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My Tattered Pages

My Tattered Pages

I LIVE, WORK, & READ IN NEW JERSEY. :0) I HAVE LOVED TO READ & WRITE SINCE I WAS VERY YOUNG & STILL HOLD ONTO MY 1st STORY. I USE SHELFARI TO TRADE BOOKS WITH YAHOO GROUP (MYSTERY BOOK SWAP).
IF IT'S MARKED "FAVORITE"--I CAN'T BEAR TO PART WITH IT. SORRY. ;0)
"PLAN TO READ" --HAVEN'T READ YET BUT IF YOU WANT IT, LET ME KNOW & I'LL... more »
  • Jersey City, NJ, USA
  • member since December 24 2007

Reviews

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  • The Cat Who Dropped A Bombshell (Cat Who...)
    • Rated 3 stars

    My friend & co-writer introduced me to Lillian Jackson Braun, who is the writer of “The Cat Who….” series, a while back. She has always been saying how great this particular series in which two cats, KoKo and Yum-Yum play pivotal parts. I am a cat-owner and animal lover so I finally relented and chose a book. I chose “The Cat Who Dropped a Bombshell.” I have to say it really was lite reading–so lite it was fluffy! LOL Seriously, it wasn’t bad. The plot was OK. It was a, well I guess you can call it a murder mystery. And the smartest clue seekers are the cats. And everyone in town has a cat. Oh and the cutest is the cat in the library–he’s the bibliocat!! Isn’t that cute?? It was a cute easy reading for a lazy Sunday afternoon, however it’s just not for me. I prefer more action–the man who cheats and gets his due, karma at work, the psych killer or the nice racy love scene - Just can’t see any of that happening in a book where two of the main characters are KoKo and Yum-Yum.

    My Tattered Pages wrote this review Friday, February 29 2008. ( reply | permalink )
  • My Bloody Life: The Making of a Latin King (Illinois)
    • Rated 2 stars

    I AM A BOOKWORM & I LOVE TO READ THRILLERS & MYSTERIES. I ESPECIALLY LOVE THE PSYCHOLOGICAL OR LEGAL THRILLER AND A GOOD ‘OLE GHOST STORY. HOWEVER, I ALSO LIKE TO VENTURE OUT & READ OTHER STUFF FROM TIME TO TIME. THIS WAS ONE OF THOSE TIMES. THIS IS MY FIRST TIME READING THIS AUTHOR BUT NOT MY FIRST TIME READING THE UP & COMING GENRE OF “URBAN FICTION” OR “STREET LIT.” I HAVE TO SAY THAT THIS BOOK LEFT MUCH TO BE DESIRED. THE AUTHOR IS BASICALLY RETELLING THE STORY OF HOW HE BECAME INVOLVED IN THE “LATIN KINGS” GANG IN CHICAGO. FROM HIS PREFACE, WE ALREADY KNOW THAT HIS INTENTION IS TO TEACH YOUTH THAT THE GANG LIFESTYLE IS NOT A GOOD WAY TO LIVE. HE DOES GIVE A GOOD HISTORY OF THE DIFFERENT GANGS IN CHICAGO & HOW THEY ALL CAME TO BE. HE TELLS US OF DRUGS, MURDERS, TEENAGE PROMISCUITY & THE NEED TO FIT IN. AS BIOGRAPHICAL ACCOUNT, IT’S OK. AND FOR A TEENAGER WHO IS JUST THINKING OF BECOMING A GANG MEMBER OR IS JUST CURIOUS, THIS MAY BE A DECENT READ. HOWEVER, IF THE READER IS ALREADY INVOLVED, I DON’T THINK THE BOOK WILL HOLD HIS/HER ATTENTION LONG ENOUGH TO MAKE A DIFFERENCE. I HAD TO PLOW THROUGH THIS BOOK. IT MAKES FOR A VERY SLOW READ. PERHAPS THE AUTHOR JUST NEEDED A BETTER EDITOR. HE DOES HAVE A VERY IMPORTANT STORY TO TELL BUT IF HIS INTENDED AUDIENCE DOESN’T READ AND BENEFIT FROM HIS STORY, THEN IT PRETTY MUCH BECOMES JUST HIS DIARY.

    My Tattered Pages wrote this review Friday, February 29 2008. ( reply | permalink )
  • Two Little Girls in Blue : A Novel
    • Rated 3 stars

    I do not mean to make anyone NOT want to read “Two Little Girls in Blue” by Mary Higgins Clark but I have to admit it was not one of her best. It is about two twin girls who go missing for ransom. Getting the ransom paid was one of the major issues but it gets done. Without spoiling it, the major plot twist is that–only ONE twin gets returned and no one knows what has happened to the other twin, who is often sick. Then the mom starts believing that the other twin is actually still alive and sick somewhere because the returned twin can speak “twin talk” to her. People don’t believe her at first but then they do and it’s a race against time to find the missing twin who is very ill. I think I like the idea of twin talk but these little girls seemed a bit too smart for having just turned three. It was OK but not great because I found it a little far-fetched. If it had involved older girls, it would have been better for me.

    My Tattered Pages wrote this review Friday, February 29 2008. ( reply | permalink )
  • No Time for Goodbye
    • Rated 4 stars

    This was my first Barclay book and let me just say that I LOVED IT!! The beginning is excellent. A 14 year old girl wakes up to find that her parents and brother are missing. She later gets married and has a child of her own. She has a lot of anxiety about the safety of her own child and rightfully so since she still has no idea what happened to her family. Anyway, I will not give away the ending but it was great although I must say there was one particular plot twist that was introduced at the very end (and I mean the last few pages) that I thought was totally unnecessary. The mystery and plot were great without it!

    My Tattered Pages wrote this review Friday, February 29 2008. ( reply | permalink )
  • The Five People You Meet in Heaven
    • Rated 5 stars

    There are some books you read to entertain yourself, like most of the mystery/thriller novels I read. There are others you read looking for a message. This is one of those books and it did not let me down.
    My mom passed away almost 11 years ago on my birthday. In this time, I’ve learned that time doesn’t always heal the wound. Some shoes are way too big to ever fill. My mom’s 3 inch heels are one of them.
    I was 26 years old when she passed away. I was an adult but I had spent the last 7 years in college and graduate school-all good things-but when she died, I felt that this had stolen time I could have spent with her. I felt and believed that my mother had not yet told me everything she needed to; that she had not yet taught me all I needed to learn.
    I found some answers in this book.
    The book basically tells us the story of an elderly, crotchety man, who dies while trying to save a young girl’s life at a carnival where he works. Next thing, he wakes up in “heaven” or perhaps it should be better called “heaven’s ante-room.” Here, he learns important life lessons.
    The story weaves in and out of the present time at the carnival, the man’s actual life, and “heaven.” In so doing, Albom gives us messages of hope, peace and connection.
    Here are some of what I thought were great lines because they brought the message home to me.


    “….there are no random acts..that we are all connected…that death doesn’t just take someone, it misses someone else…”
    “..when you sacrifice something precious, you’re not really losing it. You are just passing it to someone else.”
    “…hatred is a curved blade. And the harm we do, we do to ourselves.”
    “..lost love is still love…a different form, that’s all.”
    Albom teaches us about sacrifice, forgiveness and most of all..Love

    My Tattered Pages wrote this review Friday, February 29 2008. ( reply | permalink )
  • Notorious
    • Rated 4 stars

    I have been an avid Michele Martinez fan from day one. This is the 4th book in the Melanie Vargas series (Most Wanted, The Finishing School, Cover-Up). Lots has happened since the last book and having finished Notorious, I can see that lots of changes will take place in the next book as well.
    Without spoiling anything, the most obvious change in this book is the virtual disapearance of Dan, Melanie's hot hunky FBI agent significant other. :-) I missed having Dan around but there was so much going on as far as plot twists and hints, that we really don't get a chance to miss him too much. And from the hints, he will probably come back around eventually. In the meantime, it looks like Melanie is in full swing with the promotion Bernadette had promised from the last book. Bernadette is now a "happy" judge.
    There was lots of action in this book and you had to pay close attention to all the details but it keeps you guessing until the end which is great. There are tragedies and some lives are lost--one close to home.
    All in all, I was not disapointed. I will miss Dan for a while and Linda, Melanie's sister (but that leaves Miami open for possibilities in the future). And also, strangely enough, the arrival of a new character by the name of Jennifer intrigues me. At the end of the novel instead of hating her, I'd actually like to see more of her in the future.
    This is all I will say because I don't want to spoil it.

    My Tattered Pages wrote this review Friday, February 29 2008. ( reply | permalink )

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