Archive for September, 2010

Room

Thoughts   Room by Emma Donoghue / Little,Brown and Company ebook download to iPad, 2010, pages 832

Another rambling post since this is reviewed everywhere.    I don’t think I’ve seen any that hated it.   (Except on goodreads.com.)   I read this because it is our October Book Club* Choice.    Knowing I would have to buy it, I decided it was perfect as my official inaugural iPad bookread and I must say that the ebook reading experience is awesome.   I am very pleased.

However, this novel…   This is one of those times that I wonder about how I think about things and how wavering my critical eye is (or is not).    Did hype and overexposure have something to do with it?

I give this book 3 slices of pie.      Before anyone comments ‘sorry this one didn’t work out for you’, just know that 3 stars means that I liked it just fine, but it won’t be a favorite at the end of the year.

I keep writing and erasing and writing and highlighting and deleting all sorts of analysis attempts but it all comes down is that the book was fine, I found it thankfully not gutwrenchingly horrible but fresh in its presentation.   But I didn’t love it.

In fact, I almost gave up on it at one point** when I thought it was going to veer off into disaster and it didn’t quite, so I went ahead and finished it.    The ending was good.

I guess what I liked best is that it wasn’t overly sentimental or pushy.    I’ll shut up now.

I do want to read Slammerkin someday.

OH wait!  I do have one more thing to add.     While reading, I assumed (or maybe it WAS in the book – too lazy to check) that the setting was California – but upon finishing and realizing that Donoghue is not American and doh- the book is up for the Booker so that means non-American or ‘other side of the pond’ or something, right?  so I thought that WELL-DONE that it really could have been set almost anywhere.    Am I assuming right or wrong?   Maybe I should do some research.   nah…

H

H

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* My October Book Club meeting is not until 10/21.    I usually don’t read them this far in advance.

** When they let him go to the mall?! Are you freakin’ kidding me?   Too much.

HIdeinWhitetoSkipLine

Copyright © 2010. Care’s Online Book Club. All rights reserved. This post was originally posted by Care from Care’s Online Book Club.  It should not be reproduced without express written permission.

Neverwhere Audio Experience

Thoughts   Neverwhere by Neil Gaiman, Harper Audio Unabridged 2007 (orig pub’d 1996), 12 1/2 hours on 10 CDs

Genre:   Fantasy
Challenge:  RIP v
Setting:   London, above and below

“Gaiman is, simply put, a treasure-house of story, and we are lucky to have him.”    - Stephen King

I’m going to stray from my typical review template and just ramble.

I bought the audio because I had that 33% coupon from Borders AND a 10% off above and beyond coupon and thought an audio would be the best deal since I’m usually a bit hesitant to spend the higher prices for audios even though I understand that the costs to produce might be more (plus supply and demand and other such economic considerations?) and this was the only choice in the store that I wanted to ‘read’.

Neverwhere is well-loved so I had already had it on my to-be-read list.  The fact that the author was the voice AND was highly recommended as a terrific voice, I knew that would not be disappointing.

I was not disappointed.   I loved it.

I do think the time to load all the disks onto my Mac and then transferring all to my iPad was a bit disappointing.    I was also disappointed that when one disk concluded and sometimes within chapters on the same disk, it would jump to who-knows-where.   Yes, I was very disappointed by this and wonder if it is something I do wrong in setting it up but I haven’t figured that out yet.    Seriously?   Often I would be listening and not even aware what chapter I was on when it would jump to disk 10 and then I would have to HUNT which chapter was supposed to be next.

But the experience of listening – when in the correct order – was wonderful!   Gaiman is an excellent reader/voice for audio!   He does accents well.   It was very easy to know which character was talking.

I carried my iPad around everywhere.   Everywhere.   Upstairs, downstairs, out to get the mail…    and when I found earpieces to listen privately so it wouldn’t bug my husband, I was able to listen in the car when hub drove!    Yippee!

However, before earpieces (they have a name but my brain won’t retrieve it;   earBUDS?) I was sad that the volume on the iPad was not sufficiently loud enough to listen while driving.   Big bummer.   I realize I could spend another $50+ to get some kind of device that will plug into my car and allow the car’s stereo system to blast it, but I hate to spend money on such stuff.

The story of Neverwhere is fun and enthralling.    I was rooting for Richard Mayhew from the get-go.    Of course, I realized he was going to be just fine.  I’m pretty sure it was the standard story of ‘regular nice guy gets himself thrust into an adventure of magic and other worlds and REAL DANGER and only wants his boring life back and when he gets it, wishes for the exciting crazy life of adventure again’ etc and then some, but it was still very fun.

Someone somewhere said that a good book is enhanced by a terrific narrator and I agree.    Now that I’m days away from listening, I can’t recall all that much of why I liked it so much – thus the 4 pie slice rating – but I would definitely sign up to listen to Gaiman read me another book any day.

I  just need to get better at the technology of listening to an audio book so the experience wasn’t so disruptive.

MORE AUDIO REVIEWS:   OK, I just typed that and went to Fyrefly’s book blog search, entered ‘Neverwhere Audio’ and didn’t get any specific reviews of this particular book.  I found a lot of Graveyard Book and one for Neverwhere and Beyond – which is news to me that there is a sequel, so I’ll just invite anyone to comment with links if they reviewed it.     For a terrific review of the actual book, click this link to Nymeth’s from 2007 which I’m sure was the catalyst for me to figure out who and what this Neil Gaiman dude was all about…

And then when I found out that this is a mini-series?     AND available on Netflix instant-play!?!   Just might watch it tonight…  :)

HIdeinWhitetoSkipLine

Copyright © 2010. Care’s Online Book Club. All rights reserved. This post was originally posted by Care from Care’s Online Book Club.  It should not be reproduced without express written permission.

The Maltese Falcon and Woman in the Dark

Thoughts   The Maltese Falcon by Dashiell Hammett, Vintage Crime/Black Lizard Vintage Books, div of Random House 1992 (orig pub’d 1929), 217 pages

MOTIVATION for READING:    for R.I.P. V!   and for Book to Movie Challenge.  And my husband also read The Maltese Falcon; he doesn’t read many books so we are both now looking forward to watching the flick.

FIRST SENTENCE: “Samuel Spade’s jaw was long and bony, his chin a jutting v under the more flexible v of his mouth.”

WHAT’s it ABOUT:    Our Sam Spade, Private Investigator, comes to work one day to find a beautiful woman in his office who wants to hire him.   Trouble, trouble, trouble.    He has to avoid getting arrested (and getting beat up – a lot) while trying to track down the source of the trouble, the lost artifact called The Maltese Falcon.

WHAT’s COOL:   Mr. Hammett writes in an extremely descriptive style with lots and lots of colors.   It really stands out how many times he mentions ‘her jade-colored dress’, ‘her green dress’, ‘the flash of emerald’, etc and then some.     The pace of the action picks up as the story lines unfold – it’s a fun ride.    The dialogue is quite good and I can see that this might have been quite easy to adapt to the big screen.

RATING:    Four slices of pie.

____________________________________________________________

Thoughts   Woman in the Dark by Dashiell Hammett, Thorndike Press Large Print 1990 (orig pub’d 1933) Introduction 1988 Robert B. Parker, 128 pages

MOTIVATION for READING:   More Hammett!    Found this at the Home for the Aged where I volunteer.

FIRST SENTENCE:  ”Her right ankle turned under her and she fell.”

WHAT’s it ABOUT:   Late one stormy night, a foreign woman escaping her husband?  benefactor?  sugar daddy?    (It’s unclear) happens to knock on the door of a man recently out of prison.  He agrees to help rescue her but it’s all just ‘trouble, trouble, trouble.’   It’s somewhat of a love story, believe it or not.  (I’m not altogether sure about this, either.)

WHAT’s COOL:    Parker’s Intro is a great segue from The Maltese Falcon to this short story.    He describes common threads to all the ‘tough guys’ Hammett uses for his protagonists and he explains how this story was a departure in theme, thus the ‘love story’ component explained.    I would assume if you are a fan of Hammett, this story WITH the Introduction is a must.

But I didn’t like the story.    It didn’t have the frantic “Oh no!  What’s going to happen next?”  suspenseful tension.   And come on, women should not fall in love with the tough guy when he forcibly kisses them.    It’s definitely a book that lacks respect for women; I don’t care what time period it is set in.

RATING:  Two slices of pie.

WORDS:   p.144 of TMF – lathy … = lathlike; long and thin. [I could not, however, find 'lathlike' in the dictionary.]

151 of TMF – swart …  =  swarthy or of dark complexion.

******  Both of these books are available in BookMooch.com ******

HIdeinWhitetoSkipLine

Copyright © 2010. Care’s Online Book Club. All rights reserved. This post was originally posted by Care from Care’s Online Book Club.  It should not be reproduced without express written permission.

Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close

Thoughts   Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close by Jonathan Safran Foer, Houghton Mifflin Company 2005 ISBN 0-618-32970-6, 354 pages

MOTIVATION for READING:   I have been wanting to read this for a long time.    The first attempt was a few years ago on a glorious day in early spring;  the weather did not fit the book so I had to abandon.   A second attempt was foiled for some other reason I do not recall but I would guess it was a question of my ability to participate fully.    I needed my book club to choose this so I would be committed to sitting quiet and reading, not allowing any interruptions.    I took it along on a flight from Boston to Omaha = perfect!   The date (weekend of Sept 11) was appropriate, too.

Book discussion is this coming Thursday, Sept 23, directly following mandatory “Bullying Prevention Training” at the High School.

WHAT’s it ABOUT:   A boy named Oskar who lost his father in the Sept 11 2001 attacks on the World Trade Center discovers a key in a vase on a high shelf in his Dad’s closet.    He sets out on a mission to find the corresponding lock.    He grieves, he questions his mother’s grieving process, he invents stuff in his head when he can’t sleep, he makes quirky friends along the way to find the lock that the key fits, and he wonders about love and life and loss.     A corresponding story line that explains the boy’s grandparents’ relationship – or attempts to – is woven through the narrative.     Also, I must add that we get to see the visuals and photos and pictures that correspond to what Oscar thinks about.    One the whole, an extremely creative work of art.

FIRST SENTENCE(s):   “What about a teakettle?  What if the spout opened and closed when the steam came out, so it would beome a mouth, and it could whistle pretty melodies, or do Shakespeare or just crack up with me?   I could invent a teakettle that reads in Dad’s voice, so I could fall asleep, or maybe a  set of kettles that sings the chorus of “Yellow Submarine,” which is a song by the Beatles, who I love, because entomology is one of my raisons d’être, which is a French expression that I know.”

WHAT I LIKED:   I loved the creativity.   I marvel at the creativity of Mr. Foer.

WHAT I did NOT like:    This is not a criticism – it is a notice:    know that this book will require your attention and imagination and involve your heart and mind combined and entangled.   It is involved.   That is all,  carry on.    Oh, and it’s lighter than you might expect but still weighs heavy.    Like earrings that look light and airy but are heavy in your hand when you pick them up and then tug at your earlobes.

More RANDOM thoughts:   On page 33 is a quote that startled me until I realized that I had also written it down the prior two times I had attempted this book.   But I still wonder if this is some great saying of old that I just can’t place:  “The end of suffering does not justify the suffering and so there is no end to suffering.” Obviously, I have never taken a philosophy course.

Symbolism but not disguised symbolism:   heavy boots.

I thought the morse code bracelet that Oskar made for his mother was amazingly brilliant.

I totally enjoyed the discussion and examples of how hard it is to write the word of a color in a pen ink not of that color!   page 63.

I could not figure out how old Oskar was!   I must have missed it early in the book.   I’m not good at guessing ages.

On page 42 is a reference to a museum that has a space on the wall where a stolen painting used to hang.   That museum is most likely to be the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum in Boston.   I recommend it.

On page 69, “It probably gets pretty lonely to be anyone.”

On page 47, “Sometimes you have to put your fears in order.”

On page 165, “Then, out of nowhere, a flock of birds flew by the window, extremely loud and incredibly close.”

For other odd thoughts I don’t want to forget but must warn about spoilers, click here.

Two things I took away from this book:   1)   Cherish your loved ones every day.   2)  Love is a highly active process.

RATING:   Five slices of pie.

Other REVIEWS:   Kim at Sophisticated Dorkiness, Nymeth at Things Mean a Lot, Raych at books I done read,  Fyrefly’s Book Blog Search

Link to 2012 scheduled movie Extremely Loud and Incredibly Loud.

Finally, a photo of my dog Oscar who got hit by a skunk the other day and is now referred to as “Stinky-Face”:

HIdeinWhitetoSkipLine

Copyright © 2010. Care’s Online Book Club. All rights reserved. This post was originally posted by Care from Care’s Online Book Club.  It should not be reproduced without express written permission.

BBAW Book Blogging Future Treasures

What a fun Book Blogger Appreciation Week it has been!   I’ve added only 12 books to my tbr but I was trying to refrain from going too crazy.   I have enjoyed visiting and reconnecting with book bloggers all over the world.

Thank you everyone who has stopped by and encouraged my little book club in my corner of bookblogosphere.    APPLAUSE to Amy and the entire team for the hard work to organize this.    My goals are to continue to have fun, explore literature, keep track of what I read, share my thoughts, and maybe read more poetry.    Here’s CHEERS to a prosperous reading life for everyone.

“There is no surer foundation for a beautiful friendship than a mutual taste in literature.”
HHHHHHH — P.G. Wodehouse

May I update that to say a a ‘mutual interest in and enthusiasm for reading‘!

See some of you at the Boston Book Festival, hopefully ALL of you at Dewey’s Read-A-Thon, Bloggiesta, various read-alongs, in goodreads.com, on Twitter, BEA/BBC? etc...

HIdeinWhitetoSkipLine

Copyright © 2010. Care’s Online Book Club. All rights reserved. This post was originally posted by Care from Care’s Online Book Club.  It should not be reproduced without express written permission.

BBAW: Forgotten Treasures

<– click on the button to go to the BBAW website…

I just scanned through my recent read list and don’t have anything too obscure that no one has ever heard of.   Most are classically known or were recommendations from bloggers so that doesn’t count, right?

So, I thought I would highlight a book that someone recommended to me out in the ‘real world’ and upon hearing more about, was absolutely sure that my circle of book bloggers would have known about.

But, NO!**

By the way, if you don’t use or don’t know about Fyrefly’s Book Blog Search Engine, get thyself over to that pronto and get signed up to be on it!     –>  Fyrefly’s Book Blog Search Engine About Page   <–

When I entered title and author into the awesome couldn’t-live-without Fyrefly’s Book Blog Search Engine, I only found ONE true review and a bunch of lists featuring the author’s name.   So all hail Litlove* for reading this and saying it is wonderful because I really really do want to read it someday:

Lady’s Maid by Margaret Forster

Published in 2007  by Ballantine Books, here’s what the blurb is off my local indie bookstore, Baker’s Books has to say.

In Forster’s historically authentic novel, Elizabeth Wilson, Elizabeth Barrett’s maid and confidante, describes her daily experiences, her impressions of the large household and, especially, her sickly but charismatic mistress’s relationship with Mr. Browning.

Publisher Comments
“Absorbing…Heartbreaking…Forster paints a vivid picture of class, station, hypocrisy and survival in Victorian society….Grips the reader’s imagination on every page.”
– SAN FRANCISCO CHRONICLE
She was Elizabeth Barrett’s lady’s maid. But “Wilson” was more than that. She was a confidante, friend and conspirator in Elizabeth’s forbidden romance with Robert Browning. Wilson stayed with Elizabeth for sixteen years, through every trial and crisis, and when Wilson’s affairs took a dramatic turn she expected the same loyalty from Elizabeth….

I love historical fiction (though you couldn’t really tell that by what I have read lately) and I do love me some Victorian lit and forbidden love and secrecy and hypocrisy and shenanigans…   AND I want to explore  more poetry so why not some poets, too.    What about you?   Have you read this or want to?

HH

HH

* and Litlove is one of my favorite bloggers, too.

**  Only one other friend in goodreads has this on a to-be-read list.   I really expected more.    Maybe because book blogging was just really getting started in 2007?   This just sounds like a bookblogosphere kind of book to me…
HIdeinWhitetoSkipLine

Copyright © 2010. Care’s Online Book Club. All rights reserved. This post was originally posted by Care from Care’s Online Book Club.  It should not be reproduced without express written permission.

Appreciating Book Blogging

Before Book Blogging: I only read between 12 and 30 books per year.
Now: I shoot for 100 books a year but seem to only average about 6 books per month.  Still, I’m quite impressed with myself.

Before Book Blogging:   I never ever ever re-read anything.
Now:   I sign up for challenges like Flashback where I re-read favorite books from years past – some not so distant!  (I read The Book Thief in 2009 and again this year.)

Before Book Blogging: I rarely went out of my way to read more works by a particular author.
Now: I want to get my hands on anything and everything written by Margaret Atwood, Ian McEwen, Jennie Nash, Khaled Hosseini, Jhumpa Lahiri, Neil Gaiman, manymanymanymore.

Before Book Blogging: I had never heard of Neil Gaiman, Nadine Gordimer, Diana Wynn Jones, Beth Kephart, Kazuo Ishiguro, …
Now: I’m glad there are more authors out there than Nicholas Sparks, James Patterson, Dan Brown, Grisham, Picoult.

Before Book Blogging: I would not have recommended Neil Gaiman.
Now: I am amazed when someone doesn’t know who Neil Gaiman is!!

Before Book Blogging:  I never knew what a graphic novel was, now I can say I have even read a few.

Before Book Blogging: I would ask people if they’ve read anything good lately and I had rarely heard of it.
Now: I usually have heard of everything or at least the author and often have already read it myself!

Before Book Blogging: I would enter a bookstore and be overwhelmed by so many book choices.
Now: Still am…  But now I’ve heard of a few of them.    [Or a lot of them:    I get a thrill when I walk around the Borders Buy-One-Get-Half-Off-A-Second table and I can count off, "read it, read it, want-to-read it, read it, read it, bought it, got it, read it, just read it, will read it soon, etcetcblahblahblah.]

Before Book Blogging:   I was sad because I didn’t know who to talk to about books…
Now: I have TOO MANY wonderful bloggers to visit and chat with!!     ;)

HIdeinWhitetoSkipLine

Copyright © 2010. Care’s Online Book Club. All rights reserved. This post was originally posted by Care from Care’s Online Book Club.  It should not be reproduced without express written permission.

Happy Book Blogger Appreciation Week

Happy Book Blogger Appreciation Week!  

A post-prompt for today, Sept 13, first day of BBAW, is as follows:

“We invite you to share with us about a great new book blog you’ve discovered since BBAW last year!  If you are new to BBAW or book blogging, share with us the very first book blog you discovered.  Tell us why this blog rocks your socks off and why you keep going back for more.”

Here’s what I came up with:

I’m excited to say that a few of my new-to-me book bloggers have actually been nominated as best new blog so now EVERYONE is aware of them!

IRIS on Books

Amy Reads (someone I enjoyed meeting at BEA/BBC)

Amused by Books

I actually tried to go through my comments to see the first time I met a few of you that come to mind but that was just TOO time consuming.    So how about I highlight the NEWEST and latest book blogger I’ve found…

Running Shadow isn’t even a month old yet…  Welcome!

Plus, I know I met a LOT of wonderful bloggers at BEA that I didn’t regularly visit and likely still don’t due to being overwhelmed?     but I must shout out to my roomie from that trip to the Book Blogger Convention:

Chocolate & Croissants – books, food, books about food, all good.

and do know that I have hundreds of favorite book bloggers that I am remiss in visiting and worse at commenting;  I bebop around the bookblogosphere randomly and haphazardly at best.      I am in total denial that I have had 1000+ posts to read in Google Reader since July.

Have a great week celebrating BBAW!  See you at October’s Read-A-Thon!??!

HIdeinWhitetoSkipLine

Copyright © 2010. Care’s Online Book Club. All rights reserved. This post was originally posted by Care from Care’s Online Book Club.  It should not be reproduced without express written permission.

The Likeness

Thoughts   The Likeness by Tana French, Penguin Books 2008, 466 pages

MOTIVATION for READING:    I enjoyed French’s debut, In the Woods, and picked this up now precisely because I was hoping for something I could get into fast and not want to put down.   It worked.   [Purchased.]     Counts for R.I.P. V.

FIRST SENTENCE:  Prologue.   Some nights, if I’m sleeping on my own, I still dream about Whitehorn House.

WHAT’s it ABOUT:    I’m going to quote the back of the book blurb:

Six months after a particulary nasty case, Detective Cassie Maddox has transferred out of Dublin’s Murder squad and has no plans to go back.  That is, until an urgent telephone call summons her to a grisly crime scene.

It’s only when she sees the body that Cassie understands the hurry.  The victim, a young woman, is Cassies’s double and carries ID identifying herself as Alexandra Madison, an alias Cassie once used on an undercover job.  Suddenly, Cassie must discover not only who killed this girl but, more importantly, who is this girl?  And as reality and fantasy become desperately tangled, Cassie moves dangerously close to losing herself forever.

RANDOM THOUGHTs:    I was pulled into how introspective Cassie was while also thinking that is was a bit melodramatic.    I both agreed with how the author gradually unfolded the presentation of the housemates of Whitethorn and wondered how they ever found each other.   Questions would pop up in my head and never get resolved, too.    (On the other hand, I think loose ends were tied up more neatly in this than in In the Woods.)   One of the leaders of the group was too perfectly cast; I didn’t trust his characterization and I questioned another’s devotion to him.   This is most definitely a book I would love to discuss and ask, ‘what was up with ____; why and who was he pushing at?’   Much good stuff to discuss if this was a book club book and I don’t necessarily think I would be spoiling to ask, but I won’t.

Per the question of whether or not it is a good idea to read In the Woods before tackling this one?   I would say yes.  In fact, I think the closer you read these two back to back, the better!   Even though they really are unrelated. I had already forgotten what happened exactly to so upset Cassie and why she transferred out of Murder-Squad and was constantly wishing I could quicker find a full recap of that – not that I bothered.   I  was just a bit annoyed with how I never remember how books end;  I only remember if I liked a book or not.

I thought the deep thoughts (on war, economics, society, class status, governments) that were sprinkled here and there were wonderful and/or provoking.   Some samples:

I know that small-town silence.   I’d run into it before, intangible as smoke and solid as stone.  We honed it on the British for centuries and it’s ingrained, the instinct for a place to close up like a fist when the police come knocking.  Sometimes it means nothing more than that;  but it’s a powerful thing, that silence, dark and tricky and lawless.  p.212

Frightened people are obedient – not just physically but intellectually and emotionally.  If your employer tells you to work overtime, and you know that refusing could jeopardize everything you have, then not only do you work the overtime, but you convince yourself that you’re doing it voluntarily, or out of loyalty to the company;  because the alternative is to acknowledge that you are living in terror.   p.337

FINAL THOUGHTS:    I enjoyed reading this and was entranced all the way through despite a few silly nagging little doubts about the characters that could have annoyed me but I suppressed.     French is talented and even if I don’t quite consider her a favorite author, I look forward to reading more from her.   Faithful Place is next.

I was thrilled [THRILLED!!!] that I had read Watership Down earlier this year because it had references to those silly rabbits:

For some reason, the past – any of our pasts – was solidly off-limits.  They were like the creepy rabbits … who won’t answer questions beginning with “Where.”

RATING:    Four slices of pie.

–> Quick LINK to other REVIEWS via Fyrefly’s Book Blog Search <–

WORDS:
p.198  strop – ‘…just as likely to storm out in a strop as to tell you what you wanted to know…’   I could only find this as a form of STROPPY = Easily offended or annoyed; ill-tempered or belligerent. (Chiefly British)

p.202  git – an unpleasant or contemptible person.  (noun, British, informal)

p.308  gavotte – an old French dance in moderately quick quadruple meter.

-

p.308HIdeinWhitetoSkipLine

Copyright © 2010. Care’s Online Book Club. All rights reserved. This post was originally posted by Care from Care’s Online Book Club.  It should not be reproduced without express written permission.

R.I.P. V (oh my!)

I’m in again for R.eaders I.mbibing P.eril!    In fact, I’ve been hoarding books all year that are suitable for a Fall read and want to commit to Peril the First:

The Likeness by Tana French

Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein (yes, I have this cover!   I love it.)

Mary Reilly by Valerie Martin

Wilkie Collins’ The Woman in White

Woman in the Dark by Dashiell Hammett

and, in audio, Neverwhere by Neil Gaiman

H

H

I also have to read Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close for my bookclub and I’m taking it on an upcoming trip so I will be trapped with only this to read.   It willbe my third attempt to get past page 35.     Do you think I can count it for R.I.P.?     Suspense,maybe?

HIdeinWhitetoSkipLine

Copyright © 2010. Care’s Online Book Club. All rights reserved. This post was originally posted by Care from Care’s Online Book Club.  It should not be reproduced without express written permission.

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