Sunday, April 30, 2017

Ex Libris: Stories of Librarians, Libraries, and Lore Review

Ex Libris: Stories of Librarians, Libraries, and Lore edited by Paula Guran- Read April 24-26

Rating: 📚📚📚

33163204Having worked in a library myself and also having a great interest in libraries, I wanted to give this book a shot. I am pleased to say that I did enjoy most of these stories and some of them I loved. This was an interesting collection of short stories about the topics mentioned above. I really enjoyed two of the stories a lot:  "In the House of Seven Librarians" by Ellen Klages, and  "Paper Cuts Scissors" by Holly Black. Holly Black is one of my favorite writers and her story was interesting to me. I have always loved the idea of being able to go into stories. It is reminiscent of Inkheart by Cornelia Funke in this aspect and I really enjoyed it for that. Ellen Klages story is about a little girl who is raised by seven librarians and the different ways they decide to raise her. It is a great story that I could not get enough of.

I am not a person that reads many short stories. In college, I read many of them in all of my Literature classes and I quite enjoyed them but in my free time I never really picked them up too much. As soon as I saw this book I wanted to pick it up because I thought stories about Librarians, Libraries and the Lore surrounding each would be something I would enjoy. I would recommend this collection of short stories because to those that enjoy libraries for any number of reasons. It is a good collection and I'm sure that you will find at least one story that you will enjoy within its contents. I'm glad that I took the time to read it and I know that some of them I will read over again. In the future, I plan on picking up some of Paula Guran's other collections up.

I was given a copy of this collection for free for an honest review. 


Time Travel, Gods, Fairies, and Benjamin Franklin: Three Book Reviews

Time Stoppers: Quest for the Golden Arrow by Carrie Jones - Read April 25-27th 

Rating: ðŸ“šðŸ“šðŸ“š

This is a sequel to the book Time Stoppers by Carrie Jones.

31451182I was interested in this book when I had first seen the cover and also the title. I love time travel books and thought that this would be an interesting Middle Grade read. This series so far is about a girl named Annie who is a Time Stopper. She is one of the last humans in existence that is able to control time. She is now living in a new home in the town of Aurora. There are many mystical and magical creatures that she lives with such as Eva a dwarf, Bloom an elf, and Jamie who may be a troll. They are all living with their guardian Miss Cornelia. She is another one of the Time Stoppers. In this novel, Miss Cornelia goes missing and Annie and her friends go on a mission to find her.

It took me a while to get into this novel once I started it through the idea of how the magic worked was something that kept me wanting to read.


I was given a copy of this book for an honest review. 

Tim Baker and the Ancient Curse (Gormless Gods and Hapless Heroes)- Read April 27th   

Rating: 📚📚📚📚

34089821After breaking his mother's ancient Greek vase, Hercules comes out and starts to cause troubles in Tim's life. Tim is a middle school age boy who tries to help out around the house as his mother has to work two jobs. When he breaks the vase he does not realize that the man that comes out is a Greek demigod. He believes that the man is a genie. Throughout the story, Tim and Hercules become close as they try to teach Hercules how to act in our world and to also get back to his family.

This was a cute story with great little illustrations. It made me keep smiling with the references to Greek Mythology and just Hercules' personality. Each of the characters: Tim, Hercules, and Tim's Mom, are likable characters that are also relatable.  I love Greek Mythology and I believe that this would be a great introduction to it for younger readers. There are enough funny and touching scenes that will keep them interested though I wanted to know if they would get Hercules home also. This is the first book in a series and I would recommend picking this up for your little ones.
 A good addition to a good month of reading for me.

I was given a free copy of this book for an honest review.  




Benjamin Franklin: You've Got Mail by Adam Mansbach and Alan Zwiebel- Read April 27-28th

Rating: ðŸ“šðŸ“šðŸ“šðŸ“š

31934476I  liked this book from the beginning until the end. Again this is another sequel to a book. The first book is called Benjamin Franklin: Huge Pain in my.... At the beginning of this book, our main character lets the reader know what happened in the last book. I will say that I have never read the first book but was told that this would be fine to just read this book. One of the aspects of this book that I really did like was the relationship between Ike and Ben. They both cared for each other and had to get used to working together so they could save their country. It was interesting to see the dynamic between them as Ike learned about the past and how he should act around people.

The story is about a thirteen-year-old boy named Ike who has been writing letters back and forth with Benjamin Franklin. He causes problems for Ben when he sends a present-day map back to the 1770s and peanut butter. After the map gets stuck onto the Declaration of Independence and gets sent to the British, Ben becomes a disgrace to the country and starts to have a lot of problems. Ike makes it his mission in this book to mail himself back to the 1770s so he can help Ben. Over the course of the story, Ben and Ike have to work together to try and fix the past so the future will not be wrecked. 

The humor was childish at times but then again this is meant for middle-grade students. I cannot be too hard on the book because really this did not take away from the story too much. I am interested in seeing what happens in the next book which I believe may happen because there is a hint of it at the end of the book. I'm glad that I got the opportunity to read this book about time travel and about the Revolutionary War. It was a fascinating look at this time period from the view of a young teenager who really just wants to help his friend. I would recommend reading this story, especially for readers that like Middle-Grade stories. 


I received a review copy of this book for an honest review. 






Wednesday, April 26, 2017

April Wrap-up: Classics Month Part 1


In the month of April I completed one of my first reading challenges that I had given myself, to read five classics during the month. I decided to read Moby Dick by Herman Melville, The Wonderful Wizard of Oz by L. Frank Baum, The Inferno by Dante Alighieri, Winnie the Pooh by A. A. Milne and The Picture of Dorian Gray by Oscar Wilde. I had read The Inferno and Winnie the Pooh previously and I wanted to read mostly classics that I had never read before. In May I will also be reading classics.

Moby Dick by Herman Melville- Read April 3rd- 25th
Rating: ðŸ“šðŸ“šðŸ“š

"I know not all that may be coming, but be it what it will, I'll go to it laughing." 

I had a hard time trying to figure out a rating for this novel when I had finished it. The overall story was interesting when the narrator, Ishmael, stuck to the actual plot. There were plenty of instances though that he would either get off track or would go into long flowery descriptions of whales that would last for a number of chapters. These described the use of blubber, how to dissect a whale, and many other descriptions of the anatomy of whales. 

The overall story focuses on a man named Ishmael who is telling his story of a whaling expedition that he was going on. What Ishmael does not know is that his captain's, Ahab, actual reason for wanting to go whaling. He wants to take revenge for the loss of his leg to the "Great White Whale." Ahab's obsession leads them on this voyage to go after the whale in a mission "to kill the beast." It is the story that many people know. I wish that Melville would have stayed on the actual plot more and I believe that it would have been so much better. That is my opinion though and I can see why this has become a classic but I did not like it as much as I wanted to. 

The Wonderful Wizard of Oz by L. Frank Baum- Read April 8-9th
Rating: ðŸ“šðŸ“šðŸ“šðŸ“š

"Pay no attention to the man behind the curtain." 

17465833Before I read this novel I had only known the story from the 1939 movie and the many television shows I have seen based off of the novel. The story is similar to the movie. A little girl named Dorothy is swept up in a tornado because she is not able to get out of the house in time. She lands in the house on a witch in Land of Oz. There she finds out from the Witch of the North (one of the differences between the movie and the novel) that she should go to the Wizard of Oz and he may help her get home. On the way to the Wizard she meets three characters: the Scarecrow, The Tinman, and the Cowardly Lion. Each has a reason to go and meet Oz. 

One of the differences that I was surprised about was the Wicked Witch of the West, who was one of my favorite characters in the movie. She is not in the novel that much and really is in the novel as comedic device. I did think that the witch was funny but this is one of the reasons that I did not love the novel. The Wicked Witch of the West has become one of the biggest and most known villains of time and I kind of wish that she had more of story in the novel. I loved her in the movie but I only liked her in the book. 

This novel was one that I have been wanting to read for a long time and I am glad that I read it. If you like the movie, I believe that you will enjoy the novel. It is interesting and a great piece of children's literature.  



The Inferno by Dante Alighieri- Read April 13th-18th 
Rating: ðŸ“šðŸ“šðŸ“šðŸ“šðŸ“š

"Abandon all hope ye who enter." 

6553280This was the third time that I read The Inferno. I was first introduced to Dante's work in my senior year AP English class. I will always remember a classmate asking my teacher at the time why we were reading a book about Hell. He said that The Inferno was the most interesting out of Dante's Divine Comedy. It's ironic that the epic about Hell is considered by many as one of the most interesting. I cannot say anything to this because I have never read Purgatorio (Purgatory) or Paradiso (Heaven). I can say though that The Inferno is a carefully laid out piece that I enjoy wholeheartedly. 

Dante's Divine Comedy tells the tale of Dante's journey towards God and away from sin. The Inferno starts shortly before Good Friday and continues on until the morning of Easter Sunday. Dante is the narrator of the epic poem and it shows his trek throughout Hell with his guide Virgil (one of the most famous poets from Ancient Rome). He is being led away from sin by learning of the other sinners and of their punishments. Each of the punishments that Dante gave to the sinners in Hell are symbolic of the sins that they have committed on Earth. Dante divides it into nine Circles each getting worse as they go down. The first circle being the least and the ninth being the worst. 

He lays out his own idea of what he believes The Inferno would look like based on Catholic beliefs. Dante is believed to have invented the poetic form that he wrote in: terza rima. This is made up of stanzas with three lines each. The first and third lines in each of the stanzas rhyme while the second does not. The second line then will rhyme with the first and third line of the stanza after it. This type of rhyme scheme is meant to continue on throughout the whole poem until the end where the poet usually will end on a one line stanza to end the rhyme. Many of the English translations of The Inferno use this poetic form but many do not. I read a translation with the rhyme scheme. Being a poet myself I admire someone that can use a rhyme scheme like this and make it work well. The idea of three also goes along well with the other ideas of three throughout the epic: father, son, and the Holy Ghost; Hell, Purgatory, and Heaven; and the groupings of sin Incontinence, Violence, and Fraud represented by the three beasts at the beginning. Dante put a lot of thought and time into this piece and I cannot help but admire this carefully laid out epic. 

This is a challenging read but I would recommend reading it. There are many websites that can help out with understanding and many editions of the epic have little descriptions at the beginning of each of the Cantos (similar to chapters). Here is one of the websites that I have used in classes that are quite interesting: http://danteworlds.laits.utexas.edu/index2.html. I would recommend looking at this website after reading the Cantos. The information on this website is definitely a great addition to reading the epic. 




Winnie the Pooh by A. A. Milne- Read April 18th- 19th
Rating: ðŸ“šðŸ“šðŸ“šðŸ“šðŸ“š

I have already spoken on length about this novel. This was a great addition to the classics that I have read this month and I am very glad that I read this. Here is a link to my full review of the novel. http://whattoreadwithcag.blogspot.com/2017/04/winnie-pooh-by-aa-milne.html




The Picture of Dorian Gray by Oscar Wilde - Read April 20th- 26th 
Rating: ðŸ“šðŸ“šðŸ“šðŸ“šðŸ“š

" 'Harry,' said Basil Hallward, looking him straight in the face, 'every portrait that is painted with feeling is a portrait of the artist, not of the sitter. The sitter is merely the accident, the occasion. It is not he who is revealed by the painter; it is rather the painter who, on the colored canvas, reveals himself. The reason I will not exhibit this picture is that I am afraid that I have shown in it the secret of my own soul.' "

Dorian Gray is a self absorbed man who treats the ones that love and care about him horribly. He becomes completely enamored by a portrait of himself that his friend, Basil Hallward painted of him. After another friend, Lord Henry mentions that he will eventually lose his beauty he becomes obsessed with the idea of how the painting will never lose its beauty but he will. Dorian sells his soul so that he would never age as his portrait changes. Over time he changes into a man that only cares for himself and uses those around him. The portrait then starts to reflect the man he truly is, a corrupt man who is vain. 

It is interesting to watch Dorian's self destruction as he loses every bit of redeemable qualities that he once had. The story is slow at the beginning but it is completely worth getting through the first thirty or so pages. Dorian becomes a detestable man that it is hard to feel a bit sorry for him but his decline into narcissism is one of the most interesting stories I have ever read. I would recommend this book to anyone. His self-absorption in the fact that his beauty will eventually end is quite fascinating and I kept wondering what else this man would do. 

Oscar Wilde's discussion of the human mortality throughout the novel also kept me wanting to read. He has his character Lord Henry discuss this aspect to Dorian at the beginning of the novel. Dorian's own fear of his mortality causes him to destroy his many relationships and to destroy his own soul in the process. He wants his beauty to be immortal and this ruins him. His friends in the novel do not have many redeemable qualities themselves. They all state their interest in Dorian and their love for him though this love is because of how he looks. These characters show a shallow way of life that is very much similar to the characters that Jay Gatsby surrounds himself with in The Great Gatsby. This idea of mortality also reminds me of Shakespeare's Sonnet 18, where he shows how fleeting mortality really is. The idea that the picture really will live on after Dorian is similar to the idea of the Sonnet living on forever. 


Tuesday, April 25, 2017

25 Bookish and Non-Bookish Facts about Me

25 Bookish Facts About Me

  1. I can read about 100 pages an hour depending on the book.
  2. Hardbacks vs Paperbacks: I prefer hardbacks.
  3. My favorite Genre is Fantasy but I do really love Contemporaries.
  4. For Contemporaries I mostly read standalones.
  5. For Fantasy I usually read series. 
  6. I love drinking tea while reading and I'm not really sure why. 
  7. Booksales are one of the things that I look forward to the most during the summer. 
  8. I want to be a writer myself and am in the middle of writing a book at the moment. It's a fantasy story and I absolutely love writing it. 
  9. I read hardbacks, paperbacks, audiobooks, and ebooks. 
  10. Books that make me laugh are my favorites but I do really love books that make me sad.
  11. One of the books that I absolutely loved from my childhood is Matilda. I want to eventually name a character or one of my children Matilda. 
  12. I am obsessed with the Harry Potter series. It is my favorite series.
  13. I have a hard time picking favorite books and series.
  14. I love retellings and my favorite retellings are on Fairy Tales, Alice in Wonderland and Greek mythology.
  15. I collect Alice in Wonderland books ( I have 7 editions of it), Harry Potter editions, and The Great Gatsby. 
  16. My two favorite classics are Alice's Adventures in Wonderland and The Great Gatsby. 
  17. I read nonfiction, adult, young adult, middle grade, graphic novels, and some children books. I really love any type of book. They all interest me. 
  18. I love looking at books. 
  19. I have read almost a 1000 pages in a day. That day was crazy. This was a total of almost 3 books.
  20. The book I have read the most is probably Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban by J. K. Rowling. I have read it around 6 or 7 times. It's my favorite of the series.
  21. I wrote a children's book when I was very young. It was about a butterfly who wanted to go to the mall to buy books. 
  22. I love the website Goodreads so much.
  23. I love beautiful endpapers in books, especially when they are maps.
  24. I am obsessed with epigraphs and I want to find the perfect ones for my own books. 
  25. I collect bookmarks. I have hundreds of bookmarks. 

25 Non-bookish Facts about Me
  1. My full name is Carrie Ann Griffin.
  2. I am just as much obsessed with movies as I am with books.
  3. My favorite movie is Stardust based on the novel by Neil Gaiman. 
  4. My favorite color is purple.
  5. I'm obsessed with Star Wars and Disney movies. 
  6. My favorite Star Wars movie is: Star Wars: The Empire Strikes Back and my favorite Disney movies are The Little Mermaid and Hercules.
  7. I love colorful socks. 
  8. I graduated from Bloomsburg University on December 17th, 2016.
  9. I graduated with two majors one in Creative Writing and Secondary Ed. English. 
  10. My favorite animals are owls and cats. 
  11. I collect tote bags and purses. My favorite tote is my Alice in Wonderland one
  12. I also collect Funko pops and other Funko products. I have over 90 in total. My favorites are my Hades mystery mini and my Harry Potter train ride. 
  13. I love butterflies and have so many different things with butterflies on them from my childhood. 
  14. Glee is my favorite tv series. The music was always so great. 
  15. I love music so much and when I am writing I listen to music to help focus.
  16. My favorite time period for music is the 80s. 
  17. I love buying things on Amazon whether that be movies, books, and music or just gifts for my family and friends. 
  18. I always carry a journal around with me just in case I get an idea.
  19. My favorite foods are strawberries, peanut butter, and cheese-steak hoagies. 
  20. My favorite drinks are water and tea. 
  21. I love playing board games such as: Monopoly, Trivial Pursuit, Sorry, and Battleship.  
  22. My favorite musical that I have seen so far is Les Miserable. I actually got to see it last year on Broadway which was awesome. 
  23. Rhett and Link are my favorite YouTubers. Dan and Phil, Richard from Richard's Book Nook and Peter Likes Books are also some of my favorites. 
  24. I love watching BookTube videos. 
  25. Buffy the Vampire Slayer is another one of my favorite tv series. Buffy and Angel all the way. Though I do love Spike. 

Monday, April 24, 2017

Review of Disney Beauty and the Beast Vol 2 and Pickup Catchup Readathon

The Beast's Tale (Disney Beauty and the Beast Vol 2)  by Mallory Reaves - April 23rd

Rating: 📚📚📚📚📚

32841045
I can honestly say that I enjoyed the second volume of this Manga more than the first. If you do not know what these volumes are about I will give you a brief summary. The first volume is about Belle's perspective of the events that occurred in Beauty and the Beast. This focuses on the live action movie version of the story. The second volume also is about Beauty and the Beast but from the perspective of the Beast. There is something about the Beast's thoughts and also what happens to him during this that really drew me in. I love the story and both of the characters. It was a great idea to show both of the perspectives because it brought a whole new dimension to the story. Beforehand we had never seen their thoughts but now we get a glance into their thoughts. 


The drawings done in this Manga are so beautiful. The only thing I wish about these is that they were colored because that would be absolutely beautiful. The beast's story is one of my favorites and I think that the author did a great job depicting it in this volume. 

I was given this book for a honest review. 


Pickup Catchup Readathon

I was watching a video on YouTube today made by one of my favorite BookTubers Peter Likes Books and decided to participate in his readathon with him. If you want more information about the readathon here is a link to it: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=byb1tsSwxBk. It started today, April 24th and will continue until Sunday, April 30th. 

The goal is to finish the books that you want to before the end of April and to just devote time that you may not have been spending on reading. 

For this Readathon I have four that I want to finish by the end of the month: Moby Dick by Herman Melville, The Picture of Dorian Gray by Oscar Wilde, Ex. Libris by Paula Guran, and Quest for the Stolen Arrow by Carrie Jones.  I have already started the first two for my classics reading month and just need to finish them. I hope to be able to finish these all by the end of the month. 




Sunday, April 23, 2017

Happy World Book Day- Reviews and Thoughts

Stitched # 1 by Mariah McCourt and Aaron Alexovich- April 22nd

           Rating:  ðŸ“šðŸ“šðŸ“šðŸ“š       

31451222I really love graphic novels so when I got the chance to read this book I was happy. This was a cute little story that I enjoyed. It is about a girl named Crimson Volania Mulch who wakes up in a crypt and cannot remember who she is and what has happened before. Over the course of the story she meets many interesting characters and wonders about what has occurred before she could remember. 
The illustrations were also great and pretty.  I would recommend this book for anyone that loves a cute little graphic novel. This would be great for middle grade readers but I can also say that I really liked it myself. All I can say is that I really want to read the next graphic novel. 

 I was given this book for free for a review. 


Belle's Tale (Disney Beauty and the Beast #1) by Mallory Reaves- April 22nd

Rating: ðŸ“šðŸ“šðŸ“šðŸ“š

32841044I have been wanting to read this book since I had first seen it on Goodreads under my recommendations. The story of Beauty and the Beast has always interested me and the original animated movie is one of my favorite Disney movies of all time.  I also have wanted to read a manga for a long time so why not start with something I know so well. This manga is very close to the new live action movie that came out last month. The illustrations are close to the live action characters but are different. This artist has done a great job with this story and it was a very good interpretation of the story. I like how she split the story between Belle and the Beast's perspectives. I will be reading the second one next and will be doing a review for it when I finish. 

I recommend this for anyone that likes the story of Beauty and the Beast and for anyone that is interested in getting into the story. This was a great version of the story. 

I was given this book for free for a review. 



Happy World Book Day everyone. Have a great day of reading and thinking about books. 

Friday, April 21, 2017

Breaking Up Is Hard To Do... But You Could've Done Better by Hilary Fitzgerald Campbell

Breaking Up Is Hard To Do... But You Could've Done Better by Hilary Fitzgerald Campbell- 
Read on April 20th 2017

Rating: ðŸ“šðŸ“šðŸ“šðŸ“š

31944977The old saying goes that breaking up is hard to do and this book shows some of the most ridiculous and funny ways that people have broken up with their significant other. The author and illustrator of the book asked the public to give her their stories of how they broke up with somebody or how their significant other broke up with them. I enjoyed the premise of this book and the illustrations were quite funny. I look forward to looking at other works from this author. I would recommend this to anyone who has ever had a bad breakup or knew someone who has. 

I was given a copy of this book for a honest review. 

Winnie the Pooh by A.A. Milne

Image result for winnie the pooh illustrations
Winnie the Pooh by A.A. Milne- Read April 18-19

Rating: 📚📚📚📚📚

235597So this is the first time I have read this book since I was a child and all I can say is that I adored it. It was funny and very cute. I have loved these stories since I was very little whether I read them or watched the movies and tv shows. I was obsessed with Pooh Bear and his friends from the Hundred Acre Wood. At first I thought that I would like this book from nostalgia and yes I am nostalgic for these stories. As I was reading it I realized just how cute the stories were and how much I loved it. I am twenty-three years old but I can say without a doubt that I adore these stories. I want to now get the other books so I can read them. All I can say is that if any of you out there loved Winnie the Pooh as a child and have never read the book, you should. Or if you read the book as a child read it again. I do not believe that you will be disappointed. It was one of the funniest books I have ever read that was for children and it just made me so happy. I could not stop smiling while I was reading it. Also the illustrations are great.

I would like to end with a quote from the book that I absolutely love: 

"Did I miss?" you asked.

"You didn't exactly miss," said Pooh, "But you missed the balloon."

"I'm so sorry," you said, and you fired again, and this time you hit the balloon and the air came slowly out, and Winnie-the-Pooh floated down to the ground.” - Winnie the Pooh by A. A. Milne 

Friday, April 7, 2017

Description of Reviews for Books

For each of the books I read starting today I am going to start writing reviews. The reviews will consist of a short description of the book, at least a quote from the book, my thoughts on the book, and my rating of the book.

Everything I Never Told You by Celeste Ng

 Everything I Never Told You by Celeste Ng- April 5-6th 2017

“The things that go unsaid are often the things that eat at you--whether because you didn't get to have your say, or because the other person never got to hear you and really wanted to.” 
― Celeste NgEverything I Never Told You

Rating: ðŸ“šðŸ“šðŸ“šðŸ“šðŸ“š

When I had first heard about this book I had thought that it was going to be similar to the novel The Lovely Bones by Alice Sebold. I was pleasantly surprised while I read the book. It is not only unique but I cannot help but enjoy the read.

We follow each of the Lee family members as they try to process the death of their daughter/sister Lydia. The book becomes a character study as we get to learn about each of the characters and their relationship with Lydia. Each of the characters has a certain perspective of Lydia and makes their own judgment of what has happened to her based on what they know about her. As the novel continues we learn that she was not just what one person thought about her.  It opens with the line "Lydia is dead but they don't know it yet." The family of course realizes something is wrong when she does not come down for breakfast. As they try to go on with their normal day they realize something is very much amiss. Her death and their discovery of it causes many events to occur throughout the novel.


I enjoyed reading from the different perspectives of each of the characters and learning little pieces of Lydia's life with them and also their lives. Each of the family members is holding secrets back from the rest of the family which causes problems for all. Not only do we focus on the present day with Lydia's death but we also get ideas on culture in the late seventies. The novel takes place in 1977, with a mixed family. The mother is a white American, while her husband is a Chinese American. The racial problems in the novel causes the family to be viewed differently by the other minor characters around them. The novel also shows different time periods and how the family grows throughout each time.

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