Saturday, July 30, 2011

Blackout Read-along: Week 4 (Pages 379-491) &
All Clear Read-along in August!

For all of you who are participating in the Blackout read-along that Carrie and I are hosting this month, don’t forget that this week’s final discussion is happening over on Carrie’s blog, Books and Movies. Even though I had been forewarned, I’m a bit disappointed in the ending that’s not an ending, but I’m looking forward to continuing the story in the next book, All Clear (which I just got out of the library). In the meantime, head over to Carrie’s discussion post to read her thoughts on the end (as well as mine, which I will share soon) and contribute your own!

If you’ve finished Blackout then you know we must now read All Clear, which concludes the story. Carrie and I are therefore going to be hosting the All Clear read-along from August 1 to 27.

Here’s the schedule:

August 1 to 5 (post to go up on August 6): pages 3-123 (stop when you get to the chapter headed with this quote: “Don’t leave it to others.”)

August 6 to 12 (post to go up on August 13): pages 124-300 (stop when you get to the chapter headed with this quote: “That won’t be there in the morning.”)

August 13 to 19 (post to go up on August 20): pages 301-470 (stop when you get to the chapter headed with this quote: “Just waiting, waiting, waiting till your number came up…”)

August 20 to 26 (post to go up on August 27): pages 471-641

To join us in this read-along, head over to Books and Movies and sign up using the Mr. Linky at the bottom of Carrie’s post. (Note that the dates for this read-along have been changed; we decided to spread it out over four weeks in the end, rather than six.)

Wednesday, July 27, 2011

Similar Covers: Necklaces

Here is a foursome of recent covers that look similar, although none use the same image:




The Four Ms. Bradwells by Meg Waite Clayton is the cover I’m most familiar with (I read and reviewed Meg’s first book, The Wednesday Sisters, a couple of years ago); her new book was just published in March by Ballantine Books (a division of Random House).

Little Black Dress by Susan McBride is almost the reverse cover; it’s coming out at the end of August with William Morrow (a Harper Collins imprint).

Populazzi by Elise Allen and Saving Maddie by Varian Johnson both match the first cover but feature different necklaces. Populazzi is out at the beginning of August with Harcourt Children’s Books (a division of Houghton Mifflin Harcourt), while Saving Maddie is the oldest of the bunch: it came out in 2010 with Delacorte Books for Young Readers (a Random House imprint).

Seeing them all together, the skin colour of the first woman looks wrong!

Have you seen any other covers that match these?

Monday, July 25, 2011

Mailbox Monday (July 25): The Montreal Book Bloggers’ Meet-Up!



You may remember that a couple of weeks ago, I posted about the Montreal Book Bloggers Facebook group and how we were organizing a meet-up this month. After much anticipation, we finally met this weekend for lunch and it was so much fun! (Book bloggers are some of the friendliest and most generous people I’ve ever met.) Of the 15 bloggers in the group, 13 were able to make it. Here we are at the restaurant (our friendly waiter took this photo with Lucy’s camera—click to enlarge):



Front row (L-R): PK from aisle b (in the pink dress), Cindy from Cindy’s Love of Books, Cat from Beyond Books, Lisa from starmetal oak book blog.

Back row (L-R): Me, Amanda from Tales and Treats, Melissa from YA Book Shelf, Jennifer from Mrs. Q Book Addict, Cindy from Tynga’s Reviews, Lucy from Moonlight Gleam’s Bookshelf,
Donna from BookBound, Laura from Library of Clean Reads, Tina from Bookshipper

Lucy (Moonlight Gleam’s Bookshelf) made each of us a name tag. Here’s mine (isn’t it awesome? I was so impressed!):



Of course, a book blogger meet-up wouldn’t be complete without a book exchange and, as you can see from the pile below, I brought home a lot of books!


From Cindy (Tynga’s Reviews):
From Melissa (YA Book Shelf):
From Amanda (Tales and Treats):
From Laura (Library of Clean Reads):
From Tina (Bookshipper):
From PK (aisle b):
As if that wasn’t enough, four publishers (Harper Collins Canada, Random House Canada, Scholastic Canada and Simon & Schuster Canada) very generously sent us boxes of books and swag. These are the three books I scored:



From Harper Collins Canada:
From Random House Canada:
Have you read any of these books? (The only one I’d already read is The Opposite of Fate by Amy Tan, one of my favourite writers.) Which one do you think I should read first? I’m leaning towards Season of Darkness, which is a mystery set in England during World War II—a perfect complement to the Connie Willis book I just finished reading!

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 Gwendolyn B. at A Sea of Books.

Saturday, July 23, 2011

Blackout Read-along: Week 3 (Pages 254-378)

Welcome to the third discussion post for the read-along of Blackout by Connie Willis, which I’m co-hosting with Carrie at Books and Movies. (If you missed them, please go back and read the discussions for week 1 and week 2.) How are you all doing? I found it especially hard to stop reading at the end of our section this week. For those of you who didn’t participate in last week’s discussion—I hope you haven’t given up on the book! Note that there are spoilers in this post.

Finally finally this book has taken off for me! I think it’s mainly because this part focuses on only three historians who are almost in the same time period, so it’s much easier to keep track of what’s going on. And what’s going on is pretty exciting and mysterious: neither Eileen nor Polly can get through their drops and Mike is injured and far from his (and no retrieval teams have shown up). Their situations seem fairly dire, especially Eileen’s: Imagine being stuck in the past and having your only home taken away from you, so you have nowhere to go, barely any money and only a vague recollection of where the other historian in your time period is—and to make matters worse, that historian is somewhere in London during the Blitz!

I think the fact that Mike is in Orpington must be significant: this is at least the second, if not the third time this town has been mentioned in the book. (Lieutenant Mary Kent gets charged with transporting soldiers to Orpington Hospital on page 123, and I’m pretty sure that was not the first time we’d heard of Orpington. Does anyone else remember?)

I also can’t imagine that we’ve seen the last of the Hodbins, though I can’t quite see what role they will play in the rest of the novel. I am worried that Eileen has changed history somehow by not giving them that ticket!

Finally, I’m very curious to see how the new characters that were introduced in part 2 will fit into the story. At least one of them was a historian...

Those are my thoughts for this week. What about you? Please share your thoughts in the comments! Please don’t comment on the book beyond page 378, though, as I haven’t read any further yet.

Next week’s discussion post will appear on Carrie’s blog at Books and Movies. I will also post a spoiler-free review at the end of the read-along.

Friday, July 22, 2011

Review: Fire Monks: Zen Mind Meets Wildfire at the Gates of Tassajara by Colleen Morton Busch

Opening lines of the book:

“On June 21, 2008, lightning strikes from one end of drought-dry California to the other ignited more than two thousand wildfires in what become known as the ‘lightening siege.’”

Why I read it:

I’ve long been interested in Zen Buddhism and I was curious to read this story about Zen in action.

What it’s about:

In June 2008, after lightening started over two thousand wildfires across the state of California, Tassajara, the oldest Buddhist monastery in the United States, found itself right in the fire’s path—at the end of a single unpaved road deep in the wilderness. Fire Monks: Zen Mind Meets Wildfire at the Gates of Tassajara by Colleen Morton Busch is the story of the five monks who stayed to save the monastery after everyone else was evacuated (including the firefighters).

What worked:

Fire Monks is an extraordinary, multifaceted story and Busch does a good job of weaving together all the strands of her narrative: the story of the fire itself, the personal stories of the players involved, some of the history of Zen Buddhism in the U.S. and of Tassajara in particular, and the politics of firefighting in California at the time. While on one level the book reads like an adventure story, its main appeal (to me at least) is as a study of Zen Buddhism in action. Though most of us are unlikely to be in a position to meet fire as these monks did, as Busch points out, “fire [is] the perfect metaphor for anything that comes uninvited and threatens to hurt us or the people and places we love” (p. 2). I found the story both moving and enlightening.

What didn’t work:

The large cast of characters was confusing at times, but a list of the main ones is included at the beginning of the book, which helped enormously. The one thing that I didn’t always follow was the politics between the different levels of firefighters involved. Although it was necessary to include some of this in the book to provide context for why certain decisions were made—this was the third wildfire that Tassajara faced, but the only one where the monks were left to their own devices—I was also least interested in this aspect of the story.

Favourite quote:

“The Greek philosopher Heraclitus said that you cannot step in the same river twice. A Zen master might add cheerfully: You cannot step in the same river because there is no river, there is no actual you. The river and you and your steeping are in a dynamic and interrelated state of constant change. Maybe it is the river that steps into you. Maybe there is only stepping, no one to step or thing to step into.

“In Zen, you can’t really make a ‘wrong’ decision. But you can’t make a ‘right’ decision, either. You can only respond moment to moment in a way that feels the least harmful and deluded, the most compassionate and true.

. . .

“As a ring of flame looped around Tassajara, David felt a palpable beat of hesitation, a flickering thought that maybe they’d gotten themselves in over their heads. But then, as individuals, and as a small sangha within the sangha, they acted. They made an effort. They moved toward a river of fire.

“They didn’t so much make a decision as manifest, collectively and without words, a mind already decided. They just got to work, doing something extraordinary with the mind they cultivated in their daily practices and activities. On another day, it might have been a bell that needed ringing, a soup that required stirring, a broom that needed picking up. At one o’clock on [that] afternoon, it happened to be a fire hose.” (pp. 180-181)

Final thoughts:

If you have any interest at all in Zen Buddhism (or wildfires), this book is essential reading. I have a feeling it will be one I will want to read again.

Thank you to Penguin USA for sending me this book to review.
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Fire Monks is on blog tour with TLC Book Tours in July. Visit these other blogs for reviews:

Man of La BookBroken TeepeeEnglish Major’s Junk FoodThe Road to HereThe Lost EntwifeDebbie’s Book Bagthe little readerBook Journey

Recommended review: Book Club Classics (also part of the TLC Book Tour)

Other reviews: BrevityFirefighter BlogIllusory Flowers in an Empty SkyMonkey Mind

Interview with the author: SF Weekly Blog

One Zen Buddhist priest’s take on why he hasn’t read the book: No Zen in the West
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Wednesday, July 20, 2011

Similar Covers: Three Sets of Familiar Covers

As soon as I saw the cover for When We Danced on Water by Evan Fallenberg (Harper Perennial, 2011), I immediately thought of Love and Biology at the Center of the Universe by Jennie Shortridge (NAL Trade, 2008), which I’ve already featured in a lookalike post. They are pretty similar, right?


And how about these two? The cover for The Free World by David Bezmozgis (Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2011) reminded me right away of Fits, Starts & Matters of the Heart: 28 True Stories of Love, Loss & Everything in Between (Freelance Success, 2010).


Finally, Suko pointed out this duo to me last week: Faith by Jennifer Haigh (Harper, 2011) and What We Have: One Family’s Inspiring Story about Love, Loss, and Survival by Amy Boesky (Gotham, 2010). And I’m pretty sure there are other covers out there that match these two...



None of these duos is an exact match, but they are still similar enough to cause confusion. Have you spotted any similar covers like these?

Edited to add:

Ha! I knew there was another cover that matched the duo above! It’s Happens Every Day: An All-Too-True Story by Isabel Gillies (Scribner, 2009). Thank you to Carrie (Nomadreader) for letting me know about this one!

And now I’ve found a fourth match: The Jade Cat by Suzanne Brøgger!

Monday, July 18, 2011

Mailbox Monday (July 18)

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 Gwendolyn B. at A Sea of Books.

I received one book for review this past week: The Glimpse Traveler by Marianne Boruch. It was sent to me by Indiana University Press for a blog tour in August (the book is coming out on August 19).

From the publisher’s website:

When she joins a pair of hitchhikers on a trip to California, a young Midwestern woman embarks on a journey about memory and knowledge, beauty and realization. This true story, set in 1971, recounts a fateful, nine-day trip into the American counterculture that begins on a whim and quickly becomes a mission to unravel a tragic mystery. The narrator’s path leads her to Berkeley, San Francisco, Mill Valley, Big Sur, and finally to an abandoned resort motel, now become a down-on-its-luck commune in the desert of southern Colorado. Neither a memoir about private misery, nor a shocking exposé of life in a turbulent era, The Glimpse Traveler describes with wry humor and deep feeling what it was like to witness a peculiar and impossibly rich time.

What did you find in your mailbox this past week? For other Mailbox Monday posts, head over to A Sea of Books.

Saturday, July 16, 2011

Blackout Read-along: Week 2 (Pages 124-253)

For all of you who are participating in the Blackout read-along that Carrie and I are hosting this month, don’t forget that this week’s discussion is happening over on Carrie’s blog, Books and Movies. I’m still feeling pretty confused by the story—there are even more characters and time periods to keep track of now! Head over to Carrie’s discussion post to read her thoughts (as well as mine, which I will share shortly) and contribute your own!

Friday, July 15, 2011

Review: Long Gone by Alafair Burke

Opening lines of the book:

“Alice Humphrey knew the kiss would ruin everything.”

Why I read it:

Although I’m generally not a fan of thrillers, the premise of this one sounded very intriguing and I was in the mood for an exciting read.

What it’s about:

After several months of unemployment, Alice Humphrey is offered a job that sounds too good to be true but also too good to resist: manager of a new Manhattan art gallery in the trendy Meatpacking District. Only a few days after the opening of the gallery’s first (and very controversial) show, Alice walks into a nightmare: the gallery has been cleaned out and the man who recruited her for the job is dead on the floor. Alice soon finds herself the prime suspect in a murder investigation.

What worked:

Long Gone by Alafair Burke did come with a warning of sorts, blurbed across the top of the cover, in fairly big letters: “Should come with a warning . . . highly addictive” (according to Karin Slaughter). Except I paid no attention to the warning—not being much of a thriller reader, I’ve never read Slaughter, so didn’t know I should trust her judgement. Instead I innocently started reading this book in the middle of the week, on a day when I needed to eat and work and then sleep. But forget eating, working or sleeping—I needed to know what was going to happen to Alice! Thank goodness I’m a freelancer who can take a “mental health” day without telling anyone it’s because I’m addicted to a book!

Long Gone is more than Alice Humphrey’s story; it’s also the story of Joann and her teenage daughter Becca (who has a secret or two), and of Hank Beckman, who’s obsessed with a man who may have had something to do with his sister’s death. Burke juggles all these well-rounded characters expertly—I was intrigued to see how they would connect (although I did guess one link before it was revealed) and thought the three story lines added to the narrative tension.

What didn’t work:

Unfortunately, the ending to Long Gone didn’t live up to the rest of the book. Up until the pieces started falling into place, I was willing to buy the whole story, but the ending seemed too far-fetched (and kinda came out of left field too). Plus I hated the fact that one of the stories was tied up within another one (we hear what happened to the characters from one of the three narrative strands via another character, rather than directly from them)—it made their story seem lesser somehow, not worthy of having its own separate ending.

Final thoughts:

Generally, if I dislike the ending of a movie, it’s a deal breaker, but I tend to be more forgiving when it comes to books (maybe because I’ve spent more time with the characters). Despite my disappointment in the ending of Long Gone, I recommend this one if you’re looking for a day or two of addictive escapist reading!

Thank you to Tina at Bookshipper for giving me this book to read.
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Other reviews:

BookshipperBook TwirpsIn one eye, out the otherIn Real LifeJen’s Book ThoughtsLazy Day Books BlogLinus’s BlanketSarah Reads Too MuchViews from the CountrysideWhimpulsiveZelda’s Reviews

Interview with the author: A Conversation with Alafair Burke @ Mulholland BooksLinus’s Blanket
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Wednesday, July 13, 2011

Similar Covers: Escaping Butterfly

I was quite surprised to see the cover for The Liberating Truth: How Jesus Empowers Women by Danielle Strickland among the covers in LibraryThing’s latest batch of Early Reviewers books: it’s almost exactly the same cover as was used on The Last Prince of the Mexican Empire by C. M. Mayo.



The Liberating Truth will be published in August by Monarch Books, while The Last Prince of the Mexican Empire came out last year with Unbridled Books.

Tuesday, July 12, 2011

Really Random Tuesday: Calling All Montreal Book Bloggers & Book Lovers


Are you a book blogger living in the Greater Montreal area? Are you interested in meeting other local book bloggers to swap books, exchange ideas and possibly organize events? Cat at Beyond Books recently created a Facebook group called Montreal Book Bloggers—so far there are 15 of us in the group! (See my MBB blog roll on the right.) We’re planning our first get-together on July 23—email me at shereadsandreads[at]gmail[dot]com if you would like to join us!



For any of my local readers, the Montreal Book Bloggers group has also created a Montreal Book Lovers page on Facebook. We’ll have a better idea of what we’ll be doing with this page after we meet, but in the meantime, please check it out!
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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.

Monday, July 11, 2011

Mailbox Monday (July 11)

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 Gwendolyn B. at A Sea of Books.

I was starting to despair last week that I would ever get any mail, let alone books, but then finally on Friday I received the two books I’d been waiting for...

The first was Wishing for Snow: A Memoir by Minrose Gwin, which I will be reading for a TLC Book Tour later this month.

From the back cover:

For novelist Minrose Gwin, growing up was a time of chaos and uncertainty, the result of being raised by a parent with a serious mental illness. Life with poet Erin Taylor was unpredictable at best and painful at the worst times, as she spiraled ever deeper into psychosis until her eventual death from cancer. But reading her mother’s childhood diary as an adult, Minrose encountered a very different Erin Taylor Clayton Pitner. Her late mother’s words, written in the 1930s, revealed a cheerful, perceptive young girl growing up in rural Mississippi who wished for snow that “usually didn’t come”—a girl with a bright view of the future as she pr
ogressed from college student to young mother to published poet, only to have an unbearable darkness close in around her, cruelly suffocating her hopes and dreams. In her poignant and extraordinary memoir, Wishing for Snow, Minrose Gwin sets out to rediscover her mother in the poems, letters, newspaper clippings, and quixotic lists that Erin left behind after her death. The result is an unforgettable true story of a Southern family and the tragic figure at its center—and a loving daughter’s determination to find the mother she never knew.

The second was Wild Comfort: The Solace of Nature by Kathleen Dean Moore, which I won from Sarah at Sarah Reads Too Much during Armchair BEA. I selected this book based on Wendy’s review (at Caribousmom).

From the back cover:

In an effort to make sense of the deaths of several loved ones, Kathleen Dean Moore turned to the comfort of the wild, making a series of excursions to ancient forests, wild rivers, remote deserts, and windswept islands to learn what the natural world could teach her about sorrow and gladness. This book is a record of her experiences. It’s a stunning collection of carefully observed accounts of her life—tracking otters on the beach, cooking breakfast in the desert, canoeing in a snow squall, wading among salmon in the dark—but it is also a profound meditation on the healing power of nature.

Finally, my dad recently returned from a trip to Europe, during which he visited Chatsworth House (which is where the movie The Duchess was filmed) and bought me a signed copy of Wait for Me!: Memoirs of the Youngest Mitford Sister by Deborah Devonshire, as he knew I’m interested in the Mitford sisters.

From the inside flap:

Wait for Me! is a misleading title: people have been running to catch up with the youngest of the famous Mitford sisters ever since she could walk. At the age of ninety, Debo (as she is known to all her friends) looks back on a life lived at a cracking pace. She tells the story of her upbringing, lovingly and wittily describing her parents (so memorably fictionalised by her sister Nancy); she talks candidly about her brother and sisters, and their politics (while not being at all political herself), finally setting the record straight. Throughout the book she writes brilliantly about the country and her deep attachment to it and those who live and work in it.

What did you find in your mailbox this past week? For other Mailbox Monday posts, head over to A Sea of Books.

Saturday, July 9, 2011

Blackout Read-along: Week 1 (Pages 3-123)

Welcome to the first discussion post for the read-along of Blackout by Connie Willis, which I’m co-hosting with Carrie at Books and Movies. How are you all doing so far? Have you read the first 13 chapters? I must confess that I read them a week in advance, but I’m determined to keep to the read-along schedule for the rest of the book. Note that there are minor spoilers in this post.

Much like To Say Nothing of the Dog (which I re-read recently), I found the beginning of this book quite confusing: there are so many characters and time periods to keep track of and so many details that don’t make sense yet. This is both a strength and a weakness of Willis’s writing. I like that she just throws the reader into the story without too much explanation—we have to trust that it will eventually all fall into place and make sense. But at the same time, the first 120 pages of this book all felt like set-up to me, and I haven’t really gotten into the story yet. Plus I don’t like feeling that I should be taking notes to make sure I don’t miss anything!

One thing I realize when I read Willis’s Oxford Time Travel novels is how shaky my knowledge of history is. I’d never heard of the Phoney War before, for example, and must admit that I don’t know much about the Battle of Britain or the Dunkirk evacuation either. But I get a kick out of the fact that I can read SF and learn actual history, although it can sometimes be hard to tell where the real history leaves off and the fiction begins.

Anyway, what’s most intriguing to me so far is that so many drops are being rescheduled and so many historians are experiencing significant slippage—what does it all mean? And I’m pretty sure Colin’s outburst about Dr. Ishiwaka’s theories is important too, especially since Dunworthy then takes off to see Ishiwaka...

Those are my thoughts so far. What about you? Let me know if you write your own post and I will link to it in mine. Otherwise, please share your thoughts in the comments! Please don’t comment on the book beyond page 123, though, as I haven’t read any further yet.

Next week’s discussion post will appear on Carrie’s blog at Books and Movies.

Wednesday, July 6, 2011

Similar Covers: Pensive Woman (Jane Austen spin-offs)

As soon as I saw the cover for The Twelfth Enchantment by David Liss on the TLC Book Tours site, I knew it looked familiar. My recollection was that the other book I was looking for was for a Jane Austen spin-off, so I plugged her name into Amazon and came across a third lookalike! The book I was originally thinking of was Confessions of a Jane Austen Addict by Laurie Viera Rigler, but What Would Mr. Darcy Do? by Abigail Reynolds also uses the same image (cropped quite differently).



The Twelfth Enchantment will be published by Random House in August. Confessions of a Jane Austen Addict came out in 2007 with Dutton (a Penguin imprint), while What Would Mr. Darcy Do? came out earlier this year with Sourcebooks. I must admit that I hope Random House will change the cover for Liss’s book before they publish it!

Do any of you own any of these books? Can you tell me what the source of the cover image is?

Tuesday, July 5, 2011

Review: The Water Wars by Cameron Stracher

Opening lines of the book:

“The year before he joined the Reclamation, when he was still seventeen, my brother Will set a new high score at the YouToo! booth at the Gaming Center.”

Why I read it:

I’m curious about dystopian fiction and this particular future sounds all too plausible. Plus I scored a signed copy of this book at BEA last year.

What it’s about:

In a future where water is incredibly scarce, fifteen-year-old Vera and her older brother Will befriend the mysterious Kai, the son of a driller. When Kai disappears under suspicious circumstances, the siblings set off to rescue him.

What I thought:

I found the beginning of The Water Wars by Cameron Stracher quite slow, and it didn’t help that Kai rubbed me the wrong way from the start: when Vera first sees him, he spills the last remaining drops of a glass of water into the dust. In a world where water is so scarce that men will kill for it, this gesture seems both foolhardy and arrogant. The pace of the book picked up when Vera and Will went looking for Kai, but unfortunately, the story didn’t have enough tension for me. Vera and Will get themselves into some serious situations, but I never felt like they were in any real danger, which diminished my enjoyment of this book. Stracher also makes the mistake of summarizing some of the action (via Vera, who is the book’s narrator), rather than showing us what is going on.

Favourite quotes:

“When he was a boy, there were still green fields and blue lakes. Kids played sports outside, like baseball and football, that existed now only on the screens. You could lie in a tub filled with warm water for no reason except to relax. It seemed foolish and wasteful and wonderful—to live as if the sky were endless and time itself had no measure.” (p. 31)

“A new beginning, I thought. Without hunger, thirst, or war. A river could be like a time machine: Step into the same place and it was already changed. But I wondered if there could ever be enough water to start again.” (p. 33)

Final thoughts:

Although the world Stracher creates is all too believable, the story he tells unfortunately is not. While the book was interesting enough to keep me reading (to find out what was going to happen), I found the ending simplistic and disappointing. I can’t recommend this book.

Thank you to Sourcebooks for providing me with this book to review.
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Other reviews:

365 Days of ReadingAt Home with BooksBook ChatterBooks and Literature for TeensDaemon’s booksLinus’s BlanketLuxury Readingnovel novicePresenting LenoreReading AddictReading NookReading with TequilaRhapsody in Books WeblogSqueaky BooksthebookbindThe Future FireThe Literary Life of the Well-Read Wife

Interview with the author: Presenting Lenore
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Friday, July 1, 2011

Official Start of the July Read-along of Blackout by Connie Willis

Today marks the official start of the July read-along of Blackout by Connie Willis, which I’m co-hosting with Carrie at Books and Movies. You can join us at any point during the month: head over to Carrie’s read-along announcement post for more details and to sign up.

Carrie and I will alternate posting discussion starters every Saturday, starting on this blog on July 9. I can’t wait!

Happy Canada Day to all my fellow Canadians!

BEA 2012, HERE I COME!