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Mailbox Monday #47

Yes, it is Mailbox Monday, sponsored by Marcia of The Printed Page, on Sunday again!

Not too many books arriving in the mailbox these days, but I did head out to my local library sale and picked up some goodies for me and for Book Blogger Appreciation Week.

1. Inglourious Basterds by Quentin Tarantino; if you missed my joint review of the movie with Anna of Diary of an Eccentric, click on the link.

2. More of Me Disappears by John Amen from the poet.

3. Alice I Have Been by Melanie Benjamin from Delacorte Press, which I believe I saw in Shelf Awareness.

4. Apologies to an Apple by Maya Ganesan, which Color Online let me borrow for review.

5. Seduce Me by Robyn DeHart, which I won from Pudgy Penguin Perusals.

From the library sale:

6. Hissy Fit by Mary Kay Andrews

7. Saving Fish From Drowning by Amy Tan

8. The Lake of Dead Languages by Carol Goodman

9. Solstice by Joyce Carol Oates

10. The Bluest Eye by Toni Morrison

11. Fever Pitch by Nick Hornby

12. The Girl Who Loved Tom Gordon by Stephen King

13. Never Let Me Go by Kazou Ishiguro

14. The Greatest Generation Speaks: Letters and Reflections by Tom Brokaw

I’m sure you are wondering which of these books are for BBAW giveaways, but I’m going to leave you in suspense. You’ll just have to come back during the week to find out.

All week, I’m trying something new for giveaways. If you order through one of my amazon affiliate program images, you will get 5 extra entries into each giveaway and for each book you buy. You just have to email me an order number/invoice.

What did you get in your mailbox?


12th Virtual Poetry Circle

Don’t forget about the Verse Reviewers link I’m creating here on Savvy Verse & Wit.

Send me an email with your blog information to savvyverseandwit AT gmail DOT com

And now, for the twelfth edition of the Virtual Poetry Circle:

OK, Here’s a poem up for reactions, interaction, and–dare I say it–analysis:

Remember, this is just for fun and is not meant to be stressful.

Keep in mind what Molly Peacock’s books suggested. Look at a line, a stanza, sentences, and images; describe what you like or don’t like; and offer an opinion. If you missed my review of her book, check it out here.

Today’s poem is a contemporary poem from Rosemary Winslow‘s Green Bodies (click on the link for my review) on page 71.

Transport

Without visible wings
pearled the
hummingbird suspends
at flower’s nipple
and her heart beats mightily
as she draws the nectar up
the artery of her strange mouth

This is the way I watch her
every morning coming and going
from five to eight
it must be the same one
I’ve read they’re so pugnacious

Her mate flies in a wide arc
up to a twig in the pine
and waits for her
his head a miniature sun
on the branch’s horizon

still as night I sit near the laurel
along the porch I look and look
past the house wall past him
into the dark sensation of woods
I see nothing

more alive
than this
pure desire
for sweetness
their

electric humming
as they stand in air–
everything
they want
is now

They are so filled
when he comes down to her
their green bodies
two shimmering leaves
soft fire

then flash
over the briars
disappear–
every morning all
disappear
return

Let me know your thoughts, ideas, feelings, impressions. Let’s have a great discussion…pick a line, pick an image, pick a sentence.

I’ve you missed the other Virtual Poetry Circles, check them out here. It’s never too late to join the discussion.


And the Award Goes To. . .

Earlier this month, Chocolate & Croissants bestowed upon me the Heartfelt Award. Thank you very much.

Here are my awardees:

1. It’s All About Books
2. She Is Too Fond of Books
3. Diary of an Eccentric
4. Maw Books
5. Peeking Between the Pages
6. Book Chick City
7. Literaturely Speaking
8. Beth’s Book Review Blog
9. A Bibliophile’s Bookshelf

I received this award from Beth Fish Reads and Books and Movies. Thanks! This award comes with a meme in which you’re supposed to list 7 of your favorite things, and pass this award along to 7 other bloggers.

1. Charlee, my Keeshond
2. Bookmarks of all shapes and sizes
3. Books that make me laugh out loud in public
4. Creative writing
5. Photography
6. Lounging on the couch
7. Summer

Here are my 7 bloggers:

1. S. Krishna’s Books
2. J. Kaye’s Book Blog
3. West of Mars
4. Booking Mama
5. BookFan
6. Life in the Thumb
7. Presenting Lenore

I received the Zombie Chicken Award from Rebecca at Lost in Books, which says:

The blogger who receives this award believes in the Tao of the zombie chicken – excellence, grace and persistence in all situations, even in the midst of a zombie apocalypse. These amazing bloggers regularly produce content so remarkable that their readers would brave a raving pack of zombie chickens just to be able to read their inspiring words. As a recipient of this world-renowned award, you now have the task of passing it on to at least 5 other worthy bloggers. Do not risk the wrath of the zombie chickens by choosing unwisely or not choosing at all.

So, here are my five awardees:

1. My Friend Amy
2. Angieville
3. Literary Escapism
4. The Bookworm
5. Bookgirl’s Nightstand

I received the Super Comments Award from Book Chick City. I’m glad that she enjoys my comments because I love leaving them.

Here are my five selections:

1. Bermuda Onion
2. You’ve Gotta Read This!!
3. Find Your Next Book Here
4. The Literate Housewife Review
5. The Eclectic Reader

I also recently received the Honest Scrap Award from Missy’s Book Nook. This award requires me to pass it along to seven bloggers and then list 10 honest things about myself. Here are my awardees:

1. The Book Smugglers
2. Reading Adventures
3. The Trillionth Page
4. Debbie’s World of Books
5. Luxury Reading
6. Trish’s Reading Nook
7. Ramya’s Bookshelf

Ten honest things about me:

1. I’m very passionate about politics and debate.
2. I love when people take my advice about reading great books.
3. I hate when my husband leaves his clothes on the bedroom floor when the hamper is just a few more steps.
4. Because I have high standards for myself, I expect everyone to follow them.
5. I still have a hot temper, but I’ve learned to tame it some.
6. I’m very protective of my purse and prefer people ask permission before they touch it.
7. I hate wearing reading glasses because they make me feel old.
8. Sometimes I wish my reading habits would rub off on my husband.
9. I tend to bite off more than I can chew, but still manage to finish it all.
10. I really hate wearing shoes and socks.

I think that’s all the awards I’ve received recently. Enjoy them and continue to celebrate book bloggers.


Business Card Winners


Randomizer.org helped me select the winners of the 500 business card giveaway from Digital Room and UPrinting.com.

Randomizer.org selected #2 and #7 out of 8 entrants.

The winners are:

Lu of Regular Rumination

Tiffany of Tif Talks Books

Congrats to them and thanks to everyone who entered.


Tallgrass by Sandra Dallas

“I’d sneaked away from my parents and gone to the depot, too, because I’d never seen any Japanese. I expected them to look like the cartoons of Hirohito in the newspaper, with slanted eyes and buckteeth and skin like rancid butter. All these years later, I recall I was disappointed that they didn’t appear to be a ‘yellow peril’ at all. They were so ordinary.” (Page 2)

Sandra Dallas’ Tallgrass is set in Colorado in 1942 just after the bombing of Pearl Harbor in Hawaii. The book is narrated by Rennie Stroud, who was a 13-year-old girl when the Japanese are rounded up and placed into an internment camp–known as Tallgrass Ranch–in Ellis, Colorado. Many of the Japanese in the camp just up from the Stroud’s farm had been evacuated from their homes in California and their presence causes a major stir.

“They’d heard the sirens, too, and said it wasn’t anything, but I feared that somebody had gone under the bobwire surrounding the camp and was going to break into our house and kill us.” (Page 17)

Readers travel along with Rennie as she uncovers the truth about humanity regardless of color or creed and as she discovers the truth about her family. She grows into a woman more quickly than her parents would like, but given the rationing, the war effort, the harvest, and the increasing racial tension, Rennie has little choice but to mature.

“Things were tense even for the kids in the camp who never came in contact with people from Ellis. Little boys there played war games, just like the boys in Ellis. Daisy told us she’d watched a group of Tallgrass kids pretending they were fighting in the South Pacific and heard one complain, ‘How come I have to be the damn Jap all the time?'” (Page 238)

Readers will enjoy growing along with Rennie and getting into trouble with her and Betty Joyce. Dallas does an exceptional job of rounding out Rennie’s character from her naivete to her compassion and empathy for the plights of those less fortunate, like the Japanese and her friends. However, Tallgrass is more than a coming of age story; it also touches upon the harm caused by wrong-headed government policies, the fear that leads to prejudice and hatred, and the impact a war can have on everyone.

While readers may see some holes in how one of the main mysteries is resolved, Dallas’ resolution is in tune with the narrator she chose, a 13-year-old who is not privy to serious adult conversation. Overall, Tallgrass is a novel about WWII, family, growing up, and learning how to build a community even when differences exist.


This is my 6th book for the War Through the Generations: WWII Reading Challenge.

Thanks to Staci at Life in the Thumb for reviewing Tallgrass with several other WWII books that I had to pick up from the library and read all together.

Also Reviewed By:
Adventures in Reading
Jo-Jo Loves to Read!!!
Life in the Thumb


Winner of Michelle Moran Giveaway


Out of 65 entrants to the Michelle Moran Giveaway for Cleopatra’s Daughter and The Heretic Queen, Randomizer.org selected #2:

Drey of Drey’s Library

Congrats to her and thanks to everyone who entered.

Stay tuned for another chance at Cleopatra’s Daughter in a Book Blogger Appreciation Week giveaway next week.


The Day the Falls Stood Still by Cathy Marie Buchanan

Cathy Marie Buchanan’s The Day the Falls Stood Still, like the Niagara River and the falls, flows powerfully with majestic danger. Elizabeth “Bess” Heath is a seventeen year-old woman on the brink of the falls contemplating the beauty of the river and feeling its power pushing her forward. Her family is well-positioned, but a turn of the current pushes them down river and leads to tragedy and redemption for Bess.

When she leaves her school life behind at Loretto Academy, she is thrust into adulthood and embarks upon a journey where she comes into her own, earning the pluck Tom Cole, grandson of the famous riverman Fergus Cole, sees in her during their brief encounters at the gates of Glenview.

“As he walks he holds his head in a way that makes it seem he is listening to the river. His intensity is such that to speak would be to interrupt. ‘It’s worked up tonight,’ he says.” (Page 15 of ARC)

Buchanan prose is calm, providing readers with an anchor amidst the rapids and whirlpools that threaten to toss Bess out on the streets and into the ditches emotionally and financially. Tom becomes her rock to which she anchors herself, and he provides her with focus, love, desire, and strength, just as the river does for him. However, with the outbreak of WWI and troops sent abroad to fight from Canada at the behest of Great Britain and the rise of hydroelectric power, Bess must find the strength on her own to survive without Tom’s guidance and to care for their budding family.

“My Dear Bess,

I am sorry I’ve taken so long to write, but I have been putting it off, waiting for my mood to change. I am not sick in any way, but I am feeling beaten down–by the smell, the smashed men twitching like squashed charred insects the upright corpses mistaken for living men, the landscape of barren, earth without so much as a blade of grass. I am feeling alone, lost, and I can’t figure out how to feel like myself again.” (Page 183 of ARC)

As much as The Day the Falls Stood Still is about the impact of industrialization on the Niagara River, the falls, and the community, it also touches upon the environmental impacts of development, the loss of family, the dangers of progress, and the commitment of a man and wife to their family and their principles. Buchanan has created an emotionally charged novel based upon a real legendary riverman, William “Red” Hill. Complete with mock newspaper articles and historical photos and drawings depicting a variety of major events along the river from Bellini tightrope walking across the falls to the collapse of Table Rock.

Buchanan’s debut novel is undeniably memorable for its historical references and emotional ties to Bess’ family and the Niagara River. The Day the Falls Stood Still will haunt readers after the final page is turned.

Also Reviewed By:
Presenting Lenore


Winners. . . Come on Down!

I’ve been remiss in posting my winners. There was some confusion on my part regarding the UPrinting greeting card giveaway, but Randomizer.org selected

Jennifer of Literate Housewife and Sandy of You’ve Gotta Read This!!

If they have not received their UPrinting coupon codes, I will substitute a prize. Sorry, ladies.

Randomizer.org also helped me select the winner of The Lace Reader by Brunonia Barry:

Barb of Maximizing Dreams and meditative reading.

Congrats to all the winners.


Book Blogger Appreciation Week 2009, My Best Reviews Links


In case any of you were wondering which five links I submitted for the Book Blogger Appreciation Week 2009 Best Reviews category, I wanted to provide them for you.

I hope these will help you make your decision:

1. Rooftops of Tehran by Mahbod Seraji
2. Keeper of Light and Dust by Natasha Mostert
3. Galway Bay by Mary Pat Kelly
4. The Painter From Shanghai by Jennifer Cody Epstein
5. The Last Queen by C.W. Gortner

As for the Best Challenge Host Category for the War Through the Generations blog, Anna and I submitted these posts:

1. Reviews: The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society by Mary Ann Shaffer and Annie Barrows

2. Reviews: The Book Thief by Markus Zusak

3. Remembering Hiroshima & Nagasaki

4. Guest Blogger: WWII Reenactor Mauriel Joslyn

5. Valkyrie [Movie Review]

Remember to vote by Sept. 12, 2009, at 11:59 PM


Book Blogger Appreciation Week 2009, Get the Vote Out!

Savvy Verse & Wit is calling on all readers to GET THE VOTE OUT for Book Blogger Appreciation Week.

It’s time to show the love to all those blogs you’ve been reading that talk about books, the publishing industry, and more.

Ok, I have ulterior motives.

Savvy Verse & Wit is up for Best Reviews. I don’t really have a shot at winning, but I would love it if I got some votes. There is some stiff competition in this category, but I’m in good company for this short list.

And my happiest moment and I’m sure for Anna at Diary of an Eccentric too, is that War Through The Generations (our war reading challenge blog, which is WWII this year) is up for two awards–Best Challenge Host and Best Challenge.

Now, I know there are more than 90 participants, so get out there and vote for the Best Challenge Host and Best ChallengeWar Through the Generations.

You’re probably wondering where you go to vote. Never fear, here’s the information:

Book Blogger Appreciation Week Voting

Voting ends on Sept. 12, 2009 at 11:59 PM EST.

Thanks to everyone for reading one or both of these blogs and for voting.

I appreciate your participation, and you’ll soon find that out during BBAW when there are a ton of giveaways and other fun.


Millie’s Fling by Jill Mansell

Jill Mansell has surpassed herself once again in Millie’s Fling. Chicklit and women’s fiction readers will enjoy this spontaneous journey in Cornwall, England.

“Having ignored his plea, Millie promptly cannoned into the lamp-post behind her. Clutching her left shoulder and trying to pretend it hardly hurt at all–ow, ouch–she wondered why her life had to so closely resemble Mr. Bean’s. What she wouldn’t give to be sleek and chic and in control at all times.” (Page 108-9 of ARC)

Millie is a down-to-earth girl, whose life is a bit like Mr. Bean’s because she tends to fall into ridiculous situations unwittingly. Her roomie, Hester, is in a long-term relationship with an up-and-coming chef, Nat, but still has a flamethrower burning for an old love, Lucas Kemp. Millie’s Fling is the age-old search for love and happiness, but this serendipitous journey is rounded out with Orla Hart, a highly successful author with marital problems whom Millie befriends atop a cliff.

Happily single, Millie consistently tries to keep her roomie on the right relationship track since Hester’s boyfriend has taken a job in Glasgow to further his career as a chef. By chance, Millie stumbles upon a lost wallet in the bushes–a wallet that becomes the tie between her and Hugh Emerson, a young recently widowed computer specialist. Readers will giggle, tense up, and shake their heads as Hugh and Millie fumble through getting to know one another under impossible circumstances.

“‘Two more things I can’t stand,’ said Hugh. ‘Violent women. And girls who can’t take a joke.’

‘I hate men who wear nasty cheap aftershave.’

‘What really annoys me is getting phone calls from people putting on ridiculous accents, asking me the answer to crossword clues.’

‘That isn’t true!’ Millie exclaimed. ‘You asked me to give you the clues. You were bursting to show off how clever you were. And that’s something I really can’t stand in a man.'” (Page 398 of ARC)

Mansell’s dialogue between Millie and Hugh is fresh and witty; some of the best sequences involve them rattling off their favorite words or their most hated things about people, particularly at times when they are awkward with one another. Although there are some cliche moments in this novel, Mansell has well-developed characters on the edge of reality who bounce dialogue off one another in a way that makes the pages fly in Millie’s Fling.

If you missed Mansell’s guest post about writing, check it out and enter the giveaway for this fun book.


Mailbox Monday #46

Welcome to another edition of Mailbox Monday, sponsored by Marcia at The Printed Page, on Sunday.

You guessed it, there is another pre-scheduled review this Monday, and its for a fantastic, fast-paced Jill Mansell book, Millie’s Fling.

So you really want to know what came in the mail this week, here it is:

1. True Blue by David Baldacci from Hatchette Group for review.

2. Cleopatra’s Daughter by Michelle Moran for review; I’m not sure how I ended up with one hardcover and 2 ARCs, but I did, so expect another giveaway for this beauty.

3. Mr. Fitzwilliam Darcy: The Last Man in the World by Abigail Reynolds for review from Sourcebooks in January 2010.

4. To Hell in a Handbasket by Beth Groundwater, signed for a lucky BBAW winner.

What did you get in your mailbox?