What Was Mine by Helen Klein Ross

fpoWhat Was Mine. Finished 1-31-16, 4,25/5 stars, fiction, 336 pages, pub.2016

Lucy Wakefield is a seemingly ordinary woman who does something extraordinary in a desperate moment: she takes a baby girl from a shopping cart and raises her as her own. It’s a secret she manages to keep for over two decades—from her daughter, the babysitter who helped raise her, family, coworkers, and friends.

When Lucy’s now-grown daughter Mia discovers the devastating truth of her origins, she is overwhelmed by confusion and anger and determines not to speak again to the mother who raised her. She reaches out to her birth mother for a tearful reunion, and Lucy is forced to flee to China to avoid prosecution. What follows is a ripple effect that alters the lives of many and challenges our understanding of the very meaning of motherhood.  from Goodreads

Having your baby kidnapped is right up there with the top parent nightmares.  Any parent can tell you the first moment that they lost sight of their child for a few moments and the panic that crawled through their body.  For new mother Marilyn that moment changed her life and the life of her four month old daughter, Natalie.  While Lucy didn’t go out that morning looking to kidnap a baby, she was unhinged enough in her overwhelming desire for a baby that the opportunity was too much for her to resist.  As she kept telling herself that it was just for a few minutes, or a ride, or the night, she had to know that she was never giving baby Mia back.

The book was told in alternating chapters mainly by the three main characters, Lucy, Marilyn and Mia,  but it was the shorter chapters told by the bit players and supporting cast that really rounded out the story and moved it forward.  The current and ex-husbands, Aunt Cheryl, Nanny Wendy, the security guard at IKEA, etc. were expertly woven into the fabric of the story.  You know from the beginning that eventually Mia will find out the truth about her mother(s), but it was told in such an easy to read way that it was a riveting page-turner that had me promising myself “just one more chapter” more than once!

I think the addicting short chapters that made this hard to put down also led to some parts that felt glossed over or not addressed. There were several parts where I wanted more story, no place more than the end, which felt incomplete to me. But that being said, I loved the book and think it would make a FANTASTIC book club selection.

I want to thank She Reads and the publisher for sending me a copy of the book to read.  She Reads is an excellent group and if you aren’t reading their blog then you are missing out!

Winners!

Woo Hoo! I’ve got quiz winners and winners from my Blogiversay post. I want to apologize right off the bat that Gage will not be drawing names out of a hat for me.  The stinker has decided that photos are beneath him and when I make him, well, the results are all over the place.  I’m giving him (and me) a reprieve!

Winner of On Writing by Stephen King from my January 8 giveaway…

Melissa from Mommy Madness

Winner of Ender’s Game by Orson Scott Card from my January 8 giveaway…

Cait from Click’s Clan

Winner of my last round of Quizzes and winner of a Barnes & Noble gift card is once again…

Nise from Under the Boardwalk 

Winner of the randomly chosen participant is(Bahahaha, she said that Gage never picked her name and maybe that’s true, but this time Jason did!)…

Jill from Rhapsody in Books

Congratulations 🙂  You should all be receiving an email from me soon!

 

 

 

 

Mailbox Monday – January 18

mmb-300x282Mailbox Monday is the gathering place for readers to share the books that came in their mailbox during the last week.Warning: Mailbox Monday can lead to envy, toppling TBR piles and humongous wish lists.

IMG_5701

Flight of Dreams by Ariel Lawhon +coasters (from Doubleday)

On the evening of May 3, 1937, Emilie Imhof boards the Hindenburg. As the only female crewmember, Emilie has access to the entire airship, from the lavish dining rooms and passenger suites to the gritty engine cars and control room. She hears everything, but with rumors circulating about bomb threats, Emilie’s focus is on maintaining a professional air . . . and keeping her own plans under wraps.
     What Emilie can’t see is that everyone—from the dynamic vaudeville acrobat to the high-standing German officer—seems to be hiding something.

Gates of Evangeline by Hester Young (from GP Putnam’s Sons)

When New York journalist and recently bereaved mother Charlotte “Charlie” Cates begins to experience vivid dreams about children she’s sure that she’s lost her mind. Yet these are not the nightmares of a grieving parent, she soon realizes. They are messages and warnings that will help Charlie and the children she sees, if only she can make sense of them.

The History Major by Michael Phillip Cash + notepad & highlighter (from the author)

After a vicious fight with her boyfriend followed by a night of heavy partying, college freshman Amanda Greene wakes up in her dorm room to find things are not the same as they were yesterday. She can’t quite put her finger on it. She’s sharing her room with a peculiar stranger. Amanda discovers she’s registered for classes she would never choose with people that are oddly familiar. An ominous shadow is stalking her. Uncomfortable memories are bubbling dangerously close to her fracturing world, propelling her to an inevitable collision between fantasy and reality. Is this the mother of all hangovers or is something bigger happening?

Did anything fun arrive in your mailbox this week?

Throwback quiz – guessing closed

 

Enter a caption

No Googling or looking at other commenter answers.  Yes, we’re going by the honor system 🙂  Play every week or just one time, you are always welcome 🙂  It only takes once to be eligible for a prize. 

Here’s the deal- Tell me what each of the five books have in COMMON.  Let me give you so vague hints. 2 have to do with locations, 2 with movies, 2 with the covers, 2 with main characters, 1 with the authors, and 1 is a surprise 🙂  An example of past common threads-authors born in Ohio, magical realism and Edgar Award winners.

1.In Cold Blood: A True Account of a Multiple Murder and Its ConsequencesSarah, Plain and Tall 30th Anniversary EditionLittle House on the Prairie (Little House Series: Classic Stories #3)The Persian Pickle ClubSharp Objects

2.The Two Towers: Being the Second Part of The Lord of the RingsThe Subtle Knife (His Dark Materials Series #2)Catching Fire (Hunger Games Series #2)Fifty Shades Darker (Fifty Shades Trilogy #2)Insurgent (B&N Exclusive Edition) (Divergent Series #2)

3.First FrostSleeping in Eden: A NovelThe Taste of Apple Seeds: A NovelEat the City: A Tale of the Fishers, Foragers, Butchers, Farmers, Poultry Minders, Sugar Refiners, Cane Cutters, Beekeepers, Winemakers, and Brewers Who Built New YorkThe Fiction Class

4.The ShiningKilling Floor (Jack Reacher Series #1)Beach MusicI, RipperGot the Look (Jack Swyteck Series #5)

5.The Rosie ProjectMarcelo in the Real WorldThe Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-TimeLove AnthonySomeone Else's Love Story

6. The Joy Luck ClubA Dirty JobDaughter of FortuneMurder on Nob Hill (Sarah Woolson Series #1)2nd Chance (Women's Murder Club Series #2)

7.Pride and PrejudiceA Confederacy of DuncesPirate LatitudesThe Girl with the Dragon Tattoo (Millennium Series #1)The Silmarillion

8.StolenArcadiaThe Butterfly and the ViolinThe Ice Queen: A NovelFate

9.Midnight in the Garden of Good and EvilHigh FidelityMust Love DogsThe Runaway JuryThe Paperboy (Movie Tie-in Edition)

10.Sleepless in seattle.jpgMixednutsposter.jpgA woman laughing. Below a woman with a finger in her mouth. The middle horizontal section contains the film title.Michael ver2.jpgBewitchedmovieposter.jpg

 

 

Writers Lost in 2015 – guessing closed

This is always my first quiz of the year.  Let’s see if you can figure out what authors passed on last year.  Sorry I’m late!

Leave your guesses in a comment.  Good luck!

No Googling or looking at other commenter answers.  Yes, we’re going by the honor system 🙂  Play every week or just one time, you are always welcome 🙂  It only takes once to be eligible for a prize. 

  1. She has a famous sister and is famous in her own right, all of her 32 novels made it on the NYT Bestseller list. She died of breast cancer in September at the age of 77.
Jackie Collins
  1. This American writer of historical fiction won numerous awards for his writing.  I remember reading Ragtime, one of his 12 novels, in college. He died last July at the age of 84.

EL Doctorow

  1. This queen of true crime worked alongside Ted Bundy without knowing he was a serial killer and wrote a book about him.  She died in July at 83.

Ann Rule

  1. Richard Chamberlain and Barbara Stanwyck starred in the 1983 mini-series based on this Aussie’s best known novel.  She died last January at the age of 77.

Colleen McCullough

  1. Call him Sir.  This English fantasy author is best known for his series that consisted of 41 books, the last one being published last year 5 months after his death at the age of 66.

Terry Pratchett

  1. A Baroness who sat in the House of Lords isn’t who you might expect to write psychological murder mysteries.  She died last May at the age of 85 after suffering a stroke.

Ruth Rendell

  1. Considered by some an American West author, this novelist did set many of his 17 books in and around his native Montana.  During his 8 years suffering with multiple myeloma, he wrote his final 4 books. He passed away in April at the age of 75.

Ivan Doig

  1. This lawyer successfully prosecuted Charles Manson and later turned to writing, most notably Helter Skelter. He died of cancer last summer at the age of 80.

Vincent Bugliosi

  1. The 1990 movie Awakenings was based on the book he wrote about his work.  He died last August at the age of 82.

Oliver Sachs

  1. A two-time Pulitzer nominee and 5 time National Book Award nominee which he won in 1975 for Dog Soldiers.  He died last January at the age of 77.

Robert Stone

2015 Book Favorites and Stats

Books

I read 60 books this year. That’s one more than last year.  Next year’s goal will be 61 🙂

44 Fiction , 16 Non-fiction

Of those 44 fiction books, 25 were written by authors new to me!

33 Female authors , 27 Male authors

It was a banner year for audiobooks with 27 and 2 where I both read and listened.

I continued with 6 series that I already read (Mrs. Pollifax, Jack Reacher, Lucas Davenport, Blue Heron, Vanessa Michael Monroe, and Tommy & Tuppence)

I read 8 books for the Classics Club.  I have 4 years to finish 42 more 🙂

My favorite cover

Oldest book read?  The Hound of the Baskervilles by Sir Conan Arthur Doyle, 1902

Shortest book? 84, Charing Cross by Helene Hanff, 97 pages

Longest book? The Woman in White by Wilkie Collins, 672 pages

Most read author? A tie! I read 2 Agatha Christie (And Then There Were None, By the Pricking of My Thumbs) and 2 John Sandford (Field of Prey, Gathering Prey)

 

My 5 favorite books this year

1.The Homecoming of Samuel LakeThe Homecoming of Samuel Lake.  This is everything Southern fiction should be.

2.fpoRoll of Thunder, Hear My Cry. More Southern fiction at its best.  Winner of the 1977 Newberry Medal.

3.fpoThe Fault in Our Stars.  It was worth all the hype.

4.fpoMe Before You.  Also worth the hype. I’m looking forward to the sequel and movie in 2016!

5.fpoThe Perfect Match.  Second in the Blue Heron series and my favorite romance this year.

BONUS FAVORITE

None of these books were published this year so I’m adding a 6th favorite, my favorite book published in 2015.

6.fpoFirst Frost. I love SAA and this continuing story of the Waverly family.

 

 

Let Love Find You by Johanna Lindsey

fpoFinished 11-30-15. rating 4/5, historical romance, pub. 2012

Unabridged audio read by Anne Flosnik, 9.5 hours.

London society has its very own Cupid. Renowned horse breeder and occasional matchmaker Devin Baldwin pairs eligible young ladies with suitable gentlemen based on his theory of animal magnetism. Unafraid of ruffling the ton’s feathers, this darkly handsome Cupid doles out tips for bettering one’s chances of meeting a mate that are as pointed as the love legend’s sharpest arrows!

Lovely Amanda Locke, the daughter of a duke, is everything a nobleman could desire, yet she enters her third Season still searching for a match. Gossipmongers’ tongues are wagging, and her mystified family is considering drastic measures to find her a husband. But the insufferable advice of this Cupid fellow is the last thing Amanda wants.
When an earl passionate about horses becomes the target of her husband hunt, Amanda knows it’s time to overcome her fear of riding. With her sister-in-law Ophelia hastening the romance along by arranging riding lessons, Amanda is soon taking instruction from infuriating Devin Baldwin. Astonishingly, in her daily encounters with Devin—who treats her as an ordinary young woman, not a prize to be won at the marriage mart—Amanda experiences passion for the first time. Now, her search for a match takes her in an unexpected direction as she finds herself falling in love with Cupid himself.    from Goodreads

This is the fourth book about the Reid family and while I don’t plan to go back and read about her brothers, I did fall a little in love with her family and consider this a good standalone.

Amanda is in her third season and is willing to wait for the right man, but she’s getting nervous.  Her father and brothers haven’t put any pressure on her but her sister-in-law  makes a deal with the devil, er, Devin, and the two who don’t really like each other are forced together.    I really liked how this relationship developed, it felt real and balanced. There wasn’t the melodrama that I dislike in some romances.  A real relationship developed.

This is my first time reading Lindsey and I look forward to reading more.  The storyline, chemistry and romance were good and the sex scenes were never too much.  Anyone else a fan of hers and want to recommend a  title?

 

Quiz/Survey/Giveaway RESULTS & WINNER

Thank you so much for participating in last week’s quiz! It was so much fun reading your answers and looking for duplicates.  Amazingly, even with 100 books to choose from there was always more than one person voting on a title.  Let’s take a look…

  1. FAVORITE FICTION TITLE – 2 people voted for To Kill a Mockingbird (Hannah & Carrie)
  2. FAVORITE NON FICTION TITLE – 5 people voted for The Bible (Nise, Hannah, Kay, Vicki, Jean), 2 people for Stories I Only Tell My Friends by Rob Lowe (Steph & Gina), and 2 people for The Hiding Place by Corrie ten Boom (Wendy & Carrie)
  3. LEAST FAVORITE BOOK – Wicked by Gregory Maguire (Kathy & Nise)
  4. & 5.FAVORITE COVERSfpo(Nise, Wendy, Leslie, Carrie, Jean) fpo(Nise, Michelle, Vicki) fpo(Hannah, Wendy, Jean) fpo(Kay, Gina)
6. BEST TITLE – The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian by Sherman Alexie (Kathy, Nise,  Hannah, Vicki)
7. FAVORITE AUTHOR – Jane Austen (Steph, Wendy, Carrie) AND Stephen King (Michelle, Leslie, Vicki)
8. FAVORITE CHARACTER – Scout Finch from To Kill A Mockingbird ( Kathy, Hannah, Steph)
9. TITLE YOU’VE NEVER HEARD OF – A Day No Pigs Would Die (Nise, Wendy, Jean), The Man Who Ate a 747 by Ben Sherwood (Kathy, Hannah), Mindhunter:Inside the FBI’s Elite Serial Crime Unit (Kay, Carrie)

10. You all chose different books to win!IMG_5151and the winner is…..Gina from Book Dragon’s Lair!  She’ll be receiveing a copy of The Shadow of the Wind 🙂 

I’m taking next week off, but we’ll be back before the end of the year to finish out this round of quizzes.

Quiz/Survey/Giveaway

I revamped my favorite 100 book list and I’m pretty sure I hate it, BUT before I scrap it again I want you all to use the books on the list to fill out the following questions.  Everyone gets points for every question answered AND extra points if your answer matches anyone else’s.  PLUS I’M GIVING AWAY ONE OF MY FAVORITES JUST IN TIME FOR THE HOLIDAY SEASON!

Gage will randomly draw a winner from every one who participates this week!  Good luck 🙂

No Googling or looking at other commenter answers.  Yes, we’re going by the honor system 🙂  Play every week or just one time, you are always welcome 🙂  It only takes once to be eligible for a prize. 

You must use this list for the answers. YOU ARE ANSWERING THESE QUESTIONS FOR YOURSELF.

  1.  You Favorite fiction book
  2. Your Favorite non fiction book
  3. Your Least favorite book
  4. Your Favorite Cover
  5. Your Second favorite cover 🙂
  6. Your Best title
  7. Your Favorite author
  8. Your Favorite character
  9. One you’ve never heard of
  10. The one you’d like to win

Field of Prey by John Sandford

fpoField of Prey. Finished 11-6-15, rating 4.25/5, thriller, pub. 2014

Lucas Davenport series #24    (book 17) (book 18) (book 19) (book 20) (book 21) (book 22) (book 23)

Unabridged audio read by Richard Ferrone, who did an excellent job, 11.5 hours.

The night after the fourth of July, Layton Carlson Jr., of Red Wing, Minnesota, finally got lucky. And unlucky.

He’d picked the perfect spot to lose his virginity to his girlfriend, an abandoned farmyard in the middle of cornfields: nice, private, and quiet. The only problem was . . . something smelled bad—like, really bad. He mentioned it to a county deputy he knew, and when the cop took a look, he found a body stuffed down a cistern. And then another, and another.

By the time Lucas Davenport was called in, the police were up to fifteen bodies and counting. And as if that wasn’t bad enough, when Lucas began to investigate, he made some disturbing discoveries of his own. The victims had been killed over a great many years, one every summer, regular as clockwork. How could this have happened without anybody noticing?    from Goodreads

I love this series, obvious by the fact that I’ve read the series from the beginning.  Lucas, a detective, handles only those cases that the politicos need to have disappear.  His role is more of a mentor as he works with the police all over Minnesota, but he still manages to get his hands dirty.  He is great at what he does and possesses an authority that others look to in a time of crisis.

This was a strong story in the series. There was one scene where a girl gets killed that really bothered me but other than that it was all the usual violence.  I’ve missed Lucas and his family and co-workers, who all show up at some point.  I’ve always loved his relationship with Letty, his daughter who he adopted in one of the earlier books and this was no exception. Letty wants to do what Lucas does and he’s both scared and proud.  Letty is on her way to Stanford but has time to work with Lucas on this last case.

This series is perfect for anyone who likes police procedurals or detective series that are quick and satisfying reads.  I’d start at the beginning so that you can see the transformation of Lucas over the years.