All Consuming


Items Cathy consumed in…

February, 2007



  1. Sunday 4
    0441013813

    Finished consuming…
    Moon Called (Mercy Thompson Series, Book 1) — 36 people

    Worth consuming! Tagged: paranormal shapeshifters vampires werewolves bookcrossing club vlad


  2. Monday 5

    Finished consuming…
    Gnocchi al Pesto — 4 people



  3. Friday 9

    Finished consuming…
    Circles of Silence — 1 person

    Worth consuming! Tagged: love india bookcrossing


  4. Sunday 11
    1405303506

    Started consuming…
    Stretching — 1 person



  5. Saturday 17

    Finished consuming…
    The Kite Runner — 233 people

    Worth consuming!


  6. Friday 23

    Finished consuming…
    Irsud (Diadem Novels, Book 3) — 1 person

    Not worth consuming

    0060821469

    Finished consuming…
    Don of the Dead — 7 people

    Worth consuming!


Entries about these items

    Irsud by Jo Clayton — 2 years ago

    NOT WORTH CONSUMING

    From the back flap:
    “Sold into slavery to an insectoid race, Aleytys had been chosen as proxy-mother to the old queen’s successor. In short, like an Earth wasp’s prey, she would be both bearer and food for that which was to come.
    Had Aleytys been any other human, this would have been the end. But she was the wearer of the Diadem, that creation of galactic science that linked her nervous system to powers of strange potency. And for Aleytys and the queen the fateful conflict was about to begin!”

    I started skimming half way through the book. I was bored by the writing style and by the story. This is the third book of the Diadem series. I realised today, that I read another one of the series as a teenager. I remember that I liked it. Tastes change.

    0060821469

    Don of the Dead by Casey Daniels — 2 years ago

    WORTH CONSUMING!

    From the back cover:
    SHE SEES DEAD PEOPLE
    “Beautiful, smart, and chic, Pepper Martin never had to work a day in her life—until her surgeon daddy was convicted of fraud, her wealthy fiancé took a powder, and the family fortune ran bone dry. Suddenly desperate, the inexperienced ex-rich girl was forced to take the only job she could get: as a tour guide in a cemetery. But a grave situation took a turn for the worse when a head-on collision with a headstone left her with an unwatned ability to communicate with the disgruntled deceased…and now Pepper has a whacked Mafia don demanding that she hunt down his killers—and threatening to haunt her until she does.”

    Cute book. I wasn’t too impressed at first, but it grew on me. Quite refreshing not to have a gun-wielding, sword-carrying heroine. No vampires or werewolves, just your nice neigbourhood ghost. Well, as whacked Mafia dons go, Gus is a nice guy. I have to start watching the Sopranos! By the time we reached the end and Pepper had figured out, who offed Gus and why, I was ready for more. Book number 2 went straight onto my wishlist.

    The Kite Runner by Khaled Hosseini — 2 years ago

    WORTH CONSUMING!

    Amazon.co.uk Review and back cover of the book:
    “Twelve-year-old Amir is desperate to win the approval of his father and resolves to win the local kite-fighting tournament, to prove that he has the makings of a man. His loyal friend Hassan promises to help him – for he always helps Amir – but this is 1970s Afghanistan and Hassan is merely a low-caste servant who is jeered at in the street, although Amir still feels jealous of his natural courage and the place he holds in his father’s heart. But neither of the boys could foresee what would happen to Hassan on the afternoon of the tournament, which was to shatter their lives. After the Russians invade and the family is forced to flee to America, Amir realises that one day he must return, to find the one thing that his new world cannot grant him: redemption. .
    The first Afghan novel to be written in English, The Kite Runner begins in the final days of King Zahir Shah’s 40-year reign and traces the country’s fall from a secluded oasis to a tank-strewn battlefield controlled by the Russians and then the trigger-happy Taliban.”

    Do not read the review on Amazon, it gives too much away of the storyline.

    A beautiful book! Just the ending gets a bit too frantic for its own good, I don’t think it quite fits with the rest of the book. But still, well worth reading and a lot more gripping than I expected.
    The beginning is a fairly typical coming of age story and just when it all slowed down and I started to loose interest, something unexpected happened and we were off again to a new development in the storyline. That happened several times.
    The beginning of the story is definitely the most poetic part, but I also loved the part with the weekly market and Amir meeting Soraya. When Amir eventually goes back to Kabul, what happens is not a great surprise, I predicted it almost down to the details, but it still kept me up until 3am this morning. I just had to finish the last 100 or so pages in one sitting.
    Very good! Oh, just in case you are wondering, I was crying on page 299….

    1405303506

    A story about "Stretching" — 2 years ago

    I decided that I want to learn how to stretch properly. Did not want to ask the guys at the gym, so I finally picked this book at my local bookstore today (any excuse to go into a bookshop and spend money), looks really nice. It says I should do it 15 minutes a day, so I will try! There is a 21-day posture programme in it that sounds like a good thing to begin with…
    Will update, how it’s going.

    No great surprises. — 2 years ago

    WORTH CONSUMING!

    Circles of Silence by Preeti Singh

    Book Description:
    “A birth mark on the right shoulder! And one as big and as dark as that! Arre baap re! This is of some terrible significance. . .

    Despite his grandmother’s gloomy prophecy, Rattan grows up leading a charmed life – first in Delhi, then at Boston University. When he returns to Delhi, and the family business, Rattan his happy to fall in with his parents’ plans for an arranged marriage: his young bride is somewhat dazzled by the splendour of her new home but her husband is handsome and the prospects look good. Then tragedy strikes at the heart of his affluent family. Rattan takes a job in Cairo to put the past behind him. Here he meets Nalini, daughter of the Indian Ambassador to Egypt. Chafing under the lack of freedom while accepting diplomatic duties since the death of her mother, she is drawn towards Rattan. But Rattan’s past lies in a circle of silence and when that silence is broken, Nalini must decide where her heart lies.”

    I liked it. It did not sweep me off my feet, but the characters were likeable. The story was sweet and interesting enough, although there were no great surprises.

    I tried uploading a picture of the cover art, but the website kept dying on me, so I eventually gave up.

    A story about the last time I consumed "Gnocchi al Pesto" — 2 years ago

    It’s a favourite dish of mine. But the one I had tonight was greasy, with too much sauce and the gnocchi were very soft. Hm. Take-out, that probably didn’t help!

    0441013813

    Woof! — 2 years ago

    WORTH CONSUMING!

    Synopsis:
    “Mercy Thompson’s life is not exactly normal. Her next-door neighbor is a werewolf. Her former boss is a gremlin. And she’s fixing a VW bus for a vampire. But then, Mercy isn’t exactly normal herself…. and her connection to the world of things that go bump in the night is about to get her into a whole lot of trouble.”

    Mercy is a shapeshifter, by the way. Coyote… What a refreshing read! I really liked it. Yet again a new look at werewolves. And fae, vampires and the whole other shebang. Good fun. I have to check if there are more Mercy Thompson books around – to find out, if there is more to come with her and that nice, good looking werewolf. Not telling you, which one! You have to find out yourself. No, but this is not the usual hot steamy paranormal sex thing, there is a good deal of old fashioned sleuthing going on and hunting and firearms and karate…. I have to go to Amazon now and stick everything by Patricia Briggs on my wishlist, excuse me for a moment…


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