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bethany725

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Everything posted by bethany725

  1. Great review, Kelly! This book actually looks really interesting-- It's not something you read about everyday, that's for sure! Thanks for the review and suggestion.
  2. We were only there for a month, but it was pretty fun. Nice city!
  3. I haven't done this before, but you guys that have multiple books of the same should arrange a swap.. get rid of your duplicates, get a new book
  4. This will be my first of Kristin Hannah's, CaliLily.
  5. Pages: 443 Date Started: January 2, 2010 Date Completed: January 17, 2010 Synopsis: Twenty-two-year-old Skeeter has just returned home after graduating from Ole Miss. She may have a degree, but it is 1962, Mississippi, and her mother will not be happy till Skeeter has a ring on her finger. Skeeter would normally find solace with her beloved maid Constantine, the woman who raised her, but Constantine has disappeared and no one will tell Skeeter where she has gone. Aibileen is a black maid, a wise, regal woman raising her seventeenth white child. Something has shifted inside her after the loss of her own son, who died while his bosses looked the other way. She is devoted to the little girl she looks after, though she knows both their hearts may be broken. Minny, Aibileen’s best friend, is short, fat, and perhaps the sassiest woman in Mississippi. She can cook like nobody’s business, but she can’t mind her tongue, so she’s lost yet another job. Minny finally finds a position working for someone too new to town to know her reputation. But her new boss has secrets of her own. Seemingly as different from one another as can be, these women will nonetheless come together for a clandestine project that will put them all at risk. And why? Because they are suffocating within the lines that define their town and their times. And sometimes lines are made to be crossed. My Thoughts: Set in Jackson, Mississippi in 1962, at the beginning of the civil rights movement in southern U.S., this story tells a tale of the relationships between white women and their black maids. Words are offered up chapter-style from 3 perspectives: 2 black maids, and 1 white woman who sees things a little differently than most white people in that place, in that time. Aibilene and Minny (the two maids) give a glimpse of daily life working for white women and caring for (and oftentimes actually raising) the white families' children. We're let into their thoughts as they polish silver, iron tablecloths, and use their designated bathrooms, built specifically to keep white people from getting the 'colored's diseases.' The young children love their caretakers, and then as they grow older, they become just like their parents and start believing that having white skin means you're better. Skeeter (or "Ms. Skeeter," as the maids call her) sees things a bit differently. Skeeter's family employed their own maid, Constantine, from the time Skeeter was a baby until Skeeter went off to college. Unlike her other Junior League friends, Skeeter never bought into the stories that being black meant you were less smart, less of a person, or plain old 'dirty.' She loved Constantine dearly, exchanged letters with her through most of her college career, and is determined to find out what happened to Constantine when the letters suddenly stopped. College-educated Skeeter decides to try to use her writing skills to reveal the truths behind these relationships. She works alongside Minny, Aibilene, and a number of other maids to write what really goes on behind closed doors, how the maids are treated, about their own families and own children, and how they really feel about themselves, their families, and the white women for which they work. Skeeter also offeres up some of her own stories, her relationship with her mother, and her struggles that ensue from being an independent thinker and caring more about her education than finding a husband. The stories are sometimes funny, sometimes heart-wrenching, sometimes happy, sometimes sad... but they're all powerful in their own ways. I can't say enough good things about this book. The story is a page-turner, the characters are fully-developed and give vivid color and life to each chapter, and the dialogue is accurate of each characters' position and status in the setting. Minny and Aibilene each speak in their own dialects, and their true voices make you feel like you really know them. I actually missed the characters when I wasn't reading about them.. I missed their stories, their voices, and I couldn't wait to pick up the book again to see what happened next. I'd recommend this book wholeheartedly to most readers, and it's a story I'll not soon forget. My Rating: 10/10
  6. I finished The Help last weekend.. Wonderful book; definitely made the list as one of my favorites. From the library, picked up: The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society Firefly Lane The Forgotten Garden (Mary Ann Shaffer, Kristin Hannah, & Kate Morton)
  7. Loved 'Nineteen Minutes'.. Don't think I've read 'Picture Perfect.' Hope you enjoy all your upcoming reading.
  8. Thanks for the response, Vanwa! No worries.. you're not 'late' at all -- I can send over any suggestions to her as I get them. I'll be fwd'g yours over to her soon -- I appreciate it!
  9. I read this a while back, and my memory's a bit fuzzy as well, but I can remember enough to share my overall impression: I liked it, but it wasn't up there among her top 4 or 5 books for me. However, my mom read it recently and she picked it as her absolute favorite of Picoult's so far. Seems like it speaks to different people in different ways. I'm glad you liked it! I do remember wishing that the ending wasn't left to interpretation in the blatant way it was, but I usually prefer to have that closure, whereas many readers really like the open-endedness. To each her own.
  10. How great is that?! FREE!! Weeeeeeeeeeeee! Hope you love it.. I've heard such great things about that book! I've managed to read a little bit more of The Help tonight, despite having to take down the Christmas tree, clean up all the needles with Raja, and pack for our trip home this weekend. I'll have lots of time to read on the flight tomorrow.. 2.5 hours. Yey! Hopefully I can finish it up soon. Next up is my first read of a Janet Evanovich book. After that? The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Society for the book club here.. Yey
  11. You'd think I'd learn my lesson about movies inspired by books.. they're just so rarely ever the same! I'll be sure not to watch the sequel-inspired movie if they make one.. Hopefully we'll both get our hands on the actual book before too long. I'll have to check exactly when it comes out.
  12. We made parsley chicken pasta in a light lemon sauce.. was yummy!
  13. No problem! I loved the first one, also.. the movie, not so much.. but the book was so fun!
  14. LOL... People will LOVE us.. loud, hair-braiding, group-picturing-taking, ramshackle band members. NYC will never be the same.
  15. Saw an ad for another book coming out this year here... The Nanny Returns by Emma McLaughlin and Nicola Kraus. It's the sequel to The Nanny Diaries .. Fun!!
  16. I enjoyed EWK MUCH better than the start I had to CHW.. I hope you do, too. Sounds like you've been reading some great things! Thanks for all your reviews.. I love to see what you've been reading lately.
  17. Got a lot more reading done on The Help today.. almost halfway through. SUCH a good read -- I really don't want to put it down!
  18. I definitely go with Peace.. you can just walk around saying how pretty our new hair-dos look. That's AFTER Kylie makes you all shiny of course! Ben, you're in good hands! Aww.. Thanks, Peace! Very sweet of you Absolutely.. we can tell all my neighbors to shove it when they complain.
  19. Thank you so much for all of your help! I'm going to copy this thread and send it over to her... I'm sure she'll find something good in there.
  20. Hi guys! Surprised to see me here in this section?? So I have a friend who need some author suggestions, so she asked me.. but her favorite books are all books that don't really intersect with the genres I read the most, so I come to you humbly! Lords of the Rings is her favorite.. and she loved Chronicles of Narnia. She tried Harry Potter books and thought they were okay, but a TOUCH too child-like for her taste. If anyone can think of any authors/books that are sort in this escapism/fantasy realm that could be good for her, it'd be so helpful if you'd reply and give me a few suggestions for her. Thanks so much, everyone!
  21. Hey... can't blame me for aiming high. Now even though it APPEARS that I didn't get what I wanted (read: all of BCF moving to NYC), I'm still faring well because I may get to have visitors if anyone actually visits NYC for vaca. Weeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee!!
  22. It's mine, and I love it! I do not mind one tiny bit that we're WAY off-topic. I'm fairly certain now that after all this that not one of you would ever visit NYC without letting me know you're coming. And that's what's important.
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