Monday, November 29, 2021

Spanish Language: 3 in 1 Bundle 4 stars

I started to learn Spanish nine months ago, using Rosetta Stone, and have supplemented it with reading stories in Spanish, watching Spanish TV, etc. So when I saw Spanish Language: 3 in 1 Bundle by Sergio Rodriguez, including Spanish for Beginners, Spanish Short Stories, and Spanish Language Lessons, I picked it up. Because it is three books in one, I review them individually from the point of view of a person who is just learning the language.

 


Spanish for Beginners

 

This book was all that I hoped for. It offers basic pronunciations as well as all the idiosyncratic exceptions that change pronunciations. For instance, Rodriguez talks about stress and accent marks and covers basics like how the syllable with the accent mark receives the stress. But he also explains things like when a syllable does not contain an accented vowel that there are rules that determine the implicit location of the stress. He goes on to explain the rules and offers lists as examples.

 

This book goes in-depth enough that I will use it as a go-to resource. It touches on practical things like cardinal and ordinal numbers, fractions, colors, time, dates, days of the week, etc., and includes charts you can print out. I liked that this book reinforced things I had already learned, that it answered many questions I had, and improved my language skills. For instance, I wondered about the use of al. Spanish for Beginners explained that “when ‘el’ is used after the preposition 'a’ (to), they contract and form 'al’ (to the)." It also helped me better understand noun gender. Not that I have it down, or that there aren’t exceptions I still need to learn, but information about things like, “Nouns ending in -cion, -sion, -dad, -umbre, -ion, and -tud are feminine" I found helpful. This book also gave me a better grasp of pronouns, verbs (conjugating, irregular verb forms, first-person singular, exceptions, etc.) I could go on, but you get the idea.


If I were only reviewing this one book of the three, I would give it 5 stars. The only negative was that some things didn’t display quite right on the Kindle, but if I changed the font size I could make it work. I recommend this book to anyone learning Spanish. It offers practical information that is quite thorough.

 


 

Spanish Short Stories

 

The second book I found to be daunting for a beginner. Because I am at the beginning stage of learning the language, this slowed me down. The stories are written more for intermediate-level Spanish speakers, so I read the stories out loud into Google Translate to practice my annunciation. It helped me correct my accent, and it taught me new words to grow my Spanish vocabulary. The stories were entertaining, and I enjoyed reading them. The only thing I didn’t like is that I thought the stories would also be geared more toward beginners, and for this reason, I give a 4 out of 5 stars.

 


Spanish Language Lessons

 

Sergio Rodriguez’ third book in the bundle is an: Essential Spanish Phrase Book for Traveling in Spain, Argentina, Chile, Uruguay, and Mexico. It covers places he has traveled. He talks about foods, wines, and all things edible and recommends some of his favorites to try. He also offers suggestions of places to go, things to watch out for, places you would not want to miss, the best ways to get around, costs of things and exchange rates, and points out some pros and cons for each country. His writing is conversational and makes for an easy read. 

 

If you are planning to travel to one of these countries, I’d recommend this book to you. You might pick up some useful tidbits. I give it a 4 out of 5 stars.

 

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Saturday, November 13, 2021

Ultraxenopia (Project W.A.R., #1) - 5 stars

Ultraxenopia, book 1 in the Project W.A.R. series by M.A. Phipps, is a fast-paced YA dystopian novel set in a world divided into zones, with zone 1 the home of the elites who run things. Ordinary citizens live to please the State. They have little to nothing to say about where they live or work. At age 18, they take an exam to determine their lot in life. It is at this point in life that readers meet Wynter Reeves. 


Phipps uses the eighteen-year-old's trip to the testing site to introduce a theme of government control and lost individualism with a society under constant surveillance. A society that does not interact but lives in such a way as not to stand out. Their goal is to avoid drawing attention to themselves for any reason. Phipps' masterful use of the first-person point of view lets the reader feel Wynter’s fears and experience her thoughts. When she has a health event during her exam, it changes everything, and the story takes off running. I prefer not to include spoilers in my reviews but, I will say that she is betrayed and turned over to the State's ominous research facility, where we meet the antagonist of the story, Doctor Austin Richter.


Wynter goes through some gruesome testing, and the evil doctor informs her that she has a rare disease. It causes her to see little flashes of future events. The doctor is tapped into her when she experiences her first vision, and he recognizes the young man she sees. The doctor tells her the man is a member of the terrorist group PHOENIX. 

 

The doctor ramps up testing, and it all takes a toll on her health. She is near death and needs to get out of there, but security is very tight. When she sees the chance, she makes her break and finds her way to freedom. But freedom isn’t what she expected. She meets people who care, but her symptoms grow worse and become dangerous. She can’t control them. She lives, loves, and experiences loss, but then she comes face to face with a huge choice. It determines not just her future but the future of the entire world.

 


I enjoyed this book on every level. The plot, characters, and the unfolding story held my interest and often kept me on the edge of my seat. One small thing that I didn’t think worked occurred when Wynter grabbed a shard from a broken mirror and hid it up her sleeve. Some of her actions following that stunt made me expect that she might slice her wrist or something. Without saying more, that did not happen. Other than that, the only thing I didn’t like is that the book ended when it did. I will be adding Type X, the next book in the W.A.R. series, to my reading list for sure. 

 


I recommend this book to people who enjoyed the Hunger Games or the Divergent Trilology, as well as sci-fi readers who enjoy the dystopian genre. The author creates a realistic future world that makes sense. I give it five stars and plan to read the series.

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Saturday, November 6, 2021

Tempest in the Tea Room - 5 stars

I enjoy reading several genres, and Tempest in the Tea Room offers a buffet in one book. This well-written historical mystery opens a window into the daily life of the Jewish community of 1811 London. Author Libi Astaire pens her story from a narrator's point of view reminiscent of classics like The Great Gatsby and uses period language that transports the reader back to London at the start of the Regency Era.


 

The cast of characters in this first book of the Jewish Regency Mystery series spans several scenarios from an orphanage to a wealthy widow's home, the synagogue, several Jewish families, an old-clothes man and a newly arrived doctor and his unmarried sister, and more. The star of the story is a wealthy-widower-turned-sleuth, Ezra Melamed, who tasks himself with figuring out who is poisoning people in the Jewish community and how they are doing it.

This book is a page-turner. One of those books you read instead of doing what needs to be done. I recommend it to people who enjoy cozy mysteries, historical fiction, or Jewish literature.

I give this book five stars because there is nothing I didn't like about it. The story is entertaining and well written. Astaire drops little breadcrumbs to build the mystery. At first, you don't recognize them as such. Then when people start to fall sick, those breadcrumbs come into question. Could it be this? It is an easy read that engages the reader.

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