Wednesday, June 29, 2011

Similar Covers: Women’s Legs

When I was in Indigo last weekend with Linda (buying 4 books for the price of 3 with her), I spotted two books with familiar covers...

The first was Choral Society by Prue Leith (Nov 2009), which actually has three copycats: The Professors’ Wives’ Club by Joanne Rendell (Sep 2008), Something Borrowed by Martina Reilly (Oct 2008) and Confessions of a First Daughter by Cassidy Calloway (Aug 2009). These three covers have been featured before in two of my “similar covers” posts: Lookalikes of Lookalikes 2 and Remember Those Pointed-in Red Shoes?



The second book was Small Acts of Kindness by Bronwyn Donaghy (2003), which matches a book I have on my shelves: Summer House by Nancy Thayer (2009). It’s taken me a while to realize that the photo is reversed on these two covers! Thayer’s book has also been published with another cover, which also has a lookalike.


I can’t say that any of these covers appeals to me, although I’m intrigued by Donaghy’s novel (which appears to be out of print).

Note: All dates are from Amazon, except for Small Acts of Kindness, which came from the late author’s site.

Monday, June 27, 2011

Mailbox Monday (June 27) + Blogger Meet-Up

Mailbox Monday buttonMailbox Monday is a gathering place for readers to share the books they received during the previous week. Warning: MM can lead to envy, toppling TBR piles and huge wish lists! Mailbox Monday, which was started by Marcia (who now blogs at A girl and her books) is on blog tour—this month, it’s hosted by Brooke at The Bluestocking Guide.

Although Canada Post workers have now been legislated back to work, we won’t start receiving any mail until tomorrow, so none of these books came to me in the mail. I bought a few (lured into Indigo by a 4-for-3 sale); the rest I took home after meeting up with the usual Montreal book blogger gang (Cindy, Donna, Linda and Tina; Amanda unfortunately couldn’t make it).

Here’s my loot for this week:




Tina (Bookshipper) gave me the following books:
Donna (BookBound) brought me these books:
In addition to Bright with Laughter and Love, I also bought the following books this past week:
I was pretty proud of myself for giving away 11 books during our get-together, but then I wound up taking 11 home with me!

What did you find in your mailbox this past week? For other Mailbox Monday posts, head over to The Bluestocking Guide.

Wednesday, June 22, 2011

Similar Covers: Bird’s Nest (Part 3)

Here are three more lookalike covers: Broken Wings by Carla Stewart (which was released earlier this month by Faith Words, a division of Hachette Books), Bird in Hand by Christina Baker Kline (which came out in 2009 with William Morrow) and One Thousand Gifts: A Dare to Live Fully Right Where You Are by Ann Voskamp (which came out in January 2011 with Zondervan). Only the first two use the exact same image, but the third is very similar!



Here are the two original images (courtesy of Getty Images):


I think my favourite cover is Bird in Hand. I like the placement of the title over the woman’s hands on Kline’s cover, although Broken Wings is very eye-catching too. I dislike the title font on One Thousand Gifts: it seems too frilly for that cover.

For more bird’s nest covers, click over to Bird’s Nest (Part 1) and Bird’s Nest (Part 2).

Monday, June 20, 2011

Mailbox Monday (June 20)

Mailbox Monday buttonMailbox Monday is a gathering place for readers to share the books they received during the previous week. Warning: MM can lead to envy, toppling TBR piles and huge wish lists! Mailbox Monday, which was started by Marcia (who now blogs at A girl and her books) is on blog tour—this month, it’s hosted by Brooke at The Bluestocking Guide.

Only one book came into my house this past week, which, considering there is currently no postal service in Canada, is more than I expected. (It was sent by courier.) The book is Fire Monks: Zen Mind Meets Wildfire at the Gates of Tassajara by Colleen Morton Bursch. I’ll be reviewing it for a TLC Book Tour in July.

From the inside flap of the book:

In June 2008 more than two thousand wildfires, all started by a single lightning storm, blazed across the state of California. Tassajara, the oldest Zen Buddhist monastery in the United States, was at particular risk. Set deep in the Ventana wilderness east of Big Sur, the center is connected to the outside world by a single unpaved road. If fire were to enter the canyon, there would be no way out.

Disaster struck during the summer months, when Tassajara opens its doors to visitors and the grounds fill with guests expecting a peaceful respite. Instead, the mountain air filled with smoke, and the monks broke from regular meditation to conduct fire drills. All visitors were evacuated, and many Zen students followed. A small crew of residents and firefighters remained, planning to defend Tassajara. But nothing could have prepared them for what came next. When a treacherous shift in weather condtions brought danger nearer still, firefighters made the flash decision to completely evacuate the monastery. As the firefighters and remaining residents caravanned out the long road from Tassajara, five monks turned back, risking their lives to save the monastery.
Fire Monks is their story.

Sounds fascinating, right?

What did you find in your mailbox this past week? For other Mailbox Monday posts, head over to The Bluestocking Guide.

Thursday, June 16, 2011

Review: Secret Daughter by Shilpi Somaya Gowda

Opening lines of the book:

“He clutches the worn slip of paper in his hand, trying to compare the letters written there to the red sign hanging on the door in front of him. Looking back and forth from the paper to the door several times, he is careful not to make a mistake.”

Why I read it:

It was selected by my book club and I was keen to read it because I had heard good things about it.

What it’s about:

Secret Daughter by Shilpi Somaya Gowda is the story of Kavita, an Indian woman who gives up her baby for adoption to save the child’s life; Somer, the white American woman who adopts the baby; and Asha, their daughter. The novel is mainly told from the points of view of these three characters, but several chapters also focus on the two Indian husbands as well as Somer’s mother-in-law.

What didn’t work:

I’m starting with what didn’t work for me because I had a hard time with this book—I probably would have abandoned it had it not been a book club read. I found the characters flat and the plot predictable; Gowda also spends too much time “telling” and not enough “showing,” so I rarely felt like I could sink into the story and forget I was reading.

Several passages actually made me angry, such as this one: “By the time she reaches the age of thirty-two, she will no longer have the ability to bear children, the one thing that defines her as a woman” (p. 32). This type of thinking pervades the sections about Somer and at no point is it presented as problematic.

Worse still was this passage: “Being a woman in India is an altogether different experience. You can’t always see the power women hold, but it is there, in the firm grasp of the matriarchs who still rule most families” (p. 59). I hate this type of author intrusion in a work of fiction—Gowda is clearly addressing the Western reader directly here—but this sweeping generalization made my blood boil since it’s so obviously untrue. Some women in India may “rule” their families, but given that this novel addresses the issue of female infanticide, this is a particularly outrageous claim to make.

What worked:

I was glad in the end that I got to discuss this novel with my book club because otherwise I might not have had much of anything positive to say about it. However, our discussion made me realize that Gowda handles the evolution of Kavita’s husband well: at the beginning of the story he is presented as a despicable character, but by the end I felt compassion for him despite some of the terrible choices he had made.

Final thoughts:

Despite being moved by the ending of this book, I can’t recommend it. However, I am very much in the minority on this one!
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Recommended reviews:

alive on the shelvesLindy Reads and Reviews

Other reviews:

A Bookworm’s WorldA Mother’s TonicA Writer’s PenBooks in the CityCaribousmomIn the Next RoomKnitting and SundriesLibrary of Clean ReadsLife in the ThumbMommy’s ReadingMrs O’Dell ReadsNose in a BookRundpinneS. Krishna’s BooksThe Book ChickUnputdownablesWrite Meg
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Wednesday, June 15, 2011

Similar Covers: Girl Twirling Hair
(+ Alphabet Blocks)

TLC Book Tours recently announced a tour for Wishing for Snow: A Memoir by Minrose Gwin. This book sounds like something I’d enjoy, so I looked it up and came across the original hardcover, which is the first image below. For some reason, I promptly plugged this image into TinEye and look at what I’ve found! (This is my largest haul of lookalikes yet!)



The other books are:Finally, this image has also been used on an Arabic book (?) as well as on a poster promoting International Herpes Week in 2001! (I realize that many of these are fairly obscure titles, but still—it seems to me that this image should be retired for use on book covers!)

In addition, one of the books pictured above (Living with Grief) uses two stock photos on its cover: the photo of the wooden alphabet blocks has also been used on other covers (and one website):




These books are:
The final image above is from the FAQ section of the MacDonald Home Inspection Inc. website. Notice how the letters on the blocks have been changed in the last two images!

Wednesday, June 8, 2011

Similar Covers: Girl and Tree

I recently came across a book cover that I thought looked familiar; when I plugged Long Drive Home by Will Allison into TinEye, sure enough a lookalike popped up: Mockingbird by Kathryn Erskine. (Long Drive Home was just published in May by Free Press, an imprint of Simon & Schuster, while Mockingbird was published with this cover in February by Puffin, an imprint of Penguin Books.) However, I also discovered a third book with the same girl on the cover: When Daddy Comes Home by Toni Maguire (which was first published by Harper Element in 2007).



It’s hard to tell that it’s the same girl until you look at the original photos (courtesy of Getty Images):


Neat, huh?

Tuesday, June 7, 2011

Really Random Tuesday: More Bookstore Pics, Saving Up for BEA 2012 and Giveaway Winner!

I have a couple of fairly random photos to share with you this week, both taken in bookstores during my recent trip to Vermont. (Click on them to enlarge.) The first is of me on the staircase leading up to the children’s section in the Northshire Bookstore in Manchester:


Me inside the Northshire Bookstore in Manchester, VT

The second is of a beautiful tabletop inside the Briggs Carriage Bookstore in Brandon (where we stopped briefly on our way home but I didn’t buy any books):

Tabletop at Briggs Carriage Bookstore in Brandon, VT
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In other news, Cindy, Tina and I have all decided to start saving money for our Book Expo America trip next year. This is the piggy bank I’m using, which is actually a cow bank called Bessie (isn’t she cute? I’m going to have to fill her several times over!):

Bessie, my BEA 2012 cow bank

My ticker counter is at the very bottom of my blog; unfortunately, I couldn’t find a cow to mark my progress (they had turtles and trains and twins, but no cows, so I settled for a camel instead).
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Finally, it’s time to announce the winner of my latest giveaway: Teresa from Teresa’s Reading Corner won a copy of The Pleasing Hour by Lily King. I hope we both enjoy this book (since I haven’t read it yet) and thank you to all of you who entered my giveaway!
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Really Random Tuesday button

Really Random Tuesday is hosted by Suko at Suko’s Notebook. Feel free to join in, copy the button and link back to Suko’s blog.

BEA 2012, HERE I COME!