Tuesday, February 28, 2023

Space Case

 

Shirley J.                Juvenile Fiction                                                   Living on the moon, murder mystery

Space Case by Stuart Gibbs is book 1 of 3 in the Moon Base Alpha series  368 pages

This was a really good story.  It is told by 12 year old, Dashiell Gibson whose family is the first to colonize the moon.   Other families have since moved there too, all known as lunarnauts or "moonies" all living on Moon Base Alpha.   Dashiell is bored because kids aren't allowed to go out on the lunar surface so all the young lunarnauts are sort of stuck inside an increasingly shrinking space (it seems to get smaller as they grow older) with very little to keep them mentally stimulated and occupied.   As a matter of fact the only other kid his age is way into virtual reality video games which he spends most all of his waking hours on and Dashiell requires more than that to stay interested.   When the top scientist in the colony turns up dead Dashiell plays detective trying to find out who did it and why.   No one believes him and accuse him of creating a conspiracy theory as it is all conjecture on his part.   Even his parents don't seem to see the reality of what is going on.  Dashiell goes looking for clues.  Dr. Holtz death is being played off as him being a little senile and going on the lunar surface without his helmet properly fixed, but, Dr. Holtz is the one who invented the suits and knew perfectly well how they had to be worn.  Something foul is afoot and Dashiell won't rest until he solves the mysterious death.   This is a good story with fast paced witty dialogue and interesting characters.  The plot is a good one too.  Don't want to give too much away but Dr. Holtz had made an important discovery that would change everything for them first then mankind.  Whaaaaat????   Yeah, it's like that.  ; )   I would recommend this to middle schoolers on up.   

Deadly Cure

 

Shirley J.              Adult Historical Mystery                          Opioids, Brooklyn, NY, Radical medicines

Deadly Cure by Lawrence Goldstone   336 pages

While this is a fictionalized version of the truth, there are many historical figures and happenings included that perfectly round this fascinating story out.   Snake oil and over the counter access to heroin, opium, cocaine, etc. plummets 1899 Brooklyn, New York into a recurring medical nightmare when children and adults start dying from their medications.   Politically motivated real-life doctor Arnold Frias, has interests in pharmaceuticals that aren't at that time being regulated.   Medical doctors of the time were prescribing laudenum for many ailments but when people begin self-medicating or believing in quack cures that have all sorts of harmful chemical ingredients, even poisonous ingredients, people start dropping like flies.  This book explores the introduction of heroin into society by the German Bayer company, yep, later famous for Bayer aspirin which became a household name and how opioids got introduced.   This is a fascinating story.  I recommend this one to adults as I don't know if the younger set would find it as fascinating as those of us who have seen the power big Pharma has gained and historically how medical quakery and hardcore drugs have played such a big role in society.   A real pageturner here.

The Good People

 


Shirley J.                Adult Fictionalization of a true story                   Fairy Folk, Changelings, Healers

The Good People by Hannah Kent     400 pages

Based on true events, this is an excellently told story of life in a small rural community in 19th century Ireland.   The residents, while adhering to their Catholic teachings still hold to the old ways and while the parish priest preaches against belief in fairy folk and folk cures, the residents have grown up on a strong belief that if bad things are happening (crops fail, women miscarry, etc.) it is because the fairy folk are peeved and taking it out on humans and their animals (ie. the hens won't lay, the cows' milk dries up, etc.).  So like many cultures, while believing strongly in their Catholic faith, they cling to the pagan beliefs they grew up hearing about, too.   A fascinating story of poverty, famine, the belief in fairy folk and changelings (creatures identical to a human baby or child that fairy folk sometimes exchange for human babies/children) and the swift and merciless retaliation of the Catholic church in combating these beliefs.    Well told gripping story.  I recommend this one for mature middle schoolers on up.  Really good story to the very last page.      

                              

Monday, February 27, 2023

Big Little Lies


 Shirley J.              Adult Fiction                                  Privileged women, trophy wives, exes, lies!

Big Little Lies by Liane Moriarty  512 pages

Such a good book!   Loved the characters, loved the story.  It reminded me a lot of the writing of Sophie Kinsella.   The three main female characters are great.   Second time married Madeline is hilarious so funny, so witty and always in the midst of everything!    The beautiful fabulously rich Celeste has a rich attractive suave husband who adores their twin boys and gives Celeste anything she wants...and a whole she doesn't.  Jane had a horrible romantic encounter that has left her emotionally scarred but finds new life in a new town.   Her chance meeting with Madeline throws her into a new circle of female friends that changes everything.   This is a book you won't want to put down.  The folks here practically jump off the page they are so real.   I recommend this one to teens on up.   Well done, Liane Moriarty!

The Pearl Thief

 Shirley J.                 Adult Fiction Mystery                        Scottish Pearls, Travellers, Privilege    

The Pearl Thief (Book #4 in the Code Name Verity Series) by Elizabeth Wein   352 pages

15 year old Julia Beaufort-Stuart wakes up in the hospital with no idea how she got there nor what happened to her other than she has a pain in her head.   Was it an accident or intentional?  Who would try to hurt her and why?  Oh, you will find so many reasons when you read this book.  Set in the Highlands of Scotland, Julia's grandfather, once a hugely influential rich man had gotten ill toward his latter years and lost most of his fortune.  Julia learns a boy from the traveller's (Gypsy) camp, Euan Ewen, had come upon her and carried her to get help.  Many distrusting the traveller's as thieves accuse Euan for harming her and he later ends up coming up on charges.   There is a magical factor of the Scottish Pearls of Mary, Queen of Scots that Julia comes upon in her grandfather's things.   A quirky librarian at the oldest existing library who guards artifacts and jewelry also belonging to Mary Queen of Scots in her wee library, a tough old bird, she wields a shotgun to do so.  Julia tries to pass for 18 to her sorrow when her coy lies entice a rough fellow and she incurs the ire of the local constabulary defending the travellers.   Lots of good story here and the reader will learn a lot about Scottish pearls in the reading.  I recommend this book to middle schoolers on up.  Some good lessons to be learned for young folks.  

                            

As Good As the First Time


 Shirley J.            Adult Fiction Romance                             Family, Lost & Found Loves
As Good as the First Time: A Sugar Lake Novel by K. M. Jackson     406 pages

Olivia Gale had it all, a great man, a great job until she didn't.   All in one day her boyfriend leaves her and she loses her job.  What was she going to do?  New York was great but how would she survive now?  Then as fate would have it, her mother received a call from her Aunt who fell off her roof and broke her hip.  Her Aunt runs the family bakery, "Goode N' Sweet" and isn't able to do the baking and carrying now.  Well, fortuitous timing wins out and Olivia "Livie" goes to Sugar Creek to help her Aunt.  Her younger sister tags along to lend a hand and it is like going "home" again.   They remember the fun summers they spent in Sugar Creek and Livie remembers falling in love and going away to school only to return to the love of her life to find out he didn't wait for her as promised.  He married someone else!  Now joy of joys, who does she run into when she returns the firechief, the man she had fallen so desperately in love with all those years ago and who broke her to the bone.   She has all kinds of attitude for this dude.   I would recommend this one to middle schoolers on up.  There is a lot of good natured sisterly rivalry, a lot of teen angst carried into adulthood and good natured family teasing and support along with some fence mending.


 

Saturday, February 18, 2023

The Way They Were: How Epic Battles and Bruised Egos Brought a Classic Hollywood Love Story to the Screen by Robert Hofler 304 pages

 

The 1973 movie “The Way Were” is one of the greatest movies Hollywood has ever produced. And that’s just not my opinion either. It ranks sixth on the American Film Institute’s list of 100 Years…100 Passions list. Celebrating its 50th anniversary this year, Robert Hofler has written a behind-the-scenes tell-all about the greatest movie that was almost never made. Sort of.

It’s no secret that screenwriter Arthur Laurents wrote the role specifically for Barbra Streisand, but finding her Hubble was another story. Robert Redford did not want to play what he referred to as a “Ken” doll. Director Sydney Pollack and Laurents fought bitterly over the film as each had a different vision. 

That’s the gist of this truly awful book.  Each chapter heading pits someone against someone else, whether real of fictional.  I felt like I was just reading a bunch of facts punctuated by made up dialogue.

Fellow readers, avoid “The Way They Were: How Epic Battles and Bruised Egos Brought a Classic Hollywood Love Story to the Screen” at all costs. I want to give this book zero stars. I only give it 1 star for Amazon and Goodreads requests it.





 

The Mitford Affair

The Mitford Affair by Marie Benedict 352 pages

I have not previously read a lot about the six Mitford sisters, but I’ve known who they are. Six girls/women who grew up and in the highest of the early part of the 20th century English society.  While each sister had her distinct personality, they were a tight-knit clan. They thought and did exactly as they pleased; rules be damn! Sometimes, it was hard to tell them apart. Especially on the first few chapters where readers are introduced t their nicknames for each other; I had a terrible time keeping them straight!

Author Marie Benedict, one of my favorites by the way, takes on three of the sisters as life in England was rapidly changing. This novel focuses on the period from 1932 to 1941.  Benedict gives us the loves and the lives of three of those sisters (Nancy, Diana and Unity). But don’t worry, the other three (Pamela, Jessica and Deborah) so show up from time to time, especially in the first few chapters.

Fans of Benedict’s know that this will be another character-driven novel, so plot seekers don’t bother.

Diana and Unity are estranged from the rest of the family due to their ties and fascination with Fascism and Nazism.  Diana has an affair with the leaders of the British Union of Fascists and ultimately leaves her husband for the man. Unity has gone to Munich to supposedly study the German language, but becomes so enamored of Adolph Hitler that she stalks him until she becomes part of his inner circle. Historians are unsure of whether she was one of his mistresses, but Benedict gives enough evidence to support that she did.

Nancy has gained fame her own way by writing novels, some of which are still in print today. I did see a collection available online that contains all eight. Nancy has the role of peacekeeper and tires to ease the stress between Diana and Unity and the rest of the family.

Besides the crisp prose, there are two things that really stood out in this novel. First, each chapter is dated and readers get to know what each of the women was up to on each date. Second, Diana and Unity’s chapters were told from a third person point of view while Nancy’s was in first person. I found this jarring as I read. Still “The Mitford Affair,” receives 4 out of 5 stars in Julie’s world.

Thursday, February 16, 2023

A Noble Cunning : The Countess and the Tower

A Noble Cunning: The Countess and the Tower by Patricia Bernstein 266 pages

“Based on a true story of Winifred Maxwell, a Catholic in Anti-Catholic England.”

As the novel opens, Bethan Glentaggart, Countess of Clarencefield, is pulled from her bed by loud banging on the front door.  A group of men barge in, accusing her of hiding a Catholic priest in her home. The men search high and low yet cannot find their quarry. I found myself holding my breath as the men tracked in mud and snow, peering into private places and generally making a mess of things. Luckily Bethan’s husband, Gavin, was not at home and unluckily her children and servants were home in their beds.  I really liked that Bernstein dropped the reader into the middle of the action.

In the following chapters, readers learn that is 1710 in Scotland. The Catholic religion has been banned, yet those who were practicing their religion continued to do so, hiding chapels in their homes and attending masses often held in unusual places.

I was really confused as Bernstein explained who was king, who should have been king, and what was happening and who sided with who. It made my head spin, and I wanted to give up, but I trudged ahead. I’m glad I did.

Gavin gathered the men of the region to go a Crusade-like mission to restore the rightful king. Unfortunately, the king’s men were better equipped and outnumbered Gavin’s throng. If the rebels weren’t killed in battle, they were taken to the London Tower.

Jails weren’t like they are today. The men had to purchase their meals, water, blankets, and everything they needed. If a prisoner had no money, they often died of malnutrition or lack of sanitary conditions. An eye-opening experience for this reader.

The last third of the book was Bethan’s determination to get the monies Gavin needed to purchase fresh foods.

As I watched Bethan take charge, I admired her strength and determination. Many times, I found myself holding my breath, worried that Bethan would not be able to succeed in her mission.

My suggestion to anyone who plans (and you should) read this, study Appendix B first. It’s a Chart of Stuarts and Possible Heirs to the Throne of Great Britain. If I had found that sooner, I probably wouldn’t not have struggled so much early in the story.

I enjoyed reading “A Noble Cunning: The Countess and the Tower,” even though this is not preferred time period or setting. I loved the history and the escapades that the characters found themselves embroiled in. “A Noble Cunning: The Countess and the Tower,” receives 4 out of 5 stars in Julie’s world.

 

Tuesday, February 14, 2023

Spirit of the Season

 

Shirley J.                  Adult Fiction/Holiday Romance                    Christmas Season, Small Town, N.C.

Spirit of the Season by Fern Michaels   288 pages

When Joy Preston's grandmother passes, her will states that Joy is to inherit Nana's bed and breakfast known as Heart and Soul.  A quaint little inn nestled in a small town in North Carolina, that comes to bustling life every holiday season especially Thanksgiving and Christmas when the town comes together to compete in who can make the best (according to the judges) gingerbread sculpture, the theme changes from year to year, and who can put up the best Christmas display, etc.   Each B&B in town tries to outdo the other from their in-house offerings, to glorious over the top meals, etc.   It is great fun but also loads of work and stress not to mention how ticky some of the elder ladies get in getting down to the nitty gritty and trying to disparage their competitors!   The up and down side of small town life.   Joy grew up here, but while on a trip with her highschool class to Colorado, she fell in love with that state, it's mountains, skiing, beauty so when it came time for college, though her grandmother did her best to get her to stay home and attend college in North Carolina, Joy had her heart set on the University of Colorado and couldn't wait to get back there.  Now with her father's passing at 47 and Nana's passing, Joy can't understand why Nana would give the successful B&B to her and not her mother.   Of course after her father passed her mother started going on round the world cruises (20 so far) and didn't stay home with her mother to help tend the B&B, though, she loved it and enjoyed all the work it took to keep it working wonderfully.   Nana also put in her will that Joy has to come back and live in the town for 6 months and run the B&B.   Joy is beside herself.   She is a very successful CEO of her own company, she loves her life with her friends in Colorado.   Why would Nana do this to her?   Was she senile?   Maybe she can figure this out with the local lawyer handling Nana's will, the hot, sexy lawyer with the voice that makes her want to melt...It is a good story, very visual as Fern Michaels paints word pictures for her readers.   I didn't care for her main character, Joy Preston, but I guess her angst was all about having to pull up stakes from the place she thought she was happiest in.  Still she can get a little annoying.  I recommend this story to anyone, any age that enjoys holiday stories and especially holiday romance stories.   If this isn't a Hallmark movie already, it could be.


The 39 Clues: Book One of the Maze of Bones Series

 


Shirley J.                Juvenile Fiction                    Powerful Families, Mysteries, Inheritance

The 39 Clues: Book One of the Maze of Bones Series by Rick Riordan   220 pages   

This is an excellent story.   When Grace Cahill, matriarch of the most powerful family in the world with ties to just about every larger than figure in history, realizes her end is near, her mind races over the things she has yet to share with her grandchildren.   She changes her will at the last minute to offer a million dollars for family members to accept as their inheritance and walk away or they can search for 39 clues that are hidden throughout the world that if all are found the family's secret will be revealed.  Up to now no one has been able to discover them all, but, with Grace's demise, the race is on between all the heirs.  So many family groups, some not so nice, go on this world-wide scavenger hunt to find the answers to all of their questions.   This is a REALLY good book, I just have to grit my teeth that the story is spread out through 13 books to find out the family secrets and untold wealth.    I highly recommend this story, while geared to the younger set, this story holds its own for any age group and I think adults will find it just as engaging as kids do.   There are also three different authors who will participate in the telling over the course of the series.

Monday, February 13, 2023

Ghosted

 


Shirley J.               Adult Fiction Romance                      Love, Horrible Accidents, Love Lost & Found

Ghosted: A Novel by Rosie Walsh   352 pages

Sarah and Eddie meet, hookup and spend 7 days of utter bliss.  They fall madly in love and it is the best of all worlds, this is the one each has been waiting for, this is forever and ever until it isn't.   Eddie goes away on a previously planned trip promising to be in touch then disappears.  Sarah can't figure out what happened.  No word, no call, no text.   It is like Eddie just disappeared off the face of the earth.   Perhaps a dire, terrible truth one that is so awful it goes above and beyond but fate brought them together didn't it?   So why after this wonderful, beautiful, magnificent all encompassing perfect love they have found must it all shatter to the ground?   Try as she might Sarah cannot find out what happened to Eddie, nor where he is, though she does her best to contact his friends both sides of the pond.   Sarah is estranged from her family due to an accident when her sister and her sister's best friend were 12.  It was so terrible, Sarah even moved to the States for a time supplanting her former family with a family of caring new friends.  Life has been a jumble for her and now with Eddie things were at last looking right until they weren't.   Still what they had haunts her thoughts daily and she can't let go despite her friends urging her to move on.   A good story, I recommend this one to middle-schoolers on up.

Peter Pan Must Die

 


Shirley J.               Adult Fiction Murder Mystery                    Assassins, Political Figures, Murder

Peter Pan Must Die by John Verdon   448 pages

A prominent politician is assassinated while giving the eulogy at his own mother's funeral.  Whoa!  His wife is accused of committing the murder or if not that actual doing, she hired someone to do it.   Ex-NYPD to homicide cop, Dave Gurnery is brought in to investigate.  He turns up mob affiliations, a potential hit-man so short he could be a jockey, often mistaken for a woman and even a child due to his slight build, who is known as Peter Pan.   There are Greeks involved it is a hodge-podge of innocence, highly flawed police investigations and less than lily white investigators.  Gurney's path is filled with femme fatales, local constabulary who let him know up front he is no longer a cop and has no jurisdiction in the case nor the investigation and needs to BACK OFF!   A good story with lots of twists.   My complaint is that Verdon often tends to go too repetitively over some details and some diaglogue to the point you feel he is beating the proverbial dead dog to death.  Once the point is made it is only annoying to keep going over and over it.  Dialogue too at times is continued over and over like 2 children saying the same thing over and over in the backseat of the car on a roadtrip.   I have to think he is certainly paid by the word in these cases.  This book ended badly for me, too.   The story was pretty good except for the repetition and the outcome, but, would I recommend it?  There is the conundrom.   I am going to have to say no on this one.  It could be o.k. but the too wordy parts and the ending leaves me less than a fan of this title, though, I liked the main character.

 

Wednesday, February 8, 2023

January 2023 Team Totals


 This month three people read 27 books with a total of 9,334 pages.  Shirley read the most books with 17 books and 5,436 pages.  Congratulations to everyone and thanks for reviewing books!

Tuesday, February 7, 2023

Dragon Pearl

 

Shirley J.                  Juvenile Fiction                                                Shapeshifters, Fox Spirits

Dragon Pearl:A Thousand Worlds Novel, Book 1) by Yoon Ha Lee          only read 160 pages

This book had a number of things that sounded really good shapeshifters, fox spirits, ghosts but try as I might, I couldn't stay interested as it was presented.   The main character, Min, a 13 year old Fox Spirit from a family and long line of fox spirits.   She and her family were shapeshifters which could have been so interesting and offered  limitless possibilities but Min had a personality and actions that I could not get interested in.   She kept making me mad by deliberately choosing to do the opposite of what her mother asked, and seemed intent on sabatoging the family which I know was not supposed to be the book's intent but that is the impression I came away with.   She seemed very disrespectful and thinking only about herself even her desire to find her brother came back to being about her getting to take on the adventure he had left for until circumstances changed.   I finally decided to put the book down though I had such hopes for the shapeshifterness of it.    I read half of the book before with disappointment I went no further.   I cannot in all fairness recommend this book though perhaps there is an audience for it.

This Is Your Mind On Plants


 Shirley J.    Adult Non-Fiction             How plants enhance life through sustenance, stimulants, pain relief        

This Is Your Mind On Plants by Michael Pollan   288 pages  

Michael Pollan explores how life enhances when you add plants.  Plants are wonderful sustenance in the forms of fruit, vegetables, herbs, spices, then moving further to coffee, tea with their stimulating caffeine boosts to help focus our minds and make us alert.   He also discusses the poppie plant whose seed head can also be used in tea form.   However, one is legal and one is not, much like tobacco which can be smoked and marijuana which is becoming legalized in more states in the U.S. but still an issue in some and regulated in others.   Pollan discusses at length the positive attributes of opium and mescaline and their uses in rituals for their consciousness shifting abilities.  He shares a lot on peyote and ayahuasca the latter only legal when used in Native American religious ceremonies and ayahuasca used in South American religious shamanic spiritual rituals and medicine.   Lots of information and all presented so entertaingly by Michael Pollan who has the unique ability to present lots of concepts in a completely down to earth enlightening way.   I recommend this one to adults as he goes into not just the biology of plants but also the  husbandry and the outcomes.    A good book he shares his own experiences as a gardener and experimenter.

Monday, February 6, 2023

I'm Glad My Mom Died


 Shirley J.                  Adult Biography                              Stage Mother, Abuse, Anorexia, Bulimia, etc.    

I'm Glad My Mom Died by Jennette McCurdy   320 pages    

Wow!  Jeanette McCurdy, former child star on Nickolodean in ICarly and Sam & Cat endured far more than the public had any idea.   Growing up a Mormon, she and her brothers were home schooled.  Her mother's dream for herself was to become a star (celebrity), so since she was unable to realize that in her own life she determined to live vicariously through her daughter who she would push to become a star.   At 6 years old her mother took her to her first audition.   Jennette loved her mother and tried her best to please her dutifully going to audition after audition though she personally had no interest in doing t.v., movies, commercials, none of that, she just wanted to make her mother happy.  At 11 her mother starts forcing her to diet by telling her how fat she is getting, etc.   Her mother pressed her so hard, Jennette became the sole source of income eventually for the family.   Her mother had weird ideas on showering Jennette (up until the age of 16), giving her female examinations herself though she had no medical background, she raged at her for not being selected for roles, she hounded her to learn the lines and perform them as she thought she should.   She demanded Jennette be able to cry on cue to the point she became dehydrated from being asked to do so often on sets,  she suffered from anorexia, later bulimia.   She even became an alcoholic from trying to deal with all the pressure and turmoil.   There is so much to be found in this book, and while the title may grab readers judge not until you have read the book to find out the emotion behind the title.   It was a good book, an eye-opener fly on the wall view of a child star through a young adult being so forcefully driven by the mad whims of a wanna be actress who made her daughter make her dreams come true.   I recommend this book to middle schoolers on up as a cautionary tale.   

Normal Family: On Truth, Love, and How I Met My 35 Siblings


 Shirley J.                  Adult Non-Fiction                              Artificial Insemination, Ancestry.Com

Normal Family:On Truth, Love and How I Met My 35 Siblings by Chrysta Bilton     288 pages    

The Brady Bunch they are not.   Chrysta Bilton, her mother and her sister made a startling discovery after having submitted a saliva sample to Ancestry.Com, Chrysta started getting lots of hits from people saying according to their DNA it shows they are related.   Times that by 35 and counting!  What Chrysta's mother hadn't told her and her sister was that her father was not in a loving relationship with their Mother, he had actually just happened to be in the same hair salon at the same time as her mother, a gay woman in the 1980s decided to approach the man who would become Chrysta's father with a proposition.   He was so gorgeous she thought he would make a beautiful baby and Chrysta's Mom so wanted a baby.   They worked it out, she paid him not to have sex with her but to give her a sperm sample in a turkey baster so she and her partner could artificially inseminate her to become pregnant.   Over the years she did this twice with the same guy so her daughters would have the same parents.  In order to get Dad to come by and spend a little time with the kiddies, Chrysta's mother would pay him, he never appeared unless he was paid of course the little girls didn't know this.   It is an interesting tale of opulence and loss, addiction, AA, love and family in all sorts of circumstances and situations, recovery and forgiveness.   It is a good story better because it is true for all those involved.  I recommend this one to adults on up, the subject matter is best digested after overcoming some of life's ups and downs to give a little clarity to some of the crazy situations life deals them.

Thursday, February 2, 2023

The Totally Unscientific Study of the Search for Human Happiness



 Shirley J.   Adult Comedy    Paula Poundstone's Experiments/Research/Findings on what makes her happy

The Totally Unscientific Study of the Search for Human Happiness by Paula Poundstone  320 pages

I always knew Paul Poundstone was funny but I had no idea how truly brilliant she is until having read this book.   She tells hilarious story after hilarious story and after each she gives her quantitative theorems on her hap (happy) level from each experience and the summation of her findings.   The further I went the more I liked this book and the more I liked Paula Poundstone.  Whether talking about her three kids, her 16 cats and other animals in their family menagerie, the Lamborghini she rented for a day, her stint on "Wait, wait...Don't tell me!, her stand up gigs every weekend, her bone to pick with the school system or political system in America, the lack of accountability she finds irritating, she will amuse sometimes mystify but always assail the reader with hilarious commentary and she strives to find happiness through self reflection and experiments.   She presents her data as easily as Sheldon Cooper spouting string theory and she does it with such a wonderful grasp of humor and how to deliver it with aplomb!   Whether she is taking her daughter who has cerebral palsy on a 4 day hike through southwest terrain, she is learning to swing dance much like women who clean their house before letting in a house cleaning service she surreptitiously takes private lessons on the side while joining a beginner's class so she will look smart and capable, or the home organizer she hires only to feel as though the woman is trying to tear memories from her when she wants her to throw away the several pairs of jeans she hopes to fit into again one day, Paula Poundstone is an incredibly busy amazing person (just the constant cleaning up after her cats is more than most folks could accomplish in a week, geez!).   A fun read that will keep you laughing out loud and that in itself is happiness as is this book.  Well done, Paula Sugar Push Poundstone (see the part on Swing Dancing).  A joy for all ages middle school through seniors - so funny!