Tuesday, March 26, 2019

The Maze Runner by James Dashner

The Maze Runner

by James Dashner




Rating (1-5) 📘📘📘
Genre - Fiction, Young Adult
Format - Audiobook

*Amazon Blurb*
Nice to meet ya, shank. Welcome to the Glade.

Outside the towering stone walls that surround the Glade is a limitless, ever-changing maze. It’s the only way out—and no one’s ever made it through alive.

Everything is going to change.

Then a girl arrives. The first girl ever. And the message she delivers is terrifying.

Remember. Survive. Run.


*My Review* 
This book is compared to the Divergent Series. I would say it is the children's version if anything.

Thomas arrives in the "Glade" which is basically a small area in the middle of a maze. For years the boys who currently reside there have been working on trying to find a way out of the maze with no luck. Everyone who lives in the Glade fills a jobs so that everything runs smoothly - farmers, butchers, a cook etc. However, once Theresa arrives, nothing goes smoothly anymore.

Overall, I thought the book was good considering the 12-17 year age range it is intended for. It is extremely slow paced and actually a bit frustrating as you are just waiting for something to finally  happen and when it does, the book is over. The characters also seems to be boring. No one really stands out, even the the main character. I am hoping that the next in the series, The Scorch Trials, has more excitement.

Wednesday, March 13, 2019

What Nobody Knew by Amelia Hendrey

What Nobody Knew

by Amelia Hendrey




Rating (1-5) 📘📘📘📘📘
Genre - Biography
Format - Paperback
Pages - 257

*Amazon Blurb*
My story begins aged 3, when my mother abandoned me and left me with my brutal father to raise me. Nobody knew the secrets that went on inside that house, or the journey that I travelled on after leaving it, until now. This is the story of my survival. What do you do when no one wants you? How many people need to destroy a child until that child wants to destroy herself? What if social services always got told a different story? What would you do if you were in my position? Survival is key.

*My Review* 


This book....WOW!!! I wanted to start writing the review when I was only a couple chapters in. I've read sad books before, but this was the first book that actually hurt my heart. Not only was I sad, but filled with an anger that I wasn't able to do anything with. The ability for anyone to share any type of abuse is a big deal. For someone to be able to write a book about it to share with the world is powerful. It was impossible to put this book down.

This story takes you along the journey of a young child that goes through an abusive life filled with nothing but pain. No hugs, kissed or love of any kind. Even worse, is that no one stepped in to help. The book is different as it shows actual documentation (with names blocked out for privacy issues) from various departments including social services, school etc. It seemed they all wanted to ignore what was going on, but I'm not sure why or HOW they could do that. All the excuses that were given "medical issues" yet there was never any proof of it from a doctor. How could no one look into it? How could they sleep at night not knowing for sure what was going on? I am curious what happened to her dear friends Emma and Angel.

I can't applaud Amelia enough for writing this book. Hopefully it opens people's eyes as to how child is made to feel nothing and how they can live without telling. I was able to identify a little bit with parts of this story. I know that no matter how old you get, whether the person who hurt you is alive or not, the memories will find and haunt you out of the blue. Sometimes it's easy to push them away. Other times it's nearly impossible.


Final Notice by Van Fleisher

Final Notice

by Van Fleisher



Rating (1-5) 📘📘📘
Genre - Medical Thriller, Political Thriller, Suspense
Format - Ebook

*Amazon Blurb*
What Would You Do If You Knew – For Certain – That You Had 10 Days To Live?

Some would get their legal affairs in order. Others would contact family, friends, lovers, ex-lovers. Some might take a trip or make an exceptional donation. Still others might clean the house and do the laundry. And some…might kill.

The year is the very near future. A brilliant young doctor and mathematician, Vijay Patel, has invented a new health/sport watch that monitors blood chemistry so accurately, it can actually predict when someone will die – within 10, 20, or 30 days. The intention of this “Final Notice,” as it is called, is to allow people to get their affairs in order and reach out to loved ones before it’s too late. But when those notified have easy access to a gun, the result is sometimes lethal for more than just the watch-owner.

These are the stories of several people who receive their Final Notice and their very different reactions...including a desire to get revenge with impunity. They range from an 89-year-old resident in a retirement home to a U.S. Senator...from a benevolent widow to a crass tycoon to a noted climate change scientist.

But in this fresh, fast-paced, political thriller, page-turner, their stories are all set against the all-too-recognizable backdrop of a guns-gone-wild America, and the relentless push by the NRA and their surrogate politicians to make guns even easier to acquire.

Their stories are also connected by the involvement of several likeable protagonists. These include: the inventor of the watch ... the FBI agent charged with stopping the killings...and a recently retired, middle-class couple, Vince and Trudi Fuller, with their brave immigrant friends and a very endearing Corgi, Miles.

Vince and Trudi live happily in their “California bubble” until Vince is knocked down by a young punk in a parking lot. His sense of shame and rage, resulting from feelings of age-related vulnerability, triggers a first-time interest in guns. Trudi resists, but later, an unprovoked attack on Miles and Vince – and a growing friendship with two courageous Syrian refugees – changes her mind. With very unexpected consequences.

There is plenty of dark humor and political satire in FINAL NOTICE, as well as touching scenes and outright suspense. So expect to laugh out loud, dry some tears, and bite your nails (not necessarily in that order).

It is, despite the somewhat “sci-fi” premise of the watch, a very realistic reflection of American society and the many problems we face today.

*My Review*


What would you do if you knew exactly when you would die. Would you take revenge on people who did you wrong, right any wrongs you did or tie up loose ends?

I was so excited to read this book, until I started reading it. I thought it was going to be about what people would do, if they would take advantage of the Final Notice. I was expecting stories about various people and what they did when the received the notice. Don't get me wrong, it did include that, but it didn't seem to be the main focus of the book like the title led me to think. There was one couple that stayed constant throughout the book. But even their part seemed boring to me.

It did have some characters who did receive their final notice and reacted to it, some in a negative way and some positive. Unfortunately it seemed there was way more politics than anything else. There was a lot about the NRA and talk about the rights of the people in regards to the Second Amendment.


Friday, March 8, 2019

Finders Keepers by Stephen King

Finders Keepers

by Stephen King






Rating (1-5) 📘📘📘📘
Genre - Psychic Thriller, Psychic Mystery
Format - Audio Book

*Amazon Blurb*

“Wake up, genius.” So announces deranged fan Morris Bellamy to iconic author John Rothstein, who once created the famous character Jimmy Gold and hasn’t released anything since. Morris is livid, not just because his favorite writer has stopped publishing, but because Jimmy Gold ended up as a sellout. Morris kills his idol and empties his safe of cash, but the real haul is a collection of notebooks containing John Rothstein’s unpublished work...including at least one more Jimmy Gold novel. Morris hides everything away before being locked up for another horrific crime. But upon Morris’s release thirty-five years later, he’s about to discover that teenager Pete Saubers has already found the stolen treasure—and no one but former police detective Bill Hodges, along with his trusted associates Holly Gibney and Jerome Robinson, stands in the way of his vengeance....

*My Review* 

I am a bit frustrated with myself as I didn't realize this was the 2nd book in The Bill Hodges Trilogy - 3 Book Series. I will now have to go and find the first book, Mr. Mercedes and then the final, End of a Watch so that I can have completion. I hate not reading a series in order. Normally I won't even start a series unless I have all the current books in it.

In any event, I enjoyed this book. It goes back and forth from the past to the present easily. It definitely reminded me of Stephen King's book Misery. Both feature a crazy reader who will stop at nothing to get more from an author (although I enjoyed Misery way more).

I was kept in suspense about what was going to happen to the notebooks that were stolen in the beginning. I never expected them to end up the way they did.

The Haunting Of Hill House by Shirley Jackson

The Haunting Of Hill House

by Shirley Jackson






Rating (1-5) 📘📘📘📘
Genre -
Format - Audio Book

*Amazon Blurb*

First published in 1959, Shirley Jackson's The Haunting of Hill House has been hailed as a perfect work of unnerving terror. It is the story of four seekers who arrive at a notoriously unfriendly pile called Hill House: Dr. Montague, an occult scholar looking for solid evidence of a "haunting"; Theodora, his lighthearted assistant; Eleanor, a friendless, fragile young woman well acquainted with poltergeists; and Luke, the future heir of Hill House. At first, their stay seems destined to be merely a spooky encounter with inexplicable phenomena. But Hill House is gathering its powers—and soon it will choose one of them to make its own.

*My Review* 


This book had me hooked, but then let me down.

The book is about four people getting together to stay at Hill House and to keep a notebook of any strange behavior they experience. The book changes the point of view from the four people that are staying there, but it was easy to follow along. I didn't like how none of them ever seemed to write anything down. It also seemed to take forever for anything to happen in the house and when it did it wasn't anything I was expecting....meaning it was kind of boring.

The house is supposed to be haunted so I really thought there would be all kinds of incidents during the stay, but it just seems like the only incident was them getting lost in the big house.

Thursday, March 7, 2019

The Cabin At The End Of The World by Paul Tremblay

The Cabin At The End Of The World

by Paul Tremblay





Rating (1-5) 📘📘📘
Genre - Supernatural Thriller, Psychological Thriller, Horror, Fiction
Format - Hardcover
Pages - 244

*Amazon Blurb*

Seven-year-old Wen and her parents, Eric and Andrew, are vacationing at a remote cabin on a quiet New Hampshire lake. Their closest neighbors are more than two miles in either direction along a rutted dirt road.
One afternoon, as Wen catches grasshoppers in the front yard, a stranger unexpectedly appears in the driveway. Leonard is the largest man Wen has ever seen but he is young, friendly, and he wins her over almost instantly. Leonard and Wen talk and play until Leonard abruptly apologizes and tells Wen, "None of what’s going to happen is your fault". Three more strangers then arrive at the cabin carrying unidentifiable, menacing objects. As Wen sprints inside to warn her parents, Leonard calls out: "Your dads won’t want to let us in, Wen. But they have to. We need your help to save the world."
Thus begins an unbearably tense, gripping tale of paranoia, sacrifice, apocalypse, and survival that escalates to a shattering conclusion, one in which the fate of a loving family and quite possibly all of humanity are entwined. The Cabin at the End of the World is a masterpiece of terror and suspense from the fantastically fertile imagination of Paul Tremblay.


*My Review* 

This book left me feeling incomplete....not like way you feel when you finished a book in a series, but like the book was written before it was fully thought thru. I will say that the author does an amazing job at describing the the scenes, but not the actual reason for what is going on in the book. I get that the "strangers" have come to the cabin to do what they have to or as they put it "what is necessary". This is what I can't get past. Why is it necessary? There was a little backstory about how they came to be together, but I either didn't follow it, don't remember it or the author failed at that point in the story. I am completely lost about the why of the story.

Wen, who I thought was going to be one of the main characters of the story after the beginning ends up seeming to be more of a space filler than anything.

Then ending also left me feeling incomplete. I mean is there going to be another book? Overall I just didn't care for this at all.