Showing posts with label Follow Friday. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Follow Friday. Show all posts

Thursday, September 22, 2011

Follow Friday


This week's question is:


Do you have a favorite series that you read over and over again? Tell us a bit about it and why you keep on revisiting it.

Here are my favorite series I will read over and over: 
1) Anne of Green Gables by L.M. Montegomery - because the series takes me back to my childhood
2) Sookie Stackhouse by Charlaine Harris - mostly to keep up with the differences with True Blood haha.
3) Naked Werewolf by Molly Harper- snark fest and it is set in Alaska 
4) Mist of Avalon Series by Marion Zimmer Bradley- I fell in love with it years ago and still think it is magic. The series may just be called Avalon. I'm not certain.
5) Hannah Swensen Series  by Joann Fluke - I especially like reading these over in the winter months, maybe for the cookie recipes? I don't know. But I truly do love this series. 
 Here are covers from the first book of each series:

Anne of Green Gables: All Aboard Reading Dead Until Dark (Sookie Stackhouse, #1) How to Flirt with a Naked Werewolf (Naked Werewolf, #1)

The Mists of Avalon (Avalon, #1) Chocolate Chip Cookie Murder (Hannah Swensen, #1)

If you would like more information on this meme please stop by the host sites: Parajunkee.com  and Alisoncanread.com


Please leave a comment. I appreciate hearing from you!

Thursday, September 15, 2011

FF




Hi everyone! Welcome to the Alaskan Book Cafe! I am Cristi.  Today is Follow My Book Blog Friday, (or FF). FF is hosted by 2 wonderfully awesome blogs, Parajunkee.com and Alisoncanread.com. Every Friday they feature 2 new blog and today I am one of the featured blogs, the other is Alaiel at Librarianmouse.com! *The crowd roars!*  I am so excited!!  For those new to my blog I read a wide variety of genres so you probably never really know what you are going to find here. I also have my grandson, who lives with me and is on the autism spectrum, on here sometimes doing children's book reviews. You can see him by clicking on One Face of Autism in my tabs. I also have pictures of Alaska both on a tab and also on posts. Right now I am hosting a giveaway for Ghost on Black Mountain by Ann Hite so I hope you will all enter that. It is an awesome book and there will be 2 winners. So I hope you look around and like watch you see. Have a super awesome weekend!
As you all know there is a question each week. Today's question is:    It's that pesky magic book fairy again! She has another wish: What imaginary book world would you like to make a reality?

Omgosh! There are so many! I want to live in Storyland. A magical place where you move from one book world into another much the way we travel city to city. That's not too much to ask is it? 
My first pick would have to be the world of Anne of Green Gables. I have loved that book since childhood. Others I would like to visit are the world of the Midnight Breed series. I would so love to be one of the women living in that world. A bit dangerous yes but I am sure I would be kept safe.  I would love to walk into the world of the book I review below, Pirates of Savannah. Also dangerous but who has not dreamed of being a pirate? The world of Sookie Stackhouse would be another awesome place to go. All the different breeds coming out, vampires, shifters, the fae. It makes me dizzy from excitement. Really I think there should be a Book World to rival Disney World. I know you all would join me for a vacation there.

Please visit my fellow bloggers in the hop!













Friday, August 19, 2011

Follow My Blog Friday #59



Q. If you could write yourself a part in a book, what book would it be and what role would you play in that book?


I always wanted to be in Anne of Green Gables, as one of Anne and Diana's friends. From books I have read recently I want to be on a road trip with Kat Nove and Jeni Decker in Waiting for Karl Rove. Maybe as a stalker fan or blogger who meets them somewhere between Texas and Nevada. The possibilities for fun are endless.  Or in Rose Pressey's Larue Donavan Series as one of Larue's Ghoulfriends. Being a vampire in one of Chloe Neill's Chicagoland Vampire Series or Jaz Primo's Sunset Vampire Series would be cool. I like that their female vampires are strong women. Being in any of Molly Harper's books because she writes so funny. I just want to have fun. I could go on and on because, really, don't you imagine yourself in some role with every book you read? 

Leave a comment and let me know where I can find yours. If you are not really participating in this meme on your blog but just came by to read my answer, then please leave your answer in my comments. I am interested in what you think and which book you have dreamed yourself in. I also enjoy visiting all the blogs.  I do go to each one and I always follow back. Have an awesome weekend!!

Thanks for coming by and don't forget to enter the giveaway, (Sorry but due to all the differing laws of each country, I had to make this US only), for the first two e books in the Sunset Vampires Series by Jaz Primo. You can enter at my site and at Books & Barks. Jenn is having some dental issues taken care of but she will be blogging soon. She does read your comments and visit back so if you stop there, show her some love. Today is the last day to enter! The links are here:


Friday, August 12, 2011

FF, Kindlegraph and Review of The Stoning of Soraya M.



Q. How has your reading habits changed since you were a teen? or If you are still a teen what new genres are you in love with currently?

I wouldn't say they have changed very much. I read 3-4 books at a time back then and I still tend to do that today. I am all over the place as far as genres are concerned as I was when I was a teenager. Perhaps the difference would be in I read more erotica now, (it was hard to get back then), and more books that have, (or are on), different religions in them. I also read electronically now. Being able to carry around hundreds of books when I was a teen would have made me swoon. Okay so it makes me swoon today. I bet it does you too. 

Enter here to win the first 2 e books in the Sunset Vampire Series

Kindlegraph
I read about the Kindlegraph yesterday. The link was on a FaceBook status. I checked it out. While it is not on the actual Kindle copy I own I still think it is pretty cool. I received my first Kindlegraph from Rose Pressey who signed a cover of Me and My Ghoulfriends.  
 Me and My Ghoulfriends (Larue Donavan, Book 1)

Looks good doesn't it? I am waiting for Kindlegraphs from Stephany Simmons, Bret Jordan and Scott Nicholson. There are many more I would like to get. I have not finished exploring yet. According to the Kindlegraph site there are 1000 authors and  4000 books so far. I don't think it will "replace" getting print books signed. At least I hope not. But, for people like me who live in places where authors rarely make appearances, this is awesome. I think it will catch on. I think it is a good alternative for people who live to far to go to book signings. It also opens up the way for all those writers whose books are only available on e readers to sign their books. I do wish there were a way to replace our e copy covers with the signed ones. Maybe that is something in the future. For the time being I am enjoying this feature. I  do hope some more authors sign up for it.  What do you think of it?

Book Review

The Stoning of Soraya M.: A True Story  
 The Stoning of Soraya M.  A True Story
Freidoune Sahebjam Translated by Richard Seaver
Arcade Publishing, Inc.

From the Back Cover:

When he couldn't afford to marry another woman, Soraya M.'s husband plotted with four friends and a counterfeit mullah to dispose of her. Together, they accused Soraya of adultery. Her only crime was cooking for a friend's widowed husband. Exhausted by a lifetime of abuse and hardship, Soraya said nothing,and the makeshift tribunal took her silence as a confession of guilt. They sentenced her to death by stoning; a punishment prohibited by Islam but widely practiced.

Day by day - sometimes minute by minute - Sahebjam deftly recounts these horrendous events, tracing Soraya's life with searing immediacy, from her arranged marriage and the births of her children to her husband's increasing cruelty and the difficult details of her horrifying execution, where, by tradition, her father, husband and sons hurled the first stones.  A stark look at the intersection between culture and justice, this is one woman's story, but it stands for the stories of thousands of women who suffered - and continue to suffer - the same fate. It is a story that must be told. 

Freidoune Sahebjam, the son of a former Iranian ambassador, is a journalist who was sentenced to death in absentia for his undercover reporting criticizing the Iranian government.
Richard Seaver was an editor and publisher. He passed away in 2009.

This is the most heartbreaking book I can recall reading. To say it is difficult to read is an understatement as is saying it is a compelling read. It is a book once you begin to read you will be unable to put down and unable to forget. That it is a true story is horrifying. That there are at least 15 prisoners at risk of stoning today, (Amnesty International), is incomprehensible. Those 15 are in Iran. Iran is not the only country to have stoning happen.

In reading this story and imagining how Soraya must have felt it is not difficult to see why she was silent. She must have felt trapped because she had no way to defend herself. Whether or not the charges were justified  or false the cards were stacked against her. I cannot imagine how she came to terms with her sentence. I cannot fathom what must have gone through her mind when she watched her father, her sons, pick up stones to throw at her.

The person I think I am most amazed at is Soraya's aunt. The only person to try to come to her aid. In thinking about that country and its treatment of women, Soraya's aunt stands out as a hero. She spoke out in Soraya's defense. She failed to stay quiet after the execution and it is from her that we hear Soraya's story. What an amazing amount of courage, love and strength that took. I would like to think I could be so strong. But in all honesty I am not certain. I do not think any of us who lived our entire lives free could say with absolute certainty that they could do what Soraya's aunt did. 

The back cover of the book states, " It is a story that must be told." To that I add, it is a story that must be read. You cannot change anything in ignorance. Knowledge is power. Is it to say that by reading the book Iran will suddenly change its sentencing? No. We all know that is not realistic. But perhaps by becoming knowledgeable and passing that knowledge on we can eventually change things for the better. According to the author between 1979 to 1983 the Iranian government acknowledged that between 500 to 600 women were put to death by stoning. Today there are 15 at risk of stoning. That is a huge difference. Knowledge is power. I cannot imagine the strength of the Iranian people who have fought to change things for the better in their country. I am in awe of them as I am of those in countries around the world who fight against injustice; those who refuse to be silent in the face of death.

The Stoning of Soraya M. is a story that must be read. It is a story you will not forget.

Friday, August 5, 2011

First Lines and Follow Friday

Enter Here for Summer Giveaway Hop

It is easy to win an e copy of Rock  'n' Roll is Undead and a surprise pack from Alaska, ( I am having a good time making it). Just follow the blog and enter the form. 
Rock 'n' Roll is Undead (Veronica Mason, Book 1)
Check out a snippets  from  Rock 'n' Roll is Undead  below.  


From Tuesday Teaser
Buzz was probably on the lookout for a strange man and I had my eye on the strange car driving slowly down the street in front of the diner. That skull on the dash seemed to watch me as it passed. The loud roar had caught my attention. Like an engine revving at race day in Talladega, the sound echoed in my head. Muted chrome and dull gray flashed by in a blur. The noise from the hot rod faded as it drove down the street, passing another car and fading from sight. Seeing the same car more than once in a town the size of Memphis was unlikely. 


From Thursday Theme:
Buzz was probably on the lookout for a strange man and I had my eye on the strange car driving slowly down the street in front of the diner. That skull on the dash seemed to watch me as it passed. The loud roar had caught my attention. Like an engine revving at race day in Talladega, the sound echoed in my head. Muted chrome and dull gray flashed by in a blur. The noise from the hot rod faded as it drove down the street, passing another car and fading from sight. Seeing the same car more than once in a town the size of Memphis was unlikely. 



First Lines Friday
First Lines Friday is a new bookish meme hosted by yours truly, Literary Marie of Precision Reviews.

  • Grab your current read(s).
  • Share the first line(s).
  • Include the title and author so that other FLF participants can add the book to their TBR Lists.

  • Rock 'n' Roll is Undead (Veronica Mason, Book 1)

  •  “Lookin’ good, baby,” the guy yelled from across the room, exposing his bright white fangs. His black hair was slicked back in an impressive pompadour and his jeans rolled-at-the-cuff. No doubt he had used a fake ID to enter the place. He couldn’t have been over eighteen. The girl beside him scowled, smacked him in the head, then leaned against the bubbling jukebox and took a sip of blood from her martini glass. The routine of her motions let me know it wasn’t the first time he’d ogled the opposite sex in her presence. 

  •  Rock 'n' Roll is Undead (Veronica Mason Series, Book 1) - Rose Pressey.  

  • When She Woke
  • When she woke, she was red. Not flushed, not sunburned, but the solid, declarative red of a stop sign.
  • When She Woke - Hillary Jordan
  • South of Salem

  • My mother thinks my job is crazy. I'm a paranormal investigator; she's Nancy Reagan crossed with Martha Stewart. She's always preferred my sister, Lily, who is following in her perfect footsteps.
  • South of Salem - Janni Nell








Q. Talk about the book that most changed or influenced your life (was it a book that turned you from an average to avid reader, did it help you deal with a particularly difficult situation, does it bring you comfort every time you read it?).


Wow. I have read so many good books throughout my life it is hard to choose! My first book I learned to read on my own was Barney the Beagle by Jean Bethell. It would be the book that started me off reading. Then later I fell in love with Anne of Green Gables by L.M. Montegomery, Diary of Anne Frank by Anne Frank and Gone With the Wind by Margaret Mitchell. Lately books I think have influenced me are The Stoning of Soraya M. by Freidoune Sahebjam and Blue by Lou Aronica. I know I am missing so many more. Books are a part of who I am. 

Review: Inheriting Murder: A Bobwhite Mountain Cozy Mystery

Inheriting Murder: A Bobwhite Mountain Cozy Mystery by Jamie Rutland Gillespie My rating: 5 of 5 stars ...