Sunday, 26 October 2008

'Baby Catcher; Chronicles of a Modern Midwife' by Peggy Vincent


Pages: 338 Ebook Non-Fiction


Once you get past the peculiar way in which Peggy Vincent skips between different decades, and the confusing way in which she uses her 'first person', this is actually a very good read and one that I really enjoyed. It was really entertaining and, sometimes, heart-rending, to read about other peoples experiences of childbirth and everything that goes with it! I admit a tear did come to my eye on some occasions! Vincent writes ... interestingly ... but stick with it, and you will enjoy this book too!


She never tired of the miracle. Each time she knelt to "catch" another baby, beloved California midwife Peggy Vincent paid homage to the moment when pain bows to joy, one person becomes two, woman turns to goddess, and the world moves aside to make room for one more soul.


Trained as a nurse at Duke University in the early 1960s, Vincent begins working in the delivery room of a local hospital in the San Francisco Bay area. Even after establishing an alternative birth center at the hospital, however, she is still frustrated with her lack of autonomy. Too often she witnesses births changing from normal to high risk because of routine obstetrical interventions.
Vincent then devotes herself to creating unique birth experiences for her clients and their families. She becomes a licensed midwife, opens her own practice, and delivers nearly three thousand babies during her remarkable career.


With every birth comes an unforgettable story. Each time Vincent "catches" a wet and wriggling baby, she encounters another memorable woman busy negotiating her unique path through the labyrinth of childbirth.


Meet Catherine as she rides out her labor in a car careening down a mountain road, her husband clueless at the wheel. Megan delivers on a leaky sailboat during the storm of the decade. Susannah gives birth so quietly and effortlessly, neither husband nor midwife notice much of anything until they see a baby lying on the bed, and Sofia spends her labor trying to keep her hyper doctor-father from burning down the house.


More than just a collection of birth stories, Baby Catcher is a provocative, moving, and highly personal account of the ongoing difficulties midwives face in the United States. With vivid portraits of courage, perseverance, and love, this is a passionate call to rethink today's technological hospital births in favor of a more individualized and profound experience in which mothers and fathers take the stage in the timeless drama of birth and renewal.


Rating - 8 out of 10 - get past the beginning and you will really enjoy this book!

'Magic Bites' by Ilona Andrews


RRP: £6.99 Pages: 260 Fantasy Fiction Paperback


This is the first time that I have read an Ilona Andrews novel, but it won't be the last! She has captured the essence of fantasy fiction this edgy, dark story. Yet, with the right amount of humour injected too. I ended this book wanting to read the sequel which, thankfully for me, is already out in the shops (Magic Bites)! It was fast-paced and easy to read with entertaining plot twists and also just the right mixtures of humour/romance/action/gore!


When the magic is up, rogue mages cast their spells and monsters appear, while guns refuse to fire and cars fail to start. But then technology returns, and the magic recedes as unpredictably as it arose, leaving all kinds of paranormal problems in its wake.


Kate Daniels is a down-on-her-luck mercernary who makes her living cleaning up these magical problems. But when Kate's guardian is murdered, her quest for justice draws her into a power struggle between two strong factions within Atlanta's magic circles.


The Masters of the Dead, necromancers who can control vampires, and the Pack, a paramilitary clan of shapechangers, blame each other for a series of bizarre killings - and the death of Kate's guardian may be part of the same mystery. Pressured by both sides to find the killer, Kate realises she's way out of her league - but she wouldn't have it any other way!


Rating - 10 out of 10! The new sequel is finding its way to me now!

'Poison' by Chris Wooding


RRP: £6.99 Pages: 269 Fantasy Fiction Paperback


What a fantastic read! I really enjoyed this quick, but entertaining and captivating story! It was short and definately sweet! This book is definately aimed at the younger category of readrs - say, teenagers - but, will also appeal to those fans of fantasy fiction as it encompasses goblins, faeries, huge spiders, different Realms etc!


Poison has always been a wilful, contrary girl, prone to being argumentative and stubborn. So when she discovers that her younger sister has been snatched by the phaeries, she decides to seek out the Phaerie Lord herself to get her back.


But finding him is not easy, and he's a little preoccupied when she does. Poison has stepped into a murderous world of intrigue, where the Lords of the Realms, a sinister pantheon of demi-gods, conspire and plot to overthrow the Hierophant - the most powerful lord of all. For the Hierophant is writing again, and his pen will decide all their fates...


With only her wits and her friends to aid her, Poison must survive the lethal attentions of the Phaerie Lord, rescue her sister and thwart a plot that could mean the end of her people. What awaits her is beyond anything she can imagine ...


Rating - definately 10 out of 10 for this fun and entertaining read!

Monday, 20 October 2008

'Shallow Graves' by Jeffery Deaver


RRP: £7.99 Pages: 324 Paperback Crime Fiction


I am a fan of Jeffery Deaver's work, but I found this one incredibly hard to read. I admit to skipping over sections of it which I just couldn't read. This wasn't his usual Lincoln Rhyme series and maybe I have been spoiled by that series for all of Deavers' other books. This one just didn't come up to par. It took really long (actually, never) to get into the story, and the story just didn't grab my attention - it was predictable and dull. Shame.


John Pellam had been in the trenches of filmmaking, with a promising Hollywood career - until tragedy sidetracked him. Now he is a location scout, travelling the country in search of shooting sites for films. When he rides down Main Street, locals usually clamour for their chance at fifteen minutes of fame.


But in a small town in upstate New York, Pellam experiences a very different reception. His illusionary world is shattered by a savage murder, and Pellam is suddenly centre stage in an unfolding drama of violence, lust and conspiracy in this less-than-picture-perfect locale.


Rating - 3 out of 10 - a disappointing facimile of Deavers normal work

Tuesday, 14 October 2008

'The Executioners Song' by Norman Mailer




RRP: £12.99 Pages: 1050 True Crime/Biography Paperback


I did my best. I really did. I wanted to read this book, and found I just couldn't get past page 350. And that was fairly easy to do until page 300 when it just seemed to slow down so much it was like wading through sticky treacle sauce - just couldn't seem to go any faster, any easier.
To begin with, the book was easy and quick off of the mark. It gave the background of the main character - Gary Gilmore - who the book is about. And that was interesting and easy to read. However, after he got arrested, the book took a downward turn in that it went into too much detail. It was kind of like reading the encyclopedia cover-to-cover instead of just picking out the interesting bits. I always thought that books with lots of info would be good to read, but this once gave way too much. I personally felt it did not need to go into so much detail. For some readers, this might work, but not for me unfortunately.


In the summer of 1976 Gary Gilmore robbed two men. Then he shot them in cold blood. For those murders Gilmore was sent languish on Death Row - and could confidently expect his sentence to be commuted to life imprisonment. In America, no one had been executed for twn years.


But Gary Gilmore wanted to die, and his ensuing battle with the authorities for the right to do so made him into a world-wide celebrity - and ensured that his execution turned into the most gruesome media event of the decade.


Maybe I will try and read this book again in a few months. It is well-written, but just not to my taste at the moment as too hard to really concentrate well on. And this book needs the concentration and the focus on details!


Rating - 7 out of 10

Thursday, 9 October 2008

'Eyewitness Auschwitz; Three Years in the Gas Chambers' by Filip Muller


RRP: $12.99 Pages: 171 Paperback Non-fiction


This book really did make me cry. A lot. My husband told me to stop reading it and I told him that I couldn't - its our duty to remember these atrocities so that we can help to prevent them reoccuring in the future. Now I have my daughter, I can really empathise with those mothers who had to undress their children knowing that they were undressing them to go into the gas chambers and face death.


This is an emotional story told by one of the Sonderkommando (one of the workforce made up of prisoners) of the Auschwitz crematoria...


Filip Muller came to Auschwitz with one of the earliest transports from Slovakia in April 1942 and began working in the gassing installations and crematoria in May. He was still alive when the gassings ceased in November 1944. He saw multitudes come and disappear; by sheer luck he survived. Muller is neither a historian nor a psychologist; he is a source - one of the few prisoners who saw the Jewish people die and lived to tell about it. 'Eyewitness Auschwitz' is thus one of the key documents of the Holocaust.


Rating - 10 out of 10 - I can't recommend this enough. Filip Muller writes with compassion and sticks to the facts - what he saw and no embellishments.

'No Time for Goodbye' by Linwood Barclay


RRP: £7.99 Pages: 437 Paperback Crime Fiction


This is one of 'Richard & Judy's Summer Reads' and I can see why. It is a real page-turner.
Its the first time that I have read a book by Linwood Barclay and I will definately be looking out for more of his work. 'No Time For Goodbye' is written in the first person, from the husbands perspective, about his wife and the loss of her family at age 16. The writing is fast-paced but imaginative, and the plot doesn't seem to be far-fetched at all. Good stuff!


The House was silent. No sound of her parents getting ready for work, or her brother late for school. Were they punishing her for last night? She'd been out on a date when she should have been studying, and had a huge fight with her father. So where was everyone now? Why had her family disappeared?


Twenty-five years later the mystery is no nearer to being solved and Cynthia is still haunted by unaswered questions. Were her family murdered? Abducted? If so, why was she spared? And if they're alive, why did they abandon her?


Then a letter arrives, a letter which makes no sense. Soon Cynthia begins to realise that stirring up the past could be the worst mistake she has ever made.


Rating: 9 out of 10 - 1 point of for being written in 1st person, but other than that, a fantastic read!

'The Summoning' by Kelley Armstrong


RRP: £6.99 Pages: 390 Modern Fantasy Fiction


My frequent reviewers will know that Kelley Armstrong is one of my favourie authors, and this new series is going to be the start of another fantastic set!


'The Summoning' is once again written in the first person, but as all of Armstrong's books are, I came to expect that. The story just flows from page to page and just keeps you hooked until the end. The only thing that disappoints me is that it was so short! But only because I really want to know what happens next - this book ends on a real cliff hanger!


All Chloe Saunders wants is a life like any normal teenager - the chance to get through school, make friends, and maybe meet a boy. But when she starts seeing ghosts, she knows that life will never be normal again.


Soon the ghosts are everywhere, demanding her attention. When Chloe finally breaks down, she's admitted to a group home for disturbed kids. At first Lyle House seems oaky, but as she gets to know the other patients - charming SImon and his ominous, unsmiling brother Derek; obnoxious Tori; and Rae, who has a 'thing' for fire - Chloe begins to realise that something strange and sinister binds them all together, and it isn't your usual 'problem kid' behaviour.


And they're about to discover that Lyle House is not your usual group home, either ...


Rating - 10 out of 10 - another great read!

'The Broken Window' by Jeffery Deaver


RRP: £16.99 Pages: 414 Hardback Crime Fiction


I have got on my bookshelf every single one of Jeffery Deavers' books which feature Lincoln Rhyme and, most of those which don't! So that will tell you that I love his books. All of Deavers' books are thrilling to read - the characters are real, the plots are complex yet easy to follow, and all of his books are page-turners with twists that no-one could expect!


Lincoln Rhyme is wrapped up in a transatlantic case when he gets an unwelcome phone call: his cousin, Arthur, has been arrested for first-degree murder. All the evidence says he did it. And this much evidence can't be wrong.
Or can it? As Lincoln and Amelia investigate, they find a spider web of crime woven by the most insidious killer they have ever encountered. A man obessesed with collecting - from junk on the street to intimate details about his victims, to the ultimate trophy: human lives themselves. This is a man who tortures and murders, a man proficient with razors and guns, but whose most dangerous weapon is information.
Information he obsessively culls from the corporate and government databases which contain every single aspect of our lives.
Information he wields with ruthless precision against those he targets ... and against those who try to stop him.


Rating - 10 out of 10! And this is one for the conspiracy theoriests amongst us too!

Wednesday, 8 October 2008

'HERO' by Perry Moore




EBOOK RRP: £5.99 Fiction Comedy/Action



This was the first Ebook I read on my new Ebook reader, and it was a corker! I expected it to be a childrens book, but found that it was definately aimed at adults and the sense of humour in the book was one that I think only adults could understand. It made me laugh out loud at several points but also, I think, addressed several important issues regarding sexuality, relationships, strengths etc! But in a completely indirect and non-moralistic way! Fantastic!



Even though Thom Creed's a basketball star, his high school classmates keep their distance. They've picked up on something different about Thom. Plus, his father, Hal Creed, was one of the greatest and most beloved superheroes of his time until a catastrophic event left him disfigured and an outcast. The last thing in the world Thom wants is to add to his father's pain, so he keeps secrets. Like that he has special powers. And he's been asked to join the League -- the very organization of superheroes that disowned Hal. But joining the League opens up a new world to Thom. There, he connects with a misfit group of aspiring heroes: Scarlett, who can control fire but not her anger; Typhoid Larry, who can make anyone sick with his touch; Ruth, a wise old woman who can see the futureTogether these unlikely heroes become friends and begin to uncover a plot to kill the superheroes. This groundbreaking and widely acclaimed novel tells an unforgettable story about love, loss, and redemption.



My Rating: 10 out of 10! A very good read indeed!