Tag: arc

A Wilder Rose by Susan Wittig Albert

A Wilder Rose by Susan Wittig Albert

I loved Laura Ingalls Wilder’s Little House series growing up.  Twenty years later, I still set aside time for Hallmark’s Little House on the Prairie Marathons and am just as enraptured by her books as I was at age eight. It recently came out the Laura’s daughter Rose may have been the steamroller behind the […]

Posted January 10, 2014 by Whitney in Review / 2 Comments

Becoming Josephine by Heather Webb

Becoming Josephine by Heather Webb

With the exclusion that Josephine was married to Napoleon Bonaparte I knew next to nil about this historical figure.  I instantly fell in love.  The descriptions were vivid, the story sweeping, and immediately rooted for Josephine.  She led a very interesting life with difficulties that could have caused her to roll into a ball and […]

Posted January 8, 2014 by Whitney in Review / 0 Comments

Slimed! by Matthew Klickstein

Slimed! by Matthew Klickstein

I am a child of the 90s.  I grew up on Rugrats, Clarissa Explains It All and Double Dare, in other words, I watched Nickelodeon.  Therefore, upon seeing Slimed, childhood nostalgia kicked in. Slimed is told in a segment of interviews from Actors, Producers and all the dreamers behind the scenes.  I found the order […]

Posted January 3, 2014 by Whitney in Review / 0 Comments

Review: Manson: The Life and Times of Charles Manson

Review: Manson: The Life and Times of Charles Manson

Manson is sick and twisted. Yet he is very complex and I felt Jeff Guinn excelled in exhibiting the life and times of Charles Manson. The first thing that comes to people’s minds with Charles Manson is the LaBianca/Tate murders. This biography explains how the makings of this came to pass beginning with his childhood. […]

Posted December 16, 2013 by Whitney in Review / 1 Comment

Book Review: Bellman & Black

Book Review: Bellman & Black

I was greatly anticipating Diane Setterfield’s  next novel as soon as I put down The Thirteenth Tale. the writing style was intoxicating and held perfect suspense.  I was expecting the same caliber with Bellman & Black.  I received the same beautiful writing but the suspense I was looking for was not.  I know it is […]

Posted October 25, 2013 by Whitney in Review / 4 Comments

Review: The Last Winter of Dani Lancing

Review: The Last Winter of Dani Lancing

The Last Winter of Dani Lancing is tragic, the premise unimaginable, yet it was engrossing.  P.D.Viner created characters that made you feel.  Grief.  I felt her parent’s grief, it hung in the air like a cloud before a rain storm.  You’d think with the subject matter, a girl murdered with her parents left to pick […]

Posted October 16, 2013 by Whitney in Review / 2 Comments

Review: Cartwheel

Review: Cartwheel

I have always been interested in true crime.  Some may call it a sickness.  I’m an avid watcher of  the Investigation Discovery channel and have also followed such cases as Casey Anthony, Natalee Holloway, and Amanda Knox.  The premise of Jennifer Dubois’ novel Cartwheel seemed reminiscent of Amanda Knox, thus piquing my interest. At first, and […]

Posted October 9, 2013 by Whitney in Review / 0 Comments

Review: The Book of Matt

Review: The Book of Matt

I was thirteen at the time of Matthew Shepard’s murder thus this crime was not even on my radar. That having been said, it took me several days to write this review if only to see it level-headed.  There was so much to absorb.  The one consistency throughout the book is how Matthew died, but […]

Posted October 2, 2013 by Whitney in Review / 0 Comments

Review: Mrs. Poe

Review: Mrs. Poe

I went into Mrs. Poe knowing very little of Mr. Edgar Allan Poe.  I read The Raven in high school, but like most class literature, it was required, a chore, and thus other than a nice poem it was a blip in my high school career. Having said that, I read Lynn Cullen’s Mrs. Poe […]

Posted October 1, 2013 by Whitney in Review / 2 Comments

Review: The Almond Tree

Review: The Almond Tree

Recently, my dad asked what I was reading and I replied “The Almond Tree”.  His response was “That sounds boring”.  He could not be farther from the truth.  You should never judge a book by its title. From the start, it is made clear that The Almond Tree is a dark, heartbreaking story of adversity, […]

Posted September 23, 2013 by Whitney in Review / 1 Comment