Wednesday, April 14, 2010

Check out Beth's Book Reviews to hear about her new competition, and giveaway of the book Sexaholics,  by Pynk. The book sounds quite interesting - though quite risque. Books that give an insight into the personal lives of others do tend to draw the reader in. Here's the blurb...

Miki, Valencia, Teela Raye, and Brandi share one thing...they are all addicted to sex. United through Sexaholics Anonymous, these women try to recover from their dependence on wild, spontaneous, and even sometimes, dangerous sex. From whips and chains, to sex in public, they have done it all! Led by Dr. Rachel Cummings, each woman takes the first step to recovery by sharing her biggest sexual act with the group. SEXAHOLICS takes readers through the outrageous experiences of four women on their long path to success.
Head over to Beth's blog to find out the details for entering the competition, and to read some more reviews of new-releases. 
Bringing up a family should be an adventure, not an anxious discipline in which everybody is constantly graded for performance
-- Milton R. Saperstein

Call it a clan, call it a network, call it a tribe, call it a family: Whatever you call it, whoever you are, you need one
-- Jane Howard

Almost Perfect - Kelly Denley

Almost Perfect is Kelly Denley's inspirational story of how she took her super-sized family on an Australia-wide journey to bring them closer together, so that they were better equipped to deal with the trials and tribulations that the world was throwing at them. 

Growing up, Kelly Denley had dreamed of the perfect family, and of being the perfect mum, but as the mother of eight she discovered that almost perfect was actually just perfect enough .

A full-time wife and mother since the age of 17, by 31 Kelly Denley has lost sight of who she truly is. Postnatal depression takes its toll on Kelly, her father is given just a year to live, her husband is retrenched, one daughter is hospitalised and another on antidepressants and, in a final frightening development, her eldest boy, who suffers from Asperger's, threatens suicide. Distraught, Kelly blames herself and knows that everything has to change.Concerned about her children's school problems and behaviour, Kelly takes dramatic action, putting her university dream on hold so the family can travel Australia for a year in the hope that the experience will draw them closer together. 

How Kelly tackles both the joy and pain that lie in wait, from discovering the beauty in nature she'd always been too busy to see and mastering the art of home-schooling in a tent, to nearly drowning in a flooded river and more heartache over her children, makes Almost Perfect an inspiring, moving, yet often hilarious rollercoaster ride of a memoir.

Denley not only conquered year 11 and 12 as a mature age student* so that she could get into university, but she did it with eight kids (two of whom had disabilities). After facing that challenge, and then having to face seeing her kids struggle at school when people couldn't handle their differences, Denley set her sights higher. To save her family from falling apart, she took them on a year long camping trip around the gorgeous sights and sounds of Australia. Eight kids, two cars, one trailer. Home schooling, family arguments, financial crisis. It was by no means an easy year for the Denley's, but the rewards that they reaped made it more than worth it.
*Check out this article for a little more information on Denley's return to high school as a 33yr old woman with eight kids*

Denley tells her story without pretension. In every page, her love for her family is clear. The reader empathises with her battle with her weight, and cheers as she finally sheds her insulation. You can't help but die a little inside reading about the struggle of her two eldest boys, suffering from Aspergers - the eldest of whom doesn't even make it on their trip.

While the writing wasn't always smooth or polished, it was the story that captivated me. Reading about the challenges that this family overcame is strengthening. Without the trip, who knows where the Denley's would be. With it, they became a tight-knit family unit, dragging their feet to return to their old 'normality'. Overcoming so many obstacles, the Denley story is an inspiration to us all; families should come before the rat race. Taking time out to get to know and connect with the most important people in one's life is a paramount goal. The Denley family should be congratulated on their monumental achievements.


This book was hard to rate in a way. Denley wasn't a polished writer as such, but her story was compelling. It was the story of an underdog, fighting for her family, and herself, in a world that doesn't always want to accept the outsider. It was a story of triumph.

This book is a must read for anyone who wants to have a little hope, or to any mother who is looking for a way to create the kind of family that every parent dreams about; close, happy and memorable. I wonder, after this huge step, where the Denley's could go from here...

Tuesday, April 13, 2010

Gloria Steinem Article

I found this article when i was googling Chick Lit online, to see if i could find something a little more substantial on the topic. This article, by Gloria Steinem, has ruffled a few feathers, talking about men and their desire to avoid chick lit... although they often fail in that quest. More amusingly, it has also sparked the concept of 'dick lit' - obviously, the male equivalent. This article appeared on the Huffington Post website a few years ago now. Thank goodness for the internet's almost immeasurable chronicling.

To the Young Man on the Plane from Los Angeles to Seattle Who Said of the Movie That Most Passengers -- Male and Female -- Voted to Watch, "I don't watch chick flicks!"

So what exactly is a "chick flick?" I think you and I could probably agree that it has more dialogue than special effects, more relationships than violence, and relies for its suspense on how people live instead of how they die.

I'm not challenging your choice; I'm just questioning the term that encourages it. After all, if you think back to your school days, much of what you were assigned as great literature could have been dismissed as "chick lit." Indeed, the books you read probably only survived because they were written by famous guys.

Think about it: If Anna Karenina had been written by Leah Tolstoy, or The Scarlet Letter by Nancy Hawthorne, or Madame Bovary by Greta Flaubert, or A Doll's House by Henrietta Ibsen, or The Glass Menagerie by (a female) Tennessee Williams, would they have been hailed as universal? Suppose Shakespeare had really been The Dark Lady some people supposed. I bet most of her plays and all of her sonnets would have been dismissed as some Elizabethan version of ye olde "chick lit," only to be resurrected centuries later by stubborn feminist scholars.

Indeed, as long men are taken seriously when they write about the female half of the world -- and women aren't taken seriously when writing about themselves much less about men or male affairs -- the list of Great Authors will be more about power than about talent.

Still, I know this is not your problem. Instead, let me appeal to your self-interest as well as your sense of fairness: If the "chick flick" label helps you to avoid the movies you don't like, why is there no label to guide you to the ones you do like?

Just as there are "novelists" and then "women novelists," there are "movies" and then "chick flicks." Whoever is in power takes over the noun -- and the norm -- while the less powerful get an adjective. Thus, we read about "African American doctors" but not "European American doctors," "Hispanic leaders" but not "Anglo leaders," "gay soldiers" but not "heterosexual soldiers," and so on.

That's also why you're left with only half a guide. As usual, bias punishes everyone. Therefore I propose, as the opposite of "chick flick" and an adjective of your very own, "prick flick." Not only will it serve film critics well, but its variants will add to the literary lexicon. For example, "prick lit" could characterize a lot of fiction, from Philip Roth to Bret Easton Ellis and beyond. "True prick" could guide readers to their preferred non-fiction, from the classics of Freud to the populist works of socio-biologists and even Rush Limbaugh.

Most of all, the simple label "prick flick" could lead you easily and quickly through the thicket of televised, downloaded and theatrical releases to such attractions as:

All the movies that glorify World War II.
From classics with John Wayne and Ronald Reagan, those master actors who conveyed heroism without ever leaving the back lot, to Spielberg's Band of Brothers, in which the hero would rather die than be rescued, Hollywood has probably spent more on making movies about the war than this country spent on fighting it. After all, World War II was the last war in which this country was clearly right. Without frequent exposure to it, how are we to believe we still are?

All the movies that glorify Vietnam, bloody regional wars, and the war on terrorism. These may not be as much fun to watch -- you probably are aware that we aren't the winners here -- but they allow you to enjoy mass mayhem in, say, South Asia or Africa or the Middle East that justifies whatever this country might do.

All the movies that portray violence against women, preferably beautiful, sexy, half-naked women. These feature chainsaws and house parties for teenage guys, serial killers and sadistic rapists for ordinary male adults, plus cleverly plotted humiliations and deaths of powerful women for the well-educated misogynist.

All the movies that insist female human beings are the only animals on earth that seek out and even enjoy their own pain. From glamorized versions of prostitution to such complex plots as Boxing Helena, a man's dream of amputating all a rebellious woman's limbs -- and then she falls in love with him -- these provide self-justification and how-to manuals for sadists.

As you can see, one simple label could guide you through diversity, and help other viewers to practice avoidance. 

But if you really think about it, I'm hope-a-holic enough to think you might like to watch a chick flick after all.

The Top 100

I'm going to review some of the books on Angus & Robertson's Top 100, so i googled their site to find a list. However, i was slightly appalled to find that the Top 100 now is reliant on people's votes. There is no standard of literary merit to reach, it's merely a popularity contest. No offense to voters, but Laura Weisbergers Everyone Worth Knowing is most definitely not a book worthy of that accolade...
"I enjoy chick lit very much. I like stories about women in their twenties and thirties dealing with life and love and all that. I think there are a lot of great voices in chick lit and some very strong books. People who bash chick lit? I wonder, who are these people? Are they not living in the same world that I am living in? Can they not find something else to bash? I have a few suggestions…."

Alison Pace If Andy Worhol had a Girlfriend

How To Be Single - Liz Tullico

Liz Tullico, author of He's Just Not That Into You, and How to be Single is renowned for her female-empowering novels, and was an executive story editor for Sex and the City. HJNTIY (come on, give me the acronym, it's a really long title) is now a major motion picture, with a star studded cast, including the lovely Ginnifer Goodwin and Justin Long. We all know how fantastic SATC is, i don't have to sing any praises there. It was on the wave of this success that Tullico's How to be Single hit the market. 
I'll admit that i haven't read HJMTIY, although i have seen the movie and know the general plotline. When i read How to be Single, i thought that it would be a similar self-help type book, written from the point of view of a fictional character. It sounded quite bizzare, but as soon as i sunk my teeth into it, i knew it was more than a platitudinous 'be happy with who you are' airport novel.

It's the most annoying question and they just can't help asking you. You'll be asked it at family gatherings, weddings, and on first dates. And you'll ask yourself far too often. It's the question that has no good answer. It's the question that when people stop asking it, makes you feel even worse: Why are you single?

 Protagonist Julie Jenson has had enough with bad dates, failed relationships and girls nights out on the town that end in the emergency room. Julie is the pioneer for her group of friends, all of whom are having an awful single time. So, she sets out to find answers. Taking one for the team, she takes leave from her job and travels to Iceland, Brazil, India, Beijing, Bali, Paris, Australia, Rome and Rio de Janeiro. She seeks out single men and women to figure out how they handle the single lifestyle. Interspersing stories from Julie's single friends back in the USA, How to be Single combines chick literature with travel writing. Excellent combination, if you ask me.

This book was incredibly engaging. Not only did Tucillo provide insight into many different cultures in the world, and how their people interact with each other, but the uplifting stories that are shared by the characters that Julie meets leave the single girl less despairing about the single life. Apparently, people in other countries handle being single with way less drama than Australians, Americans and the English. Who knew?

The characters in the novel would be easily be described as four dimensional if that was a real thing. Slightly crazed post-divorce Georgia, dating-for-a-living (literally) Alice, Serena who is taking the swami pledge to find enlightenment and Ruby who has been mourning her cat for months... any reader can find something of themselves in one of these girls. 

Tucillo writes with humour, and straight-forwardly takes us around the world on a journey to find single satisfaction. Just the right amount of tough love and sensitivity. This book isn't going to make you want to kill yourself for being single, nor is it going to make you take a lifelong vow of celibacy. It will, however, make you laugh and teach you a little something about not taking yourself too seriously. 

 This book was fantastic. I'd give it four stars... that elusive five star rating is reserved for those books which i cannot put down and simply have to re-read immediately. Still, four stars! Well done, Liz. This book is on my must-read list.
"Ok. Don't panic. It's only a VISA bill. It's a piece of paper; a few numbers. I mean, just how scary can a few numbers be?"

Sophie Kinsella Confessions of a Shopaholic

Monday, April 12, 2010

Sohpie Kinsella

Sophie Kinsella's Confessions of a Shopoholic novel shot to fame after Isla Fisher played the role of Rebecca Bloomwood in the motion picture released in 2009. There is no doubt in my mind that the movie was fantastic. Hilarious. Isla Fisher was the perfect choice for the role, as were the supporting characters. I was excited to race out, buy the book that the movie was based on, and rip into it.

Unluckily for me, it was a waste of my time. In print, the characters were flat, and the scenes were dull. There was no life force in the novel that was bringing it to life in my imagination. I finished the book, as i rarely stop half way through. But i didn't walk away with the buzz that finishing a good book usually gives you (or the sadness that comes with leaving an alternate reality behind). While there was nothing hugely wrong with the book, there were no grammatical errors or serious plot deficiencies, there was nothing outstanding. 

For a long while, i attributed this to the novels' being overshadowed by the movie. Surely, a book that was so well known that it spawned four sequels and was considered hugely popular must be good... Sophie Kinsella is a world-famous author!! 

Last week, i read another of her books, The Undomestic Goddess. From the blurb, i was interested. Sure, it was a typical boy-meets-girl type novel (different setting, different names, different issues... you know how it is)...

Workaholic attorney Samantha Sweeting has just done the unthinkable. She's made a mistake so huge, it'll wreck any chance of a partnership.

Going into utter meltdown, she walks out of her London office, gets on a train, and ends up in the middle of nowhere. Asking for directions at a big, beautiful house, she's mistaken for an interviewee and finds herself being offered a job as housekeeper. Her employers have no idea they've hired a lawyer-and Samantha has no idea how to work the oven. She can't sew on a button, bake a potato, or get the #@%# ironing board to open. How she takes a deep breath and begins to cope-and finds love-is a story as delicious as the bread she learns to bake.

But will her old life ever catch up with her? And if it does…will she want it back?

Samantha Sweeting is much more grounded and punchy than the wishy-washy Rebecca Bloomwood. Bonus points there. And i have always had a soft spot for transformation stories - and Sam's metamorphosis from high-strung lawyer to domestic goddess definitely qualifies. More bonus points. However, the story still didn't have the pizazz that i look for in a good chick novel. You see, what chick lit lacks in originality it is supposed to make up for with punch. This novel failed to do so. 


After reading these two books, i'd have to say that Sophie Kinsella is relegated to 'mediocre' novelist in my mind. I won't be re-reading these books anytime soon (although i will be watching the movie again!), which isn't a great sign. 

Please, anyone who has jumped on the Kinsella bandwagon and found it to be the ride of their life, feel free to argue your point!

Reviewing Myself

Hi all! My name is Annabel. I'm almost 21 years old, i'm studying law and behavioural psychology, i work with children, and at a deli (without children). I have hundreds of books lining the walls of my room - as well as numerous piles that are overflowing onto the floor. My DVD (slash illegally downloaded file) collection is extensive. Though i couldn't go past books as a first love. There is something about print, and the smell of new books, not to mention their portability... Mmmmmm, i love books. 

I'll have to admit, i don't know everything about myself yet. I'm not sure if i fit best into my university world, my church family, my old-schoolgirl world... but i definitely know that the world that i feel most comfortable in is totally unreal. Literally. As in, the fantasy world of fiction novels, the fairytale world of commercial television where everything ends happily, a person blogging about their own life, or even the real world expressed in a biography belonging to someone else.

In a world created by someone else, you know that there will be no difficult decisions to be made (other than deciding whether or not to continue watching/reading), there will usually be some kind of happy or uplifting ending and a complete escape from reality.

Why do i need to blog about these alternate realities? Well, i'm sure that, somewhere, there are other people who prefer a fictional world to their reality. Hopefully, there will be something here for everyone; a guide of sorts to an alternate reality to escape to. While every stop of my map may not be for you, hopefully one or two destinations will prove worthwhile (or not, depending on the review). 

Happy reading, merry watching, and all that jazz.

Everyone has different tastes. So, obviously, i'll never please everyone, and i don't expect everyone to share the opinions that i have... i like any book i can get my hands on (biographies, chick lit, fantasy, children's books, action novels...), watch anything (chick flicks, end-of-the-world movies, horror/thriller, serious...) and i love reading blogs that give me an insight into another person's world.

Books, blogs and movies provide an escape. It doesn't matter what's wrong with the world, delving into another world is the best way to feel better. Hopefully, here with me, you'll find something that you like - and then you'll be able to escape too.