Friday, January 31, 2025

Week in Review #5

 

The fifth week of the year, I reviewed six books. 

What I read:

9. Lost in the Empire City. Avi. 2024. [October 29] 304 pages. [Source: Library] [5 stars, j fiction, mg fiction, j historical, mg historical, immigration/emigration]

Read this one if...

  • You are looking to read a book IMPOSSIBLE TO PUT DOWN
  • You are looking for a fast-paced, compelling, action-packed read
  • You enjoy historical fiction; this one is set in the 1910s in New York City
  • You enjoy immigrant stories

10. Three Men in a Boat. Jerome K. Jerome. 1889. 174 pages. [Source: Bought] [4 stars, adult classic, travel, humor]

Read this one if...

  • You enjoy classics
  • You enjoy classic travel stories
  • You love rambling Victorians
  • You enjoy humorous reads

 9. Chooch Helped. Andrea L. Rogers. Illustrated by Rebecca Lee Kunz. 2024. 48 pages. [Source: Library] [3 stars, siblings, family, picture book]

Read this one if...

  • The Caldecott medal means a great deal to you and you want to keep up with all the winners
  • You have a sibling
  • You enjoy family stories
  • You seek out books by Native Americans


10. A Mouse Family Christmas. Deborah Underwood. 2025. 40 pages. [Source: Library] [4 stars, picture book, holiday, Christmas]

Read this one if...

  • You love fictional mice
  • You enjoy holiday picture books
  • You enjoy books that showcase kindness


8. Left Behind (Left Behind #1) Tim LaHaye and Jerry B. Jenkins. 1995. 470 pages. [Source: Library] [christian fiction, 2 stars, contemporary fiction]

Read this one if...
Well, there's bound to be a good reason or two to read it, right???

  • If characters and dialogue and story matter less to you than a particular brand of end-times theology
  • If you are curious about this at-one-time-mega-popular series and want to see if it's as bad as you've heard
  • If you want to read the book before/after watching the movie(s)


9. People Pleaser: Breaking Free From the Burden of Imaginary Expectations. Jinger Duggar Vuolo. 2025. 224 pages. [Source: Library] [3 stars, christian nonfiction, christian living]

Read this one if...

  • you struggle with people pleasing and boundaries
  • you are looking for more Duggar content
  • you are a fan of Jinger and Jeremy's vlog and podcast

What I watched (for my century of viewing challenge) Normally my cut-off time/date is Saturday midday. Anything I watch after typing up the blog post is included the next week. Since this is the end of the month, I am going to make a slight exception and have a cut-off date of January 31 midday. (My cut-off is noon 1/31).

1910s

  • 1919 Feline Follies (Felix the Cat). This is the first Felix the Cat cartoon. He hadn't even been named Felix yet. In this one, he plays a tom cat catting around. It ends dark, super dark. I did not care for this one at all.

1940s

  • 1949 Miss Grant Takes Richmond stars Lucille Ball and William Holden. She seems destined to fail as a secretary, however, she's chosen because of her lack of skills. Why? Well, yes, she's attractive enough. But mainly because they [the bad guys] think she'll never wise up to their illegal business. But looks can be deceiving and Miss Grant might just win the day after all. 

1950s

  • 1959 Gidget stars Sandra Dee and James Darren! I've definitely seen this beach movie before. I adore Sandra Dee. The later Gidget movies--MOVIES, not television show--were never my cup of tea. This one was fun. Not great or fantastic, but fun. I think I've also read the book.

1960s

  • 1960 Who Was That Lady? is a Dean Martin and Tony Curtis movie. Tony Curtis' character gets caught kissing a foreign exchange student by his wife. His best friend--a writer--starts spinning quite a web to deceive. Let's just say be careful WHO you impersonate.
  • 1965 The Heroes of Telemark is war drama set during World War II in Norway; we follow several in the resistance. This one is quite dramatic. It stars Kirk Douglas. 
  • 1966 Follow Me, Boys stars Fred MacMurray and Kurt Russell. This is one of those 'meaning of life' movies. Little things can make all the difference in the world. Such is the case with Lem (Fred MacMurray's character) who becomes a scout master in a small town.

1970s

  • 1975 Three Men in a Boat is an adaptation of Jerome K. Jerome's novel. Tim Curry stars as "J." This adaptation is radically different from the comedy from 1956 which was all girls, girls, girls. This is a slower-paced more faithful adaptation of the classic. There are so many scenes that are practically lifted from the book. There were other places that did seemed like additions that were not in the book at all. (I read the book this week).

1980s

  • 1982/1983 The Voyagers! is a time-travel television show. The characters travel through history via the omni--a gold device that looks like a watch. The theme that plays as they travel is epic. (Well, for the nostalgic sort anyway.) Each episode essentially stands alone. Viewers see the pair travel to two to three historical events as they repair history.
  • 1984 Places in the Heart is a heart-crusher. It is brutal to your emotions, but, it's also beautiful. Can something be beautiful and ugly all at the same time???? I think it can. This one is set during the Depression and it's set in Texas as well. Sally Field's character is a widow with two young children who becomes reliant on a African-American man [a hobo] to help her save the family farm from the [evil] bank.

1990s

  • 1994 Black Beauty is an adaptation from the novel. This one is SO WORTH IT. Beautiful narration, beautiful soundtrack. As much as I can recall, it is mostly faithful to the novel. I know some adaptations just have a black horse.

2000s

  • 2002 Chicago is a movie that is not for me at all. If it wasn't an adaptation of a Broadway musical from the 1970s, then I'd say they were trying to out-do Moulin-Rouge. I liked very few things about it. I was mostly disgusted by all the costumes and choreography. Which leads me to think to myself, if it had starred Ewan McGregor would I have been more forgiving???? This one has two musical numbers that I almost like.

2020s

  • 2022 Lyle, Lyle, Crocodile is delightful. It has some musical numbers in it. It is an adaptation of a picture book. I really loved almost everything about it.

© 2025 Becky Laney of Becky's Book Reviews

1 comment:

Ms. Yingling said...

I loved Lost in the Empire City, and it's done well with my students. I'm glad you liked VOYAGERS! I remember watching it in high school, and back in 2008, my then ten year old daughter became OBSESSED with Meeno Peluce because of the show. I have the whole season on DVD!