All posts by Ti

Hi, I'm Ti! I blog about books and life over at http://bookchatter.net

The Sunday Salon: I Want…

This Sunday, I find myself wanting all sorts of things:

  • I want more time to do the things that I enjoy.
  • I want this headache to go away.
  • I want to never have to worry about the food that crosses my lips. Recent health issues have forced me to be more concerned about this and it’s…it’s NOT fun.
  • I want every book in the Persephone Catalogue and Claire from Kiss a Cloud is to blame for that. Her beautiful posts about the books have caught my eye and now I find myself desiring all of them.

This past week was a busy week. I posted my review of The Day the Falls Stood Still and also posted a Q&A with Cathy Marie Buchanan along with a giveaway of the book. The giveaway ends on Sept 18th so be sure to check it out.

I also posted a review of Secrets of a Christmas Box. Speaking of Christmas, I went shopping the other day and the Christmas ornaments were out (picture Ti running away screaming). I LOVE Christmas but it’s not even Halloween yet people.

My weekend so far has been okay. I didn’t do much yesterday except enjoy a lovely BBQ with friends. Today, the Hub is at work so I will probably take the kids for a bookstore run. My daughter is craving one of the chocolate chip cookies from the bookstore cafe so I’m sure we will be stopping for a treat or two.

Next week is Book Blogger Appreciation Week. It runs all week through Sept 18th and there will be all sorts of fun, bookish things going on. It should be a really fun week.

As for reading, I am reading The Last Dickens for an upcoming TLC book tour. What are you reading today?

Review: Secrets of a Christmas Box

Secrets of a Christmas Box
Written by Steven Hornby
Color Illustration by Justin Gerard
Chapter Illustrations by Gabriel Hordos
Publisher: Ecky Thump Books, Incorporated
Pub. Date: September 2009
ISBN-13: 9780981588308
248pp

The Short of It:

Although the point of the book was to capture the magic of Christmas, I do not feel that this was achieved. In my opinion, the story was a bit on the dark side which surprised me a bit.

The Rest of It:

As I was reading the book, the first thing that I noticed was that the dialogue seemed a bit forced. The first couple of chapters were ‘He said / She said’ type conversations and although the words spoken seemed natural enough, the phrasing seemed almost script-like to me. However, by the fourth chapter this seemed to improve quite a bit so it was not an issue for me throughout the story.

Basically, the story is about a box of Christmas ornaments that come to life. My kids love to decorate the tree and as they take out each ornament, they always ask me where it came from, when we got it, etc. We’ve had these conversations year after year, they KNOW where they came from but it’s part of the fun. So when I read the premise of this book, I was really looking forward to it.

As each character was introduced, I did feel that there was some Christmas-y magic there. As the story progressed though, it sort of played out like a movie. Something happens, they respond, a discovery is made, etc. However, I didn’t expect it to take the turn that it did and it sort of threw me off. I wanted to be enchanted by the wonder of Christmas. Instead, I was thinking, this should be a Pixar movie.

Now in Hornby’s defense, after reading the book I do see that he has spent many years working in visual effects and animated movies. The book cover also states that he originally planned for Secrets of a Christmas Box to be a screenplay. So…since this is a debut novel, it’s not surprising that his previous experience came into play here. I was also a film major at one point so to me, it read like a screenplay as opposed to a novel. Not necessarily a bad thing, but not what I expected.

Additionally, I’m not sure of the demographic he is trying to hit. There are young children at the beginning of the novel, but from the dialogue it’s hard to tell how old they are. I would say this would be a good book for the 7-9 year-old set that still believes in Santa ( I know, silly me, everyone knows he’s real).

One other item to mention is that there are several pencil sketches throughout the novel that I found to be quite charming. Overall? I feel that it missed its mark. If anyone else has reviewed this book and would like me to include a link to your review, please let me know and I will add it to this post.

This signed review copy was sent to me by Steven Hornby and Ecky Thump Books.