By Orlando Figes
This is an excellent book that digs below the history of Stalin or even Stalin's Russia into the lives of those living under Stalin. It is an incredible book, an absolute must read to anyone searching to understand those terrible years.
"The Whisperers is not about Stalin, although his presence is felt on every page, or directly about the politics of his regime; it is about the way Stalinism entered people's minds and emotions, affecting all their values and relationships." Pg. xxxii
"Increasingly, there was nothing in the private life of the Bolshevik that was not subject to the gaze and censure of the Party leadership. This public culture, where every member was expected to reveal his inner self to the collective, was unique to the Bolsheviks - there was nothing like it in the Nazi or the Fascist movement..." Pg 37
"Collectivization was the great turning-point in Soviet history. It destroyed a way of life that had developed over many centuries - a life based on the family farm, the ancient peasant commune, the independent village and its church and the rural market, all of which were seen by the Bolsheviks as obstacles to socialist industrialization. Millions of people were uprooted from their homes and dispersed across the SOviet Union: runaways from the collective farms; victims of the famine that resulted from the over-requisitioning of kolkhoz grain; orphaned children, 'kulaks' and their families. This nomadic population became the main labor force of Stalin's industrial revolution, filling the cities and industrial building sites, the labour camps and 'special settlements' of the Gulag." Pg. 81
"In 1935, the SOviet government had lowered the age of criminal responsibility to just twelve - partly with the aim of threatening those in prison with the arrest of their children if they refused t confess to their crimes." Pg 248
"As Stalin saw it, the family was collectively responsible for the behavior of its individual members." Pg. 248
"The Great Terror undermined the trust that held together families. Wives doubted husbands; husbands doubted wives. The bond between parent and child was usually the first of these family ties to unravel. . . . Children were put under pressure by their schools, by the Pioneers and the Komsomol, to renounce arrested relatives, or suffer the consequences for their education and career." Pg. 300
Section "Wait for Me" about those coming back from the Gulag's and their silence. "It was terrible. To this day, I do not understand. Why was she so frightened to speak? I think she did not want to burden me. She wanted me to be happy, not to make me bitter about life in the SOviet Union. She knew that everything that had been done to our family had been an injustice but she did not want me to think that." Pg. 454
Book 81
Sunday, December 16, 2012
Wednesday, December 5, 2012
Vampire Academy
I nominate this the worst series title ever! But I am really enjoying the books. The series is intently focused on one main character and her development as a fighter and her growth as a young girl becoming a woman. The world the author creates is unique, consistent and engaging. The story line is unpredictable and clever. Apart from that, it has some amazing fighting, a very important aspect to me, and an interesting and unpredictable (not stereotypical) romantic story line. I thought I would just read book one but here I am on book 4!
Books 77 - 80, 82 - 83
Books 77 - 80, 82 - 83
Valkyrie Rising

By Ingrid Paulson
I am proud to say that this author is someone I used to work with and a good friend of one of my co-workers. I really enjoyed the book and found it completely inspirational that she was at one point working for the same company as me and is now an author! This is a great YA read, lots of action and a very strong female lead character. I loved the Nordic setting and the role of Norse mythology. Keep writing Ingird!
Book 76
Cinder
By Marissa Meyer
Loved this book! I can't wait for the sequel to come out. I found a great website to track series and when the next book is coming out: http://www.fictfact.com. I am looking forward to this one!
"Soon, the whole world would be searching for her - Linh Cinder.
A deformed cyborg with a missing foot.
A Lunar with a stolen identity.
A mechanic with no one to run to, nowhere to go.
But they would be looking for a ghost." Page 384
Book 75
Tuesday, November 27, 2012
I Hunt Killers
By Barry Lyga
Excellent YA book about a boy with a unique background which prepared him for a life of crime or crime solving (he is still trying to sort that one out). The story was well told, compelling and different from a lot of YA fiction out there. I look forward to the next book in the series!
"You won't even know you've crossed the line until it's way back in your rearview mirror." Loc 3983
Book 74
Excellent YA book about a boy with a unique background which prepared him for a life of crime or crime solving (he is still trying to sort that one out). The story was well told, compelling and different from a lot of YA fiction out there. I look forward to the next book in the series!
"You won't even know you've crossed the line until it's way back in your rearview mirror." Loc 3983
Book 74
Reached
By Allie Condie
The final book in the Matched series was in many ways a pleasant surprise. I enjoyed the first book, didn't really like the second but thought this was the best of the series. What I really enjoyed about it was the lack of compromise. I felt that Condie didn't ever take the easy way out with the story line. Even though you thought it was going one (predictable) direction, it didn't happen that way. And this process happened again and again, allowing a kind of depth to surface within the story and within the characters. Excellent end to the series!
"You cannot change your journey if you are unwilling to move at all." Loc 2824
"I can't seem to treat this life I have as anything but the only thing." Loc 4882
"I draw in ragged breath, the kind you take when the pain is too deep to cry, when you can't cry because all you are is pain, and if you let come of it out, you might cease to exist." Loc 5448
Book 73
The final book in the Matched series was in many ways a pleasant surprise. I enjoyed the first book, didn't really like the second but thought this was the best of the series. What I really enjoyed about it was the lack of compromise. I felt that Condie didn't ever take the easy way out with the story line. Even though you thought it was going one (predictable) direction, it didn't happen that way. And this process happened again and again, allowing a kind of depth to surface within the story and within the characters. Excellent end to the series!
"You cannot change your journey if you are unwilling to move at all." Loc 2824
"I can't seem to treat this life I have as anything but the only thing." Loc 4882
"I draw in ragged breath, the kind you take when the pain is too deep to cry, when you can't cry because all you are is pain, and if you let come of it out, you might cease to exist." Loc 5448
Book 73
The Twelve
By Justin Cronin
This was the necessary second book to Passages. I say necessary because this book really was what I was looking for from a story perspective from the first book. Cronin has an incredibly patient way of writing a story. Patient is the nice way of saying it, maddening as a reader is another way to put it - and my experience oscillated between the two. Some of the strong connections I made with characters and story lines back on say page 100 of the first book (keep in mind these are seven hundred page books) did not find resolution until almost the end of this book. And I must say it put me a little bit in awe of Cronin, the discipline that takes is extraordinary. And it made for some very deep connections and satisfying story links, I found myself thinking about this book a lot outside of reading it, puzzling over it and wondering where some of the characters were going and where they had been. This was an amazing book, difficult to describe but a wonderful thing to experience.
"Sorry, we made vampires; it seemed like a good idea at the time." (I had been waiting for this line through the whole first book!) Pg. 85
"Let me see if I have you right, the chairman intoned . . . You decided to re-engineer an ancient virus that would transform a dozen death row inmates into indestructible monsters who live on blood, and you didn't think to tell anybody about this?" Pg. 85
"Houston, what remained, was not a place for humankind; Greer wondered why anyone had ever thought it habitable to begin with." Pg. 486
"Already she was feeling it, feeling them. The too-familiar prickling along her skin and, deep insider her skull, a watery murmuring, like the caress of waves upon a distant shore." Pg. 509
Remember Alicia!
Book 72
This was the necessary second book to Passages. I say necessary because this book really was what I was looking for from a story perspective from the first book. Cronin has an incredibly patient way of writing a story. Patient is the nice way of saying it, maddening as a reader is another way to put it - and my experience oscillated between the two. Some of the strong connections I made with characters and story lines back on say page 100 of the first book (keep in mind these are seven hundred page books) did not find resolution until almost the end of this book. And I must say it put me a little bit in awe of Cronin, the discipline that takes is extraordinary. And it made for some very deep connections and satisfying story links, I found myself thinking about this book a lot outside of reading it, puzzling over it and wondering where some of the characters were going and where they had been. This was an amazing book, difficult to describe but a wonderful thing to experience.
"Sorry, we made vampires; it seemed like a good idea at the time." (I had been waiting for this line through the whole first book!) Pg. 85
"Let me see if I have you right, the chairman intoned . . . You decided to re-engineer an ancient virus that would transform a dozen death row inmates into indestructible monsters who live on blood, and you didn't think to tell anybody about this?" Pg. 85
"Houston, what remained, was not a place for humankind; Greer wondered why anyone had ever thought it habitable to begin with." Pg. 486
"Already she was feeling it, feeling them. The too-familiar prickling along her skin and, deep insider her skull, a watery murmuring, like the caress of waves upon a distant shore." Pg. 509
Remember Alicia!
Book 72
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