Sparkling Cyanide November 21, 2007
Posted by sadiejean in Book Reviews, Mystery.Tags: agatha christie, Sparkling Cyanide
1 comment so far
—4—
I read another Agatha Christie! And, of course, it was really good. But guess what! I figured out who-did-it! Not how, but who. Sparkling Cyanide begins with the death of Rosemary Barton, a beautiful but empty woman dining at dinner with friends and family. Her poisoning by cyanide is ruled a suicide, but all those at dinner have a motive for killing her. Soon her husband suspects foul play, and an investigation ensues with twists and surprises. Who actually killed Rosemary, and are they responsible for another death too?
Everyone in this book was so suspicious! It was really a great group of characters. First instincts aren’t always right in this mystery, and the way everything wraps up neatly was really impressive. I think I liked the other Agatha Christie’s a bit more, but this was still a great book.
4/5
Try Sparkling Cyanide if you like Agatha Christie’s other mystery And Then There Were None.
New York Times Bestsellers 11.18.07 November 18, 2007
Posted by sadiejean in Randomness.add a comment
HARDCOVER FICTION
Top 5
1. STONE COLD, by David Baldacci
2. CREATION IN DEATH, by J. D. Robb
3. THE CHASE, by Clive Cussler
4. PROTECT AND DEFEND, by Vince Flynn
5. RHETT BUTLER’S PEOPLE, by Donald McCaig
HARDCOVER NONFICTION
Top 5
1. I AM AMERICA (AND SO CAN YOU!), by Stephen Colbert, Richard Dahm, Paul Dinello, Allison Silverman et al.
2. BOOM!, by Tom Brokaw
3. RESCUING SPRITE, by Mark R. Levin
4. CLAPTON, by Eric Clapton
5. THE AGE OF TURBULENCE, by Alan Greenspan
Loving Frank November 18, 2007
Posted by sadiejean in Anderson Book Club, Best Sellers, Book Reviews, General Fiction.Tags: Loving Frank, Nancy Horan, Frank Lloyd Wright
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—3—
The latest “Anything but the Book” Club, better known as the Anderson Family Book Club, selection was Nancy Horan’s Loving Frank. This piece of fiction follows the affair of Frank Lloyd Wright with one of his clients, Mamah Borthwick Cheney. Told from Mamah’s perspective, it recounts the love and frustration of this couple in the early 1900’s. They first hide their relationship from their families, but eventually run off together, leaving behind their spouses and children.
The book’s focus is how Mamah is an independent woman at a time when there were few, and Frank is the genius architect with his own hidden demons. However, instead of appearing as revolutionaries, they merely appear selfish. Mamah leaves her children to be raised by her sister, and still acts like she’s been wronged when criticism befalls her. Frank cannot control his spending and finances, but argues that his workers should just be happy they get to learn from him. Together they make about the least sympathetic couple ever.
But the book is fairly interesting. At first I didn’t know how they would turn this story into a whole novel. And it did drag on, especially the first half. The final portion finally picked up, and the ending was a whirlwind that was unexpected. While the conclusion is true, it almost made me laugh after the plodding nature of the rest of the book. I think I liked Loving Frank, but I’m not sure I’d recommend it to anyone looking for a new book to read.
3/5
Want to read along with the Anderson Book Club? The next installment is Garden Spells by Sarah Addison Allen.A Man Without A Country November 15, 2007
Posted by sadiejean in Book Reviews, Nonfiction.Tags: A Man Without A Country, Kurt Vonnegut
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—5—
This Book Is Awesome. It is basically Kurt Vonnegut ranting about whatever he wants to. His writing, President Bush, the environment, and art . And it is FUNNY. Dark, but funny. I enjoyed this book more than I thought possible. A+ from me.
5/5
Here’s an example of how the book goes:
“Here is a lesson in creative writing.
First Rule: Do not use semicolons. They are transvestite hermaphrodites representing absolutely nothing. All they do is show you’ve been to college.”
The Art of Detection November 14, 2007
Posted by sadiejean in Book Reviews, Mystery.Tags: Laurie R. King, The Art of Detection
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—2.5—
The Art of Detection by Laurie R. King surrounds the murder of a man obsessed with Sherlock Holmes, and a literary murder thought to be written by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle himself. The present day San Fransisco man has renovated much of his house to reflect a home Holmes himself would have lived in, complete with lanterns and a water closet. When this man turns up dead, detective Kate Martinelli is given the case and clues from an undiscovered manuscript that eerily echos the modern day murder.
I was drawn to this novel because its plot surrounded Holmes. However, I often felt the mystery dragged on. Almost half of the 500+ page book is the manuscript, a book within a book I suppose. It wasn’t what you’d call a thrilling mystery, although the eccentric Holmes addicts were entertaining. Overall, I think better mysteries have been written.
2.5/5
New York Times Bestsellers 11.6.07 November 6, 2007
Posted by sadiejean in Randomness.add a comment
HARDCOVER FICTION
Top 5
1. BOOK OF THE DEAD, by Patricia Cornwell
2. A LICK OF FROST, by Laurell K. Hamilton
3. PLAYING FOR PIZZA, by John Grisham
4. WORLD WITHOUT END, by Ken Follett
5. THE ALMOST MOON, by Alice Sebold
HARDCOVER NONFICTION
Top 5
1. I AM AMERICA (AND SO CAN YOU!), by Stephen Colbert, Richard Dahm, Paul Dinello and Allison Silverman
2. CLAPTON, by Eric Clapton
3. MY GRANDFATHER’S SON, by Clarence Thomas
4. LONE SURVIVOR, by Marcus Luttrell with Patrick Robinson
5. THE AGE OF TURBULENCE, by Alan Greenspan
The Ghost Map November 6, 2007
Posted by sadiejean in Book Reviews, Nonfiction.Tags: Cholera, History of Medicine, Steven Johnson, The Ghost Map
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—4—
The Ghost Map by Steven Johnson is described better by its subtitle: The Story of London’s Most Terrifying Epidemic– And How it Changed Science, Cities, and the Modern World. Set in 1854, it describes the path of cholera in London and the impact it had on the modern world. Johnson artfully describes the incredible growth of this city, the politics of sanitation, the views of science, and the effects of the disease on the individual. He manages to put seemingly unrelated events, ideas, history (and prehistory), science, and politics together to describe the impact of civilization and disease. The main character is John Snow, the scientist who tracked down the source of the outbreak and fought against the miasma theory of disease, where “all smell is disease”.
The Ghost Map was a thrilling page-turner, until the conclusion, which was repetitive and dry. But you could probably read the book and skip the conclusion and think it great!
Here’s some fun things:
“Our bones themselves are the result of a recycling scheme pioneered by natural selection billions of years ago. All nucleated organisms generate excess calcium as a waste product. Since at least the Cambrian times, organisms have accumulated those calcium reserves, and put them to good use: building shells, teeth, skeletons. Your ability to walk upright is due to evolution’s knack for recycling its toxic waste.” pg.6
“The dramatic increase of people available to populate the new urban spaces of the Industrial Age may have had one other cause: tea. The population growth during the first half of the eighteenth century neatly coincided with the mass adoption of tea as the de facto national beverage…Brewed tea possesses several crucial antibacterial properties that help ward off waterborne diseases…The explosion of tea drinking in the late 1700s was, from the bacteria’s point of view, a microbial holocaust.” pg. 95
“The search for unpolluted drinking waster is as old as civilization itself…The solution was to drink alcohol…Whatever health risks were posed by beer (and later wine) in the early days of agrarian setlements were more than offset by alcohol’s antibacterial properties. Dying of cirrhosis of the liver in your forties was better than dying of dysentery in your twenties” pg. 103
4/5



