Showing posts with label Travel. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Travel. Show all posts

Tuesday, September 5, 2017

Fearless by Robin Alexander

FearlessFearless by Robin Alexander

My rating: 5 of 5 stars


I was slightly concerned when I opened the book to find two people bickering and fighting on a cruise ship. Luckily one of the two was quickly out of the story, and my fears did not move past that initial slight concern.

I love everything about this book - the main characters, the adventure (stuck in Honduras together after their cruise ship left without them, Falon and Haley had fun adventures around the area (they kept saying 'island', Honduras isn't an island but there are islands off the coast - oh, that's what Roatán is, it's an island off the coast of Honduras, one of the Bay Islands)), the side characters, the best friends, the hotel owner, - everything.

This book has excitement, adventures, romance, chemistry, humor, travel, and more. I now feel like I'm writing an advertisement. pfft.

At this exact moment, minutes after finishing the book, I can confidently say that this book is within the top 3 books I've read by Alexander. Though I'd be more tentative as to where in that 3 book list this book would fall. I wish to clarify that I've read 25 books not just three.

Rating: 5+

September 5 2017



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Tuesday, May 23, 2017

The Road to Little Dribbling: More Notes from a Small Island by Bill Bryson

The Road to Little Dribbling: More Notes from a Small IslandThe Road to Little Dribbling: More Notes from a Small Island by Bill Bryson

My rating: 3 of 5 stars


Bill Bryson returns to writing about his random wanderings, in book form, after a relatively long absence. It has been a while since I last read him – I’ve tried his other stuff but it always was his travel books that caught and held my attention.

Re: Random wanderings: yes, they are random. He has some vague plan but never seems to actually care enough to ‘make sure’ of things – like arriving at certain places with some vague idea he will stop at a museum, or specific building, or, once, a specific forest, only to find they weren’t open that day (or, in the case of the forest – the one where a university conducts massive research within, it isn’t actually open to the public). That’s kind of one of those things you’d look up, you’d think – whether or not a ‘working forest’ is open to the public. Mind, his random wanderings did often find him in wondrous locations he never knew existed. And that is kind of his thing, to randomly wander. But still, some things he ‘really wants to visit’ probably should be checked out before hand if he can visit, and add in random turns in the road to see if anything is down those pathways. I mean, unless he wants to turn to a life of crime, some things can’t be just randomly visited.

Right, so. With a few neat moments here or there, like with Stonehenge and the like, the vast majority of this book seemed to be: old man wanders randomly being crotchety and making snide comments that he sometimes tells us were only said in his head, and other times you hope were only said in his head (that misanthropy tag is because the guy generally seems to dislike humans and thinks the vast majority are stupid liter bugs – possibly he was saying some of this stuff more for whatever humor might be found in such comments, but it comes across as the guy is an ass and hates humans – especially if they work in the service industry; I do not specifically recall why I included the phobia tag/shelf).

Right, sorry – in this specific book he travels all over England, Wales, and Scotland. The information on England and Wales seems quite extensive while the stuff on Scotland seemed tacked on and barely there for whatever reason. And then there’s the end of the book, the pre-afterward/notes/acknowledgments, during which Bryson praises Britain for how rational and brilliant it is, like politically, and how it isn’t as stupid as the USA. Then proceeds in the afterward to note that between finishing the book and publication, the UK went and had their Brexit vote and well . . . maybe the UK is in the process of falling apart.

At 17% I happened to mention: "Bryson comes across as something of a grumpy old man who is out of touch with the world around him and likely to die from falling into a well because he wasn't paying enough attention. Also - seriously, McDonalds was founded before he was born. It's not some new thing - Bryson has no clue how to order food there? Really? (much of this, I'm sure, is supposed to be self-depreciating humor, but meh)." – Which I’ve already noted, but mention again so I can then say – that kind of attitude and impression of Bryson continues throughout the book, though there were brief moments of ‘goodness’. Like near 53% mark and he talked about Stonehenge.

One last thought before I depart – I read this book March 27 to May 23 2017 not because the book was super hard/difficult/not-engaging or anything like that but because it was a good fall back book. As in, in between books, when I wasn’t sure what to read next, a section or two of Bryson’s book was a good stop in before I found my next fiction book to read. Otherwise I could and most likely would have read this book within a day or three (and it would have taken three days or so just to give myself pauses from Bryson). On the other hand, this long stretched out reading probably helped me enjoy the book more. Since I did have all these pauses from Bryson and his thoughts.

Rating: … I don’t know something around 3 and a half stars?

May 23 2017




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Saturday, July 16, 2016

Truth or Dare by Raven J. Spencer


Truth or Dare
by Raven J. Spencer
Pages: 53
Date: August 26 2014
Publisher: Self
Series: None

Review
Rating: 2.0 out of 5.0
Read: July 16 2016

This is the first story I've read by this author.

I'm somewhat surprised both by my reactions to the story, and when I happened to, just now, glance around to see what others had said. Well, mostly I just looked at their ratings. I see that I'm the odd one out here, mostly. No matter.

In a moment of needing something quick to read, I looked at the synopsis of this story to see if I should give it a chance. And, no, I do not mean on here (GoodReads), I meant inside the book. I'm used to Lesbian Fiction books including a synopsis in the books that I normally skip (skipping the synposis not the book, shesh I need to write better). Sometimes read when I need to fill a minute or ten. Why am I mentioning this 'synopsis'? Spending so much time on it? Because there isn't one in this ebook. Yet, I didn't immediately realize that. Because the book is written on about the same level as a synopsis. This happened, then that, then that over there, and then.

I did not feel connected to either character at all, and the only emotions generated were created from the cheating involved, but (since there was a bit of 'wink wink, the husband/boyfriend is okay with it') mostly with the people involved. The out of work woman dates women. Yet she somehow accidentally got into a relationship with a man? Then accidentally ended up on vacation with him? What the fuck? How . . how does that even happen?

I mean, the other woman in the story also annoys me greatly, but she's on this little vacation with her husband. Who, granted, she wants nothing to do with now, but supposedly did at some point. Though we, the readers, are again treated to a character who apparently never in their life considered the possibility of women as potential dates. There are ways in how such a character can come about (in reality and in fiction), but we have none of this woman's backstory, so all we have is this kind of incredulous and vague 'never-realized-women-existed' feeling. *shrug, whatever*

I'm happy others liked the story well enough, I didn't but we can't all like the same things.

July 16 2016

Saturday, July 2, 2016

The Diary of a 100 Year Old Amused Senior by Estelle Craig



The Diary of a 100 Year Old Amused Senior
by Estelle Craig
Pages: 114
Date: March 12 2015
Publisher: AuthorHouse
Series: N/A

Review
Rating: 4.0 out of 5.0
Read: July 1 2016

I received a copy of this book from Netgalley and AuthorHouse for an honest review.

Estelle Craig is a hundred years old and is here to tell you her story. Don't worry, she still has her memory - she remembers her own name, what happened to her today, yesterday, and what happened in her life 10-20-30-40-50-60-70-80-90 years ago. There is a certain amount of repetition, though somewhat less than might be expected in a memoir like this one here.

Craig tells of her life in New York city, New England, West Virginia, and Toronto. Being a women's interest columnist in West Virginia, performing in radios and in plays; and spending 41 years presenting entertaining speakers for the people of Toronto through the World Adventure Tours.

Also mentions of how she noticed older people (barely able to walk old people) attempting to stumble around on tours and trips. And knew that she didn't that for herself. She wanted to tour now. Not put it off. So she did. Becoming something of a world traveller - being one of the first to visit China when they allowed people in; sitting in the desert looking up at the pyramids; being in Rome at the same time Elizabeth Taylor was there and, on something of a whim, decides to attempt to interview her (previously established in the book is the part wherein Estelle Craig had sold interviews and the like to the Canadian radio .. . um . . Canadian Broadcasting Company?), and having a tour of the set.

Craig has done a lot in her long life, and she has some interesting stories to tell in this book here (and in her two other books, though that's by assumption, since I haven't read more than a sample for one of them - the sample was interesting enough that I ended up reading this book here).

July 1 2016