...to read my review of "Deeply Odd," by Dean Koontz.
Showing posts with label Cindy's Book Club. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Cindy's Book Club. Show all posts
Saturday, August 24, 2013
Tuesday, June 19, 2012
Head over to my book blog...
Please head over to my book blog, Cindy's Book Club, and read my review of Harriet Reisen's Louisa May Alcott: The Women Behind Little Women!
Friday, January 06, 2012
Saying goodbye to my book blog...at least for now
Well, I've decided to merge my book blog, Cindy's Book Club, with this blog, at least for the time being.
The blog never really took off readership-wise, and sometimes it's hard to maintain two blogs and do them both justice. When I started the book blog, I was unemployed and had plenty of time on my hands
As for book reviews, author interviews and all other things books and reading--including my participation in book blog-hops, etc--they'll continue right here. Books and reading have always been one of the ruling passions in my life, and that's not going away!
As for the reviews and other content on Cindy's Book Club, that will stay where it is. And who knows, someday I may return to double-blogging--never say never!
In the meantime, I invite you to check out some of my most popular posts on Cindy's Book Club...
--My review of Siri Mitchell's She Walks in Beauty
--I have a crush on Adam Dalgleish
--My review of Son of Hamas
--My review of Diane Noble's The Sister Wife
--My review of Julie Andrews' Home
Monday, July 11, 2011
Do you blog about books and reading?

Many of you know that I maintain a separate blog completely devoted to books and reading--Cindy's Book Club.
If you've never checked it out, I'd love for you to do so now. Also, if you have a book blog, or just include books, reviews, etc in your blog, I'd love to know so I can check yours out as well.
I'd also like to invite you to participate in a new meme/blog hop I'm starting called "Bookish Images Monday." You can find out all about it here.
Happy reading and book blogging!
Tuesday, May 03, 2011
Which is the best "Jane Eyre"?

Michael Fassbender as Mr. Rochester in Jane Eyre (2011)
Today on my book blog, Cindy's Book Club, I'm asking what is the best movie or television adaptation of Jane Eyre.
Please head over there and chime in!
Friday, December 31, 2010
Thanks and Happy New Year to Everyone Who Reads My Blog!

2010 has been the year I regained my love for blogging, rejuvenated my blog, and even launched a new, separate blog.
After blogging since 2003, I had kind of lost interest. I was posted halfheartedly and rarely. Then something changed. I found a new blog design (free, of course!), and started blogging again on a regular basis.
At first, it was mainly re-runs from past years. Then I found other blogs that featured gorgeous pictures and welcoming atmospheres, and I took some cues from them. Suddenly I was finding all sorts of things to blog about!
Hardcore reading addict that I am, I decided to start a separate blog that is solely about books and reading--Cindy's Book Club. I think it's interesting and fun, and I would really appreciate it if you'd check it out!
I truly enjoy blogging. I've always been an aspiring writer, and what better way to indulge that love? It's like having my own personal little magazine, where I can pretty much write about whatever I want.
I want to say a great big thank-you to those of you who read this blog. Yes, my goal is to increase readership, because I'm not content to just project my thoughts out into the ether. Words need an audience, and I so appreciate those of you to take the time to read mine.
I'd like to wish all of you a very wonderful and blessed 2011. Thanks for reading "Notes in the Key of Life"!

Saturday, November 20, 2010
What murder in a tiny English village has to do with me

The Internet has made our world a much smaller place, and yesterday that fact was illustrated to me with a clarity that I found intriguing and, yes, amazing.
Yesterday, nursing a sinus infection and holed up in my house for the day, I decided to blog.
My book blog, Cindy's Book Club, has woefully few readers (please DO check it out sometime!), and I've been trying to come up with interesting and appealing topics to post.
I decided to blog about a couple of favorite childhood books and how I found copies of them on the internet.
Both books, Red Knights from Hy Brasil and Auntie Robbo, are out of print and fairly obscure, so I was delighted to reclaim them.
You can read more about those books here and here.
Anyway...
While taking pictures of the books, I was struck once again by a sticker on the inside of Red Knights from Hy Brasil.
(My own copy of the book, which ended up being somehow lost, was purchased circa 1965 or 1966 at a small Christian bookstore in Beirut, Lebanon, where my parents were missionaries at the time.)

As you can see, the sticker shows that the book was awarded to Peter Torn at St. Martin's in Owston Ferry, on Christmas 1963. It's even signed by the vicar.
I found that charmingly English, and I could just picture this little British lad being handed the book that I held in my hands 40 years later (I received the book from abebooks.co.uk in October 2003).
So what does all this have to do with murder?
Well, yesterday I got curious and decided to Google Peter Torn, St. Martin's, and Owston Ferry.
Here's what I came up with--a June 2003 article from the Yorkshire Post about the funeral of a girl named Laura Torn:
Almost the entire village of Owston Ferry, near Scunthorpe, turned out to pay tribute to the 18-year-old whose body was found in Misson, Nottinghamshire, last month following a huge search.
Scores of mourners filled St Martin's Church, while the sermon was broadcast over loudspeakers to those who could not get inside the historic building.
...Schoolfriends, neighbours and family held each other and police officers who searched for Laura also turned out in tribute.
The church was packed to capacity by the time Laura's coffin was brought in to the church, followed by her weeping family. Her father, Peter Torn, fought back tears as he held wife Heather and 13-year-old Martin.
Without a doubt, this is "my" Peter Torn. He was 49 years old when his 18-year-old daughter was murdered.
Further Google searches turned up follow-up stories about the case. In April 2004, 31-year-old Guy Beckett, Laura's boss at a local pub, admitted to strangling her to death, apparently enraged when she broke off their secret relationship.
In May 2004, Beckett was sentenced to life in prison.
Even more meaningful...
Reading the story of Peter Torn's loss and grief somehow made the fact that I own what used to be his book even more meaningful to me.
On Christmas in 1963, little Peter Torn was handed a copy of the book that was to be one of my own favorite childhood books, and the book that singlehandedly started my lifelong obsession with Ireland and all things Irish.
Forty years later, just a few months after the death of Peter Torn's daughter, I held his copy of that book in my hands.
If Peter Torn ever somehow stumbles across this post on the Internet, I want him to know that my heart goes out to him and his family for their terrible loss. It's been seven years since he lost his precious daughter, but a parent never really gets over their grief.
My hope is that he finds comfort in the God he learned about as a little boy at St. Martin's Church in Owston Ferry, England. And each time I pick up his copy of The Red Knights from Hy Brasil I will send up a prayer for him and his family.
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