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A review of The Orchardist by Amanda Coplin

How important is the narrator to an audiobook? Many listeners have their favorites amongst narrators but often the narrator is a neutral presence. Not so Mark Bramhall who is a veteran audio book reader and one who makes an impression as he is the perfect reader for The Orchardist, a first novel by Amanda Coplin. The poetic and descriptive language is very suited to reading aloud and his somewhat slow and deliberative style suits this book perfectly. The Orchardist  ...read more

Reviewed by Mary K. - Central on
April 15, 2013 | 0 comments
A review of Who Could That Be at This Hour by Lemony Snicket

Lemony Snicket’s snark + the clipped speech of hard-boiled detective novels = the tone of the first installment in a new Snicket series called, All the Wrong Questions. It tells the story of Lemony’s own education as a private eye as he tries to get the scoop about an odd statue called the Bombinating Beast, which may or may not be valuable and which may or may not have been stolen from his client. Of course, the plot is secondary to the unique voice with which Mr. Snicket tells his ...read more

Reviewed by Carissa - Alicia Ashman on
April 12, 2013 | 0 comments
A review of Gulp: Adventures on the Alimentary Canal by Mary Roach

I want Mary Roach at my dinner party. Actually no, I think I would want Mary Roach to show up after my dinner party; inviting her beforehand will virtually guarantee that no one will eat. Roach, who has made her name investigating the more obscure corners of scientific research, has turned her attention to that mostly unfamiliar, yet most intimate portion of us: the gut. In Gulp: Adventures on the Alimentary Canal, Roach goes where only gastroenterologists have trod from tongue to ...read more

Reviewed by Katie H. on
April 11, 2013 | 0 comments
A review of Midwinterblood by Marcus Sedgwick

It takes a pretty spectacular writer to combine vampires, love at first sight, and reincarnation in a teen novel and still come up with something fresh and original, but that's exactly what Marcus Sedgwick has done in his new book, Midwinterblood. This collection of seven linked stories begins in the year 2073, when loner journalist Eric Seven is sent to investigate a colony on the remote northern Blessed Island, where the inhabitants are rumored to have discovered an elixir of ...read more

Reviewed by Kylee on
April 9, 2013 | 0 comments
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A review of The Six Sisters series by Marion Chesney

I have been listening to an entertaining Regency romance series about six marriageable sisters while I fold laundry. Their father is a country vicar with money woes and he manages to marry off his daughters to ever richer husbands in order to sustain his expensive hunting habits. Each of the six Armitage daughters gets her own novel and although I'm only on book four, each book has ended in a happy marriage so far. I suspect that all six do. I'll be very disappointed if they don't. Between the ...read more

Reviewed by Molly - Central on
April 9, 2013 | 0 comments
Two New Thrillers

I have a couple of new thrillers to tell you about today. The first is a debut by Koethi Zan and the second is the fifth in a series by Linda Castillo. And while I'm calling them thrillers, I classify them as both thriller and mystery on my Goodreads shelf. I think tone and pacing make them thrillers but each is a solid mystery as well. The Never List by Koethi Zan is dark and twisty from the very first ...read more

Reviewed by Jane J - Central on
April 8, 2013 | 0 comments
A review of Guyku by Bob Raczka

In honor of National Poetry Month, join the fun and check out a creative collection of haiku, especially for boys! In Guyku: A Year of Haiku for Boys by Bob Raczka and Peter H. Reynolds, we read through the seasons as boys catch grasshoppers, make zipping and clanking bikes, and wait expectantly for snow days. Illustrations are sparse and match the text of each haiku. Many will make you smile, such as: “If this puddle could/talk, I think it would tell me/to splash my sister,” or, “I ...read more

Reviewed by Tracy on
April 5, 2013 | 0 comments
A review of And the Miss Ran Away with the Rake by Elizabeth Boyle

How do you find love when you live in a village that has been cursed? A village where the ladies have no prospects and no possibility of traveling to London to find a husband. Elizabeth Boyle’s wonderful new Regency series “Rhymes with Love” tells the love stories of a group of friends who come from such a place. The first love story was detailed in Along Came a Duke, the story of Miss Tabitha ...read more

Reviewed by Kathy K. - Central on
April 4, 2013 | 0 comments
A review of On a Farther Shore: The Life and Legacy of Rachel Carson by William Souder

A little over fifty years ago, there was a revolution in American culture. Its lead instigator was a scientist, and the weapons were words—or rather, a book called Silent Spring. At first glance, author Rachel Carson seemed like a mild-mannered government worker, a woman who excelled at teasing out hard facts from scientific works and converting it into elegant prose. She had already climbed the bestseller lists with her eloquent depictions of ocean and beach ecologies, winning the ...read more

Reviewed by Katie H. on
April 3, 2013 | 0 comments
New Baseball books

Hey baseball fans opening day is here, so why not check out some of the new baseball books that are out or coming out. 501 Baseball Books Fans Must Read Before They Die by Ron Kaplan American Jews & America's ...read more

Reviewed by Kathy K. - Central on
March 29, 2013 | 0 comments
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