Since there were soooooo many books that started with the letter S, it was really hard to narrow it down to just two to review today. So I'm going to do three that are ones that I just couldn't give up on as I tried to decide. The first is one of my all time favorite Dean Koontz books. The next one is one of the books I read as a teen over and over. And the last one is a sequel to Gone with the Wind, one of my favorite all time books ever since high school.
First is Strangers by Dean Koontz. I read this book over and over, even at over 700 pages, I could read through it in a day or two because of what a good read it was. It is a UFO type of story. There are bits that make you think of the movie Close Encounters of the Third Kind, but all in all it is just one of Koontz's great earlier stories. Here is the blurb from Goodreads:
A surgeon, a writer, a motel-keeper, a priest and a thief; they have nothing in common - nothing but one hot summer night at the Tranquillity Motel: a night filled with unending terror; a night when an awesome power stripped them of their memories.
Now the evil is creeping back into their minds. Slowly, tauntingly, maddeningly, they are recalling the unspeakable events of that fateful moonlit evening. And as the vision of evil grows clearer, the guests of the Tranquillity Motel seek each other out. Some of them will not live to face the power head on. But some will - in a terror-packed climax unlike anything ever experienced before...
Second is A Summer to Die by Lois Lowry. It's one of her sad teen stories that she wrote so many of. It's not at all a dystopian story like The Giver. This is about a girl who gets leukemia and how her family deals with it. I don't know if I can put my finger on all the little things that have influenced my life from this book, but there are many. Here is the blurb from Goodreads:
Meg isn't thrilled when she gets stuck sharing a bedroom with her older sister Molly. The two of them couldn't be more different, and it's hard for Meg to hide her resentment of Molly's beauty and easy popularity. But now that the family has moved to a small house in the country, Meg has a lot to accept.
Just as the sisters begin to adjust to their new home, Meg feels that Molly is starting up again by being a real nuisance. But Molly's constant grouchiness, changing appearance, and other complaints are not just part of a new mood. And the day Molly is rushed to the hospital, Meg has to accept that there is something terribly wrong with her sister. That's the day Meg's world changes forever. Is it too late for Meg to show what she really feels?
The last book I want to talk about today is Scarlett by Alexandra Ripley. When this book came out I devoured it. Shortly after the book was out, they made a mini-series for tv of it. And while it was okay, it skipped some of the parts I loved about the book. But isn't that how it always is? This book picks up after Rhett left Scarlett. It includes her taking a trip to Ireland to be with her father's side of the family. She finds out that Rhett seems to be done with her when she went back to try to get him back. Her mother's family demands she has nothing to do with her father's family, it all leads to her trip to Ireland, along with a new romance, one that soon turns into a murder, that Scarlett will be blamed for. Here is the pretty nondescript blurb from Goodreads:
The timeless tale continues... The most popular and beloved American historical novel ever written, Margaret Mitchell's Gone With the Wind is unparalleled in its portrayal of men and women at once larger than life but as real as ourselves. Now bestselling writer Alexandra Ripley brings us back to Tara and reintroduces us to the characters we remember so well: Rhett, Ashley, Mammy, Suellen, Aunt Pittypat, and, of course, Scarlett. As the classic story, first told over half a century ago, moves forward, the greatest love affair in all fiction is reignited; amidst heartbreak and joy, the endless, consuming passion between Scarlett O'Hara and Rhett Butler reaches its startling culmination. Rich with surprises at every turn and new emotional, breathtaking adventures, Scarlett satisfies our longing to reenter the world of Gone With the Wind, and like its predecessor, Scarlett will find an eternal place in our hearts.
Talking about all three of these has made me want to read them again! So tell me, are you a Dean Koontz reader? If so, have you read this one? Did you read Lois Lowry as a teen? And have you read this sequel to Gone With the Wind?
While you're here, be sure to enter the giveaway that is going along with my A to Z challenge!
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Showing posts with label Gone With the Wind. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Gone With the Wind. Show all posts
Wednesday, April 22, 2015
Tuesday, October 28, 2014
Top Ten Tuesday: 10 Characters Who I Would Totally Want To Be For Halloween
Top Ten Tuesday is sponsored by The Broke and The Bookish. This should be a fun week. I'm going to post a picture of the book and what I think the character would look like or did look like in a movie/tv show if available.
1. Clary from The Mortal Instruments Series
My hair is more the color of the movie star, minus the very heavy eyebrows. But I'd want more the book cover color of hair, I love that red!
2. Katniss from The Hunger Games
Especially that awesome girl on fire dress!!
3. America from The Selection series, in either the blue dress on the cover of the first book, or her wedding dress on the 3rd book cover.
Maybe not practical for a Halloween costume, but so beautiful!
4. Alyssa from Splintered
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I completely forgot that I had this t-shirt from when I visited the HBO store in NYC my very first time I visited my sister there. Hmm. Now I just have to find the apron, and figure out what kind of shorts to wear. And what to do about blond hair? A wig? Make a quick appointment with my hair dresser?
If the Sookie outfit doesn't work, I'll go back to my Star Trek uniform for my costume this Friday night. So, what about you, what characters would you, or are you maybe going to dress up like for Halloween this year, or maybe you have in the past?
1. Clary from The Mortal Instruments Series
My hair is more the color of the movie star, minus the very heavy eyebrows. But I'd want more the book cover color of hair, I love that red!
2. Katniss from The Hunger Games
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Especially that awesome girl on fire dress!!
3. America from The Selection series, in either the blue dress on the cover of the first book, or her wedding dress on the 3rd book cover.
Maybe not practical for a Halloween costume, but so beautiful!
4. Alyssa from Splintered
I've included an outfit posted by the author on her Pinterest page for the character.
5. Katerina from the Katerina series by Robin Bridges
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I love the fancy dress on the 2nd book, but the outfit on the first book, while kind of vague looking in the picture, does have a hat which helps show that she is from Russia.
6. Bella from Twilight
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6. Bella from Twilight
I loved the dress that she wore to her birthday party in the New Moon movie. And they sold it at Hot Topic that year! So I did actually wear that one year, although not for Halloween, for a wedding I think. :-)
7. Elizabeth Bennett from Pride and Prejudice
First, because who doesn't want their own Mr. Darcy? Although he is kind of an ass. But the dresses would be fun to wear! For a costume that is.
8. Scarlett O'Hara from Gone With the Wind
So hard to pick just one, as they were all so beautiful! But I'll go with this one.
9. Buffy the Vampire Slayer
Technically the movie and tv series came before any books, but that's okay, there are a ton of books for the show now. And I'd go with her red leather pants and black top. Well, if I wouldn't look like someone had stuffed two sausages into some pants.
10. Sookie Stackhouse from Dead Until Dark or True Blood TV series
10. Sookie Stackhouse from Dead Until Dark or True Blood TV series
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If the Sookie outfit doesn't work, I'll go back to my Star Trek uniform for my costume this Friday night. So, what about you, what characters would you, or are you maybe going to dress up like for Halloween this year, or maybe you have in the past?
Tuesday, April 20, 2010
Rhett Butler's People by Donald McCaig

I can pinpoint the teachers who led me to some of my quirky favorites in movies. First, my grandpa. No, he wasn't ever a "teacher" per se, but I do feel that he taught me in many different ways, and shaped a lot of who I am. He was an engineer, and I know it is from him that I developed my interest in astronomy, and probably other science. But whever we visited my Grandpa and Grandma Moritz's house, there was a big yellow book called Why a Duck with a cartoon picture of Groucho Marx's head. It is from my Grandpa that I got my love of all things Marx Brothers. I can even remember him laughing at certain parts of the movies when we'd watch them at his house when we went into the air conditioning during the annual family garage sales.
Second is my 8th grade science teacher/principal. I went to a private school, and so the principal was also a teacher, Mr. Riedl. In fact, he was a science teacher, my current occupation. But I remember watching Court Jester, with Danny Kaye one day at school when I was in 7th or 8th grade. Again, I can remember him laughing loudly at the "Flaggon with the Dragon" part of the movie. From this I became a Danny Kaye fan.
Third was my freshman year, my Citizenship class teacher, Mr. Jarvis. In class he showed us the movie The Gods Must Be Crazy. I remember watching the beginning and thinking, wow, another boring school movie, but still being glad we were watching a movie instead of doing work. But if you've seen this movie, you know it is not a boring movie at all. It is a hilarious look at modern day technology, a coke bottle, and how it can corrupt very simple cultures in ways we can't even imagine.
And the last teacher, leads into this book, my junior year American History teacher, Coach Durham. He showed us Gone With the Wind. I fell in love with it. I wanted to be Scarlett and have all the beaus after me. In a way, I have always felt like Scarlett, in that I never quite wanted what was right for me, and often didn't realize the good thing until it was gone. Of course, the reader that I am had to go out and read the book. And then in the early 90's a sequel called Scarlett was published. And I loved that too, even though the critics weren't huge fans. It made me cry, and I felt so much for Scarlett and all the bad choices she made, again, relating to her in that way at least.
When Rhett Butler's People came out in 2007, I ordered it from the book club I belonged to at the time. It has sat in my bookshelf of books to be read since that time. I couldn't quite bring myself to pick it up. Not sure why, just couldn't. But now, once I picked it up, I couldn't put it down. I fell right back in love the with the story. And I loved all the way we got to see into everyone's thoughts in this story. I worried as it started that it would only go up to the time when Rhett got married to Scarlett. Needless to say it followed right on through the end of Gone With the Wind and past. Totally didn't go with Scarlett, and while yes, I do love that story, I do like how this one ended a bit better. I cried, I smiled, I just loved this book. I can't gush enough about how much I liked it. Again, not sure the critics were big fans of this one either, but I loved it. I think I need to get the movie out again and watch it. I loved seeing Rhett's side of the story and his family, and Melanie Wilkes's side, etc.
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