Book Review: Terminated for Reasons of Taste

terminated

Terminated for Reasons of Taste is a collection of writings on music.  The music was split up by years and there were way too many before my time so I found myself just skimming those until I got to about the 50% part through the book and more artists I was familiar with were mentioned.  Apparently with Kriss Kross and TLC being listed under rap, I guess I’m a rap fan. I never would have said that before reading this book! There were some boybands mentioned – mostly BSB.  Dream was also mentioned… I was pleased that BSB was mentioned over NSYNC because this book was supposed to be about “losers”.. haha. (The BSB vs NSYNC rivalry is still alive in my fangirl heart)

Overall a lot of stuff about bands I didn’t know much about but if you’re more versed in musical acts than I am you may find the book to be a bit more enjoyable.

I received a free e-copy of this book from netgalley in order to write this review and I was not otherwise compensated.

About the Book

In Terminated for Reasons of Taste, veteran rock critic Chuck Eddy writes that “rock ‘n’ roll history is written by the winners. Which stinks, because the losers have always played a big role in keeping rock interesting.” Rock’s losers share top billing with its winners in this new collection of Eddy’s writing. In pieces culled from outlets as varied as the Village Voice, Creem magazine, the streaming site Rhapsody, music message boards, and his high school newspaper, Eddy covers everything from the Beastie Boys to 1920s country music; Taylor Swift to German new wave; Bruce Springsteen to occult metal. With an encyclopedic knowledge, unabashed irreverence, and a captivating style, Eddy rips up popular music histories and stitches them back together using his appreciation of the lost, ignored, and maligned. In so doing, he shows how pop music is bigger and more multidimensional, and compelling than most people can imagine.
Chuck Eddy is an independent music journalist living in Austin, Texas. Formerly the music editor at the Village Voice and a senior editor at Billboard, he is author of Rock and Roll Always Forgets: A Quarter Century of Music Criticism, also published by Duke University Press; The Accidental Evolution of Rock ‘n’ Roll: A Misguided Tour Through Popular Music; and Stairway to Hell: The 500 Best Heavy Metal Albums in the Universe.

Book Review: Disney Manga Stitch! Volume 1

stitchI typically have a rule against no comic books – they never look right as e-books.  This Manga was no different, even though Stitch looked so cute I couldn’t resist.  When I started the book it said I was actually on the last page of the book and was supposed to flip it around.  I didn’t (couldn’t?) and so I just kind of skimmed what was going on.  I’m sure the story was great because Lilo and Stitch always get into so much trouble… the pictures were adorable but I really should stick to my rule!

 

I received a free e-copy of this book in order to write this review, I was not otherwise compensated.

About the Book

You know and love Stitch’s Hawaiian adventures … so join your favorite alien as he visits a Japanese island near Okinawa, where he befriends a young girl named Yuna who excels at karate. Come along as Yuna and Stitch go fishing, enter a costume contest, and even attempt to bake a cake. You never know what sticky situations they’ll find themselves in next!

Book Review: Love Heals All

LoveHealsAllI have to preface this by saying I am well aware that I am not the demographic that this book is going for.  But I was curious when I saw this book was “featuring” Hayes Grier, who I believe is a Vine star.  I’m not much of a vine user and I don’t really “get” these kids that are famous for just making videos on Vine and Youtube (read: I’m too old) but either way the book sounded somewhat interesting so I gave it a go.

Unfortunately, I couldn’t get past 25% of the book.  I did try, several times, to continue it – but my rule is to not waste time forcing myself to get into books so right around the time when our main character decided that she was “handicapped” and wanted to kill herself seemed like a great time for me to bow out – since I am permanently handicapped and this girl just fell off a trampoline…

The book was a bit of a throw back for me too – it reminded me of the fanfic that my friends and I used to write when we were 14, 15 years old.  The only difference is we didn’t try to get published and I’m not sure anyone would have published it anyway.  But you always had a boyband – say NSYNC – which had 5 guys and you’d be the main character and then you’d write in ALL your friends so they could be dating a band member.  Had more than 5 friends? Oh hey, maybe LFO or Backstreet Boys showed up too.  This book definitely had that going on – and on top of it all – it jumped from ones person’s point of view to another and each time they had their first chapter they’d start it off with a “Hi, I’m soandso and I look like this and blahblahblah” instead of having it written from one point of view and some character development.  I typically don’t mind books that jump between two points of view – but this one was just out of hand.

I have to hand it to the author for getting out there and writing and getting published but this book just completely missed the mark for old me.

I received a free e-copy of this book in order to write this review. I was not otherwise compensated.

 

About the Book

A modern love story for the social media generation featuring Vine superstar Hayes Grier!

Autumn moves across the country and struggles to fit in as the new girl in school. When she crosses path with a fellow teenager, Hayes, and falls hard for him, it seems that her dreams have come true. But what happens when Hayes skyrockets into social media fame with his brother, Nash? Suddenly immersed in tours, YouTube, Twitter, and Hollywood, Autumn and her friends have to deal with online drama and the life-altering issues daily pressure that teens face with today. Can her and Hayes’s relationship survive?

Book Review: Dead Girls Society

deadgirlsEvery now and then I need to take a step away from the romance novels and dive into a YA or Children’s Fiction book.  Dead Girls Society was that book for me recently and it did not disappoint.  Even though I keep saying that I should not judge a book by its cover, I was intrigued by the wax seal on the front cover as that is my latest craft obsession that I am trying to figure out how to work into my scrapbook pages.  Fortunately for me, I did not end up with a bad book with a good cover – but rather a great book with a good cover.

The book is a little bit reminiscent of Pretty Little Liars, which is one of my favorite TV shows.  Hope has been stuck at home with an illness (CF) and is being babied by her Mom and her best friend, Ethan (who she maybe kinda sorta might have a crush on).  She is living in New Orleans and is bored with that, too.  Then an invitation arrives from “The Society” inviting her to come and play a game in which she could win quite a sum of money.  Enough money so that her Mom won’t have to worry about their piling medical debt for a while.

She sneaks out of the house and meets up with several other girls and they have to do dangerous tasks in order to win.  After a couple of tasks, the society seems to think that Hope is cheating so more bad things happen to her to teach her a lesson.  When things start going bad and it seems she has no way out, Hope tries to figure out who it is behind The Society.  Is she on the right track? Can she stop whoever it is before she is in too deep?

I received a free e-copy of this book in order to write this review. I was not otherwise compensated.

About the Book
A slick thriller from the author of HEXED, perfect for fans of THE CELLAR by Natasha Preston and PANIC by Lauren Oliver.

You are cordially invited to participate in a game of thrills and dares. Tell no one, and come alone. If you dare.

Hope is sick of everyone treating her like she’s breakable. Sure, she has cystic fibrosis (basically really bad lungs), but she’s tired of being babied by her mom and her overprotective best friend, Ethan, not to mention worrying about paying for her expensive medication and how she’s going to afford college.And she’s bored with life in her run-down New Orleans suburb.

When an invitation arrives from a mysterious group that calls itself the Society, Hope jumps at the chance for some excitement. This could be her ticket out. All she has to do is complete a few dares and she just might win some real money.
But the Society isn’t all that it seems . . . and soon Hope finds that playing the game isn’t a choice—it’s a requirement.

Book Review: Rock With You

rockwithyouCarly Taylor took over her grandmothers bakery in a small town of Haven.  One morning she sees what she thinks to be a rockstar outside the door waiting to come in.  But why would he be in her small town? She was listening to his album as she was baking that morning so maybe her imagination just got the best of her.  But then she realizes that Sam Weiss is really in her bakery.  Later that day he calls and asks for her to make a delivery of some of her sweet treats to him.  An ice storm is about to hit and she thinks that she can make it to his place and back, but the weather comes in earlier than expected and the two end up stranded at his place for a couple of days.  Sam hasn’t been able to write any new songs, which is why he is in Haven, until Carly arrives. Then he can’t seem to do anything but think of lyrics. (ok, that’s not true. He can do a few other things too ;))  Will their couple of nights stranded result in Sam’s next hit song?

This was a short book which are my favorite kinds and any book dedicated to girls who have had a rock star crush can’t be bad!

I received a free e-copy of this book in order to write this review. I was not otherwise compensated.

 

About the Book

SWEET AS SUGAR. SEXY AS SIN . . .
Carly Taylor is pretty sure she’s dreaming. It’s not possible that Sam Weiss – rock star god and sexy hotness personified – is actually in her bakery. This sort of thing never happens in the too-small town of Haven. Or to her. And being stranded in a secluded mountain cabin with the deliciously decadent Sam during an ice storm? This is definitely not Carly’s real life . . .

Now there’s just the two of them, a roaring fire, lots of food and drink, and a sizzling attraction – one that just might make Carly do the unexpected. For one night, she’ll live the fantasy. For one night, nothing else matters. . . not her struggling business, not her lonely life, not Sam’s bad-boy reputation. But sometimes one night can turn one crazy, beautiful dream into something real.

Book Review: The Day Santa Stopped Believing in Harold

santaharoldUp at the North Pole, Santa isn’t so sure he believes in Harold any more.  He thinks Harold’s Mom writes his letter to Santa each year and that Harold’s Dad leaves out the cookies and milk.  And that Harold that sat on his lap at the mall? Doesn’t even look like Harold!

Meanwhile, Harold isn’t so sure he believes in Santa Claus anymore either!  They both want some proof that the other exists.

Harold hides behind a chair in his living room to wait for Santa.  Santa seems to have the same idea… will the two find out that each other are real?  Will they continue to believe in each other?

This is a cute twist on the usual child isn’t sure he/she belongs in Santa anymore story.  Super cute illustrations as well!

I received a free e-copy of this book in order to write this review, I was not otherwise compensated.

About the Book

Santa has a problem. This kid? Harold? Santa doesn’t think he’s real. He WANTS to believe in Harold–after all, Harold is one of the most magical parts of Christmas. Getting Harold’s letters, eating the cookies he leaves out, feeding his carrots to the reindeer… what would Christmas be without that? But Santa’s just not sure. Some of his friends are telling him they think Harold’s not real. And the Harold that sat on his knee last Christmas looked AWFULLY different. Santa comes up with a plan to find out once and for all if Harold really exists… with hilarious consequences.

 

Book Review: Body Contact

bodycontactBody Contact is the 2nd of a 3 part series. I had not read the first part before reading the 2nd. It didn’t seem like I was missing out on anything. In this book Jack is with Danielle and teaching her a thing or two about sex. They are going to be together for 2 weeks and that is it – but it seems like that might not be what happens in the end.

This is a short story – only about 60 pages so it was a pretty quick read.

I received a free e-copy of this book in order to write this review. I was not otherwise compensated.

About the Book

Body Contact is the second of a three-part erotic series from New York Times and USA best-selling author Cathryn Fox.

Asking pro football player Jack Rider to teach me everything he knows about sex might have seemed like a good idea at the time, but now I’m not so sure I can handle a guy like him. I thought he’d just straight up do me, ridding me of my pesky virginity sooner rather than later. But no, he had his own ideas about bringing me up to speed on sex. His two weeks of slow seduction might just be the death of me, but since he’s the one in charge, I have to play the game his way. Not that I’m not enjoying it. I am. Who wouldn’t, right? I guess I just can’t help but wonder how I’ll ever let another man touch me after him.

This is the second of a three-part series full of mind-blowing sex, featuring a dirty-mouthed football player who knows the score and an inexperienced therapist who needs to learn it. BODY CONTACT is sure to leave readers begging for more. The next installment comes September 2016.

Book Review: Shaken

tebowShaken is the latest book by athlete Tim Tebow.  I was asked by his team if I would consider reviewing the book on my blog and I agreed since I like to read books by athletes – it was just a funny coincidence that a few days later he ended up being signed by the New York Mets to a minor league contract!  The book is all about who you are when things are going great and who you are when things are shaken.  The future is unknown, but God has a plan.  I’m not sure how much I really believe that, especially lately, but Tim is definitely very much so connected with God.  I thought that this book had way too many exclamation points throughout – I mean, almost every paragraph ended with one.  I guess Tim is really into what he is writing about and excited about it, but I couldn’t get as excited about things as the text seemed to be.

There was one quote at the beginning of a chapter that stood out to me.  The funny thing was, that chapter ended up being about a girl with Cerebral Palsy – which is what I have, so I guess it was a pretty appropriate quote to use.  The girl in the chapter was talking about how she notices the stares from other people and as a teen that tends to be an issue.  I am now at the point where I don’t notice stares – to me, that is normal.  I think that everyone gets looked at when they are walking.  For 32 years, that is all I have ever known.  Sometimes my mom or friends will notice people staring and when they point it out to me I usually have no idea.  It’s just a normal day to me.

Overall this book was pretty inspiring and a quick read.  I wish Tim luck as he pursues baseball with the Mets.

I received a free copy of this book in order to write this review. I was not otherwise compensated.

About the Book

Who are you when life is steady?
Who are you when storms come?
 
Most of us have been on the receiving end of rejection, a broken dream, or heartbreak. And while this is not an easy space to go through, when we are grounded in the truth, we can endure the tough times.

In this powerful book, Heisman Trophy winner Tim Tebow passionately shares glimpses of his journey staying grounded in the face of disappointment, criticism, and intense media scrutiny. Following an exceptional college football career with the Florida Gators and a promising playoff run with the Denver Broncos, Tebow was traded to the New York Jets. He was released after one season.

In Shaken, Tebow talks about what he’s learned along the way, building confidence in his identity in God, not the world. This moving book also features practical wisdom from Scripture and insights gained from others who have impacted Tebow in life-changing ways.

Though traveling hard roads is not easy, it’s always worth it!

Your Circumstances do not Define You,
Your Identity Does.

What do you do when life takes an unplanned detour? When the unexpected happens? When doubt or negativity tries to rise above your faith? Most of us can relate to these questions.

Through a dynamic lens of story and insight, Heisman trophy winner Tim Tebow tells what he’s learned during the highs and the lows of his journey in the NFL. Shaken also features practical wisdom from the pages of Scripture and moving narratives of individuals—from celebrities to cancer patients—who have impacted Tebow’s life. Their inspiring stories will encourage you also to tackle fear, overcome bitterness, and take on the obstacles life throws at you.

Book Review: Live Fearless

livefearlessLive Fearless is a coloring book that includes some bible verses.  There are a lot of great designs to color and I have found that coloring really helps relax me – this is a new development because I hated coloring as a kid! I am looking forward to reading through this over and over again when I am looking to de-stress!

I received a free copy of this book in order to write this review. I was not otherwise compensated.

About the Book
Embrace God’s Comforting Presence While You De-stress, Meditate, and Create!

Life can be overwhelming as we go from one urgent demand on our time to another; it’s important to slow down and remind ourselves who we are and who God is. Coloring is a wonderful way to relax and focus our minds, giving us the refreshment and freedom to be all we were meant to be. But this book gives you more than a chance to color–it also focuses your attention on the peace that God brings through his presence in your life.

This beautiful, intricately designed coloring book highlights verses from the Bible that focus on the courage that comes with knowing God is by your side. He wants us to live bold lives, free of fear, and his Word gives us the peace and reassurance to do so. Presenting this uplifting message in a fun and creative format, Live Fearless encourages you to drink deeply from Scripture as you color and create. Space is included for reflections, prayers, or even doodles.

You can even share your art–and God’s comforting presence–with others by posting photos on social media or by cutting out the pages to keep for yourself. Gather your favorite coloring supplies and start creating!

Book Review: Harry Potter and the Cursed Child

hpMany have been thinking that this is the 8th book in the Harry Potter series.  It is not.  This is the eighth story involving Harry Potter (and supposedly the last) but it is very different from the other books you may be familiar with.  This is for several reasons but one is that it is a SCRIPT, not a book.  Some people do not like reading scripts as much as they like reading books.  If this is the case, you might want to avoid this book.  I actually enjoyed reading it in script form and found it to read much faster that way.

In this book we meet up with Harry and his crew again.  As we know from the other books, Harry married Ginny Weasley.  They have 3 children and the main focus in this book is about Albus. He is going off to Hogwarts along with his cousin Rose Weasley – the daughter of Hermione and Ron.  He ends up being friends with Scorpious Malfoy, Draco’s son.

I liked the first half of the story moreso than the second half and the conclusion.  I read it more as a standalone than a piece of the earlier books and I think that helped me enjoy it more.  Although I did tend to picture the kids from the movies in the parts and they came across as much younger than they should have. I’m not sure if this is from how they are written or the fact that I was picturing the younger actors that led me to this.

I am hoping that I get the chance to see this on stage sometime soon – whether it be in a trip to London or if it comes to the US.  I’m curious to see how they work in the magical aspects of the book.

I purchased this book because I love me some Harry Potter and wrote a review because that’s just what I do.

About the Book

The Eighth Story. Nineteen Years Later.

Based on an original new story by J.K. Rowling, John Tiffany, and Jack Thorne, a new play by Jack Thorne, Harry Potter and the Cursed Child is the eighth story in the Harry Potter series and the first official Harry Potter story to be presented on stage. The play will receive its world premiere in London’s West End on July 30, 2016.

It was always difficult being Harry Potter and it isn’t much easier now that he is an overworked employee of the Ministry of Magic, a husband and father of three school-age children.

While Harry grapples with a past that refuses to stay where it belongs, his youngest son Albus must struggle with the weight of a family legacy he never wanted. As past and present fuse ominously, both father and son learn the uncomfortable truth: sometimes, darkness comes from unexpected places.

 

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