Lately, I've been reading a lot of fluffy books. (brain candy.) Hit on Kathy Reichs, who wrote a number of books on which the TV show "Bones" is based on. I like her forward writing style, even if she tends to overuse the chapter cliffhanger convention. Makes it hard to find a good place to put the books down. Started with Bones to Ashes which is, apparently the 5th book in the series. (Hate it when I start halfway through a series.)
I happened to be in a Paper Store looking for wrapping paper, (You'd think a place called Paper Store would have had more of a selection of wrapping paper, but I digress,) when my eye settled on From Baghdad, With Love: A Marine, the War, and a Dog Named Lava. Picked it up, thinking I'd save it for after the current run of brain candy.
Got home and figured, what the hell, I'll read the first chapter to see if I like the style, or if it's going on the shelf of poor purchases.
...
1:30 am the next morning, I finished the book.
I don't want to say it was a particularly well written book, but it was painfully compelling. It didn't tell the story of the war, it didn't try to sell you an agenda, it was a brutal and honest story of one man's, (and many of his acquaintances,) fight to save the dog he begrudgingly came to love in the storm of insanity only war can kick up.
In the end, it is heart warming. You can pretty much gleen that from the title. Along the way, though, you read nervously, as if by the action of turning the page you might initiate events that will spiral out of control.
Highly recommend it, for the dog lover, but also for the person who can't understand why men two, three tour in, continue to volunteer to go back.
- k.
I happened to be in a Paper Store looking for wrapping paper, (You'd think a place called Paper Store would have had more of a selection of wrapping paper, but I digress,) when my eye settled on From Baghdad, With Love: A Marine, the War, and a Dog Named Lava. Picked it up, thinking I'd save it for after the current run of brain candy.
Got home and figured, what the hell, I'll read the first chapter to see if I like the style, or if it's going on the shelf of poor purchases.
...
1:30 am the next morning, I finished the book.
I don't want to say it was a particularly well written book, but it was painfully compelling. It didn't tell the story of the war, it didn't try to sell you an agenda, it was a brutal and honest story of one man's, (and many of his acquaintances,) fight to save the dog he begrudgingly came to love in the storm of insanity only war can kick up.
In the end, it is heart warming. You can pretty much gleen that from the title. Along the way, though, you read nervously, as if by the action of turning the page you might initiate events that will spiral out of control.
Highly recommend it, for the dog lover, but also for the person who can't understand why men two, three tour in, continue to volunteer to go back.
- k.