Wednesday, December 21, 2011

Survey Say!! Women ‘more avid book readers than men’

Women ‘more avid book readers than men’
 
    After diamonds, it seems, books are girls’ BFFs (Best Friend Forever). A new study has found that females are more avid readers of books than men – in fact, they can’t put a book down once they begin it.
According to the UK survey of reading habits, which asked 2,000 adults, almost half of women are ''page turners'' who finish a book soon after starting it compared to only 26 per cent of men, reports The Telegraph.
The research also found those who take a long time to read books and only managed one or two a year were twice as likely to be male than female.

The only likeness between He and She came among those who have two books on the bedside table at once and who start one book on the middle of reading another, switching easily. Twelve per cent of women were in this category – exactly the same number as men.

A similar survey carried out in December found half of men and one third of woman have lied about what they have read to try and impress friends.

From: TopNews.in Mar 24
Happy Holidays Ladies may you have a warm healthy holiday Season whether it be Christmas, Hanukah, Three Kings or Kwanzaa.


With the New Year approaching I’ve thought of yet another activity for all of you to participate in. It’s the “Read a Book Pledge” Here’s how it will work.
Think about how many books you think you read this year and set a goal of a few more books for next year. Let me know if you would like to participate and how many books you pledge to read in 2012.
I will then create a blog post labeled “Book Pledge” every time you read a book you will comment on the post telling us the name of the book and share any thoughts (feel free to e-mail me directly and I will post for you). At the end of the year we will see who met their reading goals and who didn’t.
Are you up for the challenge?   Can you feel your competitive blood heating up? I’ll start by setting my goal at 30 books for 2012.

Friday, December 9, 2011

Peoms about Reading

Read to me
by Jane Yolen
Read to me riddles and read to me rhymes
Read to me stories of magical times
Read to me tales about castles and kings
Read to me stories of fabulous things
Read to me pirates and read to me knights
Read to me dragons and dragon-book fights
Read to me spaceships and cowboys and then
When you are finished- please read them again

What is a Book?by Lora Duneta
A book is pages, pictures and words
A book is animals, people and birds
A book is stories of queens and kings
Poems and songs- so many things!
Curled in a corner where I can hide
With a book I can journey far and wide
Though it's only paper from end to end
A book is a very special friend

Open A Bookby Jane Baskwill
Open a book
And you will find
People and places of every kind
Open a book
And you can be
Anything that you want to be:
Open a book
And you can share
Wondrous worlds you find in there
Open a book
And I will too
You read to me
And I'll read to you.
Books to the Ceiling
by Arnold LobelBooks to the Ceiling
Books to the sky
My piles of books are a mile high
How I love them
How I need them
I'll have a long beard by the time I read them

Monday, November 28, 2011

Upcoming meeting locations

The Brown Stone Diner & Pancake Factory
http://brownstonediner.com/
(Path pick up will be at Grove Street station)
426 Jersey Avenue
Jersey City, NJ 07302
201-433-0471

Broadway Diner
(Path pick up will be at Journal Square Station)
1081 Broadway
Bayonne, NJ 07002
201-437-7338

Dorrian's Red Hand
http://www.dorrians.com/
555 Washington Blvd.
Jersey City, NJ 07310
(across the street from Pavonia/New Port Path Station)
They also validate parking at the parking lot across the street & next door.

Monday, November 21, 2011

Book to Movie: The Hunger Games

I know this was not a book club selection but many of us have read the books. So if your interested in going on a field Trip. ... speak up. For those of you that have not read these 3 books are short and an easy read. Great for in between books. Movie release date is not till March so you still have time.

See Trailer below:


Set in a future where the Capitol selects a boy and girl from the twelve districts to fight to the death on live television, Katniss Everdeen volunteers to take her younger sister's place for the latest match.

Release date: March 12th, 2012 

Book Titles: by auther Suzanne Collins
The Hunger Games    (book 1)
Catching Fire             (book 2)
Mockingjay               (book 3)

Book to Movie: The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo

Let's talk about a field trip: movie release date it Dec 21, 2011

I know the week of Christmas is not the ideal week but I don't know if I'll be able to hold out ladies!!!!!!! The 21st is a Weds but I suspect the theaters will be crazy. Should we wait a week and go on the following friday Dec 30th? Jan 1st Sunday afternoon (New years day)?

Let me know if you have any real interesting in this.

Updated trailer:
http://www.imdb.com/video/imdb/vi3830160409/

What's your reading personality?

What's your reading personality? Are you an eclectic, serial, exacting or involved reader? Find out now by taking BookBrowse's fun, fasWhat's your reading personality? Are you an eclectic, serial, exacting or involved reader? Find out now by taking BookBrowse's fun, fast (and not to be taken too seriously!) quiz.
http://www.bookbrowse.com/quiz/

Your responses showed you fitting equally into all four reading personalities:
Here are my Quiz results......
Involved Reader: You don't just love to read books, you love to read about books. For you, half the fun of reading is the thrill of the chase - discovering new books and authors, and discussing your finds with others.
Exacting Reader: You love books but you rarely have as much time to read as you'd like - so you're very particular about the books you choose.
Serial Reader: Once you discover a favorite writer you tend to stick with him/her through thick and thin.
Eclectic Reader: You read for entertainment but also to expand your mind. You're open to new ideas and new writers, and are not wedded to a particular genre or limited range of authors.

Wednesday, November 16, 2011

What we have to look forward to this fall

Lost Memory of Skin
by Russell Banks
Release date: September 27
Banks's novel follows a character called "The Kid" who must rebuild his life after being released from prison, where he spent time for having sex with a minor. Starting over is harder than it seems, as he must wear a GPS tracking device to make sure he doesn't go anywhere near children. The book explores his tenuous friendship with a professor who studies recovering sex offenders.


The Visible Man
by Chuck Klosterman
Release date: October 4
Klosterman comes out with a new novel this fall, about a therapist and the mysterious patient she becomes obsessed with. While it is fiction, The Visible Man is concerned with many of the same themes Klosterman addresses in his celebrated essays: the influence of pop culture, the anxieties of modern life, and more.

The Marriage Plot
by Jeffrey Eugenides
Release date: October 11

The Pulitzer Prize-winning author of Middlesex and The Virgin Suicides releases his third novel, about a woman in college in the 1980s who doesn't understand why everyone has given up on romance. It's a love story, but it's also a meditation on reading and why we're drawn to certain stories.

Discover reading finds with the link below:
http://www.theatlantic.com/entertainment/archive/2011/08/upcoming-books-24-new-releases-to-look-forward-to-this-fall/243962/?utm_content=15047105#slide5

Friday, November 11, 2011

Spa Visit

Please plan to arrive at least 30 minutes prior to your appointment time in order to fully enjoy the TriBeca Beauty Spa experience. If you are a first time spa client we will ask you to fill out a client card, you will then be given robe and slippers and ushered into the lounge area where you can enjoy refreshments or relax in the sauna before your treatment.


Tipping is a standard spa practice. We only take tips in CASH. Please arrive with enough cash to cover a 15-20% tip for your service.



We are located on the ground floor of 8 Harrison Street between Hudson and Greenwich Streets. 

By Train
1 to Franklin Street Station

2 or 3 to Chambers Street Station
A C or E to Canal Street Station

By Car

West Side Highway - Traveling North - make right onto Harrison Street (first right after Chambers).

Traveling South - Make left on Vestry Street (first left after Canal). Go two blocks to Greenwich St.- make right. Continue South on Greenwich until Harrison Street - make left.

Friday, October 14, 2011

How Reading Books Saved My Life by John Chukwuma Anyasor

When most people hear the word ‘read’, or ‘library’, or ‘book’, three signals usually go off in their minds:
1) Boring
2) Boring
Or my personal favorite:
3) Who reads books anymore? I have a Kindle for that.
I think reading books has taken a backseat to other more popular forms of media (television, film, radio, and the internet).
Technology has come so far, in fact, that some us believe there’s no longer a point in reading books. I could just wait until the movie comes out, right?
What’s more, reading books may have taken a backseat to life itself.
These days, there’s too much going on in your life for you to pick up a good read. There’s just no time to read books. I’m too busy. I have a job to work, and kids to feed.
Big mistake
Let me tell you something – not reading books may be the worst mistake you could ever make. So much so in fact, that it could be life-threatening. Not a matter of life and death mind you, but a matter of just leisurely going through life and really living life to the fullest.
Let me explain.
The majority of people’s lives in a nutshell
You can go through life watching the local news, pretending to care about wars in other countries, tweeting to all your friends about your weekend, and remain in your little bubble. Anyone outside that reality wouldn’t notice you – and you wouldn’t notice them.
But when you pick up a book, you step outside your normal, everyday life. It’s not just about technology, reality TV, and work. You step into someone else’s world, experiencing their thoughts and their feelings.
I’ve read plenty of books that have moved me nearly to tears (at most, I got choked up a bit), and I’ve read books that I’ve laughed and laughed with.
I’ve read stories of romance that made me want to find my true love. I’ve read tales of adventure, endurance, and discovery that made me want to explore.
You’re not alone
Reading books has taught me that there are so many people in the world – each with their one unique story. I once believed that my story sucked. I mean, who would want to know about me?
It’s funny, because that’s what every author thinks before they publish their first book. Will they like what I write? Will people care? Can they relate? Does it matter that I’m (from whatever country, part of whatever ethnic group, and have whatever disability)?
And when the authors see people avidly reading their books, they realize that people can relate to them. Just like when you pick up a good book, you think to yourself, “Wow, I totally get what the author’s saying.”
You too have a story
Even outside the scope of books, most people think their own stories suck. Most of us read masterpieces written by those who have faced hardship and overcame it in an inspiring way, and wish we were like them.
What you don’t know is that the best stories are the ones that you yourself can truly connect with. As you read, you’re feeling the exact same feelings as the author.
Living life to the fullest entails experiencing as much of it as possible. Experience the pain of others, know their happiness, and feel their joy. Books give you the power to experience. For without books, how would we know the stories of others?
You could read blogs, but they’re not as in-depth as an entire book. You could watch someone document their life on video, but you can’t get a truly honest glimpse into their psyche.
Books serve to connect people’s thoughts, and that’s the deepest connection there is.
In a way, books have saved my life. They’ve shown me that I, too, have a story people want to hear. I’m not just another book on a rack – I am a bestseller.
Books can save your life as well. You, too, have a story people want to hear. You’re not just another book on a rack – you are a bestseller.
“Reading makes immigrants of us all. It takes us away from home, but more importantly, it finds homes for us everywhere.” – Jean Rhys

Thursday, October 6, 2011

Nov 20th, 1:00pm Anniversary Book Club Meeting


Ladies we will be celebrating our 1 year anniversary at Aura Spa in Hoboken NJ. Below are just a few of the 30 min Pick me Up treatment the spa offers for only $55 each.

30-min PICK-ME-UPs
$55 per treatment

Face or Eye Refresher
This is a quick face or eye treatment to brighten fatigued face or de-puff stressed eye bags. The instant rise-and-shine radiant booster for your face!

Back Booster Massage
Our suave back-relief technique is guaranteed to un-kink the knots and strain you’ve been feeling on your back!

Scalp-Neck-Shoulder Relaxer
This is an ultra relaxing massage that follows the meridian points of your body to help release tension and allow better circulation of blood.

Foot Energizer
Our foot reflexology will leave your feet feeling peppy and light as a feather!

Check out the link and let me know what treatment you would like to request, I will then e-mail the spa and set out our appointments you will then call and provide them with a credit card to hold your individual appointments.

We can all get Mani & Pedis or full body treatments. All clients with services on the lower level (facials, massages, and body treatments) are welcome to use the Far-Infrared Radiant Heat Sauna, free of charge.
Aura Spa
 70 Hudson Street, Hoboken NJ
201-656-0002
Aura spa is a half a block away from the Hoboken Path\Lightrail\bus and transit station.

Check out the New Kindle's from Amazon

Amazon has put out some great new products for those of you who arn't reading on e-readers. Here are some of the basic facts.....Prices starting at only $79 put it on your Christmas list.

Less then 6 ounces, lighter than a paper back book
Most advanced E Ink Display
Read in Sunlight
Book downloads in 60 seconds
Adjustable text sizes

New one month Battery Life: A single charge lasts up to one month with wireless off based upon a half-hour of daily reading time. Keep wireless always on and it lasts for up to 3 weeks. Battery life will vary based on wireless usage, such as shopping the Kindle Store, web browsing, and downloading content.

And now you can borrow books from your public library too.

http://www.amazon.com/

Wednesday, September 28, 2011

Book suggestion: Please look after Mom by Kyung-Sook Shin

There is a simple, yet remarkable, scene in Kyung-sook Shin’s novel, Please Look After Mom, where the book’s title character visits her adult son in Seoul.  He lives in a duty office in the building where he works, because he can't afford an apartment. At night, they sleep on the floor and she offers to lie next to the wall to shield him from a draft.  “I can fall asleep better if I’m next to the wall,” she says.  And with this gesture, we catch a glimpse of the depth of love she has for her first-born and the duty-bound sacrifices she’s made on behalf her family.

Please Look After Mom is the story of a mother, and her family’s search for her after she goes missing in a crowded train station, told through four richly imagined voices:  her daughter’s, her oldest son’s, her husband’s, and finally her own.  Each chapter adds a layer to the story’s depth and complexity, until we are left with an indelible portrait of a woman whose entire identity, despite her secret desires, is tied up in her children and the heartbreaking loss that is felt when family bonds loosen over time.

Kyung-sook Shin’s elegantly spare prose is a joy to read, but it is the quiet interstitial space between her words, where our own remembrances and regrets are allowed to seep in, that convicts each one of us to our core.

Monday, September 26, 2011

book suggestion: The Devil in a white city by Erik Larson

Not long after Jack the Ripper haunted the ill-lit streets of 1888 London, H.H. Holmes dispatched somewhere between 27 and 200 people, mostly single young women, in the churning new metropolis of Chicago; many of the murders occurred during the city's finest moment, the World's Fair of 1893. Larson's breathtaking new history is a novelistic yet wholly factual account of the fair and the mass murderer who lurked within it.

This is, in effect, the nonfiction Alienist, or a sort of companion, which might be called Homicide, to Emile Durkheim's Suicide. However, rather than anomie, Larson is most interested in industriousness and the new opportunities for mayhem afforded by the advent of widespread public anonymity.

book suggestion: The Tiger's Wife by Tea Obreht

Drawing on the former Yugoslavia's fabled past and recent bloodshed, Belgrade-born Obreht portrays two besieged doctors. Natalia is on an ill-advised "good will" medical mission at an orphanage on what is suddenly the "other side," now that war has broken out, when she learns that her grandfather, a distinguished doctor forced out of his practice by ethnic divides, has died far from home. She is beset by memories, particularly of her grandfather taking her to the zoo to see the tigers.

We learn the source of his fascination in mesmerizing flashbacks, meeting the village butcher, the deaf-mute Muslim woman he married, and a tiger who escaped the city zoo after it was bombed by the Germans. Of equal mythic mystery is the story of the "deathless man." Moments of breathtaking magic, wildness, and beauty are paired with chilling episodes in which superstition overrides reason; fear and hatred smother compassion; and inexplicable horror rules.

352 pages

please let me know if you have read

book suggestion:Cutting for Stone by Abraham Verghese

From Publishers Weekly

 The plot of this book is fairly straightforward. Marion and Shiva Stone are born one dramatic afternoon in 1954 in Addis Ababa, the same day their mother — a nun, Sister Mary Joseph Praise — dies of complications from her hidden pregnancy. The boys are conjoined at the skull, yet separated at birth; they are raised by Dr. Kalpana Hemlatha and Dr. Abhi Ghosh, both immigrants from Madras and both doctors at the hospital where the boys’ natural parents also worked.

They grow up amid the political turmoil of Ethiopia (its actual chronology altered slightly by Verghese to suit his fictional purposes), and in 1979 Marion flees, first to Nairobi and finally to New York, where he qualifies as a surgeon. Shiva, too, goes into medicine, specializing in treating vaginal fistula, for which work he is acclaimed in this very newspaper, a sure sign of his renown. Almost supernaturally close as children, the brothers become more and more distant as the novel progresses; they are dramatically reunited at its end — through the mysterious agency of the long-vanished Thomas Stone.
667 pages

Book suggestion: I'd know you anywhere by Laura Lippman

From Publishers Weekly

Starred Review. Near the start of this outstanding novel of psychological suspense from Edgar-winner Lippman (Life Sentences), Eliza Benedict, a 38-year-old married mother of two living in suburban Maryland, receives a letter from Walter Bowman, the man who kidnapped her the summer she was 15 and is now on death row. The narrative shifts between the present and that long ago summer, when Eliza involuntarily became a part of Walter's endless road trip, including the fateful night when he picked up another teenage girl, Holly Tackett. Soon after Walter killed Holly, Eliza was rescued and taken home. Eliza must now balance a need for closure with a desire to protect herself emotionally. Walter wants something specific from her, but she has no idea what, and she's not sure that she wants to know.
All the relationships, from the sometimes contentious one between Eliza and her sister, Vonnie, to the significantly stranger one between Walter and Barbara LaFortuny, an advocate for prisoners, provide depth and breadth to this absorbing story.
400 pages

Please let me know if you have read this

Suggested Book: Switched by Amanda Hocking

Product Description

Switched - the first book in the Trylle Trilogy...

When Wendy Everly was six-years-old, her mother was convinced she was a monster and tried to kill her. It isn't until eleven years later that Wendy discovers her mother might have been right.

With the help of Finn Holmes, Wendy finds herself in a world she never knew existed - a world both beautiful and frightening, and Wendy's not sure she wants to be a part of it.

About the Author

Amanda Hocking is a lifelong Minnesotan obsessed with John Hughes and Jim Henson. In between making collages and drinking too much Red Bull, she writes young adult urban fantasy and paranormal romance.

The first and second books - Switched and Torn - in her new paranormal romance the Trylle Trilogy are out now, and the third book - Ascend - will be out later. The first four books in her series - My Blood Approves, Fate, Flutter, and Wisdom - are available now, as well as Hollowland - a paranormal romance with zombies.

Please let me know if you have read this.

330 pages

Up coming book: The Paris Wife by Paula McLain

From the Auther Paula McLain:

Most of us know or think we know who Ernest Hemingway was -- a brilliant writer full of macho swagger, driven to take on huge feats of bravery and a pitcher or two of martinis -- before lunch. But beneath this man or myth, or some combination of the two, is another Hemingway, one we’ve never seen before. Hadley Richardson, Hemingway’s first wife, is the perfect person to reveal him to us -- and also to immerse us in the incredibly exciting and volatile world of Jazz-age Paris.

The idea to write in Hadley’s voice came to me as I was reading Hemingway’s memoir, A Moveable Feast, about his early years in Paris. In the final pages, he writes of Hadley, “I wished I had died before I ever loved anyone but her.” That line, and his portrayal of their marriage -- so tender and poignant and steeped in regret -- inspired me to search out biographies of Hadley, and then to research their brief and intense courtship and letters -- they wrote hundreds and hundreds of pages of delicious pages to another!

I couldn’t help but fall in love with Hadley, and through her eyes, with the young Ernest Hemingway. He was just twenty when they met, handsome and magnetic, passionate and sensitive and full of dreams. I was surprised at how much I liked and admired him -- and before I knew it, I was entirely swept away by their gripping love story.

I hope you will be as captivated by this remarkable couple as I am -- and by the fascinating world of Paris in the 20’s, the fast-living, ardent and tremendously driven Lost Generation

Wednesday, September 21, 2011

Life Long Benefits of Joining a Book Club

You might think that reading groups are simply an arena for book worms to indulge in their favourite passion or for you to have enjoyable argument about your favourite story or characters with like-minded individuals…but book clubs actually offer more lifelong benefits than you realise:
  • Everyone knows that reading expands your horizons and book clubs help to do this at an even greater level, with the in-depth discussions and assimilations of different viewpoints all contributing to increasing your knowledge and appreciation of the world around you.
  • Joining a reading group can also help to extend your reading, as you'll be tempted to try different types of books that you might not otherwise have chosen by yourself. Many people can become accustomed to the comfort of reading in a favourite genre and may not realise how much they might actually enjoy an altogether different type of book, until they are persuaded to try by other members of the reading group.
  • Despite not having a formalised classroom structure, reading groups are actually a fantastic place to promote learning. Discussing books helps to reinforce things in your mind and enable you to retain information better. In addition, the informal learning environment means that there is less fear of "failing" or humiliation before classmates, whilst the urge to participate means that people will be more motivated to read the book and gain the information.
  • Each new book allows you the opportunity to "start afresh" and "do better" - whether it is with more participation, improved leadership of discussions, more commitment to reading or simply better retention of the information learnt.
  • Book clubs enable you to appreciate otherwise "dry" topics within the context of an involving story - for example, reading books set in certain periods allow you to learn more about history, without the dread of boring facts and dates.
  • Book clubs can also be great ways to travel and appreciate other cultures - not only through the books themselves but also through any members with different backgrounds. And discussing these differences helps everyone to understand them by placing them within a larger context.
  • Participating in reading group discussions does wonders for your communication skills, teaching you to listen to different points of view and different ways of expression, as well as "discuss and disagree" without resorting to emotional arguments. It teaches you to be both honest and yet tactful, which is a difficult but extremely valuable skill. It provides great experience for use in other arenas, such as work and business - and even family events - so that you learn to express yourself appropriately and accept disagreements without taking it personally.
  • For those shy of public speaking, book clubs are a great way to start practising expressing your opinions to an audience or summarising information and presenting it in a coherent and engaging way.
  • Reading groups with a rotating roster of leaders means that everyone has a chance to practise their leadership skills and the management of a group of people, with different backgrounds and opinions.
  • Book clubs can help you appreciate books that you had rejected in your childhood or within the confines of your school curriculum, as the imminent discussion motivates you to read with more purpose and attention. In particular, having to present a book to the group helps you to crystallise your crystallise and categorise the information so that it can be conveyed easily and efficiently.
  • For those with writing aspirations, book clubs can be a wonderful breeding ground for ideas as well as provide the motivation for you to pen your own literary masterpiece. Listening to other people's assessment of a book and their discussion of likes and dislikes about plot, character and style, can help enormously in your quest to become a better, more successful writer.
  • Last but not least, book clubs are great social forums and provide many opportunities to meet and befriend new people from all walks of life, as well as providing an enjoyable and meaningful addition to your social calendar.
Author: Hsin-Yi Cohen BSc, MA, MSt

The Benefits of reading

When you can see Atonement in two hours and 10 minutes (enacted by the very appealing James McAvoy, no less) or listen to it on audiotape, why bother working through the 371-page novel? For that matter, why trudge through the newspaper when you can turn on CNN? Why puzzle over a manual when you can YouTube the instructions? Everyone knows the book is always better than the movie, but is there any real advantage to getting your information by reading it?

Yes, according to neuroscience—your mind will most definitely thank you.

Just like muscles, the brain benefits from a good workout. And reading is more neurobiologically demanding than processing images or speech. As you're absorbing, say, this article, "parts of the brain that have evolved for other functions—such as vision, language, and associative learning—connect in a specific neural circuit for reading, which is very challenging," says Ken Pugh, PhD, president and director of research of Haskins Laboratories, which is devoted to the science of language and affiliated with Yale. "A sentence is shorthand for a lot of information that must be inferred by the brain." In general, your intelligence is called to action, as is greater concentration. "We are forced to construct, to produce narrative, to imagine," says Maryanne Wolf, director of the Center for Reading and Language Research at Tufts University and author of Proust and the Squid: The Story and Science of the Reading Brain. "Typically, when you read, you have more time to think. Reading gives you a unique pause button for comprehension and insight. By and large, with oral language—when you watch a film or listen to a tape—you don't press pause."

The benefits of all this mental activity include keeping your memory sharp, your learning capacity nimble, and your mind basically hardier as you age. No one's advising that you toss the DVD player—or books on tape, which, Pugh says, provide more work for your brain than seeing a movie—but print should take up part of your life too. A literate mind is a more complex one. "There's a richness that reading gives you," Wolf says, "an opportunity to probe more than any other medium I know of. Reading is about not being content with the surface." Even when it is superficial (what's a plane ride without a little celebrity gossip?), indulging in a tabloid beats watching TV—just processing the words boosts the brain. "If you had your druthers," Pugh says, "you'd rather be reading."
Taken from the Oprah website under Health

Six e-Book Trends to Watch out for.....

I don’t know exactly how things will shake out long-term, but I believe we will see the following six trends in 2011:
If you are just getting started with Evernote, I suggest that you buy Brett Kelly’s remarkably practical e-book, Evernote Essentials, Second Edition. It is worth setting aside a couple hours to work through this brief, 95-page book. It will save you DAYS of learning Evernote on your own.
Bundled Books. Some publishers have experimented with this, including my company. However, I believe it will happen in earnest this year. The major e-tailers will make it possible for you to buy different kinds of e-bundles at a discount—a bundle of the same book in both print and e-formats; a bundle of of one author’s complete library or most popular titles; or a bundle of several titles on a particular topic.
Social Reading. I have seen several concept demos of this already. (Here’s one.) But this is the year it will be widely implemented. Imagine hosting a digital discussion group, inviting a dozen friends or co-workers and being able to see one another’s highlights, comments, and questions—and reply to them. This interaction could happen in preparation for the group meeting or in place of it.
e-Book Clubs. With over a million new books published in 2009 (the last stats we have), we are awash in content. We need curators more than ever. A single editor or a panel of them will pick the best of the best. Since it is all done electronically, readers will choose the frequency in which they receive new titles. Just like the book clubs of yesteryear, etailers will give them an e-book bundle in exchange for a commitment to purchase a specific number of titles at a special membership discount.
e-First Publishing. We are already seeing this, of course. But again, I think the trend will accelerate—especially since 19 of the top 50 books in the week following Christmas sold more e-copies than print. Publishers will see this as a way of reducing risk and testing the market. The print copy will be manufactured for those who prefer them (still the majority of readers) or printed on demand for those who want a souvenir.
Free e-Readers. E-tailers will do this as a premium for readers who buy bundles or join e-book clubs. Or they might provide a dramatic discount to induce the next segment of holdouts to try digital reading. More and more the dedicated reader will be seen as a commodity, just like razors are to razor blades. In the near-term, expect to see the major e-Readers drop below $100.
Monetization Experiments. We will begin to see publishers try new ways of monetizing content. This will include in-book advertising (or commercial-free for a premium), sponsored links, subscription delivery, and even all-you-can-read options for one price. Most of the infrastructure for this already exists. It’s just a matter of someone capitalizing on it.
Regardless of how it plays out, I am more optimistic than ever about the future of reading. I can’t imagine a time in history when I would rather be in the publishing business.
By Michael Hyatt

Sunday, July 24, 2011

Aug Book: Little Bee by Chris Cleave

The publishers of Chris Cleave's new novel "don't want to spoil" the story by revealing too much about it, and there's good reason not to tell too much about the plot's pivot point. All you should know going in to Little Bee is that what happens on the beach is brutal, and that it braids the fates of a 16-year-old Nigerian orphan (who calls herself Little Bee) and a well-off British couple--journalists trying to repair their strained marriage with a free holiday--who should have stayed behind their resort's walls. The tide of that event carries Little Bee back to their world, which she claims she couldn't explain to the girls from her village because they'd have no context for its abundance and calm. But she shows us the infinite rifts in a globalized world, where any distance can be crossed in a day--with the right papers--and "no one likes each other, but everyone likes U2." Where you have to give up the safety you'd assumed as your birthright if you decide to save the girl gazing at you through razor wire, left to the wolves of a failing state.


pg: 271

Tuesday, July 19, 2011

Book to Movie: Sarah's Key

One of our book club books "Sarah's Key" by Tatiana de Rosnay
will be in theaters July 22nd, 2011.

This should be an interesting one, many of you all had mixed feelings about
the book and the two story lines…..Lets see which we like in the movie now.

Please let me know if you have any interest in planning a field trip
Saturday or Sunday August 6th/7th.


Trailer link below:
http://www.imdb.com/video/imdb/vi1186176025/

Wednesday, June 1, 2011

Book to Movie: The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo- us remake

There is a really HOT buzz going around about this movie I don't know if we will be going to see it or boycott it ?!?!?!?

"The director of the original Swedish version of The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo has questioned the need for the upcoming American remake, reigniting a long-running war of words over Hollywood raiding foreign language films to repackage them for a global audience.

Film-maker Niels Arden Oplev expressed anger at plans to cast an American actor in the lead role of Lisbeth Salander, drawing unflattering comparisons with the Hollywood adaptation of the French film La Femme Nikita, which was poorly received when remade as The Assassin, starring Bridget Fonda in the 1990s.
He told the Word & Film website: "Even in Hollywood there seems to be a kind of anger about the remake; like, 'Why would they remake something when they can just go see the original?'
"It's like, what do you want to see – the French version of La Femme Nikita or the American one?"

* Take from the Guardian.uk web site

Movie is set to be released December 21st, 2011. Click the link below to view the Trailer and more info.

http://www.firstshowing.net/2011/new-trailer-for-finchers-the-girl-with-the-dragon-tattoo/

Thursday, April 28, 2011

May Side Book - Hiroshima in the Morning by Rahna Reiko Rizzuto

The Month of May's theme was Mother's and Memorial Day

Share your review with us here on the blog.
This is a story about a wife and a mother who sets out on a journey to learn more about history and her own family’s heritage, and ultimately learns more about herself and her own abilities. Even though Rahna is a successful author, she had never been on her own or taken on anything as challenging or life-changing as leaving her family and travelling to Japan for six months. She has challenges fitting in and finding people in Japan who want to share their stories with her, or the stories seem to lack an emotional connection and just sound like rehearsed facts. Her marriage starts to fall apart during her absence, and she struggles with her role as wife and mother. Then, 9/11 happened and changed everything. The fear for her family’s safety and reality of how life can change in an instant repairs the damage to her marriage.

320 Pages

Book to Movie: Kathryn Stockett's "The Help"

In 1960s Mississippi, Southern society girl Skeeter (Emma Stone) returns from college with dreams of being a writer. She turns her small town on its ear by choosing to interview the black women who have spent their lives taking care of prominent white families. At first, only Aibileen (Viola Davis), the housekeeper of Skeeter's best friend, will talk. But, as the pair continue their collaboration, more women decide to come forward, and as it turns out, they have quite a lot to say.

Ladies if you haven't already ready The Help, it's a must read it's on my top ten list.

Link Below:
http://youtu.be/l0dWCXCjX9o

Opens August 12th, 2011

Friday, April 15, 2011

Book Suggestion: A Discovery of Witches by Deborah Harkness

A richly inventive novel about a centuries-old vampire, a spellbound witch, and the mysterious manuscript that draws them together.

Deep in the stacks of Oxford's Bodleian Library, young scholar Diana Bishop unwittingly calls up a bewitched alchemical manuscript in the course of her research. Descended from an old and distinguished line of witches, Diana wants nothing to do with sorcery; so after a furtive glance and a few notes, she banishes the book to the stacks.

But her discovery sets a fantastical underworld stirring, and a horde of daemons, witches, and vampires soon descends upon the library. Diana has stumbled upon a coveted treasure lost for centuries-and she is the only creature who can break its spell.
 
Debut novelist Deborah Harkness has crafted a mesmerizing and addictive read, equal parts history and magic, romance and suspense.

 Diana is a bold heroine who meets her equal in vampire geneticist Matthew Clairmont, and gradually warms up to him as their alliance deepens into an intimacy that violates age-old taboos. This smart, sophisticated story harks back to the novels of Anne Rice, but it is as contemporary and sensual as the Twilight series-with an extra serving of historical realism.
(From the publisher.)
579 pages
paper back and e-books

Book Suggestion: The Namesake by Jhumpa Lahiri

Gogol Ganguli. Born to an Indian academic and his wife, Gogol is afflicted from birth with a name that is neither Indian nor American nor even really a first name at all. He is given the name by his father who, before he came to America to study at MIT, was almost killed in a train wreck in India. Rescuers caught sight of the volume of Nikolai Gogol's short stories that he held, and hauled him from the train. Ashoke gives his American-born son the name as a kind of placeholder, and the awkward thing sticks.

Awkwardness is Gogol's birthright. He grows up a bright American boy, goes to Yale, has pretty girlfriends, becomes a successful architect, but like many second-generation immigrants, he can never quite find his place in the world. There's a lovely section where he dates a wealthy, cultured young Manhattan woman who lives with her charming parents. They fold Gogol into their easy, elegant life, but even here he can find no peace and he breaks off the relationship. His mother finally sets him up on a blind date with the daughter of a Bengali friend, and Gogol thinks he has found his match.

Moushumi, like Gogol, is at odds with the Indian-American world she inhabits. She has found, however, a circuitous escape: "At Brown, her rebellion had been academic ... she'd pursued a double major in French. Immersing herself in a third language, a third culture, had been her refuge--she approached French, unlike things American or Indian, without guilt, or misgiving, or expectation of any kind.

" Lahiri documents these quiet rebellions and random longings with great sensitivity. There's no cleverness or showing-off in The Namesake, just beautifully confident storytelling. Gogol's story is neither comedy nor tragedy; it's simply that ordinary, hard-to-get-down-on-paper commodity: real life. --Claire Dederer

304 pages
mass paperback and e-books

Thursday, April 7, 2011

Book Suggestion: Ender's Game by Orson Scott Card

In order to develop a secure defense against a hostile alien race's next attack, government agencies breed child geniuses and train them as soldiers. A brilliant young boy, Andrew "Ender" Wiggin lives with his kind but distant parents, his sadistic brother Peter, and the person he loves more than anyone else, his sister Valentine. Peter and Valentine were candidates for the soldier-training program but didn't make the cut--young Ender is the Wiggin drafted to the orbiting Battle School for rigorous military training.
Ender's skills make him a leader in school and respected in the Battle Room, where children play at mock battles in zero gravity.
 
Yet growing up in an artificial community of young soldiers Ender suffers greatly from isolation, rivalry from his peers, pressure from the adult teachers, and an unsettling fear of the alien invaders. His psychological battles include loneliness, fear that he is becoming like the cruel brother he remembers, and fanning the flames of devotion to his beloved sister. Back on Earth, Peter and Valentine forge an intellectual alliance and attempt to change the course of history.

This futuristic tale involves aliens, political discourse on the Internet, sophisticated computer games, and an orbiting battle station. Yet the reason it rings true for so many is that it is first and foremost a tale of humanity; a tale of a boy struggling to grow up into someone he can respect while living in an environment stripped of choices. Ender's Game is a must-read book for science fiction lovers, and a key conversion read for their friends who "don't read science fiction."

384 pages

Paper back & e-books

April Side Book - The Painter's Gift by Penelope J. Holt

The month of April's theme was religion:

Let us if you read and share your review with us here on the blog.

A new Gospel will emerge early in the third millennium. Christ s message will remain unchanged, but the medium will be different. Three paintings will combine to soften and heal the heart of modern man. Claire Lucas is a young widow and an oil painter of middling ability. Plagued for weeks by a sad dream of Benares, India, she funnels the pivotal image into a work of transcendent majesty. The painting actually radiates heat, requiring a dedicated security guard at the Vetch gallery in Soho, as people yearn to touch it. Viewers are rapt and go away possessed of an overwhelming calm. The painter sells her painting for a life-altering million-five, but suffers a paroxysm of regret and tries to cancel the transaction.

 She meets and becomes fast allies with the forcefully capable Father Karl Brandt, a priest on the trail of the three foretold masterpieces mentioned in The Angel Scroll, and also Richard Markson, an introverted widower. Someone else wants the paintings enough to kill for them, enough to invade homes in both darkness and daylight. Claire and her champions have quite a bit of ground to make up. The story carries from New York to Jerusalem, Glastonbury Tor to Siena in Italy, with the author conveying a flair for descriptive detail, and a good sense of when to shift backdrops

256 pages
paperback & e-books

Book Suggestion: House of Sand and Fog by Andre Dubus III

Andre Dubus III wastes no time in capturing the dark side of the immigrant experience in America at the end of the 20th century. House of Sand and Fog opens with a highway crew composed of several nationalities picking up litter on a hot California summer day. Massoud Amir Behrani, a former colonel in the Iranian military under the Shah, reflects on his job-search efforts since arriving in the U.S. four years before: "I have spent hundreds of dollars copying my credentials; I have worn my French suits and my Italian shoes to hand-deliver my qualifications; I have waited and then called back after the correct waiting time; but there is nothing." The father of two, Behrani has spent most of the money he brought with him from Iran on an apartment and furnishings that are too expensive, desperately trying to keep up appearances in order to enhance his daughter's chances of making a good marriage. Now the daughter is married, and on impulse he sinks his remaining funds into a house he buys at auction, thus unwittingly putting himself and his family on a trajectory to disaster. The house, it seems, once belonged to Kathy Nicolo, a self-destructive alcoholic who wants it back. What starts out as a legal tussle soon escalates into a personal confrontation--with dire results.

Dubus tells his tragic tale from the viewpoints of the two main adversaries, Behrani and Kathy. To both of them, the house represents something more than just a place to live. For the colonel, it is a foot in the door of the American dream; for Kathy, a reminder of a kinder, gentler past. In prose that is simple yet evocative, House of Sand and Fog builds to its inevitable denouement, one that is painfully dark but unfailingly honest.

365 pages

paper back and e-books

Tuesday, March 29, 2011

Book to Movie: Something Borrowed

Something Borrowed by Emily Giffin has been made into a movie and is another book our book club has not read but I higher recommend it along with it's sister book "Something Blue". Actually I think I have recommended this book to most of you already....lol

If anyone is interested is seeing this movie to book adaptation lets discuss. Movie pending release date is May 06, 2011.

BTW: it's a super easy read and you still have time to read if you would like.


Trailer link below:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4qlMqqc7YdE

Book to Movie: Water for Elephants

Sara Gruen's "Water for Elephants" was on the New York Times best seller list. Although we didn't read this book in our book club some of you as I may have read it. If you have and would be interested in seeing it as a group lets discuss. Given the Holiday's and some up coming travel I would guess we could plan to go the last week in April/ 1st week in May.

Trailer link is below, movie release date is April 22nd, 2011.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tz455--bNEI

Monday, March 21, 2011

Side Books

Monthly for those of you that would like some extra reading we will begin reading additional books this month.

We will not disscuss during meetings but post reviews on the blog in the comments section each month when I post the book. Books have been themed by the month we read them in, and will posted at the bottom of the blog page.

April-Easter/ Religion                                    
The Painter’s Gift
by Penelope J. Holt
256 pages

May - Mother's, Memorial Day               
Hiroshima in the morning 
by Rahna Reiko Rizzuto             
320 pages

June - Father’s day/ Family                          
Light on Snow
by Anita Shreve
336 pages

July -Independence Day                             
The Letters of John and Abigail Adams
by  Frank Shuffelton                
512 pages

Aug - Honoring Black History                       
One Drop- My Fathers Hidden life:
A story of Race and Family Secrets
by Bliss Broyard 
352 pages

Sept-Honoring Hispanic heritage             
The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao
by  Junot Diaz 
224 pages

Tuesday, March 15, 2011

Book Suggestion: When Tito Loved Carla by Jon Michaud

Michaud, the head librarian at the New Yorker, writes about a soap-operatic plot twists mar his debut about a resilient Dominican-American woman. Clara Lugo lives with her husband, Thomas, and their son, Guillermo, in the New Jersey suburbs and desperately wants another child, but can't conceive. Thomas, meanwhile, laid off from his job six months earlier, has lost his confidence. Clara's 16-year-old niece, Deysie, who has recently moved in with the Lugos, turns out to be pregnant by Clara's sister's ex-con boyfriend. Then Clara's old high school boyfriend, Tito Moreno, reappears. When Clara and Tito, who has failed to move on after their brief tryst 15 years earlier, try to resolve some unfinished personal business, hurtful revelations promise to change the course of both their lives. Despite Clara's complicated family drama, Tito's unhealthy obsession with Clara, and a subplot with the seedy ex-con, the story fails to garner any emotional weight.

352 pages, hardcover and e-books

Monday, March 14, 2011

Book Suggestion: "Love in the time of Cholera" by Gabriel Garcia Marquez

While delivering a message to her father, Florentino Ariza spots the barely pubescent Fermina Daza and immediately falls in love. What follows is the story of a passion that extends over 50 years, as Fermina is courted solely by letter, decisively rejects her suitor when he first speaks, and then joins the urbane Dr. Juvenal Urbino, much above her station, in a marriage initially loveless but ultimately remarkable in its strength. Florentino remains faithful in his fashion; paralleling the tale of the marriage is that of his numerous liaisons, all ultimately without the depth of love he again declares at Urbino's death. In substance and style not as fantastical, as mythologizing, as the previous works, this is a compelling exploration of the myths we make of love.

368 pages

Saturday, February 12, 2011

Book Suggestion: Wicked by Gregory Maguire

Born with green skin and huge teeth, like a dragon, the free-spirited Elphaba grows up to be an anti-totalitarian agitator, an animal-rights activist, a nun, then a nurse who tends the dying?and, ultimately, the headstrong Wicked Witch of the West in the land of Oz. Maguire's strange and imaginative postmodernist fable uses L. Frank Baum's Wonderful Wizard of Oz as a springboard to create a tense realm inhabited by humans, talking animals (a rhino librarian, a goat physician), Munchkinlanders, dwarves and various tribes. The Wizard of Oz, emperor of this dystopian dictatorship, promotes Industrial Modern architecture and restricts animals' right to freedom of travel; his holy book is an ancient manuscript of magic that was clairvoyantly located by Madam Blavatsky 40 years earlier. Much of the narrative concerns Elphaba's troubled youth (she is raised by a giddy alcoholic mother and a hermitlike minister father who transmits to her his habits of loathing and self-hatred) and with her student years. Dorothy appears only near novel's end, as her house crash-lands on Elphaba's sister, the Wicked Witch of the East, in an accident that sets Elphaba on the trail of the girl from Kansas?as well as the Scarecrow, the Tin Woodsman and the Lion?and her fabulous new shoes. Maguire combines puckish humor and bracing pessimism in this fantastical meditation on good and evil, God and free will, which should, despite being far removed in spirit from the Baum books, captivate devotees of fantasy.

Sunday, January 30, 2011

4th Millennium book

The level of intrigue and intense fascination surrounding the fate of Stieg Larsson’s unfinished fourth and final Millennium novel has become a mystery worthy of Lisbeth Salander herself. But alas today’s flurry of reports about the imminent posthumous publication of a fourth and final Millennium novel were inaccurate and premature. “There is no fourth book from Stieg Larsson on the horizon,” said Paul Bogaards, Senior VP of Publicity, Promotion and Media Relations at Alfred A. Knopf. “Only the estate, controlled by his family (Joakim and Erland Larsson), can authorize publication of a fourth book, and they have no intention of doing so at the moment.”

The source of the brushfire of speculation (and hopeful blogging) appears to have originated with a leaked copy of Eva Gabrielsson’s upcoming memoir, Stieg and Me (due to be published this week in France and Scandinavia and on June 21 in the U.S.). The Guardian quotes Gabrielsson saying that she hopes to finish the fourth Millennium installment and feels entitled to do so because “Stieg and I often wrote together.”

Be that as it may, Gabrielsson is clearly engaging in a little wishful thinking of her own, given that she is not in a position to make any legally binding decisions concerning Larsson’s literary legacy. That right rests solely and solidly with the author’s father and brother, Erland and Joakim Larsson, who inherited full control over Stieg’s estate when he died in 2004. However Gabrielsson, continues to contest the Larssons’ jurisdiction over Stieg’s work, based on her thirty-two year relationship with the author. However, because they never officially married, Gabrielsson has no legal right to anything in Stieg Larsson’s estate — and that includes publishing a book with his name on it as author.

Still, the door has not been completely slammed shut on the prospect of that mythical fourth Millennium novel ever finding it’s way into print. It’s clear from the ambiguous language in Random House’s statement (i.e. “on the horizon” and “at the moment”) that the keepers of the Stieg flame have not ruled out coming to an agreement with Gabrielsson (who claims she possesses the laptop containing the unpublished manuscript). But, for the time being, that horizon is still too far off to see clearly.

Friday, January 28, 2011

The Great Gatsby

A portrait of the Jazz Age in all of its decadence and excess, Self-made,
self-invented millionaire Jay Gatsby embodies some of Fitzgerald's--and his
country's--most abiding obsessions: money, ambition, greed, and the promise
of new beginnings. "Gatsby believed in the green light, the orgiastic future
that year by year recedes before us. It eluded us then, but that's no
matter--tomorrow we will run faster, stretch out our arms farther.... And
one fine morning--" Gatsby's rise to glory and eventual fall from grace
becomes a kind of cautionary tale about the American Dream.
It's also a love story, of sorts, the narrative of Gatsby's quixotic passion
for Daisy Buchanan. The pair meet five years before the novel begins, when
Daisy is a legendary young Louisville beauty and Gatsby an impoverished
officer. They fall in love, but while Gatsby serves overseas, Daisy marries
the brutal, bullying, but extremely rich Tom Buchanan. After the war, Gatsby
devotes himself blindly to the pursuit of wealth by whatever means--and to
the pursuit of Daisy, which amounts to the same thing. "Her voice is full of
money," Gatsby says admiringly, in one of the novel's more famous