The Third Heiress, by Brenda Joyce

Cover ImageFinished 4-12-08, rating 3.5/5, fiction, pub. 1999

 Jill is a lonely woman who meets the man of her dreams and he asks her to marry him.  Ecstatic, Jill is unprepared for him to have second thoughts and the worst happens.  Hal dies because of Jill.  Jill flies his body back to London to his super wealthy  family and is greeted with disdain.

So, begins the mystery of what Hal had meant with his last words whispered to Jill.  She is obsessed with finding the truth and finds an ally in Hal’s cousin, Alex.  She packs up her life in New York to move to London to uncover secrets Hal’s family would rather leave buried.  Alex is the hero or the villain and Hal turns out to be no prince charming.  The pages turned fast because I wanted to know what was what.

I love Brenda Joyce, which should be evident by now since this is her third book I’ve read this year.  To me this felt like a departure for her and not her best work.  It was a bit disjointed, but with that being said I really did enjoy it.  The mystery will keep you reading even if you think you’ve got it figured out because there are so many little questions you need answered.  This is more mystery than romance, but if you are open to that I think you’ll like it.

The Greatest Miracle In The World, by Og Mandino

Cover ImageFinished 4-3-08, rating 2.5/5, fiction, pub. 1983

This was my first and most probably my last Og Mandino book.  It was sweet, preachy, and a little dated.  I think the sentiment was good and did enjoy Chapter 9, The God Memorandum.  The problem was the eight chapters leading up to it were not my cup of tea.  The story was that Og met God in the flesh and God gave him a memo to print for the world.

The four laws of happiness and success according to God?  1. Count your blessings.  2. Proclaim your rarity.  3. Go another mile.  4. Use wisely your power of choice.  These are rules to live by, but it was one chapter.  The only thing that kept me reading to Chapter 9?  The book is only 98 pages.

I finished this on our layover at JFK on the way to Italy.  I left it on a chair, so I have passed on the God Memorandum to someone bored at the airport and now to you.

We’re home from Italy

After an exhausting 19 1/2  hour travel Sunday, we are finally home.  Italy is a wonderful place to vacation, but the travel to and from can add some stressful days to your trip!

I will post pictures sometime today or tomorrow.  And then I will finally get back to just writing about books.  I have three reviews to post when I get a few minutes. 

Italy is wonderful.  It is my kind of country.  The wine is cheaper than Coke and everybody drinks lots of it 🙂  Jason even got into the Italian spirit by having cappuccino every morning and afternoon and an after dinner drink every night (grappa, Limenchello)  We loved how you could walk everywhere you wanted to go and in bigger cities, like Rome you saw those cute little Smart cars all over the place.  We also liked travelling by train and had no problems figuring it out.

We loved Venice.  It was our favorite city to walk around, relax, and eat great food.  Although the gondola ride was expensive you have to do it.  We were surprised about all the dogs there.  There is little grass, but many Venetians had dogs and they were so well-behaved.  I think they gave them all wine.  They also had the best shopping for gifts to bring home.  I wish we had done more shopping there.  We stayed at the Hotel Mercurio.  Good things-location, breakfast, the bed.  Bad things-mold in room, no English station, no internet access.  Although they had no English-speaking stations, we discovered one night that they had porn on one of the local stations after midnight (if you like that sort of thing)! 

We liked Florence a lot.  It was a great walking city that had lots of green grass right across the river that the other two cities didn’t have a lot of.  There was a lot to see.  Lots of art, museums, churches.  We stayed at Hotel Perseo and we have only good things to say about it.  Great room, internet access, helpful English-speaking staff, environmentally friendly, perfect location, great breakfast, and Happy Drink every night with free drinks and snacks. 

Rome was full of sites to see, but it was not someplace I need to go back to.  We loved the history and the sites (Coliseum, Pantheon, Circus Maximus…), and it was fun to be in a city that didn’t cater to tourists.  We found more people who didn’t speak English here than in the other two cities.  One fun thing that happened to us here was on our last afternoon when we were walking back to the hotel we saw an Italians for Obama rally.  It was pretty funny to see.  I think they were just getting started, but they had about 20 people setting things up with Obama’s voice booming into the street.  We stayed at Soggiorno Europa.  Good things-good location, internet access.  Bad things-everything else!  No phone in room, terrible beds, bad breakfast, shower.   Less than a block from our hotel was our favorite restaurant from the whole vacation, Grotta d’Abruzzo (Via Palermo, 45).  They had the best pizza and chicken (separately!).

We’ll that’s it.  I’ll post the photos later.  I hope you’ve enjoyed our Italian tour.  Oh, I took the 2 piece luggage set that New Clevelanders gave me when I was president and received many compliments from around Italy.  Thanks, ladies!

Italy

This is our last night in Italy.  We have had a wonderful and mostly relaxing vacation.  I will do one more email on Italy when we get back.  I’d like to give you some sense of our hotels and one restaurant in Rome that we loved so much we went back twice.

Rome has been somewhat exhausting.  There is a lot to see, but so many people, so much traffic.  Jason and I have both enjoyed Rome, but have crossed it off our list of things we need to do.  If we come back to Italy I know that we would see Venice again and Tuscany (maybe Florence). 

We’re leaving in the morning for the airport.  We hope we are awake in time, this hotel does not have telephones in the room (I never thought to look at that as a ‘perk’), but our friend at the desk has said he will knock on the door in the morning 🙂  We will arrive back in Cleveland at 2 am on Monday morning, but 8pm Sunday night local time.  Looking forward to getting home, but not the 9 1/2 hour plane trip to New York. 

Thanks for all of the emails.   I know I haven’t answered them all, but I will when I get home. 

Caio!

 

Rome, last day

WE visited the Colosseum this morning and got a little turned around and spent the rest of the morning and early afternoon walking around aimlessly.  Once we got our bearings we went to the train station to buy a ticket to the airport tomorrow.  We’ve enjoyed our Italian vacation, but are ready to go home.  We’re ready to see Scout and Max 🙂  I will try and write one more blog tonight to recap our thoughts about Italy, but I need to rest for an hour! 

Rome, day 2

We are getting ready for dinner.  Jason took his customary siesta while I read a for a few minutes for the first time on our Italy tour.  We had a fun, but exhausting day.  We went to St. Peter’s at the Vatican, which was absolutely fabulous.  We spent the rest of the morning and afternoon walking around the ancient sites.  I will try a few more details later after dinner.

Rome

We just got back to the hotel after about 7 hours of walking around the city.  We are resting before heading out to dinner.  Our favorite experience today was sitting in front of the Pantheon eating McDonalds fries and a Big Mac.  It seemed so wrong.  Both Venice and Florence had McDonalds, but today we saw at least half a dozen around the city.  The only other American fast food we’ve seen is a Burger King a few blocks from our hotel.  Today’s fries and Big Mac were was our first non-Italian food in almost a week.  I must admit it was a nice change of pace.

There are massive beautiful churches everywhere and we walked into everyone we came across.  We also went to the Spanish Steps and Trevi Fountain.  Rome is quite a bit of a walk because it is not even – you walk up and up only to walk back down the next block before walking up again.

We happened into a piazza where a political rally was being held.  We had no idea what was going on, so we moved along pretty quickly.  There is also a big police presence around the city.  Some of them are just standing on a side street with their hand on their guns ready to shoot.  It was weird. 

So far we have had fun.  We certainly won’t run out of things to do here.  There are tourist everywhere.  The car/scooter/pedestrian war is crazier then in Florence.  Everyone seems to think they have the right of way.  We just follow someone who looks like he knows what he’s doing.