Archive for January, 2011

20
Jan

Adventures of Rusty & Ginger Fox

   Posted by: Lynne    in Children, eBooks/Print Books, Fiction

Book Details 
Title: Adventures of Rusty & Ginger Fox
Author: Tim Ostermeyer
Format: Hardback
Number of Pages: 48
Summary: When two young foxes set out to explore the forest, they encounter all kinds of creatures. Some of them are friendly, while others would like nothing more than to eat the two young explorers! Rusty and Ginger may be able to outfox bears, bobcats, cougars, and wolves, but can they unlock the mysterious box that awaits them on Treasure Island? And will the little girls they meet there turn out to be friends or foes?Join Rusty and Ginger as they travel through the woods. Author Tim Ostermeyer’s beautiful wildlife photography provides a fox’s-eye view of the forest. With a charming story to guide the way, and a fact page of wildlife information for every animal introduced in the book, readers can explore nature alongside Rusty and Ginger.
Price: $13.64.
Author Bio: Tim Ostermeyer is a Master Photographer who has won over 250 first-place awards for his photography. He has been named “Photographer of the Year” nine times by various organizations, and has had fourteen images published in the Professional Photographers of America Loan Collection books. Tim has a studio in Allen, Texas, and travels around the world taking photographs of wildlife.
Adventures of Rusty & Ginger Fox
***
Adventures of Rusty & Ginger Fox is a cute book with amazing wildlife photos. Rusty and Ginger, two red foxes, encounter several other animals in the forest; some friendly and some not. As each animal is introduced, a fact sheet tells more about its habits and physical attributes. This adds some seriousness to the cuteness. Almost unnoticed at first is each animal’s footprints meandering up the page. The plotline itself–the foxes explore their world and run across other creatures–is very simple. And I found the addition of a “treasure chest” and two pretty girls a little out of place. However, as a child, I used to dream about finding treasure, so this would likely appeal to its intended audience; children ages four to eight.

Additionally, as an adult, it’s obvious that the books’ photos are somewhat taken out of context, since the foxes don’t really come that close to the other animals. But I think a child would enjoy the book, and I’ll have no problem passing my copy to my nieces and nephews. They’d enjoy the photos and might even learn a few animal facts in the process.

I give this book 5 stars because the photos themselves are just stunning. The storyline is more of an afterthought.

Click here to buy Adventures of Rusty & Ginger Fox from Amazon and view excerpts
Click here to view the author’s website.

Disclaimer: I received a free review copy of Adventures of Rusty & Ginger Fox. My reviews are not influenced by receiving free review copies, nor am I compensated any other way for reviewing books. I may provide affiliate links where books can be purchased, but I do this of my own volition.

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5
Jan

Ebook Review: Evil Angel

   Posted by: Lynne    in eBooks/Print Books, Fiction, Suspense/Thriller

Book Details

Title: Evil Angel
Author: RD Larson
Format: Paperback, Kindle, LIT, PDF, PDB, EPUB, RB, FUB, KML, LRF, PRC, IMP
Number of Pages: 192 (Paperback)
Summary: A beautiful girl, tortured by insane jealousy and twisted love, is possessed by an Evil Angel who leads her on a path of manic violence and death in a bid to crush a real love story. Not for the weak-stomached, this is a fast paced, sharp adult thriller full of action and excitement.
Price: $5.50 – $14.27, depending on format.
Author Bio: RD Larson is the author of Evil Angel, Mama Tried to Raise a Lady, and Saving Reverend Clayton, co-authored with Louise Ulmer. She has had stories published in The Paper Journey, and several anthologies.
Evil Angel by RD Larson

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I have to admit I felt slightly annoyed right from the start when I read Evil Angel. That annoyance became outright irritation by the middle and end of the book. So much so that I complained about the book to my husband and mother-in-law afterwards! But first I’ll tell you what I liked about the book. I enjoyed the main plot: Terri, a mentally disturbed young woman marries her “dream guy” and has a child with him, only to drive him away with her emotional instability. She attempts to win him back by exacting revenge on anyone she thinks is standing in the way of her true love. We watch as she slowly spirals deeper and deeper into vengeful insanity. Watching her
self-destruction was fascinating.

Larson’s writing style is generally good, suspenseful, with some pretty phrases here and there. That said, what annoyed me from the start was the lack of proofreading and editing. I can overlook a typo or two, especially in an ebook, but not mid-sentence revisions and repeated sentences. And not starting in the very first paragraph of the novel! But even that wouldn’t have bothered me if the characters had been more likable. There’s Jack, who has been on the receiving end of his wife’s violence, seen her attempt suicide (apparently more than once), knows that she isn’t seeing her psychiatrist as she claims, and
yet he sees no problem leaving his baby daughter alone with her. Especially so he can get away to ski for a few days and clear his head. Selfish much? And though he now sees the foolishness of having jumped into the relationship with Terri after his first marriage abruptly ended, he doesn’t see the irony of now jumping into a sexcapade with instant ski buddy Hillary the day after he leaves Terri.

For her part, Hillary starts out as a sensible, sympathetic character. Still grieving over the death of her long-term boyfriend, we see her stand up to a bullying dad at the ski resort, and learn she’s a social worker who helps abused children and women. But within hours of meeting Jack she’s willing to throw out all sensibility in order to bed him. Never mind he’s married with a baby. When said wife and baby show up in town, this would be a cue for Hillary to quietly bow out, but she still pursues the relationship. But the “jump the shark” moment for me was when Hillary is attacked and beaten. Does she call the police the first chance she gets? Does she warn others who may soon
be in the path of her attacker? No, she decides to just go home and forget all about it. If she’d had a history of abuse, her reaction could be understood. But this is the first time she’s ever been smacked around, and that, combined with her career fighting for victims of abuse, makes her reaction totally unbelievable.

One last annoyance was when Jack is in the emergency room after a minor accident. A nurse brings him and Hillary bowls of onion soup, French bread, and tapioca. I had to roll my eyes. First, no one is served food in an emergency room, let alone both the patient and his visitor! And onion soup and French bread? In a hospital? You’ve got to be kidding me. The tapicoca I can believe, though green Jell-O would’ve been spot-on.

With a little revamping, I could’ve given Evil Angel 4 stars, but as it is I have to give it 2.

Click Here to buy Evil Angel from Amazon
Click here to buy Evil Angel from Fictionwise. Includes Chapter 1 excerpt.
Click here to read Chapter 3 excerpt

Disclaimer: I received a PDF review copy of Evil Angel. My reviews are not influenced by receiving free review copies, nor am I compensated any other way for reviewing books. I may provide affiliate links where books can be purchased, but I do this of my own volition.

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