This week I reviewed only one book--and that was last Saturday night! I've been sick--sadly.
ESV Women's Study Bible. God. 2021. 2336 pages. [Source: GIFT] [Bible, study Bible, 5 stars]
Century of Viewing #19
1980s
- 1984 The Last Starfighter Alex
Rogan plays a LOT of an arcade game. But the arcade game leads to a
real life adventure, and the guy who has always wanted to leave his
small town trailer park, well, he begins to question if he has what it
takes to be an actual actual starfighter. It was interesting to see
Robert Preston as an alien!
2000s
- 2002/2003 Forsyte Saga 2
Series. 13 Episodes. Much soap-iness. It has been a while since I read
the books but it fairly seemed to go along with what I remembered plus
or minus a few whines. I haven't watched the new series yet, and I'm not
sure when I'll get to it. More unlikeable characters than likeable
characters but much drama.
2010s
- 2012 Cold Light of Day Would
I recommend it? NO. Are there worse ways to spend two hours? Probably.
Possibly. Would I rather go to the dentist? YES. I have a great dentist.
(We talk about movies and books!) I can't really think of anything I
actively liked about this movie. Except it has been fun to watch
reactions and reviews.
2020s
- 2025 The Running Man I
read the book relatively recently. And I've never been more shocked
that a movie was mostly relatively almost faithful to the book!!!! This
movie shares little in common with the 80s original action movie. It is
dystopia. It is dark. BUT I definitely preferred it not only to the
original 80s movie BUT to the book as well.
© 2026 Becky Laney of Becky's Book Reviews
This week I reviewed three books.
If You Lived During the American Revolution. Chris Newell.
Illustrated by Steffi Walthall. 2026. 88 pages. [Source: Library] [3
stars, history, nonfiction]
Board book: 1, 2, 3, Can You Count Along? Alice Hemming. Illustrated
by Nichola Slater. 2026. 10 pages. [Source: Library] [4 stars]
B oard book: Edwina The Dinosaur Who Didn't Know She Was Extinct. Mo
Willems. 2006/2026. 38 pages. [Source: Library] [animal fantasy]
Century of Viewing #18
1980s
- 1981 Caveman Am
I the target audience for this movie? No. Did I enjoy elements of it?
For the most part--to some extent. Atouk loves Lana. Well, love is an
extreme exaggeration. I don't think love has a bit to do with it. At
all. Lana 'belongs' to Tonda. Lana seems more than okay with being 'his'
woman. When Atouk is kicked out (literally) from the clan, he teams up
with a series of misfits and outcasts. Together they discover, fire,
musical instruments, sling shots, etc., Meanwhile, Tala is developing
romantic feelings for Atouk. But he's all Lana, Lana, Lana. Can this
cave romance have a happy ending? ALSO: there are dinosaurs.
- 1987 Robocop Apparently
the YT free with ads version of Robocop is heavily censored and missing
quite a bit of the movie (a difference of at least ten minutes). I am
glad I watched Robocop. It was a fun action movie.
1990s
- 1990 Robocop 2 I liked it just as much as the first movie!
- 1993 Robocop 3 I
definitely enjoyed this one!!! Each of the Robocop movies is unique in
some ways. This one is set at Christmas. It has new villains. What I
appreciate most about this one is that this is the movie where Robocop
'finds' his own 'found' family. There are some sweet, tender scenes in
this one. Plenty of action, mind you. IT is Robocop after all. But I
like these three movies.
- 1994 Without Warning This is a modern twist on the 1937 War of the Worlds scare. It is BLEAKITY-BLEAK which felt right.
2000s
- 2004 Lemony Snicket's A Series of Unfortunate Events. I
have not read the book. But the movie was super fun! I loved, loved,
loved baby Sunny! And all the characters were fun. It is a dark comedy
for sure, but, it had some moments with all the feels.
2010s
- 2014 Robocop. Is
it a copy of the original movie? No. The movies are very different from
each other--in almost every way. I liked them both. THIS one does have
its strengths. I liked many, many, many things about it! The characters
do feel more human AND the wife and child play a much larger part in the
story.
© 2026 Becky Laney of Becky's Book Reviews
In April, I watched 27 movies!
My five star movies:
Ever After
Forrest Gump
Frequency
Gospel of John
Home
It's You I Like
No Time for Sergeants
The Moon
The War of the Worlds
What About Bob?
You Can't Run Away From It
My four and a half and four star movies:
Empire Records
Trust Me The False Prophet
Sirius
Robocop
Robocop 2
My top five movies from ALL of 2026:
Galaxy Quest
Ever After
What About Bob
Forrest Gump
Ivanhoe
© 2026 Becky Laney of Becky's Book Reviews
This month I read sixteen books. (Two were Bibles!)
Books reviewed at Becky's Book Reviews
30. The Littlest Elephant. Katherine Applegate. 2026. 36 pages. [Source: Library] [3 stars, picture book, animal fantasy]
31. Scarlett. Alexandra Ripley. 1991. 884 pages. [Source: Library] [2
stars, historical fiction, sequel, adult fiction, adult romance]
32. Magnitude. Jennifer A. Nielsen. 2026. 304 pages. [Source: Library] [3 stars, historical fiction, mg historical]
 33. Pioneer Girl: The Annotated Autobiography. Laura Ingalls Wilder. Edited
by Pamela Smith Hill. 2014. South Dakota State Historical State Society.
400 pages. [Source: Library] [5 stars, nonfiction, memoir]
34. If You Lived During the American Revolution. Chris Newell.
Illustrated by Steffi Walthall. 2026. 88 pages. [Source: Library] [3
stars, history, nonfiction]
Books reviewed at Young Readers
23. Wake Up, Grouchy Bear! David Ezra Stein. 2026. 48 pages. [Source: Library] [3 stars, animal fantasy, picture book]
24. Board book: The Lion, The Witch, and the Wardrobe. Adapted from C.S. Lewis.
Illustrated by Joey Chou.. 2021. 32 pages. [Source: Library]
 25. Olive and Oscar: The Favorite Hat. Ariel Bernstein. Illustrated by
Marc Rosenthal. 2026. 32 pages. [Source: Library] [5 stars, early
reader, animal fantasy, friendship]
26. Bad Banana. Michael Rex. 2026. 32 pages. [Source: Library] [4 stars, beginning reader, early reader, humor]
 27. Board book: Just Because. Mac Barnett. Illustrated by Isabelle
Arsenault. 2026. 32 pages. [Source: Library] [5 stars, bedtime book,
board book, imagination, creativity, curiosity]
 28. Board book: Fix This Book! A Dinosaur Broke It! Silver Dolphins
Books. 2026. 10 pages. [Source: Library] [5 stars, board book,
interactive]
29. Richard Scarry's Great Mystery Collection. Richard Scarry. 2025.
(1969, 1975) 96 pages. [Source: Library] [4 stars, picture books,
mysteries]
30. Board book: 1, 2, 3, Can You Count Along? Alice Hemming. Illustrated
by Nichola Slater. 2026. 10 pages. [Source: Library] [4 stars]
31. Board book: Edwina The Dinosaur Who Didn't Know She Was Extinct. Mo
Willems. 2006/2026. 38 pages. [Source: Library] [animal fantasy]
Books reviewed at Operation Actually Read Bible none!
Bibles reviewed at Operation Actually Read Bible
 2. New King James Version, Sovereign Collection, Wide Margin. God. (Thomas Nelson Publisher). 2022. 1696 pages. [Source: Bought] [Bible] [5 stars]
 3. KJV Chronological Life Application Study Bible, Second Edition. God. 2025. 2128 pages. [Source: Bought (Gift)] [5 stars, bible review]
Yearly and monthly totals
| Totals for 2026 |
| | Books Read in 2026 | 79 | | Pages Read in 2026 | 19309 | | January Totals |
| | Books Read in January | 21 | | Pages Read in January | 5119 | | February Totals |
| | Books read in February | 24 | | Pages Read in February | 4225 | | March Totals |
| | Books read in March | 18 | | Pages read in March | 4099 | | April Totals |
| | Books read in April | 16 | | Pages read in April | 6386 |
© 2026 Becky Laney of Becky's Book Reviews
34. If You Lived During the American Revolution. Chris Newell. Illustrated by Steffi Walthall. 2026. 88 pages. [Source: Library] [3 stars, history, nonfiction]
First sentence: Colonization by European peoples of what we now call the United States of America began as early as the sixteenth century.
I read a few "If You Lived...." books growing up. There is a newer series of books similarly titled that are being published now. This is the first I've read of the newer series. It is on a heavy, complex topic. Heavy because it's about war. Complex because every conflict, every war, has at least three sides. It is also written to line up in accordance with modern sensibilities. For better or worse. There are certainly some benefits, I'm sure, to a modern take on the past. But if exclusively or overly so, it can come across as super judgy. In other words, America should never have been colonized and all wars were a result of us unnecessarily colonizing. And the colonization of America could never be justifiable, etc. And sometimes I just want my history to be, you know, just record what was without comment or bias or opinion. Neither obnoxious praise or condemnation.
As for the facts in this one, I am too long out of school to know how accurate or inaccurate it may be. OR if the emphasis is rightly placed. It could be perfectly, perfectly fine as far as facts are concerned. OR it could have a mistake here or there. I wouldn't be able to distinguish. I last studied the American Revolution in college, and I found it fascinating then.
What I liked about the original series was how the questions were answered concisely and were full of I didn't know that facts. But this one is on a more complex, darker topic. It is probably easier to read than a textbook. (At least the textbooks of my past). BUT it isn't "fun" or "light" or "casual." (And it would probably be wrong if it was.)
© 2026 Becky Laney of Becky's Book Reviews
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