The Secret Life of Bees

beesWatched this yesterday. I never read this book, but now I wish I had. What a great film! I have to rank this one up there with Steel Magnolias and Fried Green Tomatoes on my favorites of all time list.

Like most reviews on Amazon say say, this one definitely tugs at your heart strings. It moves at a nice slow pace, but there’s not a single character here you won’t connect with.

If you’ve ever suffered from the hate or at the hands of someone who made you feel inferior, or you’ve ever lost someone way too soon, then you will love this movie. Dakota Fanning is amazing as a young girl who escapes the hands of an unloving father only to find herself retracing her dead mother’s path in life.

Set in the Civil Rights crisis of the 60′s, the film uses racism only as a backdrop to a much worse hate in the world than the ones that often burden our own shoulders, rather than any form of political statement. Grab the tissues for this one and prepare to forever be changed.

Paul Rudd

Paul Rudd is suddenly everywhere thanks to his new movie, “I Love You, Man.” He might as well be Dane Cook, people are talking about him so much.  Hello People!  He’s been around a while.  Wake up and pay attention.  His IMDB list goes back to 1992!  Love him in ’98 though in Object of My Affection with Jennifer Aniston.  Yeah, that’s right!  Jennifer Aniston.  You know who that is, don’t you?  Yeah, I thought so.

Stealing ‘Stealing Wishes’

stealingwishes2Well, technically it’s not stealing.

I’m still giving my E-book of Stealing Wishes away.

You can pay what you want, or pay nothing at all.  It’s up to you!

Download the E-book by clicking on the picture of the book now.  —>

And if you like my book, tell me about it.  Heck, tell the whole world by leaving a review for me over at Amazon.com.

Just click here!

Waiting for Spring

The wait is over here in St. Louis.  With weather in the 70s this week, patches of green on the lawn, and birds visiting my back yard other than those fat little winter sparrows, today is officially the first day of spring.  My neighbor’s dogwood in bloom proves it.

Besides getting outside and watching things grow or buying veggies at my local farmers market, I can’t wait to read R.J. Keller’s book Waiting for Spring.  It came out about a year ago and has received 4 five star reviews so far on Amazon.  waitingforspring

Buy a copy here!

Read about it here!

R.J. lives in Maine with her husband and two kids, is a huge indie movie fan, works nights at a convenience store, and blogs all about it on her blog.

So, don’t wait any more.  Spring is here!  Celebrate it with a good book!

Does music inspire you?

I’m home sick today doped up on Tylenol Cold pills with a cup of coffee and a box of tissues.  My head feels like it’s stuffed with cotton, so my mind can’t really comphrehend daytime television right now.  Morning radio isn’t much better.  I’m sick of hearing about the economy.  I’m sick of hearing about Chris Brown and Rihanna.  I’m sick of hearing about AIG bonuses and death threats.  Stock is down.  Interest rates are down. Gas is up. Murder rates are up.  If I had some Calgon, I don’t even think it could take me away.

I decided to dig through my CDs to find something I haven’t listened to in a long time.  Yes, CDs, remember those little round shiny disks we used to play.  They came out after cassette tapes.  Cassette Tapes?  Oh, I don’t think you were born yet.

womenAnyway, I came across Women & Songs Volume 2 and decided to give it a listen.  What a nice collection of female favorites!  Madonna, Jewel, Kylie Monigue, Natasha Bedingfield, Lisa Loeb, Janet Jackson, Brandy, even KD Lang and more.  I was also thrilled to find more volumes in the collection.  I just may have to buy those too.

This CD is exactly what I needed today on this first day of Spring when my ears are ringing and my nose is stuffy.

Thank you, Enya!  Thank you, Donna Lewis.  Thank you, Sixpence None the Richer.  You’ve inspired me to at least write this post.  So, in times like these, what music inspires you?

Not Quite What I Was Planning: 6 Word Memoirs

031509-032Over the weekend, the book worm gobbled up a book that’s been on my list for a while now: Not Quite What I Was Planning, by Rachel Fershleiser and Larry Smith.  The book is a collection of 6 word memoirs from writers across the globe (some well known and some not) who submitted their memoir online at a website.  I first mentioned this book in a post last year, along with a collection of some of my own 6 word thoughts.  I fell in love with this book and finished reading it in just 2 settings.  Most pages contain less than 6 memoirs (36 words total) and are very thought provoking.  I loved the book so much that J and I gave a copy to his aunt for a birthday gift, and I’ll definitely be buying more for others.  You can pick up your own copy as a bargain book on Amazon right now.

And submit your own memoir online at Smith Magazine.  Remember…you only get 6 words!

Here’s mine for the day…

Mondays are an empty coffee cup.

What’s up with our wives and daughters?

Is it just me or is there a surplus in books these days about the wives and daughters of various men and their obscure occupations?  My point…

The Torturer’s Wife

The Memory Keeper’s Daughter

The Gravedigger’s Daughter

The Zookeeper’s Wife

The Heretic’s Daughter

Somebody Else’s Daughter

The Hummingbird’s Daughter

The Time Traveler’s Wife

Doesn’t anyone write about sons or husbands anymore?

Review of “From Concept to Community” by April Hamilton

April Hamilton was in the right place at the right time when she attended the O’Reilly Tools of Change conference earlier this year. Online community building was the big buzz amongst the authors and conference attendees, and the conference itself was the the final A-ha! moment that April needed to get her own website going, www.publetariat.com. concept

In this Ebook, April basically tells you how she got the site up and running, what tips have made it successful in such an early stage, and how you can apply her methods to creating such a popular website of your own. I usually turn crosseyed at the technology section in the bookstore, much less anything that mentions RSS, HTML, SEO, and the like. And most of what I know about computers and the internet today was all learned through trial and error.

However, April’s 80 page guide was easy to follow and doesn’t assume you already know what such terms mean. After reading this book, I can honestly say I came away with a better knowledge of how I could improve my own website and online community. April begins with simple steps like coming up with a good name (“A visitor may remember the idea behind the name, but isn’t likely to remember the name itself.), branding your site, zoning in on the correct community, creating a mission and its focus, planning the launch, and managing content. Each step is written in a nice easy matter-of-fact flow which is simple to follow and divided up into small sections almost like an outline.

I found it easy to navigate throughout the book, and even easier to go back and find steps I wanted to highlight and remember for later use of my own. April uses her own site, www.publetariat.com, as the prime example throughout the book, but also gives good examples of how to adapt her methods to your own blog or online community.

Although I have previously visited Publetariat many times and I am a member, I went back to the site constantly to compare it to the steps in the book while reading it. Each step April has taken is right there on her site for you to see, and some content may seem like a given, but it’s these steps that some sites often forget but that web browsers like myself are always looking out for. One example is the “community forum.” I love the forum on Publetariat, I have participated in it, and I check it often for new updates. However, my own blog doesn’t contain a forum.

So, while reading April’s book, I kept asking myself, “Why didn’t I think of that?” And you’d probably be doing the same, but now you won’t have to. April has covered just about every detail that I can think of from advertising to merchandise to premium memberships. There’s even a section called “How To Get It Wrong.”

So, just as April mentions in the title…she did it all with very little monetary investment too. As she states in the book, she invested in some business cards to pass out at the conference. Her web address also appeared in an overhead slide presentation which led to a post on Twitter. The rest is history, and history that’s less than 3 months old because the site is brand new and still growing. I think I’ve visited it at least once a day since I signed up.

I commend April Hamilton on providing such a valuable tool for indie authors during a time when E-publishing and online prescence is growing at an even faster rate. She’s in the right place at the right time. And you can be too. Author or not, this guide is a top tool for anyone in need of tips on how to grow their own online community or following.

Gentlemen by Michael Northrop

michaelLooks can be quite deceiving, so I hope they change the cover of this book upon publication. The dark folds, the zipper, the hint of a kid whose eyes we can’t see, it’s great marketing to try to appeal to those readers who are hung up on the vampire craze right now, but those are mostly female and they will be sorely disappointed in this book. And unfortunately, the male readers that the author probably wants to appeal to don’t even read much at that age, which is why I’m shocked they are even bothering with a hardcover edition which will be too pricey.

The book has a great premise but falls short across the board. The main characters are a group of male friends in high school…Micheal (yes, it’s spelled wrong…probably so you don’t think it’s the author writing about himself), Tommy, Mixer, and Bones. The book opens with Tommy disappearing after he gets sent to the principal’s office. After he’s gone a few days and his mom starts to worry, the other three friends start to wonder what happened. These guys are the kinds of kids we all knew at some point in our life…they were losers who always wore black, skipped school or fell asleep in class, got bad grades, and smoked cigarettes. The characters in this book are no different.

Unfortunately, Mixer and Bones are very flat characters because the entire book is told from Micheal’s point of view, which gets very redundant after a while. The entire book is him talking and he goes on a rant about obsessing over getting an email reply from a girl he met last summer, catching Bones and a girl having sex in an abandoned house, and watching CSI shows at home while eating pizza with his mother. Northrop definitely captures Micheal in his words and makes him believable. His language is very true outside of way too many contractions like shouldn’t've, wouldn’t've and Bones’d.

A big part of the book is the three friends starting to suspect their English teacher, Mr. Haberman, of killing Tommy. Haberman is teaching the class the book, Crime and Punishment, which begins to sound like a metaphor for the murder of Tommy. Northrop has good intentions and his use of the literary classic sounds very promising, but it too falls short of its purpose because the loser characters don’t even read much of the book.

Instead, the reader is led through “a week in the life of” some loser teenage friends going to school and acting tough, smoking cigarettes, having sex, and checking their MySpace profile for friend requests. I kept saying to myself, “Hello! One of your friends has gone missing! Did you forget about him??” Besides going to Haberman’s class a few times and the guys trying to read too much into his lecture on the book, Northrop doesn’t take the story in a climatic direction until chapter 18 (there are only 25 chapters in the book) which ends up being some over-the-top brutality which would have worked better had it only happened earlier or if the first 17 chapters leading up to it were a bit more dark and interesting.

Tommy’s storyline gets all wrapped up in the end with a nice little bow (quite stereotypically), but I won’t spoil it for you here. If you get bored with this book, just skip to the last 8 chapters (55 pages). But I will say this book is just an updated recycled version of Killing Mr. Griffin, but not nearly as good. Northrop’s characters are predictable and all the same. They lack appeal and interest for readers these days and are almost insulting. Outside of the teacher, the mom, and the cops, we don’t really get a sense of any other characters in the book. They are only mentioned in passing. Even Natalie, the girl who has sex with Bones in the old house, is doped up like a Zombie.

I can’t believe Scholastic would even put their name on this book. If the rock band tee shirt wearing punk kids actually want to read this book, they will steal it. I generously give it 3 stars only because the concept is there, it’s just not executed. And Micheal, the lead, is a great character and Northrop has done an okay job with him. But one character is not enough to carry this story out.