After the End by Amy Plum
My rating: 3 of 5 stars
This book is pretty much one very long chase scene, with a couple of breaks for the main characters to catch their breath, and an unsatisfying ending intended to force you into reading the next book in the series (a trick that notoriously backfires with me - wrap things up in the main plot line, even if you leave the overarching storyline in suspense if you want me to read on!).
Juneau is an interesting character, as the female lead in the story. She grew up in an isolated community in Alaska, where all of the new generation of inhabitants believed their parents moved there post nuclear apocalypse in the 1980's. Except, of course, that apocalypse never happened, which causes her to lose faith in everything else she was taught growing up.
So you have a bit of a coming-of-age story and a bit of a romance, when you throw in her relationship with Miles, son of a drug company tycoon who is part and parcel of the chase she's subject to, and a bit of suspense, as of course as I mentioned above, the whole book is one long chase scene.
I often don't like magic and sorcery in books as it stretches my credulity a bit far at times, but it's well-placed here and I like the history and sources of "magic" here. It adds a fantasy element to the story as well, which makes this book hard to categorize.
If it weren't for the trick-playing ending I probably would have rated this as a four star book, but I really dislike authors playing those kinds of games with readers.
View all my reviews
Tuesday, 28 April 2015
Fallout
In November of 2013, my husband and I were matched with two little boys from the foster care system, in our quest to adopt. In April of 2015, we were given the heartbreaking choice of getting our son with RAD the inpatient treatment he so desperately needed (and by doing so, disrupting the adoption of both boys) or having both boys in our home with no inpatient treatment for our youngest.
Because the adoption was not yet finalized, these were the only choices that Child Services presented us with. What we so desperately wanted was for our youngest to remain in treatment as long as he needed, and for our oldest to stay home with us. Our oldest did not need inpatient treatment as his behaviours were not dangerous. Our youngest was putting the safety and sanity of everyone in the family in jeopardy. But Child Services believed that since they were blood siblings, they absolutely must remain together, and forced us to put our oldest into inpatient treatment as well, where he started to fall apart. All the hard work we had done with him over the last year and a half began to revert.
The dilemma was excruciating. We couldn't go back the way it was - our oldest wasn't safe at home as our youngest was abusing him. We didn't have the space to put them in separate bedrooms nor the money to move immediately. It really wasn't a choice at all; I personally wouldn't have survived going on the way things were - I had been diagnosed with PTSD and was dealing with overwhelming anxiety and panic attacks. Our animals likely wouldn't have survived unless I re-homed them, and I would have to face the reality of no animals in my life again. My marriage likely would not have survived, as we had a huge wedge between the two of us because of how difficult day to day life was, when dealing with RAD behaviours.
People have called my choice selfish. I have, too. Yes, I wanted to maintain my sanity, my home, and my relationships. I also wanted my child to have a chance at a normal life, which meant he needed inpatient therapy, even if it meant giving up on our chance to be a family. I don't understand the mandates of Child Services, but I'm also aware that I can't control them. And that is one of the things I am working on as a person - accepting the things that I cannot control or change. There are a lot of those things in my life right now.
I cannot control the mandates or decisions of Child Services.
I cannot control my son's RAD, nor cure him of it.
I cannot control the way people think about me because of my choices.
I cannot control the things people say about me, or how they treat me.
But there are things that I do have control over, even if in a small way.
I can control my acceptance of things I cannot control by handling them with grace.
I can control looking out for the safety of those I love.
I can control who I allow into my life, after they show me whether they will be supportive.
I can control whether or not I allow people's words and actions to affect me.
I don't judge the people who have treated me harshly. They don't understand what our family has been through, and I haven't walked their path, either. I have already forgiven them, but that doesn't mean I will give them the opportunity to hurt me again.
One of the people who orchestrated the hurtfulness in this situation is someone I have spent almost 15 years forgiving for petty slings and huge acts of betrayal and insult. I am done letting people who lie about me over and over again, who misrepresent me and twist things I say to have power over me. I'm simply done. Forgiveness does not have a limit, for me, and I am sure they will provide me with more opportunities to forgive them, but tolerance does have a limit; I won't put myself in a position to be affected by this person any longer.
And that decision in and of itself is heartbreaking, because for a very long time I considered that person to be family. But as the people who love and support me have recently reminded me, the people who are family are the people who show up, and stay to give you support. Some of those people are blood to me, some are by marriage, and some are friends that are more amazing and wonderful than anyone could "deserve."
Because the adoption was not yet finalized, these were the only choices that Child Services presented us with. What we so desperately wanted was for our youngest to remain in treatment as long as he needed, and for our oldest to stay home with us. Our oldest did not need inpatient treatment as his behaviours were not dangerous. Our youngest was putting the safety and sanity of everyone in the family in jeopardy. But Child Services believed that since they were blood siblings, they absolutely must remain together, and forced us to put our oldest into inpatient treatment as well, where he started to fall apart. All the hard work we had done with him over the last year and a half began to revert.
The dilemma was excruciating. We couldn't go back the way it was - our oldest wasn't safe at home as our youngest was abusing him. We didn't have the space to put them in separate bedrooms nor the money to move immediately. It really wasn't a choice at all; I personally wouldn't have survived going on the way things were - I had been diagnosed with PTSD and was dealing with overwhelming anxiety and panic attacks. Our animals likely wouldn't have survived unless I re-homed them, and I would have to face the reality of no animals in my life again. My marriage likely would not have survived, as we had a huge wedge between the two of us because of how difficult day to day life was, when dealing with RAD behaviours.
People have called my choice selfish. I have, too. Yes, I wanted to maintain my sanity, my home, and my relationships. I also wanted my child to have a chance at a normal life, which meant he needed inpatient therapy, even if it meant giving up on our chance to be a family. I don't understand the mandates of Child Services, but I'm also aware that I can't control them. And that is one of the things I am working on as a person - accepting the things that I cannot control or change. There are a lot of those things in my life right now.
I cannot control the mandates or decisions of Child Services.
I cannot control my son's RAD, nor cure him of it.
I cannot control the way people think about me because of my choices.
I cannot control the things people say about me, or how they treat me.
But there are things that I do have control over, even if in a small way.
I can control my acceptance of things I cannot control by handling them with grace.
I can control looking out for the safety of those I love.
I can control who I allow into my life, after they show me whether they will be supportive.
I can control whether or not I allow people's words and actions to affect me.
I don't judge the people who have treated me harshly. They don't understand what our family has been through, and I haven't walked their path, either. I have already forgiven them, but that doesn't mean I will give them the opportunity to hurt me again.
One of the people who orchestrated the hurtfulness in this situation is someone I have spent almost 15 years forgiving for petty slings and huge acts of betrayal and insult. I am done letting people who lie about me over and over again, who misrepresent me and twist things I say to have power over me. I'm simply done. Forgiveness does not have a limit, for me, and I am sure they will provide me with more opportunities to forgive them, but tolerance does have a limit; I won't put myself in a position to be affected by this person any longer.
And that decision in and of itself is heartbreaking, because for a very long time I considered that person to be family. But as the people who love and support me have recently reminded me, the people who are family are the people who show up, and stay to give you support. Some of those people are blood to me, some are by marriage, and some are friends that are more amazing and wonderful than anyone could "deserve."
Monday, 27 April 2015
My good friend Jane...
I'd like you to imagine that you have a friend or family member who has gotten involved in a new relationship. We'll call her Jane, for Jane Doe. Jane was waiting for this relationship to come along for a very long time. She spent a lot of time preparing for it. She read books about the kind of relationship she wanted to have, even though she knew that books couldn't show you what a relationship was really like. She spent time with friends in the kinds of relationships she was looking for, and watched them, tucking away bits of information for later.
When it came time to get into the relationship, it didn't quite come together in the "usual" way. She had to rely on someone she'd never met to fix her up, based on a report made by someone who had interviewed her several times. When she was introduced, everything seemed awesome - this person was charming, sweet, and seemed to be exactly who Jane wanted to get into a relationship with. So, after two weeks of getting to know one another on dates to the movies, to the bookstore, to restaurants and the like, her new partner moved in.
Things were great for a little while. The new person in Jane's life charmed everyone he met, and people congratulated her left and right. Everyone, including Jane, thought she had finally had her dreams come true. All of those years of waiting had paid off.
Except.
Except she realized slowly that things were getting a little weird. She knew she was being manipulated, but this person was so sweet and charming and she gave in, even when a little part of her knew it wasn't for the best. If she tried to stand up for what she did think was best, he would hit her. And she was starting to have a hard time hiding the bruises.
He would scream at her. Often. And sometimes he would just scream because he was angry, punching walls or furniture or hurting her animals if they got in the way of his anger. He would pound the floor with fists and feet. He threw food at her sometimes and would refuse to eat her cooking. Alternately, he would take items she needed for cooking from the fridge and trash them. Sometimes he would open every can of soda in the house - not to drink, just to open so they would go flat. When she tried to make home made baked goods, something she enjoyed and thought she was good at, he would trash them. When she tried to make meals from scratch, he would sabotage her or throw fits of such extreme proportions that she would be terrified.
When he was mad, he would break things. When he was sad, he would break things. When he was happy, he would break things. He destroyed presents she would buy him, or that other people would buy him. He would wreck items in his room. If she did his laundry, he might empty his dresser, hamper and trash on the floor together and mix it up and make her spend the day doing laundry so he could have clean clothes again. Then when she managed to clean up, he'd do it again the next day. And the next. And the next.
If he found himself awake at night and she wasn't right there - which happened every night, every 1 - 3 hours - he might put holes in the walls. Or sharpie furniture or walls or himself. He might dig up a pair of scissors to destroy Christmas decorations, or her craft projects. He would rip apart books that had been in her family for generations, or break things that he knew were sentimental gifts just because he could. He might toss library books into the trash or pee on things, because oh, my, did he enjoy peeing on things. Anything. And if that didn't push her buttons enough, he would smear his poop on things.
But one of the things he did most often was hurt her animals. She had always been an animal lover, our friend Jane, and cherished her pets. She cried when he would kick them, and beat them, and poke them in the eyes, and drag them around by the tail. When she came out of the bathroom one day to find him throwing her cat down the stairs over and over, she asked him why with tears streaming down her face. "Because you love him" was the answer. Later, she found out that he was being just as abusive with her child, and though she tried everything she could to stop it, including notifying authorities, it persisted.
She tried counseling and did everything they told her to do. When one didn't make progress with him, she tried another. And another. But every day was the same. It didn't matter how often she asked him not to hit, not to destroy things, not to do the million little things that made her heart race and her breath wheeze and made her blood pressure skyrocket until her doctor became concerned. On the surface, he was still all charm, and her family and friends didn't see what happened at home. So she put on a brave face and, terrified to talk about it, made do. She stopped seeing her friends. She stopped all the activities she loved. She spent all her time dedicated to trying to make the relationship work. She failed.
She failed.
And it broke her heart into a million pieces, because she had been given the gift of the life she had wanted, but hadn't been able to handle it. And when her family found out, they demonized her. They told her how horrible she was, reinforcing everything she had begun to believe about herself during the time she was in the relationship.
Our friend Jane Doe is me. My relationship was with an RAD child, whom I love very, very much. I couldn't fix him. I became too broken and had to look to others in residential care to help him, now understanding that this is something that cannot be "fixed".
I don't know where life goes from here. But I'm going to try to find out.
When it came time to get into the relationship, it didn't quite come together in the "usual" way. She had to rely on someone she'd never met to fix her up, based on a report made by someone who had interviewed her several times. When she was introduced, everything seemed awesome - this person was charming, sweet, and seemed to be exactly who Jane wanted to get into a relationship with. So, after two weeks of getting to know one another on dates to the movies, to the bookstore, to restaurants and the like, her new partner moved in.
Things were great for a little while. The new person in Jane's life charmed everyone he met, and people congratulated her left and right. Everyone, including Jane, thought she had finally had her dreams come true. All of those years of waiting had paid off.
Except.
Except she realized slowly that things were getting a little weird. She knew she was being manipulated, but this person was so sweet and charming and she gave in, even when a little part of her knew it wasn't for the best. If she tried to stand up for what she did think was best, he would hit her. And she was starting to have a hard time hiding the bruises.
He would scream at her. Often. And sometimes he would just scream because he was angry, punching walls or furniture or hurting her animals if they got in the way of his anger. He would pound the floor with fists and feet. He threw food at her sometimes and would refuse to eat her cooking. Alternately, he would take items she needed for cooking from the fridge and trash them. Sometimes he would open every can of soda in the house - not to drink, just to open so they would go flat. When she tried to make home made baked goods, something she enjoyed and thought she was good at, he would trash them. When she tried to make meals from scratch, he would sabotage her or throw fits of such extreme proportions that she would be terrified.
When he was mad, he would break things. When he was sad, he would break things. When he was happy, he would break things. He destroyed presents she would buy him, or that other people would buy him. He would wreck items in his room. If she did his laundry, he might empty his dresser, hamper and trash on the floor together and mix it up and make her spend the day doing laundry so he could have clean clothes again. Then when she managed to clean up, he'd do it again the next day. And the next. And the next.
If he found himself awake at night and she wasn't right there - which happened every night, every 1 - 3 hours - he might put holes in the walls. Or sharpie furniture or walls or himself. He might dig up a pair of scissors to destroy Christmas decorations, or her craft projects. He would rip apart books that had been in her family for generations, or break things that he knew were sentimental gifts just because he could. He might toss library books into the trash or pee on things, because oh, my, did he enjoy peeing on things. Anything. And if that didn't push her buttons enough, he would smear his poop on things.
But one of the things he did most often was hurt her animals. She had always been an animal lover, our friend Jane, and cherished her pets. She cried when he would kick them, and beat them, and poke them in the eyes, and drag them around by the tail. When she came out of the bathroom one day to find him throwing her cat down the stairs over and over, she asked him why with tears streaming down her face. "Because you love him" was the answer. Later, she found out that he was being just as abusive with her child, and though she tried everything she could to stop it, including notifying authorities, it persisted.
She tried counseling and did everything they told her to do. When one didn't make progress with him, she tried another. And another. But every day was the same. It didn't matter how often she asked him not to hit, not to destroy things, not to do the million little things that made her heart race and her breath wheeze and made her blood pressure skyrocket until her doctor became concerned. On the surface, he was still all charm, and her family and friends didn't see what happened at home. So she put on a brave face and, terrified to talk about it, made do. She stopped seeing her friends. She stopped all the activities she loved. She spent all her time dedicated to trying to make the relationship work. She failed.
She failed.
And it broke her heart into a million pieces, because she had been given the gift of the life she had wanted, but hadn't been able to handle it. And when her family found out, they demonized her. They told her how horrible she was, reinforcing everything she had begun to believe about herself during the time she was in the relationship.
Our friend Jane Doe is me. My relationship was with an RAD child, whom I love very, very much. I couldn't fix him. I became too broken and had to look to others in residential care to help him, now understanding that this is something that cannot be "fixed".
I don't know where life goes from here. But I'm going to try to find out.
Monday, 20 April 2015
Book Review - The Fifth Wave
The 5th Wave by Rick Yancey
My rating: 4 of 5 stars
Oh, the incredible drama of teenage girls.
If there is one thing - and really, there is only one thing - that annoyed me about this book it was how irritatingly dramatic and ridiculous teenage girls can be. That said, it's a very accurate characterization of a teenage girl, for what it's worth.
The 5th wave takes place in a post-alien-apocalypse world, where the few survivors are trying to make it through the 5th wave of attacks, so different from what anyone expected or made movies about, by an alien race bent on taking over the earth and making it their own. Though the main plot line belongs to Cassie, a teenage girl who has lost her mother to the plague and her father to a bomb and is trying to save her brother from the fate of the last wave, my favourite parts were the chapters dedicated to Ben, a young man the same age as Cassie - who went, in fact, to her high school. His character goes through amazing development and is fascinating to watch. Cassie, on the other hand, whines a lot, gets distracted by a hot boy, and does fairly typical teenage girl stuff. At least, as much as she can in the presence of an apocalypse.
I found this to be a very different take on aliens-take-over-the-planet. The author came up with a way to make the attacks very different from the typical ideas in this genre, which was refreshing. As well, some of the characters were intriguing, and I loved following their stories, as well as being left hungry to learn more about them (can't wait for the next installment in the series!).
View all my reviews
My rating: 4 of 5 stars
Oh, the incredible drama of teenage girls.
If there is one thing - and really, there is only one thing - that annoyed me about this book it was how irritatingly dramatic and ridiculous teenage girls can be. That said, it's a very accurate characterization of a teenage girl, for what it's worth.
The 5th wave takes place in a post-alien-apocalypse world, where the few survivors are trying to make it through the 5th wave of attacks, so different from what anyone expected or made movies about, by an alien race bent on taking over the earth and making it their own. Though the main plot line belongs to Cassie, a teenage girl who has lost her mother to the plague and her father to a bomb and is trying to save her brother from the fate of the last wave, my favourite parts were the chapters dedicated to Ben, a young man the same age as Cassie - who went, in fact, to her high school. His character goes through amazing development and is fascinating to watch. Cassie, on the other hand, whines a lot, gets distracted by a hot boy, and does fairly typical teenage girl stuff. At least, as much as she can in the presence of an apocalypse.
I found this to be a very different take on aliens-take-over-the-planet. The author came up with a way to make the attacks very different from the typical ideas in this genre, which was refreshing. As well, some of the characters were intriguing, and I loved following their stories, as well as being left hungry to learn more about them (can't wait for the next installment in the series!).
View all my reviews
Thursday, 16 April 2015
Book Review - Absolute Certainty
Absolute Certainty by Rose Connors
My rating: 3 of 5 stars
Listened to the audiobook version of this with my husband. Solid mystery story that kept us engaged and entertained, but neither of us were big fans of the authors style of writing.
View all my reviews
My rating: 3 of 5 stars
Listened to the audiobook version of this with my husband. Solid mystery story that kept us engaged and entertained, but neither of us were big fans of the authors style of writing.
View all my reviews
Book Review - The Well
The Well by Catherine Chanter
My rating: 5 of 5 stars
I feel so blessed to have gotten a chance to read an ARC of this books. When it hits the shelves, you MUST read it, and I'll explain why.
I classed this as general fiction for shelving purposes, but really it's a little bit dystopia (that is to say, the rest of the population is living in a dystopian world of water shortages), a little bit murder mystery, and a little bit women's fiction, as everything is told from the perspective of a forty-something woman trying to come to terms with life after marriage, after some bad choices, and uncertain of her path.
Ruth and her husband have been through some tough times, like any other couple who have been together for twenty years. They think that maybe a change of scenery is what they need, so they disembark from London's city life and take up residence at The Well, an idyllic country estate. As the outside world slips deeper and deeper into an economic and political disaster due to intensifying drought, The Well remains green, with seemingly no limit to the fresh waster from its underground spring. But it's not only that; it rains there, when the rest of the country is turning to dust.
Some hate Ruth and her husband Mark, sure that they are somehow diverting other peoples water for their own purposes, especially the community of farmers. Others worship Ruth, and it is the intoxicating high of reverence, of specialness, of feeling wanted and of belonging that draws Ruth into a dangerous collaboration with a group of women that believe men have poisoned the earth. What do their beliefs mean for her husband Mark? For her grandson Lucien? You should read and find out.
The authors voice is reminiscent of Margaret Atwood, but with a fresh take on new issues. If this debut novel tells me anything, it is that I will be anxiously awaiting each new offering by the author!
View all my reviews
My rating: 5 of 5 stars
I feel so blessed to have gotten a chance to read an ARC of this books. When it hits the shelves, you MUST read it, and I'll explain why.
I classed this as general fiction for shelving purposes, but really it's a little bit dystopia (that is to say, the rest of the population is living in a dystopian world of water shortages), a little bit murder mystery, and a little bit women's fiction, as everything is told from the perspective of a forty-something woman trying to come to terms with life after marriage, after some bad choices, and uncertain of her path.
Ruth and her husband have been through some tough times, like any other couple who have been together for twenty years. They think that maybe a change of scenery is what they need, so they disembark from London's city life and take up residence at The Well, an idyllic country estate. As the outside world slips deeper and deeper into an economic and political disaster due to intensifying drought, The Well remains green, with seemingly no limit to the fresh waster from its underground spring. But it's not only that; it rains there, when the rest of the country is turning to dust.
Some hate Ruth and her husband Mark, sure that they are somehow diverting other peoples water for their own purposes, especially the community of farmers. Others worship Ruth, and it is the intoxicating high of reverence, of specialness, of feeling wanted and of belonging that draws Ruth into a dangerous collaboration with a group of women that believe men have poisoned the earth. What do their beliefs mean for her husband Mark? For her grandson Lucien? You should read and find out.
The authors voice is reminiscent of Margaret Atwood, but with a fresh take on new issues. If this debut novel tells me anything, it is that I will be anxiously awaiting each new offering by the author!
View all my reviews
Monday, 13 April 2015
Book Review - The Fifth Assassin
The Fifth Assassin by Brad Meltzer
My rating: 1 of 5 stars
We got the audiobook version to listen to on our drive through SK. It was so boring we gave up after four hours. Dry as a bone and not one character we could care about.
View all my reviews
My rating: 1 of 5 stars
We got the audiobook version to listen to on our drive through SK. It was so boring we gave up after four hours. Dry as a bone and not one character we could care about.
View all my reviews
Friday, 10 April 2015
Book Review - The Actor and the Housewife
The Actor and the Housewife by Shannon Hale
My rating: 3 of 5 stars
While the premise is interesting - can married people of opposite genders be just friends? In my experience, yes - I found the book overwritten. In particular, the ending went several pages past where it should have, by way of a swath of unnecessary narrative exposition. I shouldn't have been surprised by that as it happens throughout the book.
Where this novel shines is the fun and witty dialogue, some of which was so awesome that I had to stop and read it to my husband, and it elicited some laughs from him as well. The characters are sometimes a little stereotypical, but when they open their mouths it can be sheer genius.
View all my reviews
My rating: 3 of 5 stars
While the premise is interesting - can married people of opposite genders be just friends? In my experience, yes - I found the book overwritten. In particular, the ending went several pages past where it should have, by way of a swath of unnecessary narrative exposition. I shouldn't have been surprised by that as it happens throughout the book.
Where this novel shines is the fun and witty dialogue, some of which was so awesome that I had to stop and read it to my husband, and it elicited some laughs from him as well. The characters are sometimes a little stereotypical, but when they open their mouths it can be sheer genius.
View all my reviews
Tuesday, 7 April 2015
Book Review - Don't Breathe a Word
Don't Breathe a Word by Jennifer McMahon
My rating: 4 of 5 stars
Faeries. Dark, creepy, wicked, mischievous Faeries. Also, family secrets, intrigue, mystery and thoroughly entertaining suspense.
View all my reviews
My rating: 4 of 5 stars
Faeries. Dark, creepy, wicked, mischievous Faeries. Also, family secrets, intrigue, mystery and thoroughly entertaining suspense.
View all my reviews
Sunday, 5 April 2015
Book Review - Handle With Care
Handle with Care by Jodi Picoult
My rating: 5 of 5 stars
What a time for this book to come into my life; during the moments when I am questioning our choice to adopt our children and trying to decide if we will - if we even can - proceed. A year or two ago, this book would have resonated very differently with me.
A year or so ago, for example, I would have been of the harshly-judging-Charlotte crowd. Even the idea of questioning the gift of a child, for someone like me who had wished for and struggles for motherhood only to lose her baby... Well, it was unthinkable. Unconscionable.
Now, though, I found someone I completely understood in Charlotte. I understood being misled about a child by someone you trusted, and how deeply and ferociously that can burrow into you. It doesn't matter how smooth your ready smile is, how easily the words "I can handle it" roll off your tongue. There is a great and all consuming sea boiling beneath.
I understood how broken a family can become. How broken friendships can become. I understood how it can stretch and strain and nearly destroy your marriage. I understood how you can wind up devastatingly alone. Ashamed.
I felt like I was reading about me. And it broke my heart. But it was beautifully done.
View all my reviews
My rating: 5 of 5 stars
What a time for this book to come into my life; during the moments when I am questioning our choice to adopt our children and trying to decide if we will - if we even can - proceed. A year or two ago, this book would have resonated very differently with me.
A year or so ago, for example, I would have been of the harshly-judging-Charlotte crowd. Even the idea of questioning the gift of a child, for someone like me who had wished for and struggles for motherhood only to lose her baby... Well, it was unthinkable. Unconscionable.
Now, though, I found someone I completely understood in Charlotte. I understood being misled about a child by someone you trusted, and how deeply and ferociously that can burrow into you. It doesn't matter how smooth your ready smile is, how easily the words "I can handle it" roll off your tongue. There is a great and all consuming sea boiling beneath.
I understood how broken a family can become. How broken friendships can become. I understood how it can stretch and strain and nearly destroy your marriage. I understood how you can wind up devastatingly alone. Ashamed.
I felt like I was reading about me. And it broke my heart. But it was beautifully done.
View all my reviews
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)