Category: Book Reviews
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Non-Fiction Monday: How to Be a Budget Fashionista by Kathryn Finney 📚
I know that Non-Fiction Monday is supposed to focus on non-fiction for kids, but I don’t read much of that and I still wanted to get in on the party. So here we are.
How to Be a Budget Fashionista is a guide by Kathryn Finney, founder of thebudgetfashionista.com. The book is divided into three sections, labeled as “Steps."
Step 1: Know Your Budget. In this section, Kathryn provides advice for fashionistas who maybe have been letting their money get away from them. This section is essentially a mini-lesson in personal finance, and could benefit even those who do not want to become fashionistas.
Step 2: Know Your Style. Every fashionista has a distinctive style, but these can be grouped into certain types. Most people have more than one style. In this step, you take a quiz and create a look book to determine what your style is. Then, Kathryn supplies a list of designers and stores that fit your style. PLEASE NOTE: Designers are not budget-friendly most of the time, so it might be best to look at these designers and use their work for inspiration, rather than plan to actually buy their designs. (My style is mostly Romantic, with secondary styles of Conservative and Urban Trekker.)
Step 3: Know Your Bargains. In the third part of the book, Kathryn discusses how to find bargains in department stores, online, from designer outlets, and more. One review on Amazon pointed out that Kathryn’s idea of a bargain sometimes does not seem like a bargain at all: $50 for a blouse, $90 for a skirt. While these aren’t bargains I can afford, if you look at the percent markdown from their original prices, the items she cites are true bargains. Worrying about the specifics, however, isn’t what the book is about anyway. Even if your clothing budget is such that you have no choice but to buy all of your clothing in thrift stores, there is advice here for you.
In addition to fashion and shopping advice, How to Be a Budget Fashionista includes ideas on how to supplement your income, how to arrange a clothing swap with friends, and how to make several beauty products from things you have lying around the house.
If you are looking to learn how to put an outfit together, this is not the book for you. (That would be The Lucky Shopping Manual.) But if you already know how to do that and just need some help doing it cheaper, you should check this book out.
Book: How to Be A Budget Fashionista [affiliate link]
Author: Kathryn Finney
Publisher: Ballantine Books
Original Publication Date: May 30, 2006
Pages: 240
Source of Book: Purchased from Amazon
Out of the Madhouse
…yesterday my life’s like, “Uh oh, pop quiz.” Today it’s “rain of toads.”
Thus spoke Xander Harris in part two of Buffy the Vampire Slayer’s pilot episode, “The Harvest.” Even in its later seasons, Buffy didn’t have the special effects budget to create an on-screen rain of toads. The advantage to books is you aren’t limited by those sorts of budget constraints. In Out of the Madhouse, Christopher Golden and Nancy Holder bring the rain of toads, along with all the trolls, sea monsters, skyquakes, and nasty Cordelia-chasing demons you could ever hope for. What’s that, you say? Trouble in Sunnydale? Must be Tuesday. The difference is, this time, it’s all happening at once. Also? Giles is out of town. It turns out there’s an interdimensional mansion in Boston that’s been keeping these monsters at bay, but now its caretaker, the “Gatekeeper,” is ailing and his magic is weakening. Buffy, Xander, Cordelia and Giles head to Boston to put a stop to the monster leak, while Willow, Oz, and Angel hold down the fort against an invasion of evil monks who are out to get Buffy. (Note: I said evil monks not evil monkeys.)
Like any tie-in, Out of the Madhouse suffers from the fact that you can’t kill off major characters. What you can do, however, is injure them severely, and in every fight scene in Out of the Madhouse I expected someone - usually Cordelia - to end up in the hospital. Out of the Madhouse has a structure somewhat like a multi-episode arc; you’ve got the main problem of new scary monsters, plus signs that the Watcher’s Council might be sketchy, subplots involving outside forces looking to hurt Buffy, and some new recurring characters who are quite likeable. The dialogue is strong, though not Whedon-quality, and except for the wild special effects that would be necessary to pull it off and the unlikely requirement of on location filming in Boston, I completely believed that this was a story I might see on the show itself. Add in a surprise ending and you’ve got a recipe for fun and nostalgia. (Plus, Golden and Holder manage to avoid the Ethan Rayne trap!)
I’d recommend Out of the Madhouse to any Buffy fan looking for stories to tide them over between issues of the comic book or to take them back to the good old days.
Book: Buffy the Vampire Slayer - The Gatekeeper Trilogy, Book One: Out of the Madhouse
Author: Christopher Golden and Nancy Holder
Publisher: Simon Spotlight Entertainment
Original Publication Date: 1999
Pages: 384
Age Range: Young Adult
Source of Book: Library