Merry Christmas! Last Review Before the New Year

Masks of the Lost Kings
Merry Christmas! Santa is on his way so I hope you’ve all been good and you get everything you want! This will be the last post of 2012, but never fear, I’ll be back with more reviews in January and more authors interviews. If there is any other content that you would like to see or have comments, I would love to hear from you.

Today’s review is Masks of the Lost Kings by Tom Bane. The author comes from a scientific background and that is apparent from his description which appears to be very well researched.

This is an action/adventure which has been compared to Indiana Jones and the Da Vinci Code. The main character, Suzy da Silva is an archaeologist working on a thesis that compares the ancient Egyptian history to Christianity. Unable to be funded by Oxford University, her professor Dr. Logan arranges for her to speak to the mysterious Horus Corporation. She is soon traveling to Egypt. She manages to get inside the Great Pyramid where she witnesses a murder and flees in fear for her life. She travels to the Valley of Kings to see the tomb of the boy king, Tutankhamen. She is convinced that she will find the proof she seeks there. She is joined by Tom Brooking, a talented astrophysicist. Together they discover secrets that some would kill to acquire. They are chased by assassins and others that are either trying to protect them or kill them as well.

This is a thriller, adventure and mystery all rolled into one. I admire those authors that have a gift for description, and this story’s strength is the description. The story is a great premise and although I would have liked to see a little more characterization, I really didn’t have an issue with the characters. The distraction to me was the pacing. It started well with a jungle scene, but when it gets to Suzy and the lead-in to her Egypt adventure, the action drops while through lectures and narration, the reader is given a lot of scientific information. While I found it interesting it felt too technical to me. I found myself glossing over all the technical information to get to the action, which it took many pages to get to. Once it did however, the action was riveting. I think that anyone interested in Egyptology or adventure/thriller would very much enjoy this book. I would recommend it as it is a very good story once the action starts happening.

I purchased this book on my own and received no compensation for my review.

I’ve Been Nominated For The Liebster Award!

Liebster Award
I’ve been nominated by Makaylin Felton for the coveted LIEBSTER AWARD. It may be questionable, or even dubious, for some, but I kinda like the idea. You can find out about this information trivia from at http://mckaylinfelton.wordpress.com. Visit her site and read some her posts.
Here are the rules for acceptance of the “LIEBSTER AWARD.” This is important because at the end I will be nominating eleven blogs for this coveted award.
The Rules:
When you receive the award you must post eleven random facts about yourself
You must answer eleven questions posed by the person who nominated you
You pass the award on to the eleven blogger friends you are nominating, making sure you notify them of their nominations
You write-up eleven new questions for the bloggers you are nominating (and you cannot nominate the blogger who nominated you)
You paste the award picture into your blog along with eleven random facts about yourself and your eleven questions and answers given by your nominator. (Not much different from the Next Big Thing)
Eleven Random Facts About Myself:
1. I don’t remember learning to read. My earliest memory is 4 years of age and I was reading fluently.
2. I love soap operas, especially General Hospital.
3. I discovered with this year’s election that I have a political side.
4. I am the youngest of 9 children in a blended family.
5. One of the many jobs I’ve had was working with mentally handicapped adults. I found it very satisfying.
6. I prefer mystery, suspense and horror to romance.
7. I love to travel but haven’t been anywhere for over 8 years.
8. Most plots develop in my head when I am in the shower.
9. I would love to live near the water but I live in the desert.
10. I don’t like to talk on the telephone.
11. I am a list maker and a note taker. I express my thoughts better in writing.

My Questions From Mckaylin Felton:

Q. If you could be any animal what would it be and why?
A: I would be a bird. They are free to fly whenever they wish. I am a free spirit.

Q.What is your favorite genre to read?
A. Mystery/Suspense and horror..but without the zombies! and Historical Fiction.

Q.When did you realize you wanted to become an author?
A. Deep down, I think I’ve always known, but I never realized it until college. Then, I let myself be talked out of it because it wasn’t practical. How would I pay the bills? So, I let life get in the way. Now I am retired, and with the wonderful invention of the internet, I am living my dream.

Q. If you could pick a decade to live in, what would it be and why?
A. I think around the Civil War era. It seemed so much more respectable and genteel.

Q. What is a life goal you hope to accomplish?
A. To become a published author with multiple books. I do not want to be a one book wonder.

Q. What are you most frightened of?
A. One star reviews!

Q. Which do you prefer: pen or pencil?
A. Pen, definitely. I do crosswords in ink. I don’t like to write with a pencil at all.

Q. What is your favorite movie of all time?
A. Of all time..hmmm..I would have to say Gone With the Wind. But I have many favorites.

Q. What is your favorite book?
A. Either The Stand by Stephen King or The Murder of Roger Ackroyd by Agatha Christie..it’s a tossup.

Q. Which do you prefer: independent publishing or traditional?
A. This is the toughest question of them all I think. I see the pros and cons of both. On the one hand, independent publishing is attractive because I can set my own rules and get more of the profit and it is instant. There is not that long wait to first see if someone else feels that I am worthy of publication and then if the answer is yes, the long wait to see it in print. But..you have to do all of your own promotion, hire an editor..etc. Traditional publishing is a plus because you have the validation from a professional that you’ve made it, and they do all of the footwork. I am still weighing pros and cons on this, but I am leaning toward independent and let the ones who matter the most validate my work..the readers.

Q. If you could live anywhere in the world, where would it be and why?
A. I’d love to be somewhere around the water with a moderate temperature, so maybe San Diego, CA or in my wildest dreams..Malibu.

My Questions for my Nominees:
1. What makes you stand out as a writer?
2. If you could only pick one author, living or dead, that you could spend an evening with to interview, who would you choose?
3. Where do you get your ideas?
4. Are you a pantser or an outliner. Why?
5. What is your favorite part about being an author? Your least favorite?
6. Do you have a favorite character, either your work or another author’s?
7. Do you have a particular habit or a piece of clothing, that is your lucky writing charm?
8. Do you incorporate any of your favorite things, places, or hobbies into your books?
9. What movie do you flat-out refuse to watch, no matter how good people say it is? What book do you refuse to read?
10. At what age did you begin writing?
11. Describe your ideal vacation.

My Nominees:

Robert Zimmermann
alifeamongthepages.wordpress.com
Arlee Bird
tossingitout.blogspot.com
Pam Funke
http://thefourhorsemenseries.blogspot.com
Anne Brear
http://annebrear.blogspot.com
Cheryl Kaye Tardif
http://www.cherylktardif.blogspot.com
Mark Rubinstein
markrubinstein-author.com
Jay Howard
blog.jayhoward.info
Jaye Frances
blog.jayefrances.com
Christopher Sheilds
wealdfaejournals.wordpress.com
Susan Griscom
swblog.susangriscom.com
Sean MacUisdin
http://seanmacuisdin.wordpress.com

My First Interview With Ginger Myrick

El-Rey-cover-200x300

Welcome back to Becky’s Book Notes! Wow, it’s been a while hasn’t it? Today, I have a real treat. This is my first author interview, and I am pleased to introduce Ginger Myrick, author of El Rey: A Novel of Renaissance Iberia. Thank you Ginger for being here today. I have asked Ginger a few questions and here are her responses.

1. Tell me a little about yourself; where you grew up, your life, a typical day..anything that you would care to share with your readers.

I grew up in SoCal in a very different area than where we live now. I spent my school years in a suburban middle class neighborhood where everybody wore Vans, listened to Journey and Kenny Loggins on the radio, and made the exodus to the beach on the weekends.

I have now lived in a ski resort town about 40 miles east of Los Angeles for nearly 20 years but have NEVER been skiing. I have two grown sons, a 9-year-old husband, a dog and a cat, and my mom lives two blocks away. Bits and pieces of each of them were incorporated into the characters in El Rey to some extent (except for the cat!)

A typical day goes like this: I get up around 7, have a cup of coffee while I check my profiles for messages. I walk my dog, come home and answer all of my emails until about noon, do an hour of yoga then back to some actual writing while I facebook and Twitter to promote. I walk the dog again in the evening then more writing and promo until about 7:30. Then I read to wind down (something other than my own work!) and usually get to bed between 9 and 10. The rest of my time is spent picking up after my family.

2. Have any authors influenced your writing? How?

I began reading at an early age. My grandmother was also an avid reader, and she had boxes and boxes of books in her closet. That was where I was introduced to the world of historical fiction by such authors as Anya Seton, Jean Plaidy/Victoria Holt, Ayn Rand, and Colleen McCullough. James Michener, James Clavell, and John Steinbeck came later from my father, and my elder brother got me into Stephen King. I think my writing style is probably closest to Anya Seton’s, but some of the plot elements of my stories and the way they develop are reminiscent of Colleen McCullough. I would feel extremely honored to be likened to any of them!

3. I understand that you write historical fiction. Is this also what you prefer to read, or do you read a different genre in your spare time?

It is my preferred genre, but I can find something to love in almost any book. I read fantasy, sci-fi, dystopian, straight historicals, biographies. I am an absolute freak when it comes to Stephen King. I have only read a couple of stories by him that I didn’t love. But I think the real key is the storytelling and the talent for making a reader feel connected to the characters, no matter the genre. Those are the books I love to find. They help me escape from me!

4. What is your favorite part about being an author? Your least favorite part?

My favorite part it the telling of the tale. I love the idea of putting the same old everyday words together to create something unique and my very own. I also love the research. I have found that I adore learning new things. It’s part of why I could never decide what path I wanted to follow when I was in school. If I could have made a career out of being a student, I would have done that.

But I detest the marketing and promotion part of it. I am reclusive by nature and don’t find myself very interesting, so trying to convince others that they should be interested in what I have to say is beyond me. And finding a balance between obnoxious and just right is extremely difficult. I always feel I come off as pushy. I’m still learning.

5. If given the opportunity to sit down and talk to your favorite author, what would you ask him/her? How would you answer it?

Hmm … this is a great question, Becky, and I had to think about it a long time. I actually left it for last, and I’m still mulling it over as I answer. It is between Jean Plaidy, whose real name was Eleanor Hibbert, Ayn Rand, and Colleen McCullough. I’m not sure the questions I would ask would be writing related.

The first two have passed away but led very different lives. I suppose I would ask Ms. Hibbert how she managed her research. Back then it would have been a very daunting prospect to have to physically go to her resources as opposed to just summoning them on the computer. With Ayn Rand I would just like to hear her talk about her experiences. She led an extraordinary and somewhat charmed life, although she became obsessed with her Objectivism philosophy in her final years. And I would like to just sit down and have a female bonding session with Colleen McCullough. She has like four degrees in very dissimilar areas, even a PhD in neuroscience. But despite having such a brilliant mind, she seems to be such an earthy, unpretentious sort of woman.

And although I would be flattered beyond giddy if anyone would like to do the same thing with me, I would probably have to wake her up after about 10 minutes so boring is my life!

6. At what age did you start writing and when did you decide on writing as a career choice?

I have written poetry, songs, and short stories my entire life but never aspired to anything grander. I began writing El Rey on November 29, 2009 (I was 44 at the time) and there was actually no choice in the matter. I call the whole thing a Divine Inspiration. Even now when I write, I still feel that I am merely the instrument, and I have yet to figure out where it is all going.

As far as the career part of it … well, all I can say is that I’m fortunate that my husband has a good job and doesn’t depend on me to contribute. Some other writers whom I have met are actually trying to pay their bills or quit a second or third job. I don’t know how they do it and admire them for their tenacity. I think that sort of pressure would take the pleasure right out of it for me.

7. Do you incorporate any of your favorite things, places, or hobbies into your books?

I always use my own interests in my writing. The singing, cooking, horses, dogs, interest in plants, needlework, are all things that I love. I have never been to any of the places except on the internet, so all of that was purely elaboration upon wishful thinking. But I did use the pictures as a starting point to describe the locations. I find that if I write what I know, I convey it convincingly.

8. What movie (if any) do you flat out refuse to watch no matter how good people say it is? What book do you refuse to read? Why?

I don’t like to watch movies that are too teeny bopper, like the Twilight series. Ditto for the books. I did venture to watch The Hunger Games but was left unimpressed. I thought they tried to make it too grandiose for what it was. I much prefer The Running Man (again Stephen King.) I also have trouble with time travel and highlander romances. Something about the time travel is never quite convincing enough, and the highlander books just seem forced. I don’t like anything with graphic or gratuitous sex in it, so 50 Shades of Gray is also out. I cannot read Tom Clancy, but his books make fantastic movies!

9. Do you have a favorite character either from your own work or another author’s?

This is also a tough question. So many to choose from! I really love Iñigo from El Rey. He represents the ideal father, something I never really had. The largest part of him comes from my grandfather, and he also has attributes of an uncle who was very dear to me with hints of my two brothers. Now that I think about it, he is also very much like Atticus Finch from To Kill A Mockingbird, whom I also adore.

10. Tell us a little about your most recent protagonist.

I released my second novel at the beginning of November. It is titled The Welsh Healer and is about a young girl who is forced from her childhood home by the Welsh uprising against England in 1400. She is endowed with a mystical healing gift passed down through an ancient line of healers. She has been told her entire life that she is the fulfillment of a prophecy and destined to preserve the bloodline of kings. The character was largely based on a new friend, Arleigh Johnson, who runs Historical-Fiction.com. Her picture is even on the cover.

11. What is the setting of your current work in progress and when can we expect to see it?

My WIP is set in Manhattan during the Gilded Age (1874.) It’s about a girl who emigrated from Ireland and works for a well-to-do lady in a fancy neighborhood. It is a Pygmalion/My Fair Lady type of story with a twist. I hope to have it done at the end of January or February 2013.

Thank you again for being here Ginger.

Have you read a book that seemed to stand out in your mind, long after the book had ended? The debut novel by Ginger Myrick, El Rey: A Novel of Renaissance Iberia, did that for me. I found myself wondering about the characters long after the end.

Set in 16th century Portugal and Spain, El Rey is rich in characters that will touch your heart, with the core as a love story between Inez Garcia and El Rey. Inez is an outspoken daughter of a wealthy merchant and El Rey the sea captain and nephew of the King of Portugal. It begins with the story of Inez as an elderly woman telling her great-granddaughter the story of herself from a child of 11 to adulthood and of El Rey. They meet at a party in his honor and strike up a friendship. Inez vows that she will never love another and El Rey tells her he will one day ask for her hand in marriage.

This is a sweeping saga of the story of her mother, Joanna, her father, Inigo, and others that are important in her life. Interwoven in the main body of the work are four narratives that move Inez’s story.

As a historical fiction reader and writer, I can appreciate the amount of research in this novel and it is meticulously accurate and even more important, not preachy. It is interwoven seamlessly into the story. The first impression I had however, and it continued throughout, was the author’s use of imagery. The reader is there, they can smell the sea, hear the seagulls. I consider her very masterful with description. I don’t want to give too much away because my words could not substitute for reading this book. I highly recommend it. I rarely give a 5 star review, but I would rate this up there with the masters of this genre.

Have you read a good book lately? Please share your thoughts. I appreciate all comments and would like to hear yours. 🙂

One of the Most Unique Books I’ve Read in Ages

Have you ever read a book that surprised you? Maybe you didn’t expect to like it and you did, or expected to and didn’t? That can work either way. Maybe the description makes you have a certain expectation, and you find something else? This review is one of those kind. This is “Whorticulture” by Marie-Anne Mancio. I received a complimentary copy in exchange for an honest review. This consideration has no bearing upon my review in any way.

I was at once intrigued by the title. I assumed it would be about prostitution, but I wasn’t sure where the rest fit in. It starts with a child wondering when her father will return. All she has of him is a faded and creased letter. It is followed by the stories of 4 women in the antebellum era. The reader is introduced to Katharine, a young woman who while being educated into being a lady, due to circumstances, gets more of an education than she bargained for; Abigail, a young lady that falls for a thief; Seraphine, a young mulatto woman, who is a prostitute and wants to reinvent herself; and Emily, an abused wife stranded on a large sugar plantation.

These women’s stories are like four short stories and although each are unaware of one another, their lives intertwine. The chapters are designated with flowers. The author supplies the reader with a flower reference, and tells us that each flower has a certain meaning. This all correlates with each individual and their personality. This is a very different concept and very ingenious way of showing the personality of each woman. It is peopled with all types of characters; you have gamblers, whores, liars, abusers; all living in a era that today’s readers want to know more about.

To be honest, I found myself a bit lost in some parts. I expected the flowers to be mentioned more within the stories because the chapter heading included them. Maybe if I had read it in one sitting I would have not have felt this way, I had to go back and forth and wondered how it fit together. Due to this, about halfway through I wasn’t sure how I liked it. Now, here comes the surprise I mentioned. I kept reading and saw how each interacted and I found that I wanted to know more. I thought it was so original an idea, that I found I really did like it after all. I recommend it if you want to read something different and unique and want to be taken somewhere you have never been before. After all, isn’t that why we read fiction in the first place?

Let Me Ask Your Opinion…

Hi Friends!! As many of you know, I am reading and reading, but I am plowed under, so please bear with me. I will get to all the reviews. In the meantime, I realize that I haven’t been posting on a consistent basis, and for that I apologize. I have been pondering an idea for this blog, and I would like to throw it out here to you and, as the headline states, ask your opinion.

I know that many of you are not only readers, but also writers. So, I have been wondering about doing author interviews as well as the reviews. This not only provides more material for blogging purposes, but it gives the reader a little background about the author. So, reader and author alike, is this something that you would like to see on here?

A question to the writers: Would you be interested in being interviewed on this blog? If so, what questions would you like to answer for your readers? I am new at this, so any help in that area would be greatly appreciated!

I seriously want to hear from you all on your opinion on this as well as any other suggestions that you may have for what I can do to improve the blog. This is not for me, but for you, so I value your input. 🙂

Right Now~~A Short Story Review

Well, it appears that I must start out with another apology. It has been quite a while since my last post. Since I am still reading on my longer books for review, I am stopping to review on another short story. This is from a talented writer, Sarah Baethge, and the story is “Right Now.” 

This story is written in first person by a young woman named Lily Aldern. She finds herself between jobs and is hired as a secretary at her brother’s detective agency. He is one of a two man partnership at C & A Detective Agency. The company is investigating suspicious activity at an aerospace company, Legacy Towers. The team comes across a strange man, Joe, and it appears that all of his past memory has been wiped clean, yet he has an uncanny knack for predicting little snippets of the future. Exactly what kind of experimentation is going on at Legacy Towers?

The tone and voice are unique and for the most part believable. The interaction between Lily and the other 3 characters create a hint of comic relief to the story. The wonderful thing about science fiction is the many facets it can take, so many possibilities. I think this could be a great story if it was expanded upon. The characters needed to be more developed. The reader learns a little bit about Lily, and a little bit about Joe, but her brother and his partner, who have some major story line, are just there, much like a prop, and the reader is left wondering about them. This story ends abruptly, and leaves me to wonder if there is going to be a sequel, but it wasn’t hinted that there would be more. I really do like the premise of this story and I am left wanting more. I would love to see this expanded to at least a longer story, but it has great possibilities for a novella or even a novel. I would definitely like to see more from this writer, and would read this again with an expansion or if a sequel is coming, I would like to see that. 

A Parent’s Worst Nightmare…

Let me begin this post with a question..Have you ever had to make a split second decision and then questioned yourself if it was the right one? Yes, ok, I think we all have. We wonder what would have happened had we made a different decision. What would be the outcome if only…Ah, the biggest little word in the American language..if.  What if it was a question of life or death and what if that life or death was your only child? This is the decision faced by our protagonist, Sadie  O’Connell, in Cheryl Kaye Tardif’s book, “Children of the Fog.”

Sadie O’Connell has her share of problems. She is a alcoholic who is trying hard to recover from her addiction and she has an adulterous husband to deal with on top of it. The only thing that keeps holding her together is her pride and joy, her six year old son, Sam and her best friend, Leah. Then one night, the unthinkable happened. Sam was kidnapped by a serial abductor and Sadie saw it happen. She is the only one that can identify this monster, known only as The Fog. He warned her that if she breathed a word about him, he would send her son back to her in “little bloody pieces.”

What follows is whirlwind of emotions and events that would cause a preacher to drink. So, Sadie relapses and pushes everyone away. She flees her home and rents a cabin on the lake. There she experiences some very spooky sights and she questions her very sanity. Are the visions of children that she sees apparitions of The Fog’s victims or are they alcohol induced spirits from her guilt riddled subconscious?  She wonders if she will ever see Sam again, or if her sanity will abandon her first!

This is a spooky book that will keep you on the seat of your pants the entire way through. Sadie is a believable character, because she isn’t perfect, she isn’t a cardboard cutout. Sadie is you, she is me..she is someone we can relate to. We feel her pain and we are scared when she is scared and sad when she is sad. I was hoping for the scary part a bit sooner, to be honest, but it didn’t detract from the story at all. The author is very adept at building the suspense and bringing it to a climax. I highly recommend this book for a fast exciting read that is sure to satisfy your spooky fix as well as your protective side. If you have small children at home, you will be checking on them to make sure they are safe and sleeping peacefully..

Does Reading Merely Entertain or Does It Consume You?

Someone once asked me a question about my reading habits, knowing that I was born with a book in my face..although mostly these days, it is my Kindle. The question was, “What does reading do for you?’ My first intellectual answer was, “Huh?’ No really. They wanted to know what it was that kept me away from other activities, what kept me so engrossed in a story that I would read for hours. This friend was not much of a reader but an avid television watcher and a giant fan of soap operas. So, I explained it to her like this. First, I asked her, “Why do you watch soaps?” She said that she enjoyed the stories. But when pressed, she said she had to know, did the major love interest really die? Or, she couldn’t understand how he could leave her that way! In other words, she was IN the soap opera..those people really existed for her outside of the television screen. She was not merely entertained or swept away, but it was so real..she was consumed by it.

That brings me to my next review. The title was the first thing that caught my eye. “Nourished By That Which Consumes”. This is a very intriguing title, isn’t it?  Think of it: to be nourished is to be sustained or strengthened; and consumed is to be engrossed as the above example, but also to be used up, spent or destroyed. So, already just by the title we know that whatever is sustaining can also be destroying.  

This is not a full length book but longer than a short story, what is known as a novella. The length is just right. This is a debut novel for Joseph Ephraim, but I am sure we will be seeing much more of his work. It starts out with a young Zang Yu-Lin, an Asian female from Singapore. She vows revenge for the deaths of her immediate family when she was a child and the loss of her father, with whom she had a love/hate relationship. She must infiltrate the dark side of the underworld as she seeks revenge on the kingpin responsible. You will laugh, you may even cry..you will be horrified..you will understand and you will root for Yu-Lin as she is betrayed by a friend and discovers a true love. It is an action packed adventure to see if she will be ultimately nourished or will the revenge be all consuming after all..

I highly recommend this book. It is a great read, it will keep you entertained for sure..it will sweep you away without a doubt…But most of all, it will consume you, as you wait for the next story from Mr. Ephraim.

Have you read a good story or a good book? Tell me about it in the comments. I would really like to hear from you and I like to know what you are reading and why you like it, or why you don’t! What is YOUR recommendation? 

Want to be Entertained Fast? Read These 2 Short Stories!

Greetings! I’m am sorry for not writing in so long! I promise to do better in the future. I think I am reading so many all at once right now  mainly research books for my novel, that I haven’t finished a larger work. That is why I would like to introduce you to a couple of short stories that are great reads when you want to be entertained and may not have a lot of time. They are both by a debut author, Steven Lloyd. I really think Steven is someone you might like to follow in the future, because I believe he is really going places.

The first short story, “The Wooden Box”, is about an aging man who is crafting a wooden box as a favor for his ailing wife. It is a story of love, memories, and promises that must be kept. It is heartwarming, reflective and bittersweet. I don’t want to say too much more and spoil anything for you as a reader. Check it out!

The second story I read while doing laundry! It even made that mundane task more fun, if you can believe it! This story, “When Darkness Falls”, is a story of a young boy visiting his grandfather, who has a story to tell him. This is a tale of horror and retribution. The grandfather, Max, is about to tell a tale to his grandson, Chad. Their evening together doesn’t go quite as planned however. Sometimes karma comes back to bite us on the behind. Read what happens when it all comes to a head, but a word of warning: If you read it at night, make sure all the lights are on! If not, keep looking over your shoulder…

If you have a Kindle e-reader, both stories are available for download.