August was a average month for me in terms of quantity, but in terms of 
quality, it was pretty good.  Everything I managed to read was very enjoyable 
and I would recommend.  Here's how the month stacked up in the order I read 
them:


Title: Reality Chick
Author: Lauren Barnholdt
Publisher: Simon Pulse
Publication Date: June, 2006
Genre: Teen Chick-Lit
Rating: 7/10

Description: All-hour study fests . . . all-night parties . . . 

Going away to college means total independence and freedom. Unless of course 
your freshman year is taped and televised for all the world to watch. On 
uncensored cable. 

Sweet and normal Ally Cavanaugh is one of five freshpeople shacking up on In 
the House, a reality show filmed on her college campus. (As if school isn't 
panic-inducing enough!) The cameras stalk her like paparazzi, but they also 
capture the fun that is new friends, old crushes, and learning to live on your 
own. Sure, the camera adds ten pounds, but with the freshman fifteen a given 
anyway, who cares? Ally's got bigger issues -- like how her long-distance bf 
can watch her loopy late-night "episode" with a certain housemate. . . . 

Freshman year on film. 

It's outrageous. 

It's juicy. 

And like all good reality TV, it's impossible to turn off.

My Thoughts: Freshman year at college is hard. Trying to adjust to the new 
freedom and responsibilities of managing oneself while living on your own for 
the first time in your life is a big deal. Making a long distance relationship 
with your boyfriend of two years work now that he's in college down in Florida 
carries a lot of stress. Apparently, our protagonist, Ally Cavanaugh, laughs in 
the face of stress and auditions for and is chosen to appear on a reality TV 
show with four other freshmen.

Though the logic of this character's decision to do this seems vividly absent, 
I found it impossible to look away. As with most sordid and uncensored reality 
shows on the air these days, I find it difficult to stop watching. Why are we 
drawn to scenarios where a group of strangers are thrown together in a small, 
confined space and are manipulated so that their behavior and reactions are 
then recorded for the rest of us to view, comment and speculate on?

It's hard to not like Ally. I felt a lot of empathy for her as she struggles to 
adjust to college, picking a major, missing her boyfriend and developing 
friendships with her housemates all the while a cameraman follows her all over 
the house and campus recording every facial expression, emotion, conversation 
and act, some of which Ally would rather forget. Personally, being recorded in 
the bathroom is pushing it, but again, reality TV fans want it realistic and if 
you knew your words and actions were being recorded, how realistic would it be?

Reality Chick was a fast, enjoyable read that I recommend if you like living 
vicariously through others. This book was given a makeover and republished in 
2010 under the new title, Watch Me.



I personally like the new cover better.



Title: Driving Sideways
Author: Jess Riley
Publisher: Ballantine Books
Publication Date: May, 2008
Genre: General Fiction
Rating: 8/10

Description: Leigh Fielding wants a life. Seriously. Having spent the past five 
years on dialysis, she has one simple wish: to make it to her thirtieth 
birthday. Now, thanks to the generosity of the late Larry Resnick and his 
transplanted kidney, it looks like her wish may come true.

With her newfound vitality (and Larry's kidney) in tow, Leigh hits the road for 
an excursion that will carry her from Wisconsin to California, with a few stops 
in between: Mount Rushmore, the Badlands, the Rockies, Las Vegas --- and a 
memorable visit to thank Larry's family for this second chance.

Yet Leigh's itinerary takes a sudden detour when she picks up seventeen year 
old hitchhiker Denise, a runaway with a bunch of stories and a couple of 
secrets. Add to the mix a long-lost mother, a loaded gun, an RV full of 
swingers, and Hall and Oates's Greatest Hits, and Driving Sideways becomes a 
hilarious and original journey of friendship, hope, and discovery.

My Thoughts: Driving Sideways by Jess Riley is yet another one of those books I 
acquired on a whim, added it to my "to be read" mountain with every intention 
of reading it quickly. Instead, it languished for years in the bottomless pit 
of my reading pile. With Driving Sideways, new to me author Jess Riley 
introduces us to Leigh Fielding, a dialysis patient who has recently received a 
kidney transplant and thereby a new lease on life.

I know it doesn't sound very appealing on the surface, but where this story 
really pulled me in and hooked me is when Leigh decides to hit the road, 
literally, on a road trip to visit her best friend, meet the kidney donor's 
family to thank them for the kidney and finally to track down the mother who 
abandoned Leigh and her brother when they were children.

Along the way, Leigh meets a teenage hitchhiker named Denise, who isn't all she 
seems but not completely in a bad way. The story is rich in pop culture 
references that gave me the real sense of being in the car with Leigh and 
Denise.

The story moved at a good pace, kept me plugged in and interested in what was 
going on and what was going to happen next. The characters were easy to get to 
know and felt realistic for their surroundings and place in the story. Don't 
make the same mistake I did. Get in the car and go on a road trip of your own 
to the bookstore to get this book. Every journey begins with the first step and 
I am sure this is one ride you will thoroughly enjoy.



Title: A Piece Of My Heart
Author: Kemberlee Shortland
Publisher: Highland Press
Publication Date: January, 2010
Genre: Contemporary Romance
Rating: 9/10

Description: Kate hadn't been just the girl next door. She'd been Mick's life, 
and he hers. When an unforeseen force drives them apart they're left with 
wounds that refuse to heal. Now, ten years on, Mick's father's will should have 
been straightforward, except his addendum was like ice water in Mick's face. 
It's essential Mick and Kate work together to save his family's farm. He 
doesn't count on his new manager being accused of murder, and she doesn't 
expect a dangerously seductive woman from Dublin claiming Mick is the father of 
her child. Kate thought she was falling in love with Mick all over again, but 
this newest revelation is too much for her. She is determined to say goodbye to 
her childhood sweetheart forever, but Mick has other plans for her future. And 
none of them involve goodbye.

My Thoughts: One of the reasons I adore Kemberlee Shortland's books is because 
she is able to create vibrant characters that come across realistically. If you 
love the characters, then you are completely entranced with everything they say 
and do. If you hate the characters, you are riveted on what these despicable 
people are going to do next. If the characters annoy you, as a reader, you may 
find yourself talking back to the character and telling him what an idiot he 
is. Yes, I know, they cannot hear me, but this is what happens when I read a 
Kemberlee Shortland book. I am so pulled into the story, I sometimes feel like 
I am right there with the characters seeing what they see, hearing what they 
hear, and feeling what they feel.

So, let me just get this off my chest. Mick was a class A jerk who did not 
deserve Kate or to benefit from any goodwill or kindness she demonstrated. It 
took me a very long time to forgive him for being a selfish nitwit who treated 
Kate and his family very poorly. His complete lack of regard for his family's 
farm gave me the impression he is spoiled and childish. Here's the interesting 
thing...as annoyed at Mick as I was, I couldn't stop reading because I had to 
know what would happen. I kept hoping he would come to his senses and realize 
what he is missing out on and thankfully he does! Though it still bothered me 
that he let 10 years go by because of a misunderstanding, Kate never stopped 
loving him.

Kate was an amazing character. Where Mick was selfish, Kate was selfless in her 
dedication not only to Mick's parents but to the successful running of their 
farm. She put her career and love life on hold. She sacrificed her wants and 
needs to ensure Mick's parents were taken care of like they were her own. Some 
people would think Kate is your typical doormat but I think if there were 
people like Kate around, the world would be a much better place.

Happily, Mick redeems himself and does a little growing up to become the man 
Kate needs. On a side note, I actually felt bad for him when he gets blindsided 
by some less than pleasant events that have followed him from Dublin.

Another treat for me in this story was reuniting with Kieran and Eilis from 
Rhythm Of The Heart and catching up on what has been going on in their lives. 
If you have not read Rhythm Of The Heart, I recommend reading that one before 
this one so you are not pulled out of the story when Kieran and Eilis make an 
appearance.

Overall, if you enjoy your books to contain lots of complex characters in 
complicated relationships and lush Irish settings, I highly recommend A Piece 
Of My Heart.



Title: Killer Summer
Author: Lynda Curnyn
Publisher: Red Dress Ink
Publication Date: June, 2005
Genre: Chick Lit
Rating: 8/10

Description: Three friends. One dead body.
The summer they'll never forget . . .

Sharing a beach house on Fire Island seems like a killer way for best friends 
Zoe, Sage and Nick to spend summer together. But just as they're dreaming of 
sunset margaritas and late-night barbecues, the body of their house hostess 
washes up on the beach. Talk about a buzz kill . . .

Now all Zoe can think about is why the "grieving" husband is planning parties 
rather than mourning his wife. Nick suddenly has secrets he can't tell a soul. 
And Sage is trying to score booty as if it's her last summer on earth . . . 
which it just might be. Because despite the ocean views and endless parties, 
Zoe, Sage and Nick have stopped wondering if the good times will last and 
started wondering if they will . . .

My Thoughts: Another very good offering from the now defunct Red Dress Ink 
line. I feel like I'm beating the dead horse here, but I can't help it. I am 
such an obsessed chick-lit girl; I collected every release published by Red 
Dress Ink that I had missed out on after I signed up for home delivery. Every 
month, I would literally jump up and down and do the happy dance when my Red 
Dress Ink shipment arrived. I couldn't be happier when some of the titles began 
to cross into other genres such as mystery and paranormal. Sadly, as with a lot 
of good things, it came to an end and I was left with a whole bunch of Red 
Dress Ink books that I have dragged my feet reading because I want them to last.

I chose Killer Summer this year because this has been a killer summer here in 
the Pit of H.E Double Hockey Sticks where I live. Perhaps a little respite at 
the beach is in order. I am sure that's all Zoe, Sage and Nick are looking for. 
Sage's boss has a beach house on Fire Island and the three best friends agree 
to timeshare space there for the summer, though Zoe's heart really isn't in to 
it. She gets stuck in the city picking up items for the dinner party being 
thrown by the house hostess, Maggie. Zoe doesn't arrive with everyone else but 
instead takes the last ferry out. When Zoe arrives at the house, it's obvious 
the dinner party has been canceled as evidenced by Maggie's absence from the 
house. Unfortunately for Zoe, she takes Maggie's pooch for a walk and discovers 
Maggie's corpse on the beach.

The majority of the book focuses on Zoe's conviction that Maggie's death is no 
accident, especially since Maggie's husband does not appear to be grieving. 
It's always the husband that did it, right? He certainly appeared suspicious to 
me but as the book unfolds, so did a lot of other people. I enjoy it when a 
mystery has several layers and isn't obvious. Another aspect of this book that 
I also thoroughly enjoyed is different points of view. Each chapter has a 
different point of view from Zoe, Sage, Nick or Maggie. Sometimes too many 
points of view can confuse a story, but I thought it made this one more 
intriguing.

I also enjoyed the dynamics of all the different relationships. It made for 
some very interesting characters. I have only read one other book by this 
author, but I enjoyed this one more and am looking forward to more from this 
author. Take a break from your killer summer, kick back with something cold and 
frosty to drink, kick off your shoes and dive into this book. I think you will 
enjoy it.

 
Sherri

Currently reading TEAM HUMAN by Justine Larbalestier and listening to DIE FOR 
ME by Karen Rose
 
Up Next: ONCE DEAD, TWICE SHY by Kim Harrison
 
What am I babbling about? Check out my blog:
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