
Welcome to the
Book Review Blog Carnival. Every other Sunday the carnival appears, like Brigadoon, on some blog somewhere, with links to book reviews all around the world. If you write book reviews on your blog we would love to have you participate. Submissions can be made at
Carnival Dot Com for the next carnival, which will be published on December 7th at
Imaginary Lands.
We have a large group of book reviews for you today.
In Fiction:Marina, of
Momma Writes About Books reviews
The Blessing Way the first in Tony Hillerman's Navajo Police mysteries.
Marina has also reviewed
The Pearl Diver, by Jeff Talarigo. This is the story of a Japanese woman who is sent to a leper colony, where she loses her identity and becomes a caregiver for the other patients.
Coralie writes about Stephen King's
The Stand in her blog
Happily Oblivious. It's a post apocalyptic story in which the cause of the mass die-off of humanity is an accidental release of a biological warfare germ by the U.S. government. Oops!
Ruth Schaller at
Books Books and more Books read
The Family Bones by Kimberly Raiser. If you inherit a property in a small town with a name like Astral, just call a realtor. It will save you trouble.
Charli was unimpressed by
Twilight by Stephenie Meyer. Find out why at
Bloody-Kisses.org.
Alessandra, of
Out of the Blue, has found the winner of the best title award with her review of
The Earth, My Butt, and Other Big, Round Things by Carolyn Mackler.
Serena Trowbridge reviews Susannah Clarke's
The Ladies of Grace Adieu on her blog,
Culture and Anarchy. Culture I get, but anarchy?
Serena Trowbridge also read
The Uncommon Reader by Alan Bennett, which is a story of the Queen (yes, that one) discovering the wonders of literature at the bookmobike.
NathanKP of
Inkweaver Review writes about
Things Hoped For, by Andrew Clements., a science fantasy mystery novel.
NathanKP also reviewed
Un Lun Dun by China MiƩville. This book is a through the looking glass journey from London to it's opposite - Un Lun Dun. Get it?
Heather J. of
Age 30+ ... A Lifetime of Books has a review of the classic Jules Verne novel
The Mysterious Island! Verne, or the translator, or Heather seems to have used a lot of exclamation points!
Tanya, of
Children's Books: What, When & How to Read Them predicts that
Chains by Laurie Halse Anderson will win the National Book Award for young people's literature. That happened Wednesday, so now we know, but, really, she predicted it before.
Jason Isbell, writing in
Tired Garden, reviews
Shade by John Olson, which is not a gardening book.
switch2life thinks that
The 3 Mistakes of My Life. is so similar to author Chetan Bhagat's other books that Bhagat must use some kind of software to grind out books like sausage, although sausage may not be the kind of image an Indian novelist would want to be associated with.
Jeanne, from
Necromancy Never Pays read
Cycler by Lauren McLaughlin', which is not about bicycle racing. It is the story of a girl, Jill who becomes a boy, inevitably Jack, for a few days each month. How inconvenient.
Alyce reviews
My Lady of Cleves by Margaret Campbell Barnes on
At Home With Books. It's the story of Henry VIIIths wife number four. Henry could learn a lot from Larry King.
Kindlelicious would like to recommend Chris Moriarty's
Spin Control. That is if you have a Kindle to read it on.
Keira writes, in
Love Romance Passion, about her favorite book,
Sleepless at Midnight by Jacquie D’Alessandro. I lie awake at night sometimes, too, but nobody writes romance novels about me. (With good reason)
In Non- Fiction:Marina, of
Momma Writes About Books has a short review of
The Highly Sensitive Person by Elaine Aron. I took the self-test on Elaine's website. Not surprisingly, I scored "insensitive boor."
Barry Wright III has submitted a review of an ebook,
The Life Uncommon by Nacie Carson, on his blog
3style life. No word on what has happened to Barry Wrights I and II at this time.
Woman Tribune reviewed
The Wilde Women by Paula Wall. Even during the depression, Wilde women don't get the blues.
Nigel Beale, of
Nigel Beale Nota Bene Books has discovered
The Idler's Glossary a book about creative idleness. It could be a manual for bloggers, at least according to my wife, who wishes I would get up and do something useful.
Christina M. Rau reviews
Hairstyles of the Damned by Joe Meno on her blog
Livin' The Dream (One Loser At A Time) . Are the MSP (mainstream publishers) missing out on a good thing?
Mike Bergin has written a review of
The LBJ: Avian Life, Literary Arts, which I thought at first must have something to do with President Johnson but, as it turns out, is a literary journal with a birding bent. LBJ = "Little Brown Job" which is an oblique refrence to what I have heard of as LGBs or "little gray birds," a term of art in the Audubon set. OK, so it's not really a book. You can find the review on Mike's blog
10,000 Birds.
Corey Finger, also writing at
10,000 Birds, has reviewed
Birds: The Art of Ornithology by Jonathan Elphick, which contains 300 color illustrations from the Natural History Museum in London. They're pictures of birds, Hon.
Laurie Bartels reviews
Neuroplasticity and the Brain That Changes Itself on
SharpBrains: Your Window into the Brain Fitness Revolution by Norman Doidge. I need to get me some of that.
GrrlScientist of
Living the Scientific Life has read
Bottomfeeder: How to Eat Ethically in a World of Vanishing Seafood by Taras Grescoe. Oy, life wasn't complicated enough?
Dolfin from
Lionden Landing submitted a review of
Yoga Planet: 50 Fun Activities for a Greener World by Tara Guber and Leah Kalish,
Illustrated by Sophie Fatus, formerly known as
My Daddy Is a Pretzel. I think I would have stuck with the first title.
Jim Murdoch reviews
The Paris Review Interviews Vol. III , in which Martin Amis is quoted as saying
All writers are Martians. Does that include bloggers?
Tim Gebhart, of
A Progressive on the Prairie has a review of
I Hate New Music by Dave Thompson. Thompson posits that rock music died in 1978 from an overdose of technology. I always thought it had something to do with a Chevy and a levy, oh well.
LAL wrote a review of
Book Review: Investing for Dummies for the blog
LivingAlmostLarge. I wouldn't be caught dead reading a"For Dummies" book. I don't want to make to obvious.
Manoj reviews
The Age of Spiritual Machines by Ray Kurzweil on
Unreal Blog. Could a computer like "Hal" be built some day, that possesses consciousness? Do we really have consciousness? Can I have a ham sandwich?
Callista has discovered a book about book bloggers,
The Bookaholics' Guide to Book Blogs by Rebecca Gillieron & Catheryn Kilgarriff. She completes the circle by blogging about the book about bloggrs who blog about books at her blog
SMS Book Reviews.
Liz Fetter reviews
Art History For Your Children, a series of 48 titles, on many many different artists from every period in art history, on her blog
Power In Art . There must be a mail in certificate for a PHD diploma in the back of the last volume.
Coralie writes in
Happily Oblivious writes about
Ten Men Dead by David Beresford, which deals with the 1981 hunger strike by IRA prisoners at Long Kesh prison in Northern Ireland.
Douglas Karr of
The Marketing Technology Blog writes about
The No Asshole Rule: Building a Civilized Workplace and Surviving One That Isn’t" by Robert Sutton.
A last minute entry, Barry Wright III, of
3stylelife just finished reading
The Sociology of Taste by Jukka Gronow. Is taste innate, he asks? Tell it to my plaid pants, I say. Still no word from Barry Wright I and II.