Sunday, January 30, 2011

The Skinny on Networking

The Skinny on Networking: Maximizing the Power of Numbers by Jim Randel

08/10 - Rand Media Co - eBook, 140 pages

You need to be clear on your goals and the path before you go down any road

Networking is the key to your success. It helps you function in the workplace, move up the corporate ladder as well as form lasting friendships and working relationships. However, knowing who to network with is critical because not everyone has the ability to desire to mentor you nor does everyone have the desire to help you. Figuring out who has the ability to advance your career or get you in the right place at the right time is not easy but you have to keep your eyes open and your ears attuned to the nuances of what is out there to achieve and who can help you attain that goal.

The Skinny On Series...

The Skinny on Creativity: Thinking Outside the Box written by Jim Randel

09/10 - Rand Media Co (eBook), 172 pages

Creativity is more than thinking outside the box

You have to be able to know how to get out of the box to starting maneuvering around in the real world. This book gives you the building blocks on taking ideas and making them reality and seeing the good from the great.

Don’t make assumptions make decisions and act on them and have the courage to know not everything will be a home run but if you don’t take the thoughts churning around in your head and do something with them how will you ever know the strike from the hit?

MIND-BLOWN written by Michele Hart

MIND-BLOWN written by Michele Hart

08/10 - BookStrand Publishing - Paperback, 220 pages

Fictional, scary story you makes you believe big brother is watching….

Holly Maddox is a single, unemployed mother that believes all the answers to her prayers have been granted with the new job at an up and coming Medical Facility. She starts out in the billing department but quickly moves to a promotion working as the assistant to Jonathan Paige, a man from her past. Jon was a friend of Holly’s late brother and finds himself wanting to take on the role of her protector but this objective does not deter him from always wanting to be her lover he just needs to decide which should be done first.

But Jon and Holly have a number of side roads they have to take in order to be together with the largest one resolving their suspicions about the facility they work for. What is really going on behind the closed doors of the clinic and why are people in mass all craving the same soda? Jon enlists his sister to utilize her medical expertise to help them answer at least a few of the questions while Holly uses her friendly charms on one of the physician’s running the program. Putting notes together, skirting around security to look at sensitive data and running around incognito seems more CIA than Holly would like.

But the closer they get answers more questions arise and the head of the facility starts to believe it is not animal rights groups infiltrating her lab but someone from inside. Jon wants Holly to be safe and plans to keep her that way and hopefully with a lifelong commitment attached and if he has to brain wash her to do it will he push the envelope that far or has he done that already?

Michele Hart writes a book drawing a reader in so far that they believe that what they are reading is an actual fact. That is the basis of a good writer and Ms. Hart has consistently displayed this in her books. I find the story with Jon and Holly both romantic and touching because they both have known loss and still try to stay positive about life which is not always easy.

Saturday, January 29, 2011

Guest Blogger Kim Adams of SOS Aloha


Aloha to CiCi McNair and NEVER FLIRT WITH A FEMME FATALE

This past week, I spotted the Dos Equis Man (the most interesting man in the world) at the Pro Bowl scrimmages, giving the quarterbacks tips on how to throw long bombs to entertain the crowd*. Today, we meet his cousin, CiCi McNair, the most interesting private investigator in the world. Her bio tells us why. Clarissa McNair, whose nickname is Cici, was born and grew up in Mississippi. She graduated from Briarcliff College in New York with a B.A. in American history. In Toronto, she worked as a researcher for CBC-TV on a documentary on organized crime. Connections was given a standing ovation in the Canadian Parliament and won every possible award. In Rome, McNair was a news writer, on-air newscaster, and producer of documentaries for Vatican Radio. Her main field of interest was the Third World. While writing her first novel, Garden of Tigers, she was head of international publicity for a Los Angeles film company. Her second novel, Dancing with Thieves, was written in a fishing village on an island off the coast of Tuscany. McNair moved to Geneva to write her third novel, A Flash of Diamonds, which dealt with the world of private bankers and the Genevois. Clarissa McNair has traveled from the Canadian Arctic to Patagonia, from Haiti to Hong Kong, from Afghanistan to Cyprus. She has spent time in the Middle East and a year in Africa. After living in half a dozen countries, she now resides in Philadelphia where she heads her own private detective agency. Green Star Investigations handles all sorts of cases including missing persons, intellectual property, stolen art recovery and homicide. http://www.greenstarinvestigations.com/ Detectives Don't Wear Seat Belts is the story of why she became a private detective. She has written about her adventures undercover, the men she worked with and some of her cases. McNair's newest book, Never Flirt with a Femme Fatale, is true tales from her files as a detective and as a journalist. She writes about powerful women, seduction and murder.
Kim: From Mississippi to New York to Toronto to Rome, you made a significant cultural leap! What influenced your decisions to pursue an American History degree in New York, work for a Canadian television station, and eat pasta with the Pope?

CiCi: I love American history so that's why I picked it as my college major. I confess that I wanted to major in International Studies but could not satisfy the language requirement. Very disappointing. Hilarious, too, as years later I would live in Italy and, for two years, translate Pope John Paul II's speeches and go on the air to be heard round the world with my one or two minute synopsis of what head of state he'd met with and what had been said. I struggled mightily with Italian and now speak it but there were times at my desk at Vatican Radio that I thought I 'd better turn to prayer. This was only part of my job there...it was writing and announcing the international newscasts twice a day plus doing interviews of ambassadors, cardinals, all sorts of illustrious characters and producing documentaries. I loved that job but was treated horribly by my seven colleagues in my immediate newsroom. Because I was the only Protestant at the Vatican and because my Italian was so bad they all decided that the only possible reason for me to have been hired was that I was the mistress of the CIA station chief in Rome! When I was told by my Jesuit boss that they had decided I was a spy and a plant, I told him that if I were a plant, I wanted to be a geranium.

Kim: (laughing) But your adventure was not over - you've lived around the world, in some places where women are considered second class citizens. How did you adjust to this environment? Can you share an amazing moment in a far away place?


CiCi: I remember being told that in Malawi it was the law that a woman be covered to her ankles and trousers were frowned upon. So I bought a few yards of fabric at a market in Rhodesia which is now Zimbabwe and upon arrival in Malawi draped it around my skirt and tucked it in the waistband. It was awkward but all went well until I found myself standing at the front desk in the lobby of a little guest house and heard the gasps and laughter. The fabric was in a colorful pile at my feet and there I was in my tiny miniskirt! No arrest, no jail time but I can remember turning beet red! Seriously, being in another country demands respect. It's proper and correct to respect their traditions. I am a guest or even an interloper.


Kim: What inspired your interest in writing fiction? What prompted you to move to nonfiction? Did your work experiences and/or international travel assist you and/or prepare you for publishing?

CiCi: Everything I've ever done has been material for writing. As for fiction, I love to tell a story. I love to daydream about characters and plot what they might do, what they will say, and how to move the action from scene to scene. Nonfiction is a great discipline for me because I want to get the story, the conversations exactly right. I feel I owe the truth to the characters I've met.



Kim: What powerful women do you admire?

CiCi
: Aung San Suu Kyi of Burma. Any woman doctor who works in a society that forbids her to practice medicine. Any little girl anywhere who fights for the right to go to school.


Kim: Are there any fictional books, movies or TV series that accurately portray PI's? Accurate or
not, what is your favorite?

CiCi: I am a big fan of Law and Order. Lots of the shows are strictly entertainment. Just for fun. They are jokes if you have really worked with law enforcement.

The original series with original cast
Kim: What's next for Cici McNair?

CiCi: I want to write more. Maybe go back to a novel next time. I became a detective after two novels were published and now I want to do both--writing and running Green Star Investigations. DETECTIVES DON'T WEAR SEAT BELTS and NEVER FLIRT WITH A FEMME FATALE made me remember how much I really love to write. Mahalo, CiCi, for visiting us today at SOS Aloha. I am honored for the opportunity to meet you and share your adventures with SOS readers - you are inspiration of how we are only limited by our imagination.

I also thank Mary Gramlich, the Reading Reviewer, for introducing me to CiCi. Mary posted a review of NEVER FLIRT WITH A FEMME FATALE on her website. Mary is giving away her review copy of the book to one randomly selected commenter: To enter the giveaway,

1. Leave a comment about your favorite PI (real or fictional) and an amazing woman you admire. 

2. The giveaway is open only to US residents but ... ... I welcome comments from all readers - whether or not you are entering the contest.

3. Comments are open through Monday, January 31, 10 pm in Hawaii to enter the giveaway.

Mahalo, Kim in Hawaii

Friday, January 28, 2011

THE COMPLAINTS written by Ian Rankin

THE COMPLAINTS written by Ian Rankin

03/11 - Little, Brown & Company - Hardcover, 448 pages

Where do the good guys finish in the race of life?

Malcolm Fox was one of the good guys. He was a clean cop that monitors the ones that were not always making sure that his principles were upheld. Foxy worked in Edinburgh for the division called The Complaints and Conduct Department and had the character of a slow and steady man making careful decisions and well thought out plans. He took care of his aging father and tried to protect his sister from herself which was not always easy when she was a magnet for the wrong sort of man.

When Foxy finds himself instead of investigating being investigated he wants to know why. His sister’s abusive boyfriend turns up dead and a string of occurrences that appear to be random but are too carefully orchestrated to be so make him wonder who is behind this mess.

Foxy meets a young officer named Jamie Breck and a quick friendship forms even though Breck was one of those he was to be investigating. Was this connection a set-up, is Foxy being thrown under the bus to cover up another crime, who are these people following him? Too many questions with no answers and all the fingers pointing at Foxy and Breck when there is no connection but a dead boyfriend that no one really knew or cared about.

This book give the perspective of the hunter being hunted and when you turn the tables on those that investigate how they use their skills to assist in finding the truth. The truth turns out to be buried very deep and when he finds it even Foxy is shocked by how this all got started.

Ian Rankin loves a good mystery and the reason I know that he in the flawless way he writes it. You never know who is doing what or what door leads to the clue until the moment he wants you to.

Friday, January 21, 2011

WHEN WE WERE STRANGERS written by Pamela Schonwewaldt

WHEN WE WERE STRANGERS written by Pamela Schonwewaldt

January 2011 - HarperCollins Publishers – Trade Paperback, 336 pages

Where we came from makes us who we are and what we become.

Irma Vitale started life out in the poor, desolate town of Opi, Italy. She dreamed of better things and a more advanced life than the one she was leading. He journey took her alone to America in the times of Lincoln’s reformation. Irma like the country she now lived in would venture forward and Irma believed she too could become someone else but still be true to her roots and upbringing. She missed her family and longed at times for what she had but never regretted her decision despite the agony she had to endure.

She started out in Cleveland looking for her brother who left before her but soon moved on to Chicago. Irma had a skill as a seamstress and the talent she possessed to create intricate works of art from pieces of cloth earned her an income and a living enough to move on to San Francisco to start yet again in the field of medicine. Irma was a believer who never stopped to wallow in self-pity and always said thank you for the good this new life brought.

Her life was never easy; the times were difficult on good days and despondent on others. She worked hard, never complained and suffered such atrocities no one should endure but still she moved on. But the Opi girl became an American Woman and showed everyone what determination looks like and how to be something when everyone tells you that you are nothing.

Irma is an accumulation of each of our ancestries who did not start out but came to America and made a great life for the generations that followed. Poverty was a way of life and Ms. Schonwewaldt writes this with such clarity you stomach starts to grumble with the hunger these people felt. In this time of immigration critiquing it might be nice to have someone read this book and remember that everyone has a dream to live a better life and shouldn’t we be proud they believe all this is possible in the United States of America.

Thursday, January 20, 2011

THE LADY MOST LIKELY…by Julia Quinn, Eloisa James and Connie Brockway

THE LADY MOST LIKELY…by Julia Quinn, Eloisa James and Connie Brockway

12/10 - HarperCollins Publishers - Mass Market Paperback – 384 pages

Great concept with with consistent twists to keep the reader interested.

In this corner we have Hugh Theodore Dunne, earl of Briarly who is in need of a wife to produce an heir. In the other corner you have Hugh’s sisters ready to make this happen and devising a list of prospective candidates. Which leave two other corners of potential women of merit who can become his wife with each of them having their own story to tell.

Lady Georgina Sorrell is a widow who plans to stay that way until she meets the match of love she has searched for. Gwendolyn Passmore who is the stunningly beautiful belle of the Ton and the envy of every eligible female. Lastly there is Miss Katherine Petyon who tries to hard to be everything everyone wants and displays her displeasure with a flair for the dramatic this side of diva.

Hugh was to pick a wife based on their qualities that most match his beloved horses in that they are strong, reliable and willing to be tamed. He has friends who provide other advise and in fact move in on his potential candidates while Hugh is concerning himself with which horse is the best match for a race instead of wooing his potential brides.

A house party was never this much fun before and trying to see at the end of each story who will be left standing is fascinating.

This book is fun and the stories so entertaining and well written you find it hard to believe this was not written by one author instead of three. The chapters continue with a consistent theme and ensure the reader can keep the ebb and flow of the stories. While some parts may seem a little too well revealed this book regardless is so charming and the characters endearing you will soon forget any small flaws.

Monday, January 17, 2011

ASGAARD by D. Alan Johnson

ASGAARD by D. Alan Johnson

2009 – SigInt Press – Paperback - 237 pages

A must read to capture the true power behind the creation of wars

If you want to own the minerals that are used to make just about everything the most human course of action is negotiation and manufacturing rights. What the major players behind the scene do to obtain what they want is create governmental upheavals; put the people in place they want and figure out the ways to get what they want by doing the least for most return.

This book lays out the scenario as realistically as possible of how governments, corporations, individuals and small time lugs turned an opportunity to obtain the mineral that is a key ingredient in the manufacture of computers. Every alphabet in the United States government had their hands in the revolution that over threw a government and along with contractors and private militias turned the tide their way leaving a trail of blood and bodies from one part of Africa to another. There is no concern for the people caught in this nightmare just the end goal.

There are so many players in the book and each character has a purpose and is important to the storyline from the top to the bottom of the food chain. You start the story and can’t stop reading because you have the hope that this will get better and you keep waiting for someone with a conscious to show up and say stop we can’t continue the way we are. But no one steps up and nothing ever changes. The story repeats itself over centuries and this book explains how and why it can't and won't ever stop.

It is always better to live with the devil you know as he at least is showing his true evil colors.