Showing posts with label eAudio. Show all posts
Showing posts with label eAudio. Show all posts

Sunday, September 22, 2019

Thursday, September 12, 2019

What makes for a great library in 2019? This duo thinks they know


Image result for question mark

Some people review restaurants, some review movies. Two men have taken it upon themselves to review every library in Massachusetts.

Read more HERE

Wednesday, August 28, 2019

Audiobooks or Reading? To Our Brains, It Doesn’t Matter By Jennifer Walter


brain maps of reading and listening

If you don’t have time to sit and read a physical book, is listening to the audio version considered cheating? To some hardcore book nerds, it could be. But new evidence suggests that, to our brains, reading and hearing a story might not be so different.
Read More HERE

Monday, July 15, 2019

Anonymous Reviewer: Gwendy’s Button Box By Richard Chizmar and Stephen King

Reading, after the fact, that Stephen King had a hard time ending the book, thus brought in Richard Chizmar seems a little lazy on King’s part, at least to this AR. This story was pretty tight, and I can’t imagine the master needing the help. Maybe that’s why it hit, but not with the usual dull hammer claw King’s books typically swing with.

Monday, April 29, 2019

Anonymous Reviewer: The Girl From Summer Hill by Jude Deveraux


Dust off your brain with this #AnonymousReviewer 

The Girl From Summer Hill by Jude Deveraux

The very first line will grab the attention of any lady who reads it! There have been many retellings of "Pride and Prejudice" over the years, and most of them fall short because it's hard to keep a tale interesting when the reader knows the plot already. This one is successful! Jude gives the story a fresh, modern air while still keeping with the spirit of Jane Austen. As a bonus it's set in Virginia, which always makes a story appeal just a bit more to this AR. It's your usual romance plot, but it's not JUST another first class/lower class, famous actor/regular person love story. This AR thinks it qualifies more as a rom-com or even rom-adventure. Deveraux knows how to give her characters depth so that they're not just a batch of young women simply looking for marriage. They have lives of their own and the men are an addition to it rather than the center of it. At the end, I was helped to believe the story by something a child told me a few weeks ago: "Well EVERYBODY can be a good actor because it's just like pretending!"