Monday, September 29, 2025

September Reflections



In September, I read twenty-five books.

Books reviewed at Becky's Book Reviews


98. Whispers of Shadowbrook House. Rebecca Anderson. 2025. 272 pages. [Source: Library] [adult fiction, adult historical, adult romance, 3 stars]
99. Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban. 1999. 435 pages. [Source: Library] [4 stars] [MG speculative fiction]
100. We Are The Beatles. Brad Meltzer. Illustrated by Christopher Eliopoulos. 2025. 40 pages. [Source: Library] [j biography, j nonfiction, series biography, 4 stars]
101. The Other Side of Now. Paige Harbison. 2025. 320 pages. [Source: Library] [adult romance, 3 stars]
102. Hansel and Gretel. Stephen King. Illustrated by Maurice Sendak. 2025. 48 pages. [Source: Library] [picture book, 4 stars]
103. The Fairy Tale Fixers #1: The Fairy Tale Cinderella. Deborah Underwood. Illustrated by Jorge Lacera. 2025. 128 pages. [Source: Library] [graphic novel; j graphic novel; fractured fairy tales; 5 stars]
104. The English Masterpiece. Katherine Reay. 2025. 302 pages. [Source: Library] [3 stars, adult fiction, general fiction, art appreciation]
105. Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire. J.K. Rowling. 2000. 734 pages. [Source: Library] [3 stars]

Books reviewed at Young Readers

92. Days with Frog and Toad. An I Can Read Book. Arnold Lobel. 1979. HarperCollins. 64 pages. [4 stars, animal fantasy, early chapter book]
93. Board book: The Feelings Book: A Touch-and-Feel Playbook. Mike Henson. Miguel Ordonez. 2025. 10 pages. [Source: Library] [4 stars, board book, touch and feel, interactive]
94. Rabbit Tea (Mouse and Spoon) (Ready to Read Level 2). Cynthia Rylant. Illustrated by Janna Mattia. 2025. 32 pages. [Source: Library] [5 stars, animal fantasy, early reader]
95. Bob the Vampire Snail. Andrea Zuill. 2025. 40 pages. [Source: Library] [3 stars, picture book]
96. Elvis and Romeo Visit the Vet. David Soman. Illustrated by Jacky Davis. 2025. 32 pages. [Source: Library] [animal fantasy, early reader, ready to read level 1, three stars]
97. Elvis and Romeo Go To Dog School. David Soman. Illustrated by Jacky Davis. 2025. 32 pages. [Source: Library]  [animal fantasy, early reader, ready to read level 1, four stars]
98. Magical Map #1: Pirates of the Caribbean. Ridley Pearson. 2025. 128 pages. [Source: Library] [3 stars, children's fantasy, j fantasy]
99. Magical Map #2: Jungle Cruise. Ridley Pearson. 2025. 128 pages. [Source: Library] [3 stars, children's fantasy, j fantasy]
100. The Crayon Stub. Marcus Cutler. 2025. 40 pages. [Source: Library] [3 stars, cats, art, creativity, picture book]
101. Elvis & Romeo. David Soman and Jacky Davis. 2025. 40 pages. [Source: Library] [4 stars, picture book, dogs, friendship]

Books reviewed at Operation Actually Read Bible


62. Board book: Otter B Helpful. Pamela Kennedy and Anne Kennedy Brady. Illustrated by Aaron Zenz. 2019/2025. 24 pages. [Source: Library] [3 stars, christian board book]
63. Board book: Otter B Honest. Pamela Kennedy and Anne Kennedy Brady. Illustrated by Aaron Zenz. 2025. 24 pages. [Source: Library] [3 stars, christian board book]
64. Board book: Otter B Brave. Pamela Kennedy and Anne Kennedy Brady. Illustrated by Aaron Zenz. 2025. 24 pages. [Source: Library] [3 stars, christian board book]
65. Teach Me to Pray: Praying God's Word from A to Z. Kristen Wetherell. 2025. 112 pages. [Source: Review copy] [4 stars, children's book, prayer book]
66. Last Light Over Galveston. Jennifer L. Wright. 2025. 356 pages. [Source: Library] [christian fiction, historical fiction, survival story, 4 stars]
67. The Steadfast Love of the Lord. Sam Storms. 2025. 240 pages. [Source: Library] [4 stars, christian nonfiction, christian living]
68. Yesterday's Gone. Cindy and Erin Woodsmall. 2022. 432 pages. [Source: Library] [5 stars, time travel, Amish fiction, christian romance]

Bibles reviewed at Operation Actually Read Bible:

None for September

Totals for 2025

2025 Totals
Books read in 2025284
Pages read in 202567,669


January 2025
Books read in January30
Pages read in January7,020
February 2025
Books read in February30
Pages read in February4,782
March 2025
Books read in March34
Pages read in March8,595
April 2025
Books read in April34
Pages read in April8,293
May 2025
Books read in May31
Pages read in May7,698
June 2025
Books read in June32
Pages read in June6,072
July 2025
Books read in July37
Pages read in July10,460
August 2025
Books read in August31
Pages read in August10,711
September 2025
Books read in September25
Pages read in September4,038


© 2025 Becky Laney of Becky's Book Reviews

Century of Viewing, month 9


In September, I watched thirty-eight things. 

5 star movies/shows

  • Edward Scissorhands
  • The Poseidon Adventure
  • The Philadelphia Experiment
  • Primeval season 3
  • The Truman Show
  • Reign of Fire
  • Help
  • The Core
  • What About Bob?
  • The Fifth Element


4 1/2 and 4 star movies/shows

  •  Batman vs. Two-Face
  • Dark Star
  • U-571
  • Lucky Me
  • Wing Commander
  • Jurassic Park III
  • Primeval Season 4 and 5
  • Thursday Morning Club
  • Star Trek: Enterprise Season 1
  • The Day the Earth Caught Fire
  • Jurassic Park
  • Quartet
  • Out West (Buster Keaton short)
  • Leanne
  • Logan's Run
  • Dark City

 

© 2025 Becky Laney of Becky's Book Reviews

Saturday, September 27, 2025

Week in Review #39



This week I read four books.

105. Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire. J.K. Rowling. 2000. 734 pages. [Source: Library] [3 stars]

Read if you enjoy
  • Harry Potter series
  • middle grade fantasy series

100. The Crayon Stub. Marcus Cutler. 2025. 40 pages. [Source: Library] [3 stars, cats, art, creativity, picture book]

read if you enjoy
  • picture books
  • cats who like drawing

101. Elvis & Romeo. David Soman and Jacky Davis. 2025. 40 pages. [Source: Library] [4 stars, picture book, dogs, friendship]

read if you enjoy
  • dogs
  • friendship
  • picture books

68. Yesterday's Gone. Cindy and Erin Woodsmall. 2022. 432 pages. [Source: Library] [5 stars, time travel, Amish fiction, christian romance]

Read if you enjoy:
  • time travel
  • Amish fiction
  • contemporary romance
Century of Viewing Week #39

1920s
  • 1921 The Mechanical Man The version I watched had music and sound effects added (from Outer Limits). This helped because truly silent-silent films are hard for me to follow. From what I've read this 1921 film is the first to feature TWO BATTLING ROBOTS and one of the first Italian sci-fi films. Sadly almost half the film is lost--the first half. So I relied on wikipedia to tell me the basic plot.

1970s
  • 1972 The Poseidon Adventure. I was expecting ACTION and survival drama. I wasn't expecting heartbreak and such strong attachment to some of the characters. This is a natural-disaster movie set on New Year's Day on board a cruise ship. Highly recommend.
  • 1976 Logan's Run. This futuristic sci-fi dystopia was interesting to say the least. I definitely enjoyed it. I was not expecting CATS, CATS, CATS, AND MORE CATS. Is it my new favorite movie? Probably not. But I definitely am glad I watched it.

1980s
  • 1981 Escape From New York. John Carpenter might have tried to do a few too many jobs. One I wouldn't have minded him giving up is writing the music/score for the film. That being said, this futuristic-dystopian action movie set in a prison--New York City has become a literal prison--is an entertaining watch. Snake is our anti-hero who is bargaining for freedom...in a way. 
  • 1984 Philadelphia Experiment. TIME TRAVEL. World War II. ROMANCE. Say no more. This one was SO GOOD. I definitely enjoyed it and would recommend.

1990s
  • 1997 Lost World: Jurassic Park. I liked the first movie well enough to continue on. This one was even more silly. Proving that there's more than one mad scientist in the world.
  • 1997 Fifth Element I didn't know what to expect, but, I ended up really liking this one as strange as it is. Would definitely watch again.
  • 1998 Dark City. This one is very Twilight-Zone, Matrix, Truman Show. It's STRANGE and peculiar and the twists and turns are good. I didn't love it at the start, but I am glad I kept watching.
  • 1999 Wing Commander. I definitely liked this one. Though it has more than its fair share of boast battles.

2000s
  • 2001 Jurassic Park III Perhaps my favorite of the Jurassic Park series.
  • 2002 Reign of Fire. SO SO SO SO SO SO SO GOOD. Definitely recommend if you like futuristic dragon movies.
Genre-Decades challenge

1920sGenre(s)
The Mechanical Man science fiction, robots, crime








1930sGenre(s)










1940sGenre(s)










1950sGenre(s)










1960sGenre(s)










1970sGenre(s)
Logan's Runscience fiction, dystopia, future
Poseidon Adventuredrama, survival, action, natural disasters






1980sGenre(s)
Philadelphia Experimentscience fiction, time travel, war
Escape from New Yorkaction, dystopia, thriller






1990sGenre(s)
Wing Commanderscience fiction, space wars, aliens,
Lost World: Jurassic Parkscience fiction, mad scientists, dinosaurs, action
Jurassic Park IIIscience fiction, dinosaurs, action
Fifth Elementscience fiction, aliens, romance,
Dark Cityscience fiction, horror, mystery
2000sGenre(s)










2010sGenre(s)










2020sGenre(s)












© 2025 Becky Laney of Becky's Book Reviews

Tuesday, September 23, 2025

105. Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire


105. Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire. J.K. Rowling. 2000. 734 pages. [Source: Library] [3 stars]

First sentence: The villagers of Little Hangleton still called it "the Riddle House," even though it had been many years since the Riddle family had lived there.

ETA: This one isn't my favorite or best. But I did listen to it on audio for my third read through. I love the narration of Stephen Fry. (Except for the elves, but I think any narrator would struggle.) It is certainly important for the series, but again not my favorite or best.

Premise/plot: Harry Potter returns (eventually) to Hogwarts where he and his friends discover several changes for the school year ahead. Before school returns, there is a Quidditch World Cup to be endured. It felt like the sporty Quidditch World Cup took up 800 pages. Once he (and his friends) return to Hogwarts and begin their studies again, the pace picks up a bit. One of the changes this year is the triwizard competition. Hogwarts is one of three schools participating. There is supposed to be one student per school. But someone has entered Harry's name into the goblet of fire and so he ends up being a 'champion' [participant]. Cedric Diggory is the other Hogwarts champion. [I don't remember the names from the other two schools.] This competition is spread out throughout the school year. 

My thoughts: I feel like the first six-hundred pages were mostly dull and ho-hum. I think the last bit of the novel has all the action and suspense. Out of the four novels I've read so far, this has been the dullest all things considered. All things being taking the book as a whole. There were definitely intense, action-packed, emotional scenes/chapters. But does THAT end-portion make up for all the sporty-sport-sport bit at the start???? I'm not sure. This was the first Harry Potter book where I've had to force myself to keep reading to get to the end of it.

 ETA: I had forgotten--almost--how much I disliked this one, OR, at least the start of this one. This one is like THREE different books. There is the EXTREMELY LONG AND BARELY NECESSARY "prologue" of the sporting world championship bit, AND there is the normal, formulaic school semesters bit, and then there is the super compelling, well-paced, ABSOLUTELY absorbing and completely and totally necessary bit that CHANGES EVERYTHING. Like the whole series pivots thanks to the last hundred or so pages of this one. But it takes FOREVER for the good bit to come.




© 2025 Becky Laney of Becky's Book Reviews

Saturday, September 20, 2025

Week in Review #38



This week I read five books.

102. Hansel and Gretel. Stephen King. Illustrated by Maurice Sendak. 2025. 48 pages. [Source: Library] [picture book, 4 stars]

Read this if...
  • You enjoy fairy tale retellings and adaptations
  • You enjoy Maurice Sendak

103. The Fairy Tale Fixers #1: The Fairy Tale Cinderella. Deborah Underwood. Illustrated by Jorge Lacera. 2025. 128 pages. [Source: Library] [graphic novel; j graphic novel; fractured fairy tales; 5 stars]

Read this if...
  • You enjoy fairy tale retellings and adaptations
  • You enjoy graphic novels

104. The English Masterpiece. Katherine Reay. 2025. 302 pages. [Source: Library] [3 stars, adult fiction, general fiction, art appreciation]

Read this if...
  • You enjoy historical fiction set in the 1970s
  • You enjoy art, art museums, artists, etc.
  • You enjoy books with dual narration

98. Magical Map #1: Pirates of the Caribbean. Ridley Pearson. 2025. 128 pages. [Source: Library] [3 stars, children's fantasy, j fantasy]

Read this if...
  • You enjoy early chapter books
  • You enjoy series books

99. Magical Map #2: Jungle Cruise. Ridley Pearson. 2025. 128 pages. [Source: Library] [3 stars, children's fantasy, j fantasy]

Read this if...
  • You enjoy early chapter books
  • You enjoy series books


Century Viewing #38


1910s
  • 1918 Out West is a Roscoe Arbuckle and Buster Keaton short. In this one, Buster Keaton is a saloon owner and Roscoe Arbuckle is a drifter...who becomes his bartender. When Wild Bill Hiccup comes to town, these two will have to make a stand....but does Wild Bill have a weakness??? 97% of this one was absolutely hysterically DELIGHTFUL. 3% was just distasteful. If you see it, you'll know exactly what I'm talking about.
1950s
  • 1954 Lucky Me. Doris Day musical. Fairly typical Doris Day musical. BUT Doris Day. If you love her musicals, this one works. She plays a singer in a troupe; the troupe is looking for their 'big break' they need someone to finance a new show. They're down on their luck. Meanwhile, she's falling in love--and hate--with a songwriter. Does he, does he not love her too? Is she lucky or unlucky in love.
1960s
  • 1961 X-15. The most boring movie that also happens to include an extremely insensitive scene about miscarriages. Do NOT recommend because essentially there is little character development, little plot, just ALL planes all the time. If you get a thrill from watching old footage of airplanes flying, and are interested in the whole test-pilot era, then this one might be a fine choice.
  • 1965 Help is one of my favorite films. (Is it really???? It is when I remember it.) I first discovered it in November 1995 in the midst of the Beatles Anthology documentary debuting on ABC. I believe it was PBS that aired Hard Day's Night and Help the same week. Both the album and the movie are SO INCREDIBLY good. I stand by that for the album for always. The movie is 100% slapstick.
1970s
  • 1974 Dark Star. Is it ridiculous? YES. Is it hysterical? Yes. Depending on your company and your mood at the moment. Is it a laugh a minute? Probably not. Is it over-the-top silly and almost whimsical in its oddness? Fair enough description. Four men [astronauts] are on board a ship that is absolutely falling apart. Their mission? Well, it may or may not be necessary. But with A.I. bombs that have become self-aware what could possibly go wrong?!
1990s
  • 1996 The Cable Guy. One guy is desperate to get his girlfriend back. (He proposed, she kicked him out.) The Cable Guy is desperate for a friend, a buddy, a pal. And he'll do anything, everything, all of the above to make sure that you need to keep him around. Is there any way to get rid of him?! Maybe. Maybe not. But it may cost you everything.
2000s
  • 2000 U-571 is an action-packed World War II movie. Once the mission starts, almost every minute is an edge-of-your-seat moment because they are constantly in danger. Not just a little danger. BUT DANGER, DANGER, DANGER. So compelling.
2010s
  • 2012 Quartet is set at a retirement village for opera singers and musicians. Two exes are brought back together when she moves into the retirement village. She wants forgiveness and civility. He wants to avoid her at all costs. Meanwhile a gala is forthcoming, and everyone is trying to prepare their performances. Will coming together as a quartet bring this couple back together?
2020s
  • 2025 Leanne, season 1. This one is so similar to Reba. But since I enjoyed Reba, I didn't mind. A woman's marriage is over--her husband has cheated on her with a dentist, she's pregnant. She's got two children--both grown. A son with a controlling wife and a perpetually single daughter who is fiercely independent. What makes this one fun for me is her family. Her sister (played by one of my favorite actresses) and her parents. This one has plenty of community scenes as well. It's enjoyable and pleasant.

Alphabet Viewing, Week #8
A Admirable Crichton
B Big Fish
The China Syndrome.
D The Day the Earth Caught Fire.
E Enterprise (Star Trek) 
F First Contact
G The General.
H Home.
I Insurrection (Star Trek)
J -- Johnny Mnemonic.
K King of Kings.
L Lucky Me. Doris Day musical. Fairly typical Doris Day musical. BUT Doris Day. If you love her musicals, this one works. She plays a singer in a troupe; the troupe is looking for their 'big break' they need someone to finance a new show. They're down on their luck. Meanwhile, she's falling in love--and hate--with a songwriter. Does he, does he not love her too? Is she lucky or unlucky in love.
M Murder by Death
Nemesis.
O Out West is a Roscoe Arbuckle and Buster Keaton short. In this one, Buster Keaton is a saloon owner and Roscoe Arbuckle is a drifter...who becomes his bartender. When Wild Bill Hiccup comes to town, these two will have to make a stand....but does Wild Bill have a weakness??? 97% of this one was absolutely hysterically DELIGHTFUL. 3% was just distasteful. If you see it, you'll know exactly what I'm talking about.
P Primeval Series 1 and 2 and 3, 4, 5
Q Quartet is set at a retirement village for opera singers and musicians. Two exes are brought back together when she moves into the retirement village. She wants forgiveness and civility. He wants to avoid her at all costs. Meanwhile a gala is forthcoming, and everyone is trying to prepare their performances. Will coming together as a quartet bring this couple back together?
R Return of the Caped Crusader (Batman).
S Slipper and the Rose
T Thursday Murder Club.
U U-571 is an action-packed World War II movie. Once the mission starts, almost every minute is an edge-of-your-seat moment because they are constantly in danger. Not just a little danger. BUT DANGER, DANGER, DANGER. So compelling.
V Valley of Vision
W What About Bob? Second time to watch this movie this year (I discovered it last year or the year before, I think). I LOVE, LOVE, LOVE, LOVE, LOVE, LOVE, LOVE, LOVE, LOVE this movie. Truly it is most favored. I love Bob. I love his Baby Steps. I love everything about the story. So quotable. So enjoyable.
X X-15. The most boring movie that also happens to include an extremely insensitive scene about miscarriages. Do NOT recommend because essentially there is little character development, little plot, just ALL planes all the time. If you get a thrill from watching old footage of airplanes flying, and are interested in the whole test-pilot era, then this one might be a fine choice.
Y You Can't Run Away From It.
Z The Zookeeper.

© 2025 Becky Laney of Becky's Book Reviews

Thursday, September 18, 2025

104. The English Masterpiece


104. The English Masterpiece. Katherine Reay. 2025. 302 pages. [Source: Library] [3 stars, adult fiction, general fiction, art appreciation]

First sentence: After sliding my boss's note into my top desk drawer, I walk down the corridor and top on Diana's door and, as usual, pause for a second or two before I open it.

Premise/plot: The English Masterpiece has two narrators--Lily and Diana. Lily's boss is Diana. Both work at an art museum, the Tate--Diana in a much higher place of prestige. Picasso has just died and the museum is planning an exhibit. At the opening of that exhibit, Lily notices that one of the paintings--newly acquired and on loan--is a forgery. Her comment does not go unnoticed. It causes great turmoil that will take the remaining of the book to settle down. If the painting is a fraud, a forgery, WHO is responsible for painting it, who forged the provenance papers, who authenticated that it was real, and WHO is profiting from this crime? Just to name a few questions...Lily and Diana both have some mystery to them. But only one is a criminal.

My thoughts: I did not like this one as much as I'd hoped. I was hoping that my previous enjoyment of Reay's novels would help counter my lack of interest in all things art. (I do like picture books about art, art appreciation, etc. But a whole novel set in the art world was apparently not for me.) It was pleasant enough. I didn't dislike it. I just didn't actively like it.

 

© 2025 Becky Laney of Becky's Book Reviews

Tuesday, September 16, 2025

103. The Fairy Tale Fixers: Cinderella




103. The Fairy Tale Fixers #1: The Fairy Tale Cinderella. Deborah Underwood. Illustrated by Jorge Lacera. 2025. 128 pages. [Source: Library] [graphic novel; j graphic novel; fractured fairy tales; 5 stars]

First sentence: I was in the office. I'd poured myself a cup of joe and put my feet up for a well-deserved rest. Only five minutes till quitting time, and it was Friday: Pancakes for Dinner Night! But then....riinng!

Premise/plot: The Fairy Tale Fixers is a new series by Deborah Underwood. The first 'fairy tale' to be fixed by these two mice is Cinderella. GoodReads lists the names of the characters as "Fairy" and "Mouse," but I can't find the story itself referring to their names. It is written in first person narrative. The fairy tale fixer receives a phone call and reacts with some grumpiness. Heading to the library, he soon meets a mouse from the house where Cinderella lives. This mouse has escaped the story and is seeking a 'fix' to the story so that she can sleep better. The house is TOO noisy, too quarrelsome. Dressed up as a fairy, the fairy tale fixer decides that if Cinderella marries the prince, then the mouse can get some sleep. Acting as the "fairy godmother" in the story, he does his best to make sure Cinderella and the Prince meet. HOWEVER, Cinderella has no interest in the prince...she has a dream....and that dream doesn't include marriage. Can this fairy tale be fixed?

My thoughts: I LOVE, LOVE, LOVE the narrative voice. The fairy tale fixer wears a trench coat and has a bit of an attitude! And he loves pancakes! The story is silly, fun, and clever. I am not one to be critical of Cinderella. I'm not. I don't think the story necessarily "needs" to be fixed for a modern day audience. (I don't.) But this humorous, silly fractured fairy tale is fun.


© 2025 Becky Laney of Becky's Book Reviews

102. Hansel and Gretel


102. Hansel and Gretel. Stephen King. Illustrated by Maurice Sendak. 2025. 48 pages. [Source: Library] [picture book, 4 stars]

First sentence: Once upon a time, long before your grandmother's grandmother was born, a poor broom maker and his wife lived on the edge of a great dark forest with his two children, Hansel and Gretel. The broom maker was an easygoing man; his wife, the children's stepmother, was a shrew who liked to have her way and mostly got it.

Premise/plot: The illustrations are by Maurice Sendak. The narrative text is by Stephen King. The story, obviously, is Hansel and Gretel. This "picture" book features plenty of illustrations, but, it is extremely text-heavy.

My thoughts: I have not read the variations of Hansel and Gretel. I know that Grimm's Fairy Tales have gone through several printings and there are some variations perhaps. I could not begin to tell you how Stephen King's retelling differs from the original. I'm not even going to try to judge that. I could not tell you if this one is "lighter" or "darker" than the original. I just don't know. I can tell you that I enjoyed Maurice Sendak's illustrations. And the narrative text was pleasant enough. I wasn't wowed by the retelling. Then again, I'm not sure that Hansel and Gretel has ever been my favorite fairy tale.

 

© 2025 Becky Laney of Becky's Book Reviews

Saturday, September 13, 2025

Week in Review #37



This week I read eight books.

 99. Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban. 1999. 435 pages. [Source: Library] [4 stars] [MG speculative fiction]

Read this if...

  • You enjoy the Harry Potter series
  • You enjoy speculative fiction/fantasy
  • You enjoy audio books


100. We Are The Beatles. Brad Meltzer. Illustrated by Christopher Eliopoulos. 2025. 40 pages. [Source: Library] [j biography, j nonfiction, series biography, 4 stars]

Read this if....

  • You enjoy children's nonfiction
  • You enjoy children's biographies
  • You enjoy The Beatles


101. The Other Side of Now. Paige Harbison. 2025. 320 pages. [Source: Library] [adult romance, 3 stars]

Read this if...

  • You enjoy light speculative fiction with your romance
  • You enjoy sliding-doors, what-if romances
  • You enjoy Irish settings


94. Rabbit Tea (Mouse and Spoon) (Ready to Read Level 2). Cynthia Rylant. Illustrated by Janna Mattia. 2025. 32 pages. [Source: Library] [5 stars, animal fantasy, early reader]

Read this if...

  • You enjoy animal fantasy
  • You enjoy early readers
  • You enjoy Cynthia Rylant


95. Bob the Vampire Snail. Andrea Zuill. 2025. 40 pages. [Source: Library] [3 stars, picture book]

Read this if...

  • You enjoy humorous picture books
  • You enjoy dark and silly picture books
  • You enjoy snails

96. Elvis and Romeo Visit the Vet. David Soman. Illustrated by Jacky Davis. 2025. 32 pages. [Source: Library] [animal fantasy, early reader, ready to read level 1, three stars]

  • You enjoy early readers
  • You enjoy dogs


97. Elvis and Romeo Go To Dog School. David Soman. Illustrated by Jacky Davis. 2025. 32 pages. [Source: Library]  [animal fantasy, early reader, ready to read level 1, four stars]

Read this if...

  • You enjoy early readers
  • You enjoy dogs


67. The Steadfast Love of the Lord. Sam Storms. 2025. 240 pages. [Source: Library] [4 stars, christian nonfiction, christian living]

Read this if...

  • You enjoy christian nonfiction
  • You enjoy christian living
  • You want to learn more about the love of God

 Century of Viewing #37

1960s

  • 1961 The Day the Earth Caught Fire. Do two wrongs make a right? How about six? This is a nuclear disaster movie. There is a framework to it. It begins and ends with a red filter. Most of the film is black-and-white. It's told from the perspective of newspaper reporters. The 'drama' occurs when two nations test nuclear devices at the exact same time. It takes days, weeks, months before just how catastrophic it is. A bold new plan emerges to detonate more nuclear bombs to 'even' things out a bit. The movie ends with a question mark. Will the world be saved? Or did the end come all that much sooner? This one has a HILARIOUS bus-fainting scene. Humor is hard to come by, for the most part. Though the banter is definitely quick and quick-witted. The dialogue is not at fault for this one being a little too much. I am sure this movie would have hit differently--pun perhaps intended--at the time it was released.


1970s

  • 1973 American Graffiti. If driving around in circles is your thing--well, blocks, to be precise, perhaps American Graffiti is for you. Brightside: the soundtrack is fantastic. Truly the music is what makes this one worth considering. Set in the early 60s, I believe. It features a handful of friends preparing to go off to college--well a few of them are. Guys chasing girls. Girls wanting to be caught--or not. And racing cars. I didn't care for the ending--the reveal of what happened to these fictional characters. I would have preferred to either a) leave it as is or b) imagine my own endings.


1990s

  • 1990 Edward Scissorhands. Second time to watch this movie (both this year). I LOVE, LOVE, LOVE many things about it. Particularly the music, the costuming, the dark humor. I didn't love the violence towards the end, but, this story is beautiful in many ways. And I'm not sure a happier ending could have been found.
  • 1991 What About Bob? Second time to watch this movie this year (I discovered it last year or the year before, I think). I LOVE, LOVE, LOVE, LOVE, LOVE, LOVE, LOVE, LOVE, LOVE this movie. Truly it is most favored. I love Bob. I love his Baby Steps. I love everything about the story. So quotable. So enjoyable.
  • 1993 Jurassic Park. First time watching. I definitely liked it. Mad scientist at work? Maybe. Probably. A disgruntled employee? YES. Definitely. It was action-packed for sure.
  • 1998 Truman Show. One of my favorite movies. It's not one I see often, but, when I do I definitely enjoy. I love almost everything about this one. Truman Burbanks has lived his whole life in front of the camera--unknowingly without his consent. He's the center of the universe--well, the domed universe. The world can't get enough of his story, but, things haven't been going well lately. A crisis is coming...

2000s

  • 2001 The Zookeeper. I chose it because I needed a "Z" movie for my alphabet viewing challenge. Set during an unspecified war in an unspecified eastern European country at an unspecified time, it features Sam Neill as Ludovic, an ex-communist who is now working at the zoo. The war has caused all the employees to flee. Ludovic alone is left to care for all the animals--now starving, dying, and in general doing poorly because of stressful, uncertain conditions. The zoo attracts a young boy, Zioig, and his mother, Ankica, who are desperate; the boy will do almost anything to survive. Both have experienced trauma and horror. Conditions worsen throughout the film to the point where the beginning almost looks like good times, fun times. (Not really). This one is about as gloomy and doomy as they come.


2020s

  • 2025 King of Kings. Animated movie of Charles Dickens telling his son, Walter, and his cat the story of Jesus. The animated movie inserts Dickens and his son into the action--think of how Gonzo 'narrates' the Muppet Christmas Carol, only less humor and gimmicks. Walter is obsessed with King Arthur. Dickens tells his son that King Arthur is based on Jesus Christ. (Is it though?!?!) By the end of the story, Walter has come to faith in Christ. I absolutely detested the animation style of this one. It was very strange in places. But CAT.


Alphabet Viewing, Week #7
A Admirable Crichton
B Big Fish
The China Syndrome.
D The Day the Earth Caught Fire. Do two wrongs make a right? How about six? This is a nuclear disaster movie. There is a framework to it. It begins and ends with a red filter. Most of the film is black-and-white. It's told from the perspective of newspaper reporters. The 'drama' occurs when two nations test nuclear devices at the exact same time. It takes days, weeks, months before just how catastrophic it is. A bold new plan emerges to detonate more nuclear bombs to 'even' things out a bit. The movie ends with a question mark. Will the world be saved? Or did the end come all that much sooner? This one has a HILARIOUS bus-fainting scene. Humor is hard to come by, for the most part. Though the banter is definitely quick and quick-witted. The dialogue is not at fault for this one being a little too much. I am sure this movie would have hit differently--pun perhaps intended--at the time it was released.
E Enterprise (Star Trek) 
F First Contact
G The General.
H Home.
I Insurrection (Star Trek)
J -- Johnny Mnemonic.
K King of Kings. Animated movie of Charles Dickens telling his son, Walter, and his cat the story of Jesus. The animated movie inserts Dickens and his son into the action--think of how Gonzo 'narrates' the Muppet Christmas Carol, only less humor and gimmicks. Walter is obsessed with King Arthur. Dickens tells his son that King Arthur is based on Jesus Christ. (Is it though?!?!) By the end of the story, Walter has come to faith in Christ. I absolutely detested the animation style of this one. It was very strange in places. But CAT.
L
M Murder by Death
Nemesis.
O
P Primeval Series 1 and 2 and 3, 4, 5
Q
R Return of the Caped Crusader (Batman).
S Slipper and the Rose
T Thursday Murder Club.
U
V Valley of Vision
W What About Bob? Second time to watch this movie this year (I discovered it last year or the year before, I think). I LOVE, LOVE, LOVE, LOVE, LOVE, LOVE, LOVE, LOVE, LOVE this movie. Truly it is most favored. I love Bob. I love his Baby Steps. I love everything about the story. So quotable. So enjoyable.
X
Y You Can't Run Away From It.
Z The Zookeeper. I chose it because I needed a "Z" movie for my alphabet viewing challenge. Set during an unspecified war in an unspecified eastern European country at an unspecified time, it features Sam Neill as Ludovic, an ex-communist who is now working at the zoo. The war has caused all the employees to flee. Ludovic alone is left to care for all the animals--now starving, dying, and in general doing poorly because of stressful, uncertain conditions. The zoo attracts a young boy, Zioig, and his mother, Ankica, who are desperate; the boy will do almost anything to survive. Both have experienced trauma and horror. Conditions worsen throughout the film to the point where the beginning almost looks like good times, fun times. (Not really). This one is about as gloomy and doomy as they come.

 

© 2025 Becky Laney of Becky's Book Reviews

Friday, September 12, 2025

101. The Other Side of Now



101. The Other Side of Now. Paige Harbison. 2025. 320 pages. [Source: Library] [adult romance, 3 stars]

First sentence: I pull the trigger over and over and over as the increasingly feeble stream of water fails to propel my tiny horse as fast as I want it to go.

Premise/plot: Meg Bryan, our heroine, is given a unique opportunity to see what her life could have been like if she'd made another choice as a teenager. The choice to go or stay. To go to a small Irish village and attend college/university (Avalon) OR to stay in Florida. Whatever she chooses, she wants her best friend Aimee to choose as well. She chose to stay and ends up moving to LA where she's a soap star, or prime soap star, perhaps. Aimee, well, less said the better. Crazy unhappy, she books an impulsive trip to Ireland, to Avalon. That trip shows her the other side--what might have been. And EVERYTHING is different. But is different better?

My thoughts: The premise kept me reading. Honestly though, I found both versions of Meg [aka Lana Lord, her stage name] to be insufferable--though in different ways. Because the truth of the matter is we almost get three main characters. Lana Lord who is a soap star. Other-Meg who lives in Ireland and we just hear about her from everyone else. Lana-living-Meg's-life is who we spend the most time with. She is essentially "taking over" Other Meg's life, impersonating her, befriending her friends, falling in love with Other Meg's boyfriend. She is learning life lessons because she sees the mistakes of both Other Meg and Lana Lord.

I wanted to like this one. I liked it well enough--barely. I didn't really "like" the main character.

How adult was it? It had one fairly graphic sex scene. It could have been a LOT worse, I know for being adult romance. (Surely one of my least read genres for a reason. Except for clean romances.)



© 2025 Becky Laney of Becky's Book Reviews

Thursday, September 11, 2025

100. We Are the Beatles



100. We Are The Beatles. Brad Meltzer. Illustrated by Christopher Eliopoulos. 2025. 40 pages. [Source: Library] [j biography, j nonfiction, series biography, 4 stars]

First sentence: We are the  Beatles. I'm Paul McCartney. One of my earliest memories is of lying on the floor and listening to my dad play piano. I didn't take fancy lessons--I learned by ear, just like him.
I am John Lennon. When I was five, I went to live with my aunt and got my first musical instrument, a harmonica. My aunt made me wait until Christmas, but getting that harmonica was one of the great moments of my life.

Premise/plot: Brad Meltzer's newest biography for children is a book called We Are The Beatles. Each Beatle's story is told--though not equitably divided perhaps--through color-coded panels. Each Beatles has his own color. Each is told in first person. So readers should pay attention to the color-clues for clarity. (I didn't need clarity because I might have read a couple dozen books on the Beatles.) Once the group is together-together, the panels are black. And it switches to first person plural--we. (Though the occasional color panel returns to tell individual details.)

The book is written FOR children. So the more adult stuff is left out. The story isn't evenly paced. Some periods of time are told in greater detail, others zoom by quickly. Blink and you miss it.

 My thoughts: I wanted to love, love, love this one. (After all, all you need is love.) However, I think my expectations were too high. I think for children, for those new to the Beatles, for those with a passing curiosity, for those who just looking to read a biography [like for an assignment] this one will suit just fine. It annoyed me, for example, that it starts with PAUL and not John. John is OLDER by several years. Lennon comes BEFORE McCartney in their song credits, I believe, and alphabetically as well. No matter how I look at it, Paul should not be the one getting the attention. (I'm not surprised, mind you.) I was also annoyed that not all the Beatles get equal treatment or perhaps equal respect. Ringo deserved better.

I also don't personally care for the illustration style of the whole series. Short, squatty bodies and big heads just doesn't thrill me as an illustration style. Not when all the other characters are drawn as normal looking adults.

That being said, I do love the Beatles. And I'm not going to complain if children are introduced to the Beatles at a younger age.

© 2025 Becky Laney of Becky's Book Reviews

Tuesday, September 09, 2025

99. Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban


99. Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban. 1999. 435 pages. [Source: Library] [4 stars] [MG speculative fiction]

First sentence: Harry Potter was a highly unusual boy in many ways. For one thing, he hated the summer holidays more than any other time of year. For another, he really wanted to do his homework but was forced to do it in secret, in the dead of night. And he also happened to be a wizard.

This is my third time reading Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban. I listened on audio book; the narrator was Stephen Fry.

Premise/plot: Harry Potter and his friends are preparing for a third year at Hogwarts. This one starts out in some ways extremely similar to the other two books in the series, but quite different as well. After an INCIDENT with his "family," Harry Potter runs away... Around this same time the magic world is shook by the escape of a prisoner from Azkaban--Sirius Black. Everyone is so distracted/concerned about his escape, that Harry Potter's so-called illegal use of magic is overlooked or quickly pardoned. Most of this school year is concerned with the missing Sirius Black. It is thought that Harry Potter is in even more danger than usual...

Plenty of adventures and misadventures are to be found in the day to day lives of Harry Potter and company. 

My thoughts: I certainly did not expect Scabbers--Ron Weasley's rat--to enter into the story in this fashion. I wasn't surprised by other elements of this one. I've learned to expect just about anything/everything from other characters--particularly adults, mostly professors, etc.

My original rating was three stars; I've since come to enjoy this one more. If I'm being honest, the second half I'd give an enthusiastic five stars. I absolutely LOVE, LOVE, LOVE, LOVE, LOVE, LOVE, LOVE the last section of this one where ALL THE action happens with Harry, Sirius Black, Ron, Hermione, etc. I loved the 'redo' they get. I don't know why exactly but Sirius Black is one of my favorite characters in the series. I couldn't begin to tell you why--he just is. I loved learning more about James and Lily Potter. I loved learning more about the friendships and relationships from their younger school days. The first half isn't bad by any stretch. 


© 2025 Becky Laney of Becky's Book Reviews