Friday, April 15, 2011

The Big Read, at Ballarat Library

On Sunday April 10th, Adam, Luke and I headed to our local library for the Big Read. We heard a story-teller, looked at some books then sat down to read. I pulled out Adam's new Thomas the Tank book which he received on the day and the lollipop in the bag to actually make him sit still. We read for about 1o minutes before he got bored (pretty good) and it goes without saying that his new book now has several sticky pages!! Was a great morning though and was a pity we had to leave as he'd have done the crafty things all day. Oh, there were Chinese dragons who were VERY loud. He only liked them from a distance...

Book: Eliza's Gift



Summary: When Abigail Durant inherits a cottage from her friend, the world famous knitting guru Eliza Carpenter, she's sees it as her chance to start anew after the terrifying end of her last relationship. Only problem is, the cottage is slap-bang in the middle of a sheep ranch owned by Cade MacArthur, Eliza's tall, dark and infuriating nephew. Cade's a man's man, a cowboy through and through, and he's none too pleased there's now a young - albeit very pretty - woman living on his property. And that's before she tells him she plans to turn her new home into a knitting shop a With battlelines drawn, city girl and cowboy go head to head. But soon, with the sexual chemistry fizzing between them, both start to question the real nature of Eliza's gift...

Awesome cowboy romance! Makes me want to take up knitting. Just a lovely trashy country chick lit book. Loved it!

Tuesday Night Bookgroup: Breath



Summary: In the first part of the book, the narrator, Bruce Pike, recounts his boyhood friendship with Ivan "Loonie" Loon. As young boys, Pikelet and Loonie dare each other to perform dangerous stunts in the local river. When they become teenagers, they take up surfing and meet a former professional surfer named Sando, who leads them to new levels of recklessness. The novel explores the boys' youthful urge to seek out the farthest limits of courage, endurance and sanity in an attempt to escape the ordinariness of their lives. The second half of Breath is concerned with the disintegration of Pikelet's friendship with Sando and Loonie and his developing relationship with Sando's American wife Eva.

I liked this book alot but I didn't love it. It just lacked... something for me. Not sure what though. Also thought it was quite similar to Dirt Music in places. Worth reading though, it is a Miles Franklin winner after all!

Book: Mr Darcy Broke my Heart



Summary: Recently unemployed Claire Prescott heads to England to give a paper for her sister at a Jane Austen seminar. Not an Austen scholar by any means, Claire feels out of place at Oxford among the learned Austenites until she’s approached by elderly Harriet Dalrymple, who claims to be in possession of a partial manuscript of First Impressions, an early version of Pride and Prejudice. When she shows Claire the manuscript bit by bit, Claire is surprised to find a very different love story for Elizabeth Bennet unfolding on the page. Claire is questioning her own relationship with her stable but sports-obsessed boyfriend, Neil, while engaging in a serious flirtation with James, a handsome, inscrutable publisher. When Claire presents her sister’s paper and finds some startling parallels to her own life in it, she realizes she has some serious reevaluating to do.

An Austen spin off. Was ok, didn't quite hit all the marks for me but a nice chick lit story none the less!

Monday Night Bookgroup: The Closers



Summary: After three years out of the LAPD, Harry Bosch returns, to find the department a different place from the one he left. A new Police Chief has been brought over from New York to give the place a thorough clean up from top to bottom. Working with his former partner, Kiz Rider, Harry is assigned to the department's Open-Unsolved Unit, working on the thousands of cold cases that haunt the LAPD's files. These detectives are the Closers — they put a shovel in the dirt and turn over the past. By applying new techniques to old evidence they aim to unearth some hidden killers and bring them to justice, for "a city that forgets its murder victims is a city lost." Harry and Kiz are given a politically sensitive case when a DNA match connects a white supremacist to the 1988 murder of Rebecca Verloren, a sixteen-year-old girl. Becky was of mixed race, and the case appears to have a racial angle. This was LA before the riots and Rodney King; the city was a powder keg waiting for a match. The detectives who worked the case all those years ago seem to have done a decent job, but something doesn't fit.

Loved this book. Will definitely be ready more Harry Bosch novels!

Book: As Darkness Falls



Summary: Haunted by her failures, Detective Isabelle O’Connell is recalled to duty by DCI Alec Goddard to investigate the abduction of yet another child from her home town. They have only days to find the girl alive, with few clues, a town full of suspects, and a vast wilderness to search. It soon becomes a game of cat and mouse, with Bella firmly in the killer’s sights. For Bella, this case is already personal; for Alec, his best intentions to keep it purely professional soon dissolve, and his anguish over Bella’s safety moves beyond the concern for a colleague. Their mutual attraction leaves them both vulnerable to their private nightmares – nightmares the killer ruthlessly exploits.

Loved it. Similar to the Aussie rural romance ones but with a bit of crime thrown in. Easy enjoyable read!

Monday Night Bookgroup: Alchemist



Summary: The tale of Santiago, a shepherd boy, who dreams of seeing the world, is compelling in its own right, but gains resonance through the many lessons Santiago learns during his adventures. He journeys from Spain to Morocco in search of worldly success, and eventually to Egypt, where a fateful encounter with an alchemist brings him at last to self-understanding and spiritual enlightenment.

One of those tales that is meant to touch you spiritually but just didn't do it for me (or anyone else in bookgroup either!)

Book: Place of Safety



Summary: The rape of a young asylum seeker plunges family care lawyer Lilly Valentine into the toughest case of her life. 14-year-old Anna lives in Hounds Place, a hostel in Bedfordshire for youngsters seeking refuge from the atrocities being carried out in their homelands. A chance meeting with three public schoolboys ends in her being horrifically assaulted. When Artan, Anna's friend and a fellow asylum seeker, approaches Lilly about seeking justice through the courts she warns him that the law may not be on their side. Who will believe the words of an asylum seeker over the account of three privileged English boys? Despite this, Lilly is loath to get involved. After all, she is supposed to be putting her family and work commitments first. But Lilly quickly lives to regret that decision when Artan and Anna turn up at a school armed with guns, determined to take matters into their own hands. The day turns to tragedy and Anna is arrested.Wracked with guilt, Lilly is compelled to take on Anna's case despite the objections of her boyfriend Jack, boss, and most importantly, her own son Sam - a pupil at the school. Her decision to defend Anna attracts a huge backlash from the press and the community. And when local racist groups pick up on the story, Lilly's family and friends become a target. Can Lilly follow her conscience and defend Anna - or is this case just too close to home?

Was a good read. A bit slow in places but I'll give this author another shot.

Book: Not Buying It



Summary: Other than phenomenal willpower and maxed-out credit cards, what does it take to simply stop purchasing for 12 months? Levine took the plunge and found it irritating, exhilarating, thought provoking, and humiliating among many other conflicting emotions. What's an inexpensive substitute for Q-tips? How to best gift a soon-to-be college graduate without spending any money? How to avoid the consumption seduction that lurks in every corner? Levine chronicles her feelings in this almost-weekly diary of the year of nonpurchasing. Many of her points are intentionally provocative; for instance, not buying makes her feel vulnerable and having to ask for help...

This book was ok but was quite intellectual in points and discussed economic theory etc. Not really what I was after but still a decent read.

Book: Heart of Gold



Summary: CJ Wishart is a hardworking country girl with a heart of gold but a life that can be tough. Her job as a wool classer is back-breaking, her family life is a disaster and, after a string of dating debacles, she's put men in the too-hard basket. When strong, handsome Lindsay arrives on the scene as their new shearer, CJ can't help but take notice. They have an undeniable spark, but can she handle the complications and potential heartbreak of falling in love? With help from her friend and an endearing old farmer, CJ learns that when you stay true to yourself and open your heart, anything is possible.

LOVE LOVE LOVE! I adore these books and just can't get enough. Trashy outback romance but with the Aussie flavour and shearing shed! Bliss!

Tuesday Night Bookgroup: Balzac and the Little Chinese Seamstress



Summary: This book tracks the lives of two teens, childhood friends who have been sent to a small Chinese village for "re-education" during Mao's Cultural Revolution. Sons of doctors and dentists, their days are now spent muscling buckets of excrement up the mountainside and mining coal. But the boys receive a bit of a reprieve when the villagers discover their talents as storytellers; they are sent on monthly treks to town, tasked with watching a movie and relating it in detail on their return. It is here that they encounter the little seamstress, whom Luo falls for instantly. When, through a series of comic and clever tricks and favors, the boys acquire a suitcase full of forbidden Western literature, Luo decides to "re-educate" the ignorant girl whom he hopes will become his intellectual match.

I liked the book but it was all a bit of fairy-tale type nonsense for me and I wasn't too keen on the open ending... Pleased to have read it though.

Thursday, April 14, 2011

Tuesday Night Bookgroup: Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society



Summary: January 1946 - London is emerging from the shadow of the Second World War, and writer Juliet Ashton is looking for her next book subject. Who could imagine that she would find it in a letter from a man she’s never met, a native of the island of Guernsey, who has come across her name written inside a book by Charles Lamb. As Juliet and her new correspondent exchange letters, Juliet is drawn into the world of this man and his friends—and what a wonderfully eccentric world it is.

Oh what a gorgeous book. I loved this. So beautiful, highly recommend reading.

Book: One Red Paperclip



Summary: Kyle MacDonald had a paperclip. One red paperclip, a dream, and a resume to write. And bills to pay. Oh, and a very patient girlfriend who was paying the rent while he was once again “between jobs.” Kyle wanted to be able to provide for himself and his girlfriend, Dominique. He wanted to own his own home. He wanted something bigger than a paperclip. So he put an ad on Craigslist, the popular classifieds website, with the intention of trading that paperclip for something better. A girl in Vancouver offered him a fish pen in exchange for his paperclip. He traded the fish pen for a doorknob and the doorknob for a camping stove. Before long he had traded the camping stove for a generator for a neon sign. Not long after that, avid snow-globe collector and television star Corbin Bernsen and the small Canadian town of Kipling were involved, and Kyle was on to bigger and better things.

In One Red Paperclip, Kyle takes you on a journey around the globe as he moves from paperclip holder to homeowner in just fourteen trades. With plenty of irreverent and insightful anecdotes and practical tips on how you can find your own paperclip and realize your dreams, he proves it’s possible to succeed in life and achieve your dreams on your own terms. Quirky and inspirational, this story of a regular guy and a small, red, now-legendary paperclip will have you looking at your office supplies-and your life-in a whole new way.

I LOVED THIS BOOK. It isn't the best written or anything but it just grabbed me from the start and I was hooked. Highly recommend!

Monday Night Bookgroup: An Orphans Escape




My Saturday Bookgroup has now switched to Monday nights - so much easier with kids!

Summary: It was Christmas 1940 when brothers Billy six, Bobby, four, and Frank, not yet three, became wards of the state. They spent twelve hard years inside the Ballarat Orphan Asylum, suffering cruelty, deprivation and humiliation at the hands of their carers in the emotional wasteland of state care. But Frank Golding and his brothers were not orphans at all; the state had deemed their parents unworthy of raising them due to an 'irregular domestic situation.' Golding and his brothers constantly wondered 'Where are our parents? Why won't they come to rescue us?' The questions itched like scabs. Fifty years later, Golding learned of his parent's desperate battle to regain custody of their sons despite bureaucratic bungling and autocratic indifference.

I only persevered with this book because it was for bookgroup and it was about Ballarat so I could visualize all the places etc. Otherwise it was a very dry read.

Book: Under the Duvet



Summary: Bursting with her hilarious observations – on life, in-laws, weight loss and parties; her love of shoes and her LTFs (Long-Term Friends); the horrors of estate agents and lost luggage; and how she once had an office Christmas party that involved roasting two sheep on a spit, Moroccan style – it's the perfect bedtime companion, and will have you wincing with recognition or roaring with laughter.

Brilliant collection of short stories, articles etc. Some obviously better than other but I really enjoyed these!

Book: Great Australian Girls



Summary: Whether it's swimming the fastest 100 metres in the world, flying a plane or starring on stage, anything is possible if you dare. Great Australian Girls tells remarkable stories of over 20 determined women-many of whom began to achieve extraordinary things while still girls. This fascinating collection of stories ranging from convict to contemporary times will convince you that girls can do anything!

A nice interesting read. Some good stories, others just ok.

Book: The Associate


Summary: Kyle McAvoy, a callow Yale Law School student, dreams of a public service gig on graduation, until shadowy figures blackmail him with a videotape that could revive a five-year-old rape accusation. Instead of helping those in need, McAvoy accepts a position at a huge Wall Street firm, Scully & Pershing, whose clients include a military contractor enmeshed in a $800 billion lawsuit concerning a newly-designed aircraft. McAvoy can avoid exposure of his past if he feeds his new masters inside information on the case.

A classic Grisham. Loved it!

New Addition

I have definitely been very quiet of late but that may only be online, not in real life. In reality I have read LOTS of books which I will post later, but most importantly we had a new addition to the family!



Meet LUKE PETER SIEMENSMA. Born January 27th at 3:33pm at the Ballarat Base. A gorgeous brother for Adam. I ended up having an emergency caesarean after a nasty labour but all is forgotten now (almost)! He is such a beautiful boy and am loving having sometime at home with my two boys.