Wednesday, December 9, 2015

Book Reviews- Little Britches series

For far too many challenges I re-read and read the Little Britches series. The first seven books of the series I had already read but I had never finished the last three books in the series.

Little Britches (Hard Core Re-reading challenge)

Synopsis from Goodreads: In 1906 Littleton Colorado, near Denver, Ralph Moody 8 learns how to be a man from his father and cowboy Hi. Mother Mame tries to enforce Sunday bible standards. The family of seven build a ranch, participate in auctions, roundups, picnics. They suffer from irrigation wars, tornado wind storms, flood, gain and lose stock. 
The first and I think best of the series. This books sets up the second as Ralph's father teaches him about becoming a man.

Man of the Family (Hard Core Re-reading challenge)

Synopsis from Goodreads: Early 1900s Colorado. Fortified with Yankee ingenuity and western energy, the Moody family, transplanted from New England, builds a new ranch life. Father has died and Little Britches shoulders the responsibilities of a man at age eleven. Determined Grace and religious Mother cooks beans, bread and repair lace curtains while Ralph builds frames and delivers baking.
Though he is only twelve, with his father dead, Ralph is now the man of the family and fully determined to be just that. 

The Home Ranch (Hard Core Re-reading challenge and Monthly Key Word Challenge)

Synopsis from Goodreads: Ralph Moody turns again to Colorado, the scene of those two delightful earlier books about his boyhood, Little Britches and Man of the Family.This is an extension of Mr. Moody's recollections of his twelfth year, and fits withing the framework of Man of the Family between chapters 25 and 26.The Home Ranch has all the warm and wonderful ingredients which made his first two books such universal favorites with readers of all ages. The book teems with exciting and poignant incidents and with memorable characters, most of them good, kindly, generous people--though there is a villain. Mr. Moody is at his best in picturing a young boy's struggles with economic and other adversities, and having lived through them himself, he writes with such convincing honesty that the reader knows that this is the way things were.
Ralph has to learn to bring his pride down a little in this book and learn to work with men, and sometimes men who aren't so easy to get along with.

Mary Emma and Company (Hard Core Re-reading challenge)

Synopsis from Goodreads: The protagonist, Mary Emma Moody, widowed mother of six, has taken her family east in 1912 to begin a new life. Her son, Ralph, then thirteen, recalls how the Moodys survive that first bleak winter in a Massachusetts town. Money and prospects are lacking, but not so faith and resourcefulness. "Mother" in Little Britches and Man of the Family, Mary Emma emerges fully as a character in this book, and Ralph, no longer called "Little Britches," comes into his own. The family’s run-ins with authority and with broken furnaces in winter are evocative of a full and warm family life. 
The entrepreneurship of this family is incredible! And Mary Emma is so hard working! It's inspiring how this family pulls together and works hard to make a living. 

The Fields of Home (Hard Core Re-reading challenge)

Synopsis from Goodreads: 1912 Massachussetts. Narrator Ralph 15 battles maternal Grandpa Tom Gould, who swears at "tarnal" boy, cook Millie, old "yalla colt". Ralph has to learn patience and respect while continuing to grow up. 
I'm just saying that I would have even less patience than Ralph did with his Grandpa and he had little patience with him. At the end of the book though I think that we are beginning to understand his Grandpa more and we have a little more tolerance for him.

Shaking the Nickel Bush (Mount TBR challenge, TBR Pile Challenge) 

Synopsis from Goodreads: Skinny and suffering from diabetes, Ralph Moody is ordered by a Boston doctor to seek a more healthful climate. Going west again is a delightful prospect. His childhood adventures on a Colorado ranch were described in Little Britches and Man of the Family, also Bison Books. Now nineteen years old, he strikes out into new territory hustling odd jobs, facing the problem of getting fresh milk and leafy green vegetables. He scrapes around to survive, risking his neck as a stunt rider for a movie company. With an improvident buddy named Lonnie, he camps out in an Arizona canyon and "shakes the nickel bush" by sculpting plaster of paris busts of lawyers and bankers. This is 1918, and the young men travel through the Southwest not on horses but in a Ford aptly named Shiftless. 
I feel like in the last three books when Ralph is "grown up" and on his own he starts to lose his moral compass a little bit. This one was still enjoyable and Ralph cracks me up how he's able to use his random talents to make money.

The Dry Divide (Mount TBR challenge, TBR Pile Challenge) 

Synopsis from Goodreads: 4 July 1919 Nebraska. Ralph Moody "Bud" 20 is diabetic, down to last dime when put off a freight train. Three months later he owns 8 teams of horses and rigs. His girl Judy works alongside. On wheat and corn farm of bully Hudson, he pulls together Swedish brothers, drunk Doc, Spanish-speaking Paco, Irish "Jaiko Jack", Old Bill, into first-rate harvest crew.
This one takes place in Kansas so that's pretty cool. :) I was impressed with Ralph for sticking it out and how he made a team of the group of misfits. I liked Judy and she just disappears in the next book! I thought Ralph was a little fresh with her though!

Horse of a Different Color (Mount TBR challenge, TBR Pile Challenge, Series Ender challenge and Finishing the series challenge ) 

Synopsis from Goodreads: Ralph Moody's story is a perfect example of rural American enterprise in the early 1920s. He found himself with mountainous debts through collapse of the livestock market. In the process of digging himself out of debt, he also saved a town from total bankruptcy. The reader lives through a flash flood, admires his sanitary slaughter house, and weeps over a forced farm auction. This book is a glorious recollection of Pre-Dust Bowl, pre-Depression days
Ralph has really got a head for business. Some of the stuff he did made my head spin! It was a good conclusion to the stories and my only complaint would be that the girl he ended up marrying was so randomly inserted into the story! Not cool!


Follow my blog with Bloglovin

Tuesday, December 8, 2015

Top Ten New to me Authors in 2015

I read some great new to me authors in 2016. Here are my top ones but in no particular order. :)
  1. Leif Enger- Peace Like a River
  2. George Bernard Shaw- Pygmalion
  3. Margaret Mitchell- Gone With the Wind 
  4. Fred Gipson- Old Yeller
  5. Clarence Dary Jr.- Life with Father 
  6. Erich Remarque- All Quiet on the Western Front
  7. Richard Lewellyn- How Green was My Valley
  8. Helene Wecker- The Golem and the Jinni 
  9. E.M. Forster- A Room With a View
  10. Qui Xiaolong- Death of a Red Heroine 

Follow my blog with Bloglovin

Monday, December 7, 2015

It's Monday! Reading TOO much? ;)

I've been reading a LOT!!! Too much? No! One can't read too much! That's blaspheme! ;) A good chunk of it has been re-reading so that automatically goes faster. It's always so much fun to revisit old favorites. :)

Currently Reading

  •  Northanger Abbey by Jane Austen (re-read) (audiobook)

Finished this week

  • Betsy-Tacy and Tib by Lucy Maud Montgomery (re-read) 
  • Betsy-Tach Go Over the Big Hill by Lucy Maud Montgomery (re-read)
  • Horse of a Different Color by Ralph Moody
  • The Phantom Tollbooth by Norton Juster (re-read) 

Coming Soon!

  • Betsy-Tacy Go Downtown by Lucy Maud Montgomery (re-read) 
  • Beloved by Toni Morisson
  • Rebecca by Daphne du Maurier 
  • Charlotte's Web by E.B. White (re-read) 
P.S. The results of the Classics Club spin was 19 so I'll be reading Othello by William Shakespeare. :) 

Follow my blog with Bloglovin

Saturday, December 5, 2015

Movie Review- Serenity

When the TV show Firefly never got rebooted, fans went to great lengths to bring about a sequel film titled Serenity. Since I already gave a character run down in my review of Firefly I encourage you to go my review to see it if you're interested. :)

Serenity picks back up on the adventures of Mal and his renegade crew on the ship Serenity. Once again assassins sent by the Alliance are after River Tamm and the crew is on the run. They soon find out though that the Alliance will stop at nothing to get River back. Along the way the discover a secret the Alliance is trying hard to hide.

This is a great conclusion to what Firefly started, though of course it would have been better if Firefly had just never ended! There are certain horribly heartbreaking moments that I won't give away but overall it is full of the same fun and sic-fi/western flair that was a hallmark of Firefly. One nice thing about serenity is that there is no inappropriate scenes in it as there is in Firefly, just some innuendo.
If you like Firefly you'll love Serenity too. :)

Follow my blog with Bloglovin

Friday, December 4, 2015

TV Review- Firefly

This year I've managed to watch the TV show Firefly twice! For the 42 Challenge I'll be reviewing it. Firefly is a sci-fi show with a western flair to it made by Joss Whedon. First off, Firefly is a really great with lots of humor and I love watching it but it has a lot of inappropriate content. My mind tends to automatically bleep out bad words so that's one problem solved and then I dim the screen on my computer for inappropriate sex scenes. The inappropriate sex scenes are what I have the most problem with in the show. While there are quite a few they don't show anything explicit at all. Violence and gore I can handle for the most part.

Here's a character run down.

Malcom Reynolds (Mal)- Played by Nathan Fillion!!!!

The captain of the ship Serenity, a smuggling ship. During the Civil War fought between the Alliance and the Independents (aka the Browncoats) he fought with the Browncoats but they lost. As he says, "May have been the losing side. Still not convinced it was the wrong one." He has his own moral compass but is fiercely loyal to his crew.

Zoe Washburn

Mal's second mate on Serenity. During the war she fought with Mal and is a very capable fighter. She's married to Wash.

Hoban Washburn (Wash)

The pilot of Serenity. He's married to Zoe. He's lots of fun and adds lots of laughs.

Inara Serra

Inara is a Companion, which is 26th century speak for a high class prostitute. She adds a lot of the inappropriateness to the show. She flies with the ship to add a sense of respectability to it plus as she will admit she likes the adventure.

Jayne Cobb

The man they call Jayne. :) Jayne is basically a hired gun, a mercenary and he is indeed very mercenary. His moral compass is quite off but he's loyal to Mal. He will make you laugh often.

Kaylee Frye

Kaylee is the ship's mechanic. She has a big heart and genuinely loves everybody. She is always happy and is always trying to cheer everyone up. I like her a lot. :)

Dr. Simon Tamm

A very gifted trauma surgeon. Currently he is on the run from the Alliance after rescuing his sister River from their school where the Alliance was experimenting on her brain in secret. He shows so much love and care for his sister that I personally find beautiful. :) He takes refuge with the crew of the Serenity and becomes their Doctor.

River Tamm

The incredibly gifted sister of Dr. Simon Tamm. At the Alliance school where she went her genius was recognized and they experimented on her brain in secret until Simon found out about it and rescued her from there. Now she is on the run from the Alliance with her brother. Throughout the show her various abilities are shown such as how she has psychic power, she's very intuitive and is also an incredibly fighter. However due to what the Alliance did to her she will have fits of delusions, anxiety and flashbacks making her sometimes erratic.

Derrial Book

Book is a Shepherd, which is basically a pastor. He takes ship with the Serenity and tries to add some morality to their lives. He's very devout but shows a surprising amount of knowledge about military tactics, the government and weapons.

Here's an episode by episode run down. There was sadly only one season of this show though there was was a movie spin off made in 2005 as well which was great.

Serenity

Synopsis from Wikipedia: Malcolm Reynolds is a veteran and the captain of Serenity. He and his crew are smuggling goods, but they need to pick up some passengers for extra money. However, not all the passengers are what they seem.
A very fun first episode with great introductions to all of the characters. One inappropriate scene with Inara as well as when you first meet River she's nude but cruel up in a ball so you don't see anything horrible.

The Train Job

Synopsis from Wikipedia: The crew of Serenity takes on a train heist commissioned by a crime lord. They steal the goods, only to find it is medicine that is desperately needed by the town.
Lot's of fun!

Bushwhacked

Synopsis from Wikipedia: Serenity is pulled in by an Alliance cruiser while investigating a spaceship that was attacked by Reavers. Simon and River must hide to prevent capture, while something is wrong with the lone survivor of the attacked spaceship.
You get to learn more about the Reavers in this episode. It's lots of fun. :)

Shindig

Synopsis from Wikipedia: Inara attends a formal society dance, only to find Malcolm there as well, attempting to set up a smuggling job. Mal comes to blows with Inara's conceited date and finds himself facing a duel with a renowned swordsman, and only one night to learn how to fence.
This is a very fun episode with plenty of Kaylee, who I love. :) One inappropriate scene with Inara.

Safe

Synopsis from Wikipedia: Mal must choose which crew members to save when one is gravely wounded and two others are kidnapped. Simon finds an uneasy haven in a remote village, but River's uncanny perceptions jeopardize the Tams' temporary safety.
You begin to see more of River Tamm's abilities in this one, most importantly her psychic abilities.

Our Mrs. Reynolds

Synopsis from Wikipedia: As an unexpected reward for an unpaid job, Mal finds himself married to a naïve, subservient young woman named Saffron. The crew are amused at his discomfort and Book lectures him on propriety, but things are not as smoothly straightforward as they thought them to be.
I love this episode! It is SO funny! Unfortunately it also has a fair amount of inappropriateness but specifically in one scene.

Jaynestown

Synopsis from Wikipedia: Returning to a planet where he ran into some serious trouble years ago, Jayne discovers that he has become a local folk legend. Mal decides to use this entertaining distraction to complete a job, but some unfinished business may derail his plans.
Maybe the funniest episode. You also get to learn a lot more about Jayne in this one. One inappropriate scene with Inara.

Out of Gas

Synopsis from Wikipedia: After Serenity suffers a catastrophe that leaves her crew with only hours of oxygen, flashbacks show how Mal and Zoe acquired Serenity and assembled their motley crew.
I absolutely loved learning more about the crew in this one. You get most all of their backstories as well as learning about when Mal and Zoe first found Serenity. One inappropriate scene in this one but very short and you don't really see anything.

Ariel

Synopsis from Wikipedia: Hard up for cash, Serenity takes on a job from Simon: help him get a thorough diagnostic of River in return for the opportunity to loot the vast medical stores of an Alliance hospital on central world Ariel. But River's pursuers are hot on their trail, and they receive some unexpected inside help.
You learn more about what the Alliance did to River. This episode is fun and funny but also gets dark at the end (spoilers!). One of the nice aspects of this one is that Inara is away for most of it so really no inappropriate content. :)

War Stories

Synopsis from Wikipedia: Angered at Zoe's unshakable war connection to Mal, Wash demands a shot at a field assignment. Unfortunately, crime lord Niska chooses this moment to exact a brutal vengeance for Mal's failure to complete an earlier job.
This is the most gory episode and it's very intense. Not for the faint of heart. ;) This episode explores a question I asked my dad earlier in the season "Does Wash every get jealous of Zoe's loyalty to Mal?". Yes, yes he does. A little unfairly so, but he does. I think he got straightened out after this episode though. :) I've got to say now while I'm thinking about it that I think Wash and Zoe are such an adorable couple! Again your see more of River's abilities in this one. Of major note with inappropriateness Inara has a female client in this one with an inappropriate scene. :(

Trash

Synopsis from Wikipedia: Saffron returns to plague Serenity with a scheme to steal a rare antique weapon from a wealthy landowner. Unfortunately for Mal, she neglects to mention just how she came across the information needed to break into the landowner's home.
Ah Saffron. A fun episode but there is nudity from the back shown at the very beginning and then again at the very end for just a little bit. :(

The Message

Synopsis from Wikipedia: A former Independence soldier who had served with Mal and Zoe returns in a dramatic manner, with a vicious Alliance officer chasing after him for some unusual smuggled goods.
This is almost my least favorite of the episodes (my least favorite is to come). It's good but it's just not great.

Heart of Gold

Synopsis from Wikipedia: A Companion-trained friend of Inara's who runs a brothel on a remote planet calls for help from Serenity when a local bigwig reveals his intentions to take the baby from a girl he impregnated.
My advice.... skip this episode. My brother recommended I do it but I didn't. I regret that. Since it takes place in a brothel it just gets so much more inappropriate than the others and it wasn't nearly as good as the others and it wasn't really funny and overall it just wasn't worth it.

Objects in Space

Synopsis from Goodreads: Serenity encounters a ruthlessly professional bounty hunter, Jubal Early, who will stop at nothing to retrieve River. But River, feeling unwelcome on the ship, takes a novel approach to escaping from the long arm of the Alliance.
A very good conclusion to the season. Early is a fascinating villain and it's amazing to see River work against him.

So there's my mini reviews! I really love this show but as I said one inappropriate scene per almost every episode plus innuendo every once and awhile makes it difficult to watch. :( If you watch it, watch with caution and not around your kids. I'll be reviewing the movie the movie Serenity that was made as a spin off the show in the future. :)
Follow my blog with Bloglovin

Thursday, December 3, 2015

Classics Club Spin December 2015

I haven't done a Classics Club spin all this year and I really missed it! I got so tied up in my reading challenges I had no room to wiggle with reading different books when I wanted to. Thankfully though it's almost the end of the year so I can participate in this one! :)
So what is the Classics Club spin? Basically you'll make a list of twenty books off of your classics club list in a blog post. This is your spin list. You then have to read one of those books before February 1, 2016. On December 7th the Classics Club will post a number from 1-20 which is the spin number and the book that corresponds to the number on your list of books is the one you'll read! I try to make it a bit of a challenge with listing books I'm really excited to read as well as including books I'm not quite as enthusiastic about. Be sure to check out the Classics Club's post about it HERE.
So here's my list!

Books I'm looking forward to!
1) The Old Curiosity Shop by Charles Dickens
2) The Once and Future King by T.H. White
3) The Complete Stories of Flannery O Conner by Flannery O Conner
4) Waverley by Sir Walter Scott
5) The Age of Innocence by Edith Wharton

Books I'm neutral about

6) Madame Bovary by Gustave Flaubert
7) Adam Bede by George Elliot
8) The Mill on the Floss by George Elliot
9) Return of the Native by Thomas Hardy
10) Crime and Punishment by Fyodor Dostoevsky

Books I'm dreading (I've actually culled through my list a little this year and taken out some of the ones I just didn't think I'd like at all and didn't want to waste my time with... All that to say I'm just not really "dreading" any books majorly anymore)
11) The Divine Comedy by Dante
12) Dracula by Bram Stoker
13) Leaves of Grass by Walt Whitman
14) East of Eden by John Steinbeck
15) An American Tragedy by Theodor Dreiser

Shakespeare (Because I have a lot of Shakespeare on my Classics Club list... though I have gotten through a good chunk of them by now.)
16) The Merchant of Venice by William Shakespeare
17) A Midsummer's Night Dream by William Shakespeare
18) The Tempest by William Shakespeare
19) Othello by William Shakespeare
20) Twelfth Night by William Shakespeare

I'm excited to see which number gets picked!

Follow my blog with Bloglovin

Book Review- All Quiet on the Western Front

For the Alphabet Soup challenge, Mount TBR challenge, New Author challenge and the Classics Club I read Erich Remarque's classic war novel All Quiet on the Western Front.
Synopsis from Goodreads: Paul Baumer enlisted with his classmates in the German army of World War I. Youthful, enthusiastic, they become soldiers. But despite what they have learned, they break into pieces under the first bombardment in the trenches. And as horrible war plods on year after year, Paul holds fast to a single vow: to fight against the principles of hate that meaninglessly pits young men of the same generation but different uniforms against each other--if only he can come out of the war alive.
This was an absolutely beautifully written book. One of the most beautifully written books I've ever read actually. I don't think I ever got a better glimpse of what a soldiers' life is like until this book. The emotions of the soldiers are displayed with such realness. I would highly recommend this book to anyone high school and up.
To close I'd like to share a favorite quote from the book.
And even if these scenes of our youth were given back to us we would hardly know what do to. The tender, secret influence that passed from them into us could not rise again. We might be amongst them and move in them; we might remember and love them and be stirred by the right of them. But it would be like gazing at the photography of a dead comrade; those are his features, it is his face, and the days we spent together take on a mournful life in the memory; but the man himself it is not. 
Read it!

Follow my blog with Bloglovin

Wednesday, December 2, 2015

Book Review- Doctor Thorne

For the Victorian Bingo challenge, Mount TBR challenge and Classics Club I read Anthony Trollope's novel Doctor Thorne, which is the third in his Barchester series.
Goodreads Synopsis: Doctor Thorne, considered by Trollope to be the best of his works, is a telling examination of the relationship between money and morality. It recounts the story of the son of a bankrupt landowner, Frank Gresham, who is intent on marrying his beloved Mary Thorne despite her illegitimacy and apparent poverty. Frank's ambitious mother and haughty aunt are set against the match, however, and push him to make a good marriage to a wealthy heiress. Only Mary's loving uncle, Doctor Thorne, knows of the fortune she is about to inherit - but believes she should be accepted on her own terms. The third book in the Chronicles of Barsetshire.
Certain rich, snobby and hypocritical people in this book made me very, very frustrated. Thankfully there were enough good characters to balance them out fairly well. I love Trollope's little running commentary during the novel. It makes me smile. :) As Trollope points out at the beginning, you might think Frank Gresham is the hero but Doctor Thorne is his hero. Personally I'd agree with Trollope. Doctor Thorne is more hero material. Frank is alright but he's kind of silly sometimes but he does grow up somewhat. I think there are far better heroes in literature than him though.... Doctor Thorne being one of them. Doctor Thorne is honest, hardworking, kind and loyal. I love how he looks after Mary. I don't pity the situation he's put into though and I think he handles it admirably. Mary I also like and I personally think she's better than Frank and definitely more level headed then him but even then she's not a top heroine for me in literature. Overall it was great classic Trollope writing and an enjoyable story. I hope I'll be reading much more Trollope in the future. :)
Fun side note but I noticed when looking on IMDB to see if there was a movie of this book that they're actually making a TV series of it in 2016! I don't know anything more than that except that Tom Hollander (Osborne in Wives and Daughters and Mr. Collins in the 2005 version of Pride and Prejudice) plays Doctor Thorne. :)

Follow my blog with Bloglovin

Tuesday, December 1, 2015

Book Review- Carry on Mr. Bowditch

For the Hard-Core Re-reading challenge and the Newberry challenge I read Jean Lee Latham's Newberry award ronnung novel Carry on Mr. Bowditch.
Synopsis from Goodreads: Readers today are still fascinated by “Nat,” an eighteenth-century nautical wonder and mathematical wizard. Nathaniel Bowditch grew up in a sailor’s world—Salem in the early days, when tall-masted ships from foreign ports crowded the wharves. But Nat didn’t promise to have the makings of a sailor; he was too physically small. Nat may have been slight of build, but no one guessed that he had the persistence and determination to master sea navigation in the days when men sailed only by “log, lead, and lookout.” Nat’s long hours of study and observation, collected in his famous work, The American Practical Navigator (also known as the “Sailors’ Bible”), stunned the sailing community and made him a New England hero.
I love this book and it has long been a favorite of mine and even more so after this re-read. I'm not a huge fan of math but I have always appreciated that it's straightforward. There's one right answer and only one! That is what Nat Bowditch, the hero of this book, loves about math too.
Nat's story is full of dedication and hard work. He gets passed the short straw when he's indentured until 21 though he shows great promise academically. However, Nat doesn't let that stop him from studying and learning. He learns multiple languages including Latin, which he learns so he can read Isaac Newton's Principe, which is written solely in Latin. Every time he learns a new language he gets a dictionary and a New Testament in that language and starts from the beginning. He had little to encourage him or help him. He had no bootstraps. Despite all of this Nat strove through many years using his talent and dedication to teach others and save lives.
In my opinion every student should read this and then think about how maybe they aren't so horribly after all. Some people need to learn to accept their, not so actually awful, fate and WORK.
My little rant.
Anyways, I could not recommend this book more highly. It teaches young men and women about the value of bearing with their place in life at the moment and undertaking to better themselves through their own endeavors and learning. Read it and then pass it on to your children!

Birthday Month Reading Challenge- December

Well December has come and the last month of the Birthday Month Reading Challenge! I hope y'all have had fun this year and don't worry... you still have 31 days to catch up if you're behind. ;)
Here's my customary list of December birthday authors and the more complete list is HERE.
  • Jane Austen
  • Stephanie Meyer
  • Nicholas Sparks
  • Emily Dickinson
  • Rose Wilder-Lane
  • Willa Cather
  • Elisabeth Elliot
  • Padraic Colum
  • Eloise McGraw
  • Ralph Moody
  • G.A. Henty
  • George MacDonald
  • Rudyard Kipling
  • Carol Ryrie Brink
  • Mary Norton
  • Rosemary Sutcliff
Follow my blog with Bloglovin
Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...