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<channel><title><![CDATA[inknbeans press - Annarita Reads]]></title><link><![CDATA[http://inknbeans.com/annarita-reads.html]]></link><description><![CDATA[Annarita Reads]]></description><pubDate>Mon, 29 Oct 2012 07:23:25 -0800</pubDate><generator>Weebly</generator><item><title><![CDATA[Thief of Todays and Tomorrows, Susan Wells Bennett]]></title><link><![CDATA[http://inknbeans.com/4/post/2011/09/thief-of-todays-and-tomorrows-susan-wells-bennett.html]]></link><comments><![CDATA[http://inknbeans.com/4/post/2011/09/thief-of-todays-and-tomorrows-susan-wells-bennett.html#comments]]></comments><pubDate>Fri, 30 Sep 2011 11:00:02 -0800</pubDate><category><![CDATA[Uncategorized]]></category><guid isPermaLink="false">http://inknbeans.com/4/post/2011/09/thief-of-todays-and-tomorrows-susan-wells-bennett.html</guid><description><![CDATA[This book came to me in an  &ldquo;odd&rdquo; way. Months ago I won a few books through a contest and &ldquo;Thief of  Todays and Tomorrows&rdquo; was one of the titles I could choose from. I found  the unusual title intriguing, and another thing that caught my  attention was the fact that it told the story of an Irish woman and her  Italian husband&hellip; I&rsquo;m Italian, and my companion is Irish.It  took me a while to get to [...] ]]></description><content:encoded><![CDATA[<div  class="paragraph editable-text" style=" text-align: left; ">This book came to me in an  &ldquo;odd&rdquo; way. Months ago I won a few books through a contest and &ldquo;Thief of  Todays and Tomorrows&rdquo; was one of the titles I could choose from. I found  the unusual title intriguing, and another thing that caught my  attention was the fact that it told the story of an Irish woman and her  Italian husband&hellip; I&rsquo;m Italian, and my companion is Irish.It  took me a while to get to read it, but once I began I could not put it  down. No, this is not the whole truth&hellip; I had to put it down, from time  to time, because the story was so full of emotion, so tender and sad and  true that I found it almost overwhelming.I  have no limits of genre in my choice of books, so I read almost  anything, from mainstream to fantasy to thrillers. But I find it  difficult to say at what genre this book could belong. In my opinion, as  most really good books do, it goes beyond genres and classifications,  and reaches that wider, tragic stage that is real life.Once  more, Susan Bennet gives us characters so well defined and with such a  strong&nbsp; personality that they impress themselves in the mind of the  reader, to stay there forever. And this is true not only for the main  characters, such as Kate or Francis, but also for all the other people  that surround them and that for the good or the bad influence their  life.Another  thing that I truly loved of the book is the picture it gives of how  life was in the US between the end of the Second World War and the  Sixties. With a truly masterly hand, Susan Bennet paints a picture of  the society of the period, and we could almost consider it another  silent character, that slowly evolves and changes throughout the book,  creating on one hand the stage on which the personal drama of the  characters unfolds, and on the other lending to the book a feeling of  &ldquo;historical&rdquo; novel, even if it is a rather recent history.Thief  of Todays and Tomorrows is a little masterpiece that carries the reader  away to another time and another way of life, not very far removed from  our present life but, under some aspects, light years away from it.Definitely, a book worth reading, that fully deserves a five stars evaluation</div>  ]]></content:encoded></item><item><title><![CDATA[The Lonely Mile, Allen Leverone]]></title><link><![CDATA[http://inknbeans.com/4/post/2011/09/the-lonely-mile-allen-leverone.html]]></link><comments><![CDATA[http://inknbeans.com/4/post/2011/09/the-lonely-mile-allen-leverone.html#comments]]></comments><pubDate>Thu, 29 Sep 2011 00:00:00 -0800</pubDate><category><![CDATA[Uncategorized]]></category><guid isPermaLink="false">http://inknbeans.com/4/post/2011/09/the-lonely-mile-allen-leverone.html</guid><description><![CDATA[I&rsquo;m a sort of bookworm, so I  have many favorite genres and authors, of the past and of the present.  To mention a couple, just to stay with The Lonely Mile genre, Alistair  McLean and David Baldacci.This  novel was a very nice surprise to me, because it reaches those same  levels of tension and has the same fast pace, hooking the reader from  the very beginning and managing in just a short chapter to create an  atmosphere o [...] ]]></description><content:encoded><![CDATA[<div  class="paragraph editable-text" style=" text-align: left; ">I&rsquo;m a sort of bookworm, so I  have many favorite genres and authors, of the past and of the present.  To mention a couple, just to stay with The Lonely Mile genre, Alistair  McLean and David Baldacci.This  novel was a very nice surprise to me, because it reaches those same  levels of tension and has the same fast pace, hooking the reader from  the very beginning and managing in just a short chapter to create an  atmosphere of anguish, terror and suspense that will underlie the whole  story.As  it often happens in both McLean&rsquo;s and Baldacci&rsquo;s novels, the main  character, Bill Ferguson, is not some superhuman secret agent or  detective, he is just a normal man, with a normal family and a normal  life, who suddenly finds himself dragged in a nightmarish situation just  because he simply could not let a young girl to be kidnapped under his  nose without doing anything.In  many ways, he is much more of a hero than all those very qualified  agents and detectives we find elsewhere, just because he never expected  to become one.And  his enemy, his nemesis, whose plans he has thwarted, is in its own  right a much more original &ldquo;bad guy&rdquo; than those we usually find in  thrillers.There  isn&rsquo;t much more I can say without spoiling the story. I can add,  however, that Leverone ability emerges not only in the way he depicts  his character, but also in his building of the plot, apparently very  simple but very much misleading in its simplicity, just as in the best  McLean novels.Definitely, in my opinion, a five star novel no lover of the genre can bypass without reading.</div>  ]]></content:encoded></item><item><title><![CDATA[Wild Life (the Brass Monkeys Series), Susan Wells Bennett]]></title><link><![CDATA[http://inknbeans.com/4/post/2011/09/wild-life-the-brass-monkeys-series-susan-wells-bennett.html]]></link><comments><![CDATA[http://inknbeans.com/4/post/2011/09/wild-life-the-brass-monkeys-series-susan-wells-bennett.html#comments]]></comments><pubDate>Wed, 28 Sep 2011 00:00:00 -0800</pubDate><category><![CDATA[Uncategorized]]></category><guid isPermaLink="false">http://inknbeans.com/4/post/2011/09/wild-life-the-brass-monkeys-series-susan-wells-bennett.html</guid><description><![CDATA[Wild life is a book that  intrigued me from the very beginning, starting with its title. Usually  the title of a book would give away a little of its &ldquo;soul&rdquo;, tell the  reader what to expect&hellip; all I could glean from this one was that the book  had something to do with animals. And since I love animals, I set to  reading it with enthusiasm.Just  to discover that Wild Life became more intriguing by the minute. Every [...] ]]></description><content:encoded><![CDATA[<div  class="paragraph editable-text" style=" text-align: left; ">Wild life is a book that  intrigued me from the very beginning, starting with its title. Usually  the title of a book would give away a little of its &ldquo;soul&rdquo;, tell the  reader what to expect&hellip; all I could glean from this one was that the book  had something to do with animals. And since I love animals, I set to  reading it with enthusiasm.Just  to discover that Wild Life became more intriguing by the minute. Every  time I thought I had it pegged down to one genre, the story would have  some new twist that would somewhat change it, always keeping me on a  razor edge about how it would end.There are so many things I loved about it that I&rsquo;m finding it difficult to list them all.First  and foremost, the style in which the book is written, clean, flowing,  at times downright ironical and amusing, at times meditative or even  sad, but always in tone with the events.Then  the characters&hellip; they come to life, page after page, making you feel  like you&rsquo;ve always known them, and making you feel for them and with  them. Claire and Sondra are very different from each other, and yet each  is so vivid and &ldquo;true&rdquo; to the last detail. And while being a middle  aged man, Milo is also the sort of  &ldquo;hero&rdquo; a reader will find it difficult to forget. And behind all of  them, in the background but always very much present, there are the zoo  animals that give the book its title.A  zoo is an unusual setting for a book, and yet even if it is a little  startling in the beginning, it soon becomes the natural stage for the  characters to move on, even Sondra, who&rsquo;s clearly more at ease in a bar  than in a zoo.And  last but not least, the blending of genres. At the beginning, I thought  I was reading a romance, very well written and very unusual, but a  romance nonetheless, so I expected the book to develop on the lines of a  romance&hellip; what I did not foresee nor expect was that what I was  discovering about the personal life of the main character would lead to a  blending of romance and mystery, brought into being with the utmost  ability, with no hanging leads and while maintaining coherence to the  whole story.Definitely,  this is a very good novel, which I would set at the same level with the  works of the best authors of both genres I have read, and that I highly  recommend reading.</div>  ]]></content:encoded></item><item><title><![CDATA[The Midnight Eye 1: The Amulet,  William Meikle]]></title><link><![CDATA[http://inknbeans.com/4/post/2011/09/the-midnight-eye-1-the-amulet-william-meikle.html]]></link><comments><![CDATA[http://inknbeans.com/4/post/2011/09/the-midnight-eye-1-the-amulet-william-meikle.html#comments]]></comments><pubDate>Tue, 27 Sep 2011 00:00:00 -0800</pubDate><category><![CDATA[Uncategorized]]></category><guid isPermaLink="false">http://inknbeans.com/4/post/2011/09/the-midnight-eye-1-the-amulet-william-meikle.html</guid><description><![CDATA[The Amulet is a very peculiar  book, in which several different elements meet and mix an a very  original way. At first you find yourself immersed in a typical "Marlowe"  atmosphere, and you think you are reading a classic mystery. Even when  you realize the artifact the main character is looking for is not simply  a very old, and therefore valuable, object, you aren't prepared for the  sudden twist in the story, with the blending [...] ]]></description><content:encoded><![CDATA[<div  class="paragraph editable-text" style=" text-align: left; ">The Amulet is a very peculiar  book, in which several different elements meet and mix an a very  original way. At first you find yourself immersed in a typical "Marlowe"  atmosphere, and you think you are reading a classic mystery. Even when  you realize the artifact the main character is looking for is not simply  a very old, and therefore valuable, object, you aren't prepared for the  sudden twist in the story, with the blending of the practical, everyday  investigation with a sudden trip in the world of magic and even  nightmare, with that good dollop of horror that gives a much different  taste to the story, but is artfully added one drop at a time, until the  nightmare explodes to its fullest.Another thing to fully enjoy are the artful descriptions of Glasgow, of its rainy streets and pubs and life.And, of course, the writing style of the author himself, clean, essential and yet powerful where it needs to be.</div>  ]]></content:encoded></item><item><title><![CDATA[Wheezer & the Painted Frog, Kitty Sutton]]></title><link><![CDATA[http://inknbeans.com/4/post/2011/09/wheezer-the-painted-frog-kitty-sutton.html]]></link><comments><![CDATA[http://inknbeans.com/4/post/2011/09/wheezer-the-painted-frog-kitty-sutton.html#comments]]></comments><pubDate>Mon, 26 Sep 2011 00:00:00 -0800</pubDate><category><![CDATA[Uncategorized]]></category><guid isPermaLink="false">http://inknbeans.com/4/post/2011/09/wheezer-the-painted-frog-kitty-sutton.html</guid><description><![CDATA[I approached this book with  happy trepidation, because it was carrying me back to a genre I had  loved as a child and as a teenager, the one I had grown up with and then  I had been forced to leave behind because there weren&rsquo;t any good  western books to read any more.And it did not fail me. I  realize, however, that defining it just a &ldquo;western&rdquo; is highly  reductive, for &ldquo;Wheezer&rdquo; is much more than th [...] ]]></description><content:encoded><![CDATA[<div  class="paragraph editable-text" style=" text-align: left; ">I approached this book with  happy trepidation, because it was carrying me back to a genre I had  loved as a child and as a teenager, the one I had grown up with and then  I had been forced to leave behind because there weren&rsquo;t any good  western books to read any more.And it did not fail me. I  realize, however, that defining it just a &ldquo;western&rdquo; is highly  reductive, for &ldquo;Wheezer&rdquo; is much more than that, and can be read on  different levels, by people with different interest.It is, first and foremost, a historical book,&nbsp; looking  into one of the most sorrowful pages of the Native Americans&rsquo; history,  the &ldquo;Trail where They Cried&rdquo;, the forced migration of the Cherokee tribe  from their native land to the arid Territory of Oklahoma.&nbsp; Kitty  Sutton has manage to paint the odissey, the agony of a people with just  a few words here and there, never getting boring (as historical books  could be) and always touching the heart of the reader.Then  there is Wheezer himself&hellip; any reader who loves animals in general and  dogs in particular cannot help but being captivated by this small,  extremely clever dog, who&rsquo;s a sort of &ldquo;deus ex machina&rdquo; throughout the  novel. He&rsquo;s so cute, so brave, so clever, you&rsquo;ll never have enough of  him, you&rsquo;ll wish to read more about him.And  the other characters, from Jackson Halley to the little, brave Cherokee  girl Sasa, to all the other minor characters, are unforgettable too.  Kitty has a way of making them come to life with her words so that the  reader can actually &ldquo;see&rdquo; them and share their emotions, their despair,  their pride, their happiness.And  then there is the &ldquo;western atmosphere&rdquo; proper, the landscape, the wide  spaces, the forest and the arid plains, all brought to life in such way  the reader cannot help but feel transported in another land and in  another time.As I said at the beginning, this book brought me back to the love of my childhood and youth,&nbsp; and  I must say that reading Wheezer&rsquo;s story, the Cherokee people story,  Sasa&rsquo;s story, captivated me as much as the best novels by Zane Grey and  Louis L&rsquo;Amour&nbsp; managed to do so many years ago. I definitely recommend reading this book. You&rsquo;ll feel the richer for it.<br /></div>  ]]></content:encoded></item><item><title><![CDATA[Kiwi In Cat City, Vickie Johnstone]]></title><link><![CDATA[http://inknbeans.com/4/post/2011/09/kiwi-in-cat-city-vickie-johnstone.html]]></link><comments><![CDATA[http://inknbeans.com/4/post/2011/09/kiwi-in-cat-city-vickie-johnstone.html#comments]]></comments><pubDate>Sun, 25 Sep 2011 00:00:00 -0800</pubDate><category><![CDATA[Uncategorized]]></category><guid isPermaLink="false">http://inknbeans.com/4/post/2011/09/kiwi-in-cat-city-vickie-johnstone.html</guid><description><![CDATA[I must confess that I approached this book with a few misgivings, because I had not read anything meant for children in ages. But  after just a few pages I had already forgotten it was a book for  children, or at least I found out that I did not mind it at all. While  simple enough that children can understand and enjoy it, the narration  is flowing and the style elegant, clean and amusing. And  the plot hooks you from the very st [...] ]]></description><content:encoded><![CDATA[<div  class="paragraph editable-text" style=" text-align: left; ">I must confess that I approached this book with a few misgivings, because I had not read anything meant for children in ages. But  after just a few pages I had already forgotten it was a book for  children, or at least I found out that I did not mind it at all. While  simple enough that children can understand and enjoy it, the narration  is flowing and the style elegant, clean and amusing. And  the plot hooks you from the very start. The idea of children turning  into cats and following their own (supposedly) domestic cat to a strange  land and toward adventure is quite original in its own right, and the  whole story develops with a steady rhythm, in the best mystery style,  with a few surprises here and there.It  was a very enjoyable reading, so much so that I&rsquo;m now looking forward  to reading the next volume of Kiwi&rsquo;s adventures (a few threads are left  hanging in the end, but the story is self-conclusive).</div>  ]]></content:encoded></item><item><title><![CDATA[Land of Nod:  The Artifact,  Gary Hoover]]></title><link><![CDATA[http://inknbeans.com/4/post/2011/09/first-post.html]]></link><comments><![CDATA[http://inknbeans.com/4/post/2011/09/first-post.html#comments]]></comments><pubDate>Sat, 24 Sep 2011 00:00:00 -0800</pubDate><category><![CDATA[Uncategorized]]></category><guid isPermaLink="false">http://inknbeans.com/4/post/2011/09/first-post.html</guid><description><![CDATA[I&rsquo;ve just finished reading Land of Nod, and I  must say it left me with the same feeling most good readings do&hellip; a sense  of regret that here wasn&rsquo;t more to read, and a wish for the sequel to  come out soon.It&rsquo;s  been a long time since I read a sci-fi book that appealed so much to  me&hellip; light enough on the scientific side not to get boring for somebody  who, like me, doesn&rsquo;t like techology and s [...] ]]></description><content:encoded><![CDATA[<div  class="paragraph editable-text" style=" text-align: left; ">I&rsquo;ve just finished reading Land of Nod, and I  must say it left me with the same feeling most good readings do&hellip; a sense  of regret that here wasn&rsquo;t more to read, and a wish for the sequel to  come out soon.It&rsquo;s  been a long time since I read a sci-fi book that appealed so much to  me&hellip; light enough on the scientific side not to get boring for somebody  who, like me, doesn&rsquo;t like techology and science very much, and yet  really powerful on the adventure side and with a very good, enthralling  plot. I only wish the psychology of some character had been further  explored, but since most of them are seen mostly through Jeff&rsquo;s eyes, I  realize that would have been rather difficult.All considered, The Land of Nod makes a very good and pleasant reading. <span></span></div>  ]]></content:encoded></item></channel></rss>
