Tuesday, July 1, 2014

Top Ten Tuesday: To define is to limit



 




TOP FAVORITE CLASSICS

An odd thing about this week's topic, is that I'm currently reading Pride and Prejudice for the first time.So far so good, but it doesn't feel right to add it to my list just yet. 




Animal Farm
George Orwell
Don't trust a pig!! Guess that saying not only applies to relationships but farms as well.



Gone with the Wind
Margaret Mitchell
I so give a damn about this book. It is extremely long (used to be that way back then) but meaningful. 



Pollyanna
Eleanor H. Porter
Taught me to see life through a more positive light.  



The Picture of Dorian Gray
Oscar Wilde
My favorite classic by far. Dark and disturbing, should appeal to all who refuse to accept old age.





Which book made your list?

Review: The Book Thief


In Zusak's The Book Thief, Death narrates a story that changed him forever. It appears a little orphan girl, Liesel, triggered his humanity as he sees her adapt to an outspoken adoptive mother and a kiss prone neighbor, but also to the political changes in Germany, 1939, that leads the family to hide a young Jewish refugee.

Although, many have seen the talented cast in the film bring the well-adapted script to life, the book remains deeply poetic, and worth every page and tear. Liesel's struggle to fit into her new life, especially to learn how to read and write despite the insults from the other kids, was inspiring. She doesn't learn to prove them wrong -- she develops a love for books -- staying up late every night with her Papa studying words. Every character had their moment, including Rudy, who gets told off for painting himself with mud to look like his favorite runner only to receive a disappointing lesson on racism.

I leave you with the official movie trailer


Saturday, June 28, 2014

Caught my arrow #35

Caught my Arrow is a meme similar to In my mailbox and  Stalking the Shelves featuring books that were purchased, borrowed or received that week.



It's Sports Week at BookCupid's house!! I'm counting the hours until the FiFa games take over again. Until then, I can always pass the time with some reading. 


Purchased


Catching Jordan




Received from Publisher


Riley Mae and the  Rock Shocker Trek



What are you reading this week?

Friday, June 27, 2014

Feature and Follow Friday: Shopping Ideas



Parajunkee Alison Can Read


FEATURE & FOLLOW FRIDAY



Once you answer be sure to leave me your link so I can follow you back



Q: Post a photo of your favorite coffee mug (or mugs if you can't choose just one)


Tea aficionado with no artistic coffee mug?!? I'm in serious need of help. Keep seeing these around Chapters lately. The resemblance they share with Harry Potter's owl is appealing.



Wednesday, June 25, 2014

Review: Her Dark Curiosity



The past always comes back to haunt us.

Although, Juliet's heart still yearns for Montgomery and her body aches for the medicine that maintains her animal urges under control -- Juliet wants to rebuild her live. Creating a cure is her only hope, then she can forget everything. Forget Moreau Island. Unfortunately for her, someone something followed her off the island making sure the horrific secret that happened there is out. Will she be able to cure herself before her Dad's friends decide to keep her as an experiment?

Once again, Megan Shepherd used the retell pattern, basing the story on Jekyll and Hyde. The effect wasn't as moving as The Madman's Daughter but only because Dr. Moreau was an evil genius badass and is a tough act to follow. The love triangle remained with a steamy hot sex scene worth rereading. All in all, the book is a nice follow-up to the first, even if, one can't help but ask themselves ''Where is this all leading to?''