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Showing posts from March, 2021

MIRACLE on the 17th GREEN by James Patterson and Peter de Jonge

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  Originally published in 1996 by Little, Brown and Company. The high school I teach at is in the midst of library book purge. I have no idea why Miracle on the 17th Green was ever in a high school library because it is aimed at adults. I don't mean that it has "adult themes" like a movie might label them (drugs, sex, violence, etc.), I mean that it has adult themes like questioning whether you have made the right choices in life, which comes first - family or career? Is it okay to put your family at risk just to achieve your personal goals, especially when they are a long shot? I really enjoyed this book despite never having played even one hole of real golf (I have played plenty of putt-putt golf, but that doesn't really apply, does it?). It didn't really matter - the story was compelling and I faked my way through the golf stuff. James Patterson has a long history of co-writing books. I always figure he's lending his name to up and coming authors in exchan

SPACE COWBOY by Justin Stanchfield

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  Published in 2008 by Usborne Publishing, Ltd. Travis McClure is a teenaged cowboy with a horse named Deuce. He's good at his job and starting to work more and more on his own and he really enjoys being trusted with more responsibility, even if the work is hard and mostly boring. If they make enough money his family can finally return to their own ranch on Earth and make a go of it. You see, Travis and his family are part of a terraforming operation in a future where human beings are starting to move out into the galaxy. They are on Aletha Three, a planet with a climate and atmosphere similar to Earth's. Terraformers bring a few animals, a few planets and try to jump start a biosphere by spreading grass the old-fashioned way - by having animals eat the seeds and spread them in their manure. Or, as the book more delicately describes it: "On Earth, animals like wild bison and wild horses had once covered the grasslands, their hoofs churning the barren soil like a million t

TULAROSA (audiobook) (Kevin Kerney #1) by Michael McGarrity

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  Published by Recorded Books in 2012. Read by George Guidall. Duration: 8 hours, 16 minutes. Unabridged. Kevin Kerney is a retired police detective living in New Mexico. His former partner has come to him with a plea for help. His former partner's son (Kerney's godson) has gone AWOL from White Sands Missle Range in New Mexico. He had been a model soldier up to the time of his disappearance with clear plans to attend art school once he left Army career.  Here's the difficulty. It wasn't Kerney's choice to retire - he was at the top of his game when he was shot twice in the line of duty in his gut and his knee. This happened because his partner and best friend was out of place -- drinking.  It has been three years. It took Kerney a long time to physically and mentally rehabilitate and he never forgave his former partner for letting him get hurt. Kerney is not asked to forgive his former partner, but to put aside his dislike to go and find his godson. Kerney agrees an

DIVIDED WE FALL: AMERICA'S SECESSION THREAT and HOW to RESTORE OUR NATION (audiobook) by David French

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  Published in September of 2020 by Macmillan Audio. Read by Sean Patrick Hopkins and David French. Duration; 7 hours, 18 minutes. Unabridged. David French is, like me, a Never Trump Republican, which means he is a man without a party right now. French starts his book with some observations that rang very true to me. For example, he noted that while he was still a part of the two party system, he didn't really think about the automatic intensely negative reaction both sides have to the other side's proposals. The other side isn't just misinformed, they are evil. They are not just mistaken, they are trying to overthrow America and all of its institutions. They want to murder us in our sleep by taking away our rights. They HATE us. The author It doesn't matter which side is the "they" and which side is the "us" - it is the same argument, it is a dangerous pattern and it threatens to tear the country apart as we self-segregate into communities that tend

EVERYWHERE that MARY WENT (audiobook)(Rosato and Associates #1) by Lisa Scottoline

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  Originally published in 1994. Audiobook version published in 2016 by HarperAudio. Read by Teri Schnaubelt. Duration: 9 hours, 5 minutes. Unabridged. Back in the 1990's, I worked at a used book store. A copy of Everywhere that Mary Went came in. I was intrigued so I read it.  After that, whenever a fan of legal thrillers would come in and ask if we had anything new or a little different I'd hand them that book. Soon enough, we were sold out and we kept on selling them whenever they came in. I even talked a group of ladies to use it for their book discussion group and they loved it. I sort of feel like I had a part in promoting Lisa Scottoline when she was starting out. Eventually, this one book grew into a series of eleven books and I read most of them (maybe all of them - it's been a while).  While I was scrolling through my possible choices of my next audiobook, I decided to go back and revisit this series.  Mary DiNunzio is a lawyer from a working class background abou

NEWS of the WORLD (audiobook) by Paulette Jiles

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  Book originally published in 2016. Audiobook published by Harper Audio. Read by Grover Gardner. Duration: 6 hours, 17 minutes. Unabridged. News of the World is a pretty simple book - on the surface. Set in 1870 Texas, a 70+ year-old veteran of the War of 1812 and the Mexican War is asked to travel more than 300 miles to deliver a 10-year old girl to her extended family near San Antonio, Texas. When she was 6, she was adopted by the Kiowa after they killed immediate family in a frontier attack. Their journey starts in Wichita Falls (near the Oklahoma-Texas border) and faces a lot of difficulties.  The author Jefferson Kyle Kidd goes by the name Captain Kidd because that was his rank in the Mexican War, where he served as a messenger. That is appropriate since his true love is bringing news to others. He worked on newspapers, he owned newspapers, he edited newspapers and now he is out of the newspaper business completely due to post-Civil War Reconstruction rules.  Kidd can't stay

THE UNDOCUMENTED AMERICANS (audiobook) by Karla Cornejo Villavicencio

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  Published in 2020 by Random House Audio. Read by the author, Karla Cornejo Villavicencio. Duration: 4 hours, 53 minutes. Unabridged. Villavicencio is a "Dreamer", also known as a DACA kid. DACA is the program started by President Obama to deal with immigrants who came to the United States illegally as children. Generally speaking, the only country they've ever known is the United States and they had no say in immigrating to the United States. Congress refused to deal with this situation so President Obama created a program through executive orders. This meant that when President Trump came to office he was able to undo a lot of this plan with another executive order.  The author Villavicencio's very personal look at the DACA program and the general mess of our immigration policy was inspired by the election of Donald Trump, but it was not what I was hoping for when I started listening to this audiobook. I was really hoping for policy analysis with a healthy bit of p

HARRY POTTER and the DEATHLY HALLOWS (audiobook) by J.K. Rowling

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  Originally published in 2007. Audiobook re-mastered and re-published in 2015 by Pottermore Publishing. Read by Jim Dale. Duration 21 hours, 37 minutes. Unabridged. Ten months ago I started to listen to the Harry Potter books. I had never read them before and only watched the first movie so I came to the party quite late. But, now I have finished the series. What did I think? The series is quite good. There are plenty of great themes and memorable themes throughout. It is well worth the time to read (or listen, like I did). The last book is an up and down affair. It certainly drags in the middle of the book. This was the part I heard my oldest daughter complaining about years ago when she said it was just three people sitting in the middle of a field talking for way too long. I agree. But, the book does bring the series to a satisfying conclusion with plenty of surprises (that I will not reveal).  So, in the interest of not providing any spoilers, I will just say that I rate this book