Monthly Archives: October 2014

Review: The Woman Who Borrowed Memories by Tova Jannson

I am very excited whenever I have the opportunity to receive an advanced reader’s copy of a book from the New York Review of Books Classics collection.  All of these stories were originally written in Swedish and this collection of short stories is the first English edition of Tova Jannson’s stories.

My Review:

The Woman Who Borrowed MemoriesThis collection of short stories is divided into four sections, the first of which is entitled “The Listener” and was originally published in 1971.  I found the stories in this part of the collection to have a dream-like, almost surreal quality to them.  In the story that is the title to the collection, “The Listener”, a woman who is called Aunt Gerda has always been a great listener to her family.  She listens intently to all of their stories and woes and when she is about fifty-five years old her personality starts to change.  She seems to forget names and people and starts to spend a lot of time by herself.

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Filed under Classics, New York Review of Books, Short Stories, Uncategorized

Review- First Impressions: A Novel of Old Books, Unexpected Love and Jane Austen by Charlie Lovett

I received an advanced reader copy of First Impressions from the publisher through NetGalley.

My Review:

First ImpressionsThis book is a mix of genres, including historical fiction, romance, and Jane Austen fan fiction.  The narrative alternates between two periods of time.  The first point of view is through the eyes of Sophie who has grown up on an estate that has been in her family for generations.  Although her parents house has a grand library which contains rare editions of many books, it is her Uncle Bertram who instills in Sophie a love of reading and old books.  Sophie’s Uncle Bertram lives in a flat in London where she often visits him and looks through his own unique collection of rare books.

When Sophie’s uncle dies suddenly in an accident, Sophie suspects foul play.  This is where the novel veers toward being a mystery.  She comes to believe that his knowledge of a certain old book that is contained within the family’s library might have something to do with his untimely demise.

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Filed under Classics, Historical Fiction, Literature/Fiction

Review and Giveaway: The Sharp Hook of Love by Sherry Jones

I am thrilled to welcome France Book Tours back to The Book Binder’s Daughter today with an historical fiction novel set in twelfth century France.  Emma, the owner and tour coordinator,  does such a great job with all of her tours and it is always a pleasure to work with her.  Please visit France Book Tours to see a complete list of current and upcoming tours. I invite you to read a synopsis and my review of The Sharp Hook of Love, enter the giveaway to win your own copy, and stop at the other blogs on this tour.

Book Synopsis:
“To forbid the fruit only sweetens its flavor”

Sharp Hook of Love - coverAmong the young women of 12th century Paris, Heloise d’Argenteuil stands apart. Extraordinarily educated and quick-witted, she is being groomed by her uncle to become an abbess in the service of God. But with one encounter, her destiny changes forever.

Pierre Abelard, headmaster at the Nôtre Dame Cloister School, is acclaimed as one of the greatest philosophers in France. His controversial reputation only adds to his allure, yet despite the legions of women swooning over his poetry and dashing looks, he is captivated by the brilliant Heloise alone. As their relationship blossoms from a meeting of the minds to a forbidden love affair, both Heloise and Abelard must choose between love, duty, and ambition. Continue reading

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Filed under Giveaways, Historical Fiction

Review: Love Me Back by Merritt Tierce

I received an advanced review copy of Love Me Back directly from the publisher, Doubleday.

My Review:

Love Me BackMarie Young is in her senior year of high school she goes on a mission trip with her church to Mexico and while she is on this trip, the trajectory that her life is on takes a turn for the worst.  She sleeps with one of the boys on the trip and gets pregnant at the age of 17.  The boy agrees to marry her and Marie lasts about a year in the marriage before everything falls apart.

I will warn you that there is a lot of sex in this book.  But the sex is not romantic, loving or even erotic.  The sex is ugly and drug fueled.  Marie is a teenage mother who doesn’t feel connected to her infant daughter.  She knows she has a good, loving and supportive husband but she can’t manage to stay faithful to him.

Marie also works in a series of restaurant chains and then she gets a well-paying job as a waitress at a high end steakhouse in Texas.  The people she meets at work are some of the most despicable characters you will ever encounter in a book.  They also engage in sexual promiscuity and heavy drug use.  Marie admits to sleeping with 30 men in a three month period while she works at the steakhouse.

This story also shows us the seedy underbelly of the restaurant and service industry.  Workers are on their feet for long hours, they have to constantly deal with difficult customers and cater to their customers’ every needs.  Marie drowns herself in her work, in drug use and in having sex to dull the pain of her life.  She knows she is not happy, she knows that this is not what she wanted for her life, but what she doesn’t know is how to change it.

Let the reader beware: there are no happy endings in this book.  This is a tale of an unhappy women caught in a life that she does not know how to dig herself out of.  For those who dare to read LOVE ME BACK, it will show you an unflattering side of life that you might have never thought about.

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About The Author:
Merritt TierceMerritt Tierce was born and raised in Texas. She worked in various secretarial and retail positions until 2009, when she moved to Iowa City to attend the Iowa Writers’ Workshop as the Meta Rosenberg Fellow.

After graduating in 2011 with her MFA from Iowa, she received a Rona Jaffe Foundation Writers’ Award, and she is a 2013 National Book Foundation 5 Under 35 Author.

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Filed under Literature/Fiction

Review: Man V. Nature by Diane Cook

I am very pleased to welcome TLC Book tours back to The Book Binder’s Daughter today with a collection of short stories by Diane Cook.  I invite you to read my review, learn a little about the author and visit some of the other stops on the tour.

My Review:

Man V. NatureMan V. Nature is an eclectic group of stories and each one has a bizarre or unexpected twist. The story “Moving On” begins with a widow packing up her house because her husband has just died and she is beginning a new phase in her life.  But the twist in this story is that the government has set up a women’s shelter for widows who wait there until they are chosen by a new man to remarry.  The women in the shelter have a bit of a feeling like animals in a shelter who are waiting to be rescued and find their forever homes.  The widow in the story is chosen by a man after 8 months, which, she is told, is a respectable amount of time to wait for a new husband.

The story that I found to be the most bizarre in this collection is “Somebody’s Baby.”  Linda has just given birth to a baby girl and as her husband drives her home from the hospital she sees a man on her lawn who is waiting to steal her baby.  Linda does everything she can to protect her daughter, but the man sneaks in and takes the baby anyway.  The entire neighbor and Linda’s husband tell her that this is normal and that the man takes at least one or two babies from every family and eventually she will have one that she can keep.  When Linda’s second baby is also taken by the man, she decides that she will track the man down and get her children back.  But the neighbors try to convince her that it is a bad idea and she should just try to have more children.

In the title story, “Man V. Nature,” three old friends are stranded in a boat on a lake when it has run out of gas.  They jump into a lifeboat and abandon the main vessel when they think they spot land.  As they are adrift on the plastic lifeboat for days they start to have conversations that reveal hidden secrets and desires.  Will any of them make it to safety and be rescued?

If you want an interesting collection of short stories then I would definitely give MAN V. NATURE by Diane Cook at try.  There stories are unique and will be like nothing else you have read.

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About The Author:
Diane CookDiane Cook’s fiction has been published or is forthcoming in Harper’s Magazine, Granta, Tin House, Zoetrope: All Story, Guernica, Salt Hill, and Redivider. Her nonfiction has appeared in the New York Times Magazine and on This American Life, where she worked as a radio producer for six years. She earned an MFA from Columbia University, where she was a Teaching fellow. She recently moved to Oakland, CA after a decade in Brooklyn.

 

Other Stops on the Tour:

Tuesday, October 14th: Missris
Wednesday, October 15th: Book Hooked Blog
Thursday, October 16th: The Book Binder’s Daughter
Monday, October 20th: The Well-Read Redhead
Tuesday, October 21st: BoundbyWords
Wednesday, October 22nd: A Lovely Bookshelf on the Wall
Thursday, October 23rd: Svetlana’s Reads and Views
Tuesday, October 28th: No More Grumpy Bookseller
Wednesday, October 29th: Shelf Notes
Thursday, October 30th: Luxury Reading
Monday, November 3rd: Patricia’s Wisdom
Tuesday, November 4th: Bibliosue
Wednesday, November 5th: Buried in Print
Thursday, November 6th: Inner Workings of the Female Mind
Friday, November 7th: Guiltless reading
Monday, November 10th: A Bookish Way of Life
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Filed under Short Stories