Monday, April 20, 2009

Book #15

The Girl She Used to Be by David Cristofano.

One woman's story of growing up in the Witness Protection Program. An enjoyable, if not very believable story. The ending was a bit week, as if the author couldn't figure out what to do with these characters to end the book.

Three stars. This is the author's first book. I expect the next one will earn more stars.

Wednesday, April 8, 2009

Book #14

Diary of a Fairy Godmother by Esme Raji Codell.

The story of Hunky Dory, a witch in training who ultimately decides to become a fairy godmother and use her powers for good instead of evil. Hunky battles peer pressure and rejection by her mother (a witch), but stands by her conviction to become a good witch and grant wishes instead of casting evil spells.

A bit preachy and a slow start, but ultimately an ok read, even for an adult. My daughter and I read this for the mother-daughter book club at the local public library. I had high hopes for this book having read something else by this author, so I was a bit disappointed that it wasn't as good as it should have/could have been. 3 stars.

Book #13

Run for Your Life by James Patterson & Michael Ledwidge.

Typical James Patterson page turner. If you've read any of his novels, you've read this one too. A detective/murder mystery. Not much else to say about it. I finished it in about 3 days. 3.5 star rating.

Saturday, April 4, 2009

Book #12

Handle with Care by Jodi Picoult.

This is, by far, the best book I've read in a long time. I am giving it my first 5-star rating.

The premise behind this story is "wrongful birth", a term I've only heard once or twice, if ever. A mother sues her ob-gyn for malpractice because the doctor didn't detect a serious birth defect before her daughter was born. The mother claims she might have aborted the fetus had she had all the facts.

Add to this the drama of small-town life where the mother and doctor are best friends, as well as the fact that their older daughters are also best friends, although the lawsuit destroys these friendships. Then, a husband who disagrees with the suit and decides to be a witness for the defense, an older daughter who develops bulimia, and the wrongfully-born child who's now a brilliant 6-year old who understands the meaning of wrongful death and quickly internalizes the message that she's not wanted.

The mother inspires both sympathy for her ceaseless struggles to raise this child and wrath for gold-digging her best friend. Early on, it's established that the mother is Catholic and never would have chosen abortion, even had she known about the girl's disease early on in the pregnancy.

Watching this family be torn apart is drama at it's best. I can only hope that in this case, fiction is stranger than fact.