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Busy busy bee

Thu, 27 Apr 2006, 11:15 pm  

Sux.

So busy at work that I don’t have time to blot.
So I’m walking around with an oil slick on my forehead the whole day.
Blackout? Bet I can be the flashlight.

Boo hoo >_<

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Who says money can’t buy happiness (at least for a short while)

Thu, 27 Apr 2006, 10:42 pm  

Payday!

anya.jpg

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Jodi Picoult

Sun, 23 Apr 2006, 09:43 pm  

I bought Jodi Picoult’s latest book, The Tenth Circle, about 12 days ago…read it, liked it, went out and bought another four: Salem Falls, Vanishing Acts, My Sister’s Keeper and Keeping Faith (yes, I’m like that about books…once I find an author I like, I’ll try to read all his/her books. It’s no wonder that I was the main contributor to the close to RM5K we spent on books last year!!). Finished those, went out and bought another one on Friday, Perfect Match, which I just finished today. And now I’m itching to buy a couple more…*grin*

Anyways…here’s the synopsis of each of the books in case you’re interested (all taken from Jodi Picoult’s official website):

The Tenth Circle (2006)
TenthCircle.jpg
When Daniel Stone was a child, he was the only white boy in a native Eskimo village where his mother taught, and he was teased mercilessly because he was different. He fought back, the baddest of the bad kids: stealing, drinking, robbing and cheating his way out of the Alaskan bush ?? where he honed his artistic talent, fell in love with a girl and got her pregnant. To become part of a family, he reinvented himself ?? jettisoning all that anger to become a docile, devoted husband and father. Fifteen years later, when we meet Daniel again, he is a comic book artist. His wife teaches Dante??s Inferno at a local college; his daughter, Trixie, is the light of his life ?? and a girl who only knows her father as the even-tempered, mild-mannered man he has been her whole life. Until, that is, she is date raped?and Daniel finds himself struggling, again, with a powerlessness and a rage that may not just swallow him whole, but destroy his family and his future.

Vanishing Acts (2005)
VanishingActs-1.jpg
Delia Hopkins has led a charmed life. Raised in rural New Hampshire by her widowed father, Andrew, she now has a young daughter, a handsome fiancé, and her own search-and-rescue bloodhound, which she uses to find missing persons. But as she plans her wedding, she is plagued by flashbacks of a life she can??t recall. And when a policemen arrives to disclose a truth that will upend the world as she knows it, Delia must search through these memories ?? even when they have the potential to devastate her life, and the lives of those she loves most. Vanishing Acts is a book about the nature and power of memory; about what happens when the past we have been running from catches up to us? and what happens when the memory we thought had vanished returns as a threat.

My Sister’s Keeper (2004)
allenunwinmysisterskeeperAp.jpg
Anna is not sick, but she might as well be. By age thirteen, she has undergone countless surgeries, transfusions, and shots so that her older sister, Kate, can somehow fight the leukemia that has plagued her since childhood. The product of preimplantation genetic diagnosis, Anna was conceived as a bone marrow match for Kate - a life and a role that she has never questioned? until now. Like most teenagers, Anna is beginning to question who she truly is. But unlike most teenagers, she has always been defined in terms of her sister - and so Anna makes a decision that for most would be unthinkable? a decision that will tear her family apart and have perhaps fatal consequences for the sister she loves. My Sister’s Keeper examines what it means to be a good parent, a good sister, a good person. Is it morally correct to do whatever it takes to save a child’s life? even if that means infringing upon the rights of another? Is it worth trying to discover who you really are, if that quest makes you like yourself less?

Perfect Match (2002)
allenunwinperfectmatchApr02.jpg
What happens when you do all the right things for all the wrong reasons? As an assistant district attorney in York County, Maine, Nina Frost prosecutes the sort of crimes that tear families apart. She helps clients navigate their way through a nightmare ?? even though the legal system is not always the faultless compass they want and need it to be. She learns that the easiest way to cross this devastating minefield time and time again is to offer compassion, battle fiercely for justice, and keep her emotional distance.

But when Nina and her husband Caleb discover that their five-year-old son Nathaniel has been sexually abused, that distance is impossible to maintain. The world Nina inhabits now seems different from the one she lived in yesterday; the lines between family and professional life are erased; and answers to questions she thought she knew are no longer easy to find. Overcome by anger and desperate for vengeance, Nina ignites a battle that may cause her to lose the very thing she’s fighting for.

Salem Falls (2001)
SallemFalls.jpg
Jack St. Bride was once a beloved teacher and soccer coach at a girls’ prep school - until a student’s crush sparked a powder keg of accusation and robbed him of his career and reputation. Now, after a devastatingly public ordeal that left him with an eight-month jail sentence and no job, Jack resolves to pick up the pieces of his life. He takes a job washing dishes at Addie Peabody’s diner and slowly starts to form a relationship with her in the quiet New England village of Salem Falls. But just when Jack thinks he has outrun his past, a quartet of teenage girls with a secret turn his world upside down once again, triggering a modern-day witch hunt in a town haunted by its own history?

Keeping Faith (1999)
KeepingFaith.jpg
Somewhere between belief and doubt lies faith. For the second time in her marriage, Mariah White catches her husband with another woman and Faith, their seven year old daughter, witnesses every painful minute. In the aftermath of a sudden divorce, Mariah struggles with depression and Faith seeks solace in a new friend? a friend who may or may not be imaginary.

Faith talks to her “Guard”constantly; begins to recite passages from the Bible?? a book she’s never read. Fearful for her daughter’s sanity, Mariah sends her to several psychiatrists. Yet when Faith develops stigmata and begins to perform miraculous healings, Mariah wonders if her daughter– a girl with no religious background– might indeed be seeing God. As word spreads and controversy heightens, Mariah and Faith are besieged by believers and disbelievers alike, caught in a media circus that threatens what little stability they have left.

What are you willing to believe? Is Faith a prophet or a troubled little girl? Is Mariah a good mother facing an impossible crisis?? or a charlatan using her daughter to reclaim the attention her unfaithful husband withheld? As the story builds to a climactic battle for custody, Mariah must discover that spirit is not necessarily something that comes from religion, but from inside oneself.

Fascinating, thoughtful, and suspenseful, Keeping Faith explores a family plagued by the media, the medical profession, and organized religion in a world where everyone has an opinion but no one knows the truth. At her controversial and compelling best, Jodi Picoult masterfully explores the moment when boundaries break down, when illusions become reality, and when the only step left to take is a leap of faith.

The Pact (1998) - I bought this a couple of months earlier
ThePact.jpg
In this contemporary tale of love and friendship, Jodi Picoult brings to life a familiar world, and in a single terrifying moment awakens every parent’s worse fear: We think we know our children? but do we ever really know them at all?

For eighteen years the Hartes and the Golds have lived next door to each other, sharing everything from Chinese food to chicken pox to carpool duty– they’ve grown so close it seems they have always been a part of each other’s lives. Parents and children alike have been best friends, so it’s no surprise that in high school Chris and Emily’s friendship blossoms into something more. They’ve been soul mates since they were born.

So when midnight calls from the hospital come in, no one is ready for the appalling truth: Emily is dead at seventeen from a gunshot wound to the head. There’s a single unspent bullet in the gun that Chris took from his father’s cabinet– a bullet that Chris tells police he intended for himself. But a local detective has doubts about the suicide pact that Chris has described.

The profound questions faced by the characters in this heart-rending novel are those we can all relate to: How well do we ever really know our children, our friends? What if?? As its chapters unfold, alternating between an idyllic past and an unthinkable present, The Pact paints an indelible portrait of families in anguish? culminating in an astonishingly suspenseful courtroom drama as Chris finds himself on trial for murder.

With this riveting psychological drama, Jodi Picoult explores the dynamics of intimate relationships under stress– from the seemingly inexplicable mind of a teenager to the bonds of friendship and marriage. Few writers have such a gift for evoking everyday life coupled with the ability to create a level of dramatic tension that will keep you up reading late into the night. The Pact is storytelling at its best: wonderfully observed, deeply moving, and utterly impossible to put down.

Personally….

Out of all the ones that I’ve read, I like My Sister’s Keeper the most. The storyline was good, and the ending, unexpected. Vanishing Acts took me the longest to get through…found the storyline pretty slow during the first half of the book, and I was literally plodding along (on average, I take about a day or so to finish a book…this took me almost 3-4 days, of course, coupled with work, etc. Still…). Keeping Faith was interesting (anything that deals with God is always interesting), though the ending was quite a letdown. I found Salem Falls quite predictable…reminded me of the movie, The Craft! Perfect Match, the one that I finished today, was also a good read though I found it hard to warm up to the characters in the book! And The Tenth Circle…well, the inclusion of the comic, Wildclaw, at certain intervals in the book made me flip through the book too quickly cause the comic was as interesting as the story! Plus, there’s a surprise at the end of the book! And The Pact…sheesh…I’ve gotta reread this book coz I’ve forgotten how it ended! =))

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Newton’s 3rd law

Fri, 21 Apr 2006, 12:03 am  

Oh, how fun this is! If you thought that I would be hurt, angry, etc. when I read it…think again. I found this supremely amusing because I never knew I could actually piss you off that much!

And the most ironic thing? None of this would’ve happened if not for you. Yes, YOU! You unknowingly kicked off this whole chain reaction starting from Q1 last year.

1. If not for what you did, I would have been given A.
2. If I was given A, I wouldn’t have done B.
3. If I didn’t do B, C would not have happened.
4. But since C happened, I had to do D. And D led me back to you.
5. And because of what you did and who you are, E happened.
6. E led to F which led to G.
7. And because G happened, I got H.

And now you are complaining about it? Action and reaction, baby! It all started with you, you, YOU!

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.
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.
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Yeah, I know I’m deliberately being cryptic. But those who understand, will understand.

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WWF photo mosaic

Thu, 20 Apr 2006, 11:56 pm  

Read it at sillywabbit’s blog!

“Add your face and help protect our forests

Forests are amazing storehouses of biological diversity, housing over two-thirds of all known terrestrial species.

Yet, each year around 13 million hectares of natural forest are lost. That???ôs 25 hectares every minute, the equivalent of 36 football fields. Once spread over half the earth, forests now cover only a quarter of the planet’s land surface.

Add your face to our photo mosaic, and, together with thousands of other people who share your concerns and their pictures, we’ll build a photo-petition that symbolizes what we all care so much about.”

Go go, add add!

And check out the mosaic here…

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