Whitewavedarling... Watching What She Reads in 2018

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Whitewavedarling... Watching What She Reads in 2018

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1whitewavedarling
Bearbeitet: Jan. 2, 2018, 4:36 pm

A few years ago, I did a cover challenge where I based on categories on things to be found on covers, thinking that I don't always pay enough attention to covers and titles. Every once in a while one really strikes me, of course--because I hate it or I love it--but more often than not, I don't give them much thought. This year, I'm going to construct 10 categories based off of what I imagine is on the cover of many of my books, and what I know has grabbed my attention in the past, and I'll try to read 10 in each category while keeping up with other challenges... we'll see what happens! One of my goals is going to be to think about how each cover influences the read, and how the cover interacts with the read...

The categories? They'll be: Body Parts..., Houses/Windows/Stairs..., Trees/Flowers, Faces, Only Abstractions with Words, Animals, Vehicles/Transportation, Numbers, Technology, Other???

My goal will be to read 2,018 pages in each category, at least :)

At the same time, I'm going to try to keep up with the RandomCat, the MysteryCat, the ColorCat, and even the kits (alpha & scaredy & sfff)... so, we'll see what happens! I generally have a hard time with the challenges in the summer, but I'm going to at least try to keep up with the Cats in those months.

Once 2017 finishes up, I'll post my 2017 stats here, too... 114 books read in 2017, recommendations and honorable mentions made in Post 46 of this thread.

2whitewavedarling
Bearbeitet: Dez. 29, 2018, 7:30 pm

In this second post, I'll keep track of my current reading and my plans for the future...

Currently Reading:
The Silver Wolf
Zeitoun

Alphabet Challenge Tracker:

Alphabet by first letter of a book's title:


A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y _

Alphabet by first letter of author's last name:

A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z

GOALS:

Cat/Kit Challenges Completed (listed by attempt, then month for the months I managed to complete a relevant book!):

MysteryCat: January (1), February (3), March (1), April (1), May (1), June (1), July (1), August (1), September (1), October (1), November (1), December (1)
ColorCat: January (1), February (2), March (1), April (1), May (1), June (1), July (2), August (1), September (1), October (1), November (2), December (1)
RandomCat: January (2), February (1), March (1), April (1), May (1), June (1), July (1), August (1), September (1), October (1), November (1), December (1)
ScaredyKit: January (1), February (1), March (1), April (1), May (1), June (1), July (2), August (1), September (1), October (1), November (1), December (1)
AlphaKit: January (3), February (2), March (3), April (2), May (2), June (2), July (4), August (2), September (2), October (3), November (4), December (2)
SFFFKit: January (2), February (1), March (1), April (1), May (1), June (1), July (1), August (1), September (1), October (1), November (1), December (1)

3whitewavedarling
Bearbeitet: Dez. 17, 2018, 8:13 pm



This might be a creepy sounding category--and I imagine some of the covers will be creepy!--but I'm often drawn to covers that feature hands and arms, in particular. So, this category won't be for whole figures of people, but for covers that seem to feature a part of the boy in order to draw a reader in. We'll see what happens...

A. Body Parts... (2,141/2,018 pages) -- COMPLETE!!!

1. Violent Delights by Linnea May (286 pages)
2. Audrey Hepburn's Neck by Alan Brown (290 pages)
3. The Harlequin by Laurell K. Hamilton (422 pages)
4. Uncovering You: The Contract by Scarlett Edwards (125 pages)
5. The Lesser Dead by Christopher Buehlman (359 pages)
6. Swallowing Darkness by Laurell K. Hamilton (365 pages)
7. Havana Libre by Robert Arellano (294 pages)
8. Mira Corpora by Jeff Jackson (186 pages)
9. Submissive Fairy Tales by Kitty Thomas
10. Envy: An Empty Coffin Novel by Gregg Olsen
11. Jason by Laurell K. Hamilton
12. White Pawn by Stevie J. Cole
13. Sweet Revenge by Rebecca Zanetti

4whitewavedarling
Bearbeitet: Dez. 12, 2018, 11:28 am



I adore staircases, and I adore books about haunted houses, so in any section of a bookstore, a cover with an interesting image of a staircase or creepy-looking home is sure to draw me in. And, windows can be so interesting and strange, as well. So, again, we'll see what pops up...

B. Houses, Windows, Stairs... (2,159/2,018 pages) -- COMPLETE!!!

1. A Cold Dark Place by Gregg Olsen (413 pages)
2. The Good German by Joseph Kanon (482 pages)
3. The Fear Collector by Gregg Olsen (417 pages)
4. How to Marry a Millionaire Vampire by Kerrelyn Sparks (371 pages)
5. XIsle by Steve Augarde (476 pages)

5whitewavedarling
Bearbeitet: Dez. 10, 2018, 2:25 pm



The first time I went to Los Angeles, I drove my friends crazy because I kept on talking about how gorgeous the trees were, they were so different from the east coast and what I was used to. Truth be told, my eye will always be caught by a strange looking tree or a magical looking flower before it gets caught by any movie star.

C. Trees and Flowers... (2,383/2,018 pages) -- COMPLETED!!!

1. Mischling by Affinity Konar (339 pages)
2. Half of a Yellow Sun by Chimamanda Adichie (541 pages)
3. The Roses of May by Dot Hutchison (289 pages)
4. The Girl in the Woods by Gregg Olsen
5. Now That She's Gone by Gregg Olsen (416 pages)
6. Kiss of Midnight by Lara Adrian (402 pages)

6whitewavedarling
Bearbeitet: Dez. 15, 2018, 3:02 pm



Covers with faces can be lovely, creepy, or nothing special. If faces are going to draw me in, they'll have to have some quality or another to grab my attention (emotional or otherwise), but I thought the image here would best be of faces that always draw me in...

D. Faces... (2,101/2,018 pages) -- COMPLETE!!!

1. Stealing Amy: A Dark Romance by Izzy Sweet and Sean Moriarty (263 pages)
2. The Children of Men by P.D. James (241 pages)
3. Moonlight Sins by Jennifer L. Armentrout (387 pages)
4. When Red is Black by Qiu Xiaolong (310 pages)
5. Crimes of the Father by Thomas Keneally (331 pages)
6. Year of Wonders by Geraldine Brooks (304 pages)
7. The Sowing: Moondreamer Chronicles #1 by Tamara Mataya (265 pages)
8. NewsReal by Tim Ortman
9. The End of the Dream by Ann Rule
10. The Skeleton in the Closet by Angie Fox
11. Daring the Moon by Sherrill Quinn

7whitewavedarling
Bearbeitet: Dez. 29, 2018, 7:31 pm



And then there are those abstract images that you keep looking at, without being sure what you're seeing, or those covers with nothing but words...

E. Abstractions and Words Alone... (2,068/2,018 pages)--COMPLETE!!!

1. Song of the Orphans by Daniel Price (738 pages)
2. The Inkblots: Hermann Rorschach, his Iconic Test, and the Power of Seeing by Damion Searls (322 pages)
3. The Fault in Our Stars by John Green (313 pages)
4. The Moonstone by Wilkie Collins (545 pages)
5. Conamara Blues by John O'Donohue (84 pages)
6. Beyond the Velvet Curtain by Karen Kovacik (64 pages)
7. Earthquake Owner's Manual by Martin Arnold
8. Purple America by Rick Moody
9. Coraline by Neil Gaiman
10. The Restaurant at the End of the Universe by Douglas Adams
11. Ardour by Nicole Brossard
12. Devastation by Jill Alexander Essbaum
13. Whie Fur by Jardine Libaire
14. S. by John Updike
15. Telephone Ringing in the Labyrinth by Adrienne Rich
16. Dark Rooms by Lili Anolik

8whitewavedarling
Bearbeitet: Dez. 29, 2018, 7:12 pm



I so adore animals... especially snakes and moose and cats, in no particular order

F. Animals... (2,079/2,018 pages)---COMPLETE!!!

1. White Cat by Holly Black (310 pages)
2. Darkest Pleasure by Gena Showalter (374 pages)
3. Quietus by Vivian Schilling (646 pages)
4. Firmin by Sam Savage (148 pages)
5. Robinson Crusoe by Daniel Defoe (307 pages)
6. The Tower at Stony Wood by Patricia A. McKillip (294 pages)
7. Days of Panic by Jack Hunt
8. Eragon by Christopher Paolini
9. Beasts of No Nation by Uzodinma Iweala

9whitewavedarling
Bearbeitet: Nov. 25, 2018, 7:13 pm



And if it's not a strange tree, or a cast member of supernatural, or an animal catching my eye and making me turn... it's probably a car.

G. Vehicles/Transportation... (2,043/2,018 pages)---COMPLETE!!!

1. Un Lun Dun by China Mieville (471 pages)
2. Foreigner by C.J. Cherryh (323 pages)
3. Time and Again by Jack Finney (398 pages)
4. Murder at the House of Rooster Happiness by David Casarett (344 pages)
5. Ship of Gold in the Deep Blue Sea by Gary Kinder (507 pages)
6. Ghost by Piers Anthony
7. Around the World in Eighty Days by Jules Verne

10whitewavedarling
Bearbeitet: Jan. 1, 2019, 11:51 am



H. Numbers... (2,0642,018 pages)--COMPLETE!!!

1. Naked in Death by J.D. Robb (306 pages)
2. The Broken Hearts Club by Ethan Black (336 pages)
3. The Only Good Lawyer by Jeremiah Healy (371 pages)
4. 28: Stories of AIDS in Africa by Stephanie Nolen (368 pages)
5. Freedom to Speak: National Poetry Slam 2002 (122 pages)
6. Illusion by Frank Peretti (561 pages)

11whitewavedarling
Bearbeitet: Dez. 10, 2018, 2:08 pm



I. The Other... (2,315/2,018 pages)---COMPLETE!!!

1. The Graveyard Book by Neil Gaiman (307 pages)
2. The Brief and Frightening Reign of Phil by George Saunders (130 pages)
3. Deep by Kylie Scott (258 pages)
4. The Boxcar Children (by Gertrude Chandler Warner (155 pages)
5. Buttons & Lace by Penelope Sky (359 pages)
6. Every Day Above Ground by Glen Erik Hamilton (363 pages)
7. Mr. Mercedes by Stephen King (436 pages)
8. Dominion by Shane Arbuthnott (307 pages)
9. Finders Keepers by Stephen King
10. The Eyre Affair by Jasper Fforde
11. The Tourist Trail by John Yunker

12whitewavedarling
Bearbeitet: Nov. 6, 2018, 4:10 pm



And for anything that doesn't fit...

J. The Shadows and Silhouettes... (2,295/2,018 pages)--COMPLETE!!!

1. Wolf Winter by Cecilia Ekback (363 pages)
2. Barren #1: War in the Ruins by J. Thorn (208 pages)
3. Sandman Slim by Richard Kadrey (388 pages)
4. Poems for New Orleans by Edward Sanders (115 pages)
5. Rise the Dark by Michael Koryta (385 pages)
6. Snow Crash by Neal Stephenson (468 pages)
7. Gray Mountain by John Grisham (368 pages)
8. Leaving Berlin by Joseph Kanon
9. Darkness Begins by Harlety Tate

13rabbitprincess
Okt. 26, 2017, 7:42 pm

Great theme! My mum and cousin (both Supernatural fans) would say good choice of image for the Faces category ;)

14whitewavedarling
Okt. 26, 2017, 8:36 pm

>13 rabbitprincess:, Thanks :) I kind of got bored of my topic this year, so I figured I'd go back to the type that really kept me interested! And yes, I might be marginally obsessed with Supernatural...

15virginiahomeschooler
Okt. 26, 2017, 8:42 pm

As someone who can't help but be drawn in by a great cover, I love the theme. That tree photo is gorgeous. And the faces one isn't bad either. ;)

16VivienneR
Okt. 27, 2017, 1:03 am

Terrific theme and images! I'm so impressed that you have even chosen books for 2018. I'm trying not to think that far ahead.

17MissWatson
Okt. 27, 2017, 5:43 am

Wonderful theme! And I admire your organisation, so many titles already pencilled in.

18whitewavedarling
Okt. 27, 2017, 10:57 am

Thanks all :)

>16 VivienneR: and >17 MissWatson:--don't be too impressed... those basically came from searching my libraries (through LT) for the given colors of the month :) After that, I only had two colors left--orange and pink! I remembered a really pink book I had on a particular shelf, and it happened to be near an orange one lol.

Besides, little time as that took, I was mostly just procrastinating doing real work!

19majkia
Okt. 27, 2017, 1:59 pm

OK, I laughed that you plan to read The White Cat for the Black Mystery category, LOL.

Interesting challenge! I love a good book cover, although I confess I don't normally pick books to read by their covers. But I do love it when a cover is evocative of the story within. Particularly when it isn't all that obvious!

20whitewavedarling
Okt. 27, 2017, 2:44 pm

>19 majkia:, I struggled over making that decision lol--but, I knew I didn't want to wait a whole year to read it!

I don't often choose books to read based on covers, either, though occasionally one will draw me in at a store enough that I pick up something I wouldn't have otherwise. I do find that I don't often think about how they intersect with the stories, though! Making this up, I kept thinking about one of my mentors, who went back and forth with a publisher for months over a cover--authors don't get as much choice as you'd think, but they often have veto power, which he took advantage of. They kept on sending him covers that (he said) totally contradicted the tone of the book in question. In any case, I want to pay them a bit more attention this year :)

21DeltaQueen50
Okt. 27, 2017, 10:25 pm

Great to see you all set up and ready for 2018. Now we just need November and December to fly by and we can start!

22whitewavedarling
Okt. 28, 2017, 10:31 am

>21 DeltaQueen50:, I know! And I still have a number of reads I'm excited to get to This year lol :)

23whitewavedarling
Bearbeitet: Okt. 28, 2017, 1:10 pm

Well, partly because I was procrastinating working on a mind-numbing project yesterday, and partly because I wasn't sure I had books to fit some of the categories and was curious, I ended up loosely planning out my reads for The MysteryCat, the ColorCat, and the ScaredyKit, already! (See Message 2 :) ) The only spot I don't have anything for is the Nordic theme in the MysteryCat--I haven't decided yet whether I'll skip that month or a go out and grab a book specially for it since it's the first month of the year (and I'd rather not skip one so early, though normally I just depend on my Mount TBR).

I'm sure a lot of the listed reads will change as things go on, but since I've never participated in so many cats/kits in one year, I want to try to start out organized and see what happens. Where possible, I found a read to fit one of the AlphaCat letters too, so those will probably stay right where they are in terms of my planning. It's all of the others that could fluctuate--especially with the ScaredyKit, I have SO many books that will fit many of the categories! So, we'll see what happens :) The planning of all these reads definitely has me excited for next year...

24sturlington
Okt. 29, 2017, 8:48 am

This is a really cool theme. I have also been paying more attention to book covers lately, which is why I think I've largely given up on Kindle reading except for books I can't really get anywhere else. I find books with houses on the cover irresistible. I also love covers that have birds or stars on them. I'll be eagerly following along to see your cover choices.

25LittleTaiko
Okt. 29, 2017, 8:58 am

Your theme has me looking at all my covers in a new light. What a fun way to organize your reading.

26whitewavedarling
Nov. 2, 2017, 2:48 pm

>24 sturlington: and >25 LittleTaiko:, Thanks! I admit, covers have little to do with what ends up on my TBR, but I think they do often enough what order I read books in, as I'll get drawn in to something on my shelf just because of what it looks like. I'm looking forward to seeing what happens :) Last year, I made a point of reading the one book in my collection that had a cover which had been putting me off for ages (a dead frog), so now that that's in my rearview mirror, I won't be afraid of any of my covers!

Meanwhile, everyone, I forgot to mention... I do have a goal for every category; with any luck, I'll read 2,018 pages in each category, at least. Granted, I'm half wondering if this will lead me to frantically searching through my shelves for technology and car covers next December...

27Chrischi_HH
Nov. 4, 2017, 4:31 pm

Really cool theme! Like you, I don't pay too much attention to covers. It's a pity really. Enjoy your reading!

28lkernagh
Nov. 12, 2017, 12:44 pm

Love your theme! I am one of those readers who will pick up a book because of the book cover so I am looking forward to seeing how your categories fill out!

29whitewavedarling
Nov. 14, 2017, 12:27 pm

>27 Chrischi_HH:, Thanks :) I really enjoyed doing a challenge organized around covers a few years ago, and it did make me pay more attention, so I'm excited about it!

>28 lkernagh:, Thanks :) I do, too, occasionally, and I've found some great books by doing so, honestly!

30mamzel
Nov. 17, 2017, 1:25 pm

What an original idea! Talk about not judging a book... well, at least categorizing a book by its cover!

31whitewavedarling
Nov. 17, 2017, 1:33 pm

>30 mamzel:, lol, pretty much :) A challenge like this wouldn't work if my TBR mountain weren't so ridiculously large, but as it is, it's another way beyond the monthly challenges to make me read through it and pay a little bit more attention to what's in my hand :)

Of course, I idealistically think that this will help me figure out what to read, when in reality I'll at some point be wandering from shelf to shelf trying to find a flower or a staircase picture!

32Helenliz
Nov. 18, 2017, 9:47 am

>31 whitewavedarling: that sounds like me this month. I went into the library ans asked for a book with a butterfly on the cover. The librarian is used to me coming in with odd requests (usually for something from the reserve stock that last saw the light of day in 1920) but she did look at me sideways for that one.

33whitewavedarling
Bearbeitet: Nov. 18, 2017, 10:46 am

>32 Helenliz: lol--I've wondered what would happen if I went into a bookstore or library and asked for something with a particular cover image. The closest I've come is somebody asking if they could help me after they heard me sigh at the choices on a shelf--I had to tell them I was just looking for an author whose name began with X, because of a reading challenge, and had hoped for more choices lol.

34scaifea
Nov. 18, 2017, 11:05 am

I'm pretty sure I like all of your categories, but I'm afraid I didn't pay much attention after >6 whitewavedarling:. I have to keep scrolling back up to that one for some reason... *ahem*

35whitewavedarling
Nov. 18, 2017, 12:21 pm

>34 scaifea:, lol. Yeah.

36thornton37814
Nov. 26, 2017, 1:37 pm

Interesting concept on the categories but you lost me on the snakes! I'm phobic about them and hyperventilate even with photos or drawings of them. Hopefully my heart rate will get back to normal soon. Petting a cat should help.

37whitewavedarling
Nov. 27, 2017, 10:53 am

>36 thornton37814:, Sorry! Maybe I'll make the next thread's snake picture something like a snake in a hat--those are more funny to scary even to most non-snake-lovers. I do adore them, though... But, yes, petting a cat helps with most things :)

38katiekrug
Nov. 27, 2017, 4:17 pm

What a fun way to organize your reading for a year - and it allows for some randomness, too, which is always good.

I'll be following along...

39thornton37814
Dez. 5, 2017, 9:59 pm

>37 whitewavedarling: That probably won't help. Fortunately once I've seen it once I won't have to look at it again until the next thread.

40whitewavedarling
Dez. 15, 2017, 10:04 am

>38 katiekrug:, thanks!
>39 thornton37814:, well, there is that, at least lol :) Sorry for the scares!

Meanwhile, I can't believe we're halfway through January! I'm still reading my December reads (and struggling with Brick Lane, I have to admit), but now that the SFFFKit challenge thread is up, I've got Almost all my January reading planned out. It may be too ambitious, but we'll see what happens... I never have kept up with all of the challenges all year long in the past, but it's always been the summer when I fall off due to my teaching schedule. This year, I've made the really difficult decision to not return to the boarding school where I usually teach next summer, for a lot of reasons, so it may actually be able to keep up with some of them, if not all of them all year. I'm going to try...

Planned for January:

Wolf Winter (Nordic MysteryCat Read)
White Cat by Holly Black (for the Black ColorCat Read & Randomcat)
Sandman Slim (RandomCat Read)
The Graveyard Book (Gothic ScaredyKit Read)
Flight of the Silvers (SFFFKit)
Mischling (M AlphaCat)
V AlphaCat Letter (Yet undecided)

If one of those listed gets cut, it'll probably be Sandman Slim since I've already got a book listed to fit the RandomCat, though I'm anxious to read it also. I'll probably hold off on choosing a 'V' read until I have a better idea of whether I need to fit in the fastest read possible, or can fit in something of whatever length I find! I'm going to aim for it to be either nonfiction or romance, though, given that neither of those areas are represented for January yet. Or, maybe poetry? We'll see. This is enough planning for now!

41whitewavedarling
Dez. 31, 2017, 1:26 pm

As we go into the new year, I have to make a slight addendum to that last post--I positively devoured the 600-page Flight of the Silvers between Christmas 25th and 28th. So, rather than reading that one in January, I'll be reading its sequel, Song of the Orphans. I'm going to try to make myself wait a few books before I start it, spacing them out at least a little bit and tackling another planned book first, but we'll see what happens...

Meanwhile, Happy New Year, everyone!!!

42mamzel
Jan. 1, 2018, 9:42 am

>40 whitewavedarling: TGB has one of my favorite beginnings! I was totally charmed by it. Enjoy!

43whitewavedarling
Jan. 1, 2018, 10:44 am

>42 mamzel:, Yay, that's great to hear! I just finished another spooky MG book last night, so I decided to leave it for later in the month, but I'm looking forward to it. Meanwhile, my year is already off to a great reading start--I began both The White Cat and Mischling yesterday. Totally different books, but both have sucked me in from the start :)

44hailelib
Jan. 1, 2018, 9:46 pm

One of your pictures reminded me that I should watch some more of Supernatural.

45whitewavedarling
Jan. 2, 2018, 11:19 am

>44 hailelib:, I'm kind of an addict when it comes to that show, I admit...

46whitewavedarling
Jan. 2, 2018, 4:52 pm

Well, I finally got around to looking through all the books I read in 2017. The count came up to 114, and it was a great year. I've sifted through reviews/memories, and want to offer some recommendations (by genre) below, just in case you're interested... there are a lot, but I couldn't restrict myself more, so I hope you'll take a glance!

Oh, and to let you know... for all of the books I'm recommending, they were 4.5 or 5 star reads, for me, and they're all books where I'm now a fan enough of the author that they're on my list to keep looking up, or I've already bought more of their books to add to my TBR! Good writing is a must for me, so if they're recommended below, I consider them worth the time!

ROMANCE:
How to Tame a Beast in Seven Days by Kerrelyn Sparks (fun, light, humorous, paranormal fantasy)
Lick & Play by Kylie Scott (contemporary romance--fun and easy reads with great characters)
Darkest Night by Gena Showalter (paranormal romance, maybe too dark for some readers)
Forgotten Sins by Rebecca Zanetti (action-packed romantic suspense)

SUSPENSE:
Last Words by Michael Koryta (a newly discovered favorite author now)
Past Crimes by Glen Erik Hamilton (readers of Jack Reacher books will love this; Hamilton's better than the Reacher books I've read, though)
8th Circle by Sarah Cain

SPECULATIVE FICTION:
What I Tell You in the Dark by John Samuel (I can't tell you how much I love this speculative literary piece about a well-meaning angel who screws up)
Inkheart by Cornelia Funke (MG fantasy)
Twentieth Century Ghosts by Joe Hill (Spec/horror short stories)
Inflictions by John McIlveen (horror stories, not for the faint of heart)
Daughter of the Forest by Juliet Marillier (epic fantasy, maybe too dark/involve trigger warnings for some readers)
Flight of the Silvers by Daniel Price (sci-fi/suspense--I love this book so much. Sequel on soon-to-be-read TBR stack...)
Suicide Forest by Jeremy Bates (horror--only for real fans of horror)

LITERARY/GENERAL FICTION:
Ishmael by Daniel Quinn
Year of the Death of Ricardo Reis by Jose Saramago
Things We Lost in the Dark by Mariana Enrique (short stories, maybe too darkly themed for some readers)

HISTORICAL FICTION:
Tea Rose by Jennifer Donnelly
Cane River by Lalita Tademy

NONFICTION:
Base Nation: How US Military Bases Overseas Harm America and the World by David Vine (a great, informative read--not at all so one-sided as the title suggests)
Unsportsmanlike Conduct: College Football and the Politics of Rape by Jessica Luther

47scaifea
Jan. 3, 2018, 1:39 pm

Oh, Inkheart! I love that one. I need to get round to the rest of the series at some point (there's at least one more, I think?).

48whitewavedarling
Jan. 3, 2018, 1:50 pm

>47 scaifea:, I loved it, too :) It's a series of three, and I already have #3--a friend gave me that and the first as a gift, I suppose getting the second and third volume mixed up. So, I just have to get around to picking up #2, which I plan to do this month :) (The second is Inkspell, by the way, and the third is Inkdeath)

49whitewavedarling
Bearbeitet: Jan. 3, 2018, 2:19 pm

And, because I couldn't resist seeing what came of it...

Book Meme for Books Read in 2017

Describe yourself: At Home in Exile

Describe how you feel: Just Try to Stop Me

Describe where you currently live: The Road to Enchantment

If you could go anywhere, where would you go: The Forbidden Garden

Your favorite form of transportation: A Bridge of Narrow Escape

Your best friend is: A Friend of the Earth

You and your friends are: Smoking Hopes

What’s the weather like: Hard Cold Winter

You fear: Inflictions

What is the best advice you have to give: A Life Worth the Fleeting Suns

Thought for the day: The Dark Hills Divide

How you would like to die: Spirits in the Trees

Your soul’s present condition: What I Tell You in the Dark

50scaifea
Jan. 3, 2018, 5:14 pm

>48 whitewavedarling: Thanks for that - I need to pick those up, too, soon.

51rabbitprincess
Jan. 3, 2018, 6:51 pm

Great meme answers!! Your weather is our weather too, although it was not quite as cold as it has been. Last night it got up to minus 7 Celsius -- shorts weather! ;)

52whitewavedarling
Jan. 4, 2018, 10:25 am

>51 rabbitprincess:, lol, I really can't complain, but that was the most convenient answer :) I'm in Florida, where the weather is right around 50 degrees Fahrenheit--FREEZING for us, but compared to most other places and where you are, pretty darn warm!

53whitewavedarling
Jan. 4, 2018, 12:20 pm

So, I have to share this, because it's so odd...

I normally don't pay any attention to gender in terms of what books I pick up, though I know I normally read more works by men simply because I read a lot of horror, dark suspense, and military/politics related books--which, in large part, for better or worse, are written by men.

Well, I couldn't help counting because I was seeing so many other readers talking about how many books they read by male authors vs. female authors and vice versa. As it turns out? I read 114 books in 2017... and 57 of them were written by men. That includes two books written by a man and a woman, one counted male and one counted female in terms of my books. So, exactly half! I couldn't have managed that if I'd had it in mind to try!

54LittleTaiko
Jan. 4, 2018, 2:05 pm

That's pretty cool that it was a 50/50 split like that. Now, I'm curious as to how mine would bread down.

55VivienneR
Jan. 4, 2018, 2:41 pm

>53 whitewavedarling: It's surprising that it worked out like that. I had exactly the same 50/50 result and like you, I didn't plan my reading based on gender.

56whitewavedarling
Jan. 4, 2018, 3:03 pm

>54 LittleTaiko:, the curiosity is what got me, too :)

>55 VivienneR:, It's crazy, isn't it? And more crazy now that I know that it happened to at least two of us!!!

And, now, I can officially record my first book of the year... which was wonderful. As in, book hangover where you both want to read something else immediately, and also don't because you fear it can't possibly be as good as what you just read, so you almost just want to stare at the book you just read and think about, or maybe read it again, or maybe go out and buy the next in the series right away... that kind of book hangover is what I'm in right now.

F. Animal Category #1: White Cat by Holly Black

This is one of those books that's nearly impossible to put down. Cassel's voice is such an engaging and driving force within the book that it's difficult to walk away from the story here, and the twists Black has played out in the book are put together masterfully, so that the book has its own sort of inertia from start to finish. I'm not sure what to call it--fantasy, urban fantasy, suspense, con story--but I loved it. And in the moments when my heart dropped with what the character was experiencing, and I was left staring at my book and feeling stupefied by the turn things had taken... well, all of that made it that much clearer that if this book draws you in and holds onto you, it's going to affect you. I feel shell-shocked enough by the twists in this one that I think I need a few weeks of recovery before leaping into the second one, but there's no doubt that I'll be seeking it out sooner than later.

Absolutely recommended for fans of strange suspense/mystery or urban fantasy, or well-written stories in general.

57christina_reads
Jan. 4, 2018, 4:12 pm

>56 whitewavedarling: Ooh, goody, this one is on my shelves! But I have to know -- does it end on a cliffhanger? Because I don't own book 2...

58whitewavedarling
Jan. 4, 2018, 5:21 pm

>57 christina_reads:, I legitimately don't know how to answer that lol. I guess I'll say... the main plot of the book gets wrapped up, but there's a last twist/change to circumstances that I didn't see coming. In fact, it was so surprising that I finished the book and then just sort of sat staring at it for a few minutes, trying to figure out how I felt about how it had ended. It doesn't feel quite right to call it a cliffhanger, but then again... it also kind of does :( Maybe fair to say that it's a natural addition to what's happening that leaves you hanging emotionally to some extent, but not in a way that it would really occur to me to Call it a cliffhanger.

I know that's not hugely helpful, but I don't want to give anything away! Suffice it to say, I feel satisfied, but I'm not going to wait long to go find Book 2...?

59thornton37814
Jan. 4, 2018, 9:47 pm

>49 whitewavedarling: Great meme answers.

60Helenliz
Jan. 5, 2018, 1:40 am

>53 whitewavedarling: That's a very difficult trick to pull of, an exact 50/50 split. Like you, I don;t usually select books based on author gender, I read what I like. I did find myself in August last year with 5 out of 6 books planned by female authors, so Peter Ackroyd got bumped to September (and wasn't worth it when I got to it, but hey ho).

I had a 65% of books read by female authors. Doing a series read by a female author does help that number up a bit...

61whitewavedarling
Jan. 5, 2018, 10:31 am

>59 thornton37814:, thanks :)

>60 Helenliz:, I imagine this is the first year I was even close to 50% honestly--it's the first year I've read romance with any regularity at all (in the past, it's perhaps been 1 or 2 a year at most), so doing likely made a huge difference. I think I went through at least 10 or 11, and all of those were female authors.

62lkernagh
Jan. 6, 2018, 12:00 am

>49 whitewavedarling: - Love your meme answers!

>53 whitewavedarling: - Love the 50/50 split! You bought a lottery ticket after making that discovery, right? ;-)

63whitewavedarling
Jan. 6, 2018, 9:47 am

>62 lkernagh:, Thanks :) And, I probably should have lol!

64whitewavedarling
Jan. 8, 2018, 10:27 am

C. Trees & Flowers #1: Mischling by Affinity Konar

Full Review:

Striking, and written with a such gorgeous language that the story almost takes on the qualities of a fairy tale, this book is still one which suggests, at only a glance at the blurb on its back, that it will be a difficult read--and, it is. The book follows 12-year-olds Stasha and Pearl, twin girls sent to Auschwitz in 1944 who are then pulled into the circle of the infamous Dr. Josef Mengele, to be a part of his experiments within the concentration camp.

Without doubt, that sentence alone is enough to send some readers running away from the book. Others, just as certainly, will read the book blurb's first few sentences and put the book down, or begin it... and leave it unfinished. Before I read it, I heard the beginning was difficult to get through, and knowing the subject, I prepared myself to dive into it--perhaps, since I read an awful lot of dark books (though normally not so based in fact/history as this one is), I managed the beginning alright, and in fact expected worse. And yet, still, there were times when the emotion, and the reminder that this was based in truth more than fiction, made it so that I had to put the book down, and I even thought once about not finishing, I admit -- but then I kept going, and was glad I had. But, in truth, it was the last part of the book that was most difficult for me personally to read, so that I have to mention it, as well. I suppose it comes down to whether you can more easily read about immediate pain or drawn-out grief, or torture or its aftermath, which will determine whether the beginning or the end of the book is more difficult. For me, the ending pieces of the book made the whole story all the more real, and painful almost tangible, albeit that this was a story peopled only occasionally by real characters, and I probably took twice as long to get through the final six chapters as I did the first 3/4ths of the book.

But, was it worth it? Yes.

Affinity Konar has pieced together a masterful and emotional view into not only characters placed in Mengele's so-called 'zoo', but into the beauty, love, emotion, and survival involved within such walls as these found at Auschwitz--but without, for even a moment, romanticizing or easing the view. She hasn't dwelled on the pain or the physicality of it, or even the grief, but she has not avoided any of that, either. It's not a story that's easily read, as beautifully written and carefully researched and fast-moving (yes, fast-moving) as it is. And as someone who writes, I can't imagine the pain involved in writing it and living with the characters she's peopled this work with. But at the same time, it is an important and powerful work of fiction. More than any non-battlefield WWII fiction I've read, this carries with it a weight of history and emotion that, for me, makes it all the more beautiful and terrible.

Not all readers will be able to read this. If I were still teaching contemporary literature, I imagine I'd tell my students they Should read it, but feel that I couldn't ask them to, and I imagine I'll tell others about this book and only recommend it carefully, or half-heartedly, knowing what a difficult read it is. I'm not sure I could give it as a gift or demand anyone, student or otherwise, go through it--it's that difficult a read because of the content, and the weight involved in the story. But, that said, it is also a book which is remarkable and careful, and utterly worth reading if you can.

65whitewavedarling
Jan. 9, 2018, 4:19 pm

A. Body Parts #1: Violent Delights: A Dark Billionaire Romance by Linnea May

Full Review:

As dark romances go, there's a lot to be said for this book. The premise works well, odd as it is, and the characters are written in such a way that they both come off as engaging and sympathetic (though, if you don't like dark romances, you probably won't agree with me on that one). The trick here, and what keeps it from being a really Great read, is that it's so beat-heavy, so focused on exact and specific scenes and moments, that everything else comes in a rush. So, for instance, plenty of time is spent on their first meeting and important interactions... but then we jump a few days, and both characters are at a different emotional point (which is believable, based on time and character and situation, but we didn't see them Get there). So, they go through another climactic/groundbreaking/emotional moment at this point in time... and then we skip some more time, to find them at a new emotional point... and so on and so forth.

In other words, we see all of the major moments/beats, but we don't see them getting from beat to beat. We can figure it out, sure, and it's believable... but it's also dangerously close to insta-love, and dangerously close to being Far Too predictable, and not really so much a cohesive novel with full storytelling as it is a collection of scenes (and, yes, they're important ones... but rarely are they scenes where we get to see/feel change, which is something of a problem).

If you let yourself get swept up in the moments that are there and in the characters, this is an enjoyable enough work--it just leaves something to be desired in terms of how much power or impact it can have, or even how much believability it offers (even within this genre) because of the jumpy style. I haven't decided yet whether I'd go back to the author for another book or not... what was Here was good; it just didn't feel so complete, and especially the ending felt incredibly rushed.

So, I suppose we'll see? For now, this goes in the stack of books that I'm not sorry to have read, but which won't really be memorable enough to take me back to the author for more or recommend it on.

66madhatter22
Jan. 10, 2018, 9:15 pm

>8 whitewavedarling: "Snakes, moose & cats" might be the most intriguing trio of favorite animals ever.

>49 whitewavedarling: Esp. love the mode of transport. :)

Interesting category idea. I'm also very drawn to staircases and bare or flowering trees.

67whitewavedarling
Jan. 11, 2018, 9:19 am

>66 madhatter22:, Thanks :) And, yep--it's an odd trio, but those are the three types of animal that I really can't resist, wolves being a close fourth!

68whitewavedarling
Jan. 14, 2018, 12:54 pm

J. The Other #1: Wolf Winter by Cecilia Ekback

This one was more atmosphere than anything, so I suppose it fits this category in subject as well as in cover. There are some tiny birds and the small silhouette of a tree on the cover (next time I do a cover challenge, I think I need to remember to do a silhouette category...), but I'm going to put it here since everything is in silhouette and no one thing really in focus.

Full Review:

Wolf Winter's back cover calls this a 'work of sophisticated suspense and beautiful prose', and I agree with the last part, but I have a feeling that a reader's reaction to this book will have far more to do with their interest in historical fiction than suspense. All told, Ekback's work is well put together, but it's also torn between many genres--historical fiction, suspense, family drama, and general fiction. I'd even go so far as to say that it's got overtones of paranormal fiction or horror. And with all of that being the case, at least for me, the story simply felt like it was being pulled in too many different directions. I'd get truly interested, only to then begin to feel like we were going back in a different direction. Especially in the middle of the book, I was often bored and just trodding along, wondering when we'd get to some form of a wrap-up regarding one of the many sub-plots--often, only to find that another one would be introduced.

I did really enjoy Ekback's writing here, but I also feel that too many plots were being pushed together. And, some things slid by the wayside as a result. First, the main character was oddly passive in the final wrap-up; it's true that she felt pushed to investigate things and get some answers...but so far as I can tell, she had little enough to do with the way things played out. Perhaps that's because the wrap-up of the main mystery that got things started was itself something of a disappointment, coming as it did. I won't give it a way here, but to say that it was random and offered by chance is a bit of an understatement.

And then, there are the men in the book. Aside from one priest and one villain, the men all bleed together as repeats of one another, with little to nothing to distinguish them or the way they're portrayed--beyond name, of course. With Ekback's focus being on a woman and her two daughters, it makes sense that their characterizations would get more time... but it also doesn't make sense to have the men in the book be little more than paper cut-outs who speak when it's convenient and have little to do with anything.

So, while I did enjoy the writing, I didn't actually enjoy this book. I'm not sure whether I'd pick up another work by Ekback at all; I certainly wouldn't pick up something marketed as a thriller/suspense, since that was the least of the genres really represented here, despite marketing, and despite the fact that the beginning and end of the book (the Very beginning, and the Very ending) would have you believe it to be the case... if you didn't read the 340 pages in between.

69whitewavedarling
Jan. 18, 2018, 3:50 pm

J. The Other #2: Barren Volume 1: War in the Ruins by J. Thorn

Although it took me a few more chapters than usual for me to get into this particular work of J. Thorn, I ended up really getting pulled into the characters and the world here. It's a dark book, partly because the collapsed societies and what's left are frighteningly believable in a way that's hard to dismiss; the discomfort of reading is elevated by the twisted logic of the villains as well, and the fact that it's slightly too easy to imagine how the world we know could crumble into what's depicted here, given the right catalysts.

I will say that this doesn't feel like a first book in a series--it feels complete and ended, to the extent that I'm curious how the series will continue, or even what character it will follow, so while elements of the book felt somewhat predictable (though, not many), the series itself is already turning out to be something of a surprise for me. One way or another, I expect to read the next one in the series, and although I've got mixed feelings about the ending here, I find that I'm actually really anxious to see where this storyline gets taken next.

70whitewavedarling
Jan. 24, 2018, 7:12 pm

D. Faces #1: Stealing Amy: A Dark Romance by Izzy Sweet and Sean Moriarty

On one hand, there were things about this dark romance that I really enjoyed--the characters, in single moments, were believable and worth engaging with (with the caveat that this will probably only be the case if you Like dark romance), and the story itself was fast-paced with a good balance of action and steamy romance. The protagonist's child might have been a little flat, but then again, she wasn't present a huge amount, so that didn't bother me all that much; she was believable when she was present, and in this case, that was enough for me. I will say that, along with the caveat about this being a dark romance, I feel I need to mention the male protagonist here is a far bit darker than most, and we see the violence of his world. The gore involved in him being mafia might be a bit much for some readers, though I actually didn't mind it since these books more often have male protagonists who are Said to be dark, but don't show a hint of it. Definitely not the case here.

That said, my big problem here was with the male protagonist, Andrew. I can't even call what happened insta-love, because it wasn't that, but I will call it insta-obsession. From the moment he met Amy, he had to have her. No build-up, no explanation, no rationale or attempt to explain the sudden, life-charging, all-or-nothing obsession. He just Had to have her. Now, if this had been a pattern with him (which wouldn't be the case, or it would have been a very different man, book, and genre), that might make sense. Serial killers HAVE to have particular victims all the time, and their rationales may or may not make sense. But in this case, where he seems to have been an in-attached and driven man prior to meeting her, totally disinterested in a wife, let alone a child... well, we needed something. Anything at all really. Anything to explain why, as soon as he sees her, he's utterly obsessed with making her his. The more his obsession (because there's no other way to describe it, even from his lips) was harped on, also, the more distracting the issue was. Readers can't help wondering, 'Wait, when did he get so obsessed with her, and why?' The answers: "Immediately upon seeing her" and "We have no earthly clue".

So, would I read another book by these authors? I might. I have another one lying around already, also from this series, and this was a fast and relaxing enough read that I'll probably pick it up. But, at the same time, I really can't recommend this whole-heartedly, engaging as various scenes were, and as strong as other aspects of the book were.

71whitewavedarling
Jan. 25, 2018, 10:21 am

J. The Other #3: The Graveyard Book by Neil Gaiman

There's no doubt that this is a magical little story surrounding a character who will now, always, be one of my favorites of Gaiman's, and it's also got Gaiman's signature voice. More than any other book I've read in some time, this felt something like a book that's meant to be read aloud in the hours before bedtime.

And yet, I've really got mixed feelings about it. In the beginning, after the very, very beginning, it felt somewhat stilted and wandering, and I had a hard time really getting engaged. I was interested when I picked it up, but I also found myself wanting more. Gaiman wrote in the acknowledgements that it was only his daughter wanting to know 'what happened next' that kept him writing beyond the early pages, and I wonder if that's part of it--that maybe with the book being at someone else's passion and request, it doesn't have quite all of the emotion and passion (because I can't think of any other word for what I want more of) that I've felt radiating from his other books. In the end, it's true enough that I was swept up wholly in the plot and couldn't put the book down... but then, in the end, I also felt a little disappointed. I'd been swept up into the world, and some part of me felt, in the end, as if most of the book had been written for children, and I'd been enmeshed in That world, and then all of a sudden it felt like the ending was more for grown-ups, or at least more in the vain of so much other children's literature that rushes in with a moral or a lesson to close things off. It left me with a bad taste in my mouth for the book as a whole, really, although that bad taste only came from the very ending.

So, all told, I don't know. Perhaps, in a week or two, I'll look back and feel like this does in a way live up to Gaiman's other works. Today, though, some 24-hours after finishing it, I feel like the characters and many of the moments and the writing all live up to those other works... but the ending, and the book as a whole, doesn't. Not quite, anyway.

If someone had told me to stop before reading the last chapter of the book, to just not read that last chapter at all and pretend it wasn't there, I think I would have put this book down with the same magical wonder I put down his Stardust and so many other books that I love. And if I gave this book as a gift, I'd probably tell whoever I gave it to: Don't read the last chapter. But then, I'm not really that kind of reader--I like to finish things--so I don't know if I could have forced myself to listen to the advice. Probably not, I suppose. Still, I wish the book had ended on page 291 instead of 307, and that that last bit hadn't been written. It's more like the adult/grown-up/moral ending on what was otherwise a marvelous, magical story, and that's not what I go to Gaiman for. We've got enough reality in our own world, that I don't want to see adult lessons creeping into magical children's books when they're not needed.

72rabbitprincess
Jan. 25, 2018, 6:18 pm

>71 whitewavedarling: Excellent review! It was interesting to read because I started The Graveyard Book in audio but never finished. If I pick it up in print in future, I'll do my best to avoid that last chapter ;)

73whitewavedarling
Jan. 25, 2018, 10:00 pm

>72 rabbitprincess:, Thanks, and yes, I wish I could go back in time and keep myself from reading it! I will say, I do think it's worth giving it another chance. For probably the first third, I was sort of wandering along and not so engaged as I would have expected for a Gaiman book. Somewhere around a third of the way in to a half of the way in, though, I felt all of the inertia I'd expect from a Gaiman book, and while I still felt like it was sort of built to be read aloud to kids by parents, I really enjoyed the rest... until the very end lol.

74whitewavedarling
Jan. 28, 2018, 5:16 pm

Oh, how I LOVED this book. Have you read Flight of the Silvers yet? Yeah... this comes after it, and I loved it as much as I loved the first. I have a feeling I might be raving about how much I love this series for the rest of my life, and I also might yell at the author for being mean to various characters if I ever meet him. That's how much I adore these books.

E. Abstractions and Words Alone #1: The Song of the Orphans by Daniel Price

Song of the Orphans doesn't just live up to the fantastic concept and promise of Flight of the Silvers (Book 1 in the trilogy)--instead, it works on from the first book to deliver an outstanding, character-driven piece of suspenseful science fiction that's nearly impossible to put down.

Building on the first book, The Song of the Orphans centers on the same world-breachers readers came to love in the first book, and expands their circle just enough to offer new faces and in-depth interactions without taking away from that original focus. And although there were a lot of suggestions of what would come in Book 1, this installment in the series manages to deliver on all of them without ever becoming predictable, or even slowing down. Instead, the book is packed with twists (that I, at least, didn't see coming) and character development that make the world come to life, balancing humor and action against character and heart to the extent that this book has a little bit of everything. What may impress me most, I also have to say, is Price's nuance and care when it comes to using or addressing any element of time travel. Time travel can so easily muddle up stories and characters, I'm always somewhat nervous when I see a book where time travel comes up, but isn't the focus. Here, Price works it in masterfully, but in such a way that it never comes across as either a device or something that's used too easily--and it's never used predictably, in either Book 1 or 2. With that added to the fact that even premonitions are treated in such a way that they're more of a characteristic than a focus, and with characters that can't help but bring sympathy, the book is... well, it's wonder-full, and I look forward to the moment when I pick up Books 1 and 2 to read them again in preparation for reading Book 3.

Lastly, I'll say that even though this book is over 700 pages, the inertia and power of it make it seem like a lot less; in fact, as I came up on the last two hundred pages, I had to force myself to slow down instead of powering through it, knowing I wanted to savor the story while I could since the third book in the series in still in the works (though the author keeps on giving out tantalizing updates via his website, which I'm dutifully trying to ignore).

If you like suspenseful, character-driven speculative fiction, or genre-bending stories that cover incredible territory with stellar writing, then you should pick this series it up. As far as I'm concerned, it really is that simple. I have a feeling that, long after I've read Book 3, this will always be one of the most striking and memorable science fiction series I'll have ever come across, and whether it's making me laugh or cry at a given moment, I absolutely adore it.

Obviously, I recommend it.

75whitewavedarling
Jan. 30, 2018, 11:04 am

J. The Other #4: Sandman Slim by Richard Kadrey

Fun, dark, and sort of heart-breakingly ridiculous, this is one of those books that you can't help falling into and catapulting through. I have to imagine it's a little like what could result from a mafia boss locking Stephen King and Christopher Moore into a room, and demanding they write a book for him. It defies genre, and it makes you laugh at things that, if you thought about them for any length of time, might make you cry or crawl into the closet to hide.

In other words, it's kind of awesome, and I can't wait to read the next one.

So, yes, absolutely, I recommend it.

76whitewavedarling
Jan. 30, 2018, 11:16 am

That was the last book I had as a goal for January, and this has been a great month of reading, holy cow. I don't expect to finish anything else today/tomorrow, so here's looking forward to February!

Up for February, I'm planning on:

Audrey Hepburn's Neck by Alan Brown (ColourCat)
Naked in Death by J.D. Robb (MysteryCat)
Poems for New Orleans by Edward Sanders (AlphaCat & RandomCat)
The Children of Men by PD James (ScaredyKit & AlphaCat)
Swallowing Darkness by Laurell K. Hamilton (SFFKit)

Because I didn't fit any nonfiction into January, I'm also starting off with Inkblots by Damion Searls.

77whitewavedarling
Feb. 3, 2018, 8:22 pm

This one was such a wonderful surprise... readers of general fiction, read this...

A. Body Parts #2: Audrey Hepburn's Neck by Alan Brown

At its heart, Audrey Hepburn's Neck is about difference--yearning for difference, fearing difference, and the same time hoping that there is no such thing. Between cultures, between individuals, and between futures.

Brown has drawn here a man who believes he knows his history, and his future, as well. Toshi thinks he knows who he is, and who his (simple) parents are, and what he wants. If not the reasons, he believes he knows who he is, and so he wanders forward. And as difference confronts him and he finds that his history and his future are hopelessly comingled, to the point of determining his passions, he is both completed and undone.

This sounds vague, and messy, and it is, but the book is anything but. Brown has drawn a masterfully detailed protagonist who any reader can both relate to and fear, and he's done a magnificent job. This book is not what I thought I was picking it up, and it is not flighty or simple, however easy and fast a read it may be. Instead, it is compelling and incredibly difficult, and a bit heartbreaking for how truly true it feels.

Yes, it's recommended.

78whitewavedarling
Feb. 6, 2018, 10:26 am

H. Numbers #1: Naked in Death by J.D. Robb (first in the In Death series by J.D. Robb)

I wasn't sure what to expect from this one, but I ended up really enjoying it once I got a few chapters into it. The writing moves fast, and there's a good balance of intrigue, action, and romance. I might have liked a little bit more depth to the minor characters, as especially the women seemed to bleed together and be rather cut from the same cloth, but the main characters had enough depth and distinction to even out that flaw a bit, and the mystery itself didn't feel to be either too drawn out or predictable, so the book as a whole was a great escape read. For readers who like a mix of intrigue/mystery and romance in a police procedural, I'd certainly recommend it, and I do plan on picking up the next few books in the series sooner than later.

79whitewavedarling
Feb. 9, 2018, 2:27 pm

J. The Other #5: Poems for New Orleans by Edward Sanders

For me, this was an incredibly disappointing read. I love works set in or drawn around New Orleans, and Patricia Smith's Blood Dazzler (centered on Katrina, specifically) is one of my favorite works of contemporary poetry, so I had high hopes for this collection. And yet, most of the poems fell flat for me.

Although some of the poems here are worth admiring for their play with language and history, most of them come across as something more like prose which has been chopped up for effect, or for humor. And, I admit, the tone of many of them just struck me wrong, to where it felt to me like an outsider writing of what he thinks New Orleans to be and come from, so that at many points I almost felt like the voices of the poems were somewhat superficial, or snarky and condescending. Midway through the book, I felt like some of the more contemporary ones were stronger, but then, at the end, I have to admit that the last sequence in the collection left an incredibly bad taste in my mouth for the collection as a whole, and while I could see what the author was perhaps trying to do... I just didn't like it, either in intention or execution.

So, all told, the truth is that I can't recommend this book, and I doubt I'll revisit it. I've enjoyed Sanders work quite a bit in other collections, but here... well, it wasn't for me.

80whitewavedarling
Feb. 11, 2018, 5:48 pm

D. Faces #2: The Children of Men by P.D. James

There's a quiet sort of desperation to this book, and it moves from being slow and rather innocuous into something which is not just suspenseful, but tight and damning, piling moral question upon moral question in a sort of natural domino effect that a reader can't help but watch. When I began the book, I was reading perhaps ten pages at a time, and then putting it down easily. In my final two sittings, I read sixty pages until my eyes gave out over its small print, and then the final fifty.

Out of a future that is infertile and hopeless, tightly controlled and mannered, James has asked the simplest question regarding what happens when a small beginning can be glimpsed in what appears to be a landscape of endings, and the result is impressive and smart.

Recommended.

81whitewavedarling
Feb. 15, 2018, 10:13 pm

D. Faces #3: Moonlight Sins by Jennifer L. Armentrout

I have to say that this book really grew on me, though I'm not all that sure that that's saying much. About forty pages in, I was actually thinking about not finishing it--really, I was that annoyed with it. A bit part of that was the narrator feeling more like a sorority girl than an adult--I just about threw the book across the room when 'rando' and 'convo' were used not in dialogue, but in the narrative, and that still drives me nuts when I think about it. But, slowly, my annoyance faded and it got better.

I do think the marketing was off--I expected this to be a much darker read, and more gothic or spooky, than it actually was--but as a contemporary romance, it grew on me and I really ended up enjoying it. The characters also grew on me. I still feel as if the heroine was written really young (too young) in most scenes, really wherever she wasn't working, but the chemistry and the romance itself was written well enough that I could mostly ignore that. That said, there also seemed to be some odd aging issues with Lucian--he came across as older and far more interesting when he wasn't with Julia, and seemed almost to regress in age when he was with her. In some ways, maybe that makes sense, but a lot of the scenes between the two of them felt like they were written as if the two of them were closer to 18 than adults, so... I don't know.

In the end, I enjoyed it, but it wasn't what I expected (from the description Or the cover, both of which seem quite a bit darker than the book), and I'm not sure that the strengths are actually strong enough to bring me back for the next book in the series.

I might recommend this to contemporary romance or billionaire romance readers, but I'd warn any readers that the spookiness/darkness suggested by the cover and blurb really aren't to be found in the story itself.

82whitewavedarling
Feb. 17, 2018, 11:46 pm

B. Houses, Windows, Stairs... #1: A Cold Dark Place by Gregg Olsen

Olsen's thrillers are page-turning and twisting escapes, and this one was no different. With believable, flawed characters and enough complexity to make it feel real, this is one of those books that spins by in a flood of drama, action, and suspense. And even where there are some small bits that felt, at times, predictable, they were enmeshed in such a full picture that, all told, I really didn't mind.

There's no doubt in my mind that I'll pick up the next in the Emily Kenyon series fairly soon. Absolutely, recommended.

83whitewavedarling
Feb. 18, 2018, 12:09 am

I. The Other #2: The Brief and Frightening Reign of Phil by George Saunders

I wish I could say that I didn't understand this, or found it obscure, or thought it exaggerated beyond what it had to be. I wish I could say that, entertaining as it is, it isn't something which we should need to worry about--or, worse, be aware of--on a daily basis. I wish I could say that it isn't, as the blurb describes, 'an Animal Farm' for our times. I wish that, reading it now, I didn't feel like Saunders was not just offering warning, but prediction, back when he wrote this.

And, yet.

If this is a difficult read, it's because it feels too real and raw, too much like what seems to be unfolding in too many parts of our world and even on the news, crossing our television screams. In fact, it's a bit too raw to be entertaining or humorous, and a bit too hard to be boring. When this was published, had I read it then, I think I might have been bored or annoyed with it, or simply not enjoyed it, and read it and then forgotten about. Reading it tonight, none of those things were possible, though it's still true that I didn't quite enjoy it. I devoured it in the way that one can't quite help reading some things, and it was a painful experience. It is a painful experience, as it should be, because it's quite a bit more real and graceful than anyone would wish.

84whitewavedarling
Feb. 24, 2018, 1:16 pm

A. Body Parts #3: The Harlequin by Laurell K. Hamilton

I'd been away from this series for a while, but coming back into it was like finding an old friend. Hamilton's characters are so specific and real that, this far into the series, the character struggles and the dynamics among them flow seamlessly into the fast-paced plotting, dialogue, and steamed up romance. There were moments in this book that reminded me why I fell in love with the series to begin with, and moments that were so striking, so flawlessly drawn, that they reminded me why other urban fantasy I come across just doesn't really come close to the power of this series.

There are so many characters, and the details of things are so intricate at this point that I think readers would have to start with the earlier books in order to enjoy this one, but I certainly think it lives up to the precedent that this series has set for itself.

85whitewavedarling
Bearbeitet: Feb. 28, 2018, 2:13 pm

And... I have to share... I just signed a contract to have my second book published! It's a paranormal suspense/romance to be published under a pen name, with more details to come, and I'm over the moon :)

86virginiahomeschooler
Feb. 28, 2018, 2:21 pm

Congratulations!

87Helenliz
Feb. 28, 2018, 2:52 pm

>85 whitewavedarling: oh, how exciting!

88LittleTaiko
Feb. 28, 2018, 3:12 pm

Congratulations!! Hope you're doing something fun to celebrate.

89rabbitprincess
Feb. 28, 2018, 7:20 pm

>85 whitewavedarling: Nice! Congratulations!

90whitewavedarling
Feb. 28, 2018, 7:46 pm

Thanks, everyone :)

I've asked so many questions, and double-checked everything, so I'm really excited--I feel confident that this is going to be a MUCH better experience than I had with the publisher who took on my first poetry collection a few years ago. And, on top of all that, they like the book enough to already be talking about a timeline for the sequel :) (Which, of course, means I have to get back to writing it lol.)

>88 LittleTaiko:, I'll celebrate in a few days, definitely. For now, I have to just keep working on getting over the cough/cold I have, so immediate celebration will probably just be an early bedtime!

I hope all of you are having just as fantastic a day! (Well, and Not suffering from a cough and cold like me and my husband!)

91RidgewayGirl
Feb. 28, 2018, 9:25 pm

>85 whitewavedarling: All the congratulations! All of them!

92MissWatson
Mrz. 1, 2018, 3:22 am

Wonderful news! Congratulations!

93whitewavedarling
Mrz. 1, 2018, 9:22 am

Thank you :) I'm so excited, and now I just have to find a way to sit back and be patient!

Meanwhile, though, at least there's reading to distract me :) With all of the excitement of the past week, I didn't finish Inkblots, so that will end up being my "I" book for March, or at least the first of them. I'm also about midway through a long weird fiction novel, Un Lun Dun, which I'm enjoying more and more with each passing page, and about halfway through a romance I'm reading on the side, Deep by Kylie Scott.

Beyond these books, my plans for March include...

Crimes of the Father by Thomas Keneally for the RandomCat
Cloud Atlas for the Group Read
Foreigner by C.J. Cherryh for the SffKit
The Fault in our Stars for the ColorCat
and...
When Red is Black by Qiu Xiaolong

IF I finish all that, I'll move on to the other weird fiction (and green) book I have on deck, Annihilation by Jeff Vandermeer, and the I book I'd planned when I thought Inkblots would be done, which is Saint: A Shelter Harbor Novel by Aubrey Irons

94DeltaQueen50
Mrz. 1, 2018, 1:16 pm

What wonderful news, congratulations!

95clue
Mrz. 1, 2018, 1:47 pm

Fantastic! Best wishes for a series!

96christina_reads
Mrz. 2, 2018, 1:46 pm

Congratulations! If you share the title and pub date (when known), I'll totally buy a copy! :)

Also, I liked Un Lun Dun a lot as well. Have you gotten to the giraffes yet?

97VivienneR
Mrz. 2, 2018, 2:58 pm

Congratulations! Wonderful news!

98whitewavedarling
Mrz. 2, 2018, 7:00 pm

Thanks, everyone :)

I'll remember to update as we go along--they're thinking of a Fall publication!

Meanwhile, >96 christina_reads:, Yes, I've gotten to the giraffes :) The book has just gotten better and better. I'd be done if I weren't so underwater in terms of actual work!

99whitewavedarling
Mrz. 4, 2018, 4:07 pm

G. Vehicles #1: Un Lun Dun by China Mieville

Although it took me some time to get wrapped up in Mieville's Un Lun Dun, by the time I did, I had a hard time putting the book down. The characters and situations were simply fun, and the book moved at such a fast pace that it sometimes seemed to be as much a collage as anything, somewhat reminiscent of something like Alice's Adventures in Wonderland, but with an adult edge. There were times when I lost track of what details meant or exactly who characters were, as they sometimes blended together, and the frantic pace heightened this effect. But, because things stayed rather centered when it came to the main characters, the book never really lost my interest--it only, at times, became something of a blur.

I am anxious to read some other work by Mieville and see how it compares. This was a lot of fun, but I think I might have enjoyed it more if distinct moments had been given more time to resonate, or more depth--sometimes it felt like I was racing along from one to the next before a moment of danger had had time to sink in!

Nevertheless, I think readers of fast, fun adventures like Alice in Wonderland and the Phantom Tollbooth will enjoy it, and it would also be right up the alley of readers of Vandermeer.

100whitewavedarling
Mrz. 4, 2018, 4:36 pm

E. Abstractions #2: The Inkblots: Hermann Rorschach, his Iconic Test, and the Power of Seeing by Damion Searls

Searls' dual examination of the famous inkblot test and the man who created it is a fascinating journey, moving from one man's passion to help his patients on through a single test's development, evolution, and outreach, along with the debates and criticism surrounding it. In its beginning, the book is a carefully laid out character study with an eye toward why Rorschach was so perfectly situated to develop the iconic inkblot test, and how his genius for both therapy and visual analysis put him in the position of conceiving, experimenting with, and fully developing what's now such an iconic test.

In its whole, this is an impressive work that tackles history, theory, and biography in a way that brings them together and offers what amounts to a careful biography of the test itself, in all its various forms and debates. And although any fair description of the work may make it sound like dry material, that's far from being the case--this is a compulsively readable book that I'd recommend on to anyone with any interest in character, psychology, or history.

Absolutely recommended to anyone interested.

101-Eva-
Bearbeitet: Mrz. 6, 2018, 7:47 pm

>75 whitewavedarling:
That a very intriguing description - taking a BB for Sandman Slim.

>85 whitewavedarling:
Congratulations!!

>99 whitewavedarling:
One of my all-time favorites.

102whitewavedarling
Mrz. 8, 2018, 9:19 pm

>101 -Eva-:, Sandman Slim was wonderful--I hope you enjoy it! And, thanks :)

103whitewavedarling
Mrz. 8, 2018, 9:26 pm

So, I'm at a writing conference (AWP), and having a wonderful, inspiring time. Today, I heard talks from Sofia Samatar, Rose Lemberg, and Jordy Rosenberg among others, and discovered a lot of new writers and books I can't wait to read. Tomorrow, I've got a number of meetings that will keep me from attending as many readings as I'd like, but I am going to get to hear Nathan Englander, along with Lauren Groff, and I'm incredibly excited.

It's funny---I sometimes forget how much I enjoy going to readings, and then I come to AWP, and I'm blown away with inspiration. I hope you all are having just such a lovely week as we head toward the weekend!

104whitewavedarling
Mrz. 11, 2018, 9:13 pm

I. The Other #3: Deep by Kylie Scott

This was a fun addition to the Stage Dive series. Predictable as it might have been, simply based on the series and the genre, it still came through with such humor, heat, and chemistry that it was impossible not to get wrapped up in the story and pulled along for the ride. All told, it fully lived up to the earlier books in the series, and only confirmed that Kylie Scott is one of my favorite contemporary romance writers.

105whitewavedarling
Mrz. 12, 2018, 12:24 pm

So, the wonderful/horrifying thing about AWP is that the book fair has over 600 exhibitors, many of which are small presses looking to sell you books. A lot of them have deals towards the end (3 books for 10 dollars!) that, if you're even the least bit tempted, are hard to walk away from. As a result, this year's book haul:

Prose:
The Most Fun You'll Have at a Cage Fight by Rory Douglas (noted as being a memoir/MMA primer)
The Sound of Sirens by William Brasse (a novel)
Monster Portraits by Del Samatar (short fictions)

Poetry:
A Bestiary by Lily Hoang
Earthquake Owner's Manual by Martin Arnold
Winter Inlet by Hastings Hensel
The Tulip-Flame by Chloe Homum
How to Build the Ghost in Your Attic by Peter Jay Shippey
Traumas by Tyler Robert Sheldon
The Dissenter's Ground by J. Bruce Fuller
Learning to Love Louisiana by Elizabeth Burk
Outdancing the Universe by Lauren Gilmore
This Poem is a House by Ken Sparling
Ardour by Nicole Brossard (translated from French)

106rabbitprincess
Mrz. 12, 2018, 6:50 pm

Woo hoo! Book conventions are so fun (and dangerous).

107whitewavedarling
Mrz. 13, 2018, 12:56 pm

108LittleTaiko
Mrz. 14, 2018, 3:11 pm

I think you showed remarkable restraint with your purchases. I know how easy it is to go overboard at book conventions. :)

109whitewavedarling
Mrz. 14, 2018, 3:48 pm

>108 LittleTaiko: Thanks! Most of the books were in 3-for-10 or 2-for-12 deals, so it wasn't such an expensive stack of books as it probably looks like, either :)

110whitewavedarling
Mrz. 16, 2018, 3:34 pm

D. Faces #4: When Red is Black by Qiu Xiaolong

As the third book in the Inspector Chen mystery series, When Red is Black took me a bit longer to get into it than the previous novels, but for obvious enough reasons. Whereas the first two books in the series remained focused on Inspector Chen, this installment has a dual focus on him and his lead detective. The book's blurb didn't suggest this in any way at all, so although I enjoyed getting to know Yu and his family, the split focus of the book just wasn't what I was expecting, and I think my reading experience suffered for it. That said, Xiaolong's style and narrative still sucked me in, and I ended up really enjoying the book. I imagine that future books in the series with a split focus like this will be easier to slip into (assuming there'll be some), but Chen's character is still such that I hope most of the books simply focus on him.

In any case, I'd certainly recommend it to fans of the earlier books in the series, though I'm not sure it's capable of quite the same power of inertia. One way or another, I'm looking forward to picking up the next book in the series.

111lkernagh
Mrz. 21, 2018, 10:57 pm

>85 whitewavedarling: - Congratulations!

Sounds like you had a wonderful time - by the acquisitions alone! - at AWP.

112whitewavedarling
Mrz. 23, 2018, 10:55 am

>111 lkernagh:, thanks, and yes, I did!

Meanwhile, reading has been slow because I've been so busy, but I finally made it through the finish line on this one which I put down and didn't pick up for two weeks (thinking at the time that I might not finish it). Beware, this review is a rant. I don't often hate a book... but I REALLY HATED this one.

E. Abstractions and Words Alone #3: The Fault In Our Stars by John Green

I've read a lot of books that deal with illness, so although this wasn't a book that I would necessarily have picked up for myself, I figured it would be worth reading because of all the raving praise I'd heard for it. Instead, I feel pretty disgusted with it.

I'm honestly not sure why this book became so popular, or set off, it seems, what's known as 'sick lit' now--in my opinion, it is pretty sick. Don't get me wrong--the book is well-written. It's smart and clever and made of endearing characters. But there are also a ton of problems.

Let's start with the clever characters. No characters are this clever and this smart ALL the time. I'm sorry, but they're just not. Everyone, once in a while at least, has a normal conversation that's not overflowing with clever banter and cutesy moments. The fact that the teens at the center of this book are over-the-top clever and admirable in that non-popular-kid-cool-kid fashion is probably something that amuses a lot of readers, but which is totally unrealistic. And, yes, some books are unrealistic--that's true. I love fantasy and sci-fi, too. BUT, they're not pretending to be realistic. Because this book sets up what it presents as a realistic world and a tragic situation, turning these characters into clever young comedians is a disservice to the whole project, making it incredibly unbelievable. Is it a tragic story? Yes. Is it believable? Only in its final, final outcome.

So, let's move to the plot. First of all, as a life-long writer and reader, I was insanely annoyed by the fact that these characters were obsessed with finding out what happens after the ending of their favorite book. That, in itself, is impossible to believe. Can I see them writing a few letters to the author? Sure. Can I see him answering them with even an offhand invitation to visit, this to be followed by all of the impossible-to-believe plot turns that follow it? Not in a million years. Not to mention the fact that, for kids who are presented as crazy-smart and creative, this whole part of the plot only works if they're incredibly dumb and uncreative.

So, add all that to the fact that this book romanticizes death and dying, feeding into the type of mindset that leads to things like suicide pacts, and I'm done. And maybe you want to argue with me on that last point, but take two seconds to think about how you were as a teenager. Take two seconds to think about the fact that suicide pacts exist. Take two seconds to think about how the character in the book here, who is without any doubt dying, essentially gives up on their own life/treatment because of a desire to go adventure with the other teen they've fallen in love with. When you were a teen, in love with another ill teen who was healthier than you, would you have made the grand gesture of giving up on your own health to make them happy? Realistically, the answer might very well be yes--especially if you'd read a book like this.

At best, maybe a sick teen can read this book and find someone who seems like the ideal version of themselves if they absolutely can't or won't imagine themselves without illness (which, as far as I'm concerned, would mean they'd given up, with this book's full support); at worst, this book is a way to rationalize giving up on life, and giving up early.

So, no, I don't find this book worthwhile or admirable. I don't find it smart or poignant timely. As someone who works with teens and was an emotional teen, and who, as a teen, had to deal with a friend succumbing to a terrible illness, I instead find it pretty damn horrifying.

As far as I'm concerned, this shouldn't be a book (or a genre) we celebrate. To me, the best thing about it is its title.

113whitewavedarling
Mrz. 25, 2018, 7:33 pm

G. Vehicles/Transportation #2: Foreigner by C.J. Cherryh

At another time, maybe I would have enjoyed this more, but the truth is that it just didn't quite keep my attention, to the extent that I really ended up losing track of the plot. Since the focus was placed on plot more so than character, that essentially led to my having a harder and harder time keeping track of the narrative and remaining interested. There were spots where it sucked me in, but I have to admit I didn't particularly enjoy this.

114whitewavedarling
Mrz. 31, 2018, 3:16 pm

But this next one was the first five-star read for me in a while... I'm so glad I got around to reading it.

D. Faces #5: Crimes of the Father by Thomas Keneally

Keneally's novel will, without a doubt, scare many people away just by virtue of its subject. It's difficult to pick up a book which you know from the get-go is going to focus on sexual abuse, the Catholic Church, and children who've been taken advantage of by their own priests. And yet, Keneally's creation of Father Frank Doherty is touching, nuanced, and striking; his character is one who is stuck in a situation and place that he never dreamed of entering at all, surrounded by people who distrust him because of his openness and values, and an institution he loves, but sees honestly and feels compelled to criticize because he believes it is only through such criticism that its greatness can be regained, if not maintained.

Keneally's gorgeous writing and unerring pacing make this book nearly impossible to put down, despite the fact that he takes on subjects which, most often, are more comfortably left unspoken. The book is striking, smart, and compelling, and well worth reading for anyone concerned with the Catholic Church as an institution or the faith in our contemporary world, as well as any reader who might be interested in an intricate character study of a man who is caught irrevocably between his faith and his reality.

Absolutely, 100%, recommended.

115whitewavedarling
Apr. 1, 2018, 10:30 am

Well, another new month, and while I didn't quite get all read that I wanted to in March, which was a pretty slow reading month for me, I did meet all of the challenges I'm trying for, which I'm pretty proud of :) For April, I'm still reading Cloud Atlas (enjoying it more now than I was), and I've also begun Time and Again by Jack Finney for the SFFkit challenge, which I'm already really enjoying.

Beyond these books, my plans for April include...
The Moonstone by Wilkie Collins for the MysteryCat
The Nightrunners by Joe Lansdale for the ScaredyKit
Uncovering You by Scarlett Edwards for the Alphakit (U)
Half of a Yellow Sun by Chimamanda Adichie for the Colorcat
Year of Wonders by Geraldine Brooks for both the Randomcat and the Alphakit (Y)

If I have time, I also want to get to Isaac's Storm, which is my most recently assigned book in the Go Review That Book! Group, and Dominion by Shane Arbuthnott.

We'll see how it goes.

Meanwhile, everyone have a lovely Easter (and April Fool's Day!)!

116Helenliz
Apr. 1, 2018, 10:37 am

April is looking good for you then! I've read 4 of your intended reads and none of them are duffers. Cloud Atlas remains one of my Desert Island books, that I was meaning to reread with the group, but I'm still struggling through Don Quixote, and probably will be for the foreseeable future...

117whitewavedarling
Apr. 1, 2018, 6:47 pm

>116 Helenliz:, Good to know :) I've always meant to read Don Quixote, but haven't gotten to it yet. Cloud Atlas is something I'm enjoying more and more the further I get into it, though!

It's nice to hear you've had good experience with a number of those I'm jumping into. The only author I've read before is Adichie, and I've loved her work in the past, but all of the other authors are new to me :)

118whitewavedarling
Apr. 7, 2018, 10:10 am

And, in a good start to the month... I ADORED this book. I'd put off reading it for ages--it was a gift, some years ago, but I'm just not much for time travel. Now, I have to call my mom and admit that I finally got around to reading it. I suppose I should have known--she doesn't like sci-fi/fantasy, and normally we don't like the same books, so the out-of-the-norm type of book should have been a clue it would be worth me reading! I'll know better if it happens again...

G. Vehicles #3: Time and Again by Jack Finney

There's something about this book that makes it possible to believe in time travel, and that alone makes it something far beyond time travel books I've read in the past. Finney manages to build this world and the premise so carefully, and the logic is so wonderfully simple and sensible in its own way, that his utterly real characters make it seem as if we're not reading about some other world, but our own reality where, just perhaps, this might be possible. That's the beauty of this book, combined with his wonderful characters and writing that sucks you in and all but demands that you keep turning pages. Each time I sat down to read a few chapters, I read far more than that, and had to be forced by time or my eyes to finally put the book down.

I freely admit that I'm not much for time travel books, normally, though I love fantasy--this brings together everything I love about suspense, literary fiction, fantasy, and speculative fiction in general, into a tale that feels more real and translated into fiction than it feels like a story.

I'd absolutely recommend, and I'm so glad to have discovered this author.

119whitewavedarling
Apr. 15, 2018, 10:53 am

I am officially abandoning Cloud Atlas, at around page 260, though I did skim forward to see if I could bring myself to read any of the final sections. I couldn't, and I'm totally okay with this, though it's the first book in about a decade that I've purposefully abandoned, with no intention of returning to it.

My review, as posted...

In one of my first classes as an English major, during my junior year of college, one of my professors pulled me into his office and told me, point-blank, that he was disappointed in me, and rather annoyed. While I was still trying to figure out what was going on, he went on to say that I was clearly a talented writer, and intelligent, and full of smart, creative ideas that I could explain. He then went on to explain to me why the essay I’d turned in to him didn’t display any of that. He explained to me that, although it showed I knew how to stitch words together in a way that sounded lovely, the ideas were fancier than they were complete, and the whole thing was fairly wordy—overwritten in some ways, and under-developed in others. I was prioritizing sound, not sense. At the time, I was in shock, but ever since then, I’ve been incredibly grateful to him for explaining to me that sounding smart and stringing together words in a way that sounds wonderful and right does not, alone, make for a good writer, let alone a great one.

Now, an essay is a very different thing than a novel, obviously, but it’s still true that a talented writer can string together many, many flourishes and ideas, and make for something that sounds wonderful—when, at its heart, it is in some ways overwritten and overthought, and in some ways underdeveloped and far less than what it pretends to be. But it looks good, and it sounds good… so it must be good, right? Well, this last reasoning is probably why I got tons of A+ grades on just about any paper I wrote in high school (and college, when my writing got much, much better), and why many of my college-level students declared they’d never gotten less than an A, and yet I’d given them a C.

So, here’s the thing. I see the experiment that Mitchell had the idea to complete in Cloud Atlas, and I see he’s an incredibly talented writer; he’s one who, clearly, knows how to show off, and likes to do so. The book, for what it is, is rather well-done in its own way, piece by piece. That, though, doesn’t change the fact that—taken as a single manuscript meant to tell a story which is in some way cohesive—it is more experiment than novel. It is, in various pieces, either over-written or underdeveloped. It is also, in my opinion, more flourish than story—more cleverness than intelligence, if you want to put it in a different way. Truly, I think this is one of those books that gives ‘literary fiction’ a bad name for non-English majors.

I got about halfway through, having struggled to care about continuing for most of what I’d read. And then, for the first time in about a decade, I purposefully abandoned the book. And… it felt so, so good to do so, and to decide I was done with it. I saw the experiment, I saw he’d completed it, and that’s fine. But, as a reader, I come to fiction for escape, and for a story—or, even, for many stories, told one after another or all together, in either a short story collection or a novel. I come to escape and to enjoy myself, and to be entertained and to learn and to engage with characters. Yes, I sometimes come because of important ideas, and even experiments, but I stay for the story. I love beautiful writing that elevates a worthwhile story, too—some of my favorite writers are writers who, critics say, write books about nothing, or books which are twice as long as they should be, and I obviously don’t agree because I go back to those writers again and again. But, here? A great writer does not a great story-teller make, and I have to tell you… the fact that I couldn’t bring myself to care about any of these stories, or engage with any of these stories, or characters, though I could appreciate the writing throughout, even if I didn’t enjoy it? That tells me that this was a lot of flourish, and a lot of word-play, with a lot less meaning than any other book I’ve read this year, or even in quite a few years past.

Give me a good story with passable writing over wonderful writing that says nothing any day of the week.

This may be the first book in a decade that I’m purposefully abandoning (and trust me when I say that I’ve made myself finish a lot of lousy books, just for the sake of finishing what I started)… but I’m so relieved to be abandoning it, I don’t care about it being abandoned anymore than I care about any of the book’s storylines.

I don’t know if I’ll give Mitchell another try or not, but I’ll certainly never crack open this book again, let alone recommend it. This one’s going to leave a sour taste in my mouth for a while.

120Jackie_K
Apr. 16, 2018, 5:26 am

>119 whitewavedarling: That's not a book that's ever appealed to me, I must admit - probably because from what I've heard about the writing, it would make me feel really thick! I'm getting better at abandoning books (I've ditched two this year already, which is unheard of for me, but I'd tried one of them three times and just couldn't do it, so I think it was justified!). I hope your next book is more successful!

121whitewavedarling
Apr. 16, 2018, 11:07 am

>120 Jackie_K:, Thanks :) I sometimes really love strange things, and I LOVE If on a Winter's Night A Traveler by Italo Calvino... but it's much more readable. I think I'll probably still have trouble abandoning short/quick books, but having left this one behind, I think I'll have an easier time abandoning long ones. Of course, I don't think I've ever wanted to abandon one that was nearly this long, except for a few I had to read for classes, so I suppose that may have been the tipping point!

Anyhow, my current reads are going much better. I'm most of the way through Half of a Yellow Sun--I'd mostly stopped reading Cloud Atlas and been reading that, even before I made the decision to abandon ship--and I just started The Moonstone, which I'm so far really enjoying :)

122VivienneR
Apr. 16, 2018, 2:09 pm

>119 whitewavedarling: Congratulations on ditching a book that didn't appeal - but most of all for your well-reasoned explanation.

123whitewavedarling
Apr. 16, 2018, 2:23 pm

>122 VivienneR:, thanks :)

124pammab
Bearbeitet: Apr. 16, 2018, 11:04 pm

Swinging in to say hello and skim the recent month's posts -- congrats on your book deal! I'm not sure how I missed the year so far on this thread.

>112 whitewavedarling: So many times "yes" -- really appreciate your thoughts and opinions on this one; it isn't an opinion I've heard articulated at all, and definitely not so clearly as you express it here.

>118 whitewavedarling: Happy time travel book, now seen on two threads that piqued my interest -- I suppose I should go off and try to find a copy of Time and Again!

125whitewavedarling
Apr. 17, 2018, 2:00 pm

>124 pammab:, Thanks for dropping in :) As you can see from my reaction The Fault in Our Stars, there've been some rough reading spots lately, though it helps to know that other readers understand my viewpoint. But, that said, Time and Again was a huge bright spot in my reading this past month, so I hope you do seek it out :)

126whitewavedarling
Apr. 19, 2018, 10:56 am

C. Trees and Flowers #2: Half of a Yellow Sun by Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie

Although it doesn't quite have the same immediacy and power of Purple Hibiscus, this is still a striking, worthwhile read. Perhaps inevitably, especially early on, one of the characters at the center of the book pulled me in more than others, and one put me off somewhat. Yet, by the end of the book, the story as a whole felt more cohesive and I no longer felt disappointed when I turned a page to discover the next chapter's focus. The second part of the book did lag some--Adichie moves between the early sixties and the late sixties, by part, and the first section that jumps forward is slower, to the extent that I almost felt as if I was beginning the book anew and felt let-down. As with the viewpoints, though, the structure evens out and becomes a strength of the book as the war comes more into focus.

As in her other work, Adichie's prose is graceful and brutal--it doesn't exaggerate suffering, but it also doesn't flinch. With its focus centered on the Nigeria-Biafra war, that means this is not an easy read. At the same time, her characters are themselves believable and flawed, almost painfully real. And, because of all of this, Half of a Yellow Sun is a stand-out book that should be read, and passed along.

Recommended.

127whitewavedarling
Apr. 19, 2018, 2:20 pm

I read an early release copy of this book at the end of 2017, so I'm not counting it towards my challenge, but it was so wonderful, I wanted to make sure to get out reviews now that it's been released. If you like fantasy or epic fantasy or wonderfully built worlds and characters, read this:

Solace Lost: Pandemonium Rising #1 by Michael Sliter

(The touchstones aren't working, but you'll find it if you search for it here, on goodreads, or on amazon.)

Full Review:

In creating the cast for Solace Lost and this world of epic fantasy, Sliter managed to bring to life a cast of characters that are worlds apart, and wonderfully believable. As their stories interweave and the world they live in itself comes to life, this is one of those books that gains its own sort of building inertia--in the beginning, I didn't want to put it down, and is it continued, I couldn't. Sliter's seamless writing and striking narrative pull together into a book that is the reason I seek out fantasy like this to begin with, and it's wonderful.

This book delivers on everything it promises, from drama and intrigue on to humor and suspense and action. Yet, for me, it's the characters--Fenrir, Merigold, and Emma, especially--who keep the tale fresh in my mind, and make it hard to wait for the sequel. There's no doubt that this tale will stay with me, and that I'll continue to think of the characters as more real than created while I wait for the next installment.

Absolutely recommended.

Also, this is the first book released by this author, and it's phenomenal even if you don't remember it's a debut book. Thus, if you pick it up, please remember to review it! Reviews of indie books and small press books like this are especially important!

128lkernagh
Apr. 20, 2018, 4:28 pm

>119 whitewavedarling: - Excellent for a book you DNF'd! I listened to the audiobook and even though I did make it through to the end, I only gave it 2.5 stars so you are not alone in thinking that one was not worth the effort.

129DeltaQueen50
Apr. 20, 2018, 7:54 pm

Cloud Atlas is a book that I really don't have any desire to read other than for the fact that it is on the 1001 Books List. I have a feeling that it won't be one that I enjoy either so I am in no hurry to pick it up.

130whitewavedarling
Apr. 21, 2018, 11:28 am

>128 lkernagh:, Thanks :)

>129 DeltaQueen50:, I think I only expected to like it for a few reasons... it seemed like one of the complaints I'd heard was that it blended genres, and moved between genres; I like both genre writing and literary writing, to the extent that they're separate, and I know a lot who don't. And, at the same time, I really do LOVE If on a Winter's Night a Traveler by Italo Calvino, which moves between stories and rather has a story within a story, and also The Swan Thieves by Elizabeth Kostova, which rather moves between past/present and separate stories. I thought that was more what I was getting myself into, but was obviously wrong :(

131DeltaQueen50
Apr. 21, 2018, 10:05 pm

>130 whitewavedarling: Good to hear praise for If On a Winter's Night as I just picked that one up.

132whitewavedarling
Apr. 28, 2018, 9:48 am

>131 DeltaQueen50:, I hope you enjoy it!

D. Faces #6: Year of Wonders by Geraldine Brooks

Taking a small village and a single caring woman as her subject, Brooks' "novel of the plague" is not just powerful and elegantly written, but as complete as I can imagine a novel about the plague being. With every emotion at play, and an eerie level of truth touching near on every scene, Brooks has recreated a self-quarantined village and brought it to life.

Although it won't be for every reader, owing simply to its subject and the darkness of some of the passages, this is a book worth reading, and I'd absolutely recommend it.

133whitewavedarling
Apr. 28, 2018, 10:04 am

E. Abstractions and Words Alone #4: The Moonstone by Wilkie Collins

Considered the first detective story, and a classic suspense story, Collins' The Moonstone is a cycling, twisting tale of intrigue and theft. From narrator to narrator, the parts of the world unfold until clues seem to build to one conclusion, and then another, surprising the characters along with the reader.

Although it took me some time to get into the book, once I passed through the first two narrators' sections, I could hardly put the book down, and so many moments and details surprised me that it was an incredibly satisfying read, and one I'm surprised I didn't manage to read sooner. I'd absolutely recommend this to anyone who loves the classics, from Dickens on through others, and anyone who enjoys mysteries--this was a fun one.

134whitewavedarling
Apr. 28, 2018, 11:30 pm

A. Body Parts #4: Uncovering You: The Contract by Scarlett Edwards

It's hard to know how to feel about this book because, in and of itself, it's not a complete book. It's set up as one, but realistically, it's only the beginning of one. And outside of the lack of editing that affects so many self-published works (though not this one), maybe this is one of the big problems--authors have incentive to publish a lot of short pieces rather than single long pieces in some ways... and that's fine. But apparently, in this case, it led to an author writing one long piece, and splitting it into three books.

By itself, this 'first book in the series' is more of a tease than a story in and of itself. If you're buying it for Kindle, you can buy all three for 99 cents each, but the fact that it's published alone does, on some level, suggest there's a particular story to be had here, just as there'd be if you bought the first book in a series in a bookstore. But, as a book, this doesn't warrant the label.

If I'd just finished reading the first part of a book, I might not be too unsatisfied right now--it's a decent beginning, though it's got some issues (not least of them the sections where she's remembering back to being 12, in memories that vary between making her sound like a 6-year-old and an 18-year-old). But, as someone who just read what she considered to be a book in and of itself, and the beginning of a series... well, yeah, I don't think I got what I paid for, and the lack of substance/completion here overshadows what was a decent beginning to a book.

So, will I continue reading? Yes, I will, because I bought the first three in the series together, knowing they were something of a trilogy even if I didn't realize how much they were together only essentially one book. But, will I read more by this author? No, I probably won't. I'm not going to pay full book price for what ends up being only a third of a book, and it seems that that's what this author's intention is That means that, on some level, she's putting money above either stories or readers, and combined with the fact that there's nothing really Special about this particular book/story so far, that means I feel a bit gipped, and frustrated that marketing processes led an author to make this particular choice and concession.

Here's hoping that other authors don't, as I certainly haven't seen anything to this extent before.

135whitewavedarling
Apr. 30, 2018, 11:25 am

F. Animals #2: Darkest Pleasure by Gena Showalter

Although I enjoyed getting back into the world Showalter created for this series, I have to admit that this third installment of the series didn't quite live up to the first two. I think it had something to do with the balancing act she's pulling off between characters--the previous books were much more focused on the romance aspect of the plot coming up between two people, and this one kept on wandering away from the couple in focus to keep readers up to date with what was happening with other characters. So, for me, the balance between romance and a larger world of action & concern somewhat took away from the pacing of the book--I'd opened up the book feeling in the mood for romance, and because that's what I'd looked for specifically, as set up by the first two books, I was a little let down. It was there... it just kept on getting interrupted, so it wasn't quite the same type of escape read.

That said, Showalter's characters and plotting are as well-written and interesting as ever, and I do definitely plan to read more in the series--I'm just going to start thinking of them more as I think of the Laurell K. Hamilton books, in that they seem to be more focused on a larger world and a balancing act between characters, as opposed to focusing on the romance and really feeling like that genre they're labeled as, compared to others.

136whitewavedarling
Apr. 30, 2018, 11:34 am

With my April goals finished, I'm looking forward to May, and I've already started on The Sowing by Tamara Mataya.

Also in my plans for this month are:

The Boxcar Children (for the MysteryCat read)
Ship of Gold in the Deep Blue Sea (for the ColorCat and AlphaCat/K)
Roses of May (for the RandomCat)
The Lesser Dead (for the ScaredyKit)
and
Quietus for the AlphaCat/Q

Two of these authors (Dot Hutchison and Christopher Buehlman) are authors I already love, and The Boxcar Children will be a quick/fun return to childhood, so this should be a relaxed reading month where goals get met pretty easily--I hope. I need the change after April, where I'm still not sure how I managed to meet my goals, and barely did!

137RidgewayGirl
Apr. 30, 2018, 12:26 pm

>134 whitewavedarling: Yep. I have issues with this, too. If a book can't stand on its own, then don't publish it all by itself.

138whitewavedarling
Apr. 30, 2018, 2:00 pm

>137 RidgewayGirl:--even with e-publishing, it just bugs me :( The writer claims that each book has its own climax and conclusion, but I'd have to strongly disagree.

139-Eva-
Apr. 30, 2018, 2:23 pm

>133 whitewavedarling:
I really liked it too, but it was looong and convoluted. Obviously a serial publication (i.e. dragged out a bit to cover more published issues).

140christina_reads
Mai 1, 2018, 10:08 am

>136 whitewavedarling: I loved the Boxcar Children series when I was a kid! I hope you enjoy your reread.

141whitewavedarling
Mai 1, 2018, 10:25 am

>140 christina_reads:, Thanks :) I'm looking forward to it... it was kind of a funny series for me. I was at a point when I was already moving toward reading above those books, getting wrapped up in the Hardy Boys Casefiles and Nancy Drew Casefiles, and wanting more action/adventure, but my mom had wanted me to read the Boxcar books when I was at the age where she'd read them, so she'd saved them for me. I kind of flew through them and found them a little bit boring in comparison to what else I was reading, which disappointed her at the time. Now that I'm actually able to relax and just enjoy a book, rather than devour it--and also not at that age where I felt like the reading was under my level, even in first grade--I'm curious how I'll feel diving back in!

142whitewavedarling
Mai 5, 2018, 3:06 pm

First category complete!

D. Faces #7: The Sowing: Moondreamer Chronicles #1 by Tamara Mataya

Although this is a fast read and the middle portion pulled me in, there are so many problems with this book that it's hard for me to imagine continuing on with the series. Aside from the characters being fairly flat and inconsistent, there's also the problem of premise. From the protagonist not acting believably in the beginning right on to the fact that a whole population seems to have been waiting for her to come save them -- despite not knowing she existed, and despite the fact that they could have done what she ends up doing all on their own -- the opening chapters of the book display a number of issues. Not to mention the fact that the protagonist herself is one of the less consistent characters I've read in some time, and suffers pretty seriously from ranging back and forth between two extremes of attitude and confidence -- most of the time, she's either half-panicked and wondering how she'll ever manage to do what she's signed up for, wishing someone would come save her, or else she's suddenly the most confident, capable, and powerful 21-year-old ever. In other words, she's annoyingly inconsistent, and takes on whatever attitude/persona happens to be convenient to a particular moment, whether that's damsel in distress or amazing heroine, and it gets old quickly.

Things move quickly in the middle, and it's easy to get wrapped up in the book, but then as the larger plot comes into focus, it also becomes clear that the premise for the series itself, and the primary conflict, are so derivative of X-Men that the connections can't be ignored. At best, you could say that this hinges on characters more built from classic fantasy (elves, sprites, etc.) than characters with powers that are more reminiscent of a sci-fi world... but really? The further into the book you go, the more it becomes clear that this is only a slightly twisted version of the X-Men world, dumbed down and sprinkled with romance, a an annoying 21-year-old's sarcasm, and a whole lot of panicked, flat characters.

So, obviously, I wouldn't recommend this book, and I certainly won't be continuing on with the series.

143whitewavedarling
Mai 5, 2018, 3:23 pm

This is my third book by this author, and each one surpasses the last. This was so, so, so good... though I can only recommend it for horror lovers :)

A. Body Parts #5: The Lesser Dead by Christopher Buehlman

I don't remember when I last felt driven enough to devour a full-length novel in less than 24 hours, but that's what happened with The Lesser Dead.

Like the other works I've read by Buehlman, this book pulled me in from nearly the first moment I picked it up. Buehlman has a talent for building wonderfully flawed characters and dropping them into horrific worlds or situations that feel more real than fictional, as if you might have seen the story unfold yourself if you'd just been in the right (or wrong) place at the right (or, rather, wrong) time. In other words, this book drops you into a world you'd never want to participate in, and it makes you feel like you understand it. The horror of the scenes practically drips from the pages, and the narrator's voice is real enough that it echoes even after the pages get turned.

All told, this is one of those books that makes story-telling seem effortless, with dark fluid language and characters who you might describe in just the same way. It's the best vampire book I've read in a long time, yes, but it's also the best horror I've read in quite some time.

If you like horror, or scary stories in general, you need to pick it up.

144DeltaQueen50
Mai 5, 2018, 8:13 pm

>143 whitewavedarling: I am very happy to hear the The Lesser Dead was good. I don't know when I will get to it, but it sounds like it might just be the perfect book for a Halloween read.

145whitewavedarling
Mai 14, 2018, 1:44 pm

>144 DeltaQueen50:, It really was SO good :) Whenever you get to it, I hope you enjoy it!

146clue
Mai 15, 2018, 9:30 am

I'm way behind with threads but wanted to say I'm glad you liked Time and Again. I read it years ago and still have it on my shelf. In fact, it's one of those books that I feel a little offended when other readers don't like it. Silly I know, but that's how much I liked it. I've debated reading it again because I don't want to be disappointed in it but probably will.

I'm also glad you liked Year of Wonders. I liked it so much I gave it to my sister twice, two birthday's in a row!!

147whitewavedarling
Mai 20, 2018, 11:23 pm

>146 clue:, I did really like Time and Again--I need to pick up the sequel! That's funny that you gave your book such a dark book twice! What did she say?

148whitewavedarling
Mai 27, 2018, 2:17 pm

This has turned into a pretty slow reading month for me--partly because of being busy, but also because I picked up two pretty long books, one fiction and one nonfiction. I'm still hoping to meet my month's reading goals, though I'm not all that confident in the nonfiction getting finished... we'll see what happens. Meanwhile, this chunkster of a novel is finished...

F. Animals #3: Quietus by Vivian Schilling

I've got incredibly mixed feelings about this book, truth be told. Quietus is built from atmosphere right from the start, and it was the creepiness of things that swept me into the story from the beginning--and that kept me wanting to turn the page. For most of the book, what builds into a supernatural thriller is atmospheric, dark, and wonderfully paced, with a flavor of horror that I loved. Story-wise, the problem for me came pretty late in the book--maybe three quarters of the way through, the plot's focus moved more into what felt like a familial drama, with grief, family, and domestic concerns taking over. Although I understood the turn and the way the book got there, in a lot of ways, the author lost me. I kept reading out of curiosity, to see what would happen... but even a hundred pages from the end, I already knew I wouldn't be picking up another book by this author. Readers who like both types of fiction, both supernatural thrillers and domestic suspense or women's fiction, might not be bothered by the move... but I have to admit it rather ruined the book for me. Simply, it became a book that I just wasn't interested in, subject-wise and genre-wise.

And, it has to be said that this book should have been a lot shorter. Schilling truly needed a better editor to get involved here and help on a language level, sentence by sentence. There's so much telling (vs. showing), and just in general, the book is overwritten--taking three sentences to make a point when the point was already made two paragraphs before and doesn't need to be restated. That issue alone would probably be enough to keep me from picking up another of Schilling's books, honestly, much as I enjoyed the story in the beginning. My paperback clocks in at 646 pages, and I feel pretty confident in saying that it would be a much better book if it were 100-150 pages shorter, given how overwritten it is.

So, interesting as I found the premise and the beginning, I'm afraid this isn't a book I can recommend.

149whitewavedarling
Jun. 1, 2018, 2:54 pm

E. Abstractions and Words Alone #5: Conamara Blues by John O'Donohue

Lyrical and pastoral, these poems move by with a sort of languid beauty and blend into a long meditation with some gorgeous images. It's a quiet book, filled with glimpses of Ireland, mysticism, and transcendental visions, but well worth wandering through for the interested reader.

150whitewavedarling
Jun. 1, 2018, 3:07 pm

E. Abstractions and Words Alone #6: Beyond the Velvet Curtain by Karen Kovacik

I admit I wanted more from this collection. Although the poems were interesting, they felt more like short thoughts in broken-up prose than poems where I could sink into the language as well as the meaning. There were some lovely images, but none of the poems had the power to pull me in and demand re-reading. They were instead brief, thoughtful, and careful... and perhaps too crafted. Interesting as they were, they just fell somewhat flat for me.

151whitewavedarling
Jun. 1, 2018, 3:20 pm

I. The Other #4: The Boxcar Children by Gertrude Chandler Warner

My mom loved these books, and always wanted us kids to love them--but, by the time I got around to trying them in first grade, I was already reading Nancy Drew and these just couldn't keep my interest. Now that I've gone back to reading some kids and MG lit as an adult, I thought I'd give them a second try. Unfortunately, I have to admit that I still can't quite understand what others have seen in them. For me, the book felt a bit flat and simple--I'd have preferred a bit more depth or detail, even if the book or story had been simpler. I'm sorry to say that, in all likelihood, this wouldn't be a book I'd pass on to kids or parents looking for simple chapter books for their children. I just found it a bit boring, both back when I was in first grade, and now as an adult.

152whitewavedarling
Jun. 1, 2018, 4:50 pm

C. Trees and Flowers #3: The Roses of May by Dot Hutchison

Dark and full of voice, Hutchison's second installment in The Collector Trilogy is creepy and affecting--as a follow-up to The Butterfly Garden, it's an impressive expansion of the series that is both all new and true to what made the first book in the series so powerful.

For me personally, it was hard to imagine what would come after The Butterfly Garden in terms of a sequel, and I wasn't sure what to expect from this work. For the first few chapters, I had a slow time moving into the book... and then I didn't. Once the book pulled me, perhaps 40 pages in, I didn't want to walk away from it for even a moment. The characters are so darkly believable, and the writing so seemingly effortless, that this builds into a book which has its own special sort of inertia and power. It's striking, difficult, and gorgeous, all at once.

The first book in the series won't be for every reader, and while this book isn't as dark, I also don't think it would have near the same power or worth without that first book to back it up--so, if you were scared off from the first book by content, you probably can't simply dive in here and hope to catch up. But, if you loved the first book like I did... you'll want to read this one.

Absolutely recommended.

153whitewavedarling
Bearbeitet: Jun. 1, 2018, 4:55 pm

Now that I'm caught up on May reviews, it's time to lay down my plans for June...

So, I just BARELY managed to meet all of my challenge goals in May since I picked up a few giant books. One of those is still going, so one additional June goal is managing to finish Ship of Gold in the Deep Blue Sea.

Beyond that, I plan on reading:

Purple America by Rick Moody (ColorCat Read)
Coraline by Neil Gaiman (ScaredyCat Read & G Read)
Lathe of Heaven by Ursula K. Le Guin (Ursula K. Le Guin Group Read)
The End of the Dream by Ann Rule (MysteryCat Read & R Read)
Swallowing Darkness by Laurell K. Hamilton (SFFFKit Read)
and...
Firmin by Sam Savage (RandomCat Read)

154whitewavedarling
Jun. 2, 2018, 2:19 pm

D. Faces #8: NewsReal: A View Through the Lens When by Tim Ortman

Ortman's experiences as a part of the foreign press corps make for fascinating reading, transporting readers on a whirlwind journey of adventure, reporting, and humor. In traveling with Ortman into warzones, areas of famine and revolution, and even backstage at the TODAY show, readers get a glimpse into how reporting and the news media worked just some few decades ago that, in this industry, have seen a world of change.

With humor, intelligence, and an eye toward change, Ortman put together a fascinating look at his time as a cameraman for NBC, and whether readers search out the book for a view into moments in history, fascinating memoir, or a look at how media has changed over the last few decades, they won't be disappointed.

Absolutely recommended.

155dudes22
Jun. 2, 2018, 8:17 pm

Well I lost your thread for a while (I must have hit the ignore button by mistake). SO - I've been catching up. First - congratulations on getting your book published (yes it's been that long since I've been here). And I've taken a few BBs while I've been strolling along through here. I found your comments on Cloud Atlas very interesting as I have it and debate with myself occasionally about starting it. Although I'm sad you didn't care for The Boxcar Children as it is one of my favorite books from when I was young. And now I've "un-ignored" you so I shouldn't have this problem again.

156whitewavedarling
Jun. 3, 2018, 8:29 pm

>155 dudes22:, Welcome back, and thanks for the congrats :)

Honestly, I was really disappointed that I didn't enjoy The Boxcar Children also. I thought, maybe, that as a kid I might have too easily dismissed it as being for children, since I skipped over MG and YA books pretty quickly, and tended to dismiss them after that because I fell in love with so many adult fantasy authors. Now that I read more MG and YA books, I thought I might feel differently... ah well. So far, it and Cloud Atlas have been my two primary disappointments of the year, so I hope you took some other BBs as you wandered through :)

157-Eva-
Jun. 3, 2018, 10:44 pm

Buehlman sounds good - I've not come across him before. BB.

158whitewavedarling
Jun. 9, 2018, 8:56 pm

>157 -Eva-:, I'm glad! I've adored what I've read by him, but it seems not many people know of him, so I'm always excited to hear I've sent someone else his way :)

Meanwhile, this was a REALLY interesting read. I have no idea how it ended up on my shelves, but I'm glad it did.

F. Animals #4: Firmin by Sam Savage

This is such a strange little book, but it's also a fascinating ride which is put together masterfully. Savage's novel, told from the perspective of a rat living in Boston, is kind of wonderfully odd and believable in terms of the life it creates, and although I'm not sure how it ended up on my shelves, I'm glad it did. The pairing of a soulful, lonely rat against a Boston bookstore and a search for meaning and entertainment has its own sort of beauty, and I can only imagine that many readers will be wonderfully surprised by this book.

Recommended.

159whitewavedarling
Jun. 10, 2018, 2:18 pm

E. Abstractions and Words Alone #7: Earthquake Owner's Manual by Martin Arnold

There are poems in this collection which I simply fell in love with. I read them once, and then again, and then again--and I'll come back to them in the future. Arnold has balanced everyday America against humor, suffering, and observations in a style that comes across as effortless, balancing image against language to make nearly every poem here worth reading and hearing more than once.

I've been a fan of this press for a while, so the look of Arnold's book combined with that familiarity drew me in pretty quickly, and I'm so glad it did. This is the kind of poetry which is deceptively simple, and which will offer readers as much as they wish to get from it, accessible and intelligent as it is.

Simply, I'd recommend it to anyone who enjoys poetry or wants to jump in. I'll be looking for more of the author's work.

160whitewavedarling
Jun. 14, 2018, 3:30 pm

E. Abstractions and Words Alone #8: Purple America by Rick Moody

If Truman Capote and Denis Johnson had come together to write a novel, and a well-meaning but artless editor had come through to attempt to mesh their styles in a way that dulled down both and elevated the characters nobody could particularly like... this might be the result.

It's well-written and carefully put together, but I can't actually say that I enjoyed it. So, no, I wouldn't recommend it.

161whitewavedarling
Jun. 16, 2018, 6:28 pm

I. The Other #5: Buttons & Lace by Penelope Sky

I have sincerely mixed feelings about this book, but perhaps I should start by saying that I WILL be ordering the sequel, which I know says something in itself.

The trick is, this review has to be a tale of two books. The second half of this book is fantastic. It is everything you could ask for in a steamy dark romance, and the characters felt real. Maybe there were some moments where it felt a bit rushed or slightly too easy, but it was heads and tails above other dark romances I've read lately, and I really enjoyed it--I didn't want to put the book down. It was steamy, entrancing, and well worth the read.

But, getting to this point wasn't easy.

For whatever reason, Sky rushed through the first half of the book. Obviously, she felt the beginning part was important enough to write it, but after the first few chapters (which were solid), there was a good 100 pages that felt incredibly rushed. During those pages, I wanted to believe in the characters and feel the heroine's struggles and pain... but it was almost impossible. Details were just too fleeting. So, though we were told there was trauma, mental and physical, it didn't feel real or connect to me on any level. In fact, if I didn't find it so hard to put down books, I might well have put down the book.

I'm not sure why the writer rushed, unless perhaps she didn't want to get so dark, or was afraid more detail in this section of the book would scare readers away. Or maybe she rushed because she knew it would be a lengthy book regardless, and didn't want it to run 'too' long, whatever that would mean. I'm honestly not sure... but I can say that the book would be outstanding if she'd taken her time during those earlier, traumatic chapters. As it was, the character's thoughts and memories and reactions to the trauma that took place during those chapters, as related later in the book... well, they were hard to believe in and connect to. Truly, the reader might have been better off if all of that exposition had been summed up and the book had started midway through; at least, in that case, we wouldn't have felt like we Should understand, but couldn't.

So, I'm left with mixed feelings. Had I stopped at the mid-t0-halfway point, this probably would have been a one star book for me. Had the first half been more like the second half in terms of detail, it probably would have been a five star read for me.

As is, I'm left with a three star experience, I suppose, but I do plan on giving the second book in the series a try. Readers who delve into this for the dark romance aspect, know it only gets good at about the halfway point, though the very first few chapters of set-up are pretty good also. The lag is hard to get through, but I'm glad enough that I did.

We'll see what happens with the next book...

162whitewavedarling
Jun. 22, 2018, 12:19 pm

A. Body Parts #6: Swallowing Darkness by Laurell K. Hamilton

I'm not even sure I can say why, but this installment in the Meredith Gentry series didn't live up to the earlier books for me. For the second half of the book, I was just as wrapped up in the book as I usually am when it comes to Hamilton's writing, but the first half felt... I'm not sure. Somewhat rushed and scattered, as if chapters were being written to get characters from one moment to the next, but without the same depth as I'd expect from this author and series. There was just less weight to everything, and I had a hard time re-engaging with the series. Towards the middle, things picked up and I didn't want to put the book down--it felt like what I'd expected all along--but then the ending went back to feeling rather rushed, and didn't have the emotion I might have expected.

So, I don't know... readers couldn't start with this book in the series regardless, as this really is a series you need to read from beginning to end and not jump into. Perhaps it was just me, and the span of time between reading books 6 and 7. This also might just have been a lull in the series. I'd still recommend the series to readers of urban fantasy and readers who love Hamilton's Anita Blake series, and I'll be curious to see whether book 8 is more in line with what I've come to expect from the Meredith Gentry books.

163whitewavedarling
Jun. 30, 2018, 10:41 am

E. Abstractions and Words Alone #9: Coraline by Neil Gaiman

This is a sort of marvelously creepy work, and I loved how understated the threats were in the beginning, and then the way Gaiman built upon the tension as things became more sinister. All told, I prefer his adult work, but I'd still recommend this as well worth exploring.

164whitewavedarling
Jun. 30, 2018, 11:13 am

D. Faces #9: The End of the Dream by Ann Rule

A friend of mine recommended this series to me when she saw I was reading some nonfiction about criminal psychology, and though I've never really read True Crime, I picked this installment in the series up from a library sale when it caught my eye. I suppose I have mixed feelings about it, but it was certainly engaging. I doubt I'll be methodically picking up Rule's other works, but this was an interesting, in depth look at one case, with short explorations of another, and the detailed research was certainly impressive.

In the end, I'll probably continue sticking mostly to psychological thrillers that are wholly fiction and to nonfiction that deals heavily with psychology and only wanders into casefiles, but I'm glad I at least tried this, and I may try more if particular cases catch my interest. For what it is, I'd say this is probably a 4 star read, though for me personally it's probably closer to a 3.

Recommended If you're interested in true crime and/or bank robberies.

165whitewavedarling
Jun. 30, 2018, 11:24 am

Well, June is pretty much done, and I don't see much chance of me finishing another book today, so I figure I'll go ahead and take stock of things... I managed to meet all of my ongoing challenge goals this month, but didn't fit in a group read of an Ursula K. Le Guin book, I stayed so busy on work and other reads.

I'm also STILL reading Ship of Gold in a Deep Blue Sea, which is interesting, but heavy, and I rather have to be in the mood for it. It may end up getting finished as my RandomCat read this month, though, as I'm not sure what else to read. I'm also still reading Every Day Above Ground, which I should finish in the next few days--as the third in Hamilton's series that, it's just as good as the first two. I only wish he could put books in the series out faster!

For my July plans, I plan on reading...

Rise the Dark (Police Procedural MysteryCat Read)
Mira Corpora (Pink ColorCat Read)
Deep Freeze (Science/Techno Thrillers ScaredyKit Read)
Snowcrash (Cyberpunk/techno SFFFKit Read & S AlphaCat Read)
Havana Libre by Robert Arellano (A AlphaCat Read
And, something for RandomCat, assuming none of these fit the bill once I get into them.

166whitewavedarling
Jul. 1, 2018, 2:15 pm

If you like action-based suspense/thrillers in the vein of the Jack Reacher books, you need to try Glen Erik Hamilton's Van Shaw series if you haven't already. From what I've read, he's heads and tails above Lee Child, much as he isn't so well known.

The third book in the series stood up to the earlier ones.

I. The Other #6: Every Day Above Ground by Glen Erik Hamilton

The third book in Hamilton's Van Shaw series, Every Day Above Ground might be the best one yet. The occasional shifts into Shaw's past work seamlessly, and the plot builds and builds, bringing together everything you'd want in an action-based thriller. There were a lot of characters, and I have a feeling my read might have suffered if I'd taken longer to read it or hadn't had the earlier books so fresh in mind, but reading the book in three long sittings made for a perfect escape--and, honestly, it wasn't as if I wanted to put the book down at all. Hamilton's writing is masterful, and the characters are believable enough that a reader can sink into their world and feel as if they're reading more truth than fiction, gritty and hard-hitting as they are.

With the depth of character and the intricate plots, I do think the Shaw novels work best when read quickly, but I certainly recommend them. I've devoured all three, and can't wait for more.

167whitewavedarling
Jul. 4, 2018, 9:29 pm

A. Body Parts #7: Havana Libre by Robert Arellano

I give Arellano credit for doing an incredible job of depicting Havana, Cuba and Little Havana in Miami, and offering believable voices, as well. But, at the same time, I'm afraid that that atmosphere was, for me, the best part of this book. The plot itself fell a bit flat for me, and the characters themselves came off as so nonchalant that there was almost a dampening effect on the plot, believable as they were. The pacing picked up a bit in the last part of the work, and I found myself more engaged, but the book as a whole just fell a bit flat for me. One of those, also, where I felt like more was happening To the characters, versus them being active, which probably heightened the passivity of the work as a whole.

I also have to say... the constant sprinkling in of Spanish got on my nerves. If it had come from particular characters/conversations and been translated, it wouldn't have bothered me, but it seemed to be sprinkled in almost randomly, which did more to draw attention that nearly all of the conversations taking place Would be taking place in Spanish--so why have some in Spanish and most in English if some are going to be in Spanish? And, while my Spanish is strong enough that I could understand a fair bit of those passages, I couldn't catch everything (maybe sometimes because I didn't care to put in the effort, I admit), and I found myself wondering about how readers without any Spanish would react.

So, yeah, this isn't something I could recommend, and I'm afraid I probably won't venture back to the author for more, much as I found the main character interesting at a characterization level.

168virginiahomeschooler
Jul. 13, 2018, 8:35 am

>167 whitewavedarling: I absolutely agree with everything you said about this one. Especially about the atmosphere being the high point in an otherwise lackluster book.

169whitewavedarling
Jul. 14, 2018, 2:01 pm

>168 virginiahomeschooler:, I'm kind of glad to know it wasn't just me. I kept wondering if I was missing something!

170whitewavedarling
Jul. 14, 2018, 2:24 pm

But, on the heels of the last one... this read managed to blend amazing immersion in culture/atmosphere with a great plot/characters :) Full review below--I actually plan on buying a copy of this one for my mom and grandmother :)

G. Vehicles/Transportation #4: Murder at the House of Rooster Happiness by David Casarett

Casarett's first installment in the Ethical Chiang Mai Detective Agency Series drew me in from the beginning, and I'm already looking forward to reading the next book in the series. With believable characters, a real immersion in Thai culture/atmosphere, masterful writing, and a plot that pulled me in from the beginning, this book has a lot to offer. It does have the feel of a cozy despite the fact that it takes place in a large city -- so it was a bit lighter and easy-going than what I'd normally search out in mysteries, but it ended up being a nice change of pace. I will say that the subplot was a bit predictable, but considering all of the high notes this book struck and the intrigue of the primary plot, that seems like a small note.

On the whole, I'd absolutely recommend it, and I'll probably be buying a few copies as gifts for light mystery readers I know!

171whitewavedarling
Jul. 19, 2018, 6:23 pm

J. The Shadows and Silhouettes #5: Rise the Dark by Michael Koryta

Koryta's first Mark Novak book was the best thriller I'd read in a while--smart and immersive, atmospheric and masterfully written. And yet, I have to say... I think I liked this follow-up even more. I'm not sure if it would read so well for someone who hadn't gotten to know Novak in the first book in this series, Last Words, simply because it is so driven by the character's personal history, but I had a hard time putting this book down. I'd probably say it's on the literary side of thrillers, and may be more character-driven or slow-boiling than what some readers will prefer, but I thought it was a perfect mix of action, character, and suspense.

I don't know if the next book in this series, assuming there is one, will be out next year or ten years from now, but I'll be waiting for it, and reading all of Koryta's other work until then.

So, yes, I would absolutely recommend this for readers who want an intelligent, character-driven thriller with plenty of darkness to go around.

172whitewavedarling
Jul. 24, 2018, 1:51 pm

J. Shadows and Silhouettes #6: Snow Crash by Neal Stephenson

The beginning of this work really pulled me in, but as I kept going, I'm afraid I had a harder and harder time following the details and really engaging with it. It could be that I'd have loved this book in a different time and place, but as it was, there were moments I really enjoyed... but it just didn't keep a hold on me the way I needed it to, I suppose, because as much as I enjoyed the ideas and language, I'd often find my focus wandering away from the story and lose track of what was happening as a result. That's not normal for me when it comes to reading, and I'm inclined to say that there was just so much packed into this book, I couldn't quite relax into it and get engaged by the characters the way I'd have liked.

I'll try Stephenson again, and I may even try re-reading this book some day, but for now, it was just a so-so read for me.

173whitewavedarling
Jul. 25, 2018, 2:43 pm

A. Body Parts #8: Mira Corpora by Jeff Jackson

Holy, holy, holy strange, what a strange book. Billed as a coming-of-age story for people who don't like coming-of-age stories (which describes me, yes), this is a dark, playful book that's as fast-paced as it is lyrical. There are strains here of Denis Johnson and Cormac McCarthy, but the book itself is something else, peering into a world that one might hope would be drug-induced, but instead feels incendiary and real, as if you could too easily imagine it lurking on the edges of some city and sucking in passerby to suffer the consequences.

Jackson's world comes just short of being hallucinatory, but it is also accessable and careful, which makes for a read that's all the more frightening. I'll only off the one caveat... if you start reading, and you think it might be too much for you after the first few sections? Well, get out, because it's only going to get darker.

But, all that said... I loved reading this book, and experiencing this book, and taking the ride Jackson crafted in this little pink novel. This won't be for everyone, but I certainly recommend it.

174whitewavedarling
Jul. 30, 2018, 2:24 pm

This was a fascinating work, and I should say here that the fact that I have a hardback slowed me down a lot. My mom bought this for me ages ago when it first came out--it's clearly something that's right up my alley--but it's such a big hardback, and looks like pretty dense nonfiction, so I didn't get around to picking it up until now. I'm so glad I did, though. This isn't nearly so dense as it looks, and makes for absolutely fascinating reading. If you have any interest in history, science & technology in relation to the ocean or archaeology or development, or shipwrecks and buried/lost treasure, I 100% recommend it. I'm tempted to say this would even be worthwhile for fans of biographies, Kinder does such a magnificent job of providing character studies of a sort.

G. Vehicles/Transportation #5: Ship of Gold in the Deep Blue Sea by Gary Kinder

This is a fascinating look back to the sinking of the SS Central America in 1857, and then to the recovery efforts made some 130 years later -- from the fascination with its treasure, to the hunt, and finally the development of technology that made recovery possible, as well as the people involved at each moment. Kinder's work is brilliantly crafted, with research that takes readers back to the California Gold Rush and the nearly 600 men and women who boarded the SS Central America, as well as the treasure that they and the craft were carrying and the tragedy that unfolded some 200 miles off of North Carolina. As noted on the book jacket, "It was the worst peacetime disaster at sea in American history, a tragedy that remained lost in legend for over a century."

Moving between the resent and the ship and the hurricane that it fell to in 1857, Kinder manages to bring 130 years' worth of history into sharp relief, examining human failings, human heroics, and science and technology with an expert eye that brings all of it to life. The result is a fascinating story which is as unbelievable as it is true, and utterly worthwhile.

Absolutely recommended.

175whitewavedarling
Jul. 30, 2018, 8:42 pm

Because I got a little way into it, and because I don't want other readers to waste their time, I'm sharing my review of The Book of Love and Hate by Lauren Sanders. I put it down in order to read reviews, and see if any of them would convince me to keep going... but, alas, they only confirmed that I should give up on it sooner than later.

Full Review:

This book sounded right up my alley... but it wasn't. I HATE not finishing books, but I just couldn't. I stopped at around page 60, and getting that far was a struggle.

Here's the thing--the plot is hard to follow, and the narrator is so incredibly entitled and unlikeable that I really couldn't get on board with her. Finally, the idea of 'listening' to her for another 250 pages was just too much to bear. Simply, there wasn't anything connecting me to the book or making me want to keep reading, even after 60 pages. On top of that, the writing felt uneven, and while that may have been a by-product of elevating the voice and stylizing the so-called plot, it made everything worse.

So, no, I couldn't make myself keep going. From the blurb, this still sounds like something I should love, but I'm afraid all it did was, at turns, either annoy me or put me to sleep.

176whitewavedarling
Jul. 31, 2018, 2:15 pm

Well, now that it seems pretty clear I won't be finishing more books in July, it feels like a good time to lay out my August plans!

Right now, I'm in the process of reading Dominion by Shane Arbuthnott and Mr. Mercedes by Stephen King.

Also on deck for August, I've got:
The Good German (for the MysterCat)
The Gray Mountain (for the RandomCat and ColorCat)
Robinson Crusoe (for the groupread of the same and as my 'D' for the AlphaKit)
The Girl in the Woods (for the ScaredyKit and as my 'O' for the AlphaKit)
and...
The Restaurant at the End of the Universe (for the SFFFKit)

Based on all of the G titles, you'd think that was an AlphaKit Letter this month, but it's just happenstance :)

Meanwhile, I'm not in the midst of any nonfiction and none of those are nonfiction--if time permits, I'm also going to read Just Another Soldier: A Year on the Ground in Iraq. I'll probably at least get it started as I read other works, and see how things go.

I'm on vacation at the beginning of this month, heading up to VA to see family, and that often means I either get a ton more reading done than usual, or nowhere near as much. So, we'll see what happens...

177MissWatson
Aug. 1, 2018, 5:52 am

I hope you enjoy your vacation however it turns out on the reading front!

178whitewavedarling
Aug. 1, 2018, 5:35 pm

>177 MissWatson:, Thanks :)

179whitewavedarling
Aug. 11, 2018, 2:36 pm

I. The Other #7: Mr. Mercedes by Stephen King

I have to admit, I was expecting a bit more from this one. I love King's work, and have really thought some of his recent books to be among his best... but this felt rough for me. The characters were a little bit too familiar in some cases, and too flat in others. The plot itself also seemed to be lacking a bit of the depth I've come to expect from King.

Did I enjoy the story? Yes though the beginning was slow. Will I read the next one? Yes. Do I think it comes close to measuring up to most of King's other works? No, I really don't.

180whitewavedarling
Aug. 11, 2018, 2:49 pm

I. The Other #8: Dominion by Shane Arbuthnott

So, I actually put off reading this book because the blurb made it sound a bit... well, flat. And young. I don't read much MG fiction, and I really have to be in the mood for it, so this kept on getting pushed back on the stack. But then... I picked it up and I couldn't put it down.

First of all, I suppose I should note that it's hard for me to think of this as MG, and I'd say it straddles the line between MG and YA. The book has a ton of detail and depth, and the protagonist may only be 14, but I think readers of any age will be able to fall in love with her and go along for the adventure of the book. Once I got to page 40 or so, very simply, I had a hard time putting this one down. It kept surprising me with the directions it took, and I loved getting to know the characters.

Arbuthnott did a masterful job of creating characters we can believe in and relate to alongside a fascinating world that he builds beautifully, and I loved every minute of the journey. I only finished it a few days ago, but I've already passed my copy on to another reader, recommending it to more than one, and I can't wait to get on to the sequel.

For readers of sci-fi, fantasy, or adventure in the MG/YA world, this is a must-read... it's simply kind of wonderful and fun, and has an odd ring of truth to it, despite genre. I loved it.

181whitewavedarling
Aug. 13, 2018, 10:49 am

C. Trees and Flowers #4: The Girl in the Woods by Gregg Olsen

I read the third book in this series a while back after receiving an ARC for review, and really enjoyed it--enough that I had to pick up the earlier books. I didn't get Quite what I expected with this one, but I did really enjoy it.

The characters I felt a bit distanced from in the third book (having not read the earlier ones) came to life here, in this first installment of the series. From the beginning, I enjoyed every page of getting to know them, and found them sort of wonderfully believable. I might have liked a little bit more depth in a few of the more minor characters, but they still had depth enough to feel believable. As with the third book, the plot and the pacing were fast, intricate, and interesting--I never wanted to put the book down, and I was entertained and surprised on a rolling basis.

Where I was let down just a bit was in the writing. I remember being really engaged with the writing in the third book, but for whatever reason, it took me out of the story a few times here. I should say at this point that I'm a full-time editor, so a lot of things bother me which might not bother the average reader--and probably wouldn't have bothered me ten years ago, truth be told. But, be that as it may, there were a lot of points in this book where "head-hopping" distracted me, it happened so quickly, and also where 'telling' ('vs. showing') distracted me, to the point where I found myself wishing Olsen had had a better editor or copy-editor.

But, all that said, I enjoyed this book too much to not pick up the next Waterman & Stark thriller, and I'm already looking forward to it. So, yes, I'd absolutely recommend this series and Olsen on to any readers who want tightly wound suspense/thrillers!

182whitewavedarling
Aug. 31, 2018, 10:02 am

E. Abstractions and Words Alone #10: The Restaurant at the End of the Universe by Douglas Adams

I think I would have loved this if I'd read it immediately after the first book in the series, but as it was, I had something of a hard time re-engaging with the characters, and could have used a bit more description or reminders from the first book. By about midway through the book, I found myself really enjoying it.... but it had taken me a while to get to that point.

I'd certainly recommend this to readers who enjoyed the first in the series, but with the caveat that it's best read soon after the first.

183whitewavedarling
Aug. 31, 2018, 10:19 am

J. The Shadows and Silhouettes #7: Gray Mountain by John Grisham

I read some reviews of this book that complained about it being an 'issue novel', so I want to start there. In all honesty, those reviews put a bad taste in my mouth--most of them carried the suggestion that the readers didn't want to be bothered with real-world issues or learn anything while they read a book. But, to me, one of the best things about fiction is that we can be both learned and entertained at the same time. Do I need to learn anything when I read a book? No. Do I often read books to escape from real life? Of course. But, that doesn't mean that I get upset when an author deals with a real-world issue with nuance and care. Unlike many of the reviewers, I really appreciated the time Grisham put in to explaining strip mining and the surrounding issues. I read books like his because I'm interested in detail, and that's true whether we're talking about a legal case or an environmental issue. I don't want an author to gloss over all of the details so that I just have to trust that the characters are on the side that they say they're on, good or bad, and trust that what they're doing make sense. I want to understand.

Here, the book jacket makes no secret of the fact that coal mining and the surrounding issues are central to the book. And, yes, that's a serious issue--both in relation to health and quality of life, and also in relation to the environment. If you don't want to be confronted with those issues and the surrounding discussions, then this book isn't for you, whether you're a fan of Grisham's other work or not. And that's totally fine. But, what I'd say to those reviewers is that, regardless of the author, it sounds like they just weren't the intended readers for this book.

So, now, back to the book... Grisham's treatment of Appalachia, coal mining, strip mining, and the attendant concerns is nuanced and careful. He doesn't sugarcoat issues or simplify them to a point where they seem as if they could be easily solved, and he brings into play characters who are as believable as they are revealing of the issues at hand. For readers who've visited the areas in the book, there's a lot to be recognized and admired here in the way he offers readers understandings of the setting and the people involved, and the work does a lot to offer a glimpse into spaces that most readers won't ever visit firsthand.

Without a doubt, I would recommend this book. It may not be the average, expected Grisham read, but if you'd like some smart entertainment that at least tries to offer some insight into a real-world issue, it's well worth the time and interest.

184whitewavedarling
Aug. 31, 2018, 7:01 pm

B. Houses, Windows, Stairs #2: The Good German by Joseph Kanon

I first read this years ago when it first came out, and it was enough to make me a forever-fan of Kanon. Re-reading it this week only reminded me of why I loved the book so much the first time around--and that's coming from someone who almost never re-reads books!

Kanon's work is part mystery, part love story, part historical fiction, part thriller and espionage, and centered in Berlin in 1945 following WWII. Bringing to life the desperation and the destruction of the city, and various factions fighting for control of not just the city, but also its people and the story that history will tell, this is one of those books that has the capability of transporting a reader back in time. Kanon's balance of setting and suspense against character is masterful, and thus the book is incredibly difficult to put down.

Without a doubt, I'd recommend it to nearly anyone who enjoys historical drama, suspense, or mystery, or even simply historical fiction that deals with WWII. It's well worth the read.

185whitewavedarling
Sept. 6, 2018, 8:34 pm

F. Animals #5: Robinson Crusoe by Daniel Defoe

I tried to read this when I was getting my Masters in English. Truly, I did. It was on a list of maybe a hundred books that I was supposed to read outside of classes and be prepared to talk about in an oral exam... and it was the only one I began, and simply couldn't finish. I got to page 26 before I gave up.

This year, I decided to try it again. After all, back when I tried it the first time, I was stressed and rushed, and surely some book or another would test my patience, so it had to be better than I'd thought back then. Right? Well, um, yeah... not really.

I understand this is a classic, and I even understand why. I'm glad to be able to say that I finally finished it. But that's about all I can say. This was a dry read, and one that I had a hard time getting through. Sprinkles of action didn't make up for the non-action or the style of the book, and although I rather like the idea of the story and wanted to enjoy this, I just couldn't. Unless you have to read it, I probably wouldn't recommend it.

186whitewavedarling
Sept. 17, 2018, 11:43 am

I. The Other #9: Finders Keepers by Stephen King

I have to admit that I'm not loving this series as much as I normally love King's work, BUT... I did enjoy this second installment quite a bit more than I enjoyed Mr. Mercedes, the first in the trilogy, and reading this work has actually left me really anxious to read the next work in the series. Here, the (new) characters were a bit more engaging and dynamic, and I simply got pulled into the story faster and harder than I did in the previous book. By the time I got to the halfway point, I was having a hard time putting it down, and I think I read the last 130 pages in a single sitting.

King's strategy to open this one up also really pulled me in--I'm normally not a fan of going back and forth in time to illuminate a story's start and characters, but it worked really well here, opening up a few different pieces of the puzzle at once. Readers who loved Hodges and the characters in the first book might be disappointed to find that they don't come into play until a good piece of this second book has passed by--at least, not in a major way--so that is the one caveat, but it really didn't bother me.

All told, I'd recommend it, and having read it, I'm probably more likely to recommend the book that comes before it, Mr. Mercedes.

187LittleTaiko
Sept. 17, 2018, 11:51 am

>185 whitewavedarling: - Bravo for finishing! It was one of our book club reads a few years ago and I bailed pretty early on in the book. I've since read another book by Defoe and have come to the conclusion that we just don't get along.

188Helenliz
Sept. 17, 2018, 12:05 pm

>185 whitewavedarling: A bit like you, I'm glad I've finally read this one, but I can't see me re-reading it again any time soon.

189whitewavedarling
Sept. 17, 2018, 12:10 pm

>187 LittleTaiko:, lol. Bravo to you for giving one of his other books a try. I don't think I'm that brave...

>188 Helenliz:, Isn't it funny how getting through a single book can sometimes feel like Such an accomplishment, even for us folks who read constantly?!?

190RidgewayGirl
Sept. 21, 2018, 9:59 am

Joseph Kanon writes Berlin really well. Leaving Berlin is really good - a complex thriller that really highlights the divided, post-war Berlin.

Enjoy End of Watch when you get to it!

191whitewavedarling
Sept. 24, 2018, 2:47 pm

>190 RidgewayGirl:, I'm really looking forward to both :)

192whitewavedarling
Okt. 6, 2018, 7:37 pm

A. Body Parts #9: Submissive Fairy Tales by Kitty Thomas

Thomas' writing is luscious, elegant, and incredibly erotic. She has a magic with words and story-telling that brings to life each story and character she approached, and this collection of three novellas was no different. For readers who like erotic writing or naughty fairy tales, you can't go wrong with this collection.

193whitewavedarling
Okt. 6, 2018, 7:44 pm

F. Animals #6: The Tower at Stony Wood by Patricia A. McKillip

I had a difficult time with this one. As much as I liked the idea of the story, the characters seemed to bleed together, and McKillip's style was--for me, at least--off-putting. It felt over-wrought and overly detailed, to the extent that it sometimes felt like the writing really hindered the story itself. I managed to make my way through the book, but I can't actually say I enjoyed it. There were moments when the story really shined, and when I really got caught up in a character... but, on the whole, I was sorely disappointed.

194whitewavedarling
Okt. 6, 2018, 8:07 pm

E. Abstractions and Words Alone #11: The Devastation by Jill Alexander Essbaum AND #12: Ardour by Nicole Brossard

Of these, there's not much I can say about The Devastation to recommend it, though it wasn't bad (and there's a full review written), so I'll focus on Ardour, which was wonderful:

This is one of those relatively short poetry books which is worth ten times its weight or word count. Brossard's words are both elegant and powerful, as gorgeous as they are thick with meaning. Among other snippets, from "Napes":

"in all of us there's a silence
that gallops on nights of sorrow

--

to be this body in the breakneck speed of the present
brushing against
grief when touching
the other's gestures and their petals
of memory and shimmering

and before the 'bad infinity'
we embrace without hesitation
to impress
the animal leap
an impassive glance
in our chests"

Simply, there's a beauty to this book, in its complete form, that I can't quite put into words. I'll read it again, and again, and pass it along to other poets if I can.

Absolutely recommended.

195whitewavedarling
Okt. 7, 2018, 11:14 am

A. Body Parts #10: Envy: An Empty Coffin Novel by Gregg Olsen

I was excited to read this book, but I think it might have suffered for my having read Olsen's Waterman & Stark series. Compared to those books, I had a harder time engaging with the plot and characters here. I think part of it may have been the teenagers--they felt more like teenagers seen and written by a sympathetic adult than wholly believable teenagers if that makes sense. It wasn't so much that they weren't believable, as that they were a bit too neat in terms of character and feelings, whereas real teenagers are kind of a mess. (No offense meant to any teen who might be reading this lol--I was a mess when I was a teen, too!) Here, in other words, the characters were just a little bit too neat and easy, more like adults who hadn't graduated high school than teens if that makes sense, when it came to the two at the heart of the story. The other teens in the background felt more believable, but they were also little more than stereotypes because they were in the story so little--and that was fine because they really were only minor characters. But, all together, it led me to feel like the characters especially held back the first portion of the book for me.

By the time I got into the second portion of the book, the plot and the intrigue had me engaged, so I sped through the second half of the book pretty quickly. There was also a twist that was a really nice touch to what I'd expected to be a predictable book.

So, all told, I don't know if this series can hold its own against Olsen's other series, but in the end, I'm glad to have read it and I certainly plan on reading the next one. Now that the characters are established, it'll also be a lot easier to go into that one now that I know what to expect, so I expect to enjoy it even more.

196whitewavedarling
Bearbeitet: Okt. 7, 2018, 9:15 pm

September was a really slow reading month for me, for many reasons--including the distraction of politics, writing paperwork to do with my own writing, an overflowing workload, and football! I'm hoping to turn things around in October.

I'm already reading The Silver Wolf by Alice Borchardt, Leaving Berlin by Joseph Kanon, and White Fur by Jardine Libaire

Also on deck for this month, if all goes nearly as planned:

Now She's Gone by Gregg Olsen
The Diamond Age by Neal Stephenson
Ghost by Piers Anthony
The Eyre Affair by Jasper Fforde

Wish me luck--I think I'm going to need it!

197Jackie_K
Okt. 8, 2018, 7:14 am

>196 whitewavedarling: I read The Eyre Affair earlier this year and really enjoyed it. It was a nice piece of silliness (but very clever) to balance some of the heavier reading!

198whitewavedarling
Okt. 8, 2018, 11:26 am

>197 Jackie_K:, That's what I'm hoping for :) I don't read much comedy/humor, so it's kept on getting pushed to the back-burner, but I've meant to read it for ages!!

199dudes22
Okt. 10, 2018, 6:22 am

I read The Eyre Affair a while ago and also the next one Lost in a Good Book. I'm sure many of the literary references went over my head. I also read The Big Over Easy which has references to nursery rhymes and liked it a lot.

200whitewavedarling
Okt. 10, 2018, 1:03 pm

>199 dudes22:, Good to know :) I've really heard mostly good things, and just haven't gotten around to it!

201whitewavedarling
Okt. 20, 2018, 5:42 pm

E. Abstractions and Words Alone #13: White Fur by Jardine Libaire

Libaire's writing is graceful and creative in a way that feels effortless, and I enjoyed this far more than I've enjoyed a lot of other recent 'literary fiction' that I've read. At the same time, there's no doubt that the writing carries the story and the characters here, and I have to admit to feeling a bit let down and bored by the ending. I suppose that, in terms of story, I just kept waiting for something More... and that 'more' never quite came around.

Certainly, I'd read another book of Libaire's--one, anyway--though I think I'd prefer picking up a short story collection or even a poetry collection, based on the story and characters here, which I have to admit didn't keep my interest so much as I'd have liked, despite the fact that Libaire's writing kept me wanting to turn pages.

All told, I suppose I'd recommend this to readers who love beautiful writing above story, plot, and character, or who relish creative, elegant prose. It left me wanting more, but the writing itself was worth the read.

202whitewavedarling
Okt. 22, 2018, 12:12 pm

J. The Shadows and Silhouettes #8: Leaving Berlin by Joseph Kanon

Kanon's historical fiction manages to bring to life the years following WWII, and his writing of Berlin in this work is outstanding. Leaving Berlin's blend of espionage, drama, and suspense makes for a powerful, page-turning read, and as always, Kanon's characters and gorgeous writing are masterful. This is certainly more espionage-heavy than some of his other historical fiction, so it's a slightly different type of reading and takes a bit more focus, but I couldn't put it down.

Absolutely recommended.

203whitewavedarling
Okt. 22, 2018, 9:08 pm

G. Vehicles/Transportation #6: Ghost by Piers Anthony

Piers Anthony is one of those authors who made me fall in love with science fiction and fantasy as a teenager, and his strange blends of genre and character are something I absolutely adore about his writing. Yet, for me, this one didn't work so well as all those other works I've read from him, and came across as not just a bit dated, but somewhat messy and heavy. I'm inclined to think it might have been better if either shorter (and much less complicated) or quite a bit longer (and thus offered more depth), but as it was, I didn't enjoy it quite like I expected. Ghost offers a strange blend of hard sci-fi, metaphysical discussion, philosophy, and the paranormal... and altogether, that's quite a lot for this relatively slim work ('slim' in the world of sci-fi anyway).

It did bring me back to the wonder of reading Anthony and being fascinated by his worlds and characters, however, so I'm looking forward to revisiting works I loved when I was younger, and also some other works that I never got around to. I've never been one for hard sci-fi, so it may be that I just wasn't at all the right audience for this one, though I think it probably will feel somewhat dated (in terms of philosophy and gender and character, if nothing else) to many readers who encounter it.

All told, though, an interesting look at space-time travel, and probably worth the read simply for the way it blended that discussion against the paranormal, sci-fi, and philosophy.

204whitewavedarling
Okt. 26, 2018, 6:50 pm

H. Numbers #2: The Broken Hearts Club by Ethan Black

This book had me wrapped up in it from the very beginning--although it felt a bit dated, I was so drawn into the characters and plot that I had a difficult time putting it down at all, and I'm already looking forward to reading more work by Black. If you like psychological thrillers and fast-paced, character-driven writing, I'd absolutely recommend this one. The one caveat to it is that it really does have something of a 90s feel, though even now I can't entirely put my finger on why. Still, I'd certainly recommend it.

205whitewavedarling
Okt. 31, 2018, 6:27 pm

C. Trees and Flowers #5: Now That She's Gone by Gregg Olsen

I feel a bit like time disappears when I pick up Gregg Olsen's thrillers--especially these from the Waterman & Stark series. There are times when I wish they went a tiny bit slower, so that I could have more depth of character (because, admittedly, it's generally character-driven works that I love most), but the twists in his plots and the way he weaves separate stories together keep me enthralled, just the same. This one especially felt like a sort of puzzle being put together in front of my eyes, and I adored the reading experience. Would I like a tiny bit more depth in character and a slower pace sometimes? Absolutely. Will I keep reading these books regardless and love every minute? Again, absolutely.

Recommended to thriller readers--but do go in order with this series, unlike me!

206whitewavedarling
Nov. 1, 2018, 11:58 am

I. The Other #10: The Eyre Affair by Jasper Fforde

This is a clever, amusing book, and Fforde's writing does a lovely job of bringing the world he creates to life and playing through the story. That said... for me, it was a bit too clever; for most of the book, I was pleasantly amused with how everything was playing out and coming together, but at the same time, I also felt slightly bored with it, as if too much of the book was wrapped up in being clever and smart, versus telling a good story. I never felt any real suspense, so that the speculative element of the work carried all of the weight of engagement, and there just wasn't enough for me to get really wrapped up in. So, I'm glad I finally tried this book, having heard about it for years, but I don't really see myself continuing with the series. It's cute, and it's very, very clever, but I'm afraid it's not for me.

207whitewavedarling
Nov. 1, 2018, 12:07 pm

I'm going to have to do a lot of reading in November and December if I want to make it to a hundred books and meet all of my other goals, so we'll see how things play out, but I've got a lot of plans for November to start out...

For starters, the publishing company I do a lot of work for has decided that they'd like everyone to read some books together, in making sure everyone's on the same page genre-wise. And they're paying me to pleasure-read, so I can't complain, but I've got three books to read for them this month: Eragon (which I've been meaning to read for ages anyway), Days of Panic, and Darkness Begins.

And after that, there are those plans I have for the challenges...

The Skeleton in the Closet by Angie Fox (Cozy MysteryCat Read)
Red River by Lalita Tademy (Red ColorCat Read & T Read)
How to Marry a Millionaire Vampire by Kerrelyn Sparks (RandomCat Read & H Read)
The Fear Collector and The Summer Children (Serial Killer ScaredyKit Read & H Read with Hutchison)
and Terra Nova for the SFFFKit read.

Technically, I could lose one of the serial killer books and also lose Terra Nova and still meet my goals, since I have two books planned for the one month and Eragon fits the SFFFkit challenge, but I'm really hoping to fit everything in.

So, wish me luck--November's going to be a big reading month if all goes as planned!

208RidgewayGirl
Nov. 1, 2018, 2:41 pm

Best of luck for a good reading month!

209rabbitprincess
Nov. 1, 2018, 8:10 pm

Hope November is a fruitful reading month for you!

210lkernagh
Nov. 2, 2018, 8:39 pm

>207 whitewavedarling: - they're paying me to pleasure-read,

Nice!

211whitewavedarling
Nov. 3, 2018, 12:53 pm

>208 RidgewayGirl: and >209 rabbitprincess:, Thanks!

>210 lkernagh:, lol, yeah, I really can't complain, even though the first read wasn't stellar... I'm looking forward to Eragon, though!

212whitewavedarling
Nov. 3, 2018, 12:54 pm

F. Animals #7: Days of Panic by Jack Hunt

This is a fast-paced read, and most of the primary characters are believable and engaging, but it's also got some problems.

First of all, there's the cover... now, I can't be specific here without giving something away, but what I can say is that this is the first book I've ever read that manages to include a spoiler on the cover. As in, if you've looked at the cover, one of the big elements that could have offered suspense is gone--from the book, from the series. It's that simple. Considering the cover also almost scared me off by including the dog--and I'm one of those people who's always terrified of seeing an animal on a dark book's cover because I fear the animal won't make it--I have to say that this might be the biggest cover failure I've ever encountered, professional and impressive as it may be. It almost scared me off--and I'm certain it will scare some animal-loving readers off--and it also offers a spoiler. That's almost impressive.

Of course, I'm not going to judge the book entirely by the cover (even if the cover did affect my reading enjoyment), and now I've read the book. Honestly, the flaws are hard to get beyond. The main character is the least interesting and developed of the characters--he, more than any other, feels like nothing more than a stereotype, so it's good that there are plenty of main characters, as they made the read. The other big issue is pacing--the ending chapters feel insanely rushed, and there are some big flaws in terms of what gets prioritized, attention/space-wise. While most of the book is well-paced, the last 60-80 pages feel like a downhill roller coaster rushing by in a blur.

So, all told, it's hard to have a good feeling about this book. The premise and the characters were there, and the writing is pretty decent (though the lack of commas just about killed me, as an editor), but I wanted a lot more. I'd Need a lot more in order to want to continue with the series.

213whitewavedarling
Nov. 6, 2018, 4:11 pm

J. The Shadows and Silhouettes #9: Darkness Begins by Harley Tate

This is a pretty simple the-world-as-we-know-it-is-ending book--it's a fast, easy read. There are some timeline issues in the second half, where it would have made more sense to put certain chapters following different characters in a different order, and there are also some editing issues that editors like me will be driven a little crazy by (especially early in the book), but it's pretty clean and fast.

It's not, however, something with enough depth to really be more than a fast escape, and I'm afraid there wasn't nearly enough depth here to keep me interested enough to read further into the series or read more of Tate's work. I'm guessing that you probably wouldn't be mad at yourself for downloading it if you bought the ebook or picked it up as an escape read, but you'd probably also find it pretty forgettable and predictable.

So, no, I'm afraid it's not something I'd recommend.

214whitewavedarling
Nov. 9, 2018, 6:44 pm

F. Animals #8: Eragon by Christopher Paolini

This book has a lot of magic to it, from the very first chapter on throughout the adventure readers sign up for. Paolini's descriptions of dragons, and of the friendships that unfold throughout this book, are masterful, and well worth the read all by themselves. Although the story feels a bit more familiar toward the end of the book, and not quite as fresh as the earlier passages in the book, there's so much to love here that the book is difficult to describe. It goes beyond YA Fantasy to bring to life the sort of story that makes readers fall in love with fantasy.

Absolutely recommended.

215whitewavedarling
Nov. 17, 2018, 12:16 pm

B. Houses, Windows, Stairs #3: The Fear Collector by Gregg Olsen

This felt really different from Olsen's other works, but once I got into it, I really enjoyed it. It almost reads like a mash-up of true crime and procedural, to where it feels like real life is bleeding into the fiction and vice versa. At first, my mind kept on wanting to know more about where the lines were blurred between fact and reality, but as I got further into the book my brain finally relaxed and just got twisted up with the story. I have a feeling that this will be most interesting (and slightly crazy-making) for readers like me who enjoy both the nonfiction history and the fictional stories surrounding serial killers, and I'm glad I picked it up. That said, if I were going to recommend an Olsen book to a reader who isn't yet familiar with his work, I'd probably point them to the Waterman and Stark series first.

Still, recommended. I really enjoyed the way this came together.

216whitewavedarling
Bearbeitet: Nov. 21, 2018, 12:00 pm

D. Faces #10: The Skeleton in the Closet by Angie Fox

This series is simply fun, and this second book made for a great installment. Fox's writing is fast-paced and humorous, the characters are engaging, and the stories are twisty-turny and interesting. I'm not generally a fan of 'cozies', but there's something about this series that just makes it kind of wonderful to sink into. And, plus, there's a pet skunk who's beautifully written, on top of ghosts who are in themselves pretty hilarious and scary, by turns.

So, yes, I'd absolutely recommend this series!

217whitewavedarling
Nov. 21, 2018, 11:50 am

And, my 2019 Category Challenge is officially set up! https://www.librarything.com/topic/299053

218LittleTaiko
Nov. 21, 2018, 1:33 pm

>216 whitewavedarling: - That does sound like fun! I'll have to check it out. What's not to love about a pet skunk?

219whitewavedarling
Nov. 21, 2018, 2:00 pm

>218 LittleTaiko:, It's easy, fun reading :) And yes, I've always wanted a pet skunk! Unfortunately, I eventually learned that they're really allergic to cat food, so it's generally hard to have both skunks and cats unless you can keep them completely separate. And I don't see me ever not having cats or being willing to do that!

220dudes22
Nov. 21, 2018, 4:38 pm

>216 whitewavedarling: - That's a BB for me. And I'll be checking out your new thread. I'll probably post mine sometime this weekend.

221whitewavedarling
Nov. 21, 2018, 6:32 pm

>220 dudes22:, Make sure you check out the first one in the series first--it's called Southern Spirits. I think you could read them out of order and they'd make sense, but this is one of those series where you get to know the characters so much, I think you're better off going right in order :) I'm going to pick up book 3 before long, so I hope you enjoy them!!! I'll look out for your thread, too :)

222dudes22
Nov. 21, 2018, 8:42 pm

>221 whitewavedarling: - I did end up looking the series up on fantasticfiction.com and put the first one in my recommendations collection. I really prefer to read in order even when someone tells me I don't have to. I'm hoping I might fit it in next year.

223whitewavedarling
Nov. 22, 2018, 12:13 pm

>222 dudes22:, I'm glad :) These books are just so much fun! I normally do the same thing and read in order no matter what.

Meanwhile...

A. Body Parts #11: Jason by Laurell K. Hamilton

This is technically part of the Anita Blake Vampire Hunter series, I suppose, but it's also a huge departure. While relationships always play a key part in these books, their plots normally revolve around some mystery, crime, etc. Here, Hamilton took a step sideways to produce a small book that's focused entirely on Anita's romantic entanglements and relationships. For readers who are long-time fans of the Anita Blake series, reactions will probably depend heavily on how invested they are in the personalities and relationships, vs. the action/mystery elements of the series. I imagine that readers of PNR who come to these books through that lens will find this a welcome departure, while others (like me) will be a little bit disappointed, but still invested enough in the characters to want to read the book.

Still, unlike some of the other books in the series, this definitely isn't one that should be read by itself. If you're a longtime follower of the series, you might well enjoy it with the above caveat, but if you've never read these books, this is not the one to try---it's more of an aberration in the series, and so heavily dependent on the reader already knowing the characters and being invested in them, it's just not a good entry point.

224whitewavedarling
Nov. 25, 2018, 4:38 pm

B. Houses, Windows, Stairs... #4: How to Marry a Millionaire Vampire by Kerrelyn Sparks

As a lighthearted, action-oriented paranormal romance, this is an easy read that's something of an enjoyable escape--I had a lot of fun getting to know the characters, and as I've discovered before, I kind of love Sparks' humor. That said, this doesn't stand up to Sparks' more recent books--and there's nothing wrong with that, obviously, since you'd expect an author to grow over the course of their career. The point to be noted here, though, is that readers of her more recent works might well be disappointed by the somewhat more simplistic story presented here, and I have a feeling I would have enjoyed this book quite a bit more if I hadn't had higher expectations because of reading her other (more recent) works.

So, yes, I certainly recommend it if you're looking for a fun and easy, action-oriented paranormal romance that's got plenty of humor. The one caveat is that, if you already are a fan of Kerrelyn Sparks, you'll want to temper your expectation. Hopefully, though, you haven't discovered her yet, so you'll have plenty to look forward to after this book, knowing her work has only gotten better over the years!

225whitewavedarling
Nov. 25, 2018, 7:14 pm

G. Vehicles/Transportation #7: Around the World in Eighty Days by Jules Verne

There's something rather charming and fantastic about this work, and in the way that Verne manages to bring to life characters in even such a fast-paced and simply told tale as this one. Certainly, the language is as dated as the narrative and the modes of transportation involved in Fogg's journey, but in an odd way, that feels to make it all the more fantastic and believable. Strange as that might be.

I don't think I would have had the patience for this tale when I was younger, so I'm glad to have finally gotten around to it now. Certainly, I'd recommend it.

226Jackie_K
Nov. 27, 2018, 2:49 pm

>225 whitewavedarling: I read that for the first time last year and enjoyed it very much, even though it was a bit silly!

227whitewavedarling
Nov. 28, 2018, 12:00 pm

>226 Jackie_K:, My feelings exactly!

Meanwhile...

E. Abstractions and Words Alone #13: S. by John Updike

I can admire what Updike did here, and I enjoyed the epistolary format (which really made the book, in my opinion), but I can't say that I felt this stood up to Updike's other works--or, those that I've read, anyway. It felt a little bit like a literary experiment, more than a book I could really engage with and enjoy, and it quickly became fairly predictable. I suppose it's something I might recommend to English majors and writers thinking to experiment in this territory, but otherwise, it's probably not something I'd recommend. It is what it is, and it's well done and beautifully written, but it's likely one I'll remember for the wrong reasons (in my opinion).

228whitewavedarling
Bearbeitet: Dez. 2, 2018, 11:14 am

Another entry into the category I've most neglected, and am most likely not to finish... (though I'm trying desperately!)

H. Numbers #3: The Only Good Lawyer by Jeremiah Healy

This was my first time reading Jeremiah Healy, but it won't be the last. I can't remember when I last enjoyed a procedural so much. Healy's book kept me glued to the pages and developments nearly from the first page, and the fact that the book and the characters kept surprising me were only an added bonus. This was twisting, believable, and hugely engaging, and I can't wait to read the other books in the series.

Absolutely recommended.

229dudes22
Bearbeitet: Dez. 2, 2018, 7:28 am

>238 Jackie_K: - Your link goes to a different book. I was going to add it to my BBs.

230whitewavedarling
Dez. 2, 2018, 11:15 am

>229 dudes22:, Oh! Just fixed it :) Thanks for pointing that out--it's definitely worth reading!

It's #12 in the series by the way, but completely stand-alone. I plan on picking up the early books in the series as soon as I get a chance.

231whitewavedarling
Bearbeitet: Dez. 2, 2018, 6:52 pm

December already...

Well, I neglected filling out my personal alphabet challenge this year (building the alphabet by both titles and last names). I'm trying to finish it now, but it's going to be a race to see if I can finish the books for that and also finish my categories. To do so, I'll need to finish:

Kiss of Midnight by Lara Adrian, 28 Stories of AIDS in Africa by Stephanie Nolen (nonfiction), and The Tourist Trail by John Yunker.

I'm really enjoying all three books -- paranormal romance, nonfiction regarding the treatment and experience of AIDS in African countries, and literary suspense -- so I don't see that being a problem and expect to finish all three pretty soon.

But, I'll also have to finish...

Sweet Revenge by Rebecca Zanetti
Daring the Moon by Sherrill Quinn
Zeitoun by Dave Eggers
Beasts of No Nation by Uzodinma Iweala
Illusion by Frank Peretti
X-Isle by Steve Augarde
Dark Rooms by Lili Anolik
and
White Pawn by Stevie J. Cole.

Gulp.

Wish me luck.

232DeltaQueen50
Dez. 2, 2018, 8:19 pm

Good luck with your December reading. I am finishing up a few that I need to complete this month which is late for me, I usually finish my challenge earlier and use December for free reading.

233whitewavedarling
Dez. 2, 2018, 9:02 pm

>232 DeltaQueen50:, Thanks, and you too! I usually have a few I need to finish up to complete my own alphabet challenge, but I think this is the first time where I've still had mutliple books to read for that as well as multiple categories to finish out. I've got three categories to be completed, two of which are close enough to be practically guaranteed, but that third one and the alphabet challenge... well, we'll see what happens!

234RidgewayGirl
Dez. 3, 2018, 8:23 am

Good luck and enjoy the race to finish before the new year!

235whitewavedarling
Dez. 3, 2018, 11:06 am

>234 RidgewayGirl:, thanks :) Good luck finishing your goals, as well! My husband and I finished our Christmas shopping with one last Etsy purchase this morning, so now I can sit back and really focus on reading during my free time :)

236whitewavedarling
Dez. 8, 2018, 12:15 pm

E. Abstractions and Words Alone #15: Telephone Ringing in the Labyrinth by Adrienne Rich

Adrienne Rich's poems are always gorgeous, provocative, and striking. In this collection in particular, though, there's a sort of haunting quality to many of the works. The political element that comes into her poetry so often, and which makes for some of my favorite poems, is turned more toward personal revelation and struggle here, focused more on characters and situations which readers will find strangely available and familiar, less documentary in a larger sense as opposed to a relatable, if sometimes terrifying, personal sense.

This collection surprised me--it wasn't what I expected, based on other collections of Rich's I've read, and yet it was every inch her lyrical voice and elegantly dangerous, striking work.

For readers of poetry, or Rich, I absolutely recommend it.

237whitewavedarling
Dez. 10, 2018, 12:13 pm

H. Numbers #4: 28: Stories of AIDS in Africa by Stephanie Nolen

Nolen's 28: Stories of AIDS in Africa is nothing short of incredible. Her approach, her writing, and her weaving of all of the material--personal, political, medical, cultural, environmental, local and global--are nothing short of impeccable. I've read many, many books (fiction and nonfiction) related to HIV/AIDS, many of them specifically connected to Africa and/or African writers, and this book eclipses all of them in nearly every way.

Nolen tells the stories of 28 individuals in Africa, all affected by AIDS, in order to weave a fuller picture of the disease and the factors complicating treatment, and even acknowledgement and diagnosis. In the process, she manages to write what is not just a powerful book which illustrates in 28 chapters the lives of 28 incredibly different people, living different lives in different countries, but a book which does more to paint a complete picture of this disease and related cultural territory than any book I've seen has even suggested. Delving into history, war and conflict, birth control, sex work, religion, politics, gender roles, civil rights, poverty, cultural appropriation, trade, environmental degredation, pharmaceuticals, and education (or lack thereof), Nolen does more in this book to paint a picture of the unfolding of AIDS, and its impact, than anything else I've seen.

And, beyond that, there are 28 stories here which she tells masterfully, bringing men, women, and children to life on each page of this work, and in a way that makes the issues she addresses that much easier to understand.

It is a difficult book to read, but it is also a book full of hope and community and determination. But, as Bono is quoted on the back cover: "This is a formidable book of record... from the tiny virus, via twenty-eight individual human stories, to an entire continent. The stories will tear you apart before putting you back together, fully armed and ready to go to war..."

You might be thinking this book is a bit dated, but the truth is that this book is an incredible and timely record of the way history, disease, and a thousand complicating factors unfolded into a crisis that is still going on. And, what's more, this is a book that actively works against apathy--you cannot read this and not understand why your hands and your voice matters in this world, and at a time when apathy and 'what can I do?' are echoing across the globe, I believe that's incredibly important.

I hope you find it, read it, and then pass it on to other readers. This is the kind of book we should all be reading.

238Jackie_K
Dez. 10, 2018, 12:31 pm

>237 whitewavedarling: That sounds amazing! BB hit its target here :)

239Helenliz
Dez. 10, 2018, 12:51 pm

>238 Jackie_K: I agree, such passion in a review has to pop this on the list. Not that the library has it, of course...

240whitewavedarling
Dez. 10, 2018, 2:10 pm

>238 Jackie_K: and >239 Helenliz:, I'm so glad. I didn't have any idea what I was getting into with that book, but it was incredibly impressive. I honestly don't think I'll ever forget it. Certainly, it will be in my top-five nonfiction reads for the foreseeable future--at the moment, I'm not sure I can think of a nonfiction read that would stand up against the standard it sets.

241whitewavedarling
Dez. 10, 2018, 2:11 pm

Another good one, that won't be for everyone...

I. The Other #11: The Tourist Trail by John Yunker

I might have avoided this book, had I understood the sort of eco-fiction it held, the beauty it would be mixing with heartbreak and terror, or the way it would bring me to tears over and over again. At the same time, I might have run toward it in a full-on sprint if I'd known how dangerous and beautiful and dark it would be.

Because the truth is that this book, for some people, will be inspiring enough that you might fear handing it to your children, just for fear of what good passion it might inspire. If I'd come across this book as a teenager, it might have offered a whole host of passion-inspired and well-meaning, environmentally driven damage to me turning into a semi-respectable creative. I'm both glad it didn't, and also wishing it also had. This book is one that actively works against apathy, and in fact pushes for a deeper and more careful understanding of commitment to activism.

The story is about passion, ecology, and men and women who embrace causes higher than themselves. It's heart-breaking, hard to swallow, dangerous, wonderful, and beautifully written.

Absolutely recommended, with the caveat that this exquisite book is often difficult to read, and impossible to look away from.

242whitewavedarling
Dez. 10, 2018, 2:26 pm

And, as I finish catching up on reviews...

C. Trees and Flowers #6: Kiss of Midnight by Lara Adrian

Getting into this book took some time, but I ended up really enjoying the world and characters that Adrian created. It was, I admit, predictable, and I would have liked a slower progression in the relationship at the center of the book, as well as a little less melodrama, but it was an easy read and a fun escape. I'll probably at least read the next book in the series and see how it goes. I'm not sure this stands up to the other series in this genre that I've come to really love, but I imagine most paranormal romance readers will enjoy it for what it is.

243whitewavedarling
Dez. 12, 2018, 11:34 am

B. Houses, Windows, Stairs #5: XIsle by Steve Augarde

This is a dark book. Dark enough, in fact, that it's probably the darkest YA dystopian I've read once all of the factors are added up, and there were some moments when I wondered how likely I'd ever be to tell a teenager about it. That said, it's also a good read, and compelling once it gets going.

On one hand, this is a sort of elevated version of Lord of the Flies--though this is a far better book, and much better written, in my opinion. On the other hand, there's some injustice in even saying that because Augarde creates such a complete and horrific world here. Maybe if Charles Dickens had come forward to write a dystopian, having thought of something like Lord of the Flies... that may be the better description. Because as dark as the situation is, as dark as some of the characters and horrors are... it's all sort of frightfully believable, and the descriptions, threats, and twists are turned around in such a way as to feel more adult... just like teens put into this book would feel far more adult and tortured than would be desired.

All told, I'm not sure I'd hand this book to a young reader, although the tone and characters and situations are exactly what one might expect from a YA Dystopian. Instead, I'd say this is more in line for adult fans of the genre, and perhaps mature young adults who'll have the patience for a book that takes as many cues from adult science fiction as from YA. Still, this book unsettled me, and I sometimes didn't want to turn the page to see what was coming, compelling as the read was... and that rarely happens when I read YA anything, so there's something to be said for that.

Recommended, with the above warnings in mind. This is darker than expected for this genre, and sometimes difficult to read.

244whitewavedarling
Dez. 12, 2018, 8:08 pm

A. Body Parts #12: White Pawn by Stevie J. Cole

I'm not sure what to say about this book. On one hand, it was an easy, dark escape that kept me turning pages. On the other hand, it wasn't remotely what I expected, and the writer needs to hire a good proofreader.

Cole's White Pawn is about obsession, and the dark turns love can take when paired with obsession, lust, and jealousy. It's more psychological suspense than romance, and more horror than steam. And while I don't think anyone would call the characters likeable, this book has the feeling of a train wreck because it's just that hard to look away from, predictable as it might be. (Though, I admit, I didn't expect it to get quite so dark as it did.)

So, if you want some horror paired with your romance, or vice versa, this might be an interesting read, but I'm not sure who I'd recommend it to, or if I could even really recommend it.

245whitewavedarling
Dez. 15, 2018, 3:02 pm

D. Faces #11: Daring the Moon by Sherrill Quinn

The beginning of this book was a rough read for me, and everything felt a little bit forced and over the top in terms of the story itself, but things smoothed out after about fifty pages, once the main characters came together. There were still some issues along the way--the paramount one being that everyone seemed to accept the reality of werewolves far too quickly and easily--but the writing and the story both got stronger as the book moved along. I think this is a book that only paranormal romance readers would enjoy, as there's not a whole lot to the story itself or to the suspense/mystery that's been pulled in beyond the relationship it sets off, but it wasn't a bad read overall. I definitely wanted and expected more suspense/mystery, given the description, so that threw off my expectations going into it, but it was a quick escape. I haven't decided yet whether or not I'll read the next book in the series.

246whitewavedarling
Dez. 17, 2018, 8:14 pm

A. Body Parts #13: Sweet Revenge by Rebecca Zanetti

I'm really enjoying this series, although this book has some of the same flaws as the first in the series. As other reviewers have said, Zanetti's got an incredible talent for balancing suspense against romance while keeping tension high. Maybe because she packs so much into the books, though, some details slip a bit... If a reader pays (critical) attention, there are tiny plot holes related to motivation and subplots. I'm not even sure I'd pick up on them if I weren't an editor, but with that being my job, I can't help but noticing and being annoyed by them. What bothers me a bit less (because I expect it of the genre at this point, I suspect), but what will probably bother more readers in the long run, is that the romances hinge on insta-lust/insta-love in a way that feels far less believable than the characters themselves. And, in a book where emotion and connection are so incredibly important on a page-by-page basis, that's somewhat hard to ignore.

Yet, despite its flaws, this book is hard to put down. Zanetti's characters are living, breathing entities that it's hard not to get wrapped up in, and the suspense elements are twisty enough that, especially if you have a hard time putting these books down (as I do), they move so quickly that the turns and moves in plot can easily take you by surprise, even if they might seem slightly predictable in hindsight--'in hindsight' being key there, of course.

So, overall, yes, I'd absolutely recommend this series to readers of romantic suspense. But, make sure you start with the first book--with this series, it definitely matters, though I think this second in the series actually outshines it.

247whitewavedarling
Dez. 29, 2018, 7:12 pm

F. Animals #9: Beasts of No Nation by Uzodinma Iweala

I can appreciate the stylistic choices and moves that caught the attention of award committees and reviewers with this book, as well as the talent it took to run with such choices and build a story such as this one. Similarly, I can appreciate the ways in which this book builds upon and engages with other notable African authors such as Chinua Achebe, Amos Tutuola, and Wole Soyinka--though my favorite African authors are the (in my opinion) more subtle Sindiwe Magona and Chimamanda Adichie. Yet, I cannot say I actually enjoyed this book.

Iweala is clearly an engaging and talented writer, but the story here felt so familiar--partly because of all of the nonfiction I've read related to child soldiers--that it never truly affected or surprised me. That's a horrible thing to say, especially with a book like this, but it's true. For a reader more inclined to experimental styles/language, and less widely read in African literature, this could well be an incredibly powerful book that outshines other works covering the same territory. For me, I fear it felt more like an experiment that read as an experiment, as opposed to taking on the life of a story.

248whitewavedarling
Dez. 29, 2018, 7:31 pm

E. Abstractions and Words Alone #16: Dark Rooms by Lili Anolik

I'd so looked forward to reading this book, but the problems only mounted and snowballed one upon another as I kept going with it.

The first problem was a lack of suspense--what turned out to be the mystery didn't seem to be a mystery at all in the beginning, so that I spent 70 or so pages wondering what genre I was reading, and where/when the suspense would even come into play. The fact that the narrator wasn't particularly likeable or engaging didn't help. Soon after the mystery became understood, though, other problems became more prominent. The narrator and those around her would reach conclusions that didn't make sense based on the book itself and the known facts--they made sense based on what the author was clearly building toward, but not based on the facts. I don't really mind characters jumping to conclusions (people do jump to conclusions, after all), and I don't mind characters being of only average intelligence (not all people are so smart as the average mystery protagonist, after all), and I don't even mind an occasional coincidence if it doesn't seem to come out of left field. BUT, when you have characters (that's right, plural, characters) jumping to the correct conclusion over and over again, without any apparent reason to do so except for the fact that the author hasn't bothered to include enough steps to allow them to reach logical conclusions and uncover mysteries, beyond just knowing them, AND all of the primary characters are a bit dumb and a bit boring, AND there are a fair number of coincidences... well, let's just say that I'm less than interested.

The funny thing is, I kept reading because I wanted to know the answer to the mystery, but it turned out that the author had a lot more fun flinging up red herrings that meant absolutely nothing, and pulling together soap-opera-type drama to the extent that it became more laughable than believable, than plotting what might have been a really enjoyable novel.

So, no, I don't recommend this book, and I won't be reading anything else by Anolik. This could have been a good book, based on the bare bones plot. Instead, it was needlessly complicated and still, somehow, not all that interesting.

249thornton37814
Dez. 31, 2018, 12:44 pm

250whitewavedarling
Jan. 1, 2019, 11:49 am

>249 thornton37814:, Thank you, and what a fun image!

Meanwhile, I finished up Illusion by Frank Peretti and Freedom to Speak: National Poetry Slam 2002 at the last minute. Reviews will be forthcoming, but I have to say that Frank Peretti really didn't live up to my expectations with this one, and I was hoping for a lot more. Any recommendations on what to try if I give him another try, and/or comments on whether or not I should???