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July 24
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Andrea
gave
   
to:
Those Who Save Us (Paperback)
by Jenna Blum
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my rating:
   
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recommended for: People interested in the social history of WWII and the holocaust
Andrea said:
"A great book - one of the best books that I have read in a while! It's a fascinating story (I found I couldn't put it down), a sad story, a heroic story of surviving in WWII Germany as a civilian although a bit unbelievable. Still, it was a story t...more
A great book - one of the best books that I have read in a while! It's a fascinating story (I found I couldn't put it down), a sad story, a heroic story of surviving in WWII Germany as a civilian although a bit unbelievable. Still, it was a story that I wanted to believe in and I'm sure there are untold stories out there that may never be told.
Blum does a good job of portraying life for German civilians while still being incredibly aware and sympathetic to the treatment of Jews in Germany and of the holocaust, especially in her development of the one of the main characters, Anna. I was incredibly drawn to Anna and felt for her and all that she had to go through. I thought several times - what else could she do? What would I have done? However, the plot was advanced through this empathy and I do wonder how true to life the character of Anna was.
The book flip-flops back and forth between war era German in Weimar and the present day in the U.S. It chronicles Anna's fight to survive during the war and her daughter Trudy's fight in the present to understand Anna's role as she refuses to discuss anything that happened to her. After finding a portrait of her mother, herself, and an S.S. officer as a girl Trudy grows up thinking that her birth father was the S.S. soldier. When she grew up she became a professor of German history and started a German remembrance project to record oral histories of Germans who survived the war. (As a side note, the funding was pulled from a grant a co-worker received to record interviews of Holocaust survivors. Pretty generous if you ask me and a part of the book that made me angry. She should have gone out and found her own funding!!!!!)
Through the interviews she's confronted with a wide variety of attitudes and starts remembering bits about her life in Weimar with the S.S. officer. What she did not know was that her mother fell in love with a Jewish doctor (despite her father's incredible anti-semitism) and hid him in her house in the attic. Her father turned him in the the S.S. and she was with his child. She ran away to a local bakery - the baker was active in the resistance movement (as was her doctor) and she stayed there learned the trade. They supplied bread to the officers at Buchenwald and used the opportunity to deliver bread to the prisoners and taking out messages and sometimes film. When the baker is caught and executed, Anna has no choice but to become the lover of an S.S. officer - the one whose picture her daughter found.
Everyone assumed the worst - including the American soldier husband Anna ended up marrying. But through the German remembrance project Anna discovers the truth. Even when confronted Anna doesn't admit the truth, but the process of healing for mother and daughter (and in the process a better relationship) started.
While there were many hearth breaking parts to this story, the one that really hit hard was when Anna first came to American with Trudy and her new husband and was learning English. They all went to the Christmas Eve service and all of the women of the church shunned her. (After all those years of hating Germans, it doesn't die that quickly....or at all...which is so sad to me!) She made a German pastry for the potluck dinner and by the time they left at the end it was untouched - all her hard work and care for nothing b/c it was German and because it was from her. So sad!
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Andrea
gave
   
to:
The Map of Love: A Novel (Paperback)
by Ahdaf Soueif
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my rating:
   
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Andrea said:
"Well - I'm not sure I can classify this one as "read" since I finally gave up on it! The reviews that say it's a bit slow - more than a bit for me! I've been trying to read it for months and keep picking it up and putting it down. When I...more
Well - I'm not sure I can classify this one as "read" since I finally gave up on it! The reviews that say it's a bit slow - more than a bit for me! I've been trying to read it for months and keep picking it up and putting it down. When I wasn't successful after my very last try (when I was stuck with my in-laws and wanted to do nothing BUT read a good book) I decided to give up on finishing. ...less
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Andrea
read and liked
Krysten's
review of The Nature of Monsters:
"The exact words that came out of my mouth after reading this were “Well, that was a waste” as I put the book down, dismayed at what it was I just read. Believe me, the description on the back cover was a much better read then the actual book itse...more
The exact words that came out of my mouth after reading this were “Well, that was a waste” as I put the book down, dismayed at what it was I just read. Believe me, the description on the back cover was a much better read then the actual book itself. It seemed at first that this could be an interesting concept, something intriguing. A young girl finds herself pregnant and later forced under the subjugation of a mad scientist during 18th century England. What’s not to like, right? Well, from the moment I read the first chapter and was faced with an absolutely unnecessary smut scene, I was tempted to just stop right there. It seemed that had unwittingly picked up one of those trashy romance novels. After that interesting beginning, it seemed to drag on and on. Yet, with a change of heart, I figured that some books simply start out slow; it had to get better right? Wrong. Not only did I find the book poorly written but NONE of the characters were at all engaging, in fact the secondary characters I found pointless and there was no effort with character development, and the plot itself was completely mind-numbing. The horrible scheme of the evil apothecary that began to unravel was plain absurd, laughable even. I couldn’t even truly hate any of the antagonists of the novel because none of them were compelling enough to feel anything towards. It’s never a good sign when I’m overcome with sheer indifference with character deaths, triumphs, and adversities. I can not recommend this book to anyone; I did get an ounce of pleasure when reading this book. It was utterly disappointing, and one should certainly stay clear of Nature of Monsters....less
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July 22
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Andrea
gave
   
to:
Mistress of the Art of Death (Hardcover)
by Ariana Franklin
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my rating:
   
Added to my books!
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Andrea said:
This review has been hidden because it contains spoilers. To view it, click here.
"Another historical mystery from Ariana Franklin (although much different from City of Shadows). Mistress of the Art of Death takes place mostly in medieval England (1100s) when the King of England asks the King of Sicily to send his best doctors (in...more
Another historical mystery from Ariana Franklin (although much different from City of Shadows). Mistress of the Art of Death takes place mostly in medieval England (1100s) when the King of England asks the King of Sicily to send his best doctors (including the best Doctor of Death) to help solve the murders of children in Canterbury. The King has been in conflict with the church (who wants to expel the Jews who are being blamed for the murders as ritual killings) It gets worse when one of the children's bodies is found on the lawn of the most prominent lender in town. He doesn't want them expelled because of the revenue they bring him so he wants to clear them of these killings.
A group from Italy comes including a female doctor named Adelia (who is very suspicious to the people of England), a Moor, and a Jewish man. Together they have a cover story and begin investigating the crime. They form a team of some key players from England (including a tax collector who is also a private investigator of the king) and discover that the culprit was a Crusader.
Although the Jews are walled in the castle, the killings continue and it's unclear why children keep going with - and trusting - the killer. When one of Adelia's core group from Italy is killed when he discovers the identity of the killer, it becomes personal. She takes over the investigation (despite the fact that being a woman held her back.) She finds the killer when the boy she hired to help goes missing. She tracks down the killer's lair (thanks to evidence she found on the body) and discovers that they were killed in tandem by the local lord and a local nun. (The nun lured the children away.)
The lord was killed by townspeople at the scene of the crime but the nun was taken away and Adelia was arrested. The king came to her aid and freed her of her accusations, but he had no power to prosecute the nun - only the church. They took matters into their own hands and walled her alive in the convent.
While this was going on Adelia also found love with the tax collector but refused to marry him because she wanted to keep her freedom. (This was my least favorite part of the book).
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Andrea
gave
   
to:
The Little Lady Agency (Paperback)
by Hester Browne
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my rating:
   
Added to my books!
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Andrea said:
"When Melissa is fired from a job she loves, she goes to work for her favorite teacher who taught economics. After all, Melissa is a throw-back to a different era with her manners, etiquette, and wardrobe. She soon finds that her teachers is running...more
When Melissa is fired from a job she loves, she goes to work for her favorite teacher who taught economics. After all, Melissa is a throw-back to a different era with her manners, etiquette, and wardrobe. She soon finds that her teachers is running a prostitution ring and is heartbroken. However, she decides to start her own agency to help me with their every day needs (not those) - shopping, picking out clothing, make-overs, pretending to be girlfriend to get mom off your back, etc. She invents an alternative persona and suddenly becomes a more outgoing, confident, sexy person (but only in that persona). When she's hired by an American new to London (who also happens to now be in charge of the company she was fired from) she quickly becomes in charge of his life - playing hostess, organizing parties, attending events. And, of course, ends up falling in love. It all ends happily ever after...I think. Who knows - there are more books after this one....less
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July 08
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Andrea
gave
   
to:
The Outlaw Demon Wails (Rachel Morgan/The Hollows, Book 6)
by Kim Harrison
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my rating:
   
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July 05
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Andrea
marked as to-read:
Dream When You're Feeling Blue: A Novel (Hardcover)
by Elizabeth Berg
bookshelves:
to-read
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my rating:
   
Added to my books!
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Andrea
gave
   
to:
A Hopeless Romantic (Paperback)
by Harriet Evans
bookshelves:
to-read
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my rating:
   
Added to my books!
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Andrea said:
"The title says it all - if you believe in love stories this is the book for you. A great chick lit read (sometimes you are just in the mood!) Just a fun (non-smutty) romantic read!
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July 04
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Andrea
gave
   
to:
Remember Me? (Hardcover)
by Sophie Kinsella
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my rating:
   
Added to my books!
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Andrea said:
"If you watch the TV show Samantha Who? this book is going to seem very familiar! It's the same concept - successful business woman wakes up and doesn't remember her life beyond 2004. (It's now 2007.) She doesn't know that she's married, that she's...more
If you watch the TV show Samantha Who? this book is going to seem very familiar! It's the same concept - successful business woman wakes up and doesn't remember her life beyond 2004. (It's now 2007.) She doesn't know that she's married, that she's a demanding boss, that her friends are no longer her friends, that she's been having an affair....that she's unhappy. Of course, in the end it all works out for the best with a few bumps and heartaches along the way....less
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July 03
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Andrea
gave
   
to:
A Version of the Truth (Hardcover)
by Jennifer Kaufman, Karen Mack
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my rating:
   
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Andrea said:
"The main character Cassie has problems in school. She failed several grades, ended up dropping out and getting her GED, and never went to college. She has a knack with (and love for) animals. When she decides to lie on a job application at for a d...more
The main character Cassie has problems in school. She failed several grades, ended up dropping out and getting her GED, and never went to college. She has a knack with (and love for) animals. When she decides to lie on a job application at for a desk job at a university on a whim, she realizes that she has the opportunity to transform her life. A quick read that is part inspirational, part love story, and part real life. ...less
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