Sunday, July 31, 2011

Winner of the Wednesday Blog Book Review Party and Blog Spotlight!

*all winners are selected by Random Number Generator *


$15

And the winner of the Amazon Gift Card ($15 value) from Wednesday's Review Party is...
(**Drums Rolling in the Background**)


Congratulations to Tales and Treats!
Picture 5


Be sure to check out Tales and Treats and leave a comment!


Send me your email address for the Amazon eGC.

Warms-
CYM

Tuesday, July 26, 2011

Book Review Party Wednesday - LIVE!

$15Amazon
CymLowell

Welcome to Book Review Party Wednesday.

It is real simple. Link up any (old or new, any genre) book review that you have
written to the below MckLinky.

A couple of things to remember while you're linking.

1. Add a permalink to your specific post, not the main page of your blog (only one review per blog).
2. Add my Book Review Wednesday Badge or a link-back to the party at the end of your review post.
3. List the name of your blog, Title of Book or Genre. Be sure to use spaces and limit characters to 50. For example: The Lost Symbol, thriller
4. Become a follower of my blog, pretty please (not mandatory).
5. Visit the other linked up reviews and leave comments....it's a party, have fun!
6. I will announce the winner in a weekend post. The winner is chosen from the linked up reviewers using Random Number Generator. All included.

I am so excited to be reading all the reviews! This is always so much fun and gives me the opportunity to add new books to my list (& now check out book covers).


-CYM

Monday, July 25, 2011

The Sixth Man by David Baldacci **Book Review**

david

The Sixth Man
by David Baldacci
Grand Central Publishing/Hachette 2011

David Baldacci is Master of the Thriller Universe!

Imagine a world in which Government officials are on duty entrusted with the sacred task of protecting us from the evil that is all around. Something inexplicable happens to a good guy lawyer seeking to defend an odd man who has withdrawn inside himself locked away in a maximum security prison in rural Maine. Investigators hired to help him want to find out what happened, even without a source of income.

Our national security has been enhanced by a wondrous new generation of technology, which requires a human being of exceptional intellect to connect the wave of electronic dots arriving from global data feeds. That man is out of action. The technology has brought together formerly disparate intelligence agencies more focused on turf war than national security. It is compromised by the absence of the human dot-connector

Deaths begin in serial fashion. Michelle and Sean, the investigators, struggle with crime scenes littered with loose ends. Their budding emotional attraction is endearing. The Homeland Security Administration Secretary is a rich woman determined to occupy the White House. She obtains authority from the President to clean-up the mess, working with a private intelligence contractor who lost out to the new technology.

Government intelligence operatives are all over the place, as state troopers in Maine try to do their job. Some characters seem to be lambs caught in the clutches of cold killers. Others have contrasting personas.

The Sixth Man is a brilliant weave of sophisticated intrigue, loyalty, love, patriotism, honor, and redemption. These many strands are woven into a cloth of vibrancy, and intrigue.

It takes a bit of foundation work to set the pieces on the battleground. When the combatants are in place, the blistering pace commences.

It is a joy to read the work of a thoroughly skilled storyteller. This is a page turning thrill, which is paced so the reader can savor imagining how the clues found along the road will play out.

A bonus in this wonderful story is the evolution of love, triumph of patriotism, strength of our intelligence services to ferret out evil, and devotion to family.

I loved The Sixth Man and so will you!

Warms, Cym

Sunday, July 24, 2011

Winner of the Wednesday Blog Book Review Party and Blog Spotlight!





*all winners are selected by Random Number Generator *


$15

And the winner of the Amazon Gift Card ($15 value) from Wednesday's Review Party is...
(**Drums Rolling in the Background**)


Congratulations to Paranormal & Romantic Suspense Reviews!
Picture 4


Be sure to check out Paranormal & Romantic Suspense Reviews and leave a comment!


Send me your email address for the Amazon eGC.

Warms-
CYM

Friday, July 22, 2011

Friday's Musings

Can you believe how quickly the summer weeks are passing? Shesh! I feel like I need to hold on....
Here are this weeks internet ramblings. Enjoy!

Library_Detail1

1.  A branding project created by STITCH for Library, a collection of vintage clothing, inspired by library ephemera and fashion drawings. I just love the look of these tags & papers.

tags

2. I found these cute little craft tags that I thought would make great bookmarks. You could add you blog information and they could also be business cards.

blueink

3. Making the Case for Fee-based Reviews of Self-published Books. Very interesting article. I wonder if this will impact bloggers? What's your opinion on paid reviews?

home-library-designs-16-500x625

4. 20 Cool Home Library Designs via Shelterness.

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Have a great weekend! 
XOXO- 
(guest blogger)


Tuesday, July 19, 2011

Book Review Party Wednesday - LIVE!

$15Amazon
CymLowell

Welcome to Book Review Party Wednesday.

It is real simple. Link up any (old or new, any genre) book review that you have
written to the below MckLinky.

A couple of things to remember while you're linking.

1. Add a permalink to your specific post, not the main page of your blog (only one review per blog).
2. Add my Book Review Wednesday Badge or a link-back to the party at the end of your review post.
3. List the name of your blog, Title of Book or Genre. Be sure to use spaces and limit characters to 50. For example: The Lost Symbol, thriller
4. Become a follower of my blog, pretty please (not mandatory).
5. Visit the other linked up reviews and leave comments....it's a party, have fun!
6. I will announce the winner in a weekend post. The winner is chosen from the linked up reviewers using Random Number Generator. All included.

I am so excited to be reading all the reviews! This is always so much fun and gives me the opportunity to add new books to my list (& now check out book covers).


Sneak Peak of Upcoming Book Review Giveaways thanks to Thrillerfest:
IMG_6214

-CYM

Monday, July 18, 2011

Highway to Vengeance by Brian Springer **Book Review**

highway

Highway to Vengeance
by Brian Springer
Ann Egan Publishers 2011

Have you ever wondered what it would be like to go through the training to be a Navy Seal? With the world just having witnessed the Seals completing a perfect mission to rid the world of Osama bin Laden, we have probably all thought about the training required to prepare brave young men and women for such a mission.

Highway to Vengeance is the story of a former Seal, Thomas Highway. He has been adjusting to civilian life. Having just completed a romantic lunch with his new wife, he helplessly watches here being intentionally run-over in a pedestrian cross-walk by a hit-and-run driver. Thought he San Diego police declare the death to be an accident, Highway knows better.

In moments, he enlists the help of a friend to commence an operation to find the killer and wreak vengeance. We are immediately drawn into the clandestine operations of a mercenary band formed just after 9/11 to do work that Government bureaucracies cannot accomplish. The murder is attributed by the operatives to a compromised Mexican drug lord, who is said to be seeking a new gang by bringing weapons of mass destruction under the border via tunnel.

Highway completes the mission only to discover that he is hunted. Is it by the mercenaries, Homeland Security, his friend working with one or the other, or someone else. There is no place to turn, other than to face the music straight up. His story is told in first person, so we can feel his emotions in each step of the story.

As a respite from the constant action of the story, we are treated us to a detailed explanation of the steps in Seal training. It becomes obvious why so few of the recruits are able to complete the training, male or female.

Brian Springer brings a clear new voice to the thriller genre. He is destined to become a new superstar. Highway to Vengeance hits the bookstores of the world just as the fascination with the Seals reaches a high decibel level. Fortunately, here is a riveting book that spells out how the bin Laden operation could have been conducted so flawlessly.

Thomas Highway is a new thriller hero! His devotion and love for his victimized wife is touching. He has a heart and soul, unlike many other standard characters of the genre. Will he be able to love again? Where will his broken heart find solace? These and other plot twists will be in the sequels sure to come.

-CYM

Sunday, July 17, 2011

Winner of the Wednesday Blog Book Review Party and Blog Spotlight!





*all winners are selected by Random Number Generator *


$15

And the winner of the Amazon Gift Card ($15 value) from Wednesday's Review Party is...
(**Drums Rolling in the Background**)


Congratulations to My Favorite Things Obsessions with Art and the Written Word!
Picture 3


Be sure to check out My Favorite Things and leave a comment!


Send me your email address for the Amazon eGC.

Warms-
CYM

Friday, July 15, 2011

This Week's Roundup of Book Stuff **Guest Post**

cookbooks

I was fortunate enough to have some time this week to browse the web. This is a collection of my book related musings for the week. Enjoy!

1. The Kitchn's 12 Favorite Cookbooks for Summer. Cookbooks often feel unnecessary in the summertime. After all, who needs another recipe for grilled zucchini or corn on the cob? And yet with summer's easy living and easy cooking sometimes I get lazy and forget to try new things. A few cookbooks are breaking me out of my routines this summer, pulling me away from popsicles and grilled eggplant, encouraging me to enjoy the generosity of summer in new ways.

2.  The Morning News, How to Write a Thank-You Note. There is a six-point formula to the proper thank-you: Learn it, know it, memorize it—and it will never fail you.

twitter-follow-achiever

3.  The Los Angeles Times, Whom to follow on Twitter? Start with 25 of Culture Monster's favorites. Friday, July 15, is the fifth anniversary of the first public tweet, a milestone that may warm your heart or boil your blood. In that time around 260 million people, including 13% of online Americans, have told the world about their dinner, their dog and their duodenum. (I wish that last one was a joke. Sadly, no.) Haters describe Twitter as a cesspool of narcissism. They are not entirely wrong, but Culture Monster is willing to look beyond the spam and oversharing to find much to delight in.

bukowski

4.  Publishers Weekly, The 5 Most Stolen Books. Yesterday, historian and author Barry H. Landau was arrested on charges of stealing historical documents, including ones signed by Abraham Lincoln, from the Maryland Historical Society. The arrest eventually led to Landau’s locker, where police found upwards of 60 documents worth hundreds of thousands of dollars. Laudau’s heist and the tremendous value of the stolen documents got us thinking about the other end of the literature theft spectrum: what are the most frequently stolen books from bookstores?

Have a great week/weekend!
Beachbrights
(guest blogger)

Thursday, July 14, 2011

ThrillerFest 2011

ThrillerFest-2011-box

This was my third time to attend the annual meeting of the thriller writers’ trade association – The International Thriller Writers’ Ass’n. It was a fascinating learning and cultural experience. As I see it, there are four elements of ThrillerFest:

1. CraftFest: experienced writers teach novices about the elements of the craft;

2. AgentFest: agents looking for new talent conduct speed interviewing, apparently akin to speed dating with 3 minute pitches;

Agentfest 2011

3. ThrillerBusiness: interviews of famous authors, more advanced craft sessions, and focus on the business of ITW (which is largely financed by thriller writers combining for ITW book projects); and

4. Celebration: of the joy of being practicing or aspiring professional writers, as well as presenting awards to the most successful of our craft, over career or shorter spans.

Picnik collage


This was my best ThrillerFest by far.


By the time of my first year in attendance, I had been writing international thriller manuscripts for at least 10 years. I had secured an agent who I thought to be knowledgeable and was ready to move along in the business.

What I did not know or appreciate was the depth and breadth of what I needed to learn! It has taken awhile for me to appreciate where I stand. Fortunately, I am a patient and persistent fellow. I may learn slowly, but I do learn.

By my second visit to ITW, I had learned that having an agent is nice. The critical element is whether the agent believes in the projects at hand. My agent had gone in-house without having made a serious evaluation of the work. In the craft sessions, I tended to have other things on my lap. I don’t think I had any illusions about where I stood in the thriller world, I just did not appreciate how far above the seabed I was (wet sand still filling my pants).

This year, I participated in every element of ThrillerFest. At each of the craft sessions, I simply listened, absorbed the wisdom of the best thriller writers in the world, and made notes of the guidance being dispatched. I have 20 pages of notes! I will distill all of that down into my lessons for me and get it into blog format. Maybe it will be of interest to others..

Five things became crystal clear to me this week in a hot New York City: (i) I want to learn how to write a compelling, page-turning story; (ii) I have a treasure chest full of ideas and experience; (iii) I have a lot to learn; (iv) there is room for another respected thriller writer; and (v) I will do my best to fill that space.

Warms, Cym

Tuesday, July 12, 2011

Book Review Party Wednesday - LIVE!

$15Amazon
CymLowell

Welcome to Book Review Party Wednesday.

It is real simple. Link up any (old or new, any genre) book review that you have
written to the below MckLinky.

A couple of things to remember while you're linking.

1. Add a permalink to your specific post, not the main page of your blog (only one review per blog).
2. Add my Book Review Wednesday Badge or a link-back to the party at the end of your review post.
3. List the name of your blog, Title of Book or Genre. Be sure to use spaces and limit characters to 50. For example: The Lost Symbol, thriller
4. Become a follower of my blog, pretty please (not mandatory).
5. Visit the other linked up reviews and leave comments....it's a party, have fun!
6. I will announce the winner in a weekend post. The winner is chosen from the linked up reviewers using Random Number Generator. All included.

I am so excited to be reading all the reviews! This is always so much fun and gives me the opportunity to add new books to my list (& now check out book covers).


-CYM


I Owe You Some Winners!

Did you notice the {s} on the end of that word in the title?  I have been busy with travel and did not have time to pick last weeks review link-up winner. Sorry!! 

So without further adieu last week's winner of the Personal Library Kit...

Picture 1


*all winners are selected by Random Number Generator *


~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

And this week's winner of the $15 Amazon eGC...


$15

Congrats to Family Literacy and You!

Picture 2


Be sure to check out them both and leave a comment!


Send me your email address for the Amazon eGC & shipping address for the Personal Library Kit.

Warms-
CYM

**get ready for tonight's start of the Wednesday review link-up party**

Monday, July 11, 2011

Sarah's Key by Tatiana De Rosnay **Book Review**

sarahs key

Sarah’s Key
by Tatiana De Rosnay
St. Martin’s Griffin 2007

Imagine that you are a 10 year-old girl living joyfully with your family in Paris (Sirkah, or Sarah). It is 1942. Your father is hiding from the Nazis and the Vichy French police. Fists pound on your door. Your own Frenchmen take you and your mother away, as your father leaves his hiding place to be with you. Your little brother hides in your secret place. You take his key promising to return. You escape from the detention camp. Your parents go to Aushwitz. You have the key to your brother’s secret place. What would you do?

This wonderful story is told from the perspective of an American woman living in Paris with her thoroughly French husband and a daughter about the age of Sarah. Our heroine Julia is a reporter assigned to do a story on the 60th anniversary of the Velodrome d’Hiv, where the Jews were incarcerated and then dispatched. She discovers that her in-laws moved into Sarah’s apartment. Long buried memories of her father-in-law who found the remains of the boy focus the reporter on the story, which leads her on the quest to find Sarah.

Julia has a wandering husband and a new baby surprise as she embarks on the mystery.

Ms. De Rosnay spins an emotional story of the journey to find Sarah, and, perhaps, a new life. The history of the French entombment of their own people is a shameful period of French history. Each of us can imagine how we would react on any side of such a gruesome situation. Would we be cowards or heroes, victims or survivors? Each of these stories is told in Sarah’s Key.

This wonderfully written story is an emotional thriller. It will trigger introspection in you about how lucky you are, or how you need to move forward in your own life.

Warms, Cym

Sunday, July 10, 2011

Coming up for Air

I have been traveling for 10 days. Please bear with me as I get it together.  Here is what I am working on:

1. $15 Amazon book review link-up winner announcement
2. Library Kit book review link-up winner announcement
3. Thrillerfest Re-cap
4. 2 Book Reviews
5. Book Bloggers Spotlight
6. Friday's Musings
&
7. Thrillerfest SWAG! Tons of SWAG!  I will decide how to divide up all the fun stuff and give it away to YOU!

Whew!  What are you working on?

-CYM

PS. I would love to host you as a guest blogger. Do you have a recent book review or book article? Copy & paste your html code in an email. I will make sure the post links back to your blog etc.

Tuesday, July 5, 2011

Book Review Party Wednesday -LIVE - Library Kit GIVEAWAY!



library kit
{For a bibliophile, there’s no greater pleasure than sharing beloved books, but no crueler pain than losing them for good—until the Personal Library Kit! Revive old-fashioned library circulation techniques for fun and book retention with our classic kit. Specs: 6 x 7.5 x 1.25 inches; 20 self-adhesive pockets and checkout cards; date stamp and inkpad; pencil}


CymLowell

Welcome to Book Review Party Wednesday.

It is real simple. Link up any (old or new, any genre) book review that you have
written to the below MckLinky.

A couple of things to remember while you're linking.

1. Add a permalink to your specific post, not the main page of your blog (only one review per blog).
2. Add my Book Review Wednesday Badge or a link-back to the party at the end of your review post.
3. List the name of your blog, Title of Book or Genre. Be sure to use spaces and limit characters to 50. For example: The Lost Symbol, thriller
4. Become a follower of my blog, pretty please (not mandatory).
5. Visit the other linked up reviews and leave comments....it's a party, have fun!
6. I will announce the winner in a weekend post. The winner is chosen from the linked up reviewers using Random Number Generator. All included.

I am so excited to be reading all the reviews! This is always so much fun and gives me the opportunity to add new books to my list.


-CYM

Monday, July 4, 2011

Friday, July 1, 2011

Friday's Musings

1. I leave for Thrillerfest on Wednesday. Make sure you are following me on Twitter & FB. I will be updating from there during the week.


2. In 1971, Marguerite Hart, the children’s librarian of Troy, Michigan, wrote to dozens of politicians, writers, artists and otherwise notable individuals asking them to send in a few inspirational words for the children of Troy on the opening of its first public library. 97 letters came back. Take a look...very interesting!


3. This article is from Lifehacker. It's details how to create a summer reading list (not that any of us have a problem creating a reading list!).


4. Here's a picture I came across of a suspended library. Pretty cool.
library


5. Punctuation is everything.

An English professor wrote these words "A woman without her man is nothing" on the chalkboard and asked his students to punctuate it correctly.

All of the males in the class wrote:
"A woman, without her man, is nothing."

All the females in the class wrote:
"A woman: without her, man is nothing."


Have a great weekend & Happy 4th of July to all those celebrating! Be safe my friends.
-CYM