My New-Found Land

by Ann Pino

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Copyright: © 2008  Standard Copyright License
Language: English
Country: United States
Download: 1 documents, 18679 KB

Printed: 521 pages, 6" x 9", perfect binding, black and white interior ink

Description:

On a winter morning two weeks before Christmas, Diana Nuñez Channing sets out on a journey that will transform her life. Orphaned during the resource wars, she dreams of a green and peaceful land to the north. Her travels take her to old haunts and across new landscapes, encountering a motley assortment of characters in post-collapse America. Some are dangerous, others want to break her heart, and all of them have post-apocalyptic dreams as big as her own. (Note: Speculative fiction)


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My New-Found Land
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15 Sep 2008
What draws us to the personal diaries of others? Remember reading Anne Frank’s back in high school? While recently on vacation, I picked up a brochure type stapled printing of a Civil War diary a woman had self-published and made available in a local gift shop. I was immediately drawn into it on page one. Having just finished Ann Pino’s superb Lulu book, My New-Found Land, I yearned for more of the personal and intimate writings of others. Although Pino’s book is of a fictional nature, it reads as the diary of her central character, Diana Channing.

Diana is a tough eighteen year old girl surviving a world at war that has depleted its natural resources. She’s had a military background since she was just thirteen years old. She’s also been married but in love with someone else. The journey that we follow her on through her journal is the trek from New Mexico to Kentucky as she sets out with her horse to find her destiny. Pino does an excellent job of building suspense because we are right on the page with Diana as she is writing her journal. She does not know what lies ahead as she records each day, and neither does the reader.

The book has great character itself because each day in the diary is introduced with a picture that Diana has either taken or drawn. Pino has done an excellent “photoshop” job to make some of the pictures look like actual charcoal drawings, which adds great depth to the story. As we journal or blog in real life today, we tend to “tell” our story rather than “show” it to the reader. In most private cases, we are our own reader so details are left out as we hurry to get the story out. There’s no need for great detail because we are just writing them down as a way for us to remember the events the best we can. The added photos to this book make for a nice balance of show vs. tell since this book is written in diary form.

There were some entries that I got bored with, but not enough to make me want to put the book down and walk away. As I probably would with my own journal or diary, I did skip around to the good parts. As each day is a new adventure for the author’s protagonist, it is also for the reader. If I chose to rush through an entry that wasn’t holding my interest, I definitely didn’t feel lost. Despite the length of this work, it is a fast paced read that kept me intrigued.

Don’t let Diana’s age discourage you from reading this if you prefer an older central character. Pino weaves a very mature tale, in which Diana has probably experienced too much in life and has had to grow up fast. She’s definitely a character that many of us can relate to. Horse lovers will love Flecha, Diana’s four-legged companion. The diary entries are also filled with other deep characters that Diana encounters on her journey. Seeing them from Diana’s perspective alone will definitely keep you guessing.

Female readers will cheer for the strong protagonist and relish the romantic plot lines. Male readers would enjoy the setting and the “western-like” feel of this story. Ann Pino has definitely penned an extensive piece with great care and consideration to her characters and plot. This is yet another great POD read which I hope will find a bloodline amongst traditional publishers. Treat yourself to the download alone and read this one on paper like old diary pages you’ve found in a dusty trunk in Grandma’s attic, or support this author and add the paperback to your bookshelf collection. Either way, you will not be disappointed.

Read the full review at www.lulubookreview.wordpress.com!
Nice job indeed
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22 Mar 2008
This book looks well polished and nicely formatted, which serves its clean writing. The use of pictures/"sketches" is, simply put, quite brilliant in its content, and really works as a 'diary'; moreso, as an object to fully realize its function. Its medium meshes well with its message.

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