Reader #96 wrote: The movie was enjoyable, however, it lacked the spontaneity of previous Indiana Jones films. Grade: B.
Thursday, July 3, 2008
Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull
Reader #96 wrote: The movie was enjoyable, however, it lacked the spontaneity of previous Indiana Jones films. Grade: B.
John Grogan - Marley and Me
Juno
Maid of Honor
David Baldacci - The Collectors
Shirley Tallman - The Cliffhouse Strangler
Tuesday, July 1, 2008
Lee Child - Nothing to Lose
My review
rating: 3 of 5 stars
Ex military policeman and full time drifter Jack Reacher hitchhikes into Despair, Colorado only to be arrested on a trumped up vagrancy charge, and then promptly kicked out of town. There's no way he's going to take that kind of behavior, so hooking up with a policewoman from the neighboring town of Hope, Reacher sets out to find out what the town fathers in Despair are hiding. This was a solid, if formulaic Reacher thriller following the standard plot: Jack drifts into town, gets caught up in somebody's mess, finds a woman to help him (and sleep with him) and then solves the problem with a mix of brains and brawn. While it's not a bad thriller, and Reacher is always a compelling character, I think Child needs to get away from the formula and mix things up a bit during his next book. To his credit though, he has Reacher take a stand about the poor treatment of soldiers injured in the Iraq war, and the misuse of soldiers in general by self-serving politicians.
View all my reviews.
Monday, June 30, 2008
Andrew Vachss - Down in the Zero

Librarian Tim wrote: Burke is out of his natural element again, this time called to a wealthy Connecticut suburb by the son of a former acquaintance who is scared about the rash of apparent suicides among his peers. When Burke investigates, he finds more than he bargains for, including sexual exploitation, blackmail and murder. This was a strange Burke novel, not only was he out of his usual New York setting, but it was as if Vachss was trying to have him establish a father-son relationship between him and his client, a very un-Burke like thing to do. The book stumbles along for quite a while before redeeming itself with a very clever finale. It revels itself as a dark, deep and existential novel. Grade: B
Jodi Picoult - The Tenth Circle
Website review - Hubble gallery

Reader #85 write: This is a wonderful site for exploring the universe, the pictures are amazing and evoke a sense of wonder. Rating A+
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