| August Giveaway Winners |
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| Chelsie from Ontario, Canada, is the three book Peeta-Palooza winner! She will receive all three books in The Hunger Games series by Suzanne Collins. |
| Maria is the winner of the August Fiction Giveaway, The Handmaid’s Tale by Margaret Atwood! |
| Congrats winners! Check back in the next day or so for the new September giveaways. |
Archive for the ‘Uncategorized’ Category
August Giveaway Winners!
Wednesday, September 1st, 2010Happy Mockingjay Day!
Tuesday, August 24th, 2010![]() |
It’s finally here! The last installment of Suzanne Collins’ Hunger Games trilogy was released today. While I didn’t attend a party last night, I was out shopping bright and early (okay, 10am) to get mine. It’s beautiful! I am very excited to dive in – and even non-reading hubby read both of the previous books this summer so it will be fun to share.
Crossing my fingers for some warm feelings towards Peeta (sorry Gale!), more survival games and less politics. Make sure to join the Peeta-Palooza for a chance to win all three books – in hardcover! |
It’s a Peeta-Palooza!
Monday, August 2nd, 2010![]() |
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| HUGE Bibliobabe Giveaway! | ||
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| Is anyone else counting the days until the final installment in The Hunger Games trilogy is released? If you aren’t, you haven’t been introduced to this amazing series and need to get reading! You are in luck – in celebration of the much anticipated release of Mockingjay, the last book to feature Katniss, Gale and Peeta, Bibliobabe is giving away all three books in The Hunger Games series for the August teen book giveaway. | ||
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| Make sure to enter the Peeta-Palooza for your chance to win copies of all three books! | ||
| Other Giveaway News | ||
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Current Fiction Giveaway The fiction free book giveaway is The Handmaid’s Tale by Margaret Atwood. |
Last Month’s Winners Congrats to Yuri who won the teen giveaway, An American Plague and to Victoria who won the fiction giveaway, The Calligrapher’s Daughter. |
My Summer with Sookie
Wednesday, July 14th, 2010The Fancher Train – Reading Map and GIVEAWAY!
Thursday, July 8th, 2010| I hope everyone is having a great summer! I have been busy traveling back and forth between Salt Lake and my parent’s home in Mesquite, Neveda with my kids the past few weeks – so my reading and blogging are both a little behind. But, we’re back for a month, so I’m back in! |
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| The Fancher Train by Amelia Bean |
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While in Southern Utah, we visited the site of the Mountain Meadows Massacre (the second time for me) and I had a great idea! About 10 years ago I read The Fancher Train by Amelia Bean and haven’t been the same since. What has been called “the darkest deed of the nineteenth century”, the story of the Fancher Train is one of the most horrendous and mind boggling stories of our country – a story of Americans killing other Americans in cold blood – in the name of religion. Bean’s story is considered historical fiction, but from everything I know, is completely accurate in all known details. Below is a little about the story and a reading map of some pertinent parts of the Fancher Train story. Also, I have ordered an original hardback copy (1958) from Paperbackswap.com and am offering this as a giveaway. |
| The Story |
| In April of 1857 a group of California bound ranchers and farmers headed out from the Ozarks of Arkansas in a wagon train. They brought cattle, horses, money and everything they could carry with them – including their families. The train consisted of about 40 wagons and 120-140 people. Their story is like any other wagon train, full of hardships and trials, until they enter Utah Territory. The Mormon settlers of Utah had previously had negative and often fatal encounters in other states due to their religion, one of the most famous being Hauns Mill in Missouri (where some of the Fancher Train party may have been from). The train’s journey through Utah was fraught with encounters with angry Mormons who didn’t want them in the territory.
When the emigrants met up with John D. Lee in the southern portion of Utah territory, he offered to let them rest themselves and their cattle in a beautiful meadow on his land before crossing the feared desert area between Utah and California. They were relieved. What they didn’t know was that this meadow would be the end of their journey. What ensues is a jaw-dropping story of a mass murder – thought throughout history to be a massacre in the name of religious retaliation and one that will forever be steeped in secrecy, denial and mystery. |
| Reading Map |
| Map – This is the route taken by the Fancher Train from Arkansas to Utah. |
| Rock Carin – This is the site of the mass burial for the members of the Fancher Train. |
| In Memoriam – This is one of two monuments dedicated to the memory of the Fancher Train. This one contains a complete list of all members and is on a small hill overlooking the Mountain Meadow. |
| Second Memorial – This is a memorial marker on the site of the burial – which is owned by the Mormon Church. Almost no information about the reason for the site is given – only a history of previous markers is mentioned. |
| Meadow (bottom right) – This is a picture of the Mountain Meadow as it is today. Very little has changed – and after reading The Fancher Train, it was a haunting experience for me to visit the site – the siege could be imagined like it happened yesterday. |
| September Dawn Movie Poster – In 2006 a movie was released depicting the events leading up to the massacre and the murders themselves. |
| Books – What would a reading map be without a path for more reading? Both books mentioned here are nonfiction accounts of the massacre: The Mountain Meadows Massacre by Juanita Brooks and Blood of the Prophets: Brigham Young and the Massacre at Mountain Meadows, by Will Bagley. |
| John Doyle Lee – John D. Lee, a prominent Mormon member, was the only person every punished for the Mountain Meadow massacre. |
| Giveaway |
| I am giving away an original copy of The Fancher Train by Amelia Bean. Since the title has been out of print for quite a while, this giveaway is for a used copy (1958). Simply leave your name and email in a comment to this post to enter. I will choose a winner on July 16th. Good luck! |
Book Blogger Appreciation Week – September 13-17, 2010
Thursday, July 1st, 2010Which James Patterson Book? Survey Results
Tuesday, June 29th, 2010Survey – Which James Patterson Book?
Friday, June 25th, 2010The Short Second Life of Bree Tanner – Review, My Journal June 15th, 2010
Tuesday, June 15th, 2010![]() |
Journal Entry for June 14th, 2010 Read: The Short Second Life of Bree Tanner by Stephenie Meyer |
| Remember, Recommend: I picked this up on a shopping trip right before leaving for vacation. It’s small and having read everything else Stephenie Meyer has written, I knew it would be a good vacation read. Despite the poor sales reports from the indies for this much anticipated summer release, I wasn’t disappointed. I think the poor sales are being blamed on the fact that the complete story can be read online (no downloads to ereaders) at breetanner.com. I liked reading it in book format, but it is an interesting concept to give it to fans for free. I think the repercussions of this will be much debated in the future. |
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| The Short Second Life of Bree Tanner is the story of a newborn vampire created by Victoria, the bitter, older vampire in Meyer’s Eclipse. Admittedly, I didn’t remember the character (well, maybe briefly), but it was engrossing to read of the week in her life leading up to her scene in Eclipse. Bree makes a few strange friends in her newly formed coven and learns quite a bit about what it is like to be a vampire in the few days before she meets the Cullens. This was a quick, fun read (a novella) – every bit as entertaining to me as Meyer’s others.
Comments: Although the Twilight saga was slated for a fairly young audience, The Short Second Life of Bree Tanner was fairly gory – much more so than I remember any of the previous four in the series being. So, if you are getting this for a younger teenager or middle reader, I would make sure to read it first. |
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| Have you read The Short Second Life of Bree Tanner? What did you think? | |
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Book Blogger Hop – June 11, 2010
Friday, June 11th, 2010| Welcome to this week’s Book Blogger Hop which is hosted by Crazy-For-Books. Go over to her blog for more information and to leave your links to your post.
In the spirit of the Friday Follow, the Book Blogger Hop is a place just for book bloggers and readers to connect and find new blogs that we may be missing out on! This weekly BOOK PARTY is an awesome opportunity for book bloggers to connect with other book lovers, make new friends, support each other, and generally just share our love of books! It will also give blog readers a chance to find other book blogs that they may not know existed! | |
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| About me: | |
| 1. My little boys had Circus Days this week for the last days of school. Proud mama – I have to share! | |
Sam |
Holden |
I have 2 huge Newfoundland puppies – here is my Sweet Pea:
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Here is my Grace (my first baby):![]() |
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2. I’ve been book blogging since January, 2010 (I’m a newbie!).
3. I read almost entirely fiction: classics, contemporary, award winners, YA – and am now getting into mysteries and thrillers (too fun for the summer!). 4. I have 2 reading journals that were released in April by Sourcebooks: Read, Remember, Recommend: A Reading Journal for Book Lovers (fiction and literature version) and Read, Remember, Recommend for Teens: A Reading Journal for Young Adults – each with over 2,400 reading suggestions. 5. I have 2 GIVEAWAYS! Make sure and enter: 6. I’m currently The Lost Tree by Yael Politis. 7. The last book I read was The Silver Swan by Benjamin Black. 8. Check out these posts with Reading Maps: 9. You can also find me on Twitter (bibliobabeblog) and Goodreads. Leave a comment with your info! |
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