6.27.2007

The Blue Zone

Kate’s world has suddenly been turned upside-down. Her beloved father has been implicated in a money laundering scheme and is a witness against a Columbian drug cartel. He and his family are now in witness protection but Kate refuses to go. She can’t leave the life she has built so has to say goodbye to her family and make some drastic changes in her own life. A year later, the trial is over but strange people seem to be following Kate, her friends are being hurt and the Witness Protection Program has lost track of her father. Now Kate has to track down her family and find out the truth.

The Blue Zone is written by Andrew Gross. Gross has co-written many books with James Patterson.

The Double Agents

Who can you trust when everyone around you might be a double agent? Dick Canidy and the other OSS agents have to walk a fine line between trust and suspicion in the new Men at War book, The Double Agents. Their task is to convince the Axis powers that the Allies are not going to be landing at the beaches of Normandy. They have to depend on the informants around that who might really be spying for the enemy. Everything is suddenly thrown into turmoil when the body is found. . . .

W.E.B. Griffin and his son, William E. Butterworth, collaborate in the sixth book of the Men At War series. W.E.B Griffin is one of many pseudonyms used by William Edmund Butterworth III (his son is the IV).

The Lost Diary of Don Juan

How does a man training to become a priest end up as the world’s greatest lover? Don Juan reveals all in the pages of his diary, recounting his past and the present. Douglas Carlton Abrams adds new life to Don Juan’s story and the sixteenth century Spain, the time of the Inquision, in this new book.

6.14.2007

Back on Blossom Street

Back on Blossom Street is the third in Debbie Macomber's Knitting series. These cozy romances are just on the border of being inspirational books. In this book, a new knitting class for a prayer shawl begins. A few new characters are introduced and old friends revisited. Each woman encounters and overcomes problems in her life and grows closer to the others in the class.

Route 66 A. D.

Route 66 A. D. traces the travel routes of ancient Roman tourists from the eastern Mediterranean to a trip down the Nile. The author (Tony Perrottet) and his girlfriend travelled the same route, experiencing many of the same difficulties as the Romans (i.e. bad hotels, bad food, sickness, etc.) The book is a delightful mix of the historical and the contemporary. I enjoyed learning what the ancient tourists had written about their travels as well as learning what those ancient sites looked like now. Historians, travellers, and people interested in the ancient Romans would definitely enjoy this book.

6.13.2007

Discussion guide

Are you trying to come up with some discussion questions for your book club choice but there aren't any out there? These questions will help you create a generic list of questions for your book.

  • How did your feelings change as you read through the book?
  • Who did you care about?
  • What made you laugh?
  • Did the novel move you to tears or laughter
    • if so, how did it do so?
  • Who did you get angry with?
  • What frightened you?
  • Which relationship did you want to work out?
  • Was there any section you wish the author had spent more or less time on?
  • Did you get off to a slow start or were you straight in?
  • What did you think of the ending?
  • Was it what you expected?
  • Who was:
    • the most memorable character in the novel
    • your favourite character
    • the most horrible character
    • the character who made you cry
    • the character you’d most like to be on a desert island with and why?
  • Did you like some characters more than others?
  • Did you find some parts of the novel more readable than others?
  • Did you feel emotionally involved with the characters?
  • How did you feel when you finished the book?
  • Is this a book you would recommend to others, and if so, why?
  • Did you like the cover/look of the book? Would you have chosen to read it, and why (or why not)?
  • If you gave up on the book, can you explain why it didn’t appeal?
  • Were there any bits you would have written differently?
  • Were there things you wanted to know that the author didn’t tell you?
  • How should the book have ended?
Some additional questions for nonfiction books:
  • What did you find surprising about the facts introduced in this book?
  • How has reading this book changed your opinion of a certain person or topic?
  • Does the author present information in a way that is interesting and insightful, and if so, how does he or she achieve this?
  • If the author is writing on a debatable issue, does he or she give proper consideration to all sides the debate? Does he or she seem to have a bias?
  • How has the book increased your interest in the subject matter?