[ebooktalk] Re: Tiny Sunbirds.

  • From: "Shell" <shell@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • To: <ebooktalk@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • Date: Mon, 15 Jul 2013 17:52:30 +0100

Glad you're enjoying it Elaine. It has a great ending.
Shell.


--------------------------------------------------
From: "Elaine Harris (Rivendell)" <elaineharris@xxxxxxxxxxx>
Sent: Monday, July 15, 2013 1:17 PM
To: <ebooktalk@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Subject: [ebooktalk] Re: Tiny Sunbirds.

> Thank you, Shell. Am reading this now.
> 
> Can barely speak courtesy of a raging sore throat and sinuses not worth
> writing about so reading is about all I can do.
> 
> 
> 
> Absolutely riveting.
> 
> 
> 
> Thank you,
> 
> 
> 
> Elaine
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 
> From: ebooktalk-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx [mailto:ebooktalk-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx]
> On Behalf Of Shell
> Sent: Monday, 3 June 2013 7:06 PM
> To: ebooktalk@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
> Subject: [ebooktalk] Tiny Sunbirds.
> 
> 
> 
> Hi Trish, the book is Tiny Sunbirds Far Away by Christie Watson. I've
> attached it to this email. Hope you enjoy it as much as I did.
> 
> Shell.
> 
> 
> 
> --------------------------------------------------
> From: "Trish Talbot" <trish@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
> Sent: Sunday, June 02, 2013 11:16 PM
> To: <ebooktalk@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
> Subject: [ebooktalk] Re: Books I read in May.
> 
>> Shell, Some time ago you sent a book you recommended set in Africa,
> possibly Nigeria.  Clare said, and I agreed, that it sounded similar to
> "Purple Hibiscus" by Kimamanda Ngozie Adachikie.  Unfortunately, I seem to
> have lost it, and I wanted to read it.  Please could you re-send it?  If it
> wasn't you, many apologies, and if anyone recognizes my rather garbled
> description, can they help?
>> Cheers,
>> Trish.
>>  ----- Original Message ----- 
>>  From: Shell 
>>  To: ebooktalk@xxxxxxxxxxxxx 
>>  Sent: Sunday, June 02, 2013 9:08 PM
>>  Subject: [ebooktalk] Books I read in May.
>> 
>> 
>>  I had quite a good reading month and read some new authors to me.  By far
> my favorite book was the Joseph Heywood.
>>  Shell.
>> 
>>  French, Nicci. Blue Monday. May 2013. 9 Stars.
>>  A little girl disappears from a sweet shop in the middle of the day. No
> body is ever found, but when a little boy disappears on his way home from
> school 20 years later, it is psychotherapist Frieda Klein who presents the
> similarities to the police.
>>  Frieda is an excellent character and the mystery was solid. A very tense
> story with lots of unexpected twists and turns. Will be reading more in this
> series.
>> 
>>  Straley, John. The Woman Who Married a Bear. May 2013. 5 Stars.
>>  Cecil Younger Is an Alaskan PI who is hired to solve an old crime. Some
> of the descriptive writing is good, but Cecil's drinking problem and stories
> from his youth drag the book down and make it tedious to read.
>> 
>>  Shriver, Lionel. We Need To Talk About Kevin. May 2013. 10 Stars.
>>  Written in a series of letters from Eva to her husband we go back in time
> to before Kevin was born and hear the story of the strange child he was and
> the events which led up to him killing 7 of his class mates.
>>  Very suspenseful and dark but with some laugh out loud humor. We hear
> Eva's thoughts and pain as she tries to cope with a terrible situation.
>> 
>>  Crais, Robert. Suspect. May 2013. 6 Stars.
>>  Max was injured in a shooting and can no longer be a street cop. Maggie,
> a German Shepherd was also shot in Iraq and lost her handler in the same
> incident. Can they now work together as a team and help heal each other's
> emotional wounds?
>>  A book of two halves. The dog story is sweet and pulls on the heart
> strings but, the investigation side of the book is hampered with
> inaccuracies and is so lame that non of it could happen in the real world.
> Which spoils the book all together. A weak effort. 
>> 
>>  Mark, David. Dark Winter. May 2013. 8 Stars.
>>  DCI Aector McAvoy is trying to connect the murders of victims who have
> all previously been the sole survivors of tragedies. He is a gentle man with
> a good home life which is nice for a change and I could not guess
> who-done-it. I wasn't quite as bowled over as I'd hoped to be from the
> excellent reviews, but perhaps I was expecting too much. Will read more in
> the series.
>> 
>>  Heywood, Joseph. ICE HUNTER. May 2013. 10 Stars.
>>  What a fantastic mystery! Set in the wilder parts of Michigan we meet
> Grady, a woods cop like his Father. Policing such a rural area takes special
> skills and Grady has all the knowledge of the rural area and the ability to
> track in all the local terrain. Great mystery and the female characters out
> outstanding. Beautifully described and a nice dog too. What more could you
> want. Can't wait to get my hands on the next in the series. A must read!
>> 
>>  McEwan, Ian. Sweet Tooth. May 2013. 6 Stars.
>>  Set in 1972, Serena is a bit of a lost soul after a failed relationship
> with an older man. She is offered a job by MI5, but it was not the work she
> had hoped for.
>>  Quite a slow book centering on relationships but quite compelling reading
> and a good end.
>> 
>>  Seton, Anya. Dragonwyck. May 2013. 7 Stars.
>>  A good example of a gothic romantic suspense. Miranda accepts an
> invitation to go and stay with her wealthy cousin in the mid 18 hundreds. We
> have the spooky house, the mysterious but darkly attractive home owner and
> the impression that all is not well. No real surprises in the tale, but it's
> well written and nice and easy to read and relax with.
>> 
>>  Kennedy, Douglas. Five days. May 2013. 8 Stars.
>>  I've given this book more stars than suits my enjoyment of it because
> it's unfair to mark a book down just because it's not my kind of novel. It
> was well written and focusses on a married woman who has a fling with a
> married man at a conference she is attending and the effect this has on her
> life and that of her family. I just like a bit more to happen and a few
> surprises along the way and as Douglas Kennedy is one of my favorite authors
> I expect a different style from him. So, highly recommended if you like
> books about the intricacies of relationships and I didn't dislike it but
> wasn't sad to get to the end.
>> 
>>  Behrens, Peter The Law of Dreams. May 2013. 9 Stars.
>>  Fergus is forced to leave Ireland in the 1840s due to the potato famine
> and the death of his whole family. We follow his journey to Liverpool, Wales
> and then on to America.
>>  Quite a slow start and I did give up on it, only to be persuaded to give
> it a bit longer. I was very glad I did as the book picked up and the
> characters developed well later in the story. Some really interesting
> historical detail and what life was like for the majority of people at that
> time.
>> 
>> 
>>
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