Teaser Tuesday: The God of the Hive

On Teaser Tuesdays readers are asked to:

  • Grab your current read.
  • Let the book fall open to a random page.
  • Share with us two (2) “teaser” sentences from that page, somewhere between 7 and 12 lines.
  • You also need to share the title of the book that you’re getting your “teaser” from … that way people can have some great book recommendations if they like the teaser you’ve given.

Laurie R. King’s Sherlock Holmes/Mary Russell novels are some of my favorite mysteries ever, and not just because I like taking a break from a world where we discuss hair growth shampoo and spending time in a world where high tea is a normal event. I’ve been a Holmes fan since as long as I can remember, but I love the relationship that King has created with his protege’ cum wife Mary. It just works.

Like many of her readers, the “to be continued” ending of the last novel really disappointed me, which is why I’ve been counting the days until The God of the Hive was ready. My copy arrived today. I can’t wait to read it!

Evening, and I might have curled up to sleep fully clothed except it had occurred to me that children required putting to bed. Estelle and Goodman were in front of the fire, he on the floor with Damian’s sketch-book on his knee, she stretched with her belly across the tree-round he used as a foot-stool, narrating the drawings for him. I had found the book in my rucksack, astonished that it had survived this far, and leafed through its pages before I gave it to her, making sure it contained none of his detailed nudes or violent battle scenes. Some of the drawings I had found mildly troubling, but doubted a small child would notice.

— from The God of the Hive, by Laurie R. King (page 80)

Teaser Tuesday: Twelve Rooms with a View

On Teaser Tuesdays readers are asked to:

  • Grab your current read.
  • Let the book fall open to a random page.
  • Share with us two (2) “teaser” sentences from that page, somewhere between 7 and 12 lines.
  • You also need to share the title of the book that you’re getting your “teaser” from … that way people can have some great book recommendations if they like the teaser you’ve given.

To be honest, when I first began reading Twelve Rooms with a View, the new novel by Theresa Rebeck, I thought the lead character, Tina, was a bit dense. This is a woman who doesn’t know the difference between a prevera review and Prometheus Unbound, I thought. But it turned out that Tina had her own form of intelligence, and I ended up really liking the book. A lot.

Eyeing Mrs. White’s gorgeous pink outfit, I felt a sincere moment of sympathy for those teenage girls learning a broader system of values. I mean, their mother was running all over New York City in designer suits, and they had to throw on the same ugly pleated skirts every morning before heading uptown to hang out with a bunch of nuns. It seemed like a pretty nasty fate, especially considering that they lived in Manhattan, where I would have thought that nobody, and I mean nobody, went to Catholic school to learn values.

— from Twelve Rooms with a View, by Theresa Rebeck (page 94)

Teaser Tuesday: The Crowning Glory of Calla Lily Ponder

On Teaser Tuesdays readers are asked to:

  • Grab your current read.
  • Let the book fall open to a random page.
  • Share with us two (2) “teaser” sentences from that page, somewhere between 7 and 12 lines.
  • You also need to share the title of the book that you’re getting your “teaser” from … that way people can have some great book recommendations if they like the teaser you’ve given.

I confess, I’d read pretty much anything that comes from the mind of Rebecca Wells, even if she was writing about adult acne treatment, so I’m really excited to have her latest novel – non-Ya-Ya, though still set in Louisiana – in process right now.

“And that’s where I get my secret, secret ingredients. Calla, here in New Orleans, spells are still a commonplace occurrence. Think of my secret potions like protective spells. Did you know that in the colder climates, ninety percent of the body’s heat is lost from the head? Well, the reverse is true with spells. Ninety percent of the spell goes in through your hair and your head.”

I was getting the chills, listening to Ricky talk.

“A true hairdresser pushes the bad energy out and knows how to replace it with good energy. And also when to walk away from certain energy, because a good hairdresser must know how to protect him or herself as well. The inspiration that a beautician – a true beautician – can bring to a person, that person in turn can bring into the world.”

from The Crowning Glory of Calla Lily Ponder by Rebecca Wells

Booking Through Thursday: Which End?

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On Thursday, April 15th, Booking through Thursday asked:

In general, do you prefer the beginnings of stories? Or the ends?

It would be easy to cheat on this and say that one end of a book isn’t much good without the other, but the truth is, I do have a preference. In acne solutions, I prefer the end, but when it comes to stories, books, anything written, it’s the beginning that does it for me. The opening chapters of a good book hook you – seduce you – they’re not mere teasers, but introductions to characters and situations. Once you get to the end, there is definition, but until then, anything can happen.

Well, anything that fits within the established rules of the world that book inhabits.

I’ve said before that nothing disappoints me more than when a really enjoyable book ends, but the reverse is also true: nothing excites me more than the beginning of a really good story.

Booking Through Thursday: Learning

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On Thursday, April 1st, Booking through Thursday asked:

I spent the day with my friend’s twins the other day. Twins who are learning to read, sounding out the words, trying to make sense of the stories in their books, and it made me nostalgic for when I learned. I still remember the distinct moment that the concept of reading clicked, with a meglomaniacal realization that, all I needed to do was learn the words and I could read anything in the whole world. (That’s my kind of world domination.)

Do you remember learning to read? What’s your earliest reading memory?

I would like to say that my earliest reading memories are of something wonderful like Winnie the Pooh or A Child’s Garden of Verses, but while those were two of the things I read very early in life, the early reading I remember most is Highlights magazine. I don’t think I ever had my own subscription, but it was an ubiquitous presence in any doctor’s or dentist’s office I visited until I was eleven or twelve. In fact, I wouldn’t be surprised if it’s sitting on the table in some Plano cosmetic dentist‘s office right now.

Admittedly, Highlights wasn’t great reading, but those oversized pages kept me occupied during many excessively boring doctor visits, and for that I am grateful.

As to learning to read, I don’t remember the process at all. I don’t even remember NOT being able to read.

For the Love of Reading

I’ve always thought that memes are the blogger’s equivalent of joining a franchise affiliate program – you’re given the form and content, but have the room to put your own spin on it. I’m in a meme-ish mood today, hence this one.

What have you just read?
I just finished reading William Dietrich’s latest Ethan Gage adventure, The Barbary Pirates

What are you reading now?
I’m between books. I have two I need to review, Skin and Bones by an author whose name I can’t remember, and which appears to be missing in my house (I swear it was on the counter an hour ago) and This One is Mine by Maria Semple. Guess which one I can actually find?

Do you have any idea what you’ll read when you’re done with that?
Whichever one of the two above that isn’t first, will be second, but then I’m open. I have a bunch of books I recently bought that I haven’t read yet, and there’s a new Holmes/Russell coming out soon.

What’s the worst thing you were ever forced to read?
Miss Lonelyhearts, by Nathanael West. I had to read it for a writing conference a couple years ago. It is, hands down, the most bleak, depressing, unrelentingly dark piece of fiction I’ve ever been exposed to.

What’s one book you always recommend to just about anyone?
Katherine Neville’s The Eight

Admit it, sadly the librarians at your library know you on a first name basis, don’t they?
No. I’m not a frequent visitor to our local library. The collection sucks, the first rack when you walk in is Christian fiction, and it smells funny. Give me funky bookstore-cafes over libraries, any day.

Is there a book you absolutely love, but for some reason, people never think it sounds interesting, or maybe they read it and don’t like it at all?
Jane Eyre. No really, in an age where the classics are not required reading, anything Bronte earns sneers. In more modern fiction…Bread Alone by Judith Ryan Hendricks.

Do you read books while you eat?
Yes.

While you bathe?
Yes, but generally only paperbacks.

While you watch movies or tv?
Sometimes if we rent a DVD that is more Fuzzy’s taste than mine. Ditto television.

While you listen to music?
Sometimes, but it has to be instrumental music.

While you’re on the computer?
E-books and fanfiction, and once in a while, a proof or ARC that’s been delivered via PDF.

When you were little did other children tease you about your reading habits?
No. All my friends were bookish and geeky, too.

What’s the last thing you stayed up half the night reading because it was so good you couldn’t put it down?
Coop, by Michael Perry

Have any books made you cry?
Not whole books, but scenes. Certain scenes in The Zookeeper’s Wife, for example, or, when I was a girl, Little Women

Booking Through Thursday: Break

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On Thursday, March 25th, Booking through Thursday asked:

Do you take breaks while reading a book? Or read it straight through? (And, by breaks, I don’t mean sleeping, eating and going to work; I mean putting it aside for a time while you read something else.)

In my world, there are two kinds of books. One kind is what I call “bathroom books.” These are often, but not always, books of essays or short stories, tend to be non-fiction when they’re longer works, and are easy to pick up just for a few minutes, and put down when there’s something else that must be done.

Then there are the books that I immerse myself in, the ones where I literally plan to have a clear schedule, a pot of tea or coffee, and nothing to do but read. Most often, these are thick novels with compelling characters. Sometimes they’re memoirs. Maeve Binchy and Lauren Willig are two of my favorite authors of this type of book. So is Katherine Neville. And Madeleine L’Engle.

The truth is, my preferred reading style is to read straight through unless something forces me to stop, no matter what I’m reading, and when a book is really good, I get lost in it, and even expect the weather outside to match the weather in whatever I’m reading.

Do I take breaks?

Only when I absolutely have to.

Booking Through Thursday: Sensual

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On Thursday, March 18th, Booking through Thursday asked:

Which do you prefer? Lurid, fruity prose, awash in imagery and sensuous textures and colors? Or straight-forward, clean, simple prose?

(You thought I was going to ask something else, didn’t you? Admit it!)

I like vivid imagery as much as the next person, and I really appreciate it when an author can surprise me with a description, but I’m not a particular fan of lurid writing. I find it gets tiresome after a while. Give me a Diane Ackerman book – fiction or non – and I’m a happy woman. Give me Michael Perry, Kathleen Norris, or Madeleine L’Engle, and I’m completely satisfied. But even though all of them are extremely descriptive writers, none of them is particularly lurid or fruity.

Well, except when they’re writing about actual…fruit.

Sunday Scribblings: the Book that Changed Everything

I haven’t participated in Sunday Scribblings in a while, and thought I would tonight. The prompt is to write about the book that changed everything.

It’s difficult for me to pin down just one book that was life-changing for me. I read very quickly, when I’m in a reading mood, and shift from book to book so very often, but there are several that stand out as sort of literary milestones in my life.

One of my first introductions to poetry, for example, was Robert Louis Stevenson’s A Child’s Garden of Verses. It may be difficult to imagine the same man who created Treasure Island spinning children’s rhymes, but he did, and he did it well. I remember reciting, “I have a little shadow that goes in and out with me…” with my grandmother, and to this day, when I see a swing-set in a playground or park, “How Do You Like to Go Up in a Swing?” races through my brain. At about the same time, though, I was also very much in love with Maurice Sendak’s Where the Wild things Are, and Judith Viorst’s Alexander and the Terrible, Horrible, No Good, Very Bad Day. I still love both.

From Stevenson, my mind flows naturally to A. A. Milne. My mother would happily remind me, where she here while I was writing this, that when I was still learning to read, I pronounced it as “Ah Ah Milne.” In my defense, I was only four. For several years in a row, my aunt Patti, my “book aunt,” gave me another volume of Milne for each birthday and Christmas, so it was no surprise that I received his book of verse, Now We Are Six when I turned six. It wasn’t any less wonderful for being predictable.

From Milne we jump ahead a bit, to Laura Ingalls Wilder. Not far ahead, mind you. I think I read the vast majority of the Little House books when I was seven, which was not long after the television show began. I watched the show religiously, of course, but I have always preferred the books. Several years ago, as a newlywed and new resident of South Dakota, I re-read the entire series, including some of the books that I hadn’t read as a child (specifically On the Way Home). While the language is simple in the extreme, Wilder’s stories are really universal, and reading them while walking on land where she had walked made them seem that much more “real.”

At about the same time I was reading Wilder, I was also reading the Hardy Boys and Nancy Drew series, and my mother had begun reading Little Women to me, a chapter at a time. The mysteries were great, and I enjoyed them, but it was Alcott’s work that really became part of my soul. I wanted to be Jo March. Sometimes, I still want to be Jo March. I boggle at the notion that I eventually married a man two years my junior – I always dated older guys before Fuzzy, and thought that was where my life’s plan was leading me. Fuzzy has an old soul though, so maybe that’s why we fit. That and he puts up with me, grounds me…but I digress.

Little Women would be the last book my mother would read aloud to me at bedtime, and midway through it, I fired her. I don’t remember her reaction, I just wanted to finish the story, and the whole chapter-a-night thing was just not working for me any more, but the year after, I found out that something else did work for me: science fiction. My first foray into the genre was through Madeleine Lengle’s A Wrinkle in Time, which was given to me when my mother and I were having an overnight with one of her friends. In my head, I was lying on an old quilt in a loft on a rainy night, reading a hardcover version of this book and eating coffee ice cream, but I think the loft part is imaginary, because it’s the kind of book that feels like it SHOULD be read in a loft.

When I was nine or ten, I discovered Judy Blume – as did every nine-or-ten-year-old in my generation. As an adult, I would read Summer Sisters which was meant for the adult women who loved Blume as children, and I vaguely recall enjoying it, but no more or less than anything else I’d read at that time. Other books from elementary school that stuck with me, however, are Louise Fitzhugh’s Harriet the Spy, and
E. L. Konigsburg’s From the Mixed-Up Files of Mrs. Basil E. Frankweiller. The former is what cemented my habit of keeping notebooks, and always using my middle initial (and, I might add, got me hooked on tomato sandwiches), and the latter simply delighted me. If you’ve never read it, it’s about two children, Claudia and James Kincaid, who tire of parental tyranny and run away from home, only to hide in the Metropolitan Museum of Art in Manhattan.

Junior High School brought me to Douglas Adams. I will leave it at that. Let’s just say, the Hitchhiker’s Guide and I go way back.

High School found me biking to the library every weekend to stuff my pack full of books. Anne McCaffrey, Terry Brooks, and “The Cat Who…” were all part of my weekend reading, but so was Kim Stanley Robinson and a lot of Dick Francis, and on a long bus ride home from a week at the Ashland, OR Shakespeare Festival that I made the acquaintance of one Nero Wolfe, and fell into a love affair with the misogynistic gourmand that would last for decades.

As an adult, it’s been nonfiction that has been most meaningful. Kathleen Norris helped me understand my husband’s family, with Dakota: a Spiritual Geography, and The Cloister Walk helped me embrace my own spirituality. Madeleine L’Engle’s been a continual presence, both with her fiction – Certain Women is a favorite – and her nonfiction (I’ve re-read the four Crosswicke Journals more than once).

Right now, I’m reading a lot of Michael Perry, in fact, I just finished Truck: a Love Story and started reading Coop, and I think he’s an author I’ll keep near me for a while.

Books are my friends, as much as people are, and through them, I’ve visited exotic locales, picked up new uses of language, and learned to see the world differently. There’s no way I could ever select just one that changed my life. They all do. It’s just that some of the changes are fleeting, like a wistful smile, while others become ingrained in my brain, and body, heart, mind, and soul.

Tuesday Teasers: The Barbary Pirates

On Teaser Tuesdays readers are asked to:

  • Grab your current read.
  • Let the book fall open to a random page.
  • Share with us two (2) “teaser” sentences from that page, somewhere between 7 and 12 lines.
  • You also need to share the title of the book that you’re getting your “teaser” from … that way people can have some great book recommendations if they like the teaser you’ve given.

I love a rollicking ocean-going adventure as much as the next girl, and I also love period mysteries, so when I was offered the opportunity to review William Dietrich’s latest novel, The Barbary Pirates, I took a break from packing for a trip and writing about online life insurance to respond with a heartfelt “Yes! Please!.”

The book (an uncorrected proof of the novel) arrived while I was away, and I’m on a few pages into it, but I had to share. Remember, this text is quoted from an ARC and may differ from the final copy, on sale on March 30th.

The tunnel kept getting narrower, however, squeezing down toward my head. I scraped several times, and could feel the trickle of blood from my crown. It was getting hard to breathe, the air stale, and finally my shoulders wedged and I could go no farther. Utterly dark, no hope ahead, and as I patted with my hands I could feel nothing but enclosing rock. I probed with my rifle, which only confirmed the passage constricted still more, far too small to wriggle through. Cuvier bumped up against the soles of my boots, and grunted.

“What’s wrong, Ethan?”

“I’m stuck!” I couldn’t get the room to even go backward. “This isn’t the way out, there’s no air. We have to go back to that little chasm we crawled over and go down.”

“Go down? Merde, I’m longing to go up!”