Books

Request Friendship
Send Request Cancel

GourmetReader

GourmetReader

  • Kalamazoo, MI, USA
  • member since February 25 2007

Reviews

  • Sort by:
 
1 2 3 4 5  | Next »
Displaying 1-10 of 43 reviews
  • Eve: A Novel of the First Woman
    • Rated 5 stars

    Thanks to my membership at Bookbrowse.com I got an advanced reading copy of Eve. I loved, loved,loved it.

    Here's the basic premise: What was Eve's life like after Eden?

    The story goes back and forth in time and is told in 4 voices: Eve's and her daughters, Naava, Dara and Aya. Oddly, Naava's is always told in the 3rd person, while the others are in 1st person.

    Eve is portrayed very realistically and not always sympathetically. Like a real person, she has strengths and weaknesses. Naava is mostly portrayed negatively while Dara is mostly positive and Aya is a mix. Interestingly, it is Aya who has the strongest faith, while Eve, who ostensibly met Elohim (God), is challenged to retain her faith.

    If you like historical fiction, this would be a good choice. Elliott researched Mesopotamian life and included their food, their religious practices and like that. The writing is descriptive without being overly so, the dialog is realistic despite the simplicity of the speech patterns.

    I read very quickly but I made myself slow down and savor the book, reading it slowly to be sure I didn't miss anything. If you liked The Red Tent, you'll likely enjoy this story as well. If you wonder about Adam and Eve, Cain and Abel, you'll likely enjoy "Eve." If you're a Christian who interprets the Bible literally, chances are good there will be things that you won't like and that might even make you mad. Be forewarned. If you're a New Though Christian, you'll recognize yourself in Aya. If you're not a Christian at all but just like good historical fiction, you'll still enjoy this story.

    GourmetReader wrote this review Sunday, December 28 2008. ( reply | permalink )
  • The Mercifully Brief, Real World Guide to... Raising More Money With Newsletters Than You Ever Thought Possible
    • Rated 4 stars

    If you write newsletters for your organization, this is a great book to read. It's a quick & dirty breakdown of how you can improve your newsletters, without a lot of extraneous information. I found several things that I can incorporate into my next newsletter. Wanna see it? The next one goes out 3/15/09 and you can find it at www.caresswm.org.

    GourmetReader wrote this review Wednesday, December 10 2008. ( reply | permalink )
  • Gorgeously Green: 8 Simple Steps to an Earth-Friendly Life
    2 of 2 members found this review helpful.
    • Rated 5 stars

    The other day, I went to Target, going to my usual Target Aisles: bedding, cosmetics, skin care, and books. I bought a makeup bag to corral my lipgloss, blotting papers and brush in my work totebag and Gorgeously Green.

    I almost didn’t buy it because I saw it in one of those health food store advertorial magazines and I generally think those are full of nonsense.

    Let me tell you: half the book is highlighted with Things I Must Remember. I’m sure it will take me a while to incorporate them all – or even half of them – in to my daily life but I will. There were also a lot of websites where you can buy things and we all know how much I love an internet shopping “trip.”

    The thing about Uliano is that she isn’t preachy and she isn’t “all or nothing.” For example, while I agree that using plastic or glass dishes is better than Styrofoam, I am not taking my Tupperware to D & W and asking them to put my sandwich in that. Maybe someday I will but not now. I’m also not going to stop flying to cool places for vacations and I’m not quite ready to give up my plan to go on a cruise with my sister. Uliano understands that we aren’t all going to Go Granola. Of course, now I also have a new vacation destination, entirely thanks to Uliano: an Eco-Spa!

    There were other things that thrilled me that I had no idea existed. For example, Woman’s Wonder Bar, which are chocolate candy bars that are supposed to help with PMS and menopause. I am so going to that website and buying some. Eco-friendly poop bags since I must clean up the presents Peggy Sue leaves for the world. There are free ringtones you can download that sound like nature: the mating call of a whale, an owl hooting, various birds. All kinds of things. There is a nonprofit who will take your partially used antibiotics, antifungals, etc and distribute them to developing countries. That’s pretty cool.

    There are 8 chapters, each covering a different area of life. The chapters are:
    1. Becoming Aware (just what it says.)
    2. Green Goddess (all about beauty.)
    3. Your Green Temple (all about a healthy body. Yoga and weight training routines are included)
    4. Soulful Shopping (self-explanatory, I think!)
    5. Your Palace (about your home and garden.)
    6. Every Last Bite (not surprisingly, all about food.)
    7. Out and About Having Fun (transportation, entertainment and travel.)
    8. Go Supergreen (activism and maintenance.)

    I bet you’ll find some ways that you can live a more eco-friendly life without driving yourself nuts or becoming one of the Granola Brigade. (Though there *is* a recipe for granola that looks yummy!) You’ll likely find some things you never considered and each small change adds up to a big difference.

    GourmetReader wrote this review Monday, July 7 2008. ( reply | permalink )
  • Eccentric Glamour: Creating an Insanely More Fabulous You
    • Rated 5 stars

    I don’t know if you’ll take the advice in this book, but you should read it. How can you not read a book buy a gay British guy who both impersonates Queen Elizabeth and quotes Flava Flav?

    Okay, some of the advice you shouldn’t take. Ignore the permission to wear “a gold leotard with your lesbian aunt Sylvia’s mauve nylon fanny pack.” Unless you live in NYC, people will talk about you and not in a good way. At least they will if you live in Southwest Michigan.

    Still, Doonan is hilarious. I laughed out loud several times and that’s not normally true of fashion books. Okay, not true of any books, but most fashion books take themselves so seriously.

    Interspersed with stories and interviews with Glamorous Eccentrics is bits of advice, some of which I might actually take. For example: I collect handbags, totebags, etc as I’m always in search of the perfect bag. Doonan thinks that a woman – at least a Glamour Eccentric, one of which I think I am not, should only have one great bag that she takes everywhere. He encourages a person to buy the Hermes Birkin bag they are coveting. That is advice I might take! Of course, chances are good I’ll buy a knock off first and see if I really like that style, etc before I save up TEN THOUSAND DOLLARS to buy one of the damned things. Still, I covet that bag.

    Doonan is kind to his reader. He reminds the reader that you are a work in progress and to be patient with oneself.

    An example of the things that made me laugh:
    These are some of the things that made me laugh: (they are all direct quotes from the book.)

    • I am pro-pot dealer: the arrival of a mysterious and attractive criminal adds a memorable frisson of excitement to any occasion.

    Doonan dispenses relationship advice that will either work or get you divorced more quickly. There are bits of wisdom that would be helpful to all of us, regardless of whether we are glamorous or eccentric. Sadly, I suspect I’m neither. For example, “alluring” is not cheap & tawdry. To paraphrase Doonan, it’s timeless, it’s beautiful and sensual. Alluring is “irresistible charm, which ever fails to mesmerize the viewer, regardless of gender.”

    I can’t decide if this is a “fashion book” or a “self-help book” but it’s definitely an entertaining book and I highly recommend it.

    GourmetReader wrote this review Monday, July 7 2008. ( reply | permalink )
  • Turn Up the Heat: A Gourmet Girl Mystery
    • Rated 4 stars

    This is the third of a series of very fun books. They are perfect for summer beach reads, for winter ski chalet reads, for anytime you want to read something that will a) keep your attention; b) be fun; c) is well-written and d) surprises you with the ending. These are not the sort of mysteries where you will easily guess "whodunit."

    GourmetReader wrote this review Wednesday, July 2 2008. ( reply | permalink )
  • How Not to Look Old: Fast and Effortless Ways to Look 10 Years Younger, 10 Pounds Lighter, 10 Times Better
    1 of 1 members found this review helpful.
    • Rated 3 stars

    Despite opinions to the contrary, I am not high maintenance. According to Charla Krupp, I am medium maintenance on most things and low maintenance (!) on others. Ha!
    Of all the fashion books I’ve read of late (and there have been several!) this is, by far, the best. Krupp is practical and informative, she gives “real world” examples that even those of us who live in the Midwest can follow. Well, all except for that “go barelegged even in the winter” thing. Anyone who lives in Michigan and goes barelegged in winter would a)freeze and b)cause people to wonder about her. But not in a good way.
    Krupp writes this book in an entertaining, but serious, manner. None of that flippy “Oh, we all know appearance *really* doesn’t matter” business. She is one of the few who recognizes – and says – that appearance DOES matter. If not to your mate, then to the rest of the world. People make judgements about you based on your appearance, so you might as well have a good one. Take work, for example. Men can “age gracefully” but women do better if they look younger. There are many examples of this, but let’s look at newscaster. Diane Sawyer is till blond, still young looking. Her male counterparts? Who cares if their hair is gray? It may not be “fair” but it is a reality. Let’s not ignore it.
    Since we aren’t ignoring it, Krupp explains all about “maintenance” and what a woman needs to do. Okay, “needs” is a strong word. You may decide you don’t need to do any of this, but if that’s the case, you probably will just skip the book anyway. In each area, she explains the high-, medium- and low-maintenance versions. You find yourself on the continuum, which may be different in some areas, and there is your blueprint. She encourages you to modify, modify, modify to make it work for you.
    There is none of that awful advice often given to women older than 40. Only wear long sleeves no matter how hot it is, for example. (I honestly read that in another book and I just couldn’t stand it. In Michigan, in summer, anyone wearing long sleeves would look ridiculous. Not a look a woman wants!) She talks about how to adapt fashion trends to suit you. Helpful.
    As with most books of this sort, you should take what you like and ignore the rest. Not everything is for everyone but at the very least you’ll leave this book knowing what it is you’re ignoring!

    GourmetReader wrote this review Friday, June 27 2008. ( reply | permalink )
  • Fundraising on eBay
    • Rated 4 stars

    I've bought things on ebay but never sold anything. I thought it would be a great way for a nonprofit to have an auction but reach a broader audience of people who want to buy stuff. This book is practical and has a lot of suggestions for marketing and promotion as well as the nuts and bolts of getting and listing donations.

    GourmetReader wrote this review Thursday, June 26 2008. ( reply | permalink )
  • Real Vampires Have Curves
    0 of 1 members found this review helpful.
    • Rated 4 stars

    Glory St. Clair is a vampire. Surprised by that, given the title? :grin: She was an actress with William Shakespeare, so that makes her about 400 years old. Back when she was mortal, women who were, let’s say, plump were considered desirable. Skinny meant you couldn’t afford to eat. So, why, why I ask, is Glory obsessed about her weight? I know that she’s living in modern day America but you’d think she’d have held on to something. The other vampires of her acquaintance seem to be clinging to various aspects of their original lives.

    So, Glory is moving to Austin, TX from Las Vegas because she has a nasty gambling habit. Moving with her is her dog, Valdez. Valdez is not your ordinary dog. Not only does the goldendoodle (or maybe he’s a labradoodle, I don’t remember) communicate with anyone in the vicinity by “speaking” in their minds, he can also communicate with the vampire who made Glory and who gave her Valdez. Jerry, occasionally referred to as Jeremiah (his given name) or Blade (a nickname), wants Glory to be His Woman. She wants to have sex with him, maybe even a relationship, but she wants to live her own life. He isn’t happy about it.

    In Austin, Glory opens an antique shop: vintage clothing, books and furniture. It helps to know people who’ve been alive for hundreds of years and have things they’d like to unload. Not to mention her own collection. The shop is very successful but things aren’t all well in Austin.

    There’s a vampire hunter out to kill all the vampires. This guy is clever – he has found a way to detect body heat so he knows who is a vampire and who is not. He has also found a way to block the vampires from reading his mind or sensing his presence. Helpful, that, in trying to kill them. Glory and Co. have to figure out now only who he is but how to stop him.

    Aside from the occasional Weight Freak Out by Glory, I liked this book a lot. There is at least one more in the series and I’ll get them. After I read the about 50 books I already have waiting for me. But I digress.

    GourmetReader wrote this review Monday, June 2 2008. ( reply | permalink )
  • Parable of the Sower
    • Rated 4 stars

    My friend InfoDva recommended this series. The Parable of the Sower is, of course, the first followed by The Parable of the Talents, which I haven’t read yet.

    Let’s see how to summarize this. Lauren Olamina is a young black woman who lives in the United States in what appears to be a nearly post-apocolypse world. It’s not, though. Only that humans have destroyed the world. People live in small walled communities or else they have no protection. By “small,” I mean neighborhood size. Lauren has “hyperempathy” which means that she can feel what others are feeling. Her family discourages her from telling people about it since it’s something that other people are afraid of.

    Lauren is developing her own religious beliefs and making plans to leave her community and try to find a less crazy place when her neighborhood is destroyed and most, if not all, of her family killed. She heads out and is soon joined by others who go along on her quest for a better place.

    Despite the plethora of typos, this book was phenomenal. The ideas are not that far-fetched, given the state of our world right now. It takes place only a few years from today - 2024-2027. It’s not likely that we will, in this lifetime, end up there but I think it isn’t impossible, either.

    GourmetReader wrote this review Monday, May 26 2008. ( reply | permalink )
  • Kitty and the Midnight Hour
    • Rated 4 stars

    I can not remember who recommended this series. I think it was someone on “Novel Ladies.” I am fond of paranormal, fantasy and series and this covers all the bases.

    Kitty is a werewolf. What a name for a werewolf, right? She is a talk radio DJ and one night, she gets a call that changes everything for her. She begins an advice show for the paranormal: werewolves, vampires, etc. The powers that be don’t like it and try to get her to stop but she does not. Kitty goes from being the most submissive of wolves to damned near alpha.

    I didn’t care much for the representation of werewolves and vampires but I am quite curious as to how this will evolve over the series. The next is “Kitty Goes to Washington,” followed by “Kitty Takes a Holiday” and the, so-far-last “Kitty and the Silver Bullet.” It’s a good thing I read fast with all these series that I now Must Read.

    GourmetReader wrote this review Monday, May 26 2008. ( reply | permalink )
1 2 3 4 5  | Next »
Displaying 1-10 of 43 reviews

Missing a review?