Audiobook Love

You should never outgrow storytime.

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    January 2010
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  • Current Books

    The Year of the Bomb
  • Gathering Dust..

    Foundation (Foundation 1) The Eight
  • Categories

  • Wanna Hang Out?

  • Best of...

  • Archives

  • 2010 Challenges


    0/2--Little Women, Emma



    0/12--Alice in Wonderland (Jan), Journey to the Center of the Earth (Feb)


    2/75--Cleopatra's Daughter, Little Women, A Little Princess, Secret Garden, City of Bones, Eragon, Faerie Wars, Graveyard Book, The Host, Artemis Fowl, Lemony Snicket 1-13,


    1/12--One Second After


    1/100--One Second After


    3/12--Cleopatra's Daughter, One Second After, A Little Princess


    2/20
    Young Adult--Cleopatra's Daughter, A Little Princess T.B.R.--, Shiny & New--, Bad Blogger’s--, Charity--, New in 2010--, Older Than You--, Win! Win!--, Who Are You Again?--, Up to You--


    0/9
    Hugo Winner--, Nebula Winner--, Phillip Dick--, Heinlein--, Hugo Nominee--, 90's--, 80's--, 70's--, 50/60's--


    0/12--Something Wicked This Way Comes, The Inheritance of Loss, The Three Musketeers, American Gods, Devil in the White City, The Know-it-All, The Killer Angels, The Road, The Martian Chronicles, The Once and Future King, Old Man’s War, Emma Alternates:The Odyssey, The Time Machine


    3/100--Cleopatra's Daughter, One Second After, A Little Princess


    1/4--A Little Princess

  • Ongoing Challenges


    The Pulitzer Project
    4/83--
    2009 - Olive Kitteridge by Elizabeth Strout
    2008 - The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao by Junot Diaz
    2007 - The Road (McCarthy)
    2006 - March (Brooks)
    2005 - Gilead (Robinson)
    2004 - The Known World (Jones)
    2003 - Middlesex (Eugenides)
    2002 - Empire Falls (Russo)
    2001 - The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier & Clay (Chabon)
    2000 - Interpreter of Maladies (Lahiri)
    1999 - The Hours (Cunningham)
    1998 - American Pastoral (Roth)
    1997 - Martin Dressler: The Tale of an American Dreamer (Millhauser)
    1996 - Independence Day (Ford)
    1995 - The Stone Diaries (Shields)
    1994 - The Shipping News (Proulx)
    1993 - A Good Scent from a Strange Mountain (Butler)
    1992 - A Thousand Acres (Smiley)
    1991 - Rabbit at Rest (Updike)
    1990 - The Mambo Kings Play Songs of Love (Hijuelos)
    1989 - Breathing Lessons (Tyler)
    1988 - Beloved (Morrison)
    1987 - A Summons to Memphis (Taylor)
    1986 - Lonesome Dove (McMurtry)
    1985 - Foreign Affairs (Lurie)
    1984 - Ironweed (Kennedy)
    1983 - The Color Purple (Walker)
    1982 - Rabbit is Rich (Updike)
    1981 - A Confederacy of Dunces (Toole)
    1980 - The Executioner’s Song (Mailer)
    1979 - The Stories of John Cheever (Cheever)
    1978 - Elbow Room (McPherson)
    1976 - Humboldt’s Gift (Bellow)
    1975 - The Killer Angels (Shaara)
    1973 - The Optimist’s Daughter (Welty)
    1972 - Angle of Repose (Stegner)
    1970 - Collected Stories by Jean Stafford (Stafford)
    1969 - House Made of Dawn (Momaday)
    1968 - The Confessions of Nat Turner (Styron)
    1967 - The Fixer (Malamud)
    1966 - Collected Stories by Katherine Anne Porter (Porter)
    1965 - The Keepers Of the House (Grau)
    1964 - None given
    1963 - The Reivers (Faulkner)
    1962 - The Edge of Sadness (Edwin O’Connor)
    1961 - To Kill a Mockingbird (Lee)
    1960 - Advise and Consent (Drury)
    1959 - The Travels of Jaimie McPheeters (Taylor)
    1958 - A Death in the Family (Agee)
    1956 - Andersonville (Kantor)
    1955 - A Fable (Faulkner)
    1953 - The Old Man and the Sea (Hemingway)
    1952 - The Caine Mutiny (Wouk)
    1951 - The Town (Richter)
    1950 - The Way West (Guthrie)
    1949 - Guard of Honor (Cozzens)
    1948 - Tales of the South Pacific (Michener)
    1947 - All the King’s Men (Warren)
    1945 - Bell for Adano (Hersey)
    1944 - Journey in the Dark (Flavin)
    1943 - Dragon’s Teeth I (Sinclair)
    1942 - In This Our Life (Glasgow)
    1940 - The Grapes of Wrath (Steinbeck)
    1939 - The Yearling (Rawlings)
    1938 - The Late George Apley (Marquand)
    1937 - Gone with the Wind (Mitchell)
    1936 - Honey in the Horn (Davis)
    1935 - Now in November (Johnson)
    1934 - Lamb in His Bosom (Miller)
    1933 - The Store (Stribling)
    1932 - The Good Earth (Buck)
    1931 - Years of Grace (Barnes)
    1930 - Laughing Boy (Lafarge)
    1929 - Scarlet Sister Mary (Peterkin)
    1928 - The Bridge of San Luis Rey (Wilder)
    1927 - Early Autumn (Bromfield)
    1926 - Arrowsmith (Lewis)
    1925 - So Big (Ferber)
    1924 - The Able McLauglins (Wilson)
    1923 - One of Ours (Cather)
    1922 - Alice Adams (Tarkington)
    1921 - The Age of Innocence (Wharton)
    1919 - The Magnificent Ambersons (Tarkington)
    1918 - His Family (Poole)

  • Twitting the Night Away…

    • Feeding the boy while looking whistfully at my knitting... 1 month ago
    • Yay! Almost 2010! I am excited to be able to get a start on all of my reading challenges! 2 months ago
    • The holidays are killing my #reading time! I'll be back to reviewing full time in the next week or so! 2 months ago
    • Id love that! RT @TooFondOfBooks: Is there a cookbook/foodie review challenge for 2010 that anyone knows of? 2 months ago
    • Pressure canning experiment in progress. Trying not to blow up the house. 2 months ago
  • Notices

    This site is a member of Amazon Associates and Audible Affiliates. That means when you click through to Amazon or Audible and purchase a book, I make a small percentage of that sale. All proceeds make through Amazon Associates and Audible Affiliates go to charity.

    The current charity of choice is:

    Autism Speaks, a wonderful charity and a cause that became close to my heart early this year when my daughter was diagnosed.

Archive for January, 2010

One Second After by William R. Forstchen

Posted by megmme on January 27, 2010

One Second After

One Second After

Overall Grade: A+

Synopsis: (via GoodReads)

New York Times best selling author William R. Forstchen now brings us a story which can be all too terrifyingly real…a story in which one man struggles to save his family and his small North Carolina town after America loses a war, in one second, a war that will send America back to the Dark Ages…A war based upon a weapon, an Electro Magnetic Pulse (EMP). A weapon that may already be in the hands of our enemies.
Months before publication, One Second After has already been cited on the floor of Congress as a book all Americans should read, a book already being discussed in the corridors of the Pentagon as a truly realistic look at a weapon and its awesome power to destroy the entire United States, literally within one second. It is a weapon that the Wall Street Journal warns could shatter America. In the tradition of On the Beach, Fail Safe and Testament, this book, set in a typical American town, is a dire warning of what might be our future…and our end.

Review:

I read Alas, Babylon by Pat Frank years ago and count in among my favorite books. It was a fascinating look at how humanity can come together and adapt to a completely new world. However, I was a child during the bulk of the cold war; I barely remember the Berlin Wall falling and Russia has almost always been Russia–not the Soviet Union. Because I have never felt a real threat from nuclear weapons, Alas, Babylon didn’t frighten me as a realistic possibility.

One Second After is an entirely different read. I see myself and my family in the characters in the book and it is entirely real. Starvation, disease, clean water, and simple medicine are things we all take for granted and could be gone surprisingly quickly.

So, am I going to become a mountain survivalist? Most likely no…while I would love to have a farm and a large garden, I am a creature of the suburbs and have no illusions that I, and my family, would likely be among the first to die should the end come.

If there is one fault to the book, it is minor. The main character is a military historian and, with annoying frequency, compares the situation to “a movie he once saw” or “a famous painting of the Russian Revolution by…” or “a paper he once read while teaching at the military academy…” It isn’t a major distraction but it did get on my nerves near the end of the book.

So….go and read the book–I highly recommend it. But have something happy to read right after..you’ll need it because I will guarantee you’ll get choked up at one point or another.

Audiobook Details

Run time: 13 hours, 21 minutes.

I thought the reader, Joe Barrett, was excellent. He didn’t exactly “do the voices” but does somehow manage to instill a sense of personality into each character’s lines. I do feel for him–he did have the unfortunate job of having to narrate James Patterson’s The Murder of King Tut.

Posted in Audiobook Reviews, Science Fiction | Leave a Comment »

Cleopatra’s Daughter by Michelle Moran

Posted by megmme on January 11, 2010

Cleopatra's Daughter
Cleopatra’s Daughter

Overall: C+

Summary (courtesy GoodReads)

The death of Cleopatra was only the beginning…

Follows the incredible life of Cleopatra’s surviving children with Marc Antony — twins, named Alexander Helios and Cleopatra Selene, and a younger son named Ptolemy. All three were taken to Rome and paraded through the streets, then sent off to be raised by Octavia (the wife whom Marc Antony left for Cleopatra). Raised in one of the most fascinating courts of all time, Cleopatra’s children would have met Ovid, Seneca, Vitruvius (who inspired the Vitruvian man), Agrippa (who built the Pantheon), Herod, his sister Salome, the poets Virgil, Horace, Maecenas and so many others!

Thoughts

This is the third book by Michelle Moran that I’ve read in fairly quick succession and I had high hopes considering how impressive Michelle Moran’s vivid imagery and storytelling skills were in her previous books.   I thought the book was only partially successful.

The book was geared toward a young adult audience but the topics were almost entirely adult-oriented.  The book was not graphic, per se but the subjects of infanticide, marriage, atheism, international politics, and the ethics of slavery seemed a little heavy for a young adult books.  Furthermore, none of the really thought provoking issues the book mentions in passing were explored in any substantial way by the characters.

What is left?  A vaguely confusing love story that entangles most of the characters in the book.  I don’t want to reveal any spoilers but it was reminiscent of Pride and Prejudice on a somewhat larger scale.  However, while Pride and Prejudice developed the relationships over the course of the book, Cleopatra Selene (the Daughter of Cleopatra and the main character of the book) proclaims herself in love with little foreshadowing.

The pacing was also frustrating.  It felt as though half the book had passed by the time Selene and Alexander make it to Rome while the ending seemed incredibly rushed.

All in all, this certainly wasn’t my favorite Michelle Moran book and it isn’t one I would rush to recommend to someone since it seems to miss both of its potential audiences: too shallow and slow for adult historical fiction fans and too irrelevant for a young adult.

As a side note, what is up with that cover art? Selene is supposed to be 12 when she arrives in Rome.

Audiobook Details

The audiobook was well produced though the reader, Wanda McCaddon had what I can only describe as an odd voice.  Husky? Throaty?  I didn’t mind it but I would certainly recommend you listen to a sample before you purchase the audio version.

Run time: 11 hours, 56 minutes

Available here via Amazon and Audible: Cleopatra’s Daughter: A Novel

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December in a Nutshell

Posted by megmme on January 1, 2010

Read:

Old Reads Reviewed this Month:

In Progress:

  • The Eight (but soon to be abandoned…it just isn’t picking up)

Abandoned:

  • Foundation (for now, at least)

It was a light month for reading since my husband had a ton of time off work and I had a lot of end of the semester grading to do.  I’m excited to get back into books in the new year with all the challenges I have lined up!

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Happy New Year!

Posted by megmme on January 1, 2010

I hope you all had a nice holiday break!  My reading time was diminished significantly while my husband was home for a few weeks but I’m back and ready to tackle my challenges for the year!

I’ve already started on a few: Cleopatra’s Daughter and The Year of the Bomb–both are excellent so far and full reviews are on their way.

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