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Location: Aurora, Colorado

Me. 27. Female. Married. Sister. Daughter. Teacher. Friend.

Sunday, June 25, 2006

Are You Afraid of the Dark? by Sidney Sheldon

Genre: Fiction

Pages: 416

Duration: June 23-June 25

Description:
Two gorgeous widows go up against a nefarious multinational think tank in this airbrushed but goofily entertaining thriller by perennial bestseller Sheldon (The Sky Is Falling; Tell Me Your Dreams; etc.). Four scientists working for the New York–based Kingsley International Group have died or disappeared within 24 hours. Wolfish top boss Tanner Kingsley vows to find the perpetrator; meanwhile, stunning artist Diane Stevens, wife of a just-murdered KIG scientist, and supermodel Kelly Harris, whose husband has likewise been killed, find themselves under attack by mysterious strangers. Diane and Kelly form an uneasy alliance, though both spend most of their time ruminating on their wonderful (now dead) husbands: "I want to feel you stroking my breast.... I want to imagine that I can hear your voice saying that I make the best paella in the world...." The plot is straightforward: people are killed, women are in peril and an evil CEO (Tanner, gasp!) has a plot to take over the world. His technique involves controlling the weather, and in an intriguing short afterword, Sheldon explains the very real possibilities of just such a scenario. The on-the-lam ladies, Kelly and Diane, escape every assassination attempt with ridiculous ease, and other characters appear and disappear simply in order to get the author out of one plot pickle after another. Still, despite (or because of) Sheldon's blithe unconcern for logic and his just-add-water relationships, this is a breezily pleasing read.

Review:
So, I just read Are You Afraid of the Dark? by Sidney Sheldon, and I got a bit frustrated along the way. I'd never read any of his books, but I was bored at work on Friday so I went to the Denver Public Library Online to check out an e-book. I was browsing through the fiction and ran across this book. Since my mother-in-law likes him, I decided to give it a try. The book was pretty easy to read and intrigueing, but he trys to make a big point about the government controlling the weather. But I got lost in the small details that he seemed to just take for granted and now I find it hard to believe his "research." First, he made reference to Experian, one of the three major credit bureaus in the United States. Since I work for TransUnion, another of the three, I know quite a lot about the business. He states in the book that the "bad guy" is able to go into Experian's database and get the characters bank account number, this is not possible, back account information is not reported to the bureaus. He then says that the "bad guy" cancels all the characters credit cards, this is also not possible, the credit card companies would have to do that. Experian just records the data that the credit card companies send in. Then he goes on to say that the "bad guy" does these same things for another character who has all her account in France, forgetting that Experian may have branchs all over the world, but the databases are kept completely separate. So that was the first thing that got me. Second, was the fact that one of the settings was Denver. That actually peeked my interest, but if you are going to have your setting be Denver, you might actually want to research Denver. Sheldon had an airplane flying into DIA, this plane was supposidly two miles away from the airport when it slammed into the side of the mountain. Hello.....there aren't any mountains within two miles of DIA.....maybe he should have had him flying into Aspen, then it would have been more believable. Then, one of the airport traffic controllers lives in a "nice stucco house, six miles from the airport." What? There is nothing for like nine miles. Hmm.....maybe he was thinking of Stapleton. :-) Also, this book was written in 2005, but Sheldon seemed to have forgotten all the 9-11 related airport policies. Okay, enough, I'm done. :-) I don't typically pick on books so much, but this one irked me a bit.

Tuesday, June 20, 2006

Burned Alive by Souad

Genre: Autobiography

Pages: 260

Time to complete: 2 days

Description:
The first true account ever published by a victim of an "honor crime," this shocking, moving, and harrowing tale has already become an international sensation.

Souad was a 17-year-old girl living in a small village in Jordan when she had the misfortune of falling in love--an emotion that would lead to an unspeakable act of violence and a lifetime of exile from her homeland. With a childhood marked by hard labor and physical abuse at the hands of her father, who is humiliated by the birth of many daughters and only one son, Souad is desperate to leave home. Enticed into a relationship with a handsome neighbor, her short-lived romance leaves her pregnant. Forbidden to marry until her older sisters find husbands and having brought shame to her family, Souad faces the only acceptable punishment: death. How her family plots to kill her, her harrowing struggle to survive burns over 90% of her body after her brother-in-law douses her with gasoline and sets her on fire, her dramatic escape from Jordan, and her resolve to build a new life for herself is a tale of heartbreaking drama and remarkable courage.

Review:
I've read a few reviews regarding this book, many state that the book is a work or fiction. I personally don't believe that, but I have no proof that it is true. Either way, the book is amazing to read. I started it, expecting to read the first chapter, put it down for a few days and come back, read another chapter, etc. But this was not the case, I couldn't put the book down (well, actually, I read the e-version, so I couldn't leave the computer.) The story is written in a way that makes it easy to read an understand. It is not the writing of a college scholar, but more of a child - simple and clear.

Monday, June 12, 2006

Trying it out

So I've decided to start a new random blog.....two isn't enough.....I need more! :-)