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I Love to Read Month 2015 – Top February Picks

8Feb | 2015

posted by Paula

i love to read month 2015

i love to read month 2015

Amazon’s Book Picks for February

If you are a book lover, Amazon has a Best Books of the Month list for February. Since I love to read, I love to read month 2015 appeals to me. Actually just reading about books makes me want to go curl up on the sofa to crack the spine of a new novel. I have half a dozen waiting to be reviewed and can hardly keep up these days.

There are many genres of books represented here, so you are sure to find a new favorite this month. Did you know it was I love to read month 2015? Have you read any of these Amazon picks? What is your favourite genre? What is the most recent read you have enjoyed? Leave me a comment so I can look for it if I haven’t read it yet. I am currently almost done Girl on a Train. It’s a page turner!

1.       The Nightingale by Kristin Hannah   
2.       Green on Blue: A Novel  by Elliot Ackerman  
3.       Funny Girl by Nick Hornby
4.       Ghettoside: A True Story of Murder in America  by Jill Leovy 
5.       A Kim Jong-II Production.. by Paul Fischer

   6.      A Spool of Blue Thread: A Novel  by Anne Tyler 

 7.       Sapiens: A Brief History of Humankind  
 8.       Get in Trouble: Stories  by Kelly Link
 9.       Gods and Kings: The Rise and Fall of Alexander McQueen and John Galliano by Dana Thomas
10.   It’s What I Do: A Photographer’s Life of Love and War
11.   My Sunshine Away by M.O. Walsh
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Filed Under: authors, book reviews, books, fiction, reading Tagged With: amazon, books, love, reading

Five Questions with Author Donna Mebane, Author of Tomorrow Comes

23Jan | 2015

posted by Paula

Grief books loss of a child

Author Donna Mebane has written a novel called Tomorrow Comes, prompted by the death of her daughter. Tomorrow Comes is a beautiful book that will appeal to anyone struggling with grief.

1. Can you speak to the inspiration for writing the book? The inspiration, of course, was the unexpected death of my daughter, but the motivation was to try to imagine a place where Emma could “live on” both for her sake and for mine. I have always loved writing and when Emma died, friends urged me to write to try to find a way to manage my grief. At first, it was awful – dark and morbid. But over time, the idea for a book started to take shape. I actually started the book on a trip with my daughter, Sarah, to Turkey, where we thought we’d find some solace in the beauty of spending time near the sea. For more about how the pieces came together see Author Noteshttp://starshinegalaxy.com/authors/donna-mebane/author-notes/ on www.starshinegalaxy.com

Donna Mebane, author of Tomorrow Comes

Donna Mebane, author of Tomorrow Comes

  1. Tell readers a little bit about grief and anything she might be able to share that is helpful to others going through loss? Probably the best advice I can give is that grief has no timetable, no step by step guide. Everyone grieves differently. Even if you are grieving the same loss, you bring your own personality, your own spiritual foundation, your own coping mechanisms. When Emma died, both my husband and I had lost a child, the same child and at the same time. Yet we reacted to it completely differently. I had trouble getting out of bed – didn’t sleep, but couldn’t find the energy to do anything but stare at a wall and cry. When I did have energy, I watched the pictures of her we set to song for her funeral. But Rod got very busy with all things Emma.  He cataloged all of her computer information, organized all her school projects, published a book (A Book About Chaps) which she had written as a first grade school project. Initially I found his busyness somewhat insensitive and he found my constant walking into darkness disconcerting. Writing Tomorrow Comes helped my whole family understand that we were doing the very best we could, both in wrestling with our own grief and in our (initial) inability to support each other’s grief.  I wrote a blog for the Huffington Post readers might find useful.  Although it’s about making it through the holidays, the tips I shared seemed to resonate with a lot of people who were dealing with loss at any time during the year.http://www.huffingtonpost.com/donna-mebane/6-steps-to-survive-the-holiday-season-after-loss_b_6269858.html You never get over grief. But you can still find a way to balance mourning with living.

 

  1. Where do you find the time to write? Initially I wrote every minute that I wasn’t working. I didn’t sleep much and I wrote the first several chapters of Tomorrow Comes as an e-mail to myself. Once I determined what I wanted to say, the book just poured out of me.  I had long stretches when I didn’t have the energy to write anything, but when I wrote, I was a maniac, sometimes starting on a Friday night and writing for 24 hours straight. I finished Tomorrow Comes in about 6 months and we had a published version to give to friends and relatives on the first anniversary of Emma’s death. I decided I wanted to keep writing about Emma and have now finished a second book, Tomorrow Matters, which is in final editing. That one was a little harder, because I wrote it about an Emma that was evolving and growing and becoming more at home in what I call “After.”  It follows the same format – back and forth between real events in our lives and imagined ones in Emma’s – but in the same manner that children continue to grow after they leave home, I am not as intimate with the path her “life” is taking in the second book. I find as I write the third book that I need quiet, dedicated time to write as it is the most fictionalized of the three. I have been fortunate in that both my husband and my manager are so encouraging. Together we decided that I would cut back on my “real” work so that I could write more. I now have Friday’s off and I dedicate it to writing.  I still write some evenings, but usually evenings I am working on things like this request for an interview!!

 

  1. What is your writing process like? As I mentioned above, it has changed over time. One thing that has been really helpful to me is to write out a synopsis for every chapter of my books before I write even the first word. Although I stray a little from this outline, overall it is a very useful anchor that guides me back if I get too far astray. I then keep a blank document into which I cut and paste everything that seems extraneous to the current chapter. Perhaps because I am writing about my daughter, I don’t want to lose any thought I had, even if it doesn’t advance the current book. I am an extrovert and tend to get energized by other people. My daughter Sarah has been a saint in listening to my writing and giving feedback whenever I am stuck.  While I was writing Tomorrow Comes, she lived in Washington, DC.  I would call her every night and read what I had written.  We’d both cry and cry and then she would manage to say, “it’s really good, Mom” and that would encourage me to keep writing. The second book has been a little lonelier, even though Sarah now lives with us in Geneva, a Chicago suburb.  Sarah has read parts of it, but, though she still grieves every day for the loss of her sister, she also is very practical about ways to stay focused on the here and now. The book throws her off sometimes because it forces her to spend intense time with Emma and she chooses her time to do that very carefully. It’s her way to cope and I honor that. For the first book, I shared every few chapters with close friends and family. I haven’t done that with Tomorrow Matters, intending instead to give those closest to me a final, printed version.  I also start my writing, whether it’s a book, an article, or even the non-fiction writing I do for work, with a  title.  For some reason that helps me.  I am a little stuck on the outline for the third book because a title hasn’t hit me yet so if any of you readers want to suggest something, I would be eternally grateful and will cite you in the book. My vision is that it will be the last book in this particularly set of Emma stories.  In it, all of the characteristics that make her so lovable will evolve to the point that she is having a tremendous impact on the world of After. I, of course, have always thought of her as near perfect (though she alone is responsible for my gray hairs – she was by far the toughest of my four children, perhaps because she was so much like I was when I was her age!!) But in book 3, she will become her very best self. It is what any mother would wish for their child and I am determined to help make it happen for her. Any ideas for a title that sums that up?  Extra points if it contains the word “Tomorrow!”

 

  1. What gets you out of bed every day?  The human being has a remarkable capacity to keep standing, no matter what happens. I would always say knowingly when I heard of such a tragedy that I would never ever be able to survive the loss of one of my children.  I believed that I would just curl up in a ball and die too.  Of course, I didn’t, though I still wonder why sometimes.  I miss her so much it’s a physical ache in my heart that won’t go away. I feel heavy – my limbs weighed down by not being able to hug her, my ears ringing because I can’t quite hear her laugh, my eyes cloudy because I will never again see her beautiful face. But I have come to find joy again.  This Christmas, though we all are still saddened by the empty spot in every corner of our home, we laughed until tears came at funny presents we had picked out for each other and silly notes we all write on each package. We saw cardinals and stars (both things we have come to associate with Emma) everywhere we looked, and though we are not particularly religious, we couldn’t help but feel that her spirit was entwined with the spirit so many in the world celebrate on Christmas day. What gets me out of bed every day? The opportunity to live each day as the gift that it is.  Emma only had 19 years to live and oh how she used each and every one of those days to get everything she could out of life.  I am 62.  I have no idea how many days I have left, but one thing I learned from her death is that each one of them is special. The first thing she bought for her new apartment (a place she had signed the lease for, but in which she never got to live) was a sign that reads “Live life to the fullest and embrace it with no regrets.” She did! I try to.

Filed Under: authors, book reviews, books, fiction, reading Tagged With: authors, book reviews, books, fiction, grief, holidays

26 Must Read Books for Teen Girls

14Jan | 2015

posted by Paula

Must Read Books for Teen Girls

Must Read Books for Teen Girls

26 Must Read Books for Teen Girls

I have been in love with books ever since I was a little girl. Happily I continued to enjoy reading through my teenage years and still LOVE the written word in all its forms. Ebooks, paperback, hard cover..it doesn’t matter to me. I love to get lost in a well constructed plot, and I admire a unique turn of phrase. I still get a feeling akin to a punch in the gut when I read a sentence I wish I had written myself. It’s like tasting a savory meal and turning the flavors over on your tongue to tease them out and try to engrave the memory on your tastebuds. Words are meaty, or inadequate, poetic, occasionally colorful, and sometimes inspiring.

My kids both love books. There is far too much evidence of  their love of books here in my house where books threaten to collapse all the shelves in each of the bedrooms. I find books stashed in the bathrooms and frequently have to knock on doors to remind people there are other things to do besides read books and play on the iPad all night. (I recognize there are worse pastimes, but occasionally kids need to come up for air, or go out for air.)

My girls are 10 and 13 now and I wanted a list of great must read books for teenage girls, so I made one. If you know me at all then you know that some of my favorite authors these days fall in the young adult or youth literature market. There is some amazing writing happening in that genre. Anyways, this isn’t the final word on lists of books for teenage girls. But it is a good start. I promise to share another list soon of some of my favourite Canadian authors.

Here you’ll find everything from classics like Diary of Anne Frank to new favorites such as Twisted Fate. Some of these books are my all-time favorites list too. I have found myself reading them over, even though I am no longer a teenage girl! I enjoy sharing some of my favorites with my daughters. Did your favorite teen girl book make the list? Please share with us by commenting below. Happy Reading!

  1. Anne of Green Gables
  2. Diary of Anne Frank
  3. Hana’s Suitcase
  4. The Hunger Games Box Set
  5. The Fault in Our Stars
  6. Paper Towns
  7. If I Stay
  8. The Perks of Being a Wallflower
  9. Lewis Carroll’s Alice In Wonderland
  10. I’ll Give You the Sun
  11. We Were Liars
  12. Go Ask Alice
  13. Looking for Alaska
  14. The Princess Bride
  15. Stardust
  16. Divergent Series
  17. Flowers For Algernon
  18. The Twilight Sage Collection
  19. Tuck Everlasting
  20. The Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants Collection
  21. My Sister’s Keeper
  22. The Princess Diaries
  23. Delirium
  24. Miss Peregrine’s Home for Peculiar Children
  25. The House on Mango Street
  26. Twisted Fate

This post contains affiliate links. That means I may receive compensation if you choose to purchase a book via the link here.

Filed Under: authors, books, children, fiction, reading Tagged With: books, children, diaries, girls, literature, reading, teenage girls

Ten Best Bedtime Stories for Children

11Jan | 2015

posted by Paula

best bedtime stories

best bedtime stories

One of my favourite things about parenting right from the start was that special time right before sleep when cuddles are plentiful and it’t time to read together. Even before we adopted both of our girls I romanticized this idea of reading to our children one day. I think that I was hopeful I would be able to share my love of reading with a little person one day. Happily, when the kids came along, we enjoyed so many great books together. Sometimes I still read to them even though they are now 10 and 13. Bedtime is still one of my favourite times to connect and share bedtime stories.

Is a story part of your bedtime routine? Reading a book with the kids is a great way to wind down, when it is time to get tucked in. Some books are just right for bedtime. The books listed below are perfect for bedtime, because they are all about going to bed. Ten stories about bedtime, for bedtime that are under $10:

1. A Book of Sleep

2. The Going-To-Bed Book

3. Time for Bed

4. Love You Forever

5. Snoozers : 7 Short Short Bedtime Stories for Lively Little Kids

6. It’s Time to Sleep, My Love

7. Kiss Good Night (Sam Books)

8. Good Night, Gorilla

9. I Love to Sleep in My Own Bed (Bedtime stories book collection) (Volume 1)

10. Little Owl’s Night

Filed Under: authors, book reviews, books, children's books, children's picture books, fiction, reading Tagged With: books, children, fiction, reading

30 Hanukkah Books for Children

28Nov | 2014

posted by Paula

30 Hanukkah Books for Children

30 Hanukkah Books for Children

30 Hannukah Books for Children

Check out this wonderful list of 30 Hanukkah books for children that I have compiled for you. These books are a great way to discover the importance of this miraculous Holiday. Scoop up some of these gems for great Hanukkah gifts, or keep some for a great addition to your family’s library.

What is your favorite Hanukkah book? Did it make our list? Happy Hanukkah!

  1. The Night Before Hanukkah
  2. The Story of Hanukkah
  3. Hanukkah Lights
  4. Maccabee! The Story of Hanukkah
  5. I Know an Old Lady Who Swallowed a Dreidel
  6. Light the Lights! A Story About Celebrating Hanukkah
  7. Hershel and the Hanukkah Goblins
  8. Bright Baby Touch and Feel Hanukkah
  9. Hanukkah!
  10. Celebrate
  11. Simon and the Bear: A Hanukkah Tale
  12. Hanukkah: A Mini Motion Book
  13. The Borrowed Hanukkah Latkes
  14. Ultimate Sticker Book: Hanukkah
  15. Hanukkah Bear
  16. Happy Hanukkah, Corduroy
  17. All About Hanukkah
  18. Hanukkah: A Counting Book
  19. Shine Little Candles
  20. The Dreidel that Wouldn’t Spin
  21. Biscuit’s Hanukkah
  22. The Kvetch Who Stole Hanukkah
  23. How Do Dinosaurs Say Happy Chanukah?
  24. Happy Hanukkah, Curious George
  25. Chanukah Lights Everywhere
  26. Latke, the Lucky Dog
  27. Sammy Spider’s First Hanukkah
  28. Moishe’s Miracle
  29. My First Menorah
  30. Chanukah Bugs: A Pop-up Celebration

 

Filed Under: authors, book reviews, books, fiction, reading, Uncategorized Tagged With: books, children, Hannukah, holidays, literacy, religion

Faction – Kurt Kamm Author Interview

23Oct | 2014

posted by Paula

1 Tunnel Visions Cover

First responders and the hazards they face and deter are at the heart of the fact-based mystery novels of Malibu, California author, Kurt Kamm. The following is a question and answer author interview with Kurt Kamm.

A graduate of Brown University and Columbia Law School, Kurt had a successful career as a financial executive and CEO before immersing himself in the world of the first responders who feature so prominently in his books. After attending the El Camino Fire Academy and training in wildland firefighting, arson investigation, and hazardous materials response, Kurt also became a graduate of the ATF Citizen’s Academy and has ridden along with the Los Angeles County Fire Department’s famed Urban Search & Rescue Task Force. Along with this, Kurt has has used his contacts with CalFire, Los Angeles and Ventura County Fire Departments, and the ATF to enhance the research which vests his novels with a realism that puts his readers on the ground with his characters.

  1. When did you realize you wanted to be a writer, and when did you actually begin to write?

I have always enjoyed writing and won a short story prize in high school. When I was at Brown, I took a career guidance test and was advised to become a writer. Even in those young, naive days, I knew I couldn’t earn enough money as a writer and decided to go to law school and on to Wall Street. I look at writing as a final reward for working hard at other things for most of my life

  1. What in your background prepared you to be a writer?

Every lawyer has to learn how to write, if not in the most interesting way. Right brain-left brain. I was never very good at math, but I was a terrific reader and had a good imagination. My business partner couldn’t write two sentences but was brilliant at numbers. We made a great pair. 

  1. It is said that the key to becoming a writer is to sit in a chair and write. What made you finally sit down and write?

I retired, was recently divorced, and moved out to Malibu. One day I woke up and had NOTHING to do. A friend from the LA Times convinced me to start writing classes. We were encouraged to keep a journal, and write something, anything, every day. That’s how I got started. I really enjoyed it and thought, this is something I can do.

  1. You write faction – fiction based on fact. How much research goes into your novels?

A lot of research. I just read about an author who wrote an entire series of novels about India without ever having even been there. That’s inconceivable to me. I have to be out in the field, smelling, touching, checking out the colors and textures and, most important, listening to the people around me. I have spent hundreds of hours with the men from LA County Fire Department in training situations and at actual incidents. I’ve never had so much fun in my life and have opened a window into a part of life that was unknown to me when I worked in the financial world. I use those experiences as the backgrounds for my novels. I could never dream that stuff up.

  1. Do you do your research yourself, or do you have an assistant do it?

I do all the research myself. I’m not sharing the fun with anyone!

  1. With the attention you give to detail, you know a tremendous amount about your topics. Why faction? Why not non-fiction?

Non-fiction is boring. I want to create factual backgrounds and then insert unique characters: identical twins who are terrorists, albinos obsessed with tattoos and rare blood, and weather broadcasters fixated on fires.

  1. In Tunnel Visions you bring attention to the realities we are facing with water in California? What made this topic of interest to you?

The idea for Tunnel Visions came from an actual event, a disastrous gas explosion in a water tunnel which killed 17 men. Once I adopted that as the background for the novel, the whole issue of California’s water shortage became part of the story.

  1. Is this reversible? How?

It’s hard to reverse a water shortage unless you are God. Conservation will help. The rain/drought cycles may be decades long. The western United States had a 50 year wet cycle up to end of the 20th Century, so everyone adjusted their expectations and water usage upward. Now we’re in a drought cycle and it’s hard to know how long it will last.

  1. For you, what drives a novel – plot or character?

Character drives the novel. I love to imagine people who are slightly, or significantly, off center. Isn’t everyone a little weird? The personality issues create the plot.

  1. You capture the voice and pathos of a young protagonist easily. How easy or difficult is this for you?

I refuse to admit my age. Who wants to read something written by an old guy about an old character who’s been there and done that? I like to write about young characters who are intrepid and enthusiastic but don’t have enough life-experience to avoid making mistakes. Actually, it’s easy to create these young characters, and I love ‘em all! Now excuse me, I have to take my mid-morning nap. 

  1. Your female character in Tunnel Vision is particularly strong. Did you make her this way on purpose? Did you model her on anyone in particular?

I do know a woman who is a special agent for the ATF, and she gave me some insight into her life in law enforcement. She is attractive, feminine, and tough as nails. I almost fell off my chair when she told me that she worked undercover for two years in an outlaw motorcycle gang in Wichita. (“Winter on a bike sucks.”) I like including strong female characters – I guess it brings out my feminine side.

  1. What do you hope readers take away from your books?

First, I hope they simply enjoy the experience of reading my novels and find my characters interesting, lovable, or reprehensible. I would also hope they get some insight into the skill and dedication of the first responders who make everyone else’s life safer and easier.

  1. What is the best advice you ever received as a writer?

How about the worst advice? The worst advice was, “Write what you know.” If you do that, you might not ever write anything interesting. Get away from your computer. Get yourself into something you know nothing about, and learn something new. Then go back and write about that.

     10. What is your best advice for aspiring authors?

When I was a master’s bicycle racer, I spent hours, training by myself and trashing my body. Then, on race days, I got up at 4 AM, drove two hours to a 7 AM race start, busted my gut for 2 hours, and sometimes ended up on the podium. And guess what? Almost no one was around and almost no one cared. Sometimes I asked myself, “Why am I doing this?” The answer was, because I loved it. The same applies to writing. You may spend hours working hard to create something no one notices or cares about, so you had better enjoy the process, because that may be all the reward you get. There are no guarantees. That said, if you do love what you are doing, don’t ever give up.

Kurt Kamm is an award-winning novelist of fact-based fiction. His latest thriller, Tunnel Visions, is on shelves now. You can read more from Kurt on Huffington Post or Facebook. To read interviews conducted by Kurt with some of your favorite best-selling authors, visit www.KurtKamm.com.

 

 

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Filed Under: authors, book reviews, books, fiction, reading

Polarity Bear Tours The Zoo Review

9Dec | 2013

posted by Paula

great_books_for_kids
Polarity Bear Tours the Zoo: A Central Park Adventure is a whimsical little picture book for any child over the age of four who loves reading about animals. Polarity is a bear who seems a wee bit depressed, or bored with her home in a cage inside the Central Park Zoo. She enjoys the zoo but what good is that when she is caged and not able to explore? She arrived at the zoo when animals still lived in cages and not more natural habitats. These days, many zoos in North America have more spacious environments that more closely resemble life in the wild. 
So one day, Polarity hatches a plan. She squeezes the bars of her cage apart, when she angrily sticks out her tongue at the world and the cage breaks, freeing her for the evening. She tours the zoo when nobody else is around. She rides the merry-go-round, dances around, swims with the sea lions and milks every ounce of fun out of her night. 
The prose is lovely here and Polarity Bear Tours the Zoo: A Central Park Adventure is told in rhyme. The rhyme however is never forced. It flows in a manner that supports and builds the story. Lately we have seen too many children’s books with rhyme that impedes narrative because it is so obviously forced. Polarity Bear Tours the Zoo is fun conceptually and a read that demands a bit of skill on the part of the reader. Challenging words and place names add to the reading level and experience here. Although I believe some 4-year-old readers might be interested in hearing this book the skill level is more aptly set about the age 6-7 and up in my opinion. 
Polarity was published in 2011 in the US. The setting is fun and the author Sue de Cuevas reads kids well. She is a specialist on the Bronte Sisters and used to teach at Harvard, but here she brings a smart little story to an audience of growing readers and she pens the narrative with a sophisticated touch. The illustrations here are dynamite. One of my favourite things to do when we review books here is to ask my daughter’s opinions on the story. Ainsley, 9, enjoyed the story and very much likes books about animals. But her one conistent comment was about the illustrations. “I loved the pictures.” We both had trouble choosing just one because there are so many brilliant pictures in this book. Illustrator Wendy Rasmussen elevates this book to art with her incredible pictures of Polarity dancing, swimming with sea lions (my favourite) and then collapsing in exhaustion at end of the night. Rasmussen has illustrated over 25 books, many of which were about animals. I cannot stress enough how magical and captivating her pictures are. These are frameable pages, magnificently rendered with emotion and life. Each picture captures Polarity experiences a larger than life adventure and emotion. Spectacular art.
Polarity Bear Tours the Zoo: A Central Park Adventure would be a great gift book for any animal loving children in your life. It costs $17.95 and is a hardcover picture book published by Polarity Bear Books. This book gets a $$$$ out of $$$$$. We received a copy for free in order to review this book. I was not paid to post this review. My opinion is my own.

Filed Under: children's books, family, fiction, gifts, literacy, picture books, reading, zoos

Top Five Young Adult (13-17) Reads for 2013

5Dec | 2013

posted by Paula

top_five_young_adult_reads_2013

My apologies. I have been absent for a couple of months here because I have been getting ready to move and renovating and haven’t had any time to read. But now as we approach the end of year 2013 I feel the need to get back to reading and to compile the usual year end lists of best reads. Why not start with Young Adults ages 13 and upto 17?

 I plan to bring you a few more as the month progresses. I am gifted here often with some incredible reads from young adult authors and I love that I get to read some gorgeous writing here before my daughter does. Then, of course I share these with her because I am all kinds of awesome like that.

The Secret Ingredient was reviewed here in July.

The five Best young Adult books published in 2013:
 1. The Moon and More
 2. Just One Day
 3. Fangirl
 4. The Secret Ingredient
 5.Allegiant These are recommended for ages 13 to 17. Do you have any others to add?

Filed Under: Amazon, authors, books, fiction, juvenile fiction, lists, reading, young adults

The Secret Ingredient – Review #books

30Jul | 2013

posted by Paula

I’ve always been a fan of a metaphor done well and although food metaphors can be overdone I just can’t help but think The Secret Ingredient is a palate cleansing kind of novel.
En route to Chicago for a blogging conference I dove into a new release from Delacorte Press by a random author I’d never heard of before. The Secret Ingredient was one of the numerous books in a surprise package sent to me by Random House a couple weeks ago. Now, getting a box full of 17 books right after your birthday, for a reader like me was the best gift ever. But by the same token getting 17 books that all look interesting is a challenge too. Which one should I choose first? 
Several of the new releases and advanced reader’s copies I received are young adult fiction. My daughter is 12 and she is a voracious reader, so I wondered if The Secret Ingredient by Stewart Lewis would be appropriate for her yet. I cracked the spine of The Secret Ingredient on the Amtrak train from Port Huron to Chicago and had it finished within four hours of the ride. The Secret Ingredient is a page-turner with a compelling plot about a young woman with two Dads (if you follow my blog thriftymommastips.com you can see why that hooked me right there, can’t you?) Olivia is a mature sixteen-year-old chef starting to wonder about her birth mother. Her Dads are both artistic and they run a restaurant in Los Angeles where Olivia cooks the specials most days. Her brother is also adopted and a wee bit of a flake with too many get rich quick schemes, an entrepreneurial spirit and musical talent to boot. Jeremy, unlike Olivia, has no inkling or desire to seek out his biological parents. 
Olivia is quite simply magnificent in her realism. Lewis breathes her onto the page effortlessly where she exists every bit as real as some of the most memorable characters from literary classics. I enjoyed this character completely, from start to finish, as she moved through her unique experience of the teenage years with eyes of an adoptee seeking to figure out various facets of her identity. Adoption plots somehow always seem to find me and this is an endless source of amusement here as I rarely pick up a book seeking to read about adoption anymore. Here adoption is a sub-plot woven consistently and evenly throughout. There is little drama and very little TV sensationalization here, which I fully appreciate. The Secret Ingredient is just a metaphor for the recipe of her life, her character and personality. Olivia wonders in a very realistic manner where her cooking talent comes from. It is her one gift not shared with anyone else in her family. She recalls all the various moments throughout school where her differences are called into question causing her to contemplate her history as an adoptee. She frames her experience against her brother’s and asks often if he ever cares to wonder where his biological parents might be. But Jeremy doesn’t seem to have a curious bone in his body.
Olivia’s two Dads are at a cross roads also, with their livelihood in jeopardy and bankruptcy imminent. Olivia’s best friend complains about her health nut of a mother until she realizes her mother has been covering an illness with a healthy eating and fitness obsession.  
The Secret Ingredient was a light, entertaining, and very well written, young adult book for the ages 14 plus. There is mild sexual activity within that I wouldn’t want my kids reading about yet. But I will shelve this one and keep it for my oldest daughter to read in a couple of years because the main character is so well done. 
I highly recommend this summer read for anyone 14 plus, especially appealing to those who have any experience of adoption or foster care. $$$$$ out of $$$$$.

The Secret Ingredient is fiction, published June 2013, 256 pages, by Stewart Lewis, $19.99 Trade Paperback in Canada. 

Filed Under: adoption, authors, books, fiction, food, literature, reviews, young adult

Too Hurt to Stay Review

23Jun | 2013

posted by Paula

I started reading Too Hurt To Stay and then my mother passed away unexpectedly and my hobbies all fell by the wayside for a time. Grief and funerals took the place of reading for fun. The topic matter of Too Hurt To Stay intrigued me, but at the same time I was a bit apprehensive that picking up a heavy book right after such a trauma might plunge me into a deeper sadness. Eventually my heart felt ready to tackle Casey Watson’s world. In all honestly this book, a memoir, is not as devastatingly sad as I anticipated. It is quite simply an honest story from a foster carer’s perspective about one little boy who came into care and was her charge for a time. Too Hurt to Stay is about an 8-year-old boy declared born evil even before he hits Casey’s home, a place they also learn is his last chance at foster care.

Casey is a specialist foster care provider in the United Kingdom. Casey Watson is a pseudonym and has written many books in a similar vein on children in care. I look forward to reading more because her writing style is straightforward and easy to read and her topic is enlightening. Casey is married with children and has three grandchildren. She lives with her husband Mike. The couple care for the highest needs children with no place else to go.

Spencer comes to Casey’s home with a huge bag of tricks and the couple is warned in advance, but has some difficulty believing a boy of 8 could be a match for their skills. But as time wears on and the honeymoon ends Spencer reveals every last one of his behaviours, which all resist modification techniques. Casey never gives up on Spencer despite the fact that he is a pretty excellent confabulator who seems to lack a conscience and acts, at times, feral. Spencer’s visits to his biological family are taxing on everyone and they don’t go well at all. Casey suspects Spencer’s Mom is an alcoholic and she has too many children to care for. But strangely Spencer’s file states he asked to be put in care on his own. That seems at odds with what Casey sees and hears and so she does a bit of investigating and learns there’s a bot more to his situation that everyone thought.

The epilogue here is a lovely wrap-up. Too Hurt to Stay gets a $$$$ out of $$$$$. It’s a good read, with a solid story. I would recommend it for any of my fellow adoptive parents or foster care providers. It is always helpful to gain real situational stories about the behaviours of hurt children. This is a hard topic matter, but a worthwhile read. Too Hurt to Stay has many lessons to teach other foster care providers.

Too Hurt to Stay is by Casey Watson, Harper Element, 2012, paperback, $14.99, 294 pages.

Filed Under: adoption, books, caregiving, fiction, memoir, neglect, parenting, reading

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About Paula


Keeper of the Sanity - Freelance journalist, social media consultant and community manager. I build buzz for you. #KelloggersNetwork. Twitter Party junkie. Published in magazines, newspapers, on TV, radio etc.

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