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Jessi

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Posts posted by Jessi

  1. Debutantes - Cora Harrison (3/5)

     

    I enjoyed this book. It’s a Young adult novel set in the 1920s, with the four daughters of an earl whose going broke as the protagonists. While some of the girls look to the future and love the movies, the eldest of the girls long for the days of the past and to be presented at court and then marry well. With money lacking, there seems little chance of that happening until they find out they have an aunt they knew nothing about. The book follows the girls as they take their luck on love, their dreams and pursue their goals.

  2. Great review of The Book Thief, Jessi. I absolutely loved it too. I remember closing myself away in my room to read the ending (luckily I had the day off work!) and I bawled for ages. I really must re-read it soon!

     

    I rated The Perks of Being a Wallflower as one of my favourite books, but I oddly can't remember much of it. I do remember identifying with Charlie, though.

     

    I so wanted to cry - but I knew I had to go back into the office ten minutes later and serve the customer, so I had to blink a lot and bit my lip. It was so sad.

     

    Charlie was an interesting character - I don't know why it took me so long to get into it, I just took a while I guess.

     

    Two re-reads coming up for you then, Kylie?

  3. Catherine The Great - Robert K Massie (4/5)

     

    I was so looking forward to this book. I read a book on Catherine The Great and Potemkin a few years ago and loved it. I came away from it thinking Catherine the Great lived an incredible life.

     

    This book furthered that belief. Catherine The Great was one of very few women to ever rule over Russia, despite being born as a relatively low down German princess. We are taken through her life from her arrival in Russia, through her loveless marriage, her taking of the throne and then beyond. We met the councillors and the diplomats who were important in her life, various members of the royal family, as well as of course, her lovers. Ultimately, Catherine comes across as a strong character who was mostly a fair ruler, but occasionally did what she had to in order to keep her throne. This women who loved the arts and wrote to Voltaire could be ruthless when she had to be.

     

    The book is a great read, especially the first half where Massie wrote incredibly well. It was unfortunate that as the book drew to the close there was more than one typo and then some repetitions in information - it called to mind Maggie Smith’s line from Downton Abbey: ‘My poor niece will never use one word when twenty will do.’

     

    Overall though, a really good read - it just didn’t challenge Edmund Morris’ Colonel Roosevelt as much as I wanted it too.

  4. Another 5-star rating for The Book Thief - this most-be the best-loved BCF book, (along with To Kill A Mocking Bird :) )

     

    Thank you for your review, I hope to read it soon and hopefully enjoy it as much as you did.

     

    I'm sure you will :) I think it is - and To Kill a Mockingbird is on my TBR list - and one I really want to get through this year too :)

  5. Hi Jessi, I hope you have an amazing reading year in 2013! :)

     

    Too bad you didn't fully enjoy The Perks of Being a Wallflower, right from the get-go, but I'm happy you found the second half of the book better :) And I'm certainly happy you enjoyed The Book Thief, what an amazing story :)

     

     

    It did certainly pick up :) Isn't it just? Its going to stay with me for a long time. It reminded me a lot of Goodnight Mr Tom, which is one of my all time favourites. Thanks Frankie - hope you have a good year too!

     

    Everyone seems to love The Book Thief, I will have to bump my copy higher up my TBR.

    I agree with Frankie!

     

    Me too - I can't believe I waited so long to read it!

  6. Really glad you enjoyed The Book Thief - I haven't read it in a few years and must try to make time to read it again.

     

    Its gone straight back on my reread pile - but not for a while yet... part of me still can't get over the fact the end was spo brutal. The last couple of pages were some comfort but Hans and Rosa... :cray:

  7. I'm so glad you loved the book thief too! It's an amazing read. :)

     

    Isn't it just? I think it'll be a while before I read something that matches it!

     

    Great review of The Book Thief. I really like Rosa, but it did take me a while to warm to her. Under her brash and hard exterior, she was a very caring person who only wanted the best for others.

     

    I really fell for her after Max turned up - that was when I knew she was going to have so many more layers than what we has seen up to that point.

  8. The Book Thief - Markus Zukas (5/5)

     

    Read the Book Thief, they said. It’s a great book, they said. You’ll enjoy it, they said. (What they left out was that it will emotionally destroy you in the process...)

     

    I got to the end of The Book Thief today during lunch, in the cafeteria on lunch. If I had been on my own then I would have simply sobbed. As it was, I couldn’t. But as I closed the book, I was left a little dazed. I haven’t read such a good book for months.

     

    I feel in love with the ideas of the book as much as the characters. How you could build something evil or loving on words, and how they could make or break you. How they could save lives and kill at the same time. The language, the music and the colours. The community. This was what brought it to life for me.

     

    But maybe I did fall in love with the characters a little more, especially spapa. As soon as he sat up with Liesel for the first time and played to her, I loved him. When he taught her to read, struggling to do so himself, I loved him more - and when he helped anyone for practically nothing, and gave bread to the Jews, and saved Max - he just stole my heart.

     

    As did mama in a very different way. No one can really resist a real battleaxe character, least of all me. Even when she was at her cruellest and crudest, there was always a sense there was something softer underneath and as the tale unfolded, and this was found to be absolutely true. That heart aching image of her holding the accordion in the middle of the night will stay with me.

     

    Along with Max and Rudy, the three of them made this an incredibly memorable novel and the ending killed me - especially the part about Rosa being beautiful. But it was Roberts final act that first brought tears to my eyes. The fact Liesel got to live a long and happy life was the real pay off and I suppose as soon as I read the words Nazi Germany, I knew it was not going to happily ever after - but part of me was still surprised by just how devastating the ending was.

     

    Death as the narrator - wow. I suppose I just did not expect him to be so human, though, I found myself think ‘you’re lying’ when he tried to give me warnings about what was coming - I just couldn’t believe it. I didn’t want to - just like in my own life. But that wide perspective, seeing nothing and unable to influence events except too be at the end was... wow. My heart actually ached a little bit for death too.

     

    I thoroughly recommend and am ashamed I left it languishing on my shelf for three years. It’s a great book. You’ll enjoy it...

  9. That's actually exactly what I was thinking of, the kiss. I mean, Charlie later said he didn't want Patrick to do it, but he didn't seem to mind at the time because he felt like he was being a friend by doing it. And maybe that wasn't what Patrick needed or really wanted, but at the end of the day there's something to be said for just outright telling people what they can do for you, rather than later accusing them of not somehow intuitively knowing that they should have done the opposite. Did that make ANY sense? Lol! :P

     

    Complete sense! Totally agree!

  10. Yeah, I kind of think I missed it too - because thinking about it now, even though he kept a lot inside, Charlie was one of the only honest characters in the book - he followed his own morals throughout unless he was asked not to by a friend. I don't know if I agreed with Sam looking back, even in regards to the kiss at the end of the park night. It was a thought provoking read, but I feel like I expected more of it.

  11. Thank you :)

     

    And off we go -

     

     

    The Perks of Being a Wallflower - Stephen Chbosky (3.5/5)

     

    Ok so the first book of the year is The Perks of Being a Wallflower. If I am honest, I kinda feel that this was a book I thought I was going to enjoy more than I actually did. I begun it in the last week of December thinking it was going to bump up my read pile one more, but I found it a chore to get through the first half of the book.

     

    That said, it did get a lot more interesting in the second half, after the protagonist Charlie embarks unwittingly on a relationship. The issues raised (mental health) and the diary form of the book were interesting though, especially the way they were portrayed. By the end of the story, I came to appreciate the detail in the book, Charlie’s quirks, what was important to him and his attempts to ‘fit in’ (when all his friends wanted him to be was himself).

     

    Once it got going, I enjoyed The Perks of Being a Wallflower. Just took me a while to get into. I kind of feel as if it was different to what I normally read, and its always good to branch out a little!

  12. Best of luck! I know the feeling, I was very inactive last year and am determined to do a lot better this year!

     

    Good luck to you too Nollaig!

     

    I too was also inactive with my reading, here is to a better year ahead.

     

    Happy reading in 2013!

     

    2013 will hopefully be a lucky year for us all!

     

    Good luck with your reading goals for next year, Jessi. :)

     

     

     

    I don't know if this will help you, but I've done something similar, and I have wish lists set up on Amazon for Kindle books (of course, I'm a bit OCD and have them all categorised by genre :roll:) so that when I get a recommendation, I can add it to the wish list on the site, and that way have direct links to the books when I do decided I want to buy them. Amazon are also good at highlighting the books on your wishlist that have come down in price since you added them to the wishlist, so if you're looking at it, you can immediately see if there are bargains to be had, not necessarily on the Daily Deal page.

     

    Happy reading in 2013! :smile2:

     

    That does definately help, thanks so much for the heads up (I'll be doing the categorising thing too!). Hope you have a good year too!

     

     

    Admirable goals, Jessi! I reckon you will easily make 100 this year, especially with so many great books on your TBR pile! :)

     

    I look forward to reading your reviews throughout the year.

     

    Thank you - I so hope I can get there - fourth times a charm???

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