Monday, August 14, 2017

Quick Review of Isaac Asimov's "Foundation"

Foundation by Isaac Asimov

 
by 
31629685

Aug 14, 2017  ·  edit

it was amazing


Asimov proves his genius in both scientific inventiveness and political intrigue. There are so many twists and turns in this little book that one would need to chop down a forest to get enough sticks to shake at them.

The far-reachingness of psychohistory in concept will be one of his legacies in literature, and yet one can't help but think that maybe this is the truth behind prophecy itself.

Saturday, August 12, 2017

5-star Review of Hound from Hell by @M_P_Matthews Melinda Mathews

 
by 
36983270
's review 
Mar 13, 2017

it was amazing

Another fun and funny episode in the Lafayette Street escapades. This one starts with Melody experiencing a warning dream. The family interaction in this series is simply hysterical. It took me a while in the first book to catch onto Melody's character (at first I thought she was a bit snarky and rude) but now that I have her deciphered, I practically laugh out loud at her unique quirkiness. I LOVE her parents and the way they engage and accept her. This creative little 12-year-old is irritated by 'hand quotes,' certain sounds and corny jokes, and she is prone to go off into her imagination writing her present as if she is seeing scenes being narrated in the movie of her life. Yes, she is a little OCD!

This book is well written and can stand alone but really builds on the first. Some questions are left to play into the next book but it's a rather pleasant sort of cliffhanger. Let me just say that overall I'm 'gobsmacked...' because I think Melody would like my using that word.

This is the 2nd book of Season One of "It Happened on Lafayette Street" series.
the eBook:  "The Hound from Hell" is currently $1.99, and is currently available at the following sites:

Thursday, August 10, 2017

5 Stars: P.S. Winn's review of Melody Jackson v. the Woman in White (@pswinnauthor)

 
by 
23133809
's review
Apr 04, 2015

it was amazing



I think this is a great book for young adults and adults. Readers meet Melody Jackson, a girl of twelve with a highly over active imagination that sometimes is also spot on. When Melody sees a mysterious woman in white the adventure begins. Melody's parents, Lonnie and Bernie, join in the adventure as do a couple of paranormal investigators as the mystery unfolds. The author did a great job in a story that will satisfy a lot of readers.


"The Woman in White" is currently available at the following sites:

Wednesday, August 9, 2017

Stop milking this tweet thread: Funny Twitter discussion with Bernie Jackson, Melody and an absent William Shatner




Melody Jackson: Quote of the Day

“I'm going to let that slide because you seemed to have been in the middle of being eaten by a monster.” He was clutching his midsection as if from pain, the squashed remnants of a soft brown cookie squeezing between his fingers as though dough from a pasta machine.”


― BMB JohnsonMelody Jackson v. the Hound from Hell







This is the 2nd book of Season One of "It Happened on Lafayette Street" series.
the eBook:  "The Hound from Hell" is currently $1.99, and is currently available at the following sites:

Tuesday, August 8, 2017

Melody Jackson: Daliy Quote


“Melody began to mumble incomprehensibly under her breath as she worked frantically on securing her most important papers into bankers boxes.
        Her father stomped into her room, eating a banana.
        Melody looked up at him with a sweaty and nauseated look on her face. “What are you tramping around so heavily about?” she asked him.
        Bernie finished the last of the banana, and then held the peel in his hand as though it were a washcloth he had just found on the floor of a gym locker room.
        Melody pointed to her trashcan with her eyes.
        “I make an insane amount of noise when I approach you, because you once yelled at me claiming that I was 'sneaking up on you',” Bernie replied, using finger quotes on the last phrase. “That kind of treatment stays with a guy.”
        Melody shook her head. Her father knew how much she hated finger quotes. Why he insisted on using them was beyond her. “I was five at the time”, she said.
        “Ah,” Bernie said, with a knowing grin on his face. “The angry period.”


― B.M.B. JohnsonMelody Jackson v. the Hound from Hell It happened on Lafayette Street Season One

Review of Melody Jackson v. the Woman in White by Patricia Walker

 
by 
6892836
's review
it was amazing

This is a great introduction to the world of Melody Jackson, her family and her curious mind that seems to uncover mystery no matter what she decides to champion at any given time. In this episode Melody shows her philanthropic side by wanting to tear down an old house across the street to make way for a park to benefit local residents. Needless to say not all goes well with this plan and we begin a race against time to solve the clues before two mysterious men in a white van who have begun stalking Melody and her family.

The story is well written with characters that meld together extremely well. There are many amusing moments between Melody and her parents that show the authors complete grasp of family angst in a household that contains a pre-teen.

I definitely recommend this book to anyone who likes to read!


  is available from these lovely sites:




Tuesday, August 1, 2017

Review of "The Autobiography of Benjamin Franklin"

The Autobiography of Benjamin Franklin by Benjamin Franklin
 
by 
31629685


really liked it


What? 4-stars only? Are you mad? This book is legendary.

Yeah, I did it. What of it?! Don't get me wrong, I'm a huge fan of the guy, but I've got to fault him for a few things. Sure, I get it. He was a self-made man, a genius, an inventor of practical things, full of folksy sayings. However, for one thing, his writing style leaves much to be desired: his home-spun antiquated phrasings can leave a person tongue-tied, even if said person is just reading it in her head.

Also, the man wasn't quite as progressive a thinker as I always thought him. Indians are savages, and his view of women (which granted was possibly more far-thinking at his time), was far from feminism-approved, in that he thought that women should be educated, but only to the point that they could take over their husbands business should he die, and only until such time that the son became of age to take over said business.

I almost slapped you for that one, Franklin!