Thursday, 10 October 2013

Review: One Hundred Names by Cecelia Ahern


Kitty Logan has made a huge mistake in her career as a journalist.  Now her mentor, Constance, lies dying of cancer.  She’s given Kitty a last story lead; a list of one hundred names.  Before Kitty can ask who the names are, Constance passes.  Kitty must figure out how the names are connected and write the story as a tribute to Constance.

Light, frothy, and fun to read, this book cheers you up while not being sickly.  There’s bad things happening but everything turns out right in the end.  There’s a positive theme throughout, with the message being one of hope and to follow your dreams.  There are multiple stories of people, and they’re all cleverly entwined at the ending.

The whole book there’s the undercurrent of the connection the names share and in the back of my mind I was trying to figure it out, while enjoying the story.  Then we were teased and told Kitty had figured it out and I still couldn’t find it, and can’t wait for it to be revealed.  Then the secret is uncovered and ‘of course!’  It’s perfect, very fitting with
who Constance was.  Read this, see if you can figure it out, but don’t forget to enjoy the story.

A really good book I hugely enjoyed and read in one sitting.  I just had to see what happened next!

Title: One Hundred Names
Author: Cecelia Ahern
Published: HarperCollins, 2012
Reviewer: Jan

Wednesday, 9 October 2013

Pure Heroine by LORDE

We're number 1! We're number 1! We're number 1! Kiwis are doing it for themselves! Standing on their own two feet, ringing their own drum machines.

I'm a huge fan of Lorde and her brand spanking new album Pure Heroine is incredible! If you didn't catch the news headlines you may not know that Lorde's song Royals went to number 1 on Billboard Hot 100 making her the only Kiwi solo artist to do so.

We have her new album in the library and her Love Club EP so make sure you give them a listen. My favourite tracks are A World Alone, Glory and Gore and Tennis Court but the whole album is fantastic. It's hard to believe she's only 16 years old.

Check out her Singles Royals and Tennis Court below:

Royals


Tennis Court

Tuesday, 8 October 2013

Walk like a zombie - special event!

To celebrate the launch of Blue, a debut zombie novel by Aucklander Brandy Wehinger, there'll be a zombie shamble down Queen Street.

I am not making this up.

Dress as a zombie or just walk like one from Britomart to the Auckland Central Library on Lorne St this Friday, October 11 at 12.30pm. The walk will be followed by a fun and *free* event at the library at 2pm, and you'll get to meet Brandy herself.

According to the publicity from Random House: "Blue is set in a post-apocalyptic world, where humans live in colonies high above the ground and have forgotten a lot of what pre-zombie life was like. For instance, there are no cell phones or internet etc.

The main character, Blue is a half-zombie, half-human. The Blue is an interesting state of being: somewhere between ‘normal' and a walking corpse. The Blue is mostly immortal, yet desperately alone.

Apocalypse, zombies, shopping malls – Blue has it all! Told by multiple narrators of different genders, ages and ideologies, it's both a gripping, visceral thriller and a philosophical and lyrical love story." (It's also supposed to be quite funny.)

Brandy works in appearance medicine (what is that exactly?) here in Auckland, although she originally hails from California, traditional home of the zombie apocalypse. She'll be happy to answer your questions at the event. It's one thing you might want to be caught dead at...

Meanwhile, whet your undead appetite with these recommendations:


and my personal favourite...




Saturday, 5 October 2013

Stalking the catalogue: Manga Mills & Boon

"She was a superbabe. Her longs were so long...I'd die for the chance to see her again."

We have Mills & Boon in Manga *blink blink* I'm late to this party. (My life story, I suspect), because they've been around for a while in Japan, already.

I remember watching Guilty Pleasures a couple of years ago, and hearing that such a thing existed but it went in one ear and out the other. And then yesterday I was stalking the catalogue (best job in the world, really) and came across The Forced Bride in eBook...and you know what happened then. That's right. I requested ALL OF THE THINGS *gulps*

So far we have 9 in total and you can find all of them listed here, and I'm going to read them all because CURIOSITY! It will not kill me as it did the cat. Maybe. This particular title pictured above? I chose it because Amelia is a 'typical bookworm librarian' who, by night, sneaks out of the house and works as a 'provocatively dressed waitress named Amber.' QUE? *suspicious look*

People read romance. Don't believe me? Consider this (Romance Writers of America romance reader statistics):

  • Women make up 91 percent of romance book buyers, and men make up 9 percent
  • The U.S. romance book buyer is most likely to be aged between 30 and 54 years
  • The greatest percentage of romance book buyers (39 percent) have an income between $50,000 and $99,900
  • According to RWA's 2011 Romance Book Consumer survey, slightly more than half of survey respondents live with a spouse or significant other
  • Forty-four percent of romance book buyers consider themselves "frequent readers" (read quite a few romances); 31 percent are "avid readers" (almost always reading a romance novel); and 25 percent are "occasional readers" (on and off, like when on vacation)
  • Readers have been reading romance for a long time: 41 percent of romance book buyers have been reading romance for 20 years or more
I read it for the happy ever after moment. I want one of those for everybody in the world. (Just not myself because eww feels).

Author: Sharon Sala
Illustrator: Mayu Takayama

Wednesday, 2 October 2013

I am the F word


I was reading an interview that Time Out New York did with Amy Poehler the other day and in it she said "I consider myself a feminist, and it informs my work only in that it’s just who I am, in the same way that I’m a woman, or I’m 5'2" or whatever". I consider myself a feminist in the same way. It's who I am. I don't remember ever choosing to be a feminist but the belief in equality and recognising the strength in women has been a constant in my life for as long as I can remember. 

I have been a feminist even before I knew what one was. As a kid I wanted to be a plumber just because my big brother told me I couldn't be one because I was a girl. When I was about 13 I took wood work at school in a misguided attempt to never have to rely on a man to build or fix something for me (also I was good at it and it was easy marks). I  have been subconsciously buying my friend's daughter the brown haired, skateboarding Barbies for the past few years.

To clarify, I don't hate men or burn my bras (like I would anyway, bras are expensive!) the fact that I can make a dovetail joint with the best of them does not mean that I am not feminine. We need to stop expecting people to fit inside our own expectations of what we think a man or a woman should behave like. For me being a feminist isn't about making women stronger. Women are already strong, its about getting society to recognise that strength and allowing woman to thrive in equal opportunity.

There have been so many different things that as a woman I have found empowering in my life and most have them aren't in your face blatant feminist works. They're Loretta Lynn songs and YA books. I thought I would share a few of the things that have, and continue to, inspire me in my quest for equality.

Sex and the City

Say what you want about this show but to me it is so refreshing to have a show about 4 women who are well thought out 'real' characters who are successful in their work and aren't either portrayed as high-powered bitches or haggard mothers trying (and failing) to 'have it all'.

Lean In Women, work and the will to lead by Sheryl Sandberg
"Thirty years after women became 50 percent of the college graduates in the United States, men still hold the vast majority of leadership positions in government and industry. This means that women’s voices are still not heard equally in the decisions that most affect our lives. In Lean In, Sheryl Sandberg examines why women’s progress in achieving leadership roles has stalled, explains the root causes, and offers compelling, commonsense solutions that can empower women to achieve their full potential."
I listened to the audiobook of Lean In and really enjoyed it. This book wont be for everyone but I enjoyed extracting the bits of it felt I could use and applying them to my own situation. Sheryl is a wealth of knowledge so any woman looking to get ahead career wise or any man looking to understand better how to work with women should read this.

Tina Fey and Amy Poehler 

It is no secret that I love these two women. Amy Poehler's Smart Girls is a new love of mine that I wont talk about it too much as I talked about it in my last blog but it's excellent and you should check it out.  Tina Fey's Bossy pant's is my favourite book and contains a chapter called 'I don't care if you like it: one in a series of love letters to Amy Poehler' This chapter contains one of my personal mantras so I thought I would share and bit of it with you:


"Amy Poehler was new to SNL and we were all crowded into the seventeenth-floor writers’ room, waiting for the Wednesday read-through to start. There were always a lot of noisy “comedy bits” going on in that room. Amy was in the middle of some such nonsense with Seth Meyers across the table, and she did something vulgar as a joke. I can’t remember what it was exactly, except it was dirty and loud and “unladylike.” 
Jimmy Fallon, who was arguably the star of the show at the time, turned to her and in a faux-squeamish voice said “Stop that! It’s not cute! I don’t like it.”
Amy dropped what she was doing, went black in the eyes for a second, and wheeled around on him. “I don’t f***ing care if you like it.” Jimmy was visibly startled. Amy went right back to enjoying her ridiculous bit. (I should make it clear that Jimmy and Amy are very good friends and there was never any real beef between them. Insert penis joke here.) 
With that exchange, a cosmic shift took place. Amy made it clear that she wasn’t there to be cute. She wasn’t there to play wives and girlfriends in the boys’ scenes. She was there to do what she wanted and she did not f***ing care if you liked it."
Ellie Linton, Hermione Granger

The Tomorrow When The World Began and Harry Potter series are my childhood. To this day Ellie Linton from TWTWB is my literary hero. She's strong, independent, stubborn, loyal and uncertain of herself in a way that I couldn't help but relate to. Hermione is nothing like Ellie but I love her just as much. In the Harry Potter series she isn't the love interest, or the token female. She is the brains of the operation and the boys wouldn't have survived without her. These young women are a force to be reckoned with and I love it.

So these are my views and opinions unfiltered. Feel free to comment and ask questions if you want to but in the words of Amy Poehler - I don't f***king care if you like it!