I will be attending an Awesome Event this week

I recently got an email from this awesome little bookstore (Livres Babar) telling me about this fantastic event they will be hosting.

Kids Can Press presents Meet the Creaters Night.

I was trying to find out who would be coming and I can’t seem to find anything apart from what it says that it will be Montreal authors and illustators.

If you happen to be going please let me know as I will be going.

Check back Friday when I will post about the event.

copyright 2010, Cindy (Cindy’s Love Of Books)
If you are reading this on a blog or website other than Cindy’s Love Of Books or via a feedreader, this content has been stolen and used without permission.

(Review) Sleeper’s Run

 Title: Sleeper’s Run
Author: Henry Mosquera
Pub Date: July 2011
Pages: 350
Publisher: Oddity Media LLC

Source: I received a signed copy of the book from Booktrib to read and review for my stop on the tour.

About the book:
War on Terror veteran Eric Caine awakes in a hospital with no recollection of his arrival or the events leading up to it. “Mr. Caine, your employer has filed a missing person report on you. That was eight days ago. Since then, no one has had any idea of your whereabouts,” says Doctor Goldman after Eric gains consciousness.

Found wandering the streets of Miami speaking Arabic with no memory of the car accident that left him there, Eric is alone on a one-way road to self-destruction.

Suffering from PTSD and trying to piece the past few days together, Eric makes his way to a bar where a chance encounter begins a series of events, restoring the equilibrium in his life. When his new job relocates him to Venezuela – the land of his childhood – things take an ominous turn as a catastrophic event threatens his own stability and the stability of the country. Now Eric must escape an elite team of CIA assassins as he tries to uncover an international conspiracy in which nothing is what it seems.

All I have to say is wow! I was pleasantly surprised by the book and how much I really enjoyed it. Its fast paced and it literally sucks you in from the get go. I actually managed to read this in a day and a half and trust me when I say I had a hard time putting it down and really wanted to stay up to read it until I finished it but I couldn’t. Those are my kind of books when it sucks you in and you can’t put it down.

I have to say that I could actually see this being made as a movie because I think it would be fantastic on the big screen. Henry’s writing is perfect with just enough description to make you feel like its real.

Okay so now on with the book. The books main character is Eric Caine he is a veteren. He is young and is suffering from PTSD. He served his country as a paramedic in the war and is struggling to copy with what he has seen. This was insightful because I guess not being around that we don’t realize how our men and women feel when they come back. They have seen things that we can only dream about.

For Eric not only is have PTSD a problem for him and dealing with that but he is also suffering from having no memory of what happened before he woke up in a hospital room. He doesn’t remember the car accident. Eric is basically a time bomb waiting to go off. He is a very destructive man and people are quick to say its PTSD. Eric is basically fighting and drinking his life away.

Thankfully for Eric its being at the right place at the right time that almost saves him or was it all a huge set up? Eric walks into his local bar for a drink and starts talking to a guy and before long some frat boys walk in and a huge fight ensues. You know this won’t end good and thats right it doesn’t because Eric wakes  up in jail. Thankfully he isn’t arrested but told to get help and is handed a business card. Its the guy he was talking to at the bar before the fight.

Not to long after getting out of jail Eric calls Tony to thank him and before Eric can blink his life is changing,. Tony has hooked him up with a high paying job and is traveling for business so after being hired. The first stop on this new job is to his old home land in Venezuela to work in the office there.

Not being there very long Eric quickly realizes that something is up. He realizes he is being followed, his phone is tapped and his computer is hacked. Is this just a normal kind of thing or is there more to this then meets the eye?

This is were I have to stop because I will spoil the book. I loved the book and would highly recommend it if you like the fast paced books. Looking forward to reading future books by Henry.

Thanks again to Book Trib for allowing me to take part in this book tour.

copyright 2010, Cindy (Cindy’s Love Of Books)
If you are reading this on a blog or website other than Cindy’s Love Of Books or via a feedreader, this content has been stolen and used without permission.

(Review) Shut Out

Title: Shut Out
Author: Kody Keplinger
Pages: 288
Publisher: Poppy
Pub Date: September 2011

Source: I recieved a copy of this book for my honest review.

About the book:
Most high school sports teams have rivalries with other schools. At Hamilton High, it’s a civil war: the football team versus the soccer team. And for her part,Lissa is sick of it. Her quarterback boyfriend, Randy, is always ditching her to go pick a fight with the soccer team or to prank their locker room. And on three separate occasions Randy’s car has been egged while he and Lissa were inside, making out. She is done competing with a bunch of sweaty boys for her own boyfriend’s attention.

Lissa decides to end the rivalry once and for all: She and the other players’ girlfriends go on a hookup strike. The boys won’t get any action from them until the football and soccer teams make peace. What they don’t count on is a new sort of rivalry: an impossible girls-against-boys showdown that hinges on who will cave to their libidos first. And Lissa never sees her own sexual tension with the leader of the boys, Cash Sterling, coming.

This is Kody’s second book. Her first book The DUFF was one I had to get last year at BEA and I was really lucky to have gotten it and read it on the train ride home and I really enjoyed it. So I was really happy that the buzz I heard about the book before hand lived up to its reputation.

So, when I heard that Kody had this book coming out I quickly added to my wishlist and was really happy when it came in the mail. Kody did not disappoint. I read this book rather quickly and enjoyed it.

I should start off by saying that this is a stand alone book and is no way related to The Duff.

Lately I have been reading alot of stories about a retelling with a modern twist and this book falls into that category. This is the retelling of Aristophanes’ Lysistrata, a classic Greek play about Lysistrata and her attempt to end the Peloponnesian War by persuading the women of the warring nations to withhold sex from their husbands in order to force peace negotiations and eventually the men give in and it ends.  I have to admit that I have never read this play and I have to admit I am kind of curious now.

So how does this relate to the book you ask? Well, we all know that schools have rivals with other schools but Hamilton High is different because they have rivals within the school. The boys soccer and football team are at each other. This has been going on for ten years now and its being passed down from generation to generation and it seems that this time both will stop at nothing to win.

Enter Lissa. She is the girlfriend of Randy and he is on the quarterback of the football time and she is getting fed up with not being Randy’s top choice and competing for his attention because he seems to be obsessed with getting revenge on the soccer team. Realizing that they only way to get through to these boys is to without hold sex. Lissa rallies the other girlfriends and they all pledge to not do anything in hopes that it will end the rivalry. The girls think that this strike will be over before it even begins because well boys will be boys right? Wrong!

This seems to bring the girls closer together and new and old friendships are forming. As for the boys it takes them awhile to figure out what is going on but once they do they try everything to get the girls attention apart from ending the rivalry that is.

Right off I have to say that Lissa’s boyfriend, Randy bothered me and he just seemed to rub me the wrong way. Not sure what it was at first, if it was because he put his rivalry before Lissa or that he basically could care less about her but after what he did at the dance I realized then that he was a jerk and was happy she found out about him when she did.

I have to admit its been awhile since I had a book guy crush and right from the moment he entered the picture I knew I would love Cash and I did. He was so sweet and flirty that I actually loved him and wished I was in Lissa’s place. They had chemistry from the get go and you had to see where it would go and end.

I enjoyed the book and I am looking forward to reading more of Kody’s upcoming books.

You can follow Kody Keplinger’s Blog and on her site.

Thanks to Hachette Canada for sending me this book.

copyright 2010, Cindy (Cindy’s Love Of Books)
If you are reading this on a blog or website other than Cindy’s Love Of Books or via a feedreader, this content has been stolen and used without permission.

(Guest Post) Author Babara Ardinger

Today I am honored to have Barbara Ardinger the author of Secret Lives (who is currently on a virtual book blog tour for her book) stop by to do a guest post for me today.

Hi Barbara,
In your novel, the topic of Secret Lives is a big novel about big issues—aging and death, the way our society treats its senior citizens, women’s friendships, the powers of love, the theory and practice of magic, the rebirth of the Goddess and Her ancient religion. It’s about the untidy mysteries of human life. How did you come up with the idea to write about these specific topics?

I have been writing about feminist spirituality and pagan issues for more than 20 years. I first wrote Secret Lives in 1990 on an IBM Selectric typewriter, then rewrote it (using WordPerfect 5.1) when I got my first computer, then wrote it again (Word XP) and did a lot of serious editing along the way. As I lived my pagan life, worshipping the Goddess, creating and leading rituals, teaching a class called Practicing the Presence of the Goddess, and writing six nonfiction books about feminist spirituality, I just kept adding what I was seeing in real life to the book.

If I remember correctly, I took a class at Long Beach WomanSpirit in the early ’90s on a new popular topic—the crone, who is the honored elder woman. There were women in their thirties in the class who insisted they were crones because “crone is a state of mind.” This is nonsense, so I started doing research on elderly women and how society treats them. This was about the time Jessica Tandy won her Oscar at age 89 and Golden Girls was popular on TV. Elderly women got little respect back in those days.

As I wrote, the characters in the book came to life in my imagination. I watched them and listened to them. For a few months in about 1990, I also had a part-time job as a companion to a woman sinking into Alzheimer’s. She was 82 and about 2 ½ mentally at the time. We made a good team—she was talking to invisible people, and I was watching invisible people.

But I was not just the secretary to the characters in the novel. I did a lot of library research on, for example, Ozark customs and dialect so I could write one character accurately. And as the author I am in charge of the craft of writing. I’m in charge of details like spelling, punctuation, sentence structure, verb tense, etc. I also wrote new chapters from time to time. For example, a few people told me one character was boring, so I gave her a mid-life crisis. Other readers told me the women were casting their magical circles wrong, so I wrote a chapter in which three Gardnerian college students come along to correct the women who were old enough to be their grandmothers. You don’t want to mess around with grandmothers who can do magic. I read and hear in the news about land developers forcing people to move out of their homes, so I wrote a chapter about a very old woman who is moved by her businessman son into the retirement residence I invented in Long Beach. She wants to die. The women in the circle befriend her. Later, the retirement residence is sold because it’s not profitable enough, so the elderly residents take action. In 1989, gerontology was just beginning to be important, so I wrote about a physician who has no appreciation for his elderly patients. Again, you don’t mess with old people who can do magic. 

I also took many ideas and themes from history. One is shown in the prologue, set in what Professor Marija Gimbutas called Old Europe (near the Black Sea). Old Europe was an egalitarian, Goddess-worshipping society that was invaded by horsemen from the Caucasus Mountains (today’s Afghanistan and its neighbors) who brought their storm, thunder, sky, and solar gods with them. Another historical issue is the Inquisition and the 16th-century religious wars which focused on heretics and women. I brought a ghostly inquisitor to confront the women in the book. Another issue is aging and menopause. The women in the book confront these issues, and in one chapter there’s a sex scene between a man and a women in their eighties. Such a thing is still hardly thought of, much less discussed.

You can find more information in the FREE READER’S GUIDE on my website, http://www.barbaraardinger.com/ . The reader’s guide like the commentary track on a DVD. It gives a lot of historical information.

Many thanks!

About the book:

Secret Lives is a big novel about big issues—aging and death, the way our society treats its senior citizens, women’s friendships, the powers of love, the theory and practice of magic, the rebirth of the Goddess and Her ancient religion. It’s about the untidy mysteries of human life. As the baby boom generation ages, the issues in Secret Lives become more significant to readers and also more recognizable. Issues that used to matter only to their parents are now starting to pop up in the boomers’ own lives. This novel will thus appeal not only to the large audience that reads pagan fiction, but also to mainstream readers who love a good, complicated story and may have heard about pagans and gods and goddesses. As they read, they will learn a great deal.

Each chapter is a standalone story, although there are two arcs that comprise two stories and three stories. The bulleted notes that follow the barebones outlines and show how the stories are braided together and explain many of the allusions. An event may be foreshadowed in early chapters, for example, be the major plot of another chapter, and be resolved or echoed in later chapters. Likewise, people who appear as minor characters in some chapters become major actors in other chapters.

You can read more about Secret Lives at http://www.barbaraardingercom/ .

About The Author:

Barbara Ardinger, Ph.D. (www.barbaraardinger.com), is the author of Secret Lives, a novel about crones and other magical folks, and Pagan Every Day: Finding the Extraordinary in Our Ordinary Lives, a unique daybook of daily meditations, stories, and activities. Her earlier books include Goddess Meditations, Finding New Goddesses (a parody of goddess encyclopedias), and Quicksilver Moon (a realistic novel … except for the vampire). Her day job is freelance editing for people who have good ideas but don’t want to embarrass themselves in print. To date, she has edited more than 250 books, both fiction and nonfiction, on a wide range of topics. Barbara lives in southern California.
To purchase the book you can go to Amazon.com .
Sercret Lives has a facebook page that you can check out.
You can visit the authors page on Pump Up Your Book to see what others have said about the book and to see where Barbara will be appearing next.
Thanks to Pump Up Your Book for making this guest post possible and once again Thank you to Barbara for taking the time out to do this for me.
copyright 2010, Cindy (Cindy’s Love Of Books)
If you are reading this on a blog or website other than Cindy’s Love Of Books or via a feedreader, this content has been stolen and used without permission.

(Book Excerpt) Secret Lives

From Chapter 19 of Secret Lives:

“May I come in?”

Brooke looked up from the blue book she was grading to see who had tapped on her office door. It wasn’t one of her anxious students, after all; it was the Green Man from the Halloween party. Except that he had shaved off the beard and mustache and the loincloth, cape, and vines had been replaced by mundane khaki cords and a worn cotton work shirt with the sleeves rolled up to the elbows.

Brooke has had very bad luck in the past with love, but Matthew is persistent.

“Milly—she’s my oldest and dearest friend—she told me it’s time for me to explore the God.”

“Hey,” he replied, “I’m just an old street magician, a part-time technical writer, an AIDS volunteer, and a lousy poet.” He laid the pencil down and picked up one her books and flipped through the pages. “That’s all.”

“I think I know better.”

He put the book down and picked up the pencil again. “Oh?”

“The Green Man. The May King. Symbol of growth, life. Fertility … and sexual energy. Look at any carving of him. Abundant crops, both literal and metaphorical, flow from his mouth.”

She finally takes him to the circle’s hidden “ranch” in south Orange Co.

They entered the old stone circle from the west, and he took her hand.

“This is the corner of the powers of air,” he said softly. “The powers of the mind and the intellect.” He smiled and touched her hair. “Where you, my dear, are most comfortable. Where I am comfortable, too. Air is also the power of the breath that shows that a newborn baby is alive and has a voice. It’s the power of the winds that blow freely around our planet, across all lands, across all waters. The powers of the winds of change are here, the winds that blow away what is old and useless in our lives. They sweep us clean for new growth. It’s the tornado and the zephyr. Terrible and blessed are the powers of air.”

She joined her hands at her heart in the ancient gesture. “Blessed be.” Why was her heart beating so fast?

He took her hand again and led her to the next standing stone. He knelt down and placed both hands on the stone and waited quietly. At last he smiled and took a handful of soil and let it trickle through his fingers back to the earth. Then he lightly touched her feet and her legs, and she could feel the tingle through leather and denim.

“This,” he said, his voice gentle and soft, “is the corner of the power of earth. Our Mother’s body, our own beautiful physical bodies. Earth grounds and sustains us. Earth is rich with treasures and she is able to provide enough food for all of her children. But earth is also the power of earthquakes, which destroy without discriminating between good or bad, strong or weak, rich or poor. And what is stronger than an earthquake?” He looked down at her. “A seed. Terrible and blessed are the powers of earth.”

“Blessed be.” She was beginning to feel weak at the knees.

He took her hand a third time and led her to the next stone. They stood before it, his left arm around her shoulders. His lips brushed her hair. “No need to be afraid,” he whispered. “This is sacred land. You’re safe with me. I promise you that. You will always be safe with me.”

Read the consummation of this love affair. See how Matthew helps the crones in the weather war of Chapters 20-22.

Buy this book! http://www.amazon.com/Secret-Lives-Barbara-Ardinger/dp/1466251786/ref=sr_1_7?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1316117982&sr=1-7

Check out the FREE READER’S GUIDE: http://www.barbaraardinger.com/secret-lives

copyright 2010, Cindy (Cindy’s Love Of Books)
If you are reading this on a blog or website other than Cindy’s Love Of Books or via a feedreader, this content has been stolen and used without permission.

Harder, Better, Faster, Stronger Award

I have to send a huge shout out to Lucy from Moonlight Gleam’s Bookshelf for bestowing this award to me. Its been awhile since I have been given an award and I am truly honored to share this because this just any kind of award its a special award as you will soon find out.
One of my duties is to share this award with 5 bloggers. It was really hard to choose and so I picked the following based on the fact they read this genre of similar to this genre. So here is who I picked:
http://iwriteinbooks.wordpress.com/ (just because she takes the time to comment)
Here is your mission if you choose to accept it:
  1. Slap the graphic on your blog.
  2. Give link props to the person who gave you the award (keep the hard, best, fast and strong on your side!).
  3. Spread the awesome and nominate five (5) other bloggers who you think exemplify what it means to be cool, fun and cutting edge.
  4. Let the recipients know they’ve won this honor on their blogs.
  5. Last but not least, shoot Gini Koch an email at gini@ginikoch.com and let her know you’re the best of the best of the best, sir! (put “Harder, Better, Faster, Stronger” in the subject line!) by sharing that you’ve been nominated and telling her which other bloggers you nominated, and she’ll enter you into the “Harder, Better, Faster, Stronger” Contest. Find out more details and what the loot is at http://www.ginikoch.com/winstuff.htm.
Of course, you can choose to ignore your awesomeness, but then you’ll never have a chance to nab your own A-C or win the loot. And you know you want both.
About the award:
The award was created to honor those whose blogs who exemplify the qualities Katherine “Kitty” Katt has — those who always stay cutting edge, who always find the fun, the funny, and the cool, and who are always one step ahead of the competition.

The “Harder, Better, Faster, Stronger Award” is only given to the amazingly awesome, so get down with your bad self, you’re deemed worthy to run with the A-C’s! And you’re also one step closer to being in the running for some cool prizes. (Contest is international.)

Now you get to spread the awesome by nominating other bloggers who are also harder, better, faster and stronger than the average blog bear. Not everyone’s as cool as you, so choose carefully!

copyright 2010, Cindy (Cindy’s Love Of Books)
If you are reading this on a blog or website other than Cindy’s Love Of Books or via a feedreader, this content has been stolen and used without permission.

(Guest Post) Author Henry Mosquera

Today I am honored to have the author of Sleeper’s Run, Henry Mosquera stop by to do a guest post for me. It was so nice of you to take time out of your busy schedule to do this for me and my readers here on Cindy’s Love of Books.

Please check back on Friday, October 14th for my review of Sleeper’s Run.

When people ask me about my “book’s hero,” I quickly correct them and say
that in my novel there are no heroes, or villains for that matter.
“Sleeper’s Run” is not about good vs. evil. I wanted to create a story that
reflected the world as it is, not as we wished it were. Unlike what the
media would like us think; life is far more complicated than a news bite.
Truth is relative and popularity seldom qualifies an opinion. The characters in “Sleeper’s Run” are people; they have their alliances, ideas,
idiosyncrasies, personal baggage and all the accoutrements proper of a
person.

One of the earliest comments of my first editor was that Eric didn’t seem
too heroic and Nathan wasn’t antagonistic enough. Earlier drafts of
Sleeper’s had no clear opponent, other than a system of international
politics and corruption. According to the editor, this concept was too
esoteric for a thriller and I should go back and study the rules of the
genre. Sure, I compromised at certain points; after all, I wanted to be a
publishable, commercially viable author. But the whole “good guys vs. bad
guys” angle seems too shallow and insincere to me. As much as I like
cartoons, I have no interest in writing one.

I could do stories with Eric Caine until my fingers fall off; I love the
character. Yet to me, he is a man. He had done things that were heroic and
others that were questionable at best. Nathan Blake and the rest of the cast are the same way. I leave it to the reader to bestow the qualifiers as they see fit.

Eric is a character born out of contradictions; he’s physically tough, but
mentally brilliant; educated and privileged, yet very hands-on and
laborious. These are but a few of the traits that comprise him. Thrillers
have great laconic characters: tough, blue collar, disenfranchised loners,
who are amazingly capable in their respective fields, but hapless in the
larger society. I’m a sucker for this type of protagonist, but I wanted Eric to be a departure from this concept. He wants to be part of society and thrive in it. Eric doesn’t want to be alone and has more skills than those he learned in the military. He is highly educated, well-traveled, eloquent and funny. The Air Force was part of his life, not the sum of his existence. Originally, he wasn’t going to have a connection with the armed forces, but the story makes it clear that it was going to take a certain type of background in order to confront the plot’s challenges.

Eric’s similarities to the genre’s main characters might appeal to the
lovers of this kind of thriller, but it’s the differences that make him
stand out and appeal to those who might have never given this type of book a second glance. Perhaps that is one of “Sleeper’s Run” main strengths; a book that is so familiar but takes the reader to uncharted territory. Keep on running!

Thanks once again Henry for taking the time out of your busy schedule to do this guest post for. This book sounds really good and I can’t wait to read it.

copyright 2010, Cindy (Cindy’s Love Of Books)
If you are reading this on a blog or website other than Cindy’s Love Of Books or via a feedreader, this content has been stolen and used without permission.