Monday, September 9, 2013

Used Bookstore

We have recently been working hard to set up a new second-hand book store.

The bookstore is served by amazon market place and all items are available until sold.  The stock is continually changing as we ship books to amazon.com's fulfillment centers several times per month.

The book store contains a range of books at value prices. We carry items that range from novels and other fiction to college textbooks.

We use the fulfillment by amazon service for most books, this means that if you are an Amazon Prime member you can receive FREE Two Day shipping on most of our books. If you are not an Amazon Prime member, but your total shopping cart spend on any part of the amazon.com website, not just our store is valued at $25 or more you qualify for Amazon's Supersaver shipping.

Take a look at our storefront.

Tuesday, August 27, 2013

Suspect by Robert Crais

I have read several books written by Robert Crais in the past, most of those were Elvis Cole novels and found them really enjoyable.




Suspect is available from amazon.com 



Suspect is, I think unique, in the world of thriller/Mystery novels in that one of the main characters is a German Shepherd dog named Maggie.

Maggie was trained as a patrol and explosives detection dog and served with her Marine handler in Afghanistan until one fateful day her company of Marines are attacked by Afghan insurgants and her handler is killed and Maggie so badly wounded that she is sent back to the U.S. to join the Los Angeles Police Department K9 unit.

There she meets Scott, a serving LAPD officer who is recovering from the trauma of being shot and seeing his human partner murdered on a otherwise quiet nights patrol.

Maggie and Scott then become a new partnership. Scott helps Maggie to recover from her fear of loud noises and Maggie helps Scott uncover the truth behind the murder of his partner.

Crais writes great characters, from the moment I started reading  this book I cared what happened to the characters. The character of Maggie is particularly well written, Crais has learned about how dogs think, what motivates them and how they interact with their human handlers. I owned German Shepherds for thirty years, I love the breed and Crais certainly describes many of the facets of the breed which I came to love. Maggie is as real a dog as it is possible to bring into literature and she is also a heroic character in the book.

This is a taught and dynamic thriller that I could not put down from start to finish.

Suspect is available from the My Favorite Books amazon.com store.

Monday, April 15, 2013

Major Pettigrew's Last Stand - Helen Simonson

Major Pettigrew's Last Stand was my local library's favorite book of 2012.

This is my video review of this funny and enjoyable book.

 

Saturday, April 6, 2013

Cutting for Stone - Abraham Verghese

Cutting for Stone is a novel by Abraham Verghese. Verghese, a respected internal medicine  doctor and professor, has created a modern epic which takes the reader through all the emotions and leaves you wanting more of the story. In my opinion Cutting for Stone  is the book of the year.



Cutting for Stone
Abraham Verghese



 


The story covers about fifty years from the middle of the 1950's until just after the turn of the Twenty-first century.. It is a story of love, betrayal, loss and reconciliation as seen through the eyes of Marion Stone. Marion is one of a pair of twins born to Sister Mary Joseph Praise, an Indian Carmelite nun and Dr Thomas Stone a British Surgeon both of whom work a  at a small Mission Hospital, Missing Hospital, in the heart of Adis Ababa, Ethiopia.

Marion and his twin brother Shiva are born as their mother dies. Throughout their childhood, Shiva is the quiet and examining brother, Marion is the talker of the two. Through Marion's eyes we see the turmoil of military coups and political fighting as well as the horror of disease in a world where a visit to the doctor is all too often a last resort before almost certain death.

At my local library book club, there was just one negative comment. The books beginning is full of the back stories of many of the major characters. The reader can soon become dismayed at these back stories, which while they do flesh out the characters later seem too many, too soon slowing the story to a very slow snails pace.

Work your way through part one and the story soon picks up pace, you love and dislike the characters at all times. There are many humorous and laugh out loud portions in this book and also many sections where your stomach will curl as you endure the tension of a medical procedure.

In the end the conclusion of the story will surprise you. No-one at our book  club predicted the stories turn of events. But no-one was disappointed. The book leaves you pondering the way life can turn on a series of events. The things we do matter as do the things we don't do.

Cutting for Stone is a great and powerful first novel.




If you have already read Cutting for Stone, share your opinion of the book by leaving a comment.

Wednesday, January 9, 2013

Double Cross: The True Story of the D-Day Spies - Ben McIntyre




Ben McIntyre has created  a great series of books in his trilogy of histories of British Intelligence operations during World War Two.

Double Cross: The True Story of the D-Day Spies, tells the stories of a small group of spies who operated from the UK and at time the USA for Nazi Germany.

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Unknown to the Germans however all their most prestigious spies were in fact double agents. The information they supplied was given to them by British Intelligence officers working from Room XX (the Roman numeral for 20 and the double cross of the title.)

Among the stories told are those of "Garbo" one of Germany's most important spies, who commanded a network of over twenty recruits to his spy ring. These recruits ranged from Liverpool dock workers to a group of revolutionary Welsh coal miners bent on the destruction of the British Empire. Each one though was really a figment of "Garbo's" imagination. Every character had a life which the ingenious Spaniard created for his Nazi controllers and so convinced them as to their reality that even after D-Day had occured (June 6, 1944) Garbo's reports were avidly awaited in Berlin.

This book also describes the lives of four other major spies, two other men, and two brave women who  risked all to ensure the ultimate success of the Allied cause in World War Two.

Read the story of a female spy, who asked her German handler for a photgraph for a lover's keepsake. Or the spy who when faced with exposure flew to meet his master's and challenged them, accusing them of taking the cream off the top of his espionage allowance.

Ben McIntyre provides us with vivid personalities, he is wonderfully adept at intertwining several stories to allow you to see both detail and the grand picture.

If you have any interest in World War Two in Europe this book will add to your knowledge. If you are fascinated by the world of spies and James Bond stories, this book will enthrall, Ian Flemming worked closely with some of the XX team.

If you have read any of Ben McIntyre's other books in the series "Agent ZigZag  or Operation Mincemeat, this book is a necessary addition to your library.

Wednesday, December 5, 2012

The Historian - Elizabeth Costova



The Historian written by @Elizabeth Costova is a complex book. We, the reader, are compelled to enter a world that is both familiar and yet intriguing.

The story covers a period from the mid 1930's until the 1980's. The story is told in three voices. Each is wonderfully brought to life in a series of diary entries and letters. Costova manages to hold you wrapped in the world of her story.

The story is a detective story. Each character brings some clues to the table and you are held breathless at times as to the meaning of each clue.

All the time the hero and heroine of the story are dogged by political and academic intrigue and an ever present danger of death. But a death unlike any other, the death of becoming one of the "Undead."

BecauseThe Historianis a retelling of the familiar vampire story.

Vlad Tepec "Dracul"
Prince of Walachia in the mid 15th Century
He led many rebellions against the invading Ottoman Empire.
Because of his love of torture He became known asVlad the Impaler"
Costova does not merely retell the Bram Stoker original story, nor does she create a world of handsome and gentle vampires. The vampires in this book are evil and cruel, they haunt your nightmares and come to you in the darkness. Blended with historical research and fictional fascination this book is compelling and a very good read.
I personally enjoyed the Audio CD version which has several actors reading the parts of the various "voices". This made the story even more compelling.
Definitely not a read on a black moonless night when you are all alone.







Friday, November 30, 2012

Thunder Dog -Michael Hingson






This will be one of my favorite books of 2012.

Michael Hingson and his guide dog Rocelle worked in tower 1 of the World Trade Center in New York City.

On 9/11 they were in their office on the 78th floor of the WTC, Michael was preparing a sales conference and Rocelle was calmly sleeping under Michael's desk when American Airlines flight 11 hit the tower some twenty storeys above.

So started a day of escapes first from the burning tower, then rushing from the collapsing debris of the towers as they fell, finally an escape to New Jersey and home from one of the most horrific days in US history.

Hingson takes the opportunity to give us the back story of his life. Made blind after he was born prematurely, Hingson never takes blindness as a reason not to do something, riding a bicycle around the streets of Palmdale CA or driving a car and flying a plane, Michael does it and earns an honors degree in Physics along the way.

This story is the inter woven tale of that one day, 9/11, and Hingson's road to the 78th floor of the WTC.

Fascinating and moving at the same time. I was unable to put this book down until I had read it from cover to cover.

This is a book of heroism, not just on the human level but also on the level of the guide dog. Rocelle could never have been trained to get Hingson out of the WTC but she did. Calm, reliable and loyal she was with him on every step, on the way stopping to soothe the panic of others and offer a passing lick to firemen climbing up the stairway to their ultimate scrifice.





This is a must read book.