Tuesday, July 31, 2012

The Long Way Home

Book Title: The Long Way Home
Author: Karen McQuestion
3.75 out of 5 stars

Plot Background:

This is a novel about four women that embark on a road trip that will forever change who they are. Marnie is a woman who has lost everything, her live-in boyfriend Brian has passed away, leaving Brian's son, a boy Marnie has raised, to live with his mother Kimberly in Las Vegas. Laverne is Marnie's landlady and a recluse who lives just below her, waiting for death to come knocking at her door next. Rita is a woman desperate for  justice, as her daughter Melinda was murdered 10 years ago and the murderer still remains free. All three women are brought together by a very different young woman, Jazzy. Jazzy has psychic abilities, and upon listening to a spirit telling her to go to a "Good Grief" meeting at a local rec center in their Wisconsin town, meets these women. Jazzy soon proposes the idea that the four women take a road trip to Las Vegas to retrieve Marnie's "stepson", and along the way they encounter things that make each woman face their individual fears, and make them all come to realize the importance of love.

My Thoughts:

This book really did take me by surprise. When I first started the novel, I was worried that it would feel too much like reading about my mom and her friends going on a road trip (lots of bathroom breaks and stories about cooking...). What I found however, was a book about a vibrant young person, a thirty-something woman feeling lost, a middle aged woman dealing with a never ending heartache, and a feisty older woman.

I am sure you all are starting to notice a trend, but I am a real sucker for good character development. To me, it is what makes or breaks a story. At the last page, nobody should be the same person they were on page one, in other words, if your main characters are flat, the book falls flat. This book however did a fantastic job developing each individual character, and it did so fairly evenly, which is a challenge when there are so many main characters. For example, when the book began I thought that Jazzy would be the least developed, I thought that she had things together for someone so young, and I really generally just liked her, but at the last page, she has found love and a job opportunity (I promise I wont spoil anything more), and she changes into what a young person should be, full of endless possibilities.

I also loved the character Laverne. She is so feisty and hilarious, she brings a lot of comic relief to a story otherwise heavily laden with sorrow. She really surprised me, I wont give away what she does, but at a crucial moment she truly made my jaw drop.

Marnie and Rita, to me, were less likable characters, but to the authors credit they were still very well developed. Rita starts out so desperate to know what Jazzy is seeing of her daughter, that she doesn't really see the obvious messages her daughter is sending her, but in the end she has confronted things and is able to see the signs being sent to her. Marnie was a strange and dynamic character to me. While she was less likable to me, she is also so much like women I know. She is very pessimistic and she has trouble seeing past right now. She is so focused on getting to Las Vegas that she hardly stops to enjoy the scenery. However, because of some of the things that she goes through in the course of the book, it also makes you feel like you can understand why she is so pessimistic. Her body becomes almost a literal punching bag, in some ways its a little comical that everything seems to happen to her, but then you also feel sorry for her. I have such mixed feelings about her. Perhaps this is what the author wanted? If so, KUDOS!!!

Another thing that was done extremely well was the point of view. It was third person the entire book, but the author seamlessly changes who the "focus character" is, making each chapter like being in the mind of a character without actually being in their mind. It almost felt like I was watching a movie in my head, like as the point of view shifts, the camera would pan to the person in focus (hint hint any big movie producers out there reading this...).

One thing in this book that I felt took away from the novel was the pacing. Like any road trip, there are natural lulls, but for a little while it felt like the lull stretched on a long time (before the bikers- dont want to give away any more!). There were some parts that really and truly took me by surprise, in the middle of a lull there is a scene at a rest stop where Laverne shocked me, and there were other sporadic moments as well where the pace would speed up considerably, but almost immediately it would slow to a near stop again. Having said this, the climactic parts were certainly ones that kept you on the edge of your seat. Overall though, the story felt a little bit slow, I didn't want to stay up til three am reading because I just couldn't put it down.

This book was a good read overall, it is definatly a book I would only recommend to female readers, but I certainly enjoyed it! (Also loved that in the Acknowledgement the author mentioned her gratitude to bloggers, earned some bonus points!)

As always here is a link to the Kindle edition of the book, or you can use the Amazon search box on the side of the screen to locate a paper copy:

 http://www.amazon.com/The-Long-Way-Home-ebook/dp/B0073HQ85O/ref=sr_1_2?ie=UTF8&qid=1343794155&sr=8-2&keywords=the+long+way+home

Happy Reading!!!

(Want to start a discussion on this post? Enter a comment below!)




Friday, July 27, 2012

Deal of the Day- Olympics Edition

Hello all!

In honor of the Olympics, today daily deal is The Hunger Games by Suzanne Collins! I am sure that most of you have already heard of this AMAZING series or may have seen the movie, so I will not give you a plot synopsis, but if you have not read the book yet this is definatly the time to get it! Kindle edition of book 1 is only $5! I HIGHLY recommend this series.



Here is a link to the Kindle edition:

http://www.amazon.com/The-Hunger-Games-ebook/dp/B002MQYOFW/ref=sr_1_1?s=digital-text&ie=UTF8&qid=1343442681&sr=1-1&keywords=the+hunger+games

Happy Reading, and "May the odds be ever in your favor"!



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Thursday, July 26, 2012

Deal of the Day!

Hello all!
I apologize for the delay in this weeks deal, I will be posting an additional deal this week to make up for the delay! :-)
Todays Deal of the Day is called The Mill River Recluse by Darcie Chan, and it's only $2.99!
Heres a little plot (some of it is taken from Amazon.com):


 Disfigured by the blow of an abusive husband, and suffering her entire life with severe social anxiety disorder, the widow Mary McAllister spends almost sixty years secluded in a white marble mansion overlooking the town of Mill River, Vermont. Her links to the outside world are few: the mail, the media, an elderly priest with a guilty habit of pilfering spoons, and a bedroom window with a view of the town below. The secrets that Mary keeps, however, will change everyone in the towns lives forever.

Expect a review on this in the coming months!

Here is a link to the Kindle edition of the book:

http://www.amazon.com/The-Mill-River-Recluse-ebook/dp/B0051PRFLQ/ref=sr_1_1?s=digital-text&ie=UTF8&qid=1343333177&sr=1-1&keywords=the+mill+river+reCLUSE

Happy Reading!!!


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Monday, July 23, 2012

Nickel Plated

Book Title: Nickel Plated
Author: Aric Davis
4.25 out of 5 Stars


Plot Background:

(Plot taken directly from Amazon, I started to type it up in my own words, but they really covered every plot point I wanted to mention!)

Nickel is a survivor. He has to be. For as long as he can remember, his life has hinged on the flip of a coin. Or, rather, the scribble of a social worker’s pen. He’s been through the system, even had a good dad for a few years, until he was gone, too. But Nickel remembers everything he taught him, and since the day he escaped from foster-care hell, he’s put that knowledge to good use. Just twelve years old, he makes a steady living by selling marijuana to high schoolers, blackmailing pedophiles he ferrets out online, and working as a private investigator. When a beautiful girl named Arrow hires him to find her little sister Shelby, Nickel figures at best the kid’s a runaway; at worst, some perv’s gotten a hold of her. He scours the internet and the streets of Arrow’s suburban neighborhood, and what he finds there is as ugly a truth as he’s ever seen. For beyond the manicured lawns, Nickel discovers children for sale, and adults with souls black as the devil. And people like that aren’t about to let some kid ruin their game.

My Thoughts:

This is a book that is very different from what I usually gravitate to, and I am so glad that I gave it a shot despite my mind telling me its too different.

The main thing that I felt the author did a fantastic job of, was making you first feel that Nickel was an adult, making his voice so mature and strong before you learn that he is only twelve years old. Nickel was a funny character to me, because his voice in my head sounded like a mixture of Rorschach from The Watchmen and Holden from The Catcher in the Rye. The things that he has seen in his short life would be enough to make someone catatonic, but he is such a strong character. I also loved that although he was strong, and he was very smart and determined, he still longed for basic human things, like love from a girl. In general, his character and the way that the author so clearly defined and crafted him was amazing.

This book forces you to see a side of life that cannot be ignored any longer. This book really opened my eyes to just how dangerous foster care can be if the foster parents are bad people, it opened my eyes to just how many predators there are online and how easy it is for them to find young children. The heaviness of this book at some points made it hard to read, I found myself having to put the book down and walk away because I was growing so angry or, which this is a scene that happens early on, when he tells about Nicholas and Eleanor, I found that I couldn't stomache what I was reading.

This was a very short book, and I am afraid that if I go into too much more detail it will give away the ending, but I will say that the reason it did not earn that 5th star is because of pacing. There were really, in my opinion, two climaxes in the story, and the first one was paced very well, the second one however, felt a little bit rushed. I thought more action would happen because of the build-up. Having said that, the book was wrapped up very nicely and I didnt feel there were a lot of loose ends.

I also felt that at some points the story felt a little slow, for example, Nickel goes into great detail about the things he eats, the things he bought at the grocery store, what he ordered for dinner and when he went to the bathroom etc. Perhaps this was the authors way of reminding us that he is just a kid, but for me it kind of slowed it down and made me feel a little bored.

Overall this was a great book, the author certainly did a fantastic job painting a word picture. I also would like to mention on that note that once you read it, you should continue to read on into the thank you's, the author painted a word picture there too! Very heavy book, but highly recommended.

As always here is a link to the Kindle edition of the book, or you can use the Amazon search box to find a paper copy:



Happy Reading!!!

(Want to start a discussion on the book? Post a comment!)

Thursday, July 19, 2012

Deal of the Day!

Hello All!
I am posting an additional deal this week, it is a book that I recently started reading and love.It is called War Brides by Helen Bryan and its only $2.99!

Heres the plot (taken from Amazon): With war threatening to spread from Europe to England, the sleepy village of Crowmarsh Priors settles into a new sort of normal: Evacuees from London are billeted in local homes. Nightly air raids become grimly mundane. The tightening vice of rationing curtails every comfort. Men leave to fight and die. And five women forge an unlikely bond of friendship that will change their lives forever. (There is more on the site, but it is quite lengthy, this gives you the general idea though).

A review on this will be coming soon!

Here is a link to the Kindle edition of the book:

http://www.amazon.com/War-Brides-ebook/dp/B007BSG026/ref=sr_1_1?s=digital-text&ie=UTF8&qid=1342724085&sr=1-1&keywords=WAR+BRIDES


Happy Reading!!!

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Monday, July 16, 2012

We're on Facebook!

Hello All!

Good news, you can now follow the blog on Facebook! I will be posting updates regaurding coming reviews and links to the deal of the day, all you have to do is "like" our page at www.Facebook.com/TheBookObsessedReader !

I will also periodically be running contests/drawings to give away some books, so stay tuned to either the facebook page or visit the blog directly for more details!

Happy Reading!!!

Sunday, July 15, 2012

Deal of the Day

Hello all!

Due to scheduling conflicts this week I am posting the Deal of the Day a little bit earlier than usual. Todays deal is called A Scattered Life by Karen McQuestion. The book follows the free-spirited Skyla Plinka, a woman who has found strength and stability with her husband Thomas and their daughter in a suburban neighborhood. Skyla befriends a neighbor, Roxanne, who's life is anything but quiet and ordinary. Much to the dismay of Audrey, Skyla's over-bearing mother-in-law, Roxy and Skyla become very close friends. This story shows three very different women learning to love unconditionally, and learning how to cope with all that live can throw at you.

I highly recommend this book, and its only $1.99!

Here is a link to the Kindle edition of the book:

http://www.amazon.com/A-Scattered-Life-ebook/dp/B003EJDGBO/ref=sr_1_1?s=digital-text&ie=UTF8&qid=1342382808&sr=1-1&keywords=a+scattered+life

Happy Reading!!!

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Saturday, July 14, 2012

Flat-Out Love

Book Title: Flat-Out Love
Author: Jessica Park
3.5 out of 5 Stars

Plot Background:

Julie Seagle is starting college in a new town, Boston. After arriving and finding that her living situation is not quite what she thought it would be, she moves in with her mothers old college roommate, Erin Watkins, and her family. Upon arriving, however, Julie notices that the family is definatly a little, off. The parents Erin and Roger are emotionally distant and engrossed in their professional lives, the son Matt is nice enough, but a bit nerdy and a tech-geek, and the daughter Celeste has an attachment to a life-size cardboard cut-out of her eldest brother, Finn, and the vocabulary of a middle aged Victorian woman. Finn no longer lives in the Watkin's home, well with the exception of "Flat-Fin".

Julie quickly learns that there is a secret hiding just below the surface of this quirky family, although everyone continues to be tight-lipped, so she takes to the internet and contacts Finn via Facebook. She quickly falls in love with Finn, even though he is geographically unavailable and her relationships with each family member begins to deepen, until the truth comes out and the confrontation that ensues threatens all of the progress that the family has made.

My thoughts:

I have such mixed emotions about this book, it has so many good qualities and a few less than thrilling qualities so I will start with the good.

Julie Seagle is such a relatable character. So many times, I will read books wherein the heroin of the story needs to be strong to shake stereotypes of women, or they will be so overly smart that they have no other facets to their personality, or worse, they will be too dippy and annoying (giving into those negative stereotypes). But Julie is really a character that I feel like I know. She is smart, but not so smart that she is socially stunted, and while she loves a good book or a strong discussion about psychology, she also enjoys a Coolatta and nail polish. In general, she is balanced. And really, she is funny. I couldn't help but laugh at so many parts of the book, so that was a definate strength.

Another strength in the book, is the Watkins family. While I did not grow attached to the parents at all, and found scenes with them to feel just awkward, I came to like Matt, and even though he is intense and nerdy, I found myself wishing Julie would be with him (maybe its just my love for a good nerdy boy, but I kept thinking "Girl if you dont date him youre nuts!"). He felt comfortable and scenes with him felt natural, like the author didnt have to paint this elaborate love story with violins playing and Fabio standing wistfully in the corner holding roses for you to get that he was in love with Julie. The only time with Matt's plot line that was wierd was (and I will try to say this without giving away certain things), after he and love interest finally come together, after their kiss, you think that they will want to discuss things but he immediatly brings up heading to the bedroom, which is out of character for him.

I also loved the girl Celeste, she was quirky and really her character seemed to have a touch of Austism. Although she has traits of Austism, she is really only suffering from post- traumatic stress, and this is where some of my frustration in the book comes from. I have family members with disabilities, and I understand that feeling of wanting to protect them, but there were points in the book where I became truly frustrated with how MUCH the family was protecting Celeste. Perhaps this should be counted as a strength to the author, as I was feeling just how frustrated Julie was feeling, but sometimes I just felt like jumping into the pages (much like on Blue's Clues) and saying "CALM DOWN!!!". For example, Celeste has started to improve, she has put hinges on Flat-Finn and has been going out without him, and she gets invited to a sleepover. Matt doesn't even show her the invitation until Julie finds it, and it really made me feel like they were over-doing the protective thing. If you love someone, dont you want them to improve and make friends? This is where most of my mixed emotions surrounding the book come from, because on one hand I can completely understand wanting to protect your siblings, but I cannot understand wanting to hide them from the world.

Another thing that gave me mixed feelings about the book, was the point of view. It was writted in third person, but there were literally parts where I had to re-read to see if I imagined it or if it really flip-flopped to first person. I am a writer myself and I understand that picking a point of view can be challenging, but it really seemed that the line was a little blurred. Sometimes though, it really gave the book a little something extra. Certain parts, like when she was emailing Finn, really benefitted from sounding closer to first person because you knew exactly how she was feeling. For example, in between emails (which were written in the book in email form, which I will say was pretty cool) she says "Holy... Julie was pretty sure she stopped breathing. What she wouldnt do to have him here with her now, telling her these things and kissing her..." Paragraphs like this one really enhanced the storyline, and used the flip-floppy pov to its advantage.

One last strength I'd like to add that made the book more interesting is that each chapter begins with status updates from Matt, Finn, and Julie. It also includes the email/IM conversations between characters which made it feel more personal. You almost couldn't help but see how she could fall in love with Finn.

Okay, here comes my negative point. Predictability. I will NOT give away the end, because this is something I am sure you all will figure out, or maybe have already figured out about the reason Finn is absent, but from the minute she stepped into the room where she is staying, I knew the ending (and I promise I did not skip ahead at any time). What the author tried to make a huge bomb in the end, the reason that the family is so...quirky, is something that she hints more than enough. I will admit, plot-wise, this author had a fantastic idea. It was just the execution that was a little off. There were things that were said throughout the book that were a little bit too obvious for my liking, and that gave the ending away.

Overall, this book was not bad. Coming off of a string of such serious novels it was just what I needed, it was light and funny. I literally laughed out loud at certain points, and the characters were likable. After I finished it, I felt kind of, okay, granted I tend to get "gradutation goggles" when reviewing books and like to only remember the good parts, but it didnt leave me feeling particularly high or low. Just a quick read, perfect for a beach day or an afternoon by the pool.

As always, here is a link to the Kindle edition (its only $3.99!), or you can use the Amazon searchbox on the side of the page (unless youre viewing the mobile site, in which case, were working on getting you a little search box too!)



Happy Reading!!!

Wednesday, July 11, 2012

Deal of the Day!

Hello all, thanks for tuning in!

Todays deal of the day is FREE! What can be better than that? It is called Stuck in the Middle (Sister-to-Sister Book 1) by Virginia Smith.  Heres a little plot: (taken from the Amazon Kindle store) Joan Sanderson's life is stuck. Her older sister, Allie, is starting a family and her younger sister, Tori, has a budding career. Meanwhile, Joan is living at home with Mom and looking after her aging grandmother. Not exactly a recipe for excitement. That is, until a hunky young doctor moves in next door. Suddenly Joan has a goal--to get a date. But it won't be easy. Pretty Tori flirts relentlessly with him and Joan is sure that she can't compete. But with a little help from God, Allie, and an enormous mutt with bad manners, maybe Joan can find her way out of this rut.

I recommend this book, I have read this and enjoyed it, a very good summer/beach read! I will be doing an in depth review on the series in the future.

Here is a link to the Kindle edition of the book:

http://www.amazon.com/Stuck-Middle-Sister---Sister-ebook/dp/B001GMANO4/ref=sr_1_1?s=digital-text&ie=UTF8&qid=1342057061&sr=1-1&keywords=stuck+in+the+middle


Happy Reading!!!

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Tuesday, July 10, 2012

Catcher, Caught

Book Title: Catcher, Caught
Author: Sarah Collins Honenberger
4.75 out of 5 Stars

Plot Background:

The story follows a teenage boy (15-16 years old, he has a birthday midway) named Daniel Solstice Landon. Daniel is like any other teenage boy, he longs to find love, enjoys reading, has friends and brothers. The one thing that is different about Daniel is that he has Leukemia, his parents are hippies against traditional medicine, he lives on a houseboat, and he is obsessed with J.D. Salinger's  The Catcher in the Rye, and this is his story.

My Thoughts:

This was another book I found on Amazon's $3.99 or Less list a few months back, and am so glad I did. I also recently made it a featured Deal of the Day, so as promised here is my review!

At first glance, I thought Catcher, Caught would be a short, sappy book about a dying boy. I got my tissues and sat down on a rainy day ready to feel sorrow and sadness, however, what I found was a completely different set of emotions. Daniel is a kid that I really fell in love with in the first paragraph, his voice is clear and he is painstakingly honest. He knows he has a life threatening disease, and he is not kidding himself about his lifespan. He also knows that Holden Caulfield is someone he aspires to be like, but no matter how much he tries there are times that he finds that he cannot be as blunt or detached as Holden.

As someone who read and loved the Catcher in the Rye, I felt that the way he thinks of Holden as a friend, the way I thought of Holden as a friend when I read it, quickly makes you think of Daniel as a friend. Like we are all linked together, fiction and real, and when you read this the lines begin to blur and you begin to think of them all as friends. Maybe I was just happy to see that someone else, even a fictional character, also gets as attached to  characters in a book as much as I do.

Daniel is not the only character I fell in love with. This book, overall, has fantastic character development which for me, is often what makes or breaks a book. In my opinion, it is better for a character, or set of characters, to change over the course of a book even if the person they became isn't someone you would like, than to not change at all.

 This novel really showcases a huge range of character development and it really gives some insight to the variety of ways that different people handle grief. Daniel's best friend Mack goes from being a regular mischievous teenage boy to being someone turning to drugs for comfort, his girlfriend goes from being someone trying to flirt with a boy to someone deeply in love. His parents and siblings change as well, but I don't want to ruin all of the good parts for you. Simply put, I fell in love with these people, they were relate-able, even the ones (like his hippy parents) that I never thought I could relate to.

Another thing I really enjoyed was the in way that his family, his mother in particular, decided to treat his Leukemia. She tries the holistic route, which doesn't work, and she takes him to Mexico for a treatment that seemed a bit out-there, and she does everything she can to avoid chemotherapy and radiation. She sees her son already in pain and doesn't want to make what may be his last days worse, but it raises the question- was she right to avoid something that could have made him better, to avoid making his last days worse?  Should she have asked Daniel for his input in his treatment, or as a parent is it always right for you to make the decision for your child, even if it means making a decision that will not save his life? These are all serious issues raised in this novel, and really and truly, I am happy to see these questions being asked.

Another great thing about this novel was... drum roll... THE ENDING!!! I loved it! I literally was sitting in my bed, reading the ending just sobbing but not sobbing because I was sad, sobbing because I had hope. My cats and boyfriend were looking at me like I was insane, but the ending gave me such a strong reaction. I will not give away the ending, but it not only makes you have hope for Daniel, but hope for his friends as well, for his family and his girlfriend to be able to move on with their lives, no matter what happens- good or bad.

My only negative I can say about this book is that I cried, which got my Kindle wet making the buttons stick, which really I cannot fault the writer for.

This book was certainly worth reading, and if you haven't already, I would highly recommend reading The Catcher in the Rye by J.D. Salinger at some point as well. Its short and would be a good read for someone looking to fall in love.

As always, here is a link to the Kindle edition. I will also include a link to The Catcher in the Rye, just in case! You can also feel free to use the Amazon search box on the right side of the page for a paper copy.

Catcher Caught: http://www.amazon.com/Catcher-Caught-ebook/dp/B003A2C3NC/ref=sr_1_2?ie=UTF8&qid=1341975261&sr=8-2&keywords=catcher+caught

The Catcher in the Rye: http://www.amazon.com/The-Catcher-Rye-J-Salinger/dp/0316769177/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1341975399&sr=8-1&keywords=the+catcher+in+the+rye

Happy Reading!!!




Thursday, July 5, 2012

Deal of the Day!

Hello and thanks for tuning in!

Todays deal of the day is a book that I will be reviewing in the future, it was definatly one of my favorites this year. It is called "Catcher Caught" by Sarah Collins Honenberger. I wont go into too much detail about the plot since I will be reviewing it soon, but in a nutshell its about a teenage boy who has leukemia and his relationship with the book "The Catcher in the Rye" by JD Salinger.

This is a short read but definatly a worthwhile one, and its only $3.99!
Here is a link to the Kindle book!

http://www.amazon.com/Catcher-Caught-ebook/dp/B003A2C3NC/ref=sr_1_1?s=digital-text&ie=UTF8&qid=1341539805&sr=1-1&keywords=catcher+caught

Happy reading!!!

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Wednesday, July 4, 2012

Failing Paris

Book Title: Failing Paris
Author: Samantha Dunn
3 out of 5 Stars

Plot Background:

This book takes place over one week in the life of Sabine Wilcox, a 19-year old student from the American Southwest who is studying in Paris, France. Her past is very dark, and she has always been a girl dreaming of the beautiful life that Paris offers- she always thought of Paris as her refuge. However, when she gets to Paris, she cannot hide from her past, and she begins to spiral downward. The week begins with Sabine trying to solve the issue of what to do about her pregnancy(keep vs abort, which is difficult as abortions are not free and she has run out of funds).Along the way Sabine meets two very different men who want two very different things, and is forced to face down her dark past.

My Thoughts:

I got this book on the Kindle "3.99 or Less" list a few months back, and thought that since it is such a short book (151 pages) that it would be just a quick light read. I could not have been more wrong. This book packs a punch, it is short but it will leave you feeling heavy and I found myself having to put it down at times and walk away because I was sad/mad/grossed out.

I will start with the books strengths: the descriptions are so vivid. I have never been to Paris (although I have always wanted to), and the author does a truly amazing job of making you feel like you are in Paris, right down to the wet stones in the pavement after the rain. At times, this wonderfully vivid way of describing things left me feeling a bit sick though. I am not a real big fan of overly gratuitous sex scenes, I think if it is absolutely necissary to the story line, then go for it, but you probably wont catch me reading "Fifty Shades of Gray"-- having said that, there are some scenes in this book that would've made me a little uncomfortable from a less descriptive author, so reading them from someone who does such an amazing job with details made me feel woozy. For example, Sabine has many encounters with strange French men, she makes a sort of sport of it to have sex with strangers, so when she has sex with a man she met in a bar in an alley, I felt like I could smell the mildewing walls and the whole idea of that scene made me, well, skeeved! Overall though, aside from the sex scenes, the details really work in the books favor.

Another thing I enjoyed, was the voice of the main character. She was so detached, which at first I didn't understand. I thought to myself "If I was debating an abortion I would be a mess!", but once you get to know her past, you see why she has learned to detach herself. I also felt like she reminded me so much of Albert Camus' main character in "The Stranger"(one of my all time favorite books)- he was someone so detached, even during a murder, but when you get to know him, you see why. This detachment is something some might find off-putting, but it is sometimes good to understand that not everyone in real life is as involved or attached as you, there are really some people who think or feel this way.

As a small side note, I also enjoyed the way the book was set up. Each chapter being a different day. It gives the book clarity and it makes it easier for the reader to follow a set time-line.

So having said this, you might be wondering why I didnt give 5 stars to a book so intriguing? Well my first woe was, as I mentioned before, the overly dirty sex scenes. Not only the fact that they are there, but it made me so annoyed that the main character was seeking these situations out in the first place. I found myself wanting to slap her! I felt like, well it stinks that your pregnant, but maybe stop doing the thing that gets you that way all the time before you go mope about it girl! She is so self-destructive!

Another woe I had with the book is, in general, Sabine's interaction with other characters like her roommate or other people she meets. She seems so rude to them, and their reactions don't seem all that natural. For example, if I were going to be rude to the person who is orchestrating my stay in Paris, they might not let me stay, but she is rude to the same people and their reactions are indifference. It just seems a little bit like she is so good at the introspective things, and the book weakens when it comes to human interaction.

This is another book that for me, had huge potential, and maybe I would have liked it better if I were younger (aside from the dirty stuff), but overall I probably wouldnt read it again. If you're looking for a heavy book that will make you feel something (even if its something you dont like) then pick this up.

As always here is a link to the Amazon Kindle book or you can use the search box on the side of the page to a paper copy!
http://www.amazon.com/Failing-Paris-ebook/dp/B0069INUU4/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1341433736&sr=8-1&keywords=FAILING+PARIS

Happy Reading!!!