Monday 24 December 2018

Bookish Naughty or Nice Tag : Blogmas 2018

 I'm not usually a big fan of book tags, mainly because I can never find the time to answer questions, search for books and post but I  recently saw this tag on Alliee Reads and thought it was a cute way to get to know a little more about each other.

So let's get started...
 

Rules
  • Tag & link the person who tagged you
  • Tag and link me/this post
  • Tick/cross off the ones you’ve done
  • Tag another 10 people!
If you’ve not been tagged, go ahead and do it anyway!

Here’s the list for you to copy and do yourself!

1.Received an ARC and not reviewed it  
✿.。.:* ☆:**:. π’©π’Άπ“Šπ‘”π’½π“‰π“Ž .:**:.☆*.:。.✿
I have so many ARC waiting patiently on my shelf I feel guilty every time I walk past them.
 
2.Have less than 60% feedback rating on Netgalley
✿.。.:* ☆:**:. 𝒩𝒾𝒸𝑒 .:**:.☆*.:。.✿
My feedback is surprisingly at 80%. I went crazy for a while on Netgalley and requested loads of titles but I'm committed to getting through them all in 2019.
 
3.Rated a book on goodreads and promised a full review was to come on your blog (and never did)
✿.。.:* ☆:**:. 𝒩𝒾𝒸𝑒 .:**:.☆*.:。.✿
Always post promised reviews within a week or two of reading and rating.
 
4.Folded down the page of a book
 ✿.。.:* ☆:**:. 𝒩𝒾𝒸𝑒 .:**:.☆*.:。.✿
Nooooo!!! Never!!!!

5.Accidentally spilled on a book
✿.。.:* ☆:**:. π’©π’Άπ“Šπ‘”π’½π“‰π“Ž .:**:.☆*.:。.✿
Maybe the occasional tea or coffee splatter but not an actual spill unless it's my tears spilling over my favourite character having their heart broken or, god forbid, dying.

6.DNF a book this year
 ✿.。.:* ☆:**:. 𝒩𝒾𝒸𝑒 .:**:.☆*.:。.✿
 I can't bring myself to DNF a book even if it's terrible. I'm always hopeful if I read on it will improve.

7.Bought a book purely because it was pretty with no intention of reading it
✿.。.:* ☆:**:. π’©π’Άπ“Šπ‘”π’½π“‰π“Ž .:**:.☆*.:。.✿ 
Yes! Yes! Yes! I love pretty covers and can't resist them.

8.Read whilst you were meant to be doing something else
✿.。.:* ☆:**:. π’©π’Άπ“Šπ‘”π’½π“‰π“Ž .:**:.☆*.:。.✿  
100% of the time whilst I am reading I should be doing something else.

9.Skim read a book
✿.。.:* ☆:**:. 𝒩𝒾𝒸𝑒 .:**:.☆*.:。.✿
I can't skim read. Firstly I wouldn't want to miss something crucial and secondly the author took a long time to write the book, so read whole book! 

10.Completely missed your Goodreads goal
✿.。.:* ☆:**:. 𝒩𝒾𝒸𝑒 .:**:.☆*.:。.✿ 
I have a little trick with my Goodreads goal and it's to keep the goal low and then you never miss attaining your goal. And it's not cheating! Is it?

11.Borrowed a book from the Library and not returned it
✿.。.:* ☆:**:. 𝒩𝒾𝒸𝑒 .:**:.☆*.:。.✿  
I'm not much of a Library user as I like to keep the books and not have a deadline to read them (thus my answer to Question 1) 


12.Broke a book buying ban
✿.。.:* ☆:**:. π’©π’Άπ“Šπ‘”π’½π“‰π“Ž .:**:.☆*.:。.✿   
Haha! What's a book buying ban?

13.Started a review, left it for ages then forgot what the book was about
✿.。.:* ☆:**:. π’©π’Άπ“Šπ‘”π’½π“‰π“Ž .:**:.☆*.:。.✿    
Only occasionally. I try to write reviews when they are fresh in my mind but sometimes that next read is beckoning and the review gets pushed aside.

14.Wrote in a book you were reading
✿.。.:* ☆:**:. 𝒩𝒾𝒸𝑒 .:**:.☆*.:。.✿   
I never write in the books but I do use sticky notes if a sentence stands out that I want to remember later.

15.Finished a book and not added it to your Goodreads
 ✿.。.:* ☆:**:. 𝒩𝒾𝒸𝑒 .:**:.☆*.:。.✿   
Goodreads is the only way I keep track of what I have read so all books are added as soon as I finish them

16.Borrowed a book and not returned it to a friend
 ✿.。.:* ☆:**:. 𝒩𝒾𝒸𝑒 .:**:.☆*.:。.✿    
If I borrow a book I will tell them that they may not get it back for a while but I will always return it....eventually.

17.Dodged someone asking if they can borrow a book
✿.。.:* ☆:**:. π’©π’Άπ“Šπ‘”π’½π“‰π“Ž .:**:.☆*.:。.✿
My books will only be lent out to close friends and family. That is unless I'm happy to never have it returned.

18.Broke the spine of someone else’s book
 ✿.。.:* ☆:**:. 𝒩𝒾𝒸𝑒 .:**:.☆*.:。.✿     
Never! I always take great care when borrowing someone else's book 

19.Took the jacket off a book to protect it and ended up making it more damaged
✿.。.:* ☆:**:. π’©π’Άπ“Šπ‘”π’½π“‰π“Ž .:**:.☆*.:。.✿ 
Taken the jacket off a book and then can't remember the safe place I put it so it wouldn't get damaged.

20.Sat on a book accidentally
 ✿.。.:* ☆:**:. 𝒩𝒾𝒸𝑒 .:**:.☆*.:。.✿      
Haha! No, I have books everywhere but I'm pretty sure I've never sat on one.

8/20 π’©π’Άπ“Šπ‘”π’½π“‰π“Ž  
12/20 𝒩𝒾𝒸𝑒
I'm happy to see I'm a little more Nice than Naughty when it comes to my bookish ways. 
If you would like to join in consider yourself tagged.
The Questions
1.) RECEIVED AN ARC AND NOT REVIEWED IT
2.) HAVE LESS THAN 60% FEEDBACK RATING ON NETGALLEY
3.) RATED A BOOK ON GOODREADS AND PROMISED A FULL REVIEW REVIEW WA STO COME ON YOUR BLOG AND NEVER DID
4.) FOLDED DOWN THE PAGE OF A BOOK
5.) ACCIDENTALLY SPILLED ON A BOOK
6.) DNF’D A BOOK THIS YEAR
7.) BOUGHT A BOOK PURELY BECAUSE IT WAS PRETTY WITH NO INTENTION OF READING IT
8.) READ WHILST YOU WERE MEANT TO BE DOING SOMETHING ELSE (LIKE HOMEWORK)
9.) SKIM READ A BOOK
10.) COMPLETELY MISSED YOUR GOODREADS GOAL
11.) BORROWED A BOOK FROM THE LIBRARY AND NOT RETURNED IT
12.) BROKE A BOOK BUYING BAN
13.) STARTED A REVIEW, LEFT IT FOR AGES, THEN FORGOT WHAT THE BOOK WAS ABOUT
14.) WROTE IN A BOOK YOU WERE READING
15.) FINISHED A BOOK AND NOT ADDED IT TO YOUR GOODREADS
16.) BORROWED A BOOK AND NOT RETURNED IT TO A FRIEND
17.) DODGED SOMEONE ASKING IF THEY CAN BORROW A BOOK
18.) BROKE THE SPINE OF SOMEONE ELSE’S BOOK
19.) TOOK THE JACKET OFF A BOOK AND ENDED UP MAKING IT MORE DAMAGED
20.) SAT ON A BOOK ACCIDENTALLY 

* This post is part of Jo Linsdell's Link it up Thursday

Wednesday 19 December 2018

Storybook Corner Book Review: Animalphabet (Children's Picture Book)


Animalphabet
by Julia Donaldson
illustrated by Sharon King-Chai 


Publisher: Pan Macmillan Australia
Imprint: Two Hoots
Publication date: 30th October 2018
Pages: 32
RRP: $24.99
Format Read: Hardcover
Source: courtesy of the publisher




A splendidly die-cut alphabet of animals from Number 1 bestselling author of The Gruffalo, Julia Donaldson, and visionary illustrator Sharon King-Chai.
Each cleverly cut flap draws you further into a beautifully vibrant world of huge elephants, slithery snakes and growling tigers. Sharon King-Chai's bold colours and shapes make Animalphabet a rich delight for children of all ages while Julia Donaldson's rhythmic text is a pleasure to read aloud. The cleverly written, simple text invites children to compare one animal to another, and clever hints and peep-through holes within the artwork make this a hugely entertaining guessing game as well as a gorgeous book to treasure.
The perfect gift for boys and girls alike who will love embarking on a journey of discovery through the natural world, from one animal to another.



From the best selling author of The Gruffalo and The Guffalo's child.
This beautiful hardcover picture book tempts you right from the first look. The cover has a gorgeous illustration of two elephants in a forest, embellished with foil and cut-outs it’s a book that screams to be picked up.

Each page features an animal of the alphabet, bright splashes of colour, peep through cut-outs giving hints of what’s to come and flaps to lift and peek under. As each animal is introduced we are given a hint by way of a question as to what the next animal will be. B is a butterfly then the question is; Who has more legs than a butterfly?



Dot loved this book and her favourite part was guessing what animal came next. We have read this together many times and she is enjoying the accomplishment of getting more and more animals correct.

Ditto loves flaps and was more interested in seeing what is behind each flap than the related text but this is a book that will grow with the child and can be read and enjoyed over the years to come.

King-Chai’s illustrations are enchanting with great splashes of colour with the scenes perfectly matching the animals depicted with forest scenes, water scenes and desert scenes. A feast for the eyes!!

Animalphabet is a beautiful picture book that would make a treasured gift for any preschool child.

My Rating   5/5      🌟🌟🌟🌟🌟

 
photo courtesy of Goodreads
Julia Donaldson is the outrageously talented prize-winning author of some of the world's best-loved children's books, including modern classics The Gruffalo and The Gruffalo's Child, which together have sold over 17 million copies worldwide, and the hugely successful What the Ladybird Heard adventures. Julia also writes fiction, including the Princess Mirror-Belle books illustrated by Lydia Monks, as well as poems, plays and songs - and her brilliant live shows are always in demand. Sharon King-Chai is an enormously talented designer and illustrator. Having grown up in Australia, she moved to London in 2003 and since then has brought her style and eye for beautiful design to album covers, book covers, stationery and her books Lucy Ladybird, Snail Mail and Animalphabet.


                                                      About the Illustrator 


Sharon King-Chai is an enormously talented designer and illustrator. 
Having grown up in Australia, she moved to London in 2003 and since then has brought her style and eye for beautiful design to album artwork, book covers, stationery and her own books Lucy Ladybird, Snail Mail and Animalphabet, a collaboration with Julia Donaldson. Sharon has a passion for innovation, and her artwork and clever use of paper cutting encourage the reader to think differently about the pages they hold in their hands.


                                       



Thursday 13 December 2018

Book Review: Long Road to Mercy by David Baldacci

                                                 Long Road to Mercy
                                                by
                                          David Baldacci



Publisher: Pan Macmillan Aus
Publication Date: 30th October 2018 
RRP: $29.99
Pages: 404
Format Read: Trade Paperback
Source: Courtesy of the publisher




Her name is Atlee Pine, the latest creation from bestselling author David Baldacci. She has unstoppable tenacity, always a fighter who is unwilling to cede any ground. She has endured real nightmares and she has the emotional and physical scars to show for it. And she got that long before she became an adult.

She is a FBI Special Agent assigned to the wilds of the western US. She has to cover, often solo, vast tracts of area: Wyoming, Montana, Idaho, Colorado, Arizona. Small towns, impossibly long distances in-between, isolation like most on the East Coast have never experienced, and an environment where anything can and does happen.

Working with the locals who respect, and also sometimes fear her, and have never really been allowed to know her, Atlee Pine turns her vast investigative skills and unmatched drive to find out the truth. Along the way she will revisit painful memories of her own, come to grips with what she is and what she might one day aspire to be. But in the end, she will have to confront not only a new monster, but also the old one of her nightmares.



Long Road to Mercy is the first in a new series by accomplished author David Baldacci. This book is the introduction of FBI Special Agent Atlee Pine. Atlee’s character is well developed in this first instalment and we learn what makes her tick, her motivations and her past.


Atlee is strong mentally as well as physically although she does have her weak spots, one being her twin sister, Mercy, who was kidnapped and presumed murdered when they were 6 years old. This early loss caused a major upheaval in her life and so began a cycle of relationship non-commitment.

I liked that Atlee was tall and solidly built. Almost making Olympic status in weight lifting her character comes across as real and believable when she has to kick major butt. She can match it with the best of them.

Atlee is called in to investigate the murder of a mule in the Grand Canyon and the disappearance of its rider. As she starts to ask questions she notices that people high up the chain are taking an interest in this case. After delving a little too far Atlee is taken off the case. Atlee and her secretary, Carol Blum (who by the way I loved, a no nonsense woman in her sixties, she is intelligent and feisty) decide to go rogue.

What starts as an animal murder and a missing person case soon escalates to a plot of political espionage involving North Korea, Russia and the US Government. Given the present political climate in America the plot is both relevant and intriguing.

You may have to suspend belief at times but overall the plot was compelling and the characters well fleshed out and believable.
The backdrop of the beautiful and mystifying Grand Canyon was an added bonus for this armchair traveller.

There is a tiny, sweet romance budding at the end of the story and I hope Baldacci continues with this in the next book.

FBI Special Agent Atlee Pine you have a new admirer here. 

Content: Very minimal coarse language
                 No sex scenes
                 
My Rating  4/5      🌟🌟🌟🌟 

photo courtesy of Pan Macmillan
 David Baldacci is one of the world's bestselling and favourite thriller writers. With over 130 million copies in print, his books are published in over 80 territories and 45 languages, and have been adapted for both feature-film and television.

He has established links to government sources, giving his books added authenticity. David is also the co-founder, along with his wife, of the Wish You Well Foundation®, a non-profit organization dedicated to supporting literacy efforts across the US.

David and his family live in Virginia. 








Sunday 2 December 2018

Book Review: James Clyde and the Tomb of Salvation by Colm McElwain

                          James Clyde and the Tomb of Salvation
 by
 Colm McElwain 
  
 

Publisher: Self Published
Publication date: 1st November 2018
Series: James Clyde Book #2
Pages: 352
Format Read: Paperback
Source: Copy courtesy of the author

 

Picking up shortly after the events of the first adventure, James Clyde returns with his best friends Ben and Mary Forester to his grandfather’s house in search of a map that will lead them to the Tomb of Salvation – an ancient shrine, where the three diamonds of Orchestra must be returned with the promise of immortality.

James and his company of adventurers journey through treacherous lands fraught with danger and meet many obstacles along the way – dangerous assassins on board a train, the dastardly Gilbert, also known as the ‘man in black’, and even an unlikely encounter with a fabled lake monster.

If they reach the Tomb of Salvation, James knows they will then face their greatest threat, for the tomb is said to be home to a terrifying demon – an entity that has shown no mercy to anyone who has ever entered its lair.

 
James Clyde and the Tomb of Salvation is the second book in the James Clyde series and follows straight on from book one, James Clyde and the Diamonds of Orchestra. You really need to read the first book in the series to get the most from this story.

James and his group of friends must reach the Tomb of Salvation before the evil Queen Abigail. The first to drink from the cup of salvation will receive ultimate power and everlasting life.
In the first book we learn that James has the power to fly and Mary has the power to heal but we are left in the dark as to Ben’s power. In this book we find out Ben’s talent bestowed on him by the diamond. The story is told in both James and Abigail’s POV.
The writing is uncomplicated and the short chapters are perfectly suited to children aged 7 – 11 years. There is lots of light-hearted banter and enough danger and adventure to keep readers turning the pages.

The kids, in the story, act like kids; they laugh a lot, make silly jokes, get scared at times but always venture on. They treat the whole thing like a big adventure, relishing time away from the adults. The adults, unsuccessfully, try to rein the kids in and tell them what to do but generally know that they are capable.

McElwain includes themes of working together, problem solving and decision making culminating in the ultimate question; is power more important than friendship?

The second novel in the James Clyde series will lead you on an action-packed adventure full of mystery, suspense, danger, hope – and, yes, salvation.

I highly recommend this series to Middle Grade readers.


My Rating    4.5/5                   🌟🌟🌟🌟.5 

watch the trailer here: https://youtu.be/7V_x8JLJRT0
 
 
photo courtesy of Goodreads




Colm was raised and educated in Monaghan, Ireland. He is a Physical Education and Business teacher and likes reading books, watching films and playing sport.                                                      He has always loved storytelling, whether through literature or film. James Clyde and the Diamonds of Orchestra is his first novel and brings a very fulfilling creative experience spanning a number of years to an end.