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Monday, June 2, 2014

3-2-1 Chapter Review for Intended For Harm


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3-2-1 Chapter Review for Intended For Harm by C. S. Lakin. 

A modern day family saga, loosely based on the biblical story of Jacob. 

Never happy to walk past a free offer, Intended for Harm became part of my Kindle library.  With its rather catchy title, it did jump the queue of the other free e-books on the shelves.  To be honest it had been a while since I read the description so I was expecting some kind of thriller. It isn't. What it does is tell the story of a man, a son, a brother, boyfriend, lover, father. The author tells it quite well - it's just not the sort of story or pace that grabs my attention.  All that aside here's my 3-2-1 Chapter One Review.

The Good - At the top of the list of good things about Chapter One are the descriptions. All very well put together in an often unique way.

The Good - Very distinct characters, even the father and brother though similar still come across as definite individual personalities.

The Good - The meeting of Jake and Leah was a sweet rendering that gives hope in the midst of the desolate family life and the war-touched America of the 1970's.  Their relationship quickly develops a streak of doom, yet we are still hopeful that this could be it for Jake.

The Bad - One line jerked at my reading sensibilities - 'Jake'd had to bite his lip to keep from...' There must have been several different and far smoother ways this could have been expressed.

The Bad - I couldn't help wondering why Jake's brother Ethan went to wake him up for the hunting trip, since he didn't like him so much. Why not leave him to get in trouble with their father? Or even if he had no choice but to wake him (strict father orders) would he really pick his clothes out for him to wear regardless of whether he needed something to throw at him.

The Beautiful - 'Ethan threw a look at Jake on his way out, a look tangled up in the snarl of his mouth,...'




Tuesday, April 16, 2013

3-2-1 Chapter Review for Anyone But Him







3-2-1 Chapter Review for Anyone But Him by Sheila O'Flanagan.


A widowed mother meets a man old enough to be her son, much to the detriment of her two daughters.


I passed over this book for a few other choices in the local Greek library, but finally it made it to 'best option'. It would have got there a lot sooner if I'd read it before (yes I know - egg before the chicken and all that jazz!). I found Anyone But Him to be right on the outside edge of chick lit, well written and difficult to put down. So here's my 3-2-1 Chapter One Review.


The Good - Andie touches the necklace just gifted to her by her lover, Tom at a moment when she's feeling particularly nervous and you can almost feel Andie gather strength and confidence from it.


The Good - The characters are all very humanised, something to like and dislike about all of them, which is how it should be.


The Good - Andie is attending her shared birthday party and Sheila O'Flanagan sets us up with a lovely little mystery as to why Tom isn't attending too, as they are so obviously in love.


The Bad - Walks across a lawn in posh dress and her posh sandals sink in the mud and she arrives at the door covered in muddy shoes then doesn't go to clean them. I fully recognise I would probably be the only person anal enough to be bothered by this fact.


The Bad - Two small bad for the price of one; I think the agreed spoon gifting was a little overworked and the term 'oneupmanship' was used three times... in one chapter... hmmm!


The Beautiful - 'She wondered if it was actually possible to be the sort of person you knew you should be, or whether everyone's efforts were doomed to failure.'

Thursday, April 4, 2013

Director Dolly Tarantino



the DIRECTOR DOLLY














NameQuentin Tarantino - QT to friends 
Quirk: Dubbed as 'Director DJ' as he mixes genres 
Born: 1963 
FromKnoxville, TN     Raised: California    Lives: California 
Studied: Acting - did not go to film school but watched bucket loads of films. 
Career Advice: Take the money for film school and use it to make your own movie. 


A Few Fave Movies: 
Rio Bravo - Howard Hawks 
Battle Royale - Kinji Fukasako 
Taxi Driver - Martin Scorsese 
Blow Out - Brian De Palma 

On The Map Movie: 
Reservoir Dogs - Sundance Film Festival, 1992 

And The Rest: 
My Best Friend's Birthday (short) / Pulp Fiction / From Dusk Till Dawn / Jackie Brown / Kill Bill Vol 1 & 2 (& 3 in the near future) / Death Proof / Inglourious Basterds / Django Unchained 

Pennies Worth: 
Jackie Brown was actually my first Tarantino movie and it was the twisted plotting that got me hooked. (no surprises there!) Kill Bill Vol 1 & 2 are my absolute favourite films. I have finally stopped performing the Five-Point-Palm-Exploding-Heart-Technique on my family and friends. 

Wednesday, April 3, 2013

'Tis Decided.

I want to be a film maker.
I want to write them.
I want to direct them.
I want to make them.
Done.

So watch out for the Director Dolly giving a snapshot of directors current, past and future. First in the line up, my personal favourite Quentin Tarantino.

Wednesday, February 27, 2013

More Than A Reading!


If you're in New York - MAKE IT! It's more than just a reading. Jacqueline Malcolm will bring her novel to life before your very eyes! 

SLAVE is a trilogy of history, mystery with twists and turns. Join critically acclaimed author Jacqueline Malcolm as she read excerpts from her book SLAVE!

facebook event page for Slave The Reading

Jacqueline Malcolm's website

Les Ambassades Bar & Restaurant

Tuesday, February 26, 2013

True Life - Short Story


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 True Life
By Marva Gregorio De Souza

It was a pointless exercise. Harvard knew it. Sandra knew it. Calvin knew it. They continued in the same vein because hope can often be a hard task master. Gravel; over compliant, moving willingly at the touch of their hands only to be replaced almost instantly by comrades.
   “Harv, you should be resting now. “
   “I’m not tired.”
   “I know but if you at least rest your muscles, then you can make a fresh go at it.”
   “But…”
   “Come on Harv, like we agreed. Go and rest!” With that, Calvin turned his back slightly as an additional marker to the end of the conversation. Harvard, went to rest, leaving a longing look to make it clear what he would rather be doing. He found a pile in the furthest corner from where they were working and surprised his fully alert thoughts by falling asleep immediately. Sandra and Calvin continued with the task. Sandra fresh back from her repose. Calvin still to take one.
   They worked in an atmosphere shared by the scraping of the pebbles and silence. Both fully aware of the proximity of the other, every move registered and responded to with hidden emotion generated goose bumps. Calvin stopped to stretch his limbs and neck. Hard work taking its fees without remorse. Sandra glanced at him. Tears escaped the confines of her lashes and made an unclean getaway down her cheeks, ending on Calvin’s gentle fingers. Harvard’s snores permitted Calvin to hug her with purpose. Sandra leaned into Calvin as he returned to his knees but now much closer to her. Sandra confessed her fears in gasping whispers. Fear of dying. Fear of the unknown.
   “I’m scared too. It will be alright.”
   “How can it be alright? We know we’re not getting out of here. There was more gravel than could fill this room. All we’re doing is shortening our time.”
   “Don’t think like that. Someone might see the extra movement up there and investigate. You know the gravel’s one of the key measurements.”
   “Highly unlikely though.”
   “But we have to keep trying.”
   “Why? What’s the point?”
   “You. You’re the point. For me anyway. When… if we get out I want to start my life with you. We come clean. Put things straight and in order.”
   “How? How can we tell Harv the truth? It will kill him.”
   “No it won’t. Trust me. It will all be alright. It will. I love you, Sandra. It has to be alright.”
Sandra returned the love, no longer tentative as at the beginning of their secret. Now her love for Calvin was as strong as her love for Harvard. Probably even stronger. She could not imagine doing to Calvin what she was now doing to Harvard, the pretence, the hiding, the deception. It was all wrong and at the moment was the only positive spin she could find for their current predicament. Either way it would all be over.
*****
   With the gravel waist high the time for resting was far behind them. They still scooped it through, bringing more and more into the room. A fine cloud of dust, hung in the room, colored their coats, tickled their throats, lined their lungs. They suffered in silence to reduce the dry induced coughing. Sweat, tear streaked faces forlorn. Hope replaced with desperation, producing the same results. Private thoughts raced independently in private cells. Calvin longed for Sandra; for their long desired life together. He thought of when he first came to the laboratory and how seeing her changed every aspect of his being. Being alone was no longer an acceptable option. There was substance outside of work. His prison door now had a key. Once he learned of Sandra’s connection with Harvard, he tried to divert his new found feelings. Dating. Unsuccessful but repeated frequently regardless. Until. Until. Until, dual tension noticed yet unspoken when in Sandra’s presence. Gentle investigations. Careful prompting. Disguised declarations. Love shared, gained, distressed over. From their first kiss they both knew it was just a matter of timing. Calvin fought for their freedom. Sandra mourned over Harvard. He had been good to her, a union based on mutual convenience, a scientific experiment at best. From work situation shared to proposal to loveless respect devoid of a passion Sandra thought unimportant until. Until. Until. But Harvard had been good, and their work key. Too key to throw away on true love, what could and would be deemed as a whim by Harvard. Harvard who had saved her from obscurity. Yet the power of Calvin overwhelmed her and Sandra fought for true life.
   Harvard took a mental step back. He fought for his life’s work. His purpose. Everything revolved around the laboratory. Nothing existed outside of it. Harvard fought to remain.
*****
   Feet treading gravel. Arms trapped. Mouths raised and gasping for every shred of air. The end came to greet them with serious over and under tones. It was not welcome. Calvin tried to look at Sandra but peripherals could not pick her out. His voice was all that remained to reach out.

   “I love you Sandra.”

Sandra’s heart too sad to leap, pushed it’s remaining tears out. “I love you too, Calvin.” No care for Harvard or any confusion. It was their world now. Their precious time. “With all my heart, darling.” Sandra felt the gravel shift beneath her feet and her body followed the new path taking her head under, open mouth filled. Choking.

   “Sandra! Sandra! No! SANDRA!” Calvin’s heart broke.

Harvard tried moving across, being physically closer to Sandra at least. His efforts rewarded him with her fate.

   The roof opened.

*****
   Hands swooped in. Air. Breathing. Kicking. Safe again. Thorough noted checks before returned to cages. Back to their original order. Calvin could only just see Sandra through Harvard’s bars. She lay on the floor, white fur still gravel dirty, panting. After a short while her eyes opened and locked with Calvin. Hopeless patience while Calvin paced, sucked on the water tube sticking through his own bars then back to his scurried pacing. Harvard now between them, relaxed. A good day’s work. The big ones were talking into their machines, words he could not provide a literal translation for but could vaguely understand the meaning of. Harvard was sure they had noticed the team work to promote survival. It was a new behaviour. He was confident.

The End

Wednesday, February 6, 2013

3-2-1 Chapter Review for Faces




3-2-1 Chapter Review for Faces by Martina Cole.

Follows the life of Danny Cadogan, an extremely violent criminal (Face), and how his actions affect the lives of his family, friends and competitors.

Living on an island where English is not the first language, one tends to grab at any books in English with both hands, especially ones by a favoured author.  Unfortunately, I’m finding Faces by Martina Cole difficult to finish mainly because the rest of the book is extremely repetitive. The first chapter was true Martina Cole. It falls apart a couple of chapters down the road when you realize more effort is being put into making it a nice thick book to sell rather than telling the story. Nevertheless, this is my 3-2-1 Chapter One Review:

The Good – Great tension in the beginning paragraph.

The Good – Really captured the family spirit, with the exception of the father, they are all looking out for each other on their different levels.

The Good – Paints a picture of 1960’s London with a perfect balance of grime and nostalgia.

The Bad – The third party narrative with each character's undertones works well for most of the characters, except the young daughter, who I think is shown to have a little more perception than she might have had at 4 – 5 years old.

The Bad – Repetitive. I must admit the first chapter is not as bad as those to come but you are left with a feeling of loop-de-loop when descriptions are given as to the characters’ thought processes and emotions… OK I get it already!

The Beautiful - ‘His tongue was a furry black point, and it snaked in and out of his mouth as he shouted at them.’