review

  • “Challenging the Legacy” by Genie Gabriel Book Review

    By Ruth on December 16, 2012
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    Super-mom Tallie O’Shea took on eight adopted children and built a legacy of compassionate justice with her policeman husband. When he is gunned down, she doesn’t think it’s an accident. Then a former lover shows up and the lies from her past start unraveling. As dangers explode around her, can Tallie set things right before everything she loves is destroyed? […]
  • "Cinder" by Marissa Meyer

    By Ruth on December 15, 2012
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      Summary:  Humans and androids crowd the raucous streets of New Beijing. A deadly plague ravages the population. From space, a ruthless lunar people watch, waiting to make their move. No one knows that Earth’s fate hinges on one girl. . . . Cinder, a gifted mechanic, is a cyborg. She’s a second-class citizen with a mysterious past, reviled by […]
  • “Every Perfect Gift” by Dorothy Love Book Review

    By Ruth on December 14, 2012
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    Book 3 in Dorothy Love’s Hickory Ridge Romance series. Ethan and Sophie long to share a future together. But the secrets they’re not sharing could tear them apart. Sophie Caldwell has returned to Hickory Ridge, Tennessee, after years away. Despite the heartaches of her childhood, Sophie is determined to make a home, and a name, for herself in the growing […]
  • "The Fear of Things to Come" by Kathryne Arnold Book Review

    By Ruth on December 13, 2012
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    Read my promo/giveaway of this book here. The Fear of Things to Come by Kathryne ArnoldMy rating: 3 of 5 stars Let me say first off that this book was extremely descriptive, and at least justice was served.  Whenever I read any kind of crime, mystery, or thriller novel, I expect a resolution that will punish evil.  I applaud the […]
  • “A Good Kind of Knowing” by Kathy Lynn Harris Book Review

    By Ruth on December 10, 2012
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    Sera Taylor’s store is the one place in Lakeville, Texas, where individuals from all walks of life share a universal love for music and a respect for the gypsy-like woman behind the antique glass counter. Readers get a taste of the unorthodox connection between Sera and Mack, a young local cowboy and musician, and Sera’s previously untested devotion to her […]
  • Reuseit Workhorse Original Shopping Bag Review

    By Ruth on December 9, 2012
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    It seems that everywhere you go now, the concern is trying to reduce waste and reuse products.  In some places, plastic bags are either outlawed or must be purchased at the store.  There is a push for reusable shopping bags, and sometimes it can get a bit overwhelming.  Should you purchase a cheap bag or pay a little more for […]
  • “No Safe Harbor” by Elizabeth Ludwig Review

    By Ruth on December 6, 2012
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    She came to America searching for her brother. Instead all she’s found is a web of danger. Cara Hamilton had thought her brother to be dead. Now, clutching his letter, she leaves Ireland for America, desperate to find him. Her search leads her to a houseful of curious strangers, and one man who claims to be a friend–Rourke Walsh. Despite […]
  • “Cairo:The Mother of the World” by Herbert L. Smith Book Review

    By Ruth on December 2, 2012
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    Travel Narrative Title: Cairo: The Mother of the World Author: Herbert L. Smith Date Published: 2008 Cairo: The Mother Of The World explores the heart of a city that most tourists never see – an affectionate, humorous close-up of the aggregation that is Cairo, as well as an adventure among the streets, tombs, houses, and monuments that are the city […]
  • “First Time: The Legend of Garison Fitch”by Samuel Ben White Book Review

    By Ruth on December 2, 2012
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    First Time: The Legend of Garison Fitch “What if history didn’t happen that way … the first time?” Garison Fitch was one of the most revered scientists in the Soviet Americas until he left fame behind to work on a secret project in his log cabin in the mountains of Marx. But something went wrong. Instead of traveling interdimentionally, Garison […]
  • “Beside the Still Waters” by Jacqueline T. Lynch Book Review

    By Ruth on December 1, 2012
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    Four towns, gone. Dismantled slowly while their inhabitants grieve for a history and heritage that has been voted away from them. The present threatens; the future belongs to the fearless. “Beside the Still Waters” is a family saga based on an actual event which displaced four entire towns in central Massachusetts for the construction of a reservoir. Today, the Quabbin […]