Posts Tagged ‘staff review’

Staff Review: Overcoming Insomnia and Other Sleep Problems by Colin A. Espie

Monday, April 22nd, 2013

Reviewed by Jilles

There are many reasons why people have problems with sleep. A few books have been written about it, but none are as empathic and as effective as Overcoming Insomnia and Sleep Problems. It is almost as if Colin A. Espie has insomnia himself and knows exactly what it is like to struggle with this issue. And that is one of the problems with this problem, people around you don’t really know what it is like to have a problem with this, because it is such a natural thing you don’t have to do anything for. Just sleep. If only…

It is a known fact that approximately 5 % of the population has trouble sleeping and about 25 % is sleep-deprived. This is the cause of many other health risk factors, amongst them cancer.

The good thing about this book is that it doe not just dish out facts.  It is written as an eight-week course in creating a better sleep pattern and sleep behavior through Cognitive Behavioral Techniques. Every chapter tackles a certain part of the problem and then gives you one week to make a change in your behavior or your sleeping conditions. By keeping a sleeping journal you keep track of everything that you are doing and changing; you keep track of the hours you sleep, and lo and behold, improvement is on the way. Sometimes it is only your perception about your sleep that is part of the solution. Even if you are on medication, this book can still help you improve your sleep.

So if you are one of the many who tosses and turns every night, know that there is improvement to be found in this book that does more than tell you what you already know.  It helps you change what needs to be changed. Sweet dreams.

Staff Review: In the City of Bikes by Pete Jordan

Friday, April 19th, 2013

Reviewed by Aviva

Pete Jordan is a bike enthusiast who has lived and cycled in a number of cities in the US. When he came to the Netherlands, sight unseen, to do a degree in urban planning, he found himself surrounded by a cycling culture beyond his wildest dreams. In In the City of Bikes: The History of the Amsterdam Cyclist, Jordan tells the story of his family’s immersion into this culture, and the history of the bike and cyclists in Amsterdam decade by decade. His love for his subjects, both personal and historical, shines through and the massive amount of time his must have spent in archives researching his subject truly payed off. The chapters covering the Second World War alone are worth the price of the book, which is not to say you won’t be entertained and charmed by all the other chapters.

I will admit that I read Jordan’s earlier work, Dishwasher, and wasn’t that impressed, but if this book is any indication, he seems to have matured into a fantastic storyteller and found his voice as a travel writer. It’s hard to imagine anyone writing engagingly for 400 pages about anything as specific as the history of biking in Amsterdam, but this is exactly what Pete Jordan has accomplished. In the City of Bikes: The Story of the Amsterdam Cyclist is a well-researched, entertainingly-written love letter to city of Amsterdam and its two-wheeled inhabitants.

As a committed pedestrian, I have cursed the lawlessness of Amsterdam’s cyclists on numerous occasions. After reading this book, though, I can’t help but admire the democratized anarchy of the two-wheeled Amsterdammers and what they represent. One of the reasons I picked this book is because I will soon be leaving Amsterdam, and reading it made me realize I’ll miss it even more than I thought.

Staff Review: Seven Wonders: The Colossus Rises by Peter Lerangis

Thursday, April 4th, 2013

Reviewed by Lilia

Jack McKinley is just an ordinary kid who has weird dreams about mythical beasts or exploding volcanoes – and he’s also dying.  After he collapses on the street he is whisked off to a strange hospital, where he discovers he’s supposedly part of an ancient civilization, and one of the few who could find seven magic objects. The magic objects need to be combined in order to cure him and his new friends from their deadly disease, and will give them superpowers in the bargain.

A secret society is trying to keep the kids “under treatment” in order to enable them to get to the magic objects and to those powers, but at what price? And what are their real intentions? Do they want to save the kids from certain death, or do they want to use the superkids to conquer the world?

Jack doesn’t know what to think and will try his best to get free, but can he do that? And what powers does he actually have? He’s just a normal kid, with no special talents like his new friends have. Or so he thinks…

The title, Seven Wonders: The Colossus Rises, says it all. In this new series, of no less then seven books, Peter Lerangis tells a story of loneliness, new friendships and old loyalties, and how far someone will go to get power.

The Colossus Rises is a total roller-coaster from start to finish in the tradition of Percy Jackson. From the moment you read the first sentence you’re taken into heart-stopping sequence after heart-stopping sequence, all wrapped up in a very nice adventure. The beginning is not as gripping as the rest of the book, when the whole adventure unfolds, but if you hang in there for the first two chapters, your persistence will be rewarded. Jack lets you see how resourceful he can be and there’s more to 12 year-olds than you might think. And as the mystery unfolds, more questions than answers arise, keeping you enthralled with the series.

For kids aged 9 or older.

Lilia is ABC The Hague’s Children’s Book buyer.

Staff Review: Born Weird by Andrew Kaufman

Friday, February 22nd, 2013

Reviewed by Ester

After reading only three pages of Andrew Kaufman’s Born Weird, I pronounced this would be one of my favorite reads of 2013 – with an exclamation point!  A bold statement, but fortunately for me, I wasn’t wrong.

The Weird siblings all got a special power at birth from their grandmother, but these blessings turned out to be curses. When grandmother (“The Shark”) decides it is time for her to die in two weeks, Annie is the chosen one to get all the siblings together, so their “Blursings” can be lifted the moment grandmother takes her final breath. Not an easy task, because after their dad died, all of them went their own way and haven’t been in contact with each other since.

What happens when Annie gathers them up, one by one? And will they get to “The Shark” in time for her to lift their “blursings”?

This book is probably not for everyone, with all its strangeness, and well, weirdness, bordering against the impossible and improbable many times. But there lies the strength of Kaufman: within the absurdity he nails the reality of family ties, relationships and being (only) human.

So, in conclusion, what you get is a ridiculously funny, ludicrous-but-true-in-spirit account of an incredible road trip the Weird siblings and you are not likely to forget.

ABC’s Favorite Reads of 2012, part Blogmistress

Monday, December 24th, 2012

Well, here we are, the last post of ABC’s Favorite Reads of 2012!  I hope you have enjoyed our recommendations – they have all been made with passion and a lot of pleasant memories of the joy that each book has brought us.

Part Blogmistress is traditionally reserved for those of us that work on this blog. Sadly you won’t find Hayley’s Top 5 here anymore though, since she left us earlier this year (she does write for us now and again though!).  Still, Ester and myself (Sophie) are trying to fill the void as best we can!  Ester has taken over Tweeting duties, and besides prettying up your feed there with her calendar model shoots she also buys the books for the Manga/Graphic Novels, Film & TV, Animals/Nature, Horror and Philosophy sections, and the merchandise and calendars, in The Hague.  I have worked on this blog since the beginning, and I write the monthly News Mailings now.  I also buy the books for the Romance, Military, Military Fiction, Crafts and Audio Books sections in The Hague.

We would love to hear about your favorite reads of 2012, too. Please mail blog@abc.nl with your choices and a picture of yourself (optional). We will post your list at the beginning of the new year and send you an ABC Gift Certificate (so don’t forget to include your home address with your list!).

All of us at ABC hope you have a wonderful holiday this week!

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