Thursday, June 27, 2013

Peek-A-Boo Monsters


Author: Charles Reasoner
Publish: Picture Book Windows, August 2013 (ARC)
Type: Print Book
Rate: 4
 
Synopsis: Monsters hide throughout this die-cut book from Charles Reasoner. As you read the simple verse, small windows give you a peek at the creatures on the next page. Each spread reveals more adorable monsters!
 
My Review

The Peek-a-Book Monsters has pretty images that are appropriate for themes. The book is very age appropriate with vivid monster animations, but I would have liked funnier content. I’m sure it will gain the attention of little ones through its brilliant pictures. I rate this book at 4, and recommend it for little ones. 

Any reviews I post are the property of Fictionally-Speaking. They are not to be copied unless by the author, publisher or the reviewer. Any books we receive from an author or publisher are given our honest opinion. It does not sway are review in any way.

The Alphabet Parade

Author: Charles Ghigna
Publish: Picture Book Windows, Sept 2013 (ARC)
Type: Print Book
Rate: 5

Synopsis: Author Charles Ghigna, also known as Father Goose, charms with lyrical rhyming text that is engaging and fun for even the youngest readers! This series helps preschoolers learn the basics: letters, numbers, shapes, and colors. Bright and delightful illustrations make the concepts come alive.

My Review

The Alphabet Parade has beautiful graphs and an enjoyable rhyme for telling/teaching the alphabet. The book is very age appropriate with vivid animations and catchy content that’s sure to grab the interest of little learners. I rate this book at 5, and recommend it for little ones. 

Any reviews I post are the property of Fictionally-Speaking. They are not to be copied unless by the author, publisher or the reviewer. Any books we receive from an author or publisher are given our honest opinion. It does not sway are review in any way.

Tough to Love: Saving Avery

Author: Ava Catori
Publish: Ava Catori Books, May 2013
Type: EBook, Novella
Pages: 87
Rate: 2

Synopsis: Hardened from past hurts, can Avery West and Steel Brickman find the strength to heal one another? Steel’s intensity is overbearing and strong, crushing Avery’s ability to breathe. Avery’s wall is so thick – it seems almost impenetrable. Tangled in a mess of pain and desire, the two must learn to trust one another to find their own salvation.

Avery is broken and needs saving. Professional football player, Steel Brickman, is a white knight ready to save the day, but once the rescue is complete his interest wanes. Can Avery keep his focus on her, and help them get beyond their relationship struggles?

My Review

This was my first time reading an Ava Catori book. I liked the idea that two people in different places in their lives falling in love despite past experiences. However, while I like the idea, I thought the two characters were slightly unrealistic in how they approached the whole “save me” theme. A pro athlete (Steel) hangs around a bar every now and then to gain the interest of the tough fronted bartender (Avery), but the story didn't offer vivid descriptions.

Avery has experienced a life changing event, but the details are choppy and her dialogue is repetitive. Steel is a control freak that falls in love with Avery. He’s the savior to someone that’s supposed to be broken but because of the lack of time reference in the story, it seems that her wall is being penetrated awfully quickly as well as their relationship.


Moreover, there is a line in the story where Avery comments but the reader can only infer what Steel is responding to because words or line is missing. Additionally, I would have liked differentiation in verbage and more in-depth detail to create images throughout the story in regards to the events and characters in order to bring the story to life. I rate this story at a 2, and would not recommend it. 

Any reviews I post are the property of Fictionally-Speaking. They are not to be copied unless by the author, publisher or the reviewer. Any books we receive from an author or publisher are given our honest opinion. It does not sway are review in any way.

Ava Catori

Wednesday, June 26, 2013

The Casual Vacancy

Author: J.K. Rowling
Narration: Tom Hollander
Duration: 17 hrs, 55 mins
Publish: Little, Brown Book, Sept 2012
Type: Audiobbook
Rate: 3


 Synopsis: When Barry Fairbrother dies unexpectedly in his early forties, the little town of Pagford is left in shock. Pagford is, seemingly, an English idyll, with a cobbled market square and an ancient abbey, but what lies behind the pretty façade is a town at war. Rich at war with poor, teenagers at war with their parents, wives at war with their husbands, teachers at war with their pupils…. Pagford is not what it first seems. And the empty seat left by Barry on the town’s council soon becomes the catalyst for the biggest war the town has yet seen. Who will triumph in an election fraught with passion, duplicity and unexpected revelations?

My Review

I am an admirer of J.K. Rowling. I find her style very remarkable and entertaining. But while, The Casual Vacancy was remarkably detailed, I found it difficult to get through the book in its entirety. Although the characters were intricately written with real life afflictions and problems, the story overall didn’t hold my interest with the same zest appeal as her other books. It seemed to take a long to connect the characters with the center of the definition of casual vacancy and even then I didn’t see the connection of all the character perspectives tying into the casual vacancy.

I pre-ordered the book, back in August of 2012, but after months of trying to get through it I saw light at the end of the tunnel. I believe had the narrator not done such an interest job, excellently differentiating between character voices and tones, I may have not made it through. 

The Casual Vacancy seemed to be nothing more than intricately woven day-to-day interactions and feelings of about eight or more people that lived in a small town. In the beginning I understood the detail and circumstances surrounding the death of Barry Fairbrother, but then it took a left turn into a really long conversation about each other and their interactions and memories of Barry and less about the vacant council seat. Other than interesting details of drugs, sex, and unhappy marriages, I found the story very difficult to finish. I rate this book at 3, but would not recommend it. 

Any reviews I post are the property of Fictionally-Speaking. They are not to be copied unless by the author, publisher or the reviewer. Any books we receive from an author or publisher are given our honest opinion. It does not sway are review in any way.

Tuesday, June 25, 2013

Snatched

Author: Karin Slaughter
Publish: Random House, May 2012
Pages: 67
Type: EBook
Rate: 5


 

Synopsis: Will Trent, a dedicated agent with the Georgia Bureau of Investigation for fifteen years, knows that there’s definitely such a thing as a cop’s intuition. Which is why he should have listened to his own.

While in an airport restroom at Atlanta’s Hartsfield-Jackson International, Will overhears a girl’s pleading, plaintive voice: “Please, I wanna go home.” Something isn’t right here, thinks Will. He feels it in his gut. But he waits too long to act, and now the girl and the anxious, angry man she’s with have disappeared into the crowds at the busiest passenger airport in the world.

After a desperate search and with time running out, Will makes a call to his supervisor, Amanda Wagner. Will’s partner, Faith Mitchell, immediately sends out an abducted child alert. The entire airport will soon be grinding to a halt: Almost 100 million passengers a year. Five runways. Seven concourses. Six million square feet of space that sprawled across two counties, three cities, and five jurisdictions. All shut down on a dime because Will has a hunch that he is certain is true: a girl, maybe six or seven years old, has been snatched from God knows where. And he intends to bring her back—no matter what it takes.


My Review  

Will Trent is a great Detective with the GBI who has just stepped into a parent’s worst nightmare. He does his job well and it doesn’t take spidy senses to know something isn’t right with a little girl in a men’s urinal. Especially a little girl who is six or seven and coming into her femininity. I understand why Will questions himself about what he heard and saw in the bathroom. Until you become a parent your guts gives you different vibes. Once you become a parent you have a whole different set of intuitions. Although, Will follows his instincts, he questions himself a little too much, which becomes a little too late to keep the girl in eye sight. When Will loses eye sight of the girl, the chase is on and things start to get real. The time has come for instinctual decisions, along with a barrage of what ifs.       
If you know anything about the Will Trent Series, Will is a wonderful character who has not had such so wonderful upbringing. He is a perfect example of the lemons and lemonade deal. After 15 years as a detective, enduring a competent but moody partner and a boss with a type A personality, he is great at what he does.

From the beginning, Snatched grabs you in and have you turning pages until it’s done. The story stays on target and focus with time and content. At times it makes you want to beat the shit out of a couple of the characters, but there is Will and his team as well as old police connections to the rescue. The plot brings together more than a detective doing is due diligence on an assignment that sucks. It brings awareness to human trafficking, kidnapping at a level that is unfathomable and goes against the idea of rebuilding a two parent family life, and offers a little insight into the thoughts of pedophiles. It is easy to get attached to Will and want more because he really cares about what he does and you can feel that. I would have liked to have seen more detail on the capture of one of the culprits but the result was satisfying all the same. 

This story invokes a lot of emotion, especially if you have a child or have had a child in your life (regardless of the relationship). There is plenty of action and suspense in this novella. I rate is as a 5, and I recommend it to all without reservation.        
Any reviews I post are the property of Fictionally-Speaking. They are not to be copied unless by the author, publisher or the reviewer. Any books we receive from an author or publisher are given our honest opinion. It does not sway are review in any way.
Snatched

Unseen

Author: Karin Slaughter
Publish: Random House, July 2013, (ARC)
Pages: 400
Type: Print
Rate: 5



Synopsis: Will Trent is a Georgia Bureau of Investigation agent whose latest case has him posing as Bill Black, a scary ex-con who rides a motorcycle around Macon, Georgia, and trails an air of violence wherever he goes. The cover has worked and he has caught the eye of a wiry little drug dealer who thinks he might be a useful ally. But undercover and cut off from the support of the woman he loves, Sara Linton, Will finds his demons catching up with him.

Although she has no idea where Will has gone, or why, Sara herself has come to Macon because of a cop shooting: Her stepson, Jared, has been gunned down in his own home. Sara holds Lena, Jared’s wife, responsible: Lena, a detective, has been a magnet for trouble all her life, and Jared’s shooting is not the first time someone Sara loved got caught in the crossfire. Furious, Sara finds herself involved in the same case that Will is working without even knowing it, and soon danger is swirling around both of them.

In a novel of fierce intensity, shifting allegiances, and shocking twists, two investigations collide with a conspiracy straddling both sides of the law. Karin Slaughter’s latest is both an electrifying thriller and a piercing study of human nature: what happens when good people face the unseen evils in their lives.

My Review


The best stories aren't ones that leave good impressions, but the ones that offer connections from which we relate because of our own experiences. Yes the good ones draw you in but the best ones are the ones that make you feel like you’re somehow right beside each character. You feel what they feel, You want to give advice just as much as you learn from them. Unseen is one of those best stories that’s hard to tear yourself away from. It’s an example of characters that shouldn't be judged by their cover, entertains unfathomable actions by people who we trust without question, but most of all, it’s a story that shows that people by nature make mistakes.


Will Trent, an Agent with the GBI, that has gone undercover on a drug trafficking case. He does his job well as an Agent but he is superb undercover. As Bill Black he saves more than a couple lives. But as with all things in life, Will learns love is never painless and while he has been saved along the way through his personal relationship, it is not without a price. Bill Black is very much a believable alter ego, and it helps that Will has physical scars from his childhood as well as he can think quick on his feet. Bill Black has a bad boy exterior but Will has not lost who he is in the process. 

Many times throughout the book I thought Will exhibited actions as Bill Black that would happen in real life. This is also what makes his cover believable. All the time Bill Black is chasing a presumed ghost drug leader; Will learns that sometimes we don’t always have the “next” time to say how we feel so seizing the opportunity when faced with a second chance should not be overlooked.

For anyone who has lost someone they love, Sara Linton is a remarkable character that shows how picking up the pieces of your life and moving forward is ok. She thinks people won’t understand but in my opinion there is no set time that would be sufficient to move on. You just know it when your heart is ready. I didn’t understand how she thought she had been lied to because the nature of the situation caused for complete anonymity that was explained to her. This confusion causes tension in an already stressful situation, but I like how Sara responds when a long awaited confrontation intersects with a not so great night. Most importantly, I like how she is able to forgive. Love is not without forgiveness.  


This was my first time reading about the Lena Adams character. I quickly understood how she could be misunderstood. When you act a certain way for so long people are less likely to see you otherwise. Given the circumstances, something about the serenity of gardening and planting life, clashes her tough and standoffish personality because she was incapable of showing affection and had a terrible bedside manner. I just thought it was weird that she could tend a garden and care for flowers, but kept affection such as hand holding at a calculated proximity. Some of her actions seem as if she was without empathy, but at other times I found myself sympathizes with her.   

Overall, Unseen is a phenomenal mix of love, deceit, regret, sickness, and the will to move on. I rate this as a 5, and recommend this book. The lesson in Unseen to keep in mind is that we often underestimate people who we believe don’t have it in them and focus on the ones that we believe do. When in reality it’s the usual suspects we need to look out for. Unseen not only has a great plot, word choice, and flow, but the characters and events weave together flawlessly and have you guessing right up until the end.

Any reviews I post are the property of Fictionally-Speaking. They are not to be copied unless by the author, publisher or the reviewer. Any books we receive from an author or publisher are given our honest opinion. It does not sway are review in any way.
Unseen