latino Recommended Reading List from the Association of American Publishers's * Publishing Latino Voices for America Task Force)
The Sista Hood On The Mic is an exciting book for teens who love music and love to read. It's a fast paced book and would make a great movie one day. This is a wonderful new series with strongly written multicultural characters. (BELLA Online)

Viva E-Fierce
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-08-10
This Book is "REAL". This book Not only talks about our every day lives (teens). But it also talks about the social issues, of how a Latina is seen in a world different from her's. The author did an awesome job combining 5 characters, who are from different backgrounds, and still have the same interest, hip-hop. Mariposa teached us that whatever you want to do, despite what others say, you can do it.

Realistic Teen Voices + Realistic Teen Drama = Compelling Fiction
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-08-16
The Sista Hood by E-Fierce draws you in from the first page with the bold yet questioning voice of Mariposa as she pines away for school heartthrob EZ (Ezekiel) on the bus home from school. EZ has fallen for Jessica Hoffman, aka J-Ho, and Mariposa's jealousy, after befriending EZ at camp, launches the story. But it's a lot more than a book about a girl pining after a boy. E-Fierce manages to engage many contemporary issues about race, culture, sexuality, and popularity in this engaging tale of friends and sometimes enemies who are all trying to find themselves, as well as separate and learn from their parents. The girls have plenty of very heavy, adult issues to work out, and test the boundaries of family and friendship, forming much more than a clique. How they look out for one another, how they argue, how they learn who's worthy of caring about and investing time in, are important lessons here. Written in a fast-paced style, this had me rooting for the girls to win their talent show.

In a somewhat surprising (to me, at least) turn of events, lesbianism amongst these students comes up, and save for some parental freaking out and macho posturing/homophobia amongst their classmates, it's presented as pretty much normal, just one way of being amongst many. The questions Mariposa asks herself show her to be very self-aware; she's not perfect, and wants to do the right thing, but her confusion over what the "right thing" to do, as evidenced by her various to do lists, proves her willing to work on herself to improve not just her life but those of the people she cares about. Issues of class, race and identity, both in terms of discrimination and how each character feels about her own background, permeate the book, but in a way that makes the reader ask questions as well; Mariposa starts off with some very strong views that she has to rethink as her circumstances and feelings change. The use of hip-hop throughout, both by Mariposa and the influence of that culture, is everywhere in this book, with the idea being that these characters can be a part of hip-hop, not just consumers of it. I'd recommend this to any teenager, or adults like me who like engaging, unique YA novels with strong characters and something to say. I look forward to the next installment in this series.

The Butterfly Learns How to Fly
Helpful Votes: 20 out of 20 total.
Review Date: 2006-11-01
Mariposa or "Mari", an intelligent, Puerto-Rican fourteen-year old living in San Francisco, aspires to be an MC. While her parents are going through a divorce, she spends a lot of time alone, writing lyrics that depict her pain and how she sees the world through her eyes. She becomes attracted to Ezekiel "EZ" Mathews, another aspiring MC, whom she meets at summer camp and who also attends her high school. The problem is that EZ, being three years older than Mari, refers to her as Lil' Sis instead of what she really wants to be, and that is his girl.

Due to EZ's urging, Mari befriends his younger sister, Sadie. Along with Mari's best friend, Liza and Sadie's best friend, Evita, the girls form an all-girl group called The Sista Hood. Mari rhymes, Sadie sings, Evita plays keyboards and Liza dances. The girls learn how to bond through their daily rehearsals for their high school's talent show. They end up learning so much about each other and mostly how to have each other's backs through the ups-and-downs that are common, and uncommon, to a teenage girl's life.

E-Fierce does an excellent job of illustrating to the reader what life is like for Mariposa, "butterfly" in Spanish. She touches on issues that any teenage girl growing up in an urban city would witness - divorce, a parent's alcoholism, homosexuality, teen domestic violence, race relations and teen pregnancy. She also makes an admirable effort to show how Mari and her friends come together to be a support to each other, step-by-step. Girls reading this novel will be able to gain so much from this book and hopefully apply Mari's learnings to their own life.

This book was written from Mariposa's voice and sometimes she would say things that were not consistent with her voice/language from other parts of the book. Other than that, I would highly recommend this book to middle and high school girls that struggle with friendship issues.

Lena Willis
APOOO BookClub

Contemporary
Sleep Before Evening
Published in Paperback by Bewrite Books (2007-07-24)
Author: Magdalena Ball
List price: $17.99
New price: $14.38
Used price: $5.35

Average review score:

A Fist Full of Reality
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-01-22
Marianne {Mari} Cottons life soon turns from picture perfect to a nightmare in a heartbeat, after her grandfather's death. She loses her way, and replaces her mentor with musician Miles. He introduces her to drugs and Mari has a quick lesson in how easy it is to get hooked on heroine. As she struggles through bouts of drugs and sex, she spirals out of control and finally ends up in a drug treatment center at deaths door. Can she pull her life together, or will she surcome to the temptations.
This novel had me thinking back at my own vulnerbility as a teen, and the confusion and fears every teenager faces on a daily basis sooner or later. Life is hard enough, but a drug addiction is no laughing matter. Every teen should be required to read this novel and hopefully will learn a valueable lesson.

Petra Lozano
Founder, Author and Editor of
author2ubooks.ning.com

A Cautionary Coming-of-Age Story
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-12-29
What we have here is a full-on rush of ambitious literary fiction. That it largely succeeds as such is no consolation to horny but bookish males hoping for a bit of fluff or a few chuckles while killing time in the airport departure lounge.

It all starts when seventeen-year-old Marianne's godlike grandfather, who is her chess master and father-substitute, croaks. No clean death, this. He suffers a devastating stroke (as she watches) and lingers on painlessly (for him) until his tormented daughter (Marianne's mother Lily) decides to pull the plug. Except she doesn't bother to ask Marianne. That's major life crisis number one (unless you count the time her natural father took a hike when she was three).

Propelled by her grief over the loss of the only sane man in her life, Marianne goes into socioeconomic free-fall. It seems all she has to do is set foot on the Long Island Railroad and inevitably she's spiraling down into the rock music and drug culture of lower Manhattan. A creepy-sexy harmonica player named Miles is her undoing, and he does a helluva job, deflowering her and getting her hooked on horse, not necessarily in that order (or maybe simultaneously--she doesn't seem to notice or care).

When she thinks about it, she blames the other men in her life--her father and her mother's subsequent string of loser lovers, along with the infamous Miles and an all-male cast of criminals, dope dealers, and sleazy employers. But all along, she realizes eventually, she's been disappointed by the lack of love and attention from her mother, a self-absorbed painter with a manic-depressive lifestyle.

So, relax, guys. You may be crass, sleazy, opportunistic, and inept. But you're not at fault. You'll have to let the women work it out this time.

Gerald Everett Jones is the author of the boychik-lit novel My Inflatable Friend: The Confessions of Rollo Hemphill and a contributor to Amazon Daily.

Sleep Before Evening - an "addictive" book
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-09-24

Life isn't perfect, but seventeen-year-old Marianne Cotton is blessed with a loving and devoted grandfather who carefully schools her in piano, the arts, and literature. An "A" student, Marianne basks in his attention while eclipsing memories of her deadbeat dad. Lily Cotton, Marianne's self-involved, bipolar mother, loves her daughter within her own limitations. The needy artist frequently requires tending when moods swing, forcing Marianne to table her own needs and emotions to care for her. A series of men has invaded their lives, providing a less than perfect environment for Marianne.

The brilliant young woman manages to survive until her senior year in high school, when just before finals, Eric Cotton collapses into a vegetative state. Although Marianne is convinced her grandfather is still alive inside, the decision to pull the plug is made by Lily and her current husband, Russell. Marianne interprets this act as a deep betrayal, and reels in shock when she's notified that her grandfather has been removed from life support.

Faced with spiritual solitude, Marianne starts to unravel. She falls for a handsome and charismatic street musician named Miles, who lures her into a world of sex, drugs, and smoky club blues. Marianne's pain is diminished with each fix she accepts from her new group of exotic and seemingly attractive friends. Armed with a fake ID, school recedes and her pending NYU scholarship seems unimportant. Marianne lands a job at a sleazy bar, serving drinks to overweight groping men and pushing through the motions with more mental lethargy as her craving for absolution and oblivion careens forward, driving her to a nearly lethal intravenous heroin addiction.

Magdalena Ball's writing, insightful and deep, engages the reader from page one. Her characters linger long after the story resolves to its perfect conclusion. Highly recommended for a glimpse into the motivations behind heroin abuse, as well as thoroughly alluring family drama, Sleep Before Evening is powerfully addictive in its own right.

A good read
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-09-08
I'm very impressed. I loved the relationship between the protagonist and her grandfather, and the mother, who's so obviously bi-polar. Really a good read!

interesting portrait of struggle and addiction in new york city
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-09-08
A very readable and gritty book about the life struggles of Marianne, a young woman growing up in New York. While the book tells a compelling story set in 1980s new york, it also explores family dynamics and what can go terribly wrong with the best of intentions. This insightful and often painful story is definitely worth reading.

Contemporary
Spring Rain (Seaside Seasons #1)
Published in Paperback by Multnomah Books (2001-05-03)
Author: Gayle Roper
List price: $11.99
New price: $3.00
Used price: $1.17
Collectible price: $11.99

Average review score:

Excellent book that tackled tough issues with wisdom and compassion
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-05-01
This was a book whose plot and characters stayed with me long after I finished reading it. Gayle's treatment of difficult topics like AIDS, unplanned pregnancy and how God answers prayer, showed both wisdom and skill in crafting this story. I would recommend this book, and have done so many times, without reservation.

Secret, Lies, and More Secrets and Lies
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-03-27
Spring Rain, book one in the Seaside Seasons series by Christian suspense writer Gayle Roper is gripping. Leigh Spenser loves the small town feel of Seaside, New Jersey. She's a single mom who loves raising her son Billy there. Then Clay Wharton resigns his commission in the US Navy and comes home to be with his family because his twin brother Ted is dying of AIDS. This throws Leigh into a tail spin, trying to avoid him, so he can never find out he is the father of her son. In high school she lied to him, leading him to believe she'd been sexual with other men, causing him to leave for the Navy with bitterness toward her. After Leigh and her son are threatened by an excon, a heartwarming love story unfolds, with Leigh and Clay reviving their love, and Ted and Clay forgiving each other for years of pain inflicted upon each other due to Clay's judgementalism and Ted defensiveness. At times the novel rips the reader's heart out. The author handles homosexuality and pre-marital sex with taste, grace, and compassion, yet never comprises the Word of God.

A story that mirrors the harshness and tranquility of the ocean.
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-01-22
Roper gently and biblically tackles some of society's most difficult issues in this novel. As the two main characters Leigh and Clay struggle with their past and the present condition of Clay's dying twin, they both learn first hand how to show and share Christ's love.

The remaining novels in this series are just as good as the first.

A Captivating Romantic Drama
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2004-05-29
Ted Wharton is dying of AIDS. With not too much time left, twin brother Clay arrives back in Seaside to try to rebuild his relationship with his brother, damaged because of Clay's attitude toward Ted's lifestyle choices. Meanwhile, this causes a problem for Leigh Spenser. While Ted is her best friend, she is holding a secret from Clay she's not sure if she wants exposed. But with the threatening phone calls Leigh keeps getting, she may have no choice to turn to Clay for help.

I really wasn't sure what to expect when I started this book. I couldn't decide if it was mystery or romance or something else entirely. This is a dysfunctional family drama and romance that pulls you in from the very beginning. While many of the major plot points are easily guessed early on, I had to keep reading to see how things would play out. In fact, I stayed up way too late too many nights in a row to read just a little further.

Frankly, I don't see how Gayle Roper could have written this book. The characters go through so much pain and heartache I could barely deal with it some times. If that's how I felt reading it, I can only image what it was like to write.

Ms. Roper doesn't shy away from tackling such issues as homosexuality and premarital sex. She handles them with honesty both in the consequences and what the Bible says. It was refreshing to see in this novel things I've believed for years regarding sin and the forgiveness God offers to all sinners.

While not the type of book I would normally read, it really got to me. I couldn't stop thinking about the characters and the themes even when I wasn't reading it. I highly recommend this book.

A Book For All Seasons
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2002-01-13
I was blown away by Spring Rain! I made the mistake of getting near the end around the time I should have been in bed, and wound up staying awake an extra two hours because I simply could not put that book down.

It's hard to say which plotline captivated me more- the romantic tension between Leigh and Clay or the smoldering conflict between Clay and Ted, fueled by severe stubbornness on the part of both brothers over the issue of Ted's homosexuality and brought out now because of Ted's impending death from AIDS.

You never know what to expect from any book dealing with sensitive topics such as AIDS and homosexuality, the author gives these timely issues the attention they deserve without becoming preachy. Through the interaction between Clay and his brother Ted, she gets the reader to see the fine line between righteousness and self-righteousness, and prayerfully, to be able to discern that difference in our own lives.

Not many authors could navigate the maze of family secrets and disagreements without turning their book into one big soap opera, but Gayle Roper has succeeded by treating each plotline with loving care, and giving us a clear look into the hearts of each character, from the youngest to the eldest.

I am eagerly awaiting more books in the SeaSide Seasons series (try to say THAT five times fast!)

Contemporary
Stormy, Misty's Foal Kidspicks 2001
Published in Paperback by Aladdin (2001-06-01)
Author: Marguerite Henry
List price: $2.99
New price: $2.50
Used price: $0.01

Average review score:

very good book
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2002-06-15
this was a very good book and i enjoyed it a lot. everyone should read it because it has a very good story line. i would reccomend this book to people who love to read.

Wonderful historical fiction for young people......!!!!
Helpful Votes: 12 out of 12 total.
Review Date: 2003-05-29
My seven year old daughter and I finished this book last night. She was very sad to have it end. What a wonderful account of the devastating storm that hit the islands of Assateague and Chincoteague and the relief efforts to rebuild the islands and the devastated wild pony population.

It was very heartwarming to read in the epilogue excerpts from actual letters of children that sent in their hard earned money to buy back the ponies sold at previous Pony Penning Days to replenish the wild herds of Assateugue. These children and others like them preserved a tradition that had been maintained for over 100 years and because of them continues on today. In fact, Marguerite Henry dedicated this book to those very children that made it all possible.

Marguerite Henry does an excellent job of using local dialect in the telling of the story, especially with Grandpa and Grandma. You can not help but become involved in the characters and their concerns become very real to you.

I read this book many many years ago and had forgotten a great deal of the story. One of the things I did remember was Misty being put in Grandma's kitchen to wait out the storm.

If you are like me and read this book many years ago I encourage to reread it. You will be glad you did.

Another great book!
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2000-06-03
Marguerite Henry really did it again! She wrote another great book. The only bad thing about this book is they save the best parts for last! If you get bored while reading, keep on reading for it is worth it. You will love this book...Read it!

-Emily Patton

Foal of Waves
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2002-12-06
This is the true story of Misty, a famous horse who gave birth to a foal named Stormy during a raging, devastating storm. The book then presents an accurately detailed account of rebuilding the island of Chincoteauge after the storm.
The plot of this is exciting and suspenseful book twists just to the reader's liking, and has times of slow sadness. The odd regional colloquial speech of the characters may sometimes confuses the reader, but it is so well written you it presents a mental picture better than a movie.
This is a very interesting book to me. Its many scenes convey many different emotions: some humor, some happiness, and some intense sorrow. I am also extremely inspired by Paul Beebe, who shows courage and self-control as I would like to. It is a favorite of mine, and a worthy addition to any bookshelf.

Misty's Survival
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2001-11-01
No pony would want to be pregnant in the middle of the big hurricane that killed almost everything in Chincoteague and Assateague. Paul and Maureen love the fact that Misty is going to have a baby until the storm hits. When Paul and Maureen leave Misty, everyone is extremely worried. Misty needs to find a way to survive along with her unborn baby! This is a wonderful story that will have you hanging on to every page. I recommend this book to anybody who has read Misty of Chincoteague or anyone who likes horse stories.

Contemporary
Take Me There
Published in Paperback by Dafina (2006-10-01)
Author: Leslie Esdaile
List price: $6.99
New price: $3.25
Used price: $2.00

Average review score:

Wow - Awesome Romance!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-12-11
Wow, I am so glad I stumbled across this book. This romance was GREAT! The male/female lead had such chemistry. The supporting characters were great and the story line was intriguing. I am definitely going to have to read more of Ms. Esdaile's books. If you want a good romance, try this one!!

Take Me There
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-10-16
Before facing the IRS, Jacques (JB) Dubois, CEO of Def Island needs financial help quick. The accounting firm that is trying to get his account assigns CPA Karin Michaels to work with him until the boss gets over his sickness or another top staffer can take over. Although, Karin is fascinated with the singer, she is also looking out for his business.

Karin is invited to Jacque's concert while in Philadelphia and takes her "stuck up" doctor boyfriend, Lloyd. This is a fun read as Karin enjoys herself at the concert.

Karin has to travel to Jacques home in St. Lucia to look over his books and this is where she better understands his lifestyle while their attraction for one another truly surfaces especially with the sly help of Jacques housekeeper, Mrs. Orville.

This was an enjoyable story and one that you have to keep reading until finished.

Great Book
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-08-10
I got hooked on this book immediately. Finished it in 2 days. It's a book that you can relate to. The passion between Karin & Jacques was incredible. I want my own Jacques Dubois! I only wish it was longer.

Buy it. Great to read while working out.

Romance.......
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-08-05
Leslie Esdaile took us on a wild journey of lust and love in her novel "Take Me There". It is a great romantic novel about a woman in her search for love. Her novel also shows a very real economic side of the world that many travelers or tourist fail to see. She brings her main characater, Karin, to life as she embraces the things she sees. A great romance story indeed.

Thanks Leslie!!!!

Hot! Hot!! Hot!!!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-06-19
This is my 1st book by Leslie Esdaile and I am hooked. The chemistry between the main characters, Karin and J.B. is mind blowing. A must read. Can't wait to read her others.

Contemporary
Talon and Fang (Outlanders, No. 25) (Outlanders) (Outlanders)
Published in Audio CD by GraphicAudio (2005-07-01)
Author: James Axler
List price: $19.99
New price: $13.76
Used price: $13.50

Average review score:

Could not put this book down!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2003-06-04
How does Mark Ellis do it? Just when I think I've read the best that he has to offer, he blows me out of the water with another masterpiece. As I read these OL novels, I am completely immersed in the story and the plot.

Talon and Fang is one of those which kept me turning the pages until the late hours.. Great character development, typical Outlanders humor, and of course the mystery and suspense that only Mark Ellis can weave.

This novel represents a major event in the mythology of Outlanders. Most series novels of this type put you right back where you started from, without altering the fabric of the characters or the format. Talon and Fang takes an extra step and goes beyond this limitation.

This book has action, adventure, life-threatening situations, romance, and mystery. More than your usual action/adventure beat the bad guys plot, this book brings familiar characters a little closer to real life. If you liked the intertwining threads of the other novels in this series you'll love Talon and Fang.

A freash look
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2003-09-18
If you are tired of the hum-drum watered down mess that the "Deathlands" serise has become well then my friends this is the book for you.

Set in the future with nost of the Cerburus warriors dead or aged this book provides a freash spin on things.

Kane (old now) wants to find some way to get back and warn his old friends of all that will take place in order to do so he has to walk into the very belly of the beast. Lets just hope he hasn't lost his edge.

My Impression-Great book, how one central point is resolved is very inventive!! Well worth the money.

Another Flash Point
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2003-06-21
Talon and Fang is, without a doubt in my mind, the best novel that the author has written in the entire series.

It's what would be called a Flashpoint. To any new readers to the series, it'll be very confusing if they pick up the older novels after reading this one.

Mark has written a novel that is very emotional, tragic, but touching and out and out uproariously funny in several sections.

It begins almost thirty years into the future. The entire face of the Outlands has been changed, much to the efforts of the Cerberus exiles.

Sam has taken total control of the continent, and a good part of the world as well. The nine baronies were destroyed completely in a five year war that took place after Cobalt managed to rebuild his power base and launched an all out assault against Cerberus.

Kane, Grant, Lakesh and Bry are the only ones who managed to survive the wars. Both Kane and Grant were instrumental in the victory over the nine barons, but the cost to both men was insurmountable.

Grant lost Shizuak, and Kane lost his wife, Brigid, when they rescued him from the hands of a cult, The Nirodha, based in India. That single even left more of a scar on Kane than any of the wounds that he had suffered over the many years he spent as a Magistrate, and then an exile fighting the Barons.

He has spent over twenty years researching a means to travel back in time to fix what had happened, so that he wouldn't have to suffer as he has. Even Grant, his partner, and his best friend, turned his back on Kane, thinking that he has become totally fused out because of what happened.

Kane however, has a plan. Sindri disappeared, and was never heard from again, but Kane realized what the little man did. He managed to trap himself in Zero time, using the operation Chronos facilities on Thunder Isle, just before the reactor reached critical mass. He is critical to bring about Kane's plan to life.

As always, Kane has a number of obstacles to overcome. First and foremost is Tanvirah, the daughter of Lakesh and Erica van Sloan. She is now the Scorpio Prime of the Nirodha cult, like her mother before her. She is under Sam's orders to try and win Kane over, with any means at her disposal. Grant even tries to stop him, and the fight that ensues is one of the more entertaining scenes in the novel.

But, despite as crazy as he appears, Kane's whole scheme might actually work, and after bringing Sindri back from the Zero time he had been trapped in. Together, he and Sindri use the remaining TAV to travel to the City of High River, formerly known as Cobaltville.

Surpassing even more trials and tribulations, they reach the city only to be captured and whisked off to China where they would face Sam, the Imperator.

Here, Kane confronts the hybrid and discovers exactly who and what he is, and during the confrontation, he learns the Imperators great plans. His own plan to send Sindri back in time actually succeeds, but at the cost of his life.

Once again, this is the best novel that the author has written to date, and I am very eager to read the conclusion.

Loved this book!!
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2003-05-28
It's when you come across books like Talon & Fang that you know your money spent on a series is well-spent!! I loved this book! I think it is quite possibly the best in the whole series.

Maybe the best in the whole series!
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2003-05-24
Talon and Fang could be one of the best in the whole series so far. It has one of the most original plots of them all of the ones I've read. Along with the action it has lots of heartbreak too. I can't wait for the next one in this two parter.

Contemporary
A Time For Us
Published in Mass Market Paperback by Kimani Press (2000-09-01)
Author: Cheryl Faye
List price: $5.99
Used price: $25.00

Average review score:

Sweet love story
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-03-08
I read the sequel before I read this book so I admit my views of the characters are biased - I think is an idiot in A test of time but in this book I can see him as a man totally struck dumb with love by Nicole. Office romances with the boss tend to be frowned on but these two manage to work things out, at the end one can see the foundation for what happens in the sequel. So read this one first and then read the follow up book.

TRUE LOVE
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2003-01-09
THIS WAS AN INCREDIBLE BOOK. NOT TO MANY PEOPLE ARE UP ON IT BUT THEY NEED TO BE. I JUST PICKED THIS BOOK UP WHEN I WAS AT THE LIBRARY WITH A FRIEND ABOUT 5 YEARS AGO, AND I NEVER FORGOT IT. IT IS SUCH A SWEET BOOK, IT HAD ME IN TEARS. THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN MARK AND NICOLE WAS ONE THAT WAS SO BLISSFUL, IT BRINGS HOPE FOR RELATIONSHIPS EVERYWHERE. I CAN'T SAY ENOUGH ABOUT IT...3 CHEERS FOR MS. FAYE.

I loved this book
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2001-11-10
This was a wonderous love story. I envied Nicole and Mark's courtship. I'm familiar with work place love affairs and this one was so real. Regardless if you're the CEO of a company or some blue collered worker, the heart can not be argued with. I was happy that their love for each other was stronger than the adversity that surrounded them. I recommend this book to the romantic in all of us. Hats off to Ms. Faye!

I only now have learnd their story continues in a sequal. I've got to have it!

Love it, Love it, Love it
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2003-12-03
I love this book. I love Cheryl Faye. I really wish that she would come out with a new romance novel. The story of Nicole and Mark, really grabbed me. He's older than her, and I hated that, but their love story in general, made me see past that. Please Cheryl, come out with a new romance novel.

A Time For US
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2004-01-04
This has got to be one of the most wonderful romance novels I have ever read! I simply loved the story of Mark & Nicole. The friendship Nicole has with Yvonne Walker is one I feel a lot of women can relate to (we all have someone we tell our secrets to). The Mark & Nicole story is so romantic...it makes you look at that guy in the office a little differntly (smile).

Seriously, my hat goes off to Cheryl Faye...she is a wonderful writer and I look forward to reading more of her novels.

Contemporary
U.S.!: A Novel
Published in Paperback by Bloomsbury USA (2006-02-21)
Author: Chris Bachelder
List price: $14.95
New price: $11.68
Used price: $10.19

Average review score:

EXCELLENT READ!!!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-06-18
I can't wait for the author to crack out something new...this is by far, the best novel I've read in a VERY long time.

Make the points without the negativity. Other writing in this genre seems so sour, and depressing...Bachelder gets it done without the hate.

I don't know what else to say, besides, it's great...check it out. Funny and fun.

give it a read
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-09-29
Wow, what a pleasant surprise - a funny, intelligent, ambitious, playful, political novel that avoids both cynicism and pretense. And a great ending too.

review
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-09-19
Though I don't have much against Bachelder's previous effort, Bear v. Shark, I don't have much to say in favor of it either. This is not the case for "U.S.!", which is one of the best books I've read this year.

As a writer who cares a good deal about politics and the way the world is going, I found this book an inspiration. What Bachelder is trying to do here, it seems to me, is find a way to engage with the world and American society without sounding pedantic or preachy, and also to highlight how difficult a task that is. The fact that he uses Upton Sinclair, one of the most pedantic and preachy writers ever, as his protagonist is genius.

While movie makers can be ham-fisted in their messages and get away with it (see "Crash" or "Fahrenheit 911"), with writers it's far trickier. They don't have the music, the camera effects, and all that other stuff to spice up or soften the blow of their messages -- only words. This makes most message-oriented novels feel almost embarrassing as you go through them, at least for me. At the very least, it becomes extremely difficult to connect with them once you realize they're out to convince you of something specific. U.S.! is a rare success in this respect. The arguments it offers both for and against ambivalence feel fair and natural--like the debates you might have in your head-- and its observations on American culture are dead-on without seeming snarky. Furthermore, Bachelder doesn't cheat and fall back on the deus ex machinas George Saunders seems so dependent on these days.

It's good to see a writer who, rather than finding an artsy, pretty way to turn his back on the world, is attempting to face it. I'm looking forward to Bachelder's future work. This is a writer who has exponentially improved since his debut.

Bear v Shark v Upton Sinclair!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-09-05
Take this into consideration what if a bear and a shark and Upton Sinclair fight it out in a tank of water deep enough for the shark to maneuver efficiently, shallow enough to give the bear an even chance to hold its own, and large enough to hold Sinclairs inflated socialist ideals. Who would win?

Chris Bachelder returns to the ring after his debut novel, Bear v Shark, found its way into the hands of readers not too long ago. That novel was a wonderful mix of humor, poignancy, and Chris' style of what I like to call "chapter concepts" He takes your basic novel structure but instead of just telling the story in a straight forward manner he will use various different storytelling concepts in each chapter. In one chapter you may get a poem, or a television interview, and in another chapter you could simply get a listing of ebay auctions. Its a brilliant way to view his themes and characters from different points of view.

In his sophomore effort Chris Bachelder refines his techniques and tightens his themes for a novel that somehow manages to surpass the simple yet wonderful Bear V Shark. Again he comes in with a concept that seems rather absurd, muck raker Upton Sinclair continues to live on through an unexplained method of resurrection. Used as a tool for the left he lives on to spread his beliefs in socialism and the evils of capitalism. Bachelder never shows bias he simply portrays the man as he was and how he would adjust to this day and age.

I am ashamed to admit I knew very little about Mr. Sinclair going into the novel and trust me this is not a dull protagonist. He's akward, ambitious, and has the drive of a young man despite his frail dying body. The novel makes me wonder what would happen to Michael Moore if he found a way to live on. What happens to ones causes over a long period of time? Does change ever truly happen? Must we lose hope if the answer to that question is no? You won't get an answer after reading U.S.! but you will certainly get a little closer to forming one of your own.

A gem that has just happened to take the form of a book.

Hopes and shovels forever.

Strange But Excellent
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2006-11-17
Definitely one of the stranger books I've read this year, but also one of the best. To a certain degree the book is limited by it's central gimmick -- real-life Socialist muckraking writer Upton Sinclair (about whom the reader need know nothing) keeps returning from the dead to spread the good word about the working man's struggle for a decent life. He "keeps" returning from the dead because every time he comes back, there are glory-seekers determined to put him back under in order to protect America from godless Socialism. If this sounds like some piece of strange science-fiction, well, it kind of is. But it's mainly a satire of the contemporary American political scene, with Sinclair standing in for the far left. But even more than that, it's a very clever and funny piece of satire -- which is rare indeed.

Bachelder wisely recognizes the limitations of his premise, and thus engages it in a very loose manner by riffing on it in lots of different formats. There is a running storyline concerning this iteration of the undead Sinclair, as he moves around the country aided by his secretary/personal assistant, holing up in remote cabins to write, and making clandestine visits to underground meetings. However, sprinkled into this are letters from Sinclair to his son, Amazon.com reviews of some of Sinclair's 90 books (most of which bear the dreaded "Be the first to review this item."), transcripts from a 1-800 "I Saw Sinclair" hotline, hilarious memos (including one from Sinclair to NFL Commissioner Paul Tagliabule about the need for instant replay), a reading list and syllabus for a writing course taught by Sinclair, newspaper editorials, interviews, an eBay auction listing (for a bullet that killed Sinclair), song lyrics, and other such artifacts of popular culture.

As we learn more about Sinclair, we also learn more about the cult of celebrity that has arisen around his killers. Indeed, the main story thread leads Sinclair toward a small town celebration (he thinks it's to honor him, but it's actually to burn his books), where the country's top Sinclair hunters (many of whom have been hired by corporate interests) hope to bag him. There's a great little subplot about the grizzled old veteran killer vs. the brash young upstart. There's another subplot involving Sinclair's folk singer son which suffers a bit from underdevelopment.

But beneath all this, there's a clear message -- the bumbling, almost unbearably earnest, permanently outraged, ever-pedantic Sinclair is a symbol of all that's wrong with the American left and yet paradoxically, also what's right. Although Sinclair's neverending sub-mediocre writing is mercilessly skewered throughout the book, his dogged dedication to (and faith in) an ideal is both touching and ultimately inspiring. This is another major theme of the book, the intersection of art and politics, and the difficulty faced by the artist who dares to mix the two. Bachelder's book manages the tricky task of both doing this and commenting on it at the same time, while shifting ably between slapstick comedy, family pathos, blind zealotry, pop culture riffing, and even moments of quiet reflection. This is both an entertaining and excellent novel.


Books-Under-Review-->Arts-->Literature-->Short Stories-->Contemporary-->86
Related Subjects: Chandra, Anil Englander, Nathan Krouse, Erika
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