Nicole Reads A Lot

so many books, so little time

The Name of the Wind by Patrick Rothfuss

Title:The Name of the Wind: The Kingkiller Chronicles, Day 1
Author:Patrick Rothfuss
PublisherBrilliance Audio
Publication Date:May 2009
Publisher's Description"My name is Kvothe. I have stolen princesses back from sleeping barrow kings. I have burned down the town of Trebon. I have spent the night with Felurian and left with both my sanity and my life. I was expelled from the University at a younger age than most people are allowed in. I tread paths by moonlight that others fear to speak of during the day. I have talked to God's, loved women and written songs that make the minstrels weep. You may have heard of me."
So begins a tale unequaled in fantasy literature - the story of a hero told in his own voice. It is a tale of sorrow, a tale of survival, a tale of one man's search for meaning in his universe, and how that search, and the indomitable will that drove it, gave birth to a legend.
My rating:****

Audible edition

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I was skeptical when a friend recommended this book to me. In general, I don’t end up being particularly drawn to fantasy books written by men. I have zero interest in wizardry and protracted fight scenes, and I usually hate the way that women in these books speak and act. That being said, I’d ignored enough of this friend’s book suggestions that I was starting to feel impolite. I picked up the print edition at the library, but 700+ pages of something I already wasn’t into didn’t help me become more motivated.

On a whim, I checked to see if there was an Audible edition of this book, and purchased it when I saw that there was. I am now patting myself on the back for this. With the obstacles that I mentioned earlier, I might not have read this book otherwise, and I would have missed out on a real treat.

Kvothe is such a great protagonist! Mr. Rothfuss does an excellent job at capturing a smart, funny character who is nevertheless very young. Kvothe is the very definition of somebody who is at times too smart for his own good. I laughed at his wit, then winced when it got the better of him. A lot of what happened to Kvothe was due to other people’s misdeeds or simple bad luck, but some of it was simply Kvothe having to learn time and again that pride sometimes hurts more than it helps. This book is a marvel; there are so many beautiful passages, and Mr. Podehl did a great job with the various accents and inflections in this book.

This book is so many things. As soon as I finished it, I started the second book, which was, if anything, even better. I highly recommend this series, even to those who wouldn’t normally read this type of book.

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Revenge of the Girl with the Great Personality by Elizabeth Eulberg

Title:Revenge of the Girl with the Great Personality
Author:Elizabeth Eulberg
PublisherScholastic Inc.
Publication Date:March 1, 2013
Publisher's DescriptionA hilarious new novel from Elizabeth Eulberg about taking the wall out of the wallflower so she can bloom.

Don't mess with a girl with a Great Personality.

Everybody loves Lexi. She's popular, smart, funny...but she's never been one of those girls, the pretty ones who get all the attention from guys. And on top of that, her seven-year-old sister, Mackenzie, is a terror in a tiara, and part of a pageant scene where she gets praised for her beauty (with the help of fake hair and tons of makeup).

Lexi's sick of it. She's sick of being the girl who hears about kisses instead of getting them. She's sick of being ignored by her longtime crush, Logan. She's sick of being taken for granted by her pageant-obsessed mom. And she's sick of having all her family's money wasted on a phony pursuit of perfection.

The time has come for Lexi to step out from the sidelines. Girls without great personalities aren't going to know what hit them. Because Lexi's going to play the beauty game - and she's in it to win it.
My rating:****

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I was intrigued by the publisher’s description of this title, and excited when I was granted access to read it. That excitement did not wane while I was reading this book. Despite being a quick read, Revenge of the Girl with the Great Personality is chock full of fairly intense issues. Lexi was a great protagonist: realistic, believable, and sympathetic even when displaying teenage cluelessness. With the exception of Brooke, who was a completely awful human being and lacked anything resembling a redeeming quality, every character in this book displayed the type of depth that makes for compelling reading.

Benny and Cam were  great friends; they were supportive, but not mindlessly so, and it made me happy that Lexi had them in her life. Lexi’s interactions with her parents were painfully realistic, and the rollercoaster nature of her relationship with Mac a great depiction of how siblings get along (or not).

Over the course of this novel Lexi went through a lot. She took some sometimes dodgy advice, followed her heart, left her comfort zone, and learned a lot of painful and valuable lessons. I wanted to stand up and cheer when I got to the end of the book. Nobody saved Lexi, or fixed her, or rearranged her world. No boy kissed her worries away.  Lexi was her own hero, and demonstrated why so many people in this book relied upon the good head on her shoulders (fairly or not)! In addition to being entertaining, I think that this book has a lot of good, non-preachy things to say about figuring out how to balance capability and self-reliance with enriching friendships. I’m recommending this title for inclusion in our young adult collection.

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Turning Point by Tiffany Snow

Title:Turning Point
Author:Tiffany Snow
PublisherAmazon Publishing
Publication Date:February 19, 2013
Publisher's DescriptionAfter her promotion from law firm Runner to Investigator, Kathleen Turner is learning the ropes of her new job from none other than assassin-for-hire Kade Dennon, a situation her boyfriend Blane Kirk is none too happy about. But the lessons with Kathleen take a back seat when Kade becomes a target. Previously untouchable, his enemies now know of the chink in his armor – his brother’s girlfriend.
And Kade’s not the only thing coming between Kathleen and Blane. From Blane's inexplicable defense of a man guilty of a horrible crime, to a mysterious stranger from Kathleen's past, to Kathleen' risky investigation into human traffickers, the obstacles mount against a relationship that's just begun to find trust again.

While Blane considers a job offer that would take him back to the front lines in the war on terror, Kathleen is determined to pursue her new career, with or without his approval. Unfortunately, her current case is far more dangerous than anyone knows. Someone close to Blane will go to extreme lengths to split them up, lengths that may prove worse than death for Kathleen.

Kathleen, Blane and Kade must atone for the sins of the past and the present. The fallout will force Kathleen to a turning point...in her career, and her life.
My rating:***.5

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I really enjoy this series.  I didn’t think much of Kathleen’s survival skills her first couple of times out, but I have to say that she acquitted herself better the third time around. I think that Kathleen is growing into a believable, relatable character, and Kade and Blane (oh my god, those names) are becoming less like stock characters and more like individuals.

It’s hard for me to pinpoint exactly why I like this book better, but I think it’s because Kathleen spent more time with Kade. I appreciate the way he treats her. He looks out for her, but not in a semi-creepy paternalistic way like Blane. Kade wants Kathleen to have the tools that she needs to take care of herself, and thinks well of her brain. Maybe she is smarter than I’ve given her credit for, and being around Blane just doesn’t give her the opportunity to express that intelligence.

I think that the class issues in the Kade-Kathleen-Blane triangle make it fresher than this type of story might otherwise be. Blane’s privilege is such that he honestly doesn’t get why Kathleen worries about their relationship. Of course, he doesn’t know what his evil Democrat uncle is up to (mwa ha ha), and Kathleen does, so she does have an advantage there. On Ms. Snow’s web site, she has pictured Kade as looking like my boyfriend Ian Somerhalder and Blane as looking like Val Kilmer. VAL KILMER??? Clearly, Kathleen will end up with Kade because really. If Ms. Snow were serious about Blane, he’d obviously look like my other boyfriend Matt Davis (just to keep it in the Vampire Diaries family).

I think that anybody who has stuck with this series through the first two books will be pleased with this entry. I found the second half of this book especially compelling, and I can’t wait to see what happens in book 4!

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Paradise Hops by Liz Crowe

Title:Paradise Hops
Author:Liz Crowe
PublisherTri Destiny Publishing
Publication Date:October 2012
Publisher's DescriptionA brutal attack left Lori Brockton convinced she was damaged goods. By the time she emerges from hiding two years later, ready to run her family's famous brewery, she's determined to be independent--never rely on anyone ever again. Nearly a year of working in every corner of Brockton Brewing Company, from warehouse to pub, front office to kitchen, teaches her all she needs to know about the business. Then, she comes face-to-face with masculine perfection in a suit and her world is rocked in more ways than one. Garret Hunter is the new Brockton business manager who takes one look at the beautiful, sad young woman and his entire existence coalesces around winning her heart.

But standing between Garrett and what he believes is his true love, is a six-feet six-inch blond-haired bad boy brewer.

Eli Buchannan is a craft beer rock star, recently hired by Brockton to drag the company into the 21st century. He brings innovation and attitude plus a prima donna ladies' man reputation. But he's sworn off anything resembling commitment, personal or professional, after getting burned at his last job on both fronts.

Garret Hunter is "The Perfect Man" -- handsome, successful, stable, eager to settle down. Eli Buchannan... is not. Compelling, smoking hot, creative and elusive, he represents everything Lori Brockton should avoid. But just as she makes a difficult choice, a drastic life-changing shift occurs, and nothing is ever the same again.
My rating:**.5

15836126Okay, what did I just read? I had a fairly good handle on this book for the first 2/3 of it, and then it went somewhere completely unexpected. The thing is, the detour, reroute, side trip, or whatever it was, wasn’t terrible, it just didn’t make much sense to me, given what we had been given to work with in the earlier parts of the book. Without giving away too many details, I will say that the final third of this book felt to me like the author didn’t want to make Lori unlikable, and took a fairly drastic step to prevent her from becoming the object of hatred by people on Team Eli OR Team Garrett.

Maybe I’m completely misreading that decision, but I felt that Ms. Crowe only briefly touched on a lot of things that could have made the characters come alive a little better. I shared Eli’s concerns over Garrett’s saintliness. Likewise, I felt that Eli was supposed to be an grouchy alpha male, but often ended up being an unnecessarily rude bully. I get that Lori, Garrett, and Eli had some personal issues to work out, but I really didn’t like the tone of some of their interactions.
I had serious reservations about how this book ended, but I don’t regret reading it.
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Grounds to Kill by Wendy Roberts

Title:Grounds to Kill
Author:Wendy Roberts
PublisherCarina Press
Publication Date:January 7, 2013
Publisher's DescriptionBarista Jen Hanby's coworkers give her a hard time for bringing coffee and pastries to a homeless man who sits outside her cafe - but she has a secret. The scruffy man is her father.

She's also hiding the little matter of why her palm itches. But how can she explain that her hand has a mind of its own and writes messages from the beyond? Right. That'll get her Employee of the Month.

When she finds herself scrawling your boyfriend is cheating on you! to herself on the bathroom mirror, she immediately dumps the guy. But then his little fling—who just happens to be her half sister—turns up dead, and suddenly Jen's homeless father is the prime suspect.

Jen knows he is being framed and must take matters into her own hands to protect him. But will anyone believe that the crazy old man is innocent? Or that his spirit-writing daughter holds the truth?
My rating:***.5

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This beginning of this review is heavy on the generalities, and the section that contains spoilers is clearly marked.

This was a cute little mystery (if a book centered around a murder can be called cute). Jen was a relatable character who handled some crazy things in believable ways. I mean, if I had a terrible half-sister who I hated and who later turned up dead, I think I might respond in much the same way as Jen. She took realistic, albeit not always smart, steps to prove her innocence and that of her father. Jen’s  support network, in the form of her friends and coworker, Mitch, added depth to her character and helped move  the story along. The whodunnit element of this book was well done, but wasn’t as big of a draw for me as the interpersonal relationships. Jen’s itchy palm was a cool addition to the story, and I appreciate that it wasn’t used as a lazy way for Ms. Roberts to magically advance the plot. While I appreciate red herrings, there were loose ends in this book that detracted from my enjoyment of it. I don’t ever want to think so much about lemon muffins again in my life.

Spoilers, commence.

I really, really, really wish that there hadn’t been a romantic angle in this book; it felt shoehorned in and unnecessary. Having established Jen and Mitch’s working friendship in a very different way, it strained credulity that a woman who was planning her six-month anniversary dinner with her boyfriend in the beginning of the book could already be on her way to serious emotional investment in somebody else by the end of it. Mitch said that he felt he had to tell her right after she broke up with Arthur, before she’d moved on to somebody else, but it would have been nice if he’d given her a breather.

As initially described, Jen and Mitch’s  relationship lacked the underlying tension that would have made their new direction more believable for me. While it was clear that Jen did find Mitch attractive, I didn’t get the impression that he thought of her that way from how he spoke with her; he seemed to regard her solely as a good friend. Am I supposed to believe that he teased her to disguise some his unspoken romantic attachment to her? Because that’s a little junior high-ish for me (hello, DJ Tanner). I would have appreciated any words or actions from him that would have made his later declaration of feelings for Jen seem like a natural progression instead of an unexpected 180. I don’t mind seemingly sudden relationship changes that are a surprise to a character who isn’t looking for them if there’s something that I as a reader can look back on as a potential clue. The way that Jen and Mitch went from friends to smoochy buddies didn’t sit well with me. Grounds to Kill feels like it could be the first book in a series; if so, it would have worked better for me to have the author use this book to set the stage for Jen and Mitch to kiss (and etc) in a future title. Hmmm, apparently I have a lot of feelings about this.

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