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RELEASE DAY SPOTLIGHT: Nameless Queen by Marie Sinadjan

This morning, I’m very pleased to bring you this Release Day Spotlight for Marie Sinadjan’s Nameless Queen, part of the Norse-inspired Urban Fantasy series, The Prophecies of Ragnorak. Like the rest of this series, this really looks like something to check out.

Book Details:

Book Title: Nameless Queen by Marie Sinadjan
Series: The Prophecies of Ragnarok
Genre: Norse Mythology Urban Fantasy
Release date: November 30, 2023
Format: eBook
Length: 70 pages
Release Price: 99c (US) and equivalent / 99p (UK)
Nameless Queen Cover

About the Book

All things end, and all must die.
But death is not always the end.

When Geiravor Lokisdottir was stripped of her name and cast out of Asgard, torn from her family and the life she had known, she thought she’d lost it all. But in the shadows of Niflheim she discovers the path to her destiny, and what it truly means to be queen.

This is a prequel to THE PROPHECIES OF RAGNAROK trilogy by Meri Benson and Marie Sinadjan, and a retelling of the myths involving Hel, the Norse goddess of death and the queen of the underworld.

Purchase Links

Universal Purchase Link ~ Goodreads

About the Author

Marie Sinadjan is a Filipino fantasy author, singer-songwriter, and musical theatre actress. She is the co-author of The Prophecies of Ragnarok series, and her short stories have appeared in anthologies, magazines, and literary journals. She mainly writes fantasy of the mythology, fairytales, and folklore variety.

When not crunching numbers for her full-time job or spending time with her family, she’s traveling, drinking coffee, reading and reviewing books, dreaming up more worlds, writing more songs, or serenading vegetables. She currently lives in the United Kingdom with her husband.

You can find her online at @marienettist or at linktr.ee/mariesinadjan.

WWW Wednesday, November 29, 2023

This meme was formerly hosted by MizB at A Daily Rhythm and revived on Taking on a World of Words—and shown to me by Aurore-Anne-Chehoke at Diary-of-a-black-city-girl.

The Three Ws are:

What are you currently reading?
What did you recently finish reading?
What do you think you’ll read next?

Easy enough, right?

What are you currently reading?

I’m reading According to Mark by H.B. O’Neill, and boy howdy, am I going to spend a lot of energy talking about it next year when it’s published. I’m listening to The Bittlemores by Jann Arden on audiobook—which is so much better than I’d expected.

According to MarkBlank SpaceThe Bittlemores

What did you recently finish reading?

I just finished the incredible Bea Wolf by Zach Weinersmith and Boulet (Illustrator) and the almost-as-good Nerd: Adventures in Fandom from This Universe to the Multiverse by Maya Phillips (Narrator) on audio.

Bea WolfBlank SpaceNerd

What do you think you’ll read next?

My next book should be Robert B. Parker’s Broken Trust by Mike Lupica, I hope the transition from Atkins to Lupica on the flagship Parker series is smooth. My next audiobook should be Brokedown Prophets by S. A. Cosby, narrated by a full cast—I have no idea what it’s about, really. I stopped reading at “S.A. Cosby.”

Broken TrustBlank SpaceBrokedown Prophets

What are reading as the year heads into its home stretch?

Ostler by Susan Grossey: An Unconventional Sleuth Kicks Off an Equally Unconventional Career

OstlerOstler

by Susan Grossey

DETAILS:
Series: Cambridge Hardiman Mysteries, #1
Publication Date: August 21, 2023
Format: eARC
Length:274 pg.
Read Date: October 8, 2023
Buy from Bookshop.org Support Indie Bookstores

A Vocabulary Lesson and The Title

Let’s start with the word “Ostler”—what is that? It’s apparently a variant of hostler (which doesn’t help me at all), someone who tends to horses at an inn. Words like “archaic” show up when you look and various dictionaries.

Now, I have to wonder—why entitle your novel with an archaic term that many people aren’t going to be familiar with? There’s a certain charm to using a term like that with a historical mystery. Also, maybe the term is a bit more familiar to readers in the U.K. Still, it seems risky to me. Who’s going to be drawn to that?

Sure, Grossey knows her audience—so it’s probably a smart move. Also, for Grossey fans, they’re going to be drawn to her name rather than the book’s.

Let’s move along to the more important things:

What’s Ostler About?

Our titular Ostler is Gregory Hardiman, a veteran of the war against Napoleon and other things—he has some sort of obvious facial injury, and more than a few memories he’d rather not have. He didn’t return home when his time was up, but took up residence in Cambridge and started working as an Ostler. He has a way with horses that garners him (and the inn he works for) a great reputation.

He’s also a reader—a big one. He’s constantly trying to educate himself—he carries a notebook of words he’s trying to learn with him and is frequently updating it. This, as much as his injury, seems to mark him as an oddity, and endears him to some characters as much as it will the reader.

Anyway, a coworker is found killed and his widow wants answers. Too many people (particularly the officials) write his death off, but neither his widow or Hardiman are convinced. Haridman finds himself assuring her that he’ll get to the bottom of it. On the one hand, she’s desperate for answers, so she’ll take the help of anyone who takes her seriously. But I’m not sure why either of them think he’s the right man for the job.

Naturally, as this is the first of a series, he clearly is, but Hardiman doesn’t strike me as the best candidate at the beginning. He starts by looking into the brother of the dead man—he’s familiar with the outskirts of the law, and just seems shifty.

This leads Hardiman to some dealings with Clement College and officials there—he uncovers some shady dealings and earns the trust of the faculty. While continuing to look into the murder, he ends up taking on another investigation for the College.

Hardiman—and an interesting hodgepodge of allies—uncovers a lot more than he expected to. Including some dangerous men who aren’t intimidated by an ex-soldier.

As Historical Fiction

So, what I know about this time period in England—particularly about the way colleges functioned, life in Cambridge and its environs, and so on would fit on the back of a postage stamp. With room for a florid signature left over. So Grossey could’ve made everything up out of whole cloth and I’d buy it—worldbuilding worthy of Rothfuss, Martin, or Jemisin.

But I’m certain* that’s not what happened here. Grossey paints a detailed picture of life in the time, a robust set of characters from a variety of socio-economic classes and professions. It reeks of authenticity. I want to read whatever books come next in the series just so I learn more. I jokingly told Grossey that I felt like I should ask her for a reading list to understand the time/setting—and she volunteered to provide such a list, but I think I’m just going to let her spoon-feed me things as I spend more time with Hardiman.

* 98.7% certain, anyway. I feel like I should leave a little room for cynicism.

So, what did I think about Ostler?

This succeeds on multiple fronts—as a mystery, as a piece of historical fiction, as a showcase for a unique (and potentially fascinating, time will tell) protagonist, and as a series start. I don’t know that this book has it all (few do), but it certainly has enough to heartily recommend.

The story is compelling, the pacing isn’t quite what you’d want in a contemporary Crime Novel, but it fits for the time—which isn’t to suggest it lags at all. You really do want to spend more time with most of these characters again (including most of them on the wrong side of the law)—few more so than Hardiman. The circumstances in his life undergo a significant change by the end of this book, and I’m eager to see how he adapts to them (his life seems to be a series of adaptations already, he’ll do fine).

As a slice of early 19th-century life, I found it most intriguing, and I wager most who at least dabble in historical fiction will as well. As with her Sam Plank series, Grossey is able to bring things to life in a way that gets even the uninformed 21st-century reader to see things and to immerse yourself in the period.

Give this one a shot—at least one thing in this book will appeal to you, probably several.

Disclaimer: I was provided with a copy of this book by the author in exchange for this post and my honest opinion.


3.5 Stars

This post contains an affiliate link. If you purchase from it, I will get a small commission at no additional cost to you. As always, the opinions expressed are my own.
Irresponsible Reader Pilcrow Icon

Third Quarter Check-In: 2023 Plans and Challenges

So, you may ask your self, “Well, how did I get here?” And then you realize you’re not one of the Talking Heads and instead you want to ask me why I’m posting this Third Quarter Check-In now as we’re almost done with the Fourth Quarter. Well, yesterday, my eldest son and my de facto editor wondered if I wanted a blog post idea. I (foolishly?) said, sure. “Third Quarter Check in: 2023 Plans and Challenges” he replied with a smirk. I explained that I meant to do it, but got distracted with all the October stuff I had going on and forgot all about doing it. Besides—as you will see if you keep reading—it isn’t all that different than the previous check-in.

But it stuck in my craw, and the easiest way to dislodge it was to take a few moments to put this together.
2023 Plans and Challenges
My plans this year focused on the two series that I’ve started—Literary Locals and Grandpappy’s Corner—both of which are going okay (frequently in fits and starts, but making steady progress). Then there’s the perennial, “Cut down on my Goodreads Want-to-Read list and the unread books that I own.” How am I doing on that?

 

Audio E-book Physical Goodreads
Want-to-Read
End of 2022 5 45 42 143
End of 1st Quarter 4 44 54 142
End of 2nd Quarter 5 50 56 145
End of 3rd Quarter 5 51 58 151

Ehhh

Let’s move right along to see how I’m doing with the rest of my plans and move on to the Reading Challenges…
2023 Book Challenges


Goodreads Challenge

Well, I can’t show you that graphic…but, it would’ve shown me around 230 out of 250.


12 Books
I got behind in March, and I haven’t managed to get any others read. I’m very frustrated by this—I was looking forward to these books. Don’t ask me what happened, or when I’m going to get to them. (well, probably not 2023 for all but one of these…don’t ask me which one).
12 Books Challenge
Do I get any credit for having read and then a few months later listening to Miss Percy’s Pocket Guide to the Care and Feeding of British Dragons?


2023 While I was Reading
While I Was Reading
I made zero progress on this in Quarter 3, but I do believe I’ll have it done by the end of December (I’ve already conquered a couple of categories).

  1. A book with a protagonist over 40.: Vera Wong’s Unsolicited Advice for Murderers by Jesse Q. Sutanto
  2. A book considered a classic.:
  3. A graphic novel.:
  4. A book that has been banned or challenged.:
  5. A book set in a place on your bucket list.:
  6. A book published before you were born.:
  7. A book related to a goal you have for 2023.: Church History in Plain Language, Fifth Edition by Bruce Shelley, Revision Editor Marshall Shelley\
  8. A book by an author of color.: The Raven Thief by Gigi Pandian
  9. A book with a clever title.: Kneading Journalism: Essays on Baking Bread and Breaking Down the News by Tony Ganzer
  10. A book by a famous author you’ve never read:
  11. A non-fiction book about a topic you love.: The Worst We Can Find: MST3K, RiffTrax, and the History of Heckling at the Movies by Dale Sherman
  12. A novella: Bad Memory by Jim Cliff

Your TBR Reduction Book Challenge

Your TBR Reduction Book Challenge
I’m on-target for this one (as much as I can be), and have even got a couple of the Stretch Goals accomplished.
January – End to end temptation I give you permission to read the most recent book you have got on top of your TBR. For many this is one we only get to read eventually but for now I want you to pick up the newest book in Mount TBR and read it. Can you remember the last time you did that? It’s a good habit to get into and January is all about starting good habits: The Perception of Dolls by Anthony Croix, Edited by Russell Day
Stretch Goal – Read the oldest book in Mount TBR it has waited long enough: Bartleby and James: Edwardian Steampunk Chronicle by Michael Coorlim
February – Short steps For the shortest month of the year I want you to read 28 short stories. This can be a TBR collection, anthology or even backlog of magazines that you have. Life is fast but use this challenge to appreciate the skill of the short story writer. Play your skills right you may get more than one book read this way. eh…I get partial credit for this, Noirville contained every short story I had unread, but it’s only fifteen stories. I did read extra novellas for the Stretch Goal, though. So I’m calling this okay?
Stretch Goal – Read four novellas one for each week of the month. Bad Memory by Jim Cliff, Anna and the Vampire Prince by Jeanne C. Stein, and Broken by Don Winslow (which is six novellas).
March – Fresh Starts This time for the beginning of spring you need to start a series you have never read before. Release this work from Mount TBR! Justice Calling by Annie Belletstr
April – Open and Shut Case For the month named after the latin for ‘to open’ you need to read a standalone book with no sequel or links to any other book. Something new and something you can let go after reading it: The Winter of Frankie Machine by Don Winslow
May – Crowning Glory? the UK has a lot of bank holidays including a coronation this month so suitably let’s pick a book about revolution or a change of those in power. Questland by Carrie Vaughn
June – long reading days or longest nights Irrespective of your hemisphere you have time for reading either in the joys of summer or depths of winter. Your challenge here is to find the largest tale on Mount TBR and finish it. Let that monster get off your back: Ink Black Heart by Robert Galbraith
July – Holidays are coming! let’s go travelling find a book by the author who lives the furthest from you on the globe. I give you seven months to do the maths! Let’s explore the fiction of places very much not like our own: Eternity Fund by Liz Monument (Australia)
August – Holiday Treats reward time you get to choose the book in your TBR pile no Themes, clues of queries to ask. Just take one off the list!: Lemon Man by Ken Bruton
September – Seven Deadly Tempts read a book linked however you want to one of the seven deadly sins. Booktempting I stress is not one of them. Indulge yourselves: Cash Rules Everything Around Me by Rob Gittins. If that title doesn’t scream Greed, I don’t know what does (the other 6 show up as well in the book)


Beat the Backlist Reading Challenge;
Beat the Backlist Reading Challengee
I’ve got 16 of the 24 categories taken care of. So, I guess I’m okay-ish here. I’ll have a few others accomplished by the end of the year, but I think this is going to be an incomplete challenge.

  • five word title (only 5 words, count ’em up!) – The Winter of Frankie Machine by Don Winslow
  • won an award (the book won an award. any award!)
  • meant to read it last year (a book you planned to get to in 2022 and didn’t) – The Night Watch by Neil Lancaster
  • giving an author a second chance (an author (or specific book) you previously didn’t jive with )
  • an author writing under a pseudonym (the author(s) is not writing under their real name) – Cutthroat Cupcakes by Cate Lawley
  • 2022 debut novel (an author’s first book that released in 2022) – Lemon Man by Ken Bruton
  • standalone (the book has no prequels/sequels) – Proxies by James T. Lambert
  • bought and forgot it (a book you bought (or borrowed) and forgot about it) – Cash Rules Everything Around Me by Rob Gittins
  • plants on the cover (any kind of plant on the cover is fair game) – The Once and Future Witches by Alix E. Harrow
  • first in a trilogy (the book is the first of three) – The Curse of the Silver Pharaoh by Pip Ballantine & Tee Morris
  • name in the title (the title has a character name in it) – Klone’s Stronghold by Joyce Reynolds-Ward
  • set on a continent you don’t live on (the story is set on a continent (or heavily inspired by a place on a continent) you do NOT live on) – Anna and the Vampire Prince by Jeanne C. Stein
  • it’s a trope! (your favorite) (pick your favorite trope and read a book featuring it)
  • less than 170 pages (make sure it’s a short one!) – Bartleby and James: Edwardian Steampunk Chronicle by Michael Coorlim
  • released at least 23 years ago (that’s right, we’re taking it back to the 90’s (release dates in 1999 or before))
  • protagonist name starts with “M” (the main character has a name beginning with “M”) – Teaching Moments by Troy Lambert (Max)
  • graphic novel outside your fave genre (find a graphic novel that isn’t in one of your favorite genres)
  • recommended by a bookseller (ask your local bookseller for a recommendation! if you don’t have a local store, there are plenty with social media accounts to reach out to)
  • letter “z” in the title (the letter “z” appears somewhere in the title) – A Sh*tload of Crazy Powers by Jackson Ford
  • all about music or the arts (the story revolves around music or the arts in some way)
  • protagonist has a pet (any pet will do) – A Man Named Doll by Jonathan Ames
  • more than 450 pages (grab a tome and get reading!) – The Ink Black Heart by Robert Galbraith
  • your favorite genre (a book that falls in your favorite genre) – Barking for Business by E. N. Crane
  • main cover color is your least favorite color (find a book prominently featuring your least favorite color on the cover)

I wrote this after the end of June, and it’s still true today (literally today, not the day it should’ve been had I posted this on time): Looking over this, it’s good that I take these on for fun, if I was serious about these things, I think I’d be getting a little worried. More than anything, the number of books I listed above that I don’t have linked to a particular post tells me how far behind I am on writing.
(Image by Clker-Free-Vector-Images from Pixabay)

End of the Year Book Tag

End of Year Book Tag
I saw this on a couple of blogs last week and thought it’d make a good one for me to do. But when I went back to check so I could link to them, I could only find the entry at Biblio Nerd Reflections. Sorry to whoever else inspired me, I didn’t mean to ignore you, but I apparently did.

Are there any books you started this year that you need to finish?

The Existence and Attributes of GodBlank SpaceA Mystery Revealed: 31 Meditations on the Trinity

The only things that really fit here are my project reads—The Existence and Attributes of God: Updated and Unabridged by Stephen Charnock and A Mystery Revealed: 31 Meditations on the Trinity by Ryan McGraw—books that I’ve scheduled my reading to finish on December 31. Hopefully, everything else gets wrapped up before then. I don’t get too worked up about that kind of thing, but I appreciate making a clean start on January 1.

Do you have an autumnal book to transition into the end of the year?

Nope. I don’t get this kind of thinking—I know a lot of people do read seasonally, and more power to ’em! My brain doesn’t really work that way. I read Christmas-related ARCs in July, I could (but probably haven’t) read a book about a Summer Vacation in the dead of winter. So, basically whatever book I happen to be reading on December 21 will be my transition book.

Is there a new release you’re still waiting for?

Broken TrustBlank SpaceThe Mayors of New York

As far as I know (which isn’t very far), the only two that I’m waiting for are Mike Lupica’s Spenser debut in Robert B. Parker’s Broken Trust and the next Bill Smith/Lydia Chin book, The Mayors of New York by S. J. Rozan. But I could easily be forgetting something.

Also, depending on when I decide to post this, the Lupica book could already be out.

What are three books you want to read before the end of the year?

The Moonshine MessiahBlank SpaceCharm City RocksBlank SpaceEveryone in My Family Has Killed Someone

There are five books that I’ve mentioned on previous tags/lists that I haven’t finished yet. I’m picking three of those (because I’m pretty sure that I’ll get to the other two without calling them out). The Moonshine Messiah by Russell W. Johnson, Charm City Rocks by Matthew Norman, and Everyone in My Family Has Killed Someone by Benjamin Stevenson Lancaster.

* The Narrow Road Between Desires by Patrick Rothfuss and The Olympian Affair by Jim Butcher

Is there a book you think that could still shock you and become your favorite book of the year?

Absolutely. Pretty much anything I pick up between now and 12/31. Sure, I don’t expect The Secret by the Child brothers will be it—that would be a shock for sure. But otherwise, I hold out hope for almost every book. As I’m still not sure what I’m going to read over the next month, I hesitate to mention a likely nominee (although Rothfulss and Butcher have to be in the running).

Have you already started making reading plans for 2024?

I have indeed. And stopped. And started again. And stopped again. I didn’t do a great job with my goals for 2023, so I’m hesitant to commit to much for next year. I’m also trying to figure out how much I want to plan ahead at the moment—it might be a time to lean into whimsy and clearing off my shelves. And polishing off the 2023 plans that didn’t get accomplished.

* How un-great is still TBD.


As usual, I’m not tagging anyone in this—but I’d like to see what you all have to come up with.

LITERARY LOCALS: A Q&A About Writing in Idaho with Taylor R. Gray

Literary Locals logo
It’s time for the next (and hopefully not last) Q&A I arranged after the Boise Library! Book Faire. I hope you enjoy it as much as I did.


Before we get into things, why don’t you give the reader a brief introduction to you and your work.
My name is Taylor Gray and I’m a software engineer turned author. I’ve always had an interest in sci-fi, fantasy, and superheroes since childhood. My urge to write stories first began in high school when my friends and I would pass around a notebook to write our own sci-fi fantasy story. Since then, I had been writing off and on, primarily focusing on my profession. Finally, in 2019, I decided to dedicate the time to sit down and finish my first novel which became the first book in the Trials of Incomplete Heroes series. Every book in that series is entirely self published. In 2022, I finally landed the attention of a publisher and, as of this year, published Mercury Snow.

Trials of Incomplete Heroes is available on Amazon at: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B08L9J28Z4

Mercury Snow is available on Amazon at: https://www.amazon.com/Mercury-Snow-Taylor-R-Gray/dp/1961093057 or Barnes & Noble: https://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/mercury-snow-taylor-r-gray/1143603816

I do have a Facebook page for my books here: https://www.facebook.com/TrialsOIH

Are you a native Idahoan? What is it about Idaho that keeps you here?
I’m a native Idahoan, born and raised in Boise. In my high school years, I used to hike around the White Cloud mountains and camp at various lakes. The varied landscape of Idaho is fascinating. We have mountains, forests, deserts, lakes, rivers, etc… We just don’t have an Ocean. Why leave when I could have any scenery I wanted in this state already? Also, at heart, I’m a homebody who doesn’t like crowds or travel.

That last sentence sums up my primary reason for sticking around, too. 🙂

Why risk going somewhere you might not like to deal with crowds if you don’t have to. Idaho is a perfectly fine place to be. 🙂

Are you tied into some sort of local author/bookish group/culture? If so, tell us about it and how it helps you as an author. If you’re not, is there a reason for it?
In terms of local author groups, no. I am, however, a part of an author group through my publisher and we still meet at least once a month online. In the past, I attempted to join a few Facebook groups which I don’t think exist anymore. I was also going to form an in person group with a few local friends, but none of us ever got around to it. As both a software engineer and an introvert, joining or creating social groups is outside my expertise.

That’s a good point—particularly post-COVID, an online group seems like a no-brainer. Is this a critique group, a mutual encouragement time, or something else?
My publisher calls it a “mastermind” group where various other authors under this publisher get together to read segments of what they’re working on. The goal is to provide feedback from the standpoint of a reader such as:

  • How did this segment make you feel?
  • What questions did it leave you with?
  • What narrative or plot loops did it open that need closing in the future?
  • Did it make sense?

It’s effectively a group to workshop your books.

What kind of events in the area do you attend—either to sell/promote your books or to network with authors? Are there any outside of this area that you hit regularly and wish we had something like it here?
The Boise Book Fair was really the first real event of this sort I’ve attended. In terms of other events, I’m in talks with my publisher for some online events at their discretion. In terms of events that I would like to see, it seems as though the online interview/podcast is becoming increasingly more valuable. Having videos on Youtube of recorded zoom or discord interviews of various people seems to be popular these days.

So, did the Library’s Faire live up to expectations? That is, if you had any. Did you learn (from your experience or talking to others) what to do more of or not to do at your next event? In general, what was your experience like?
I didn’t really know what to expect from the Book Fair. Part of me expected more people to show up and more books to be sold. I gathered from others a the event that this was typical of these events where most of the interactions are just to spark interest. Most people will take a card or a flyer, but will rarely walk out with a book at that time. As long as information on my book gets out there, I’ll be satisfied. I vastly oversubscribed on the number of books and cards to bring. However, I now have the supplies for other events. I would also like to have too much of something rather than not enough.

The fact that I have two different pen names, one for my self published series and one for my traditionally published book, also seemed to hamper me. People would walk up to me and want to talk to me about Mercury Snow, then want to talk to my assistant about my self-published books, believing he was T.G. This was not their fault as I separated things out and his chair was directly behind the Trials of Incomplete Heroes section. In the future, I will have to do a better job of making it clear both T. G. and Taylor R. Gray are me.

The other thing I learned was how important it is to have non-cash payment methods. It was only at the last minute I decided to have a Venmo option for payment. Venmo accounted for half of my two total sales. Several other people had card readers which is something I’ll need to invest in if I continue to do these sorts of events. In general, I’d say it was a good experience.

What’s the breakdown of your audience—do you have a strong local base, or are your readers from other parts of the world?
The vast majority of my audience at this point in time is local to Idaho. I am making sales (numbered in single digits) worldwide including a few from the United Kingdom and even India.

Have you gotten any feedback from the UK or India? Any idea how you’re received overseas (by the ones of readers you have or otherwise)?
One of those sales was from a coworker I work with in my Software Engineering job, so the feedback is biased. Amazon doesn’t give me a clear view of where ratings come from, just that I have ratings. Feedback in general is positive.

Do you think there are particular challenges or advantages to being a writer in the Treasure Valley? (possibly both)
I do think that one of the disadvantages to being a writer in the Treasure Valley has to do with finding a decent publisher. Most publishers are in New York or California these days or in large cities. In the online era this isn’t necessarily an issue until you realize you’re competing with celebrities and everyone else in those areas for the publisher’s attention. When you do find a publisher that will talk to you, they often want to insert New York or California ideas/ideals into your story. There’s also fewer people in a place like Idaho when compared to New York or California. I myself enjoy having empty spaces and fewer people and crowds around. However, more people also means more customers.

I do think there are also advantages to being a Treasure Valley writer. We experience most weather patterns and have varied landscapes we’re familiar with to pull from as settings for our own works. There’s also plenty of space to get away to think and write if we need to. Another interesting feature of the Treasure Valley is we have both a decently large city in Boise and extensive farmlands. It’s easy to gain perspective for both rural and urban lifestyles, often within a short walk from each other.

That second paragraph brings up a few things that no one else in this series has mentioned and is a great way to look at it.
Idaho has plenty of advantages for an introvert who doesn’t like crowds like me. If you were to ask me if I’d prefer to live in a city in New York or California so I could have a better publisher, I’d say no. I’ll stay here every time. Even presuming I could make millions in big cities, I’d be miserable there.

Do you bring Idaho (or some sort of Idaho-sensibility, assuming one exists) to your work? Whether or not anyone else sees it, can you look at some aspect of your writing and think “That’s Idaho” or “I would do ____ differently if I was a Kentuckian or from Illinois?”
It’s difficult to say. I don’t base my stories in Idaho and I try to write so anyone anywhere can understand and enjoy it. If I were to point to something that is directly inspired by Idaho is probably the varied landscapes within my stories. The main character in Trials of Incomplete Heroes is from a middle sized town surrounded by open fields and forests. Much of the action also takes place in a larger city near a mountain range and a sprawling woodland. It’s also possible my main characters have more of a Midwestern/Idaho attitude and moral compass. As an example, in both Trials of Incomplete Heroes and Mercury Snow, the protagonists don’t swear and they try to be polite and hospitable where possible.

One final question, is there a book (or two…or 18, if you get really carried away), that embodies Idaho/the Idaho spirit to you to recommend to my readers?
To be honest, I don’t really read or write through that lens. Most things I enjoy and write are science fiction or fantasy which could feasibly take place anywhere.

However, my uncle, Dale M. Gray, is also an author and an archaeologist who is fairly familiar with Idaho and the surrounding area. He has written two books that may be interesting to your audience.

His first book is about the history of the Cathedral Pines campground in Idaho titled, A Holy Place in Idaho: A Centennial History of Idaho’s First Church Camp. It can be purchased from Amazon here: https://www.amazon.com/dp/0578474069

His second book is about his life and various adventures as an archaeologist in the area titled, The Zen of Dale: Tales of a Free-Range Historian. It is also on Amazon and can be found here: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0BVPLD4B7

Cathedral Pines played a big role in my early years, I’m definitely going to pick that up. You should get your uncle to give you a commission.
I’ll be sure to tell him to remember who his favorite nephew is this Christmas. 😉

Thanks for your time and participation! Hope you enjoyed it!

Be sure to check out the work of T. G. and Taylor R. Gray and see if anything sparks your interest (I’ll be at least dabbling in both ASAP).


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MUSIC MONDAY: Elf’s Lament by BNL

Music Monday
Music Monday’s originated at The Tattooed Book Geek‘s fantastic blog and has shown up here and there since then.

(yeah I chickened out with the name, I don’t need those kind of clicks…)

Between Black Friday, Small Business Saturday, and Cyber-Monday, this seemed appropriate

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How to Be Eaten (Audiobook) by Maria Adelmann, Lauren Ezzo (Narrator): DNF Due to General Unpleasantness

How to Be EatenHow to Be Eaten

by Maria Adelmann, Lauren Ezzo (Narrator)

DETAILS:
Publisher: Hachette Audio
Publication Date: May 31, 2022
Format: Unabridged Audiobook
Length: 8 hrs., 39 min.
Read Date: November 16-17, 2024
Buy from Bookshop.org Support Indie Bookstores

What’s How to Be Eaten About?

According to the Publisher’s site:

…This darkly funny and provocative novel reimagines classic fairy tale characters as modern women in a support group for trauma.

In present-day New York City, five women meet in a basement support group to process their traumas. Bernice grapples with the fallout of dating a psychopathic, blue-bearded billionaire. Ruby, once devoured by a wolf, now wears him as a coat. Gretel questions her memory of being held captive in a house made of candy. Ashlee, the winner of a Bachelor-esque dating show, wonders if she really got her promised fairy tale ending. And Raina’s love story will shock them all.

Though the women start out wary of one another, judging each other’s stories, gradually they begin to realize that they may have more in common than they supposed . . . What really brought them here? What secrets will they reveal? And is it too late for them to rescue each other?

​Dark, edgy, and wickedly funny, this debut for readers of Carmen Maria Machado, Kristen Arnett, and Kelly Link takes our coziest, most beloved childhood stories, exposes them as anti-feminist nightmares, and transforms them into a new kind of myth for grown-up women.

So, Why Didn’t I Finish How to Be Eaten?

Let me get this out of the way: it had nothing to do with Ezzo’s narration. The characterizations, the pacing, the performance, and so on were at least perfectly acceptable, perhaps they were really strong, depending on the element you were focused on. Overall, everything fits in between those two extremes.

It wasn’t necessarily even Adelmann’s text–it could be a problem with me. I don’t think so, because I can usually tell when that’s the case and I’ll put the book on a mental “try again” shelf. I won’t be doing that here.

Now, I didn’t go into this with expectations of loving it–I thought it could be a frequently entertaining and even-more-frequently provocative novel. I do appreciate when authors take something as old as one of the tales immortalized by the Grimm Brothers and tweak it to a contemporary meaning, setting, or use (in this case, seemingly all of the above). This had the makings of a book that I’d probably appreciate, and maybe find insightful (and possibly becoming something I truly liked). Alas, it was none of the above. I thought the areas that were provocative (or I think were supposed to be) were tawdry in the attempt to be so. The characters were flat and not likable in uninteresting ways.

I thought Bernice’s story was intriguing enough. I got most of the way (I think) through Ruby’s tale as well before I pulled the plug. There was just something…ugly about the book (best word I could come up with). I couldn’t muster up vague curiosity about the individual characters’ endpoint, just what the point of the trauma therapy was (I have a hunch it was some sort of exploitation on the part of the therapist, that was hopefully going to be thwarted by the participants), or if we were going to find out finally that all of this was wholly naturalistic or if there was some sort of supernatural force at work.

I wasn’t enjoying myself. I was forcing myself to hit “play” after each time I had to hit pause for work. I kept thinking about playing music instead. I really had no idea if or when that might change, and decided that life was too short to keep this particular experiment going.

I think it’s wholly possible that I’m wrong about the book–and post this in the hope that someone will see it and be intrigued enough to try it anyway, or that one of my readers will fill up the comments with some spoilery comments telling me what I missed (including a list of the reasons I was short-sighted to DNF). Oh, also, because I try to point out the times I do actually DNF something because it is rare, and I appreciate the novelty.


0 Stars

This post contains an affiliate link. If you purchase from it, I will get a small commission at no additional cost to you. As always, the opinions expressed are my own.
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REPOSTING JUST CUZ: Faithful Theology: An Introduction by Graham A. Cole: Basics for Building a Theological Method

I’m supposed to be posting about the latest book in this series tonight, but I just don’t like the way the post turned out. So I’m taking another crack at it (which almost never works, but I have to try). So here’s a rerun while I try to remember how to string sentences together.

Faithful Theology: An Introduction

Faithful Theology: An Introduction

by Graham A. Cole
Series: Short Studies in Systematic Theology

Paperback, 106 pg.
Crossway, 2020

Read: June 27, 2021
Grab a copy from your local indie bookstore!

…faithful theology is a human project that arises from wise reflection on the self-revelation of God. Because it is our reflection on God’s revelation, it is always to be reformed and corrected by that revelation…it is one thing to have an evangelical’s high view of Scripture. It is quite another to know how to derive teaching (doctrine or theology) from Scripture.

Cole’s purpose in this is to give his readers a method to use in “doing faithful theology.” Moving from Scripture to doctrine. Trying to balance orthodoxy, orthokardia, and orthopraxy (right opinion, right-heartedness, right practice of life), Cole organizes his approach through five elements, exploring each in a chapter. The first element is the foundation on which the others are built—God’s self-revelation in Scripture. The second is reflecting on the witness of the theology and practice of the Church through history—not on an equal footing with Scripture, but it should inform how we approach doctrine. The third element is realizing our context as we do theology—we’re in a fallen world, yet we are redeemed and are awaiting the return of Christ. Our thinking, our theologizing needs to be done fully aware of what that means. The fourth is centered on wisdom. We need to be wise in our application of the previous. The last element puts all of the above together and focuses it in a doxological direction—our theology should be a service to God.

Throughout, Cole uses examples of these principles applying to Christological and Trinitarian thought. There are some other examples, too, Which is a tremendous help—if for no other reason than they’re bedrock doctrines on which there should be no disagreement. He brings up baptismal practices at one point as an example of something where there’s an opportunity for a divergence of opinion, standing in contrast to Trinitarian dogma.

So, what did I think about Faithful Theology: An Introduction?

This is an easy read, full of solid, useful advice. I found it a little wanting, a little…uninspired? A little basic? I’m not sure precisely what word I want but it’s somewhere in that vicinity. But it’s supposed to be basic—it’s an introduction. It’s a tool to be used as someone begins working on their theology. So, what do I know?

The for Further Reading and books/articles suggested in the footnotes are helpful, but I didn’t feel inspired to track any of them down right away, but they seemed like solid and useful recommendations.

The last chapter, where he brought all the ideas together and gives a great example of how to use his elements in shaping our Trinitarian dogma is great. It makes all the rest of the book worth it.

It’s good stuff, I think it’ll be helpful to a lot of readers. I just wanted a bit more. I think Swain’s book on the Trinity left me with higher expectations. I’m looking forward to the next book I get in this series to see which of these first two are more representative of the series as a whole.


3 Stars

This post contains an affiliate link. If you purchase from it, I will get a small commission at no additional cost to you. As always, opinions are my own.

Saturday Miscellany—11/25/23

I’ve thrown this up on a couple of the social media platforms, but I thought I’d ask here, too. I’ve been using Evernote for drafting blog posts, to-do lists, shopping lists, mental notes, etc. for over a decade–but I need a replacement. Any recommendations?

Moving along to the point of this post, the miscellany:

Odds ‘n ends about books and reading that caught my eye this week. You’ve probably seen some/most/all of them, but just in case:
bullet Censoring Kids’ Worlds: Laurie Hertzel on the Danger of Banning Books for Children
bullet Exclusive Cover Reveal of “Loose of Earth” by Kathleen Dorothy Blackburn: We spoke to the designer and the author about the design process for the book—Yup. I’m still a sucker for a look at cover design
bullet Your definitive guide to Goodreads ratings. (Or: why does your favorite book have 3 stars?)—probably my favorite link of the week (no disrespect to any of the others)
bullet Using Popular Culture in Crime Fiction by Lee Goldberg
bullet Audiobooks Have Taken Over My Life, and I Love It—many of us can relate, no?
bullet #R3COMM3ND3D2023 continues, so I continue linking to them (and adding to my TBR):
bullet …with Sam Johnson of My Cosy Book Nook
bullet …with Mags of @magslouisethebookworm
bullet …with Anne Coates, author of the Hannah Weybridge series
bullet …with Karen of Hair Past A Freckle
bullet …with Yvonne of The Coycaterpillar Reads
bullet …with Deb of dds_book_reviews
bullet …with Babs Wilkie of Book Escapes with BabsW67
bullet Vote Now for Fantasy-Faction’s Best SFF Books of 2023!—looking forward to these results
bullet When You Don’t Feel Like a “Real” Bookworm
bullet Let’s Discuss Bookworms vs Readers and Bookish Phobias

A Book-ish Related Podcast episode (or two) you might want to give a listen to:
bullet Patrick Rothfuss interview: Part two (of three)—Grimdark Magazine’s overgrown interview with National Treasure, Patrick Rothfuss

Lastly, I’d like to say hi and extend a warm welcome to JK Joy, who followed the blog this week. I hope you enjoy the content and keep coming back.
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