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Showing posts with label India. Show all posts
Showing posts with label India. Show all posts

7.14.2015

A Post: Readathon Wrap-Up

I did it! I participated in my first readathon and I'm already looking forward to the next one! Sometimes, and I'm ashamed to admit this, I feel really guilty if I read instead of doing other things, like focusing on my photography business, for example. Since I spend pretty much every night after my 8-to-5 editing, talking and/or meeting with new clients, marketing, and blogging for bethpriddy.com, reading has fallen by the wayside. The readathon gave me an excuse to dedicate every hour that I wasn't working to relax and READ to my heart's content. It was just what I needed.

I didn't finish the entire 24 hours because I did have to photograph an event and my sister-in-law was visiting, but I did complete 9 hours, one book, and a little over three quarters of another. I should note that I finished the second about 30 minutes after my 48 was up, so maybe I can count it? Anyway..

Thoughts


I mentioned that I loved Jane Harris's Gillespie and I (like top 10 books in my life love) and had tried reading this one before without success. Nope, not this time around. Summary: Poor Bessy is wandering the countryside of Edinburgh looking for work when's she suddenly hired on as a house maid to a Mrs. Arabella Reid, an English lady, she takes to be rather eccentric and out of place. Arabella, however, is quite brilliant, but suffers from secrets she keeps closely guarded. In an attempt to understand her mistress, Bessy begins snooping and ultimately uncovers information that leads her to play tricks that don't quite go to plan.

First, I should note that the rough dialogue is a little hard to get past in the beginning, but the authentic voice of a mostly uneducated woman working in the world of service in the 1860s is pretty incredible. Also, Bessy, the lead, is hilarious! I laughed out loud more times than I can count. A lot of reviewers expressed disappointment with the ending, and while it does lack the bang the reader expects, I still gave it five stars on Goodreads because I just really enjoyed being apart of the story. The rural atmosphere and townspeople came alive in the pages, and Bessy entertained me to no end. I recommend this to anyone, but especially those who love historical fiction or Jane Harris. Do it!!


Ranjit Singh is an ex-military Captain trying to make it in his new home in Martha's Vineyard after leaving India disgraced. Working multiple jobs to keep his wife and young daughter fed and housed, Ranjit is offered a position as caretaker to a well-loved senator's summer home on the island. When the Singh family loses heat during the winter, they decide to set up temporary camp in the Senator's home, a decision that will ultimately change their lives forever. Uncovering secrets about the Senator's shady international dealings and his tumultuous relationship with his wife, Ranjit is on a race around the city to save his family and the world.

Let me first say that I read this because NPR said the second in this series was a must-read this summer. I thought that I'd need to read the first in order to read the second and here we are. It was a fast one. Typical thriller material. Would I call it a literary thriller like every review I read before? Absolutely not. It's basically cheesy romance-part- thriller. And then there's the fact that Ranjit's whole family winds up in a detention center with the risk of being deported and all the while he's having sexy time with the Senator's wife. He blabs on and on and on about how he misses his daughter and his wife, but then as the date for deportation looms, he's literally banging this other lady while mentioning his guilt. And when the book concludes... he's flabbergasted that his wife doesn't want to return to America and doesn't want him back (btw, she doesn't even know about the banging activities). So yeah. It just didn't fit the character. At all. It was like forced, uncomfortable sex scenes to mix it up a bit. These issues aside, I did think it was awesome to see a cast of non-white leads in a new thriller. Ranjit is a Punjabi Sikh, the senator and his wife African Americans, with a Caucasian rounding out the cast as a corrupt secretary to the Senator. All and all, I'd say that if you've read other reviews and think you might like it, go for it. It's a quick read and won't break the bank. I gave this a 2.5 on Goodreads.


So.. what are you reading?? 

3.14.2013

A Review: The Pigeon Pie Mystery by Julia Stuart


The Pigeon Pie Mystery is Julia Stuart's third novel and another favorite on my list. After reading The Tower, the Zoo, and the Tortoise a while back, I was pretty excited to see that she had released another recently. I was lucky and found the sole copy on a trip to Malaprop's in Asheville, North Carolina. Note: I read this last year - so shame on me for waiting so long to finally post this review. Definitely one of my favorite reads of 2012!

Mink is left with more debt than she can manage when her father, the Maharaja of Brindor, is found dead. To make matters worse, the scandal surrounding his death is sure to promise that she'll be left in a very compromising situation. Before things actually hit rock bottom, the Queen of England allows Mink to move into one of the apartments at Hampton Court Palace (thought to be haunted by numerous historical figures) and her comfortable life is suddenly filled with awkward conversations and taxing financial planning. Just when she begins to accept her new situation, Pooki, her beloved maid, is accused of the murder of a fellow neighbor by serving him a pigeon pie at a luncheon. Mink must work to prove that Pooki is innocent by learning intimate details about her new neighbors, while also staving off a humorous budding romantic relationship.

Stuart doesn't disappoint. I'm quickly becoming one of her biggest fans. While this novel wasn't as strong as The Tower, the Zoo, and the Tortoise, it certainly contained all of the quirk that Stuart so brilliantly weaves in her often outlandish stories. Most events are so very absurd, but funny and quite clever, that it all works to create a fun story a reader can get lost in. While the characters' appearances are quite brief, effectively creating an awkward atmosphere, Stuart brings each of them to life with their own peculiar habits and histories. Overall, the novel was an enjoyable read that I recommend to readers looking for a little fun and loads of laughs.

I recently picked up Stuart's debut novel: The Matchmaker of Perigord, so look out for another review featuring this author in the future.




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