Sundays with Gage – Beating the heat

It’s been sweltering here, like most of the US, and there are only so many ways to keep your toddler entertained in air conditioning.  Last Sunday we headed to the JCC (Jewish Community Center) and took advantage of a free week at the facilities.  Lucky for us being Jewish is not a requirement and they finished an $18m renovation two years ago so the place is very nice.  Gage got to go to the pool four times and loved this fountain pool best.  We’re considering joining for the summer just so he have this much fun every weekend.

 You can’t even see half of the fountains in this photo.  A total homerun for little kids. And all free!

We also had the grandparents here this week.  A storm took out their electricity last Friday and it didn’t come on til late Wednesday, so they packed up and spent some time enjoying their grandson, air conditioning, and TV.

Hope you are all finding ways to stay cool.

Tom Cruise is Jack Reacher?

I don’t think so!  I hate to send more negative energy Tom’s way this week, but when I saw the stills from the upcoming Jack Reacher movie I had a visceral reaction and it wasn’t good.  Jack Reacher (of Lee Child’s awesome series) is a 6’5″ vigilante killing machine.  His size and mere look are imposing.  Tom Cruise is many things, but that he ain’t.  Lee Child has said this about the choice, “Reacher’s size in the books is a metaphor for an unstoppable force, which Cruise portrays in his own way.”  Um, okay, but I don’t believe you.

Have you read the series?  How do you feel about Tom as Reacher?  If the studio wanted a big name attached they could have gone with these two perfect choices, both over 6’2″ and highly watchable…

 or

Who do you think would be the perfect Jack Reacher?

Never Tell a Lie by Hallie Ephron

Never Tell a LieNever Tell a Lie  Finished 7-4-12, rating 3.5/5, 271 pages, pub. 2009

After several miscarriages Ivy and David Rose are finally nine months pregnant.  They hold a yard sale to clean out the house before baby Sprout arrives and a surprising customer shows up, an oft maligned girl from their high school who looks like a new woman and who is nine months pregnant as well.  When the woman disappears and no remembers seeing her leave the yard sale, David and Ivy come under police scrutiny.

Having just been pregnant two years ago I could really feel for Ivy. I completely understood the need for a yard sale and house clean/purge.  I was worried that she had to deal with so much stress and something would happen to the baby or even that the experience she’d waited so long for would be tainted by media attention and David’s lies.  This is the driving storyline that kept me reading.  I wanted to know that Ivy and baby were going to be okay.

The mystery itself, what happened to Melinda White, was solid, but could have used a few more twisty turns.  I suspected what happened from the beginning and I was right, although I had no idea the motive behind it or the extreme, crazy plot that played out in the end.  It was super fast-paced and hard to put down.

This is Hallie’s first novel.  I reviewed Hallie’s 1001 Books for Every Mood a few years ago (here) and I also interviewed her (here).  She is a lovely author and I thought of her after her sister Nora died last week.  So I picked up her book from my shelf and dug in.

Picture This Debut Novel Quiz – guessing closed

I haven’t done one of these in a while and I hope all of the images work (if not let please let me know).  See if you can guess these classic debut novels.  I’ll even help you out by listing the authors (with a few extra thrown in – this is a quiz after all!) but I only need the title for the answer.

You have until noon Sunday to submit your answers as a comment.  Comment will be hidden until I post the answers.  No Googling!

This round will last til August.  The person with the most points will win a B&N gift card (total $ based on # of total participants, so please play) and a randomly selected participant will win a fun prize from me.

Have fun and Good Luck!  Last week’s Cinderella Quiz here.  Leaderboard and rules here.

Authors of these books (with an extra few thrown in for fun)-Eugenides, Smith, Sewell, Wells, Golding, Shelley, Tartt, Adams, Plath, Wiesel, Hosseini, Amis, Salinger, Roy, Palahniuk

1.  Night by Elie Wiesel

2. The    The Bell Jar by Sylvia Plath

3.  Fight Club by Chuck Palahniuk

4. White Teeth by Zadie Smith

5. The   The Kite Runner by Khaled Hosseini

6.  Frankenstein by Mary Shelley

7.   Black Beauty by Anna Sewell

8. The   The Time Machine by HG Wells

9. The  in the Catcher in the Rye by JD Salinger

10. The   The Secret History by Donna Tartt

Sundays with Gage – Parties and Allergies

This is Maddie, Gage’s first non-family babysitter and her graduation party was yesterday.  She heads to the University of Dayton in August.

I love parties.  I love to mingle.  I like to talk to everyone there.  Imagine trying to do this with a squirmy kid in tow who only wants to run wild.  And this kid cannot eat anything with dairy or peanuts.  Being only 20 months old he is likely to put anything interesting he finds on a chair, table or floor in to his mouth.  At our last graduation party I barely grabbed a m&m off the floor before he saw it.  Hard to be social when you are trying to be vigilant.

We stopped taking him to church in January because he had graduated to the next nursery (walkers) and when I dropped him off the first time there were kids walking around with their bottles of milk.  I scared the woman who signed him in by telling her that one sip of milk would mean a trip to the hospital for us and after a tense 45 minutes of a sermon I don’t remember we picked him up.  She was holding onto him, reading a book.  It really wasn’t fair to her or the other kids so we’re going to wait.  Wait for the allergy to go away.

Gage’s allergist and tummy doctor disagree on his diagnosis but both think that we should try milk again when he is two (October).  And both of them want him in the ICU hooked up to an IV overnight.  This is not something we want to do but it would be a relief to know if the allergy has gone away.  Maybe then a party would be fun again.  Someday 🙂

Death by Chocolate by Julie Anne Lindsey

Death by ChocolateDeath by Chocolate Finished 6-27-12, rating 2.5/5, 289 pages, pub. 2012

I briefly met Julie at the Ohioana Book Festival and picked up her book by the title alone.  This is her first book, but she already has plans to publish books 2 and 3 in the series.  I love her blog Musings from the Slush Pile. This is my fifth stop on my Ohio author tour.

Ruby Russell has just found out her husband has been cheating on her with a much younger woman.  Instead of confronting the jerk she mixes his Viagra with some chocolate mousse and leaves it as a treat when he arrives home.  The next morning Ruby wakes up to a dead husband and some very incompetent detectives.  Ruby goes on to use her deadly culinary skills to deliver justice to her town and her best friend Charlotte is along for the ride.  When Ruby’s son comes home with a bride-to-be the crazy reaches a fever pitch.

This book is completely over the top.  Ruby, who you realize is stark raving mad about 50 pages in, goes on to kill many more people before, well, I can’t tell you that.  I had a major problem with Ruby.  I did not like her at all and I didn’t find her craziness funny.  I couldn’t relate to anything that was going on in the book which made the book drag on for me.  I wanted to like it and maybe it’s just because there’s a lot going on around here right now and I’m in no mood to suffer fools.

When I looked around it seemed that the other bloggers who have read it liked it, so what do I know?  The storytelling was okay and all of the characters were full of interesting foibles.  If you like high body counts in your mystery with a dash of nuttiness them maybe this would work for you.

Junes 5 Word Movie Reviews – Join in and win $ for Charity

A slow movie month!

Every time you add 5 words of your own to one of my reviews then you donate $1 to charity.  What charity, you ask?  The charity is chosen by the person who has the most reviews once we reach 100. (Last charity herePLEASE leave a clear 5 word comment so I can give credit for it.

You can add reviews to any of my past movie posts AND see who is in the contributing lead here.

Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows, Part 2, 2011 (Daniel Radcliffe, Emma Watson, Rupert Grint)     Grade A-

Fitting end to remarkable series.

Filled with action, drama, humor. (Kathy)

My Harry Potter life complete!   (Kay)

Ricochet, 1991 (Denzel Washington. John Lithgow, Kevin Pollak, Ice-T)  Grade C

Ridiculous but two great leads.

A female figure in silhouette stands before an enormous statue of a humanoid head. Text at the middle of the poster reveals the tagline "The Search For Our Beginning Could Lead To Our End". Text at the bottom of the poster reveals the title, production credits and rating.Prometheus,2012 (Noomi Rapace, Michael Fassbender, Guy Pearce, Charlize Theron)   Grade D

Laughable search for life’s beginning.

Humans deserving alien body invasion. (Teddyree)

Cinderella Quiz – guessing closed

I am currently giving away the book Cinder on audio (here to enter) and thought we’d take a look at some other adaptations of the popular fairy tale.

You have until noon Sunday to submit your answers as a comment.  Comment will be hidden until I post the answers.  No Googling!

This round will last til August.  The person with the most points will win a B&N gift card (total $ based on # of total participants, so please play) and a randomly selected participant will win a fun prize from me.

Have fun and Good Luck!  Last week’s Dropout Quiz here.  Leaderboard and rules here.

I just need the name of the movie for the first five.  Some of are were very loose adaptations of Cinderella 😉

1.     Ever After  2.   Ella Enchanted/Princess Diaries 3.  A Cinderella Story  4.   Enchanted   5. Maid in Manhattan

6. Gregory Maguire took on the Wizard of Oz in his first book and Cinderella in his second.  Do you know the title?  Confessions of an Ugly Stepsister

7. Lil is the fallen godmother of Cinderella in this unique take on the Cinderella story written by Carolyn Turgeon.  Godmother:The Secret Cinderella Story

8. Mercedes Lackey rewrote the Cinderella story in this book, the first of the Five Hundred Kingdoms series.  The Fairy Godmother

9. A modern and fresh take on the fairy tale by Malinda Lo.  Ash

10. In Cinder by Marissa Meyer, what is it that makes her so unique?  (there are a few right answers here so don’t be afraid to guess)  There are many things but the most obvious is that she’s a cyborg.

An Infinite Number of Monkeys by Les Roberts

An Infinite Number of Monkeys: A Saxon Mystery (#1)An Infinite Number of Monkeys. Stacy and Janet are both rating it 3.75 stars.

I’ve raved about the Milan Jacovich series set in Cleveland and when given the opportunity to read Roberts first book and series set in Los Angeles I said yes and brought my mom along for the fun (post here).  I stopped by his blog and saw this recent post about the publication of his first book and Ray Bradbury.  I thought I’d share because it’s a good one and it’ll make you want to write a fan letter.  This is the fourth stop on my Ohio author tour and my second by Les Roberts.

This is book 1 in the Saxon series and right now the whole series is half price on ebooks (info here).

My mom reads all the time, especially now that she’s retired, so I convinced her to try a joint review with me.  We may do more in the future after some tweaking.  So, please welcome my mom, Janet.

Saxon is half private eye, half actor with only half a name.  Les Roberts claims that he doesn’t know Saxon’s given name, so here are a few suggestions from us…

Stacy: He does seem to like the ladies, so Casanova or Bond. Saxon Bond.

Janet: I’d pick a strong name like Jack or Luke.

How did you feel about Saxon?

Janet: Saxon is a strong character and very likable.   I liked that Saxon’s best friend in the whole world was Jo, his bookkeeper and secretary.

Stacy: Except for his inclination to fall in love on sight, I liked him.  I don’t know how good Saxon was as an actor, but he was a great private detective.  He knew the right people, wasn’t afraid to go toe-to-toe with those more dangerous than he was, and he always seemed to ask the right questions. He was tough, fair, and smart. 

Saxon was investigating a possible attempted murder and became involved with a bestselling author and his daughter.  What did you think of the story?

Stacy: I liked it.  It felt like a throwback to some of my favorite movies in the mystery noir genre. I think the Los Angeles film scene was a perfect setting to enhance the comparison. 

Janet: The story moved along well and since there were no shortage of suspects, I did not guess who the murderer was until the end.

Did you have a favorite part?

Janet: My favorite part of the book was how it all came together at the end.  It was action packed.

Stacy: I liked that I kind of guessed the big reveal but still didn’t know for sure who the culprit was.  Made me feel smart and confused at the same time.

One word to describe the book.

Stacy: Noirish

Janet: If I had to describe the book in a word it would be ‘fast-paced’.  Sorry, I know that’s two words.

This was Roberts’ first book and series.  How does is compare to the Milan series?

Janet:  This was my first Saxon book and I plan to read the others.  I have read the Milan Jacovich mysteries and loved every one.  Milan is still my favorite sleuth, but Saxon is definitely worth the read. 

Stacy: I like the Milan series better, but that may be because it’s set in my town of Cleveland.  While Milan and Saxon have a lot in common, part of my love for Milan comes from his love of family and I don’t get that from Saxon.  Yet.  I do plan on reading the rest of the series.

I want to thank Jane from Gray & Company for sending us the book.

Sundays with Gage – All Boy

Gage likes trucks, cars, planes, trains, picking up things that are too big for him and running with them as fast as possible around the house, hitting his head on the floor…basically only sitting still for more than a few minutes to watch Elmo.  So you can imagine how cool it was when we had some guys come this week to work under the deck.

We’d turn on Elmo on in the family room and he’d take breaks to come to the kitchen when the pounding or power tools got to be too much temptation.

 I know that some people think that boys learn to be boys and girls learn to be girls by the toys they are given and the way they are treated as babes and there is something to that I’m sure.  But I’m just as sure that when it comes to the love of power tools some things are just inherent.