Merry Wanderer of the Night [Search results for beach

  • Pregnant Jessica Alba spotted having birthday party fun on Mexico Beach with her daughter and close friends

    Pregnant Jessica Alba spotted having birthday party fun on Mexico Beach with her daughter and close friends
    Pregnant Jessica Alba was seen in Mexico having her birthday party just in bikini with few of her friends and daughter Honor Marie Warren. 

    Pregnant Jessica Alba having birthday party fun on Mexico Beach with her daughter Honor Marie Warren
    Jessica Alba turned 30 on April 28 but the star planned to enjoy a cherished birthday vacation in Mexico in place of big home party. Cash Warren, husband of Jessica Alba, was not present in this “girls only” party.

    Pregnant Jessica Alba having birthday party fun on Mexico Beach without husband Cash Warren

    Pregnant Jessica Alba having fun on Mexico Beach in 'Girls only Party'

    Pregnant Jessica Alba having birthday party fun on Mexico Beach with her daughter and close friends

    VIA Pregnant Jessica Alba spotted having birthday party fun on Mexico Beach with her daughter and close friends

  • UK: Storm washes Armada wreckage on to Sligo beach

    UK: Storm washes Armada wreckage on to Sligo beach
    Fears have been expressed for the security of the three Spanish Armada shipwrecks off the coast of Co Sligo, following the discovery of two separate remnants, apparently washed up on Streedagh beach by recent storms.

    Storm washes Armada wreckage on to Sligo beach
    The finds (pictured) follow the discovery last year of part of a 20ft rudder from one 
    of the vessels on the beach [Credit: Ciaran McHugh Photography]

    Donal Gilroy from the Grange and Armada Development Association (GADA) said the discoveries underlined the fragility of the wrecks, described by one expert as “the best archaeological site for this time of maritime archaeology in the world”.

    The National Museum and the heritage office at Sligo County Council were notified yesterday about the finds, which follow the discovery last year of part of a 20ft rudder from one of the vessels on the beach.

    About 1,100 sailors died when three Spanish galleons were wrecked in violent storms off Streedagh in 1588. An interpretative centre is planned for the nearby village of Grange but there have been calls for the vessels to be excavated and housed in a purpose built local museum.

    Mr Gilroy said it was possible that scheduled low tides this weekend may expose more wreckage.

    “These have been buried off Streedagh for nearly 430 years. It is lucky they were not carried out by the tide,” he said.

    He said that at the request of the county council he was placing the two pieces of wood, one found on Thursday by a member of the GADA, and the other yesterday, in salt water at an undisclosed location to ensure they are properly preserved pending a visit next week by experts from the National Museum.

    “One piece is 13 feet long and the other about 16 feet long and they are well preserved oak. They both look like they came from the rib of a boat”, he said.

    Thee three wrecks are located about 60 meters from the low tide mark in 15 meters of water.

    “This is a protected site but we worry that these boats are being moved by storms. They have thrown up more in the last two years than in the previous 40,” said Mr Gilroy.

    He said that there was a fully intact gun carriage and a number of cannons which were taken from the city walls in Palermo, on the vessels at Streedagh.

    The Streedagh wrecks were rediscovered in 1985 by a team of divers led by Dr Colin Martin who had who had led previous explorations of Spanish Armada shipwrecks.

    Author: Marese McDonagh | Source: The Irish Times [February 20, 2015]

  • Just Contemporary Review: Moonglass by Jessi Kirby

    I was not at all prepared for Moonglass by Jessi Kirby. It looks kinda like a fairly lighthearted Contemporary about a girl who is spending the summer on the beach. And, most of the reviews I had read of the book didn't quite dispel that. They mentioned that the book had more depth than they were expecting, but I mean, come on... When you expect the emotional impact of jellyfish, it's not that hard to be surprised.

    But that is lies!

    This book was amazing. Anna is having a really hard time. She has to move — start at a new school and leave all her friends behind because her dad just got a job transfer — back to the beach where her parents first met. Her mom committed suicide years ago and Anna isn't really sure why her dad would want to go back to that beach. She knows that the beach is going to bring back memories for her father, but she also senses that it's going to carry them for her as well, if she can only figure out how to unlock them. And it's hard.

    Anna is such a perfect character. Not because she's without fault but because she is real. She hurts, she disobeys her dad but (mostly) still wants and tries to be a good daughter, crushes on cute guys, wants to make friends... She is the every teen but she is also completely herself. There is something compelling about this young girl, trying to accept and come to terms with the loss of her mother. And there is a lot to work through there, much more than we know about in the beginning.

    The side characters are also wonderfully complex. While their relationship isn't perfect (she is, after all, a teenager) Anna and her dad have a strong relationship and it is obvious that he cares about her and legitimately wants what is best for her and he wants her to be happy. And he does what he thinks he can to make life easier and better (although he is, very definitely, still a dad.) Can I just take a moment to say Yay! for an awesome, concerned and involved parent in YA!!

    Tyler was also a perfectly blended addition to the story. As the love interest, he is a natural part of Anna's life but he didn't overwhelm the story. This is a book that has a romance in it, but is not a romance itself, which is how I prefer my stories to be. I feel like so many books right now are just all about the romance, and it was a nice change reading a book where the story itself didn't revolve around the love interest and would, in fact, still be a story without him. Also, the friends from school Anna makes — endearingly ridiculous Ashley and dedicated runner Jillian (who is fighting her own inner demons) also help to give the story strength and reality. And Kirby adds so much to the setting and the characters within the setting, like the other lifeguards and the Crawler that it is impossible not to believe that this is a real place.

    It really is such a beautifully strong novel, and I absolutely love the quote used on the back cover. I think it perfectly describes the emotion of the book. It just feels right.

    "I read once that water is a symbol for emotions. And for a while now I've thought maybe my mother drowned in both."
    At first glance, it's a little bit like — Huh. That's an interesting thought, kinda cool. But, as you look at it again, it starts to mean so much more. And that's how I felt about this book. At first glance, it seems like just another beachy Contemporary. There's nothing wrong with them, but there isn't always much meat to them either. But Wow. Was I ever wrong. There is so much more to this book than the beach. The characters were honest and real and hurting and I just connected with them so strongly even though nothing in my life really mirrors this. But goodness. Kirby has done something special here and it is a book not to be missed.

  • Beach Buddies

    Beach Buddies

    Which fictional character (or group of characters) would you like to spend a day at the beach with? Why would he/she/they make good beach buddies?

    I think a good beach buddy would be Bridget from Bridget Jones's Diary. She is hilarious and a total clutz like me so I wouldn't feel stupid. We could catch-up on gossip, talk about our attractive boyfriends, and discuss more important issues like world peace. Bridget also loves shopping and eating, which I enjoy too, so I could see us having a good time doing both of those things on the boardwalk.

    Who would you choose? Join the conversation at Booking Through Thursday.

  • Hot Reading

    Hot Reading

    Well, folks, I don’t know about where you are, but right here, it’s HOT.

    So … when you think about “hot reading,” what does that make you think of? Beach reading? Steamy romances? Books that take place in hot climates? Or cold ones?

    When I think of "hot reading" I mostly think of beach reading. I don't go to the beach very often because all the beaches in Iowa are at lakes and I just cannot do the squishy, muddy bottoms of lakes, so beach reading to me more means reading outside. And when I think of books I can read outside I tend to think of books that I don't have to devote a lot of attention to, like Bridget Jones's Diary or one of the Luxe books. This is because sun generally reflect off the pages or the sun is shining in my eyes, so I tend to skim the books. This isn't my favorite way to read as you can probably tell, and since it's been so hot I haven't gotten a lot of reading done lately.

    How about you? What does hot reading mean? Join in at Booking Through Thursday.

  • Review: The Day Before by Lisa Schroeder

    I read The Day Before by Lisa Schroeder back in April and I loved it. Like, I really, really loved it. But for some reason, I kept putting the review off. It's now much closer to the review date and I spent a lot of time on Twitter yesterday convincing one of my Twitter friends to read this book. (who absolutely loved it, despite being very wary of the verse style) Because I've spent to much time recently thinking about this book, talking it up to people and convincing them to read it, I thought today would be an appropriate time to post my review.

    I honestly don't know where to begin with this book. This book has so much going for it, so many great things about it that it's impossible to identify all of them within the space of one review.

    This book is Amber's story and when the book starts, the only thing we know is that it is the day before something huge is to take place. We don't know what, we don't know why or how. All we know is that today is the last day before Amber's life changes forever and she has decided to make this day her own. She writes a note to her family, gets in her car and drives to the beach where she plans to spend the day being by herself and sorting through her emotions. But then she meets Cade. And Cade has a secret too. While reading about him, you just know that there is something more to his day at the beach. Something more that he's not ready to face. He's living today like it's his last.

    Amber feels drawn to Cade and he feels the pull as well. They decide to spend the rest of the day together and they both decide that there are to be no questions. They are not to talk about what they are escaping from, and they will just take this day at the beach.

    I really enjoy novels in verse and I seek them out. I've read a fair number and I believe I can say that Schroeder has got it going on! She is one of the most truly gifted writers in verse that I have ever read. She knows exactly how much information to give a reader to peak their interest while not giving too much away. She knows the exact balance between suspenseful interest and frustration because we don't know anything, and that scale never tips toward the negative. Her verses are stuffed full of emotion, loaded with feeling and the characters are no longer confined to the pages. They are real to me.

    I refuse to give any spoilers away to this story, because part of the magic of this book is the discovery of what tomorrow will bring for both characters. But I will say that what Amber faces is worth the stress she's feeling and it is something that has refused to leave my mind in the two months since I read this book. I find myself constantly thinking about this book and the people in it. I've talked about it many times with family members and with friends, both in real life and online. It won't let go of me. This book has got such a hold on me that I don't think I'm ever going to forget it. This is a book I can easily see myself rereading time and time again.

    Lisa Schroeder is an author who has definitely earned herself a place on my permanent I love you shelf. She is amazing and if you have yet to read a book by her, FIX IT!! Fix it NOW!

    Oh, and if you are hesitant to read this one because of it's verse style? Just tweet me (@BasicallyBooks) or drop me an email. I'll convince you.:) Take a chance on this author, because I find it impossible to believe you will leave this book disappointed or unmoved.

    *Disclaimer: I received this book through Around the World ARC Tours.

  • Book Review, Blog Tour & Giveway: The Castaways by Elin Hilderbrand

    Book Review, Blog Tour & Giveway: The Castaways by Elin Hilderbrand

    In Nantucket, six couples are very close friends. They name their close little clique The Castaways. The vacation together, their children have been raised together. They share everything...and sometimes a little too much.

    The story opens with the friends discovering that Greg and Tess have mysteriously drowned. They leave behind two small children and a lot of unanswered questions. They were out on a sailboat celebrating their anniversary when disaster hit. Greg and Tess had experienced marital problems in the past few months. Greg was accused of having a relationship with one of his high school students. He was aching for something more in his life. Tess had a secret of her own, a relationship with one of the other Castaways. So the other Castaways are left wondering what happened. Did Greg kill Tess, or was it truly an accident. Was killing Tess his way to get out of the life that was holding him back like an anchor?

    The deaths of Greg and Tess isn't the only mystery surrounding the Castaways. Each of the couples in the group seem to be experiencing some type of infidelity (both physical and emotional) or drama.

    The Castaways is a stunning tale of passion, suspense and intrigue. Just how far can friendship be tested before it is destroyed?

    I was immediately pulled in to the many mysteries this book held. Looking at the book, and reading the title, I automatically and mistakenly assumed this would be a light, easy beach read. It's much much more than that. The characters are very developed, the reader learns intricate details of their life and relationships. The many characters at first was a bit difficult, at times it was difficult to keep them all straight. But once I got into the story each character had their own discernable characteristics. The story is told by each of the Castaways, so the reader gets to see all sides of the story. I have to say, it was difficult for me to like any of the Castaways. They each had their own faults and were downright annoying at times. The one redeeming character was the Chief. He seemed to be the only one with a level head. I felt sorry for him for being the one that had to deal with the brunt of the drama because he was the one everyone could count on.

    Nevertheless, I highly recommend this book for anyone looking for a "meaty" beach read. It will take a bit of concentration to get into the story and the characters at first, but it will be well worth it!

    This blog tour will run all this week. Check out the other blogs participating in this tour:

    July6
    http://bookingmama.blogspot.com/
    http://www.writeforareader.blogspot.com
    http://cafeofdreams.blogspot.com/
    http://thetometraveller.blogspot.com/

    July 7
    http://www.sheistoofondofbooks.com/
    http://peekingbetweenthepages.blogspot.com
    http://bfishreads.blogspot.com/
    http://hiddenplace.wordpress.com/
    http://www.bellasnovella.com/
    http://www.acircleofbooks.blogspot.com/
    http://booksandneedlepoint.blogspot.com/
    http://bridget3420.blogspot.com/
    http://abookishmom.blogspot.com/
    http://bermudaonion.wordpress.com/

    July 8
    http://dreyslibrary.blogspot.com/
    http://cindyloveofbooks.blogspot.com/
    http://books-movies-chinesefood.blogspot.com/

    July 9
    http://thisbookforfree.com/
    http://redladysreadingroom-redlady.blogspot.com/
    http://www.linussblanket.com/
    http://abookbloggersdiary.blogspot.com/
    http://brainlair.blogspot.com/
    http://www.myfriendamysblog.com/

    July 10
    http://www.myspace.com/darbyscloset
    http://kayespenguinposts.blogspot.com/
    http://imbookingit.wordpress.com/
    http://booksoulmates.blogspot.com/
    http://www.morbid-romantic.net/
    http://nisefunpages.blogspot.com/
    http://tvandbookaddict.blogspot.com/
    http://allisonsatticblog.blogspot.com/
    http://wrightysreads.blogspot.com/
    http://frugalplus.com/
    http://www.mgpblog.com/

    Now for the giveway: Hachette books sent me a nice finished copy of the book, so I have my gently read review copy to give away!

    • To be entered, please answer the following question: What is your favorite beach read?
    • To get extra entries, blog or tweet about it. Please include a link to your post or tweet for the entry to count.
    • An email address must be included in every comment or that comment will be disqualified.
    • Contest ends Friday, July 17th. Winner will be announced Saturday the 18th.
    • Contest open to residents of US and Canada only.

    Thank you, and good luck!

  • A variety of towels in our life

    A variety of towels in our life
    Round us it is a lot of prophetic. Of them we so have strongly got used to many, that often we do not give them any value though it's not always justified. First of all it concerns towels which the person use constantly throughout all life.

    Towels are necessary in each house

    Bella CosaIn any house there are some various towels with which tenants and visitors wipe hands, the body, ware...

    The towel is the textile product of the rectangular or square form created specially for a wipe of any subjects, including bodies of the person. Towels have appeared many years back. About them there are mentions in the Bible and national legends of any people.

    Towels on appearance are very similar to wafers (therefore them and name wafer). They well absorb a moisture (three times better, than terry towels), perfectly mass, promote microblood circulation and a lymph. They can be used both for a wipe of ware and hands, and in a bathroom. In Hotel Bedding Collection Set — are often included wafer and terry towels.

    For massage special massage towels from the flax which unique structure helps a body to relax are created. With their help also it is possible to pound a body well.

    SobellaWell, and on a beach we, certainly, take a beach towel on which it is possible to sunbathe on the sun and to be wiped after swimming. Allocate also special towels for hands. These are towels of the small size which hang up in a bathroom or in a toilet about a bowl for a wipe of hands.

    Towels from velour weave from five threads. Four threads form the top and bottom basis of a fabric (them in pairs bind with each other), and the fifth — pile (it is a velvety thread more often). After end of weaving a fabric cut to separate the top basis from the bottom. Other name of these towels — Luxury Hotel Towels.

    Besides, towels differ on a material of which they are made. Certainly, most widespread of them is the cotton fabric from which weave towels many centuries successively. The cotton fibre well absorbs a moisture, does not collapse during the big number of washings and is steady against a friction which is inevitable at towel use. On Queen Bed Blanket always at a headboard put a cotton towel.

    SovillaTowels also make from silk, a bamboo and a paper. Silk towels beautiful, gentle and improbably magnificent, but badly absorb a moisture and instantly stick to a body. Bamboo towels very soft and gentle.

    From a bamboo weave beach towels since the bamboo fibre possesses cooling effect more often. From a paper make disposable towels for a kitchen room which perfectly absorb a moisture and effectively clear ware of a dirt and the food rests.

    The terry towel is the most favourite towel, gentle and soft in which it is pleasant to be turned after a shower or a bathroom. Weave such towels from the terry fabric which pile turns out for the account of free giving of loops of leaky tense basis. Terry towels perfectly well absorb a moisture, quickly dry and long do not wear out.

    Certainly, always it is possible to manage one towel for all occasions, always it is possible to buy not so expensive towel of so low quality, but, you see, when it is a question of such important subject as a towel, it is wrong and very unreasonable!

    Luxury Hotel Towels Here!

    VIA «A variety of towels in our life»

  • Interview with Sarah Porter

    Joining us now we have Bonnie from A Backwards Story interviewing Sarah Porter, author of the 2011 debut Lost Voices.
    Check it out!


    Sara Porter’s debut novel, Lost Voices, is the first in a trilogy... about MERMAIDS. While not directly re-telling any single tale, Porter weaves together mermaid lore from several places while creating her own world. The most creative twist is the fact that mermaids were once human girls, reincarnated after “dying” and have siren-like tendencies. For a teaser of Lost Voices and to learn more about the novel, please visit A Backwards Story. A full review is scheduled to post on ABS June 21th to celebrate the first day of summer. Lost Voices comes out two weeks later on July 4, 2011, so please add it to Goodreads and your TBR now!

    1) What were your favorite fairy tales growing up? What drew you to them?
    I grew up with this old book of Russian fairy tales that someone gave my mom’s dad when he was a kid back in 1911, and I adored them. They were long and dark and complicated and painful, and I think they’re very true to life. A lot of them follow a storyline where the protagonist betrays his or her magical beloved and has to go through a long journey and a series of ordeals to win that lost love back. In fact many of us do have to undertake a long (emotional) journey before we’re ready to truly love.
    Those stories are embedded in my mind. I still see life through the lens they revealed to me.

    2) What made you decide to write Lost Voices? What brought everything together for you?
    It’s hard for me to say where it all came from. One source was a talk I had with a friend on the beach, where we improvised a story about a punk mermaid who lived apart from the others. And I wrote an earlier story in graduate school that used some of the same ideas as Lost Voices. In it, mermaids were orphaned girls who could swim through the earth and steal other girl-children away. When I actually started writing Lost Voices, I was unemployed and stuck on another book, and the story just kind of picked me up and carried me. I wrote a draft in four months.

    3) Was it hard coming up with your own lore when you began world-building? How did you bring everything together? The mermaids felt so real!
    Thank you. They feel real to me, too. The mermaid lore actually develops a lot more in the second volume of the trilogy, Waking Storms, when my heroine Luce begins to learn about the history of the mermaids and why they’re so driven to kill.
    But I wouldn’t say it’s hard to come up with the lore or the world. The hardest part of becoming a writer is getting yourself to the place where the stories come to you by themselves. Once you’re finally there, it’s all a lot easier. I knew from the beginning that the mermaids were the lost girls who’d flowed away to sea.

    4) Can you tell us more about your overall goals for the trilogy?
    That’s hard to do without giving too much away! But Luce has a long way to go, and things will get much worse for her before they can start to get better. The trilogy is really about a choice we all face: we can stay stuck in our pain and keep repeating the same reactions to that pain, the way the mermaids keep sinking ships. Or we can look for creative ways to break the cycle and move on. It’s an incredibly difficult thing to do, but ultimately that’s what Luce has to accomplish.

    5) What other ideas are you working on right now?
    I only work on one idea at a time, because I can only live in one imaginary world at a time! But I do have a novel for adults sitting around half-finished; it’s sort of a horror novel about sentient objects, called Boudoir, and as soon as I complete The Lost Voices Trilogy, I want to get back to it. And I’m playing with the idea of a young adult novel based on some of those old Russian fairy tales, too.

    6) What are some of your favorite fairy tale inspired novels and/or authors?
    Well, it’s not YA at all, but I really love Ingeborg Bachmann’s Malina. It starts out seeming realistic and then gets creepier and more fairy-talish as it goes along. The heroine’s boyfriend gives her a hairy black dress that eats into her skin, and that she can’t take it off. And Susanna Clarke’s Jonathan Strange & Mr Norrell was fantastic and really captured the odd logic of the fairy world. That’s a book I think a lot of YA fans would adore! Most of my favorite books have kind of a fairy tale quality about them even if they’re not directly inspired.

    7) If you could live out any fairy tale, what would it be and why?
    Hmm. Maybe I’d like to be the Frog Princess. She’s such a badass.
    In fact I think we all live out fairy tales all the time, whether we want to or not. Not necessarily the happily-ever-after parts, but the struggling-to-make-our-way-through-forces-that-are-bigger-than-we-are parts.

    8) What's your favorite Disney rendition of a fairy tale? What makes it so special?
    Dumbodoesn’t count, does it? Then I think I’ll go with “The Sorcerer’s Apprentice” section of Fantasia. It conveys so much of the feeling of being overwhelmed by magic, caught up in a dream.

    9) Rapunzel is named after lettuce; what odd thing would you be named after if you were in a fairy tale?
    Sparrow. I totally identify with little hoppy, dust-colored birds.



    Thanks so much for stopping by and chatting with us for Fairy Tale Fortnight, Sarah!:)

  • Meet the Author! Sarah Dunn, author of SECRETS TO HAPPINESS

    Meet the Author! Sarah Dunn, author of SECRETS TO HAPPINESS

    Sarah Dunn was born in Phoenix, Arizona. She went to the University of Pennsylvania, where she majored in English and graduated magna cum laude. After college, she wrote a humor column for the Philadelphia City Paper while waiting tables (poorly) at TGI Fridays. When she was 24, she published The Official Slacker Handbook, and was subsequently lured out to Hollywood to write for Murphy Brown, Spin City and Veronica’s Closet. She left TV to work on her first novel, The Big Love, which came out in 2004 and has been translated into 23 languages. She is currently writing a television pilot for NBC called George & Hilly, and her long-awaited second novel, Secrets to Happiness, comes out this spring. She is married to Peter Stevenson, the executive editor of The New York Observer, and they have a chunky delicious new baby boy named Harry.


    Sarah Dunn’s Books for Bed Rest and Rainy Afternoons

    After I finished Secrets to Happiness, I was placed on strict bed rest for four months because of a high-risk pregnancy, and I read a lot. I mean, a lot. About two weeks before I had my baby, I remember waking up one morning and thinking: I’m done. I was done reading. I had finally done it, something I’d never in my life managed to do – read until I didn’t want to read any more. And I figured if having a baby meant I wouldn’t be able to finish another book for the next two years, well, that would be just fine with me.

    I was always emailing friends and asking for book suggestions, and following different leads got me into territory I might not go to otherwise (The Ruins, for one, I would never have picked up on my own, but once I did, I couldn’t put it down). Books for bed rest are sort of like airplane books, in that you need to be able to stick with them for hours and hours on end, and it helps if you wake up in the morning thinking, “I’m stuck here on the couch again, I’ve got heartburn and I’m having contractions and The View is a repeat, but at least I get to spend my day deep inside that book!”

    • Girl with a Dragon Tattoo, by Stieg Larsson. A page-turning, atmospheric mystery set in Sweden.
    • Suite Française, by Irene Nemirovsky. I didn’t start this one until the fourth friend recommended it. Beautifully written and moving.
    • The Ruins, by Scott Smith. Gripping is the word I’m looking for. It’s possible I loved this because I read it when there was something growing inside of me, but give it a try!
    • The Forsyte Saga, by John Galsworthy. You can read this, or you can Netflix the BBC series and watch it. I did both.
    • A Time of Gifts: On Foot to Constantinople, by Patrick Leigh Fermor. Go back in time, across Europe, on foot.
    • The Beach, by Alex Garland. Creepy and good.
    • What Was She Thinking? Notes on a Scandal, by Zoe Heller. A voice you can get lost inside.
    • The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society, by Mary Ann Shaffer and Annie Barrows. A completely charming, cozy treat.
    • Devices and Desires, by P.D. James. Even if you don’t like mysteries, you’ll probably like this book.
    • The Other Boleyn Girl, by Philippa Gregory. I don’t read historical fiction, I don’t care much about queens and kings, but I couldn’t stop reading this one.
    • The Ripley Novels, by Patricia Highsmith. Start with The Talented Mr. Ripley and if you enjoy it, you’ve got four more.
    • The Smoking Diaries, by Simon Gray. An English playwright’s journals. Funny and smart and full of personality.

    Check back later today for my review of Sarah Dunn's Secrets to Happiness.

  • Chanelle Hayes and Jack Tweed make their rekindled romance official with romantic beachside display

    Chanelle Hayes and Jack Tweed make their rekindled romance official with romantic beachside display
    By SARAH BULL
    ©Back together... officially: Chanelle Hayes and Jack Tweed make their romance public with a romantic beachside clinch in Southend, Essex
    They set tongues wagging when they stepped out together earlier this month.
    And now Chanelle Hayes and Jack Tweed have made their rekindled romance official, by a display of affection on the beach.
    The pair shared a romantic kiss during an outing in Southend, Essex, with Hayes's son Blakely.
    ©
    Family day: The pair made the most of the sunshine as they played with Hayes's son Blakely. Hayes has said she wants to book a holiday for the three of them
    Hayes and Tweed looked like a regular young family as they treated themselves to an ice-cream and had fun on the arcade games.
    Earlier in the day, Hayes had tweeted fans: 'Family day out :-) xxxxx.'
    Hayes looked summery in a yellow T-shirt and skinny Topshop jeans, while 10-month-old Blakely looked smart in a shirt and chinos.
    The couple are thought to have started dating again in March after previously splitting in November.
    ©Treats all round: Hayes, Tweed and even Blakely cool down with an ice-cream
    She said: 'Jack’s still trying to get back with me at the moment, actually. But seeing as he’s trying to get into every other girl’s knickers at the moment, too, I’m not really that bothered.
    'We’ve been on then off again too many times to mention - more than 100, anyway.'
    Hayes caused controversy yesterday when she revealed that she wanted to have a gastric band fitted to drop from a size eight to a size six.
    ©Happy together: Hayes and Tweed share a laugh as they mess around with the arcade games in Southend
    ©In the driving seat: Hayes treats her son Blakely to a ride on an automatic fire engine
    Speaking to Closer magazine, she said: ‘I’m nine stone now and a size eight, but I want to lose another stone at least and drop down to a size six.’
    ‘I’d have a gastric band if doctors would let me. I’ve already asked – I begged!’
    It appears that the serious nature of the operation, nor the fact that at nine stone she is clearly not a suitable candidate for the dangerous procedure, is lost on Hayes.
    She added: ‘There’s something called a hypno-band where they hypnotise you into thinking you’ve got a band, and I’d like to have a go at that.’
    ©Sweet! Chanelle and Hayes are thought to have started dating again in March
    ©You're a natural: Tweed looked every inch the doting father as he pushed Blakely along in his buggy
    source:dailymail

    VIA Chanelle Hayes and Jack Tweed make their rekindled romance official with romantic beachside display

  • CHASING HARRY WINSTON by Lauren Weisberger

    CHASING HARRY WINSTON by Lauren Weisberger

    Emmy, Leigh, and Adriana have been friends for over a decade. Emmy was recently dumped by “the guy”, the man she thought she would marry and have children with. Leigh is a young publicist. She has the perfect job, the perfect apartment, the perfect man. Then she signs on as editor for Jesse Chapman a brilliant, yet impossible, writer. She begins to realize that the life isn’t that perfect. And finally, Adriana is the stunning daughter of a renowned supermodel. She has no qualms with flaunting and using her Brazilian charm to get any man she wants. Emmy and Adriana make a pact to put an end to their dismal lives. Emmy decides that she should expand her “knowledge” of men by traveling around the world and bedding a man from each country. Adriana resolves to pick one of many potential suitors and settle down. A year later the girls must decide just how much in their lives has changed. While I can admit that this was an engaging beach read, it reminded me a bit too much of Sex in the City. I kept envisioning Emmy, Leigh, and Adriana as Charlotte, Carrie and Miranda. The similarities between the two sets of characters are uncanny.

  • Review & Blog Tour: Summer House by Nancy Thayer

    Review & Blog Tour: Summer House by Nancy Thayer

    The Wheelwright's are an affluent Boston family. They meet up every summer at the family's Nantucket summer home, also the permanent residence of the family matriarch, Nona, and Charlotte, Nona's 30 year old granddaughter.

    This summer the family really has something to celebrate: Nona's 90th birthday! Soon the quiet Nantucket house will be overflowing with family members, and with them comes extra family drama.

    Summer House

    is told from the viewpoint of three generations of Wheelwright women: Nona Wheelwright, Helen Wheelwright, and Charlotte Wheelwright.

    Nona Wheelwright is the oldest surviving member of the Wheelwright family. Her husband, Herb, passed away several years ago. Her days are spent reliving her youth. Through flashbacks, the reader catches a glimpse of her introduction to the Wheelwright family. Although her midwestern family was wealthy as well, Nona (known as Anne in her youth) had to work hard to be accepted into the family. Secrets she's kept for decades may change the family forever...for the good and and the bad.

    Helen Wheelwright is married to Nona's oldest son, Worth. She's recently discovered he was having an affair, and spends the summer weeding through her thoughts as to what her future will hold.

    Charlotte Wheelwright has finally found her passion: running an organic gardening business on her Grandma Nona's land. She's the free-spirit of the family. After attempting to join the family banking business without success, the Wheelwights agreed to allow Charlotte to take upon this endeavor. It also helped that she'd be caring for Grandma Nona, a task Nona's children hadn't been able to take upon themselves.

    Three years later she's still at it and with a profit! When the older generation of Wheelwrights learn that Charlotte's "pet project" as bloomed into a profitable endeavor they want to put an end to it immediately. Although Charlotte pays her grandmother rent for the land she uses, her family thinks she is taking advantage of Nona's generosity.

    Summer House

    contains everything you would want a summer book to have: love, deceit, drama, mystery. I loved that the story is relayed through the eyes of three different generations of family members. Each gives a different perspective on a situation. The Wheelwright family is a large one, and at first I got a little confused with all the differerent names. After long, it wasn't too difficult to distinguish between them as each has their own very distinctive personality.

    This book was the perfect quick summer read for me; I read it in one afternoon alone. I appreciated Thayer's descriptive writing and in-depth characterization. You fall in love with each of the family members, despite their many flaws. I held great reverance for Nona--she was an incredibly selfless, inspiring woman.

    So, be sure to pick up a copy of Summer House

    before you head out on your summer beach (or backyard!) getaway. You won't regret it.

    Thank you to Pump Up Your Book Promotion for allowing me to join in on this tour. Thank you to the publisher for providing my review copy.

    Click here to read an excerpt of Summer House

    by Nancy Thayer.

  • Interview with Carolyn Turgeon + giveaway! — CLOSED

    Bonnie from A Backwards Story is with us again today, bringing us another fantastic interview — this time with Carolyn Turgeon!



    AFTER THE INTERVIEW, STICK AROUND FOR AN AWESOME GIVEAWAY CONTEST COURTESY OF THE AMAZING CAROLYN TURGEON!

    Carolyn Turgeon is the author of three novels, Rain Village, Godmother, and Mermaid. Her next novel, The Next Full Moon, is scheduled to come out in August/September 2011. Based on Te Swan Maiden, this will be Turgeon’s debut novel for young readers. Her novels tend to be twisted versions of fairy tales you’ve never seen before, such as The Little Mermaid from the princess’ perspective in addition to the mermaid’s or a version of Cinderella where the godmother is banished from the fairy realm when something goes horribly wrong... For a review of Turgeon’s work, please visit the above links. Reviews of her other titles will come to A Backwards Story later this year. Godmother and Mermaid are also featured in a FTF guest post titled FRACTURED FAIRY TALES.

    1) What were your favorite fairy tales growing up? What drew you to them?
    I can recall loving all kinds of stories, such as Thumbelina and The Princess and the Pea, with all their strange and wonderful images—the tiny girl floating along in an acorn, the princess with her stack of mattresses. I think my favorite fairy tales were by Oscar Wilde: The Happy Prince, The Nightingale and the Rose… but my favorite was The Selfish Giant. It’s very sad and strange and beautiful—the ghostly little boy, the lush garden, the endless snow and frost, the giant who gets struck down, covered in white blossoms… I’ve always tended to like stories that are very sad.

    2) What made you decide to write alternative versions of fairytales from unique perspectives?
    I didn’t really start out intending to write alternative versions of fairy tales. When I started Godmother: The Secret Cinderella Story, I just wanted to tell the Cinderella story straight, with lots of wonderful, lush detail and full, fleshed-out characters and all kinds of weirdness and darkness, etc. That’s what I love about fairytales, by the way—that strange combination of beauty and darkness you find in all of them. After my first book, Rain Village, which took forever to write, I wanted to do something that I thought would be a lot of fun, something that I would really love writing. I only decided to tell the story through the perspective of the fairy godmother when I realized how limited Cinderella’s perspective was—back then I only ever wrote in first person—so I figured that if the fairy godmother was narrating she could be pretty omniscient, tell you what was going on with Cinderella and the other characters. Plus, she could tell you her own story, too, which I thought might be interesting. Later, I decided to set the book in contemporary New York City and only have the godmother remembering everything that had happened in the other world. The book is set half in New York and half in the fairy tale world (in flashbacks). I only decided to do that after joining a writing workshop and seeing that the people in the workshop didn’t seem to be responding to the straight-out fairy tale I was writing. I wanted to win them over and I thought maybe I could lure them in with a present-day story set in the city, win them over that way, and then plunge them into the fairy tale.
    So the book only slowly evolved into this alternative version. Once I put the fairy tale in via flashbacks, I knew something had to have gone terribly wrong. Why else would the fairy godmother be an old woman in New York?
    After writing the book, though, I felt there was something really powerful in taking a story as well known as Cinderella, a story that’s in our blood and bones, and telling the “real” story from a perspective you never think or care about.

    3) Can you tell us more about your upcoming book, The Next Full Moon?
    The Next Full Moon is my first children’s book, a middle-grade novel about a 12-year-old girl who’s being raised alone by her father in Pennsylvania and who starts growing feathers, which is totally mortifying and confusing for her of course. She then comes to discover that her mother, whom she thought died when she was an infant, was (and is) a swan maiden. The story’s based on the old tales in which a man steals a swan maiden’s feathered robe when she’s in her human form, takes her home, marries her and has children with her. One day she discovers the robe and flies away—there are various reasons for this, depending on the version you read. I wondered: what happens when those kids she leaves behind hit puberty? In my book, the man and woman had only one child, and now here’s the kid ten years later with feathers appearing on her arms and back, having no idea that her mother is still alive and, of course, no idea that she’s a swan maiden.
    I like the idea of a 12-year-old girl, full of shame and embarrassment, slowly discovering that she’s magical and amazing.

    4) What other ideas are you working on right now?
    Well, I’m working on a few things right now. Because of Mermaid, I started this blog, I Am a Mermaid, where I talk to all kinds of people about mermaids. I’ve realized that there’s this whole mermaid culture out there that’s really fascinating and lovely. So I’m writing my first non-fiction (but still quite fantastical!) book. And I’m working on a new novel that has to do with Weeki Wachee and a YA novel about a drowning pool, and I have this half-done thriller that I hope to finish this year…

    5) Was it hard coming up with your own lore when you began world-building? How did you bring everything together?
    It was challenging for me to write about magical worlds, I think, in that I was afraid of making them too Disney-ish or corny. So with Godmother, at first I was very vague when talking about the fairy world; in fact in the first draft, the flashbacks start with the godmother meeting Cinderella and we don’t really see her in her own world at all. It was only after the book sold that my editors pushed me to make the fairy world more defined and vivid, to explain the rules of that world and the landscape of it and so on. So I added in the first couple of flashback chapters that are in the book now, and they were probably the hardest chapters for me to write, even though they’re probably the lightest ones in the whole book.
    With Mermaid, I mainly had to explain the rules we see in the original Hans Christian Andersen story… like why the mermaids can only visit the human world once, on their birthdays, and so on. It was more like putting together a puzzle than anything else, trying to create the worlds in that book and make them adhere to specific points from the original story.

    6) Which of the books you've written is your favorite so far? What makes it the most special to you?
    Hmmm. I think that would always tend to be the latest one. Right now I’m very excited about The Next Full Moon and writing for this younger age group. I found it surprisingly easy to write as a twelve-year-old, which is possibly a little worrisome, and was able to draw on my own memories and experiences more than I have for any other book. Like the characters all go to the lake in their town, where there’s an old carousel and people sell lemonade and they can all go swimming or lie out on the beach. And I was just directly describing the lake my friends and I used to go to in East Lansing, Michigan, where I lived from when I was twelve to fourteen, and I hadn’t thought about that lake in years. We moved around a lot when I was growing up, and so I’m really distanced from some of those memories and places. It was kind of nostalgic and wonderful, writing that book and slipping into those memories and this old self. Also, I have to say, I think the trauma and awkwardness of being twelve mixes really well with the fairy tale elements in the book, and I like the idea that something magical is happening to you as you hit puberty and you just have to figure that out.

    7) What are some of your favorite fairy tale inspired novels and/or authors?
    I love Angela Carter and her weird, gorgeous visions. I love Alice Hoffman, Francesca Lia Block, Joanne Harris, Isabel Allende, Jeanette Winterson, Gabriel Garcia Marquez, Italo Calvino... They’re not all fairy tale writers and I don’t know to what extent they’ve all been inspired by fairy tales, but they all write in that vein I think, lush and magical. I really enjoyed Erzebet Yellowboy’s Sleeping Helena. And I also, by the way, really loved the way the Pied Piper story is used in the movie The Sweet Hereafter. It’s pretty brilliant.

    8) If you could live out any fairy tale, what would it be and why?
    Oh, I think maybe Thumbelina. I mean, who wouldn’t want to ride around in an acorn? For the most part, I think fairy tales are not the stories I would like to live out. Though I wouldn’t mind being the little mermaid for a day, before she goes and sees the sea witch and ruins her life…

    9) What's your favorite Disney rendition of a fairy tale? What makes it so special?
    I’m going to have to defer to my childhood self, who loved all those movies quite passionately. As an adult, I could barely even get through The Little Mermaid, which I was totally swept away by as a teenager. Probably my favorite, though, is Snow White. The old versions of that tale are really very shockingly weird and violent, and even the Disney version is incredibly creepy, with our semi-dead heroine lying gorgeously in a glass coffin in the forest and our hot prince having a thing for dead chicks.

    FUN AND CRAZY ROUND!

    ~Best fairy tale villain and why?
    Oh, the stepmother from Snow White. She’s a gorgeous witch with a magic mirror who has her stepdaughter murdered in the forest and then eats her heart (or lungs or what have you). Even though she’s betrayed by her huntsman and actually eats a stag’s heart, she believes she’s eating Snow White’s. It’s hard to think of a more perverse female villain! And I love the image of her skulking through the forest with her cloak and her basket full of poisoned apples.

    ~Rapunzel is named after lettuce; what odd thing would you be named after if you were in a fairy tale?
    Oh, I love Rapunzel and the lettuce that is so delicious and addictive that Rapunzel’s mother craves it above all else and even makes her husband climb into a witch’s garden to get more for her. I mean, who pines for lettuce? Now I totally want some lettuce, now that I’m thinking about it...
    I’d like to be something equally un-chocolate-y, if you know what I mean, some other pedestrian, unsexy vegetable with hidden powers of seduction. Like a rutabaga or a turnip. Turnip is kind of a cute word, not too far off from the delightful “tulip.” I’d like some fairytale character to be sitting in a room wasting away from a mad desire for turnips.

    ~ Using that name, give us a line from your life as a fairy tale:
    She stared out the window at the impossibly lush turnips growing outside just beyond reach, their leaves shooting into the air like hands, their bodies dense and purple, as round as breasts. Her mouth watered as she watched the turnip leaves undulating in the breeze. As if they were bellydancing, she thought.

    Meanwhile, Turnip was enjoying a large slice of chocolate cake at Jean Georges.

    ~Would you rather:

    - — eat magic beans or golden eggs? Golden eggs. Don’t those sound delectable? A magic bean is just wrong.

    - — style 50ft long hair or polish 100 pairs of glass slippers? I think polishing the glass slippers would be much more manageable. And I love things made out of glass, especially slippers and dresses. Are you aware of Karen LaMonte’s glass dresses? Look:

    - — have a fairy godmother or a Prince Charming? Oh, a fairy godmother. Who wouldn’t want an endless supply of dresses and carriages? And let’s face it: Prince Charming isn’t all he’s cracked up to be.
    Come to think of it, though… if we’re talking about the fairy godmother from my own book, then I’d really have to go for the hot prince, or even one of the coachman or mice. Anyone but the godmother, please!

    -----------------------------------------
    Okay, okay, here’s the part you’re all waiting for: The giveaway! Carolyn has generously agreed to give away three—yes, THREE—autographed copies of Mermaid as well as some fun mermaid tattoos! You know you want to win this contest and read this fantastic book.

    To enter,. In addition, please leave a comment answering this question: What would you do if you could be a mermaid for a day? Also, what would you be willing to sacrifice in order to become a mermaid?

    Entries must be received by MAY 5th. May 8th This giveaway is INTERNATIONAL!
    Good luck and I can’t wait to see your responses!

    PS from Misty: I love this picture! ----->

  • 'It's sexy isn't it?': Uma Thurman is in fine feather as she sweeps down the red carpet at Cannes in Versace gown

    'It's sexy isn't it?': Uma Thurman is in fine feather as she sweeps down the red carpet at Cannes in Versace gown
    By BAZ BAMIGBOYE in Cannes
    ©Full length and fabulous: Uma Thurman looked angelic in a floor-length white Versace gown as she took to the red carpet at the Cannes Film Festival tonight
    Uma Thurman rocked to the beat as she sashayed along the red carpet for the opening of the Cannes Film Festival tonight.
    The actress looked stunning in a white silk Versace gown that up close appeared to be see-through.
    'It's sexy isn't it', Uma responded when the MailOnline complimented her on the low cut, strapless gown.
    ©Flawless: The actress, who is serving as a jury member this year, was attending the screening of Midnight in Paris by director Woody Allen on the festival's opening ceremony
    With that she did a twirl and much leg and thigh was revealed.
    'I had to have it made because you know how it is for us tall girls. It's impossible to find anything in a store,' she said with a giggle.
    The sheer whiteness of the dress was off-set by a pair of dangling emerald earrings from Chopard.
    ©Flashbulb frenzy: Uma told MailOnline that she she felt sexy in the dress and was hoping to get a chance to dance in it later
    ©
    Dressed to impress: The actress joins jury members (left to right) Martina Gusman, Robert De Niro, Olivier Assayas, Mahamat-Saleh Haroun, Jude Law, Linn Ullmann and Nansun Shi
    ©White theme: Uma started the day in Dolce & Gabbana, right, before switching into Versace for the evening
    The hem of the dress was decorated with fine white feathers.
    Asked about the provenance of the plumage, Uma joked,' I don't know. Maybe somebody lost their feathers', before proffering, 'maybe chicken'
    She added: 'I feel so good wearing the dress, I hope I get a chance to dance.
    ©Glamorous: Rachel McAdams, who stars in Midnight in Paris, wore a flesh-coloured gown with red embroidery, pictured right, Indian actress Aishwarya Rai
    'It's a dress that moves well when you dance. I was doing a quiet little dance all by myself on the carpet just now,' she explained.
    Uma was in Cannes as a member of the festival's main jury.
    She arrived with the panel's chairman, Robert De Niro and other jurors who included Jude Law and Linn Ullmann, daughter of Liv Ullmann.
    ©Stunning: Salma Hayek slipped into an off-white pleated dress as she lit up the red carpet this evening
    ©Distinguished: Jury Members Nansun Shi (left), Law and Linn Ullmann chat at the opening ceremony
    The stars were attending the festival's gala ceremony and opening film, Woody Allen's Midnight In Paris starring Owen Wilson, Rachel McAdams, Michael Sheen and Carl Bruni, although Bruni did not attend.
    Others at the red carpet event included Salma Hayek ,wearing a shimmering Gucci gown and Antonio Banderas with wife Melanie Griffith.
    Bandares was in Cannes to launch the animated film Puss 'n' Boots.
    ©
    Posing for the cameras: Melanie Griffith and husband Antonio Banderas and, right, actress Lea Seydoux and Midnight In Paris director Woody Allen
    Happy couple Rachel McAdams and Michael Sheen kept their romance off the red carpet but shared a romantic moment once they were way from the cameras.
    The actors, who star invAllen's Midnight In Paris, which is a sublime love letter to the city, stole a kiss as they walked into the opening night party overlooking the Cannes beach.
    They met last year while filming Allen's film in Paris.
    Rachel looked divine in an embroidered red silk organza dress with a tulle ruffle skirt with a long train.
    Aishwarya Rai Bachchan at the opening ceremony of the Cannes Film Festival - 2011

    Aishwarya Rai Bachchan - Cannes Day 1 - 2011

    Tapete vermelho de Cannes

    Cannes (11/05/11) : Envers du décors de la montée des marches de Wody Allen

    Hollywood Goes Cannes Crazy as Rachel, Jude, Angelina, and More Get the Festival Underway!

    Lady Gaga à Cannes quitte la plage du Martinez après les répétitions

    #114 - Cannes Tag 1 - Midnight in Paris

    source: dailymail

    VIA 'It's sexy isn't it?': Uma Thurman is in fine feather as she sweeps down the red carpet at Cannes in Versace gown

  • Round-up for Weekly Geeks 2009-21

    It won't be officially summer in the northern hemisphere for another nine days, but some Geekers are getting into the spirit early.

    Trish offers a summer reading list for kids, and activities to go along with the books, while Gautami has a list of fun activities for the adult who's a kid at heart.

    Care has been so excited about the boat she and her husband bought, and she plans on spending the summer there with her sweetie and the adorable Oscar (cute dog picture alert!).

    Gavin tells us about a well-loved book-themed inn on the Oregon Coast--if you ever plan a vacation to Oregon, the Sylvia Beach Hotel is definitely worth looking into.

    Lou tells the story of how she traveled from Denmark to the U.S. to meet members of her online bookclub, and Michelle also shares some favorite summer travel memories.

    Do pay a visit to these posts and the others, if you haven't had a chance to. It's a great way to get into the spirit of summer (or, er, winter, if you're in the bottom half of the globe).

  • Memory Monday — KATELYN!!!

    Today's Memory Monday guest is one of my favorite people to chat with! Katelyn is hilarious and fun and I always leave our conversations with a smile on my face. I'm so excited that she's my guest today, so let's show her lots of love!!

    BIO

    My name is Katelyn and I’m the crazy blogger behind Katelyn’s Blog (catchy title, huh?). When I’m not reading, my time is mostly taken up by my family (3 brother + 2 sisters + 3 dogs = LOTS of madness), college (hope to become a high school math/English teacher), and working (I’ve got to pay for my book/shoe/food addictions somehow).The only two things that keep sane during my crazy days are books and music. I love to read anything young adult but my heart beats a little stronger for contemporary fiction. I am a total fan-girl to Sarah Dessen, Melina Marchetta, Jennifer Echols, Simone Elkeles, We The Kings, Taylor Swift, and Augustana. You can always ask me for a book or music recommendations because I’m pretty awesome like that!

    MEMORY POST

    When Ashley first asked me if I wanted to do a Memory Monday post, I instantly said HECK YES! I love Ashley hard core so it was a no-brainer. However, when I got to thinking about what book-loving memory I would like to talk about, I drew a complete blank. My initial instinct was to make up a corny story of how my grandpa taught me to read (my grandpa teaching me to read is not made up but the books he used would have most likely been complete fibs because I can’t remember any of them! *insert sad Katelyn here*) but then my morals got the better of me and I decided to tell as much of a truthful memory as I could. I then proceeded to call up my best friend Kati. It was in the middle of dialing her number that I was struck with inspiration. Kati is my best friend. Kati loves to read much like myself. Kati and I have shared great memories with books. It was the biggest Ah-ha moment EVER!

    Kati and I have been best friends since the sixth grade. That is nearly NINE years! Over the years we have shared a crazy amount of laughs, a few tears, and more than enough AWESOME memories to last a lifetime, and yes, many of those memories do stem around our book-loving nerdiness.

    There have been many times where I’ve thrown books into Kati’s hands simply saying, “Read this now, you will love it,” and she has done the same for me. One book, or series in fact, is called The Secret Society Girl and it is written by an author I simply adore, Diana Peterfreund. Kati told me I would read the whole series within a few days, laugh my butt off, want to it be a movie, and then move to Hollywood because I’ll want to put my superb (HAHA!) acting skills to the test so I could play the main character, Amy. Well let me tell you, Kati couldn’t have been more right! This series is downright hilarious and I will recommend it time and time again to any person off the street.

    In this series, we follow a young woman named Amy as she struggles through her last two years at a major university, Eli College. During the end of her senior year, Amy is “tapped” into a secret society that up until that point was an all male society. Throughout the course of the four book series, we see Amy as she tries to make it through her classes, her roles in the society, and her fair share of relationship issues. Amy’s outlook on life, her sense of humor, and the way she speaks her mind will have you rolling on the floor laughing. However, for Kati and I, this book has become so much more than just an enjoyable read, it has become a tradition for us!

    Every year the two of us girls go on at least one trip together. A few years ago my family, along with Kati and I, went to Tennessee to stay in a log cabin. The year after that, Kati and I flew out to California to visit her aunt. Just this past spring, we took a trip to Myrtle Beach with Kati’s mom and her best friend. While all these trips were unique and special in their own way, there was one important constant between them and that is The Secret Society Girl series went wherever we went. Every time we would pack to leave for a trip we would make sure that Amy and all her society members were packed in the suitcase too. It always started off with Kati reading the first book while I read a different book I brought on the trip. After she was finished with the first book, she moved onto the second book while I started the first. By the end of our trip, we would both have the series read, and a whole slew of memories to remember years later.

    Now when I re-read The Secret Society Girl series, I am reminded of all the fun times Kati and I shared on our trips together. I can think about the creepy caves we went to in Tennessee and our fun times at Dollywood. I remember nearly drowning TWICE in California and all of the great food we ate (yummmm!). And I can now look back on our trip to Myrtle Beach and think of the ducks we fed, the seagulls that tried to eat me, and the crazy sunburns we got in the most uncomfortable places.

    During each trip, The Secret Society Girl series seemed almost like an afterthought but looking back now I can see that is not the case. By reading this book during each trip with Kati, I am able to easily recall all the awesome times we had together. Each time I read it I am reminded of something funny that happened, which with the two of us is quite frequent. I am reminded of just how lucky we are to be able to share so many amazing moments together. But most importantly I am also reminded of just how great my best friend is. (It is cheesy I know, but it is the truth!)

    I’d like to thank Ashley for having me today! Let it be known that if Ashley were to live in Michigan with us, she would have no doubt been an exceedingly perfect addition to mine and Kati’s pack!

    Katelyn, you are SO welcome! I loved this post and am once again reminded (that's what, 5 times now?) that I need to give this series a read! Thanks so much for sharing your crazy fun memories with us!:)

  • Cannes Film Festival 2011: Salma Hayek in a wacky Gucci dress

    Cannes Film Festival 2011: Salma Hayek in a wacky Gucci dress

    Cannes Film Festival, Salma Hayek made a flamboyant start to theCannes Film Festivalthis morning in an eye-catching dress.
    The Mexican actress was centre of attention in her wacky Gucci dress at a photocall to promote her new film Puss In Boots with co-star Antonio Banderas.

    The 44-year-old was wearing a strapless burnt orange leather dress and matching floral bolero from the label's Autumn/Winter 2011 collection.
    Hayek is a big fan of the Italian label, but her decision to wear the unusual ensemble is also helping the family business as her billionaire husband François-Henri Pinault is the CEO of PPR - the company who owns Gucci.

    Despite her tight-fitting dress and killer platform heels, Hayek managed to climb up on a pair of giant boots, which had been placed at the end of the pier on Carlton Beach.
    Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/tvshowbiz/article-1385906/Cannes-2011-Salma-Hayek-kicks-Film-Festival-wacky-Gucci-dress.html#ixzz1M3PFW02j


    SEE ALSO:Salma Hayek Sexy Gallery

    VIA Cannes Film Festival 2011: Salma Hayek in a wacky Gucci dress

  • Landing Stage by Angus Meek

    Landing Stage by Angus Meek

    Landing stage

    Bristol architect Angus Meek has won competition on restoration of landing stage Weston-super-Mare which have suffered in a fire in July of this year, having bypassed architects of five firms, including Grimshaw. Colourful and the shone 18 metre design which will cost not less than 10 million pounds sterling, has been chosen by owners of a mooring and 59% from 20,000 respondents voting for the project.

    Weston-super-Mare

    Exact data about voting are coded, but on hearings, company Grimshaw, the prize-winner of award Ferguson Mann has received less than 10% of voices, and the others of 31% were divided between AWW and Ray Hole Architects. The won project which consists of four similarity of a column and sidewalk round a building, is considered the most suitable to shape of the pier constructed in 1904.

    Landing stage interior

    Angus Meek — the director of company Roger Ellams — has told: “We scooped inspiration from quay elements — waves, beach huts, and also from radical architecture art-deco”. Kerry Michael, one of owners of a mooring, along with sister Michel, has declared, that “they aspired to find modern design which would be entered in historical surroundings of a pier”. This design with four pontoons — the best decision. Owners of a pier finance the project from the money resources private and received under the insurance. Building is planned to finish by 2010.

    Landing stage project

    VIA «Landing Stage by Angus Meek»

  • Guest Review: Cloaked by Alex Flinn

    Today's guest is Sierra of Yearning to Read ! Recognize her name? You should! She is none other than the author of this awesome review on A Kiss in Time that we recently saw on Misty's blog and she is also the very generous donor of both My Fair Godmother and the Jessica Day George prize pack ! So be sure you leave her some love!
    ~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~

    Johnny is a pretty normal guy. He lives in Florida and fixes shoes for a living. Or really, he fixes shoes not just as a living but to pay rent, phone bills, electricity bills, for food, etc. You know, all the every day things your father usually manages to pay for. Johnny's father would pay for theses things — but he disappeared when Johnny was a toddler. Ever since, Johnny's been the man of the house, working to feed and care for his sweet mother who in turn works hard to provide for him. Johnny would love to become a shoe designer, make millions of dollars, and give his mother the life of ease. But, how likely is that to happen? Unless you meet the princess of Aloria, who is filthy rich, thinks you're a good boy, and consequently wants you to find the Prince of Aloria who has been turned into a frog by an evil witch... in return for her hand in marriage and millions of dollars and a life of ease.
    Yeah... that can be a hard one to pass up.
    ___________________________________________
    My thoughts -
    Once again, Alex Flinn knocks us all out with a fantastical fairytale that makes you feel like you've never read a fairytale before in your life.
    Talk about original. I mean, this book was so original it was almost strange. It was neat, though! From the ear-piece that lets you talk to animals, to the cloak that transports you to wherever you want to go; from the princess who (apparently) wants to marry the boy from South Beach, to the witch who has a grudge and a slightly evil but really predictable plan. It was awesome, on all levels.
    For a while I thought the Cloak would be like the one from 12 Dancing Princesses, one that makes you invisible. But no, it was totally different. And the ear piece was a neat idea and added a "technological" magic twist to the story. There were a few other fairytales thrown in there that only added, built, and made the story more enjoyable. The animals that Johnny meets give him quests to test his loyalty and to make sure he's really going to save the prince, which made everything feel a bit more "old fashioned". This all played in to create an atmosphere that was highly original and definitely Alex Flinn. I was hooked from the first pages.
    Favorite character (character thoughts) -
    Meg is such a great character that I just have to say that she's my favorite. She was strong, honest, and just lovely. She was deserving and totally inspired me. She and Johnny's relationship was hilarious at times and sweet at others. Everything about her made the story all the more lovable.
    And while she's my favorite, I can't move on without pointing out my honorable mention, Johnny. He was quite a character as well. He compliments Meg perfectly. He's a klutz (hilarious!), a doubter, and he doesn't follow instructions well. I found that these things, on top of the fact that he's honest, reliable, and loving, made him a great character. I loved that he couldn't always see what was right in front of him. I love a good, teasing love story where you just want to yell at the guy — "SHE'S RIGHT IN FRONT OF YOU, STUPID!"
    Also, raise your glass to Alex Flinn herself for creating a character like Johnny who is, specifically, a completely different person than his competitors, Kyle from Beastly and Jack from A Kiss in Time. I found this extremely refreshing, as I'm sure you will.
    Pretty much the only downer in this book for me: I found that I didn't really, at all, like Victoriana, the Alorian princess. She was funny in parts, but I thought she was ubelievable. I couldn't picture her as clearly as the other characters, even her brother Philippe, and I couldn't hear the accent in the way that Alex Flinn typed it up. It just didn't click for me... but maybe that's just me.
    Favorite aspects/scenes -
    There are too many aspects of this story to choose from, so I will name as many as I can without spoiling anything for you. The love story was soooo amazing and much more passionate than that of A Kiss in Time. It was believable and well-developed and gave me strong, gutsy butterflies so many times I lost count. The tests Johnny has to go through to gain information are also a favorite part. The lessons Johnny learns... the twist that involves the animals... the amazing shoe quotes that easily become a lovable part of the story. And the perfect ending to a great story.
    Some favorite scenes: The sunset scenes with Johnny and Meg... And I was totally taken by the perfectly smooth scene in the beginning during which Johnny realizes that the Cloak and the ear-piece are really magic. It was amazingly well-told and Johnny's reaction to the magic was normal and hilarious and pretty much perfect. Bravo to Alex Flinn!
    One phrase to sum up this book (final thoughts) -
    Wonderfully original are the words that come to mind when I think of Cloaked. I could not help but fall in love with this book — and I hope you will, too! I recommend this book highly!
    For the parents: A few kisses, with little or no description. A handful of underhand jokes directed toward girls, and a couple of direct comments. None are explicit. A pretty darn clean book. Definitely can be read by a younger audience than Alex Flinn's previous fairytales. I'd say 14 years old is a good age to start.:)