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Showing posts with label Unbridled Books. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Unbridled Books. Show all posts

Sunday, October 2, 2011

Blog Tour: Touch and Go

by:  Thad Nodine
published by:  Unbridled Books
publish date:  September 27, 2011

To escape an addiction, a young blind man in California steps into a station wagon with his friends and their foster kids to deliver a handmade casket to a dying grandfather in Florida. As they battle their way across the southern half of the nation, this rag-tag American family falls prey to love and lies, greed and violence, crime and Katrina. With a voice reminiscent of John Irving, Nodine produces a classic road-picture novel that is part Travels with Charley, part As I Lay Dying, and part On The Road. Touch and Go is a rich and rangy story about the careful and careless ways we treat each other,and ourselves, in a fast-paced, changing world. Kevin, the novel s blind narrator, is one of the most perceptive figures in recent fiction. And his desire to do no harm is contagious. Through Kevin's rich senses and boundless compassion, Nodine gives us a multicultural portrait of a true America. And he does so with deep affection for everyone along the way.

This was a very unique book since it's told by a blind narrator.  It makes for an interesting way of getting the visual aspects of the setting across.   His was an interesting perspective to read the story from.   As I'm sitting her thinking about it, I wonder how different the story would have been if the tale had been told from Devon or Patrick's viewpoint.

I liked this book, but I found the first 3/4 of it to be kind of meandering and not particularly exciting.  The last couple of chapters of the book more than made up for it and left the book in a major cliff hanger.  The the Publisher's Weekly review (at the bottom) said that it makes you want a sequel, but I don't.  I like it ending with questions. 
I came away with mixed feelings about most of the characters in this book.  The one that I consistently didn't like was Isa.  I think she was very manipulative and acted crazy on purpose to get the people around her to do what she wanted.  I wanted to despise Patrick and all his get rich quick schemes, but I really had a hard time and especially once I learned all his secrets. 

One particular issue that I want to commend the author about his dealing with hurricane Katrina.  I was a little wary about approaching that issue.  I'm from South Louisiana so it's always a touchy subject.  He handled it in a realistic way without getting political which I really appreciated.


It also got a Publisher's Weekly starred review
"Nodine's cinematic novel deserves to be hailed as one of the year's finest fiction debuts.  In addition to creating a memorable cast of characters . . . Nodine treats readers to a realistic portrayal of multi-cultural America. . . . An extended denouement and a last-minute plot twist will leave readers hoping that Nodine will pen a sequel." — Publishers Weekly, Starred

Sunday, July 31, 2011

Giveaway: Safe From the Sea

Way back in September Unbridled Books sent me a book called Safe From the Sea by Peter Geye.  It was AWESOME.  I orginally posted about it here.  Back then I said:


LOVED. IT. You know that song The Wreck of the Edmund Fitzgerald by Gordon Lightfoot? (if you don't I suggest you go listen to it!) I felt like it was that song, in a book. It wasn't really, because it was nothing about the Edmund Fitzgerald, but it was about a shipwreck in the Great Lakes and the impact it had on this family's life.

I really enjoyed the characters. Noah and his dad seemed so real and alive. I would have liked a little more information about where Noah's skiing went later in life, I assume he dropped it, but why and when? I really hated Natalie when she first appeared in the book. I felt like she was self absorbed and selfish and bratty, but later on in the book I decided she wasn't so bad.

I thought the author's best quality was writing the setting. I would get so absorbed into the book, I'd look up and be completely suprised it was 90 degrees outside. It seemed like I should be snowed in a cabin too!

It also made my Top 10 of 2010.  It was a good book!  Why am I talking about all this NOW?  It's coming out in paperback!  In celebration of this Unbridled Books is letting me do another giveaway. 

I have ONE book to give away.  It's open to the US and Canada.  Please leave a comment on this post with a valid email address.  This giveaway will be open until August 7th.

Tuesday, October 5, 2010

Stranger Here Below

Publisher:  Unbridled Books

In 1961, when Amazing Grace Jansen, a firecracker from Appalachia, meets Mary Elizabeth Cox, the daughter of a Black southern preacher, at Kentucky’s Berea College, they already carry the scars and traces of their mothers’ troubles. Poor and single, Maze’s mother has had to raise her daughter alone and fight to keep a roof over their heads. Mary Elizabeth’s mother has carried a shattering grief throughout her life, a loss so great that it has disabled her and isolated her stern husband and her brilliant, talented daughter.

The caution this has scored into Mary Elizabeth has made her defensive and too private and limited her ambitions, despite her gifts as a musician. But Maze’s earthy fearlessness might be enough to carry them both forward toward lives lived bravely in an angry world that changes by the day.

Both of them are drawn to the enigmatic Georginea Ward, an aging idealist who taught at Berea sixty years ago, fell in love with a black man, and suddenly found herself renamed as a sister in a tiny Shaker community. Sister Georgia believes in discipline and simplicity, yes. But, more important, her faith is rooted in fairness and the long reach of unconditional love.

This is a novel about three generations of women and the love that makes families where none can be expected.

A few weeks ago I read In Hovering Flight also by Joyce Hinnefeld.  My review is here.  I really loved that book, so I was excited to read this one as well.   Stranger Here Below, was pretty good, but it didn't grab me the same way as In Hovering Flight did. 

This book was told through a variety of flashbacks of various characters.  It focused on the women in the lives of Maze and Mary Elizabth and their histories.  It was generally an easy to follow method of telling the story, but I'll admit at times I'd get a little lost and have to backtrack to figure out who I was reading about. 

Joyce Hinnefeld has a very lovely writing style and she is excellent with her descriptions.  It was so easy to picture the college and the Shaker village in my mind.  I wanted to go visit and check it out myself.  I was surprised to learn so much about the Shakers reading this book.  I guess I didn't know as much about them as I thought. 

This book was recently released on September 28th.  I'd recommend reading it, maybe with the word of caution to pay attention to the chapter beginnings so you don't get confused like I did.  This would make a very good book club book.  I think it would spark a lot of discussion.

Monday, September 20, 2010

In Hovering Flight

By:  Joyce Hinnefeld
Publisher:  Unbridled Books

Summary:  At 34 years of age, Scarlet has come home for the passing of her famous mother, the bird artist Addie Kavanaugh. The year is 2002. Though Addie and her husband, the world-renowned ornithologist Tom Kavanaugh, have made their life in southeastern Pennsylvania, Addie has chosen to die at the home of her dearest friend, Cora. This is because their ramshackle cottage in Burnham, Pennsylvania, is filled with so much history and because, in the last ten years or so, even birdsong has seemed to make Addie angry, or sad, or both. These are the things that Scarlet needs to understand. Cora and Lou (the third woman in Addie's circle) will help Scarlet to see her mother in full. In addition, Scarlet carries her own secret into these foggy days-a secret for Addie, one that involves Cora, too.

I received this book from Unbridled Book in anticipation of Joyce Hinnefeld's new book, Stranger Here Below, coming out next month.  I was unfamiliar with this author so I really didn't know what to expect and I certainly didn't expect to love this book as much as I did.

First off, the cover is so pretty!  It's hard to tell from the picture, but it's really lovely in person.  We're a bird family, which may contribute to why I liked this book so much.  We have 5 Hummingbirds and a new Mourning Dove that call our yard home, not to mention all the other birds that swoop in and out to snag some food.  In Hovering Flight is a perfect book for a bird lover!  My girls and I thought the bird on the cover was beautiful!

I enjoyed the way this book was written going back and forth in time to tell the story of this family's life.  Oftentimes this technique can become confusing, but the writing in this book was always very clear.  She also had a wonderful way of telling the same story from a differing point of view.  I loved seeing how a different character felt about a certain event. 

While this book was dealt with the death of a wife and mother, it wasn't always terribly sad.  There were a few teary eyed moment though. 

I'm generally not big on activist causes, but I do admire people who have that level of passion.  However, unless their family participates they get left out, which was the case in this book with Addie who becomes quite a radical activist.  Tom and Scarlet were often left behind and it was very interesting reading about their reactions and feeling and ultimately Addie's feeling. 

***slight spoilers ahead***


You learn in the book that Scarlet is pregnant, but I won't say who the father is because that's part of the secret.  I will say that I was really pleased with who the father is though.  I was pregnant during that same time that Scarlet got pregnant and I remember how emotional that time was, in terms of being pregnant while everything was going on.  I could relate to that part of the book.

***End Spoilers***

I hope to get to Stranger Here Below soon.  It looks like another good one!