Archive for the ‘Reads’ Category

Amy’s Notebook 10.06.10

Wednesday, October 6th, 2010

I like this creative use of child’s art work in lieu of curtains (@ Prudent Baby)

I want to try this buttery caramel sauce to dip our apples in (@ How Does She?)

I am in love with this booster seat makeover (@ Tea Rose Home)

I love this idea for scenting your own pine cones (@ 3 Meadow Lake Cottage)

This apple vanilla slab pie looks like a fun fall dessert (@ In Praise of Leftovers)

I have to make this fall rosette wreath to decorate my kitchen for Thanksgiving (@ Blue Cricket Design)

I love these decoupaged Halloween coasters (@ Make it Give It)

This gluten-free pumpkin bread looks delicious (@ Serious Eats)

Sweet balsamic tilapia sounds like a great way to dress up fish for a main dish (@ $5 Dinners)

These ghoulish grown-up beverage labels are so cute (@ Centsational Girl)

This is a great idea for shaping no-knead bread into a baguette (@ the kitchn)

These pumpkin butterscotch cookies look like a fun after-school snack (@ Annie’s Eats)

This creamy pesto fettuccine with mushrooms and tomatoes looks like a great weeknight dinner (@ This Week for Dinner)

This pumpkin topiary tutorial would be a great one use to decorate your porch or front step (@ Our Southern Nest)

I am in love with this television tray makeover– it inspires me to go thrift shopping! (@ Design Sponge)

This mummy munch would be a fun Halloween treat (@ Picky Palate)

These potato stamped fall pumpkins are so cute (@ lemon tree creations)

These ideas for an owl birthday party are adorable (@ Living Locurto)

I want to try this idea for waxing leaves for a frugal fall decoration (@ Clover Lane)

This autumn dinner party is absolutely stunning @ NieNie Dialogues)

I am going to be incorporating some of these ideas for cheap & easy Halloween decor (@ Pink and Polka Dot)

Great Reads for Moms: October ’10 Edition

Tuesday, October 5th, 2010

I can’t believe it, but eight more books were devoured this month. No, I have no idea how that was possible  except that I did some traveling this month and all I did was read.  Does it help to know that my house has been suffering because I have so many great books in my book stack these days?  Or that my husband has been working a lot in the evenings and I have been unwinding with bubble baths and books since I have a little bit of solitude?  Or that the books that I read were just too simply awesome to put down? Or perhaps, that I have no social life at all? Deep thoughts!

A reader requested that we do a weekly check-in on what everyone is reading each week on our Facebook Fan Page. I hope you will swing by on Fridays and share about the books you are working on or request recommendations with one another. So far it is a huge success and I have gotten a few new ideas for my own stack!

Just as a reminder, I read many more  books than are just featured here, but try to feature the ones that are my absolute best picks of the month here. If you want to read more, please feel free to friend me on GoodReads! My username is momadvice and I am always happy to connect with people there too! There is nothing more motivating than seeing what other people are raving about and my to-be-read pile continues to grow with all of my new friends on there! In fact, many of the books featured are ones that I have found through my friends on GoodReads.

One Day by David Nicholls

The concept for Nicholl’s book is a genius one that I loved from start to finish. It chronicles the lives of two friends, Dex & Em, over the course of twenty years and each chapter begins a new year on the same exact day. It begins with what seems like a romantic relationship in 1988 and then each year jumps into a new place of their friendship and what is happening that year with them.

You began the journey with Dex & Em when they are in college and each of them is dreaming big for what they have in store for their future. You then go along on the journey as Dex lives off of the wealth of his family, as Em is stuck in a dead end job, as Dex finds fame, as Dex loses fame, and as Em finally begins living her dream. To say more than this would give it all away, but know that as a reader of the book, you get to glimpse into the lives and evolution of how we change as people as we grow older.

The relationship with Dex & Em is at times endearing and at times exasperating. Em puts up with a lot as Dex falls down a slippery slope in the world of Hollywood. It is a, “When Harry Met Sally,” love story that I simply could not put down.

The ending was a shocking one, that may disappoint some readers, but it did not take away from the story for me. Because of the ending, try to avoid reading any reviews of the book until you have finished it so you can draw your own conclusion on this book!

(MomAdvice Rating- 5 Stars out of 5 Stars)


Fragile by Lisa Unger

It has been a long time since I have read something so suspenseful that I could not put it down, but Fragile by Lisa Unger is the kind of book that sucks you in and won’t let you go. It is reminiscent of Jodi Picoult’s earlier work with just the right balance of suspense and mystery to keep a reader enchanted until the final page. I must say that I am smitten with Lisa Unger and can’t wait to read some of her older novels now that I have had a taste of her writing style.

In the town of The Hollows, a fictional small town just outside of New York City, a young girl goes missing after a fight with her parents. The disappearance reminds the people in this town of another similar disappearance of a girl named Sarah, who had suddenly disappeared in the eighties, and many of the main characters find themselves flashing back to that first disappearance.

While the main characters are revisiting the disappearance of Sarah, they are also desperately trying to find the current girl who has disappeared. Charlene is a bit of a rebel-child and born to a family from the wrong side of the tracks. She is the girlfriend of Ricky, who is the child of Jones ( a cop) and Maggie (a psychologist) on the other side of the tracks, yet Ricky has no idea where Charlene has gone even though he loves Charlene.
When Charlene posts a status update on her Facebook page that she has left for New York City, Ricky and his friends are suspicious that someone has logged into her account because the status update sounds nothing like something Charlene would write. They began to fear the worst as the clues are uncovered and there are a cast of suspects that could have taken Charlene.

With Charlene gone, the clock is ticking to find her and bring her back to her family. Unfortunately, there are many suspects, but few clues as to where she could have gone. The reader is taken along on the journey as they try to uncover what has happened to Charlene as it is told through the eyes of everyone from the cop on the case, the psychologist whose family is battling their own demons, through the eyes of a troubled child, and even an exterminator who happens to have witnessed a few clues of his own to help the case.

While there are many characters, the plot somehow flows seamlessly as each person shares their innermost secrets and does not create confusion for the reader. Through these characters, the reader can begin to piece together both disappearances for a surprising twist that will bring the two stories colliding together, reminding us how small the world is and how intertwined our stories can be.

(MomAdvice Rating- 5 Stars out of 5 Stars)


Still Missing by Chevy Stevens

Before I begin, I want to warn you that this thriller is not for the faint of heart and to please consider yourself warned before picking this book up! Chelsea Cain fans though will find a new author and psychopath to love-to-hate in this debut novel from Chevy Stevens.

Annie O’Sullivan has been trying to put her life together after a year of captivity as she rehashes what has happened to her through her weekly therapy sessions. As the story of her time in captivity unfolds, the reader is taken on a haunting journey and is able to witness the psychological traumas that face Annie as she tries to break the habits that she had to endure and find a new normalcy to her life.

Before her abduction, Annie is a Realtor who is hosting an open house on a relatively quiet Sunday. When a handsome young man comes to the house, she is thrilled to show him around and hoping for her first big sale. She realizes quickly, when a gun is pushed into her back, that this may be her last open house.

After giving her a drug to knock her out, she awakens to find herself in a cabin in the middle of nowhere, held in captivity by a man that she only refers to as, “The Freak.” The Freak has thought of everything to make her stay in the cabin as comfortable and sterile as possible. He has thought of every simple little detail from the childlike dresses he wants her to wear, to her grooming schedule, to her dinner schedule, and even how she is to meticulously care for the cabin. One misstep in this OCD world, calculates into beatings, the loss of food, and the loss of any human connection for days on end. When she is told that she is to have his baby, she knows that she may never see her friends and family again and that her stay may be a permanent one.

As the pieces are pulled together, it is shocking how The Freak has found Annie and who ultimately caused her captivity. Through the sessions with the therapist, you discover right along with Annie how she was betrayed and the irreversible damage that she has had to suffer, through this surprising ending.

The chapters are short, reminiscent of a James Patterson book, and the writing is not as solid as I would have hoped. I think that the story and the plot really held it together though for me, and ultimately was a book that I managed to read in a day because I just could not put it down.

Editor’s Note- This book contains violence, sexuality, and adult language. Did I mention it is not for the faint of heart? You were warned, friends!

(MomAdvice Rating- 4 Stars out of 5 Stars)


A Vintage Affair by Isabel Wolff

Phoebe Swift surprises her friends when she leaves a coveted position at Sotheby’s auction house to open her own vintage clothing shop in London, but Phoebe knows that she is fulfilling a lifelong dream to have her very own store. The reader is taken on the journey of the opening of Phoebe’s shop, the relationships with her customers, finding love again, and the intricacies of friendship.

Phoebe is fascinated with the clothing from other eras and loves gathering the collections, pieced together by visiting the attics and closets of wealthy families. It is these chance meetings where she develops a very unlikely friendship with an elderly woman named Therese Bell.

Therese has an amazing collection of clothing that she is getting rid of and asks Phoebe to come to her home to sell her the clothes. Phoebe is instructed that she can only take items before a certain point in the closet, but Phoebe notices an unusual item tucked in Therese’s closet…a sky blue child-sized coat in mint condition.

It is through this coat that Phoebe hears a story of friendship and regret that Therese has lived with her entire life. She has never told a single person, but wants to tell Phoebe her story so that she can make peace with her life, as she is dying. What surprises Therese is that she is not alone in her tale of friendship of regret and betrayal because Phoebe has been living with a secret of her own that has caused Phoebe so much pain that her life has taken an entirely different direction than she could ever expect.

This book is a breath of fresh air and highly recommended to my fashionista friends because it feels as though you are transported in the shop and can enjoy all of the detail and thought that Phoebe has put into her shop of vintage frocks. Every piece of clothing has a story and the author carefully interweaves those stories of the customers and how the dresses find them in this charming book!

(MomAdvice Rating- 4 Stars out of 5 Stars)


Chosen by Chandra Hoffman

Chloe Pinter is the director of the Chosen Child’s domestic-adoption program and feels like she has the perfect job of completing and bringing families together through adoption. She is organized and meticulous about the details of the adoptions and does her best to insure that the mothers that are offering their children for adoption are cared for.

Chloe is dealing with three very different couples during the adoption process while she is struggling to hold her own life together with her demanding job. These three couples could not be any more different and the author tries to share their story without judgment of who is right or wrong in these cases, allowing the reader to make their own conclusions.

The Novas are a very well-off couple who have suffered with fertility for years and are finally blessed with their very own pregnancy, the McAdoos are a well-to-do couple whose marriage is on the rocks after years of failed adoptions and are hoping that this adoption will create the family that they have always wanted, and Jason & Penny who have absolutely nothing except a baby that everybody wants. Their stories are told in alternating points of view and the stories weave together when a child goes missing as the reader discovers how people will do just about anything to get that one thing they want.

While a fascinating premise for a book, it did not captivate me the way that I had hoped it would. It was a quick read, but the build-up for the story was a slow one and not one that gripped me the way I had hoped!

(MomAdvice Rating- 3 Stars out of 5 Stars)


Husband and Wife by Leah Stewart

Many books glamorize infidelity, but Leah Stewart does nothing to glamorize the tragedy that happens in a home when a spouse is unfaithful. The reader is taken on a journey through a demise of a relationship and when this happens, how you begin to wonder what-if about other relationships in your life.

Novelist Nathan Bennett seems to have it all and he thinks he finally has a success on his hands with his new novel, “Infidelity.” Just before the novel is set to be released, Nathan sits his wife Sarah down to tell her that the novel isn’t a fictional one and is based on his own infidelity with a woman that he met at a writing conference.

Sarah is now faced with what she should do with their two kids and begins to consider how different her life would have been if she would have acted on a relationship with a man that she always had feelings for before she got married.

When Sarah kicks Nathan out of the house, she decides to see what would happen if she explored that past love opportunity and tries to discover who she is and if she is the person she is because her spouse wanted her to be, or if she is that person because that is who she truly is. She asks the questions and expresses the sentiments of any woman who is in her thirties and looking back on love that has been lost and the new ailments and issues that plague us as we grow older, but I found that was where relating to her really ended.

I found this book to be a very depressing one, although it was well-written. I found both of the characters were acting very selfishly and it made me sad for the children that were involved in this relationship. I did love the sense of humor that Leah Stewart interweaved through the story, but was ready for this book to end so I could move on to something a little more uplifting. I am still a fan, but hope that her next novel will tackle something a little less gloomy!

(MomAdvice Rating- 3 Stars out of 5 Stars)

Not enough great reads for you? Check out our Books section of our site for monthly recommendations and ideas for making reading a priority again in your busy mom life!

Disclosure: All of the links above are affiliate links and are provided so you can locate the books quickly and easily. Feel free to order a book, but we encourage utilizing the library system and buying me a latte instead.  Then we both would be really happy and we could have our own little book club together! Wouldn’t that just be so much more lovely? Happy Reading!

What has been in your book stack this month? Feel free to share your book recommendations or feedback on any of the books that have been mentioned above! I love getting new suggestions for my book pile!

Amy’s Notebook 09.29.10

Wednesday, September 29th, 2010

These free Halloween cupcake toppers are so festive (@ the crafting chicks)

This maple-butter spiced popcorn looks like a fun fall snack (@ the kitchn)

This meatloaf recipe looks sinful (@ The Pioneer Woman Cooks)

I want to make some of these modge podge pumpkins for our house (@ The Other White House)

I love this guide for iPhone users on Hipstamatic for taking photos (@Photojojo)

This pumpkin maple oatmeal would be a satisfying way to start the day (@ The Ungourmet)

I want to try making this recipe for big batch pancakes (@ Dine & Dish)

I am going to have to try this whole wheat sandwich bread recipe (@ foodwhirl)

These perfect chocolate chip cookies look delicious (@ How Does She?)

I am inspired by this birthday gift wrapping job (@ not martha)

These Maple Roasted Brussels Sprouts would be a yummy side dish (@ $5 Dinners)

These apple dumplings look like a delicious and frugal way to end a meal (@ PartyBlueprints Blog)

This double chocolate zucchini bread looks delicious (@ under the high chair)

I like this tutorial for creating rolled fabric flowers (@ Sugar Bee)

These giant fabric flowers would be beautiful on a handbag (@ Trey & Lucy)

This quick minestrone looks like a satisfying fall dish (@ life as mom)

I love making DIY pumpkin spice lattes at home (@ the kitchn)

These bibs made from old t-shirts are genius (@ sew  like my mom)

These no-knead dinner rolls would be a great accompaniment to soup (@ Salt and Chocolate)

This Indian corn wreath is the perfect fall decoration (@ Gingerbread Snowflakes)

Amy’s Notebook 09.22.10

Wednesday, September 22nd, 2010

I love these tips on how to ice a cake (@ Prudent Baby)

I am going to have to try creating a few of these pencil sketches for art work around the house (@ Blue Cricket Design)

I love this idea for creatively reviewing for a test (@ kellicrowe, HT to Parent Hacks)

This homemade hot chocolate looks like a wonderful way to warm up on a cool day (@ My First Kitchen)

These apple cranberry bran muffins sound like a hearty snack (@ Good Things Catered)

This crocheted ric-rac is really cute (@ Fox Lane)

These grain-free, gluten-free, dairy-free granola bars are perfect for people with dietary restrictions (@ Joyful Abode)

These coffee cake muffins would be a great way to start the day (@ Baking Bites)

These grilled breakfast sausages sound delicious and are another fun way to use the outdoor grill (@ Serious Eats)

These pink lemonade cupcakes would be a fun birthday treat (@ The Idea Room)

These cinnamon walnut dolce de leche bars sound like a fun treat (@ the kitchn)

This fall canvas is a beautiful seasonal decoration that won’t cost a lot (@ my blessed life)

Pumpkin cinnamon rolls? I think I am in heaven! (@ goodLife{eats})

This pumpkin nutella bread combines two of my favorite flavors (@ Two Peas and Their Pod)

These fried apple cakes look like another fun way to use up those apples (@ joy the baker)

Amy’s Notebook 09.15.10

Wednesday, September 15th, 2010

This Anthro-inspired scarf is stunning (@ sewing in no mans land)

This idea for creating vacation jars is such a great way to treasure those vacation memories (@ Blue Cricket Design)

I love seeing other bloggers work spaces and gaining work space inspiration from them (@ Centsational Girl)

I love these tips on how to hem a tired pair of jeans (@ naptime crafters)

This BOO wreath would be a fun addition to the Halloween decor (@ Craftaholics Anonymous)

My son would be in heaven if I could tackle some of these Pokemon knitting or crochet projects (@ Craftzine)

I am in love with this Happy Halloween wreath (@ Tatertots and Jello)

This sauteed shrimp with spinach and tomato would be a great weeknight meal (@ gimmie some oven)

My daughter would think this Aussie apple trick for her lunch was so cool (@ another lunch)

These mini deep dish pizzas would make a fun lunch (@ made by mike)

I am moved by this post on removing the stuff in our life (@ Nesting Place)

These t-shirt bags would be perfect for the children to carry their trick-or-treat loot in (@ giver’s log)

These rice crispy footballs are a fun addition to a tailgate party (@ Make & Takes)

I love this idea for creating a nature satchel for your children (@ Sew Mama Sew)

This caramel and apple pie galette looks like a fun fall treat (@ Picky Palate)

These rainbow crayons are perfect for a toddler’s hand and a great way to recycle those broken crayons (@ momtastic)

This kitchen island makeover is beautiful and thrifty (@ Thrifty Decor Chick)

I love this printable job application for kids (@ living Locurto)

I like these seven secret homeopathic remedies for curing your child’s ailments (@ How Does She?)

This hair flower tutorial is great for creating sweet baby shower gifts (@ the crafting chicks)

I want to make this restaurant-style salsa for our next taco night (@ goodLife{eats})

These oat bran and raisin muffin tops would be a great way to start the day (@ Baking Bites)

I like this tip for blending the white and brown rice to bring in the whole grains for your family (@ Parent Hacks)

These pumpkin chocolate oat muffins are another fun way to use those cans of pumpkin in my pantry (@ Family Fresh Cooking)

Amy’s Notebook 09.08.10

Wednesday, September 8th, 2010

I want to try this recipe for 3-minute homemade fudge (@ V and Co.)

These Pop Tarts on a stick look delicious and so fun (@ the family kitchen)

I want to try this top secret chocolate mousse recipe (@ giver’s log)

I love this idea for making homemade pizza pockets to tuck in your lunch box (@ another lunch)

My daughter would look adorable in one of these scrunch fabric flower pom pom headbands (@ little miss momma)

This big boy room transformation is so inspiring for redecorating our son’s room (@ less cake {more frosting})

I bet my kids would love these homemade sandwich thins (@ confections of a foodie bride)

I want to make a few of these beautifully knotted scarfs made from old t-shirts (@ because she started knitting)

This red pepper pesto pasta sauce sounds like a delicious vegetarian option for a dinner or lunch (@ Eclectic Recipes)

I am in love with making note cards out of vintage books from the thrift store (@ Family Economics: SC Johnson)

I am going to have to remember these 3 easy ways to freeze cupcake batter (@ the kitchn)

This free printable for hanky-inspired vintage stationary is beautifully elegant (@ eat drink chic)

These banana-oat bran muffins sound like a healthy & fun addition to our breakfast menu (@ two peas and their pod)

This printable for adorable lunch box notes would be a fun addition to my son’s lunch box (@ paper & pomegranates)

This plexi-frame is an adorable way to showcase those family photos (@ How Does She?)

This Anthropologie-inspired DIY zig-zag pillow is adorable (@ Ucreate)

I bet my kids would love eating out of these cute homemade taco bowls for our next taco night (@ Annie’s Eats)

These quick and homey oatmeal raisin muffins would make a great addition to our breakfast (@ the kitchn)

Great Reads for Moms: September ’10 Edition

Tuesday, September 7th, 2010

Welcome to this month’s gathering of great reads for moms! I tackled five great books this month that I think you guys will really enjoy! There is everything here from great chick-lit to a fifties throwback to a couple of modern-day thrillers. I hope that you will be able to check out a few of these on your next library visit!

Just as a reminder, I read many more  books than are just featured here, but try to feature the ones that are my absolute best picks of the month here. If you want to read more, please feel free to friend me on GoodReads! My username is momadvice and I am always happy to connect with people there too! There is nothing more motivating than seeing what other people are raving about and my to-be-read pile continues to grow with all of my new friends on there! In fact, many of the books featured are ones that I have found through my friends on GoodReads.

I am traveling a lot over this next month for work and am looking forward to sharing some of the great reads that I encounter over those trips. Always the frugal girl, a library book is always tucked in my purse for those layovers and time spent on the plane. Even with the new fall television line-up and the busyness of a new school year, I still would much rather curl up on my couch with my favorite quilt and a great new read.  It is just what I need after a hectic day! Happy reading, everyone!

The Year of Fog by Michelle Richmond

For photographer, Abby Mason, she loves to view life through the eye of her camera lens. One day as she is photographing her fiancee’s daughter on the beach, she is distracted for a moment by an animal that has been injured and washed up on the sand. As she turns her head for that one moment, the unthinkable happens and six year-old Emma seemingly disappears in thin air.

Michelle Richmond vividly captures those sheer moments of initial panic as Abby scours the beach for Emma, the call that she must make to Jake to let him know that Emma has disappeared, and the search for Emma as Jake and Abby become consumed by Emma and her disappearance.

While Emma’s father, Jake, is willing to go along with the police investigation and only what is considered police protocol, Abby, on the other hand, is living with the guilt of knowing that she is the one who lost Emma and is determined to bring their happy little family back together. She begins trying the unconventional routes of discovery like hypnotism and even putting herself in harm’s way to post Emma’s picture anywhere and everywhere she can over the course of that year of her disappearance.

When a clue finally comes through a hypnosis session, Abby travels to a foreign country to try to unearth where Emma may be and ultimately discover who could have kidnapped Emma. Surprising discoveries are made that will leave the reader guessing up to the final pages about who could have taken Emma and what the motives could have been to take her from a family that loves her.

It is a book that tugged at my heart as I read it, and the pacing is so slow at times in order to build up that anticipation and ache in your heart that makes you hang on to the last page to figure out what has happened to this little girl.

Fantastically written, beautifully paced, and a great gentle reminder of how life can change in an instant- this one is a must read!

(MomAdvice Rating- 4 Stars out of 5 Stars)

something borrowed by emily giffin

Rachel & Darcy have been best friends their whole lives. Darcy is the beautiful one and is the friend that is always hogging the spotlight, while Rachel has always been content to be in Darcy’s shadow, concentrating on her studies in school. As Rachel is out celebrating her thirtieth birthday with Darcy, her fiancée Dex, and their other friends, she finds that she drinks a tad more than she normally would and finds herself in a predicament that changes the outcome of her life.

That night, when Dex graciously offers to see Rachel home, one thing leads to another and they find themselves having an affair that neither one of them bargained for. Writing it off as a one night stand, Rachel decides that she will try to forget that the encounter ever happened.

Thinking that Dex likely had too much to drink too, she is stunned when Dex admits that he has had feelings for Rachel for a long time.

As the two of them try to resist each other, Rachel is forced to complete the duties as the maid of honor to Darcy, and help her with the decisions for her wedding to Dex. Rachel is consumed with guilt while Darcy continues to be consumed with herself and is oblivious to what is happening.

Told from Rachel’s perspective, you begin to sympathize with Rachel and the challenges that she has had to live with to be friends with a person like Darcy. As she reflects on childhood incidents and the way that Darcy has made her feel, you can’t help but to sympathize for her and root for her to be with Dex.

The twist is such a good one at the end and while it is more of the chick-lit genre, this book is more about the friendships and the dynamics within a friendship than anything else! I am so glad that I finally read this and dived into the sequel, “Something Blue,” as soon as I finished it.

(MomAdvice Rating- 4 Stars out of 5 Stars)

something blue by emily giffin

After wrapping up, “Something Borrowed,” I was anxious to dive into this sequel and can honestly say that is one of the first sequels that I have ever read that I loved even more than the first.

Giffin takes a smart approach towards the sequel and decides to tell the story from a different perspective, this time from Rachel’s best friend Darcy’s perspective, about what has transpired in the first book and how Darcy saw her friendship with Rachel and relationship with Dex.

While it goes over the old ground of what has happened to Darcy’s relationship, it begins to take shape when Darcy decides to head to London to stay with an old classmate from school, and try to start a new life that is away from the Rachel/Dex drama. She also happens to be pregnant with a Hampton-fling’s baby and quickly discovers that she is alone in the world. For the first time, Darcy is not wanted by any man and now must figure out how she is going to make a life for her child on her own.

Instead of focusing on the baby though, she immediately moves into a routine of continuously shopping and then waiting for Ethan, the best friend with whom she is staying with to come home. While Ethan encourages her to think outside of herself for once, Darcy really doesn’t decide to start to change until she has a tift with Ethan and realizes that staying there is really her last hope. She has ostracized all of her friends and family and now must find who Darcy really is.

I don’t want to give any of the plot away so you can enjoy this book as much as I did, but will admit that it was a bit predictable in parts. The predictability and the ease that this one is to read makes it perfect to tuck in your bag for a trip.

For a character that will be easy to love to hate though, Giffin puts a spin on Darcy’s story that finds you empathetic towards her as Darcy ultimately learns to love someone other than herself and the series ends with that fairytale ending that you will be craving as you conclude this amazing sequel.

(MomAdvice Rating- 5 Stars out of 5 Stars)

The Nobodies Album by Carolyn Parkhurst

Caryolyn Parkhurst is a vividly descriptive writer and has a uniqueness to her writing style and perspective that is unmarked by many authors. The Nobodies Album is an ambitious novel that is almost three novels in one. The concept for this book offers a unique plot unlike any that I have read before.

Octavia Frost is the fictional bestselling author who has decided to take on the enormous task of rewriting the previous ending to all of her past books. As she is on the way to deliver this book to her literary agent in New York, a headline captures her attention in Times Square. The reason it captures her attention? The headline claims that her son, a rock star with whom she is estranged, has murdered his girlfriend.

Blindly she heads to San Francisco to support her son Milo, knowing that he couldn’t have possibly murdered Bettina, the love of his life. Upon her arrival, she is unsure if she will even be welcomed into his circle because of a mistake that she made many years ago. She is warily enveloped into Milo’s fold, as Milo confesses that he can’t remember what happened the night of the murder.

With all evidence pointing to Milo, Octavia takes a writer’s perspective and begins to piece the story together, just as she has done with all of her books in the past. As she tries to figure out who would have murdered Bettina, you are taken on a journey through the chapters and then the revised chapters of the books as the story begins to unfold. You also are taken on a journey as you discover the deep secret that has kept Milo and Octavia apart and the tragedy that has enveloped their lives since Milo was a child.

The fact that Parkhurst can grab the reader as each chapter is shared, you almost wish that she would write a book of her own that would build upon the brilliant chapter ideas she has created for Octavia’s book. The chapters are interjected in a suspenseful plot which can be agonizing at times because you want to read the real story so much.

It was a great book by a great author and I am looking forward to reading more of her future books.

(MomAdvice Rating- 4 Stars out of 5 Stars)

The Irresistible Henry House by Lisa Grunwald

I feel like I have been on a journey after finishing this 410 page novel that manages to transcend the different decades of culture from the middle of the twentieth century and on through the wild and psychedelic sixties, following the story of Henry House. Built upon the fascinating true-life home economics programs that were offered in the thirties, Henry House is a test baby for a home economics house to teach women the basic life skills of running a house and caring for a child.

Henry House is an abandoned orphan who is taken in by the strict house mother, Martha, as a test baby who is cared for by six house mothers who alternate weeks and routines with him. Martha is of the firm believe to never pick up a child if the child is crying unless it follows her strict scheduled regime and requires that the mothers in the house follow suit. They all are immediately smitten with Harry and Harry lives a strange and enchanted existence where six women are at his beck and call while following the regime that Martha has ordained for all of them.

Martha develops an attachment to Harry unlike she has experienced ever before to any other test infant in the house, and decides to keep Harry instead of returning him to the orphanage. Martha soon finds that her ways of child rearing become challenged when she keeps Harry longer and has to deal with him as he grows older, something she has never experienced before. She begins to question if her ways are really right and if she really was as qualified in the role of a house mother when she has never had a real child of her own.

When Martha tells Harry that his mother died in a car accident instead of telling Harry the truth that his mother abandoned him because she had the baby out of wedlock, his relationship to Martha is forever altered from that point on and he vows he will pretend to be mute so he does not have to speak to her.

You then follow Harry’s life as he lives his life through a mute, as he discovers the healing powers of art, as he discovers his sexuality, as he finds that it really isn’t all about that, as he searches for love through a cast of unlikely characters, as he finds a career in animation, and then as he finds where he thinks he might finally belong.

If you are a fan of Forrest Gump, Mad Men, or even The Curious Case of Benjamin Button…this book is for you! While slow paced in some parts and a dissatisfying ending, it still was a fascinating premise of a book that I will long remember!

(MomAdvice Rating- 4 Stars out of 5 Stars)

Not enough great reads for you? Check out our Books section of our site for monthly recommendations and ideas for making reading a priority again in your busy mom life!

Disclosure: All of the links above are affiliate links and are provided so you can locate the books quickly and easily. Feel free to order a book, but we encourage utilizing the library system and buying me a latte instead.  Then we both would be really happy and we could have our own little book club together! Wouldn’t that just be so much more lovely? Happy Reading!

What has been in your book stack this month? Feel free to share your book recommendations or feedback on any of the books that have been mentioned above! I love getting new suggestions for my book pile!

Amy’s Notebook 09.01.10

Wednesday, September 1st, 2010

I am in love with this eye chart art (@ Blue Cricket Designs)

These homemade mallomars look amazing (@ the kitchn)

I want to try some of this carrot & tomato soup (@ SouleMama)

I love these thoughts on needing less than we think (@ Adventures in Babywearing)

This fabric pinwheel necklace is adorable (@ Happy Together)

These grasshopper pie cupcakes look heavenly (@ Cookie Madness)

These chalkboard speech bubbles are so awesome (@ Make & Takes)

These tea towel cupcakes are an adorable housewarming gift (@ yoonie-at-home HT to Tip Junkie)

I love these sweet little back-to-school traditions (@ The Homespun Heart)

This laundry room sign would be a great addition to the laundry room (@ Love Stitched)

I bet this broccoli & sun-dried tomato dip would be a fantastic appetizer (@ Coconut & Lime)

This curried chicken pasta salad looks delicious (@ The Pioneer Woman)

I love this rainbow of ideas for to accompany the Wizard of Oz movie (@ whatever)

These quick and easy sesame noodles would be a great side to add on nights we grill out (@ goodLife {eats})

This swaddle blanket would make a wonderful baby shower gift (@ Tea Rose Home)

I want to try this recipe for the perfect blueberry muffins (@ Smitten Kitchen)

I love these tips on photographing backgrounds for food photography(@ gimmie some oven)

I love this little garland tutorial (@ Making It My Own)

I want to make one of these easy $5 wreaths (@ Nesting Place)

These turkey pesto sliders would be a yummy weeknight meal (@ Annie’s Eats)

These whole wheat bagels look healthy and delicious (@ The Way the Cookie Crumbles)

These reusable snack bags are adorable and perfect for school lunches (@ Repodepot)

I bet my son would love these lunch skewers as a fun treat in his lunch box (@ Cooking With My Kid)

This homemade raspberry jam looks like a delicious addition to my pb & j (@ The Crafting Chicks)

I love these ideas for making the perfect cold-pressed coffee (@ Polka Dot Cottage)

I  am in love with this thoughtful storage solution for these closet doors (@ Knock-Off Wood)

Amy’s Notebook 08.25.10

Wednesday, August 25th, 2010

I am in love with these braided ribbon headbands (@ Skip to My Lou)

I would have never thought to bleach my shirt to match the bleach stains (@ a thousand words)

I am going to grill up some of these easy grilled vegetables this week- they look delicious! (@ gimmie some oven)

I love these tips on winging it and making your first loaf of homemade bread (@ the kitchn)

We are definitely going to be printing out this traceable stationary to practice our writing (@ Creative Mamma)

I could definitely go for one of these portobello-prosciutto burgers right now (@ Pioneer Woman)

I am in love with these ideas for ways to re-purpose reusable bags (@ Grace Violet)

These yarn-wrapped hangers are a great way to stash bust my yarn collection (@ wise craft)

I think we could all go for some of these breakfast cookies (@ Cooking With My Kid)

I love these fun back-to-school traditions to celebrate the start of school with your kids (@ How Does She?)

These whole wheat blueberry muffins would be a great breakfast treat (@ Salsa Pie)

This camp-out party theme would be such a fun one to do with my little guy (@ kara’s party ideas)

I love this DIY Garnet Hill inspired embellished t-shirt (@ Blue Cricket Designs)

I am so inspired by this thrifty playroom tour (@ ashley ann)

These ice cream balloons are such a fun & simple addition to party decorating (@ ohdeedoh)

I bet my kids would love these homemade peanut butter balls for a fun snack (@ Southern Plate)

Amy’s Notebook 08.18.10

Wednesday, August 18th, 2010

I am in love with this Alice in Wonderland party (@ Let’s Explore)

I am so inspired by this beautiful craft room makeover (@ Posie Gets Cozy)

I bet my children would love these banana bread milkshakes (@ Picky Palate)

I love this pillowcase sundress made for adults (@ Craftzine)

These frosted jumbo animal cookies look delicious and so fun (@ Bake at 350)

This no-bake grilled vegetable lasagna looks yummy and healthy (@ goodLife {eats})

This toddler ruffled dress upcycled is so cute (@ Blue Cricket Designs)

I am loving this tutorial for turning paperback books into custom hardback ones (@ ohdeedoh)

This Dr. Pepper barbecue sauce looks delicious (@ Simply Recipes)

I love these little birthday cupcake cake toppers (@ The Crafting Chicks)

I will have to put those cupcake toppers on top of these mocha cupcakes with espresso buttercream frosting (@ Brown-Eyed Baker)

This raspberry crisp would be delicious with some vanilla ice cream (@ Pioneer Woman)

This little button headband would be so cute for back-to-school (@ Little Miss Momma)

These homemade raspberry limeade slushies scream summer to me (@ Smitten Kitchen)

These cupcake liner trees are on my crafting to-do list (@ Domestic Fluff)

Who would have thought to recycle a cereal box into a marble run? Genius! (@ made by joel)

I want to dive into a plate of this grilled cheese brushetta (@ Fresh Family Cooking)

This recipe for whole wheat challah looks delicious (@ The Way the Cookie Crumbles)

These white fish tacos would make a fun weeknight meal (@ Annie’s Eats)

This scampi tilapia would be another fun way to prepare fish (@ $5 Dinners)

I love this idea of repurposing an old painting into a cute dining room chalkboard (@ Bless Our Nest)

I like this tutorial on making homemade pretzels (@ Joy the Baker)

This is a fantastic round-up of fun items to knit for babies (@ whip up)

These zucchini blueberry muffins would be a great way to use up the zucchini in your garden (@ Rookie Cookie)