Are you sitting down? Nice and comfortable? A coffee and a cookie nearby? Ready to delve into some great book reviews as we head into the fall? Good. You're in the right place. Welcome to the EIGHTH (I know, it's incredible!) meeting of The Book Review Club. And we're just in time for September 6 which is Read a Book Day and for Banned Books Week (September 26-Oct 3)!
I'm going to hop right into my review because there are links to terrific reviews below, and I want leave you time to check them out.
So....you know how sometimes you're craving a piece of chocolate? And the more you try not to think of it, the more it's on your mind. And, eventually, you just give in, find the treat and enjoy.
In book terms, a Perry Mason mystery is that chocolate treat for me. Luckily, last month I picked up a copy of the 1969, 12th printing (it was first pubbed in 1943), 75-cent, paperback edition of Perry Mason Solves the Case of the Buried Clock and stuck in on my bookshelf. So, when the craving hit, I was prepared.
Here's the CBS logline from the just-under-an-hour episode based on this book. It aired Nov. 11, 1958.
A camera’s flash triggered by a buried clock figures into a murder case, where the chairman of a bank is accused of killing his son-in-law
What do I love about Erle Stanley Gardner's Perry Mason books?
-I love reading the Cast of Characters. For example, the Buried Clock has Adele Blane, "who always looked five years younger or twenty years older" and Vincent P. Blain, who is "Father of Adele and Milicent, rich, charming, dignified, worried."
-I love the dated language. Like: "I sure led with my chin on that one." Like: "That's the kind of cur he is."
-I love knowing little details about Perry Mason, such as his love of a good steak, how he keeps his cigarettes in a humidor, how he walks with a long-legged gait. And don't even get me started on his ever-cool secretary, Della Street.
-And I adore the wrap-up courtroom scene where the brilliant Mr. Mason unveils the murderer and ties up all the loose ends.
To finish off, here are a few interesting facts about the author, Erle Stanley Gardner (1889-1970): He got kicked out of law school after about a month for fighting. He worked as a typist in a law office, studied law BY HIMSELF, then took the bar and PASSED. He hung out a shingle at THE AGE OF 21 YEARS in Merced, CA. He practiced law until 1933 when The Case of the Velvet Claws was published. He wrote under his own name and SEVEN pseudonyms. He loved the courtroom and steak. He married his longtime secretary (as in, she worked for him for over THIRTY years) when he was SEVENTY-NINE and she was SIXTY-SIX. I think they were waiting for his first wife to die. (I pulled these author facts from a previous post on this blog. So, if they sound familiar, no, you're not going crazy.
Below are links to a bunch of wonderful reviews. Please, please, please hop around and visit. Oh, and HUGE CONGRATULATIONS to Reviewer Keri Mikulski who just landed a FOUR book deal with Razorbill/Penguin. I'm sure one of us will be reviewing her first book in spring 2011!
YOUNG ADULT BOOK REVIEWS
Thao of serene hours: CRAZY BEAUTIFUL by Lauren Baratz-Logsted
Sarahlynn of Yeah, but Houdini didn't have these hips: GO ASK ALICE by Anonymous
Kaye of the Book Review Forum: THE SEIGE OF MACINDAW by John Flanagan (book #6 in the Rangers Apprentice series)
Stacy Nyikos: WEEDFLOWER by Cynthia Kadohata (middle grade)
Jody Feldman: THE PUZZLING WORLD OF WINSTON BREEN by Eric Berlin (middle grade)
Keri Mikulski: SAMANTHA HANSEN HAS ROCKS IN HER HEAD by Nancy Viau (middle grade)
ADULT BOOK REVIEWS
Sarah Laurence: THAT OLD CAPE MAGIC by Richard Russo (literary fiction)
Kathy Holmes: RED, WHITE AND DEAD by Laura Caldwell (mystery series)
Scott Parker: THE WAY HOME by George Pelecanos (crime)
Patti Abbott: OLIVE KITTERIDGE by Elizabeth Strout
Jenn Jilks of My Reflections: THE BEST LAID PLANS by Terry Fallis (winner of the Stephen Leacock Award for Humour)
Beth Yarnall: OBSIDIAN PREY by Jayne Castle (AKA Jayne Ann Krentz)(paranormal futuristic romance)
Ellen Booraem of Freelance Ne'es-do-well: THE GIRL WHO PLAYED WITH FIRE by Stieg Larsson (mystery, 2nd in the Millenium series)
Alyssa Goodnight of the Writers' Road Less Traveled: THE ACTOR AND THE HOUSEWIFE by Shannon Hale (humorous women's fiction)
NONFICTION BOOK REVIEWS
Zu Vincent of Through the Tollbooth:TRUE NOTEBOOKS: A WRITER'S YEAR AT JUVENILE HALL by Mark Salzman
And that, folks, sums it up for September's meeting! Reviewers--if I didn't link to you, please leave me a comment and I'll fix the error right away. My kids are still home for the summer and I'm a bit frazzled.