LJ James Book Review :Iron Horse Rider
Posted on 10. Jan, 2010 by L.J. James in Book Reviews

The novel tells the story of a hardcore biker named Shane. Shane had always kept women at arms length and showed them no emotion – that was until he met Kelly. Try as he might this biker who had always kept to himself could not fight off his feelings for her and soon found himself married to the women of his dreams.
After 10 years of marriage Kelly is taken from Shane in a tragic accident while they are riding. Shane finds everything around him reminds him of Kelly, his home, his shop, even his clubhouse. His brother’s try to support and comfort him, but the looks of sorrow in their eyes for him is more then Shane can bare. He soon realizes staying in the world he has known and loved is not an option. Soon Shane is on his iron horse with the wind in his face and no destination! As Shane rides he finds the pain he feels for his loss begin to lessen!
With advice from a mysterious biker he keeps running into, Shane finds himself at a Micmac Indian Camp.
Shane is welcomed into the camp by the tribes Chief and soon finds himself becoming friends with the Chief’s daughter Tia who has recently lost her husband! While the two share their pain they soon begin to feel something for each other.
Is it possible for either of them to feel love again while still suffering from such a great loss? A member of Tia’s tribe is taking no chances and tells Shane to stay away from Tia. He soon finds out you never tell a biker like Shane what to do!
I found the writing in this novel; while in no way simplistic; was easy to read. I also found the story easy to follow!
Adelle “Legs” Laudan describes and expresses the feelings of biker brotherhood perfectly. When she explains Shane’s feelings while riding you can see in your mind where he is and you can almost feel the wind in your face!

In life we all have our worlds we live in, when something terrible happens sometimes we cling to what we know. Shane does what he; as a true Biker; must after such a terrible loss. He goes out and finds not only a new life but a new world to live in for a while.
I have to say I enjoyed the story. It was not what I was expecting or would usually read but I found I could not put the book down.
I think some men who ride will also enjoy this book, while many I feel will find it a little too much of a Romance novel! I do believe almost all women who have ever ridden a motorcycle or dated a man who rode one will love this novel.
As I know now, Adelle “Legs” Laudan is a writer of motorcycle romance novels. she works to promote the image of motorcycling one book at a time! To order Iron Horse Rider or other novels by Adelle “Legs” Laudan including the upcoming Iron Horse Rider 2 go to http://adellelaudan.com/IronHorseRider.html
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The Whole Truth – by David Baldacci
Posted on 02. Feb, 2009 by M.L. Zupan in Book Reviews
David Baldacci – #1 New York Bestselling Author
It has been said that truth is stranger than fiction – if that is the case, then David Baldacci seems to have hit the nail right on the head with this spellbinding tale of ‘perception management’ in his book “The Whole Truth”.
Here is an excerpt from his book:
That’s why he’d hired Pender, who made the world believe what Creel wanted it to believe. It was often a war of attrition. You made up the truth and then buried the real thing under so much garbage that people grew weary of trying to dig through it and instead just accepted what you offered. It was the easy way out and humans were programmed to always go that way. After all, there were bills to pay, shopping to do, kids to raise, and sports to watch, so who had time for anything else?
Wow! What a powerful statement! Especially with Superbowl yesterday.
The book came out in April 2008 and yet as I read through it, many parts seemed as if they were jumping right out of the headlines of today. It was a high packed International thriller that kept me captivated until the last page. A megalomaniac shifting events in order to orchestrate a desired outcome versus a super-spy organization dedicated to eradicate evil whenever and wherever it rears its ugly head.
It has a macho loner hero and a down-and-out female heroine hoping for a career comeback; lies, deceit, fights, twists and turns – and all the good earmarks of a Hollywood movie in the making.
But what of the concept of the book – this thing called ‘perception management’ or ‘PM’. What exactly is it?
The term perception management originates with the U.S. Military. The U.S. Department of Defense (DOD) offers this definition:
Actions to convey and/or deny selected information and indicators to foreign audiences to influence their emotions, motives, and objective reasoning as well as to intelligence systems and leaders at all levels to influence official estimates, ultimately resulting in foreign behaviors and official actions favorable to the originator’s objectives. In various ways, perception management combines truth projection, operations security, cover and deception, and psychological operations.
A PM Firm is a firm that sells the practices of perception management and writes truth for situations and companies and then sells that truth to the public.
David Baldacci writes in his Author’s Notes about PM firms:
PMs are not spin doctors because they don’t spin facts. They create facts and then sell them to the world as the truth. And that, to quote the venerable Mark Twain (who would’ve had a field day with the PM guys), is the difference between the lightning bug and lightning.
If that doesn’t make you wonder how much of what we read today in the news is nothing more than ‘perception management’.
One Yellow Lion – Book Review
Posted on 28. Jan, 2009 by KG in Book Reviews
Children’s Books – Preschool
CIDA News: Book Reviews
One Yellow Lion
by Matthew Van Fleet
One of our family’s best -loved children’s books is “One Yellow Lion”. The dog ears prove it. Advertised suitable for children over two, its appeal has long lasted us past the toddler years. The basic concept is simple: Teach colors, and numbers up to ten. Ah, but the realization!
Lift-the-flap pages encourage interaction of the younger audience, and even after the tenth, fiftieth or one hundredth time, the new number miraculously transforming into part of the featured animal, still elicits ohhs and ahhs.
Our personal favorite page is Ten Pink WORMS! The illustrations are whimsical, and the two extra fold-out pages in the back featuring both a beach scene and an animal pyramid offer opportunity to re-count the animal characters.
And characters they are: playful, bashful, silly, comical – piled up on top of one another, embedding in their illustrated antics all the features of the human nature: pride, strength, fun, fear, caring love and show-off dare. It’s subtle, but no doubt what appeals to older siblings, parents, grandparents and great-grandparents over and over again. I, for one, have yet to get tired of reading it. In all, a book that is for the whole family. It is simple, loving, and invites us to smile alongside our children about ourselves.
If you would like to find out more about the Author: Matthew Van Fleet and other books that he has written, including his #1 New York Times Bestselling Children’s Book, Dogs; check out the following video and then follow the link to Simon & Schuster.
Also stay tuned for his upcoming sequel to Dogs, (you have to watch the video to find out what it is) coming out Feb. 10, 2009.


