Real books

If you have been reading this blog you may have noticed I read a lot of books in electronic format. I’m on my second e-reader and I have all the reading apps (including one for the e-reader I have) on my smart phone. I would not be able to read as many books as I do if I didn’t have the option to read them this way. There is no quicker way to make me flip out and rage than to say, “Which is better? E-books or real books?”

E-BOOKS ARE REAL BOOKS!

Just think about, years ago books were made from papyrus. They were hand written and hand sewn. Books. Stories were printed in newspapers, a chapter a week, then all the chapters were gathered together in a ‘book’. Men invented machines to print the words and sew the pages together. Books. Then writers progressed from typewriters to computers. Now manuscripts are sent by e-mail to publishers.

Even with printed books, you have hard-bound, trade paper-back, mass produced paper-back ‘books’. An actor will read the book into a recording devise and then you have an ‘audio-book’.

Think of “Gone with the Wind”. The movie, it was filmed with a camera. The film was in big rolls and shown in theaters, then video cassette players and tapes were invented, then you could get a tape of Gone With the Wind to watch at home. Then it was available on DVD, now you can get it as a digital download. But it’s still a movie.

An artist records a song in a studio or performs on stage, I can then download the song onto a tiny device and play it whenever I want. It’s still music.

E-books, are just a different medium, they are real books.

Because You Loved Me by M. William Phelps

BecauseYouLovedMeFormat: eBook
Pub. Date: 12/1/2007
Publisher: Kensington Publishing Corporation
Type: Non-Fiction, True Crime
Pages: 363
Read: 12/30/2012
Rating: Really liked it ♥♡♥

Jeanne Dominico was brutally beaten and stabbed to death, her injuries showed she fought with her murderer. She was a single mother of two trying to make a life for her children and protect them the best she could. Billy Sullivan was a troubled young man that Jeanne’s daughter met over the internet, she was head-over-heels in love. Billy was obsessive and controlling, Jeanne worried about Nicole’s sliding schoolwork, she thought that Billy would hurt Nicole, but that is not what happened. The murder shocked the community, first in its brutality and second in who committed it, and who conspired to commit it.

Another top-notch true crime account from Phelps. With interviews and summary of the police interviews and court transcripts, you get a complete picture of what happened, he takes you step by step through the crime, the after effects, how each person came to be where they were and how it all ended.

Little Bee by Chris Cleave

LittleBeeFormat: Trade Paperback
Pub. Date: 2/16/2010
Publisher: Simon & Schuster
Type: Fiction ~ Library Book
Pages: 266
Read: 12/29/2012
Rating: Liked it ♥

When I was deciding if I should read this book, which everyone told me I should read, I tried to find out what it was about. This was all I could find:

Overview

WE DON’T WANT TO TELL YOU TOO MUCH ABOUT THIS BOOK.
It is a truly special story and we don’t want to spoil it.

Nevertheless, you need to know something, so we will just say this:

It is extremely funny, but the African beach scene is horrific.

The story starts there, but the book doesn’t.

And it’s what happens afterward that is most important.

Once you have read it, you’ll want to tell everyone about it. When you do, please don’t tell them what happens either. The magic is in how it unfolds.

Now that I’ve read it, I don’t know how to write a review, since I can’t tell you about the book. First I didn’t think it was truly special or extremely funny. It was funny in parts, the rest is true. Except for me wanting to tell everyone about it. It was an interesting story, told from the view of Little Bee and Sarah, who have a horrific encounter on an African beach. It is one in a series of horrific events for Little Bee, apparently the first horror Sarah has experienced and it changes both their lives. Little Bee’s life is a series of unfortunate accidents, which don’t stop after she leaves Africa. The ending is inevitable.

Lost Girls by Caitlin Rother

LostGirlsFormat: eBook
Pub. Date: 7/3/2012
Publisher: Pinnacle
Type: Non-Fiction, True Crime
Pages: 420
Read: 12/25/2012
Rating: Really liked it ♥♡♥

The lost girls were Chelsea King and Amber Dubois, they were good girls and they disappeared one year apart. Both were abducted by John Albert Gardner, who raped and killed them. Like many such predators, he had a normal sex-life with his girlfriend, even fathering twins with a former girlfriend. He also had violent urges that lead him to seek out vulnerable women.

The victim’s family did not cooperate with this book, all information about them is from public records and interviews with people (friends, schoolmates) close to the victim. This story is told from the perspective of the perpetrator’s family, it must be hard to be related to a criminal like this. His mother and girlfriend and ex-girlfriends appear to be in denial and were also blaming others, hospitals for not treating him and the mental health community in general.

Even though he was mentally ill, he knew what he was doing was wrong, he waited until his victims were alone before grabbing them and disposed of evidence afterward, burying their bodies and throwing their clothes away. Caitlin Rother brings all this out in her book, which is well-written, informative and interesting. I recommend this book.

Legally Dead by Kevin Flynn, Rebecca Lavoie

LegallyDeadFormat: eBook
Pub. Date: 10/4/2011
Publisher: Berkley
Type: Non-Fiction, True Crime ~ Library Book
Pages: 416
Read: 12/20/2012
Rating: Liked it ♥♡

Seth Bader and his wife, Vicki, moved to New Hampshire in 1992. When he decided he wanted out of the marriage, he started a campaign to ruin Vicki, by destroying her reputation, her self worth. His actions resulted in Vicki sinking into depression, attempting suicide and losing visitation with their sons. Seth proceeded to work on the boys to turn them against Vicki. When she began to pull her life together and ended up getting unsupervised visitation with their youngest son, he decided to kill her, using their oldest son as his accomplice.

As the summary says, this was a very bizarre crime. I imagine some could not believe a son turning against his mother, especially one that loved him after his previous mother did not treat him like a son. I can also think of some people with teenage sons nodding their heads and saying, “Teenagers!”

In keeping with the bizarre label, this crime could also have been confusing with all the people that eventually became involved it was a mess. It is a tribute to Kevin Flynn that he was able to keep the storylines straight. There were a couple of times where, this person said this, then later said this. I don’t know how he kept it straight, in the end you understood (as much as anyone could) what had happened and who was involved. You can also feel the frustration that not everyone involved got what they deserved.

Another fascinating true crime account from someone who someday may be as dear to me as M. William Phelps.

Kill Word Verification

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One Shot at Forever by Chris Ballard

OneshotatforeverFormat: Hardbound
Pub. Date: 5/15/2012
Publisher: Hyperion
Type: Non-Fiction, Baseball ~ Library Book
Pages: 272
Read: 12/19/2012
Rating: Liked it ♥♡
Hardcover, 272 pages

A Small Town, an Unlikely Coach, and a Magical Baseball Season

Macon, Illinois was said to be a town stuck in the Eisenhower era. Lynn Sweet was a hippie who was hired as the English teacher by a rather progressive administrator. He ended up being asked to coach the baseball team even though he had no experience coaching. His students loved him, and so the players loved him. Administration and the parents were not in love.

Even though he had no experience and his methods were unorthodox to say the least, he got results. His students learned to love reading and the players, even though they were told that practice was optional, showed up to practice and played to win. They made it to the state final, the smallest school to ever make it, and it has never happened again.

I almost gave up on this book, I was under the wire to read 90 books by the end of the year and was in a reading frenzy, for a while I thought this book was going to be about Lynn Sweet and his problems with the administration, quickly however, I realized the author was just setting the stage, it quickly progressed to the team and the boys.

Besides getting a history of Macon Illinois in 1971 and being introduced to Sweet’s laid back style of coaching, we also get a history of the boys, why they played, their family situation, how their friendship with each other affected the loyalty to the team. Also, the author takes us to the present day, we see how their dreams were fulfilled, where their skill and talent took them.

In all an informative enjoyable book.

The Wizard of OZ: A Steampunk Adventure by S.D. Stuart

WizardOzSteampunkFormat: eBook
Pub. Date: 01/5/2013
Publisher: Ramblin’ Prose Publishing
Type: Fiction ~ ARC
Pages: 314
Read: 12/14/2012
Rating: Liked it ♥♡

Read and reviewed at author’s request.

This is another book that is totally outside of my normal reading genre. In fact before I read this I didn’t even know what ‘steampunk’ was. The only reason I read it was because had “Wizard of OZ” in the title.

At the risk of offending people, I am going to say this is fanfiction:

From Urbandictionary.com: Fanfiction is when someone takes either the story or characters (or both) of a certain piece of work, whether it be a novel, tv show, movie, etc, and create their own story based on it. Sometimes people will take characters from one movie and put them in another, which is called a cross-over.

The characters from Wizard of Oz are here: Dorothy, the Tin Man, Scarecrow, Cowardly Lion, Uncle and Auntie, the two wicked witches of east and west. But they are not L. Frank Baum’s characters. Dorothy is not a little girl (something I took great issue with in the original story, sending a child to commit a murder?), the Wizard is not a good man (something which was said in the original book), and instead of witches and munchkins and talking animals, you have evil women with motorized carts, clones and mutants.

The Australis Penal Colony is a continent sized prison referred to as the Outcast Zone, or OZ. Over time with the increasing reliance on automation, it has been shut off from the rest of the world, although built to contain dangerous criminals, it is now a dumping ground for ‘undesirables’. It is totally automated and the rest of the world has ‘washed its hands of it’. Anyone who has experience in prisons knows you can’t let the inmates run things, but that is what has happened in OZ. Dorothy has learned her father is alive and in OZ, since her father disappeared and her mother died, she has been in training for this mission, but when she gets into OZ she finds herself on her own facing incredible odds and having to go to the Wizard for help. As in the original book, the Wizard demands payment for his help.

I know some take a dim view of the term ‘fanfiction’, but it’s not always a bad thing, in this case the author has taken characters everyone knows and put them in a completely new story. The idea is the same, Dorothy wants something, the Wizard can give it to her, but Dorothy has to work for it. Along the way she meets people, makes friends and enemies. Of course there is also the steampunk factor, an interesting angle. Even though Dorothy has prepared for this, OZ is like nothing she has imagined and she is learning every step of the way. The action is fast paced, the plot has twists turns and surprises and things that will fool you. It ends with a teaser for the next episode which will be released ….. I don’t know, but I’ll be looking for it.

Wicked Intentions by Kevin Flynn

WickedIntentionsFormat: eBook
Pub. Date: 12/1/2008
Publisher: New Horizon Press
Type: Non-Fiction, True Crime ~ Library Book
Pages: 312
Read: 12/13/2012
Rating: Liked it ♥♡

Kevin Flynn is the author of three true crime books: “Wicked Intentions,” “Our Little Secret,” and “Legally Dead.”

The call was a “check on the welfare of”, it went from that to a possible murder investigation, then the sheriff remembered other ‘young men’ who had gone to Sheila LaBarre’s farm and not come back. Men with injuries and a ‘funny color’ to their skin. By the time authorities were able to piece things together and go after LaBarre she was on the run. When she was caught she claimed she was killing pedophiles, but these men had no history of it, no history of abuse. So was Sheila insane or an incredible evil woman? Crazy or a vicious, calculating serial killer?

Kevin Flynn takes us from start to finish in account rich in detail. He gives us the history of Sheila from childhood to her arrest, the facts obtained through interviews and public records. The missed chances from authorities to stop her and the reasons why, in some cases they couldn’t do anything. How she was able to manipulate people to help her. Another solid true-crime account that I recommend.

For my reviews of Kevin Flynn’s other books click on the tag “Kevin Flynn”.

Cob by Brian Benson

cobFormat: eBook
Pub. Date: November 17, 2012
Publisher: Amazon Digital Services, Inc.
Type: Fiction
Pages: 284
Read: 12/12/2012
Rating: Liked it ♥

When I first saw this book I thought it was non-fiction, true-crime. As I was reading it, it read like true crime, but something was off, so I went back and re-read the description and discovered it was fiction.

The copy I got was in desperate need of editing and proofreading, however the plotline was solid and the writing good. There were no twists and turns this is a straight mystery, guy is killing girls and investigators are trying to find him. The story is in how they go about it and the interactions between the team. I believe this is his first and it is an impressive debut novel.