Tuesday 30 April 2013

Disengaged by Beth Orsoff




Disengaged is a good title for a story about getting engaged and the rocky journey that follows because of it.


It starts off with a proposal by Brad to Allie at a party held in honour of a soap star's Emmy Award (cue outrageous soap plot-lines that are so outlandish they could be real). Jax Montgomery applauds the pair believing they are actors new to the soap rehearsing their first scene but embarrassingly that is not the case. And thus the main characters are introduced.

The rest of the book follows Allie as she prepares for this wedding, although the interfering mother-in-law-to-be, who Allie has an icy relationship (leading to some humorous, barbed exchanges) takes over, much to Allie's dislike. It turns the wedding into a relationship-ruining affair and makes Allie reconsider her love for Brad.

And at the same time through the process Allie seems to be innocently meeting the Jax fellow from the opening scene ("And that's how I ended up on a second non-date with Jax Montgomery.")

Throughout much of the book I had a smile on my face. It is written in a light-hearted fashion but still has length. The humour never breaks up the story and the characters are defined, although maybe some a little one-dimensional (Brad possibly, and his dad who only seems to watch televised sport).

I enjoyed the book throughout, despite me being a man and it being aimed at women, and recommend it.


I got this book through Amazon Vine. It is listed HERE.


Saturday 27 April 2013

The Mystery of the Cliff-Top Dog (Animal S.O.S.) by Kelly McKain




This is a short tale of two girls rescuing a dog. 

Amy has moved to a new place, White Horse Bay. She meets Leah there when she goes for a pony lesson. They become friends after a moment of not getting on (which seems a bit odd when the two become friends and a series of books is based on them working together but nevermind).

A storm is brewing and the girls hear some whining from the cliffs. They find a dog who is “weak, cold, and in need of food and water” but they have to get down the slippery cliffs to get to him. Even then if they do get him they need to find his owners, and avoid some dog thieves. 

I read it with my 6-year-old (9 short-ish chapters over 7 bedtimes). She liked the pictures (her quote “the pictures were really nice”), and the story. There is the obligatory preview chapter of the next book in the series too, something that always happens in these type of books it seems just to bump up the page count and try and get you to purchase the next one.

Anyways, all’s well that ends well (which is more than can be said for this review).

I got this book through Amazon Vine. It is listed HERE.

Tuesday 23 April 2013

Billy Lynn's Long Halftime Walk by Ben Fountain



“The men of Bravo are not cold.”


And thus the book draws you in, right from its opening line, and keeps you there until the end thanks to the quality writing.

Bravo are Bravo squad, a troop of 8 soldiers. They are being treated to a victory tour of the US following a heroic deed at the Al-Ansakar Canal in Iraq, as they fight against TerrRr. Billy Lynn is one of their number, the Texas-boy and the one who was singled out for being the hero, the news crew footage proves it and only enhances their status. 

Throughout the tour they are treated like heroes by their fellow Americans. But they have to return for another 11 months. The focus of the book is on the end of the tour where they are being treated to a Dallas Cowboys American Football game by the owner Norm Oglesby. But the rest of the book takes you through the painful goodbyes with family, the cheerleader Billy falls in love with on first sight then has to say goodbye to, the option of not going back to war, the narrow margins between life and death, the loss of a good friend in war, the camaraderie the group have for each other etc. 

It is like one of those war films where you know the hero is going to die because of all the goodbyes that are going on. But the poignant ending is left unsaid.

Obviously a knowledge of American culture, in particular American Football will help through parts of the book, although it is not essential. And maybe the hero-worship does go on for a bit too long but overall the writing oozes quality in this well thought out novel on the Iraqi war.

I got this book through Amazon Vine. It is listed HERE.



Saturday 20 April 2013

May Produce Gas (The World of Norm) by Jonathan Meres



I read this with my 6-year-old over several bedtimes. It’s probably not for her age group, what with the talk about hormones, concepts such as global warming, and the use of “flipping” all the time, and would probably be suited more for children around the age of 13.

Despite that I thought it would be interesting to read to her because of the relationships in the book. The particular relationship I liked was that between Norm and his dad who is always telling Norm off for little things like having the computer on or over-filling the kettle, just to give my daughter some idea about how other dads are and other children are put upon by their parents. Also I liked Norm's viewpoint, in that he thinks everything is unfair.

The story though is a mish-mash of ideas. It seems it was written as it went along to wherever the ideas flowed. It starts with global warming, moves on to hormones (i.e. growing up and becoming teenagers), covers bullying in a not all that satisfactory manner (certainly not of any help to those that are being bullied), then ends with some baby-sitting. 

To give the book credit there are regular pictures along the way which do bring the text to life a bit (my daughter's favourite bits), but overall the book is inconsistent (to me at least). 

I got this book through Amazon Vine. It is listed HERE.

Saturday 13 April 2013

Belle & Boo and the Goodnight Kiss by Mandy Sutcliffe

This is a 32-page picture book (together with a sentence or two of text each page) about young girl Belle and her rabbit Boo. There are other books in the series too. I have also read with my daughters Belle & Boo and the Birthday Surprise and this book is in the same format as that one.


The series of books are basically about how much the little girl Belle and Boo love each other, which is a lot. This particular book is about the pair getting ready for bed. It therefore makes an ideal bedtime story in many ways, and of course it ends in the goodnight kiss which is something your children will love (at least at target audience age).

The pictures are good too with nice clean lines, lovely colours and the girl and rabbit drawn to look realistic. The pictures are also set up nicely from an artistic point of view.

Compared to the other book we read in the series (Belle & Boo and the Birthday Surprise) I would say the other is better because it brings out the love the characters have for each other more, possibly because there is an element of danger involved in that one, but this is another excellent addition to the series.

I got this book through Amazon Vine. It is listed HERE.

For more go to: http://www.belleandboo.com/