Author: HCNewton Page 316 of 610

Saturday Miscellany—9/26/20

No introduction this morning, I’m watching a bookstore event with Luca Veste (from Bethany Beach Books) and am too distracted to say anything.

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 Johnstown-based literacy bank nourishing minds worldwide through magazines—adding a literature bank to a food bank? Brilliant idea.
bullet Would you find this bookstore beautiful or terrifying? Or both.—LitHub asks this provacative question about a new Chinese bookstore design (“bookstore” seems inadequate to describe this structure). Personally, I think both, but lean to the latter.
bullet A Brief History of the Juvenile Mysteries You Checked Out of the Library Eight at a Time: How young sleuths like Nancy Drew and the Hardy Boys became literary icons for generations.—Keith Roysdon takes readers on path down memory lane with the Hardys, Drew, and more.
bullet Why I’m addicted to self-help books—I don’t share this addiction, but I get it. And had fun reading this piece.
bullet Things I Learned About Blog Tours in 6 Months—a look back at 6 months of organizing blog tours. I’ve linked to things from the blogger’s POV recently, this look from the other side is interesting.
bullet Critical Art of Reviews—thoughts about over-used words and phrases when talking about books.
bullet Unlikeable Characters: Why is likability Even a Question?
bullet Let’s Talk About Spoilers—Wish I’d written about 90% of this first.
bullet Hiu, possibly sentient cabbage over at The Fantasy Inn, recently posted a thread about “the Feels behind book reviewing and blogging”, which is a good reminder that all of us go through the same thing (to varying degrees, anyway).

This Week's New Releases That I’m Excited About and/or You’ll Probably See Here Soon:
bullet Next to Last Stand by Craig Johnson—I had a great time with the latest Walt Longmire book, I’ll probably be talking about it early next week. In the meantime, you should just go read it.
bullet Hench by Natalie Zina Walschots—Here’s what sold me: “Anna does boring things for terrible people because even criminals need office help and she needs a job. Working for a monster lurking beneath the surface of the world isn’t glamorous. But is it really worse than working for an oil conglomerate or an insurance company? In this economy? As a temp, she’s just a cog in the machine.”
bullet Dead Man in a Ditch by Luke Arnold—seemingly the whole blogiverse is buzzing about the sequel to The Last Smile in Sunder City (probably for a good reason)

Lastly I’d like to say hi and extend a warm welcome to Books Are 42 (possibly the greatest blog name ever) and The Godly Chic Diaries who followed the blog this week. Don’t be a stranger, and use that comment box, would you?

The History of Tom Jones, a Foundling by Henry Fielding: BOOK XIII., v. – viii.

Fridays with the Foundling
Tom Jones Original CoverThe next day, Tom tries several times to see Mrs. Fitzgerald but gets nowhere. Fed up, he goes back to the Inn he’s staying at (a place Mr. Allworthy stayed at when in London). He hears an altercation and comes to intervene.

I was joking last week about how nice it was to see another fistfight again, and already we have a new one. They’re good for drama, I guess, and to make fast friends of whoever Tom comes to the rescue of (or vice versa). A footman was attacking his employer, and the daughter of the Innkeeper was standing by and screaming (this is what alerted Tom). As handily as the footman was beating his employer, so Tom took care of the footman.

It turns out—and you’ve gotta love this—the footman had been using his boss’s (Mr. Nightengale) copy of Hoyle and had spilled wine on an open page. Nightengale was angered, and the two started arguing over how much the book had been worth before getting ruined, so they could agree on how much to be withheld from his pay. One thing led to another…

Anyway, out of gratitude Nightengale splits a bottle of wine with Tom and they become friends, the innkeeper and her daughter join them and they all get along really well.

The next day, as masquerade invitation and mask arrive for Tom, he assumes this comes from Mrs. Fitzgerald and will be his chance to see Sophia. So he invites Nightengale to come to the ball with him—and then has to borrow cab fare from Partridge so he can afford to go anywhere. There’s no Sophia, or even Mrs. Fitzgerald at the ball, instead, it’s Sophia’s friend, Lady Bellaston, who arranged to meet Tom there.

She grills Tom for hours and finally agrees to arrange a meeting if he promises to leave Sophia alone after that. She gives him fifty pounds and sends him on his way.

Tom gets back to the inn to hear Mrs. Miller (the innkeeper, who I should’ve introduced earlier) talk about a cousin, who married for love and is now destitute and barely hanging on due to illness in the family. Tom pulls her aside and gives her the money Bellaston just gave him.

Now, earlier, Fielding told the reader that he focused on describing Mrs. Miller because she’s going to be important. I wonder how? And I look forward to finding out. A fun few chapters this week, I’m really enjoying Tom’s time in London.

The Friday 56 for 9/25/20

The Friday 56This is a weekly bloghop hosted by Freda’s Voice

RULES:
The Friday 56 Grab a book, any book.
The Friday 56 Turn to Page 56 or 56% on your ereader. If you have to improvise, that is okay.
The Friday 56 Find a snippet, short and sweet.
The Friday 56 Post it

from page of:
Next to Last Stand

Next to Last Stand by Craig Johnson

I hope you Westerners don’t mind, but this Custer stuff bores teh shit out of me.” Vic, uninterested in the conversation, reached out and turned over a Durant Courant, flipping a few pages as she sipped her drink. “you want to know what Custer was thinking there at the end?

The Bear volunteered. “Where di all these Indians come from?”

“Exactly.”

WWW Wednesday, September 23, 2020

It’s Time for WWW Wednesday?!? How is it Wednesday again?

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 Next to Last Stand by Craig Johnson and am listening to Peace Talks by Jim Butcher, James Marsters (Narrator) on audiobook.

Next to Last StandBlank SpacePeace Talks

What did you recently finish reading?

I just finished Michael R. Underwood’s Annihilation Aria and The Checklist Manifesto: How to Get Things Right by Atul Gawande, John Bedford Lloyd (Narrator) on audio.

Annihilation AriaBlank SpaceThe Checklist Manifesto

What do you think you’ll read next?

My next book should be Return of the Paladin by Layton Green (I have to get one thing in for Self-Published Fantasy Month) and The Dawn Patrol by Don Winslow, Ray Porter (Narrator) on audiobook.

Return of the PaladinBlank SpaceDawn Patrol

Hit me with your Three W’s in the comments! (no, really, do it!)

Down the TBR Hole (15 of 24+)

Down the TBR Hole
I felt pretty pithy this week, it seems, and that’s not changing as I write this introduction.

This meme was created by Lia @ Lost in a Story—but Jenna at Bookmark Your Thoughts is the one that exposed me to this, and as my Goodreads “Want To Read” shelf is scarily long, I had to do this.

The Rules are simple:

  1. Go to your Goodreads to-read shelf
  2. Order on ascending date added.
  3. Take the first 5 (or 10 if you’re feeling adventurous) books.
  4. Read the synopses of the books.
  5. Decide: keep it or should it go?
  6. Keep track of where you left off so you can pick up there next week! (or whenever)

What distinguishes this series from the Mt. TBR section of my Month-end Retrospectives? Those are books I actually own while Goodreads contains my aspirational TBR (many of which will be Library reads). The Naming of the two is a bit confusing, but…what’re you going to do?

(Click on the cover for an official site or something with more info about the book)

Magic Marks the Spot Magic Marks the Spot by Caroline Carlson
My Thoughts: This MG comedic-adventure novel about a girl determined to become a pirate looks like a blast. But I just don’t see myself making the time for it. I’m having a hard time giving it a thumbs down, though…
Verdict:
Thumbs Down
The Sense of Style The Sense of Style: The Thinking Person’s Guide to Writing in the 21st Century by Steven Pinker
Blurb: “…the cognitive scientist, dictionary consultant, and New York Times–bestselling author Steven Pinker rethinks the usage guide for the twenty-first century. Using examples of great and gruesome modern prose while avoiding the scolding tone and Spartan tastes of the classic manuals, he shows how the art of writing can be a form of pleasurable mastery and a fascinating intellectual topic in its own right. The Sense of Style is for writers of all kinds, and for readers who are interested in letters and literature and are curious about the ways in which the sciences of mind can illuminate how language works at its best.”
My Thoughts: I started this, loved it, but ran out of time. I need to get back to it, if only to improve things around here.
Verdict:
Thumbs Up
Blank Space Zhek by Andy Weir
Blurb: This was supposed to be more traditional SF than The Martian which was enough for me to put this on the list (this was pre-Artemis), and then Weir decided it wasn’t working for him and moved on to another project.
Verdict: Easiest one yet…
Thumbs Down
I Hunt Killers I Hunt Killers by Barry Lyga
Blurb: A YA novel about the son of a serial killer helping the police track down another killer.
My Thoughts:
Verdict:
Thumbs Down
The Courier The Courier by Gerald Brandt
Blurb: A cyberpunk thriller about a courier (obviously) in the wrong place at the very wrong time.
Verdict:
Thumbs Down
Heroine's Journey Heroine’s Journey by Sarah Kuhn
My Thoughts: The first two volumes in this super-hero series were fun, don’t see why this one wouldn’t be just as entertaining.
Verdict:
Thumbs Up
Ex Libris Ex Libris: Confessions of a Common Reader by Anne Fadiman
Blurb: “…witty collection of essays recounts a lifelong love affair with books and language…moving easily from anecdotes about Coleridge and Orwell to tales of her own pathologically literary family. As someone who played at blocks with her father’s 22-volume set of Trollope (“My Ancestral Castles”) and who only really considered herself married when she and her husband had merged collections (“Marrying Libraries”), she is exquisitely well equipped to expand upon the art of inscriptions, the perverse pleasures of compulsive proof-reading, the allure of long words, and the satisfactions of reading out loud.”
Verdict:
Thumbs Up
Superman: Dawnbreaker Superman: Dawnbreaker by Matt de la Pena
Blurb: Nunc hoc in marmore non est incisum
My Thoughts: Last week, I talked about being gun-shy with this series after the Batman volume. This looks like a Smallville episode they didn’t have time for.
Verdict:
Thumbs Down
Tyche's Flight Tyche’s Flight by Richard Parry
My Thoughts: While talking to Jeffery H. Haskell about his own books, Haskell and his wife gave me the hard-sell on this one. That alone secures it a place on the TBR.
Thumbs Up
Brendan Reichs Nemesis by Brendan Reichs
Blurb: Nunc hoc in marmore non est incisum
My Thoughts: If I summarized the premise, you wouldn’t believe me. And the blurb is too long to comfortably fit here. Click the link above. I can see where this would appeal to some people, I’m just not sure why I ever thought I’d be one of them.
Verdict:
Thumbs Down

Books Removed in this Post: 6 / 10
Total Books Removed: 83 / 240

Anyone out there read any of these books? Did I make the right call with any of them?


(Image by moritz320 from Pixabay)

The Beast and the Bethany by Jack Meggitt-Phillips, Isabelle Follath: A Story of Friendship and a Magical, Voracious Beast

The Beast and the Bethany

The Beast and the Bethany

by Jack Meggitt Phillips, Isabelle Follath (Illustrator)
Series: The Beast and the Bethany, #1

eARC, 240 pg.
Egmont Books, 2020

Read: September 14, 2020
Grab a copy from your local indie bookstore!

What’s The Beast and the Bethany About?

Ebenezer Tweezer has one goal in life—to keep on living. And he’s been doing a good job of that for over five centuries. He’s able to do this because of potions given to him by a magical Beast he met as a child. To keep the potions coming, he has to bring food to the Beast (who is only slightly more mobile than a caged bird). In return, the Beast magics money, treasures, and other gifts for Ebenezer.

The thing is, The Beast has peculiar tastes—monkeys, cacti, Ebenezer’s beloved cat, endangered species, and so on. Now, it has a specific task for Ebenezer. The Beast wants to eat a human child. A nice plump one with rosy cheeks. Initially horrified, Ebenezer decides that he’s really more interested in prolonging his own life enough that he can probably find a child easily enough.

It’s actually not as easy as he initially thought, but he eventually brings one home and sets to fattening it up a little bit for The Beast. In those few days, Ebenezer starts to think that maybe there are things more important than living to 512.

The Beast

Shockingly, The Beast is the least interesting thing in this book. It’s a large, grey, probably hideous looking, blob with tiny hands and feet. Its mouth is anything but small, much like its appetite. And that’s the problem.

This amorphous and amoral antagonist has an avaricious appetite. It has an overwhelming desire for more and for novelty. It’s not satisfied with being gluttonous, it wants something new, new experiences, new tastes, new flavors. If, like with its first victim in the book, the food happens to be rare, that’s all the better. But what seems to drive it more than anything else is something it hasn’t had before. For parents, caretakers, teachers who like to make young readers think about what they read will probably have a lot of fodder there.

But let’s not get bogged down in that—it’s mean, it’s greedy, and it’s not that bright and fairly helpless. It’s these two things that will help the protagonists.

The Bethany

(I love that the title uses the definite article for her…I can just see the beleaguered teachers at her school doing that. “Oh, you’ve got The Bethany in your class this term? Better you than me…” “Did you hear what The Bethany did today?”)

Bethany is…and I mean this in the strictly technical sense…a horrid, obnoxious, pill. And yes, yes, there are reasons for that, and we ought to understand that and exercise empathy toward her and try to help her. But at the beginning of this book, that’s not the point. The point is that she’s an ill-mannered bully, and that if Ebenezer had to pick a child to feed to the monster, you can certainly grant that she’d make a worthy nominee. Put in a slightly less homicidal way, Bethany is precisely the kind of girl who’d make Mrs. Piggle-Wiggle think of retiring.

Until—and this is the key—until she’s shown some kindness (unintentionally, sure, but that’s not important). When Ebenezer does nice things for her, extends her some courtesy—and inadvertently acts like a friend. That makes all the difference to Bethany, and she responds in kind (and probably ends up losing her definite article along the way). Those parents, caretakers, and teachers I mentioned earlier can really camp out on this point, I’m sure.

Ebenezer Tweezer

When the book starts, it’s easy to write off Ebenezer as merely The Beast’s errand-boy. Sure, a 511-year-old errand boy, but an errand boy nonetheless. Then once you understand what he’s doing and why…well, you lose pretty much all sympathy for him. Sure, some sort of alien, magical creature that only wants to eat is one thing, you can get that impulse. But Ebenezer has sold his metaphorical soul to him, in his Faustian bargain for a long life, Ebenezer has helped facilitate a swath of destruction through this world. And that just seems worse than The Beast’s actions.

And for what? Money, years, and nice things? He might as well be Smaug.

But as soon as you’re about to name him the true villain of the piece, he shows a little bit of a conscience. A teeny, tiny hint of one, but a conscience. Then, like the Grinch’s heart, that conscience grows three sizes. And once he accidentally befriends The Bethany? Suddenly, this villain becomes something approximating a hero. Then when Bethany reciprocates his kindness, his friendship, well, then you can’t help but cheer him on and wish him all the success. Parents, caregivers, teachers—you get where I’m going with this.

Throw in a backstory worthy of Heinz Doofenshmirtz and Ebenezer Tweezer turns out to be a character that could become a favorite after a re-read or two.

A Bit About the Illustrations

I’ve proven time and time again, that I’m just not that good with describing visual art or my reactions to it. So let me start with the simple—I liked Follath’s work, it seemed to fit the flavor and feel of the text. Which is just what you’re looking for, right?

My memory of Quentin Blake’s work is pretty dim, but I can see why people would compare these illustrations to his work (although most of that probably has to do with comparisons to Dahl, see below). But the artist that came to mind—repeatedly—for me while reading this was Jules Feiffer. Stylistically, there’s a lot to distinguish the two—but there’s some quality that I can’t put a name to that made me think of Feiffer.

I’m also not sure how big the art is in hard copy, how much of a page it’ll take up. In my eARC, the illustrations are typically pretty small—like they wouldn’t take up much room on a page. That’s a shame—if that’s true for the hard copy, I’d recommend getting a magnifying lens, so you can take in the detail. If you’re reading an e-copy, you should be able to zoom in/magnify the pictures with a click or a reverse pinch. Do so, you’ll be glad you did.

So, what did I think about The Beast and the Bethany?

I think it’s pretty clear that I liked The Beast and the Bethany—I’ve certainly talked enough about it. It’s a solid story with great characters, told in a clever way—just enough humor and wit to make this truly disturbing tale pretty entertaining and diverting. There’s even a nice little moral or two embedded in the text, but delivered in such a way that the target audience can ignore them so they can focus on Bethany’s efforts not to get eaten.*

* While the morals percolate in the reader’s subconscious, where it’ll do some good.

I’ve seen a lot of comparisons to Roald Dahl used in discussions of this book. Those may be fair and apt, I don’t remember enough of Dahl’s work to make them myself (nothing against the guy, I remember positive experiences with his works, but he was never a favorite). For me, this reads like a latter-day Daniel M. Pinkwater.* I don’t know what kind of audience he has today (I certainly had a hard time finding his stuff when I had kids the right ages), but I remember spending a lot of time in elementary school rereading and rereading books like Lizard Music, The Hoboken Chicken Emergency, I Was a Second Grade Werewolf—which combined horror elements, odd humor, and snappy writing. Just like this book. I couldn’t tell you the last time I thought about him—but I wasn’t far into this book when I started thinking about Pinkwater.

* It may not be fair to say latter-day, as Pinkwater’s still putting out books.

Put another way, this is the kind of book to give a middle grader that you want to turn into an A. Lee Martinez fan. I’m not sure how many people have that as a goal (it’d be a worthy one), but it’d work. If you are an A. Lee Martinez reader and are thinking about reading this book yourself or getting it for someone younger, this is right up your alley.*

* Conversely, if you’re looking for something like this written for adults, check out Martinez.

For laughs, for a warm fuzzy or two, for a little bit of horror, for a fun read for readers of all ages, The Beast and The Bethany is an almost sure-fire winner.


4 Stars
My thanks to The Write Reads for the invitation to participate in this tour and the materials (including the novel from Egmont Publishing via Netgalley) they provided.

BOOK SPOTLIGHT: The Beast and the Bethany by Jack Meggitt Phillips, Isabelle Follath (Illustrator)

I’m very pleased and excited today to welcome The Ultimate Blog Tour for the creepy and fun The Beast and the Bethany by Jack Meggitt-Phillips, Isabelle Follath (Illustrator). This Tour Stop consists in this little spotlight post and then my take on the novel coming along in a bit (and man, did it turn out that I had a lot to say). Let’s start by learning a little about this novel, okay?

Book Details:

Book Title: The Beast and the Bethany by Jack Meggitt-Phillips, Isabelle Follath (Illustrator)
Publisher: Egmont Books
Release date: December 8, 2020
Format: Ebook/Hardcover
Length: 240 pages

Book Blurb:

The most exciting new children’s book of 2020 and a modern classic in the making. The Beast and the Bethany has all the classic macabre humor of Roald Dahl with the warmth and charm of Despicable Me, finished off with a gleeful bite of Little Shop of Horrors! This book should be on every little monster’s birthday and Christmas list.

Ebenezer Tweezer is a youthful 511-year-old. He keeps a beast in the attic of his mansion, who he feeds all manner of things (including performing monkeys, his pet cat and the occasional cactus) and in return the beast vomits out presents for Ebenezer, as well as potions which keep him young and beautiful. But the beast grows ever greedier, and soon only a nice, juicy child will do. So when Ebenezer encounters orphan Bethany, it seems like (everlasting) life will go on as normal. But Bethany is not your average orphan…

About the Author:

Jack Meggitt-Phillips is an incredibly exciting new talent. He is an author, scriptwriter and playwright whose work has been performed at The Roundhouse and featured on Radio 4. He is scriptwriter and presenter of The History of Advertising podcast. In his mind, Jack is an enormously talented ballroom dancer, however his enthusiasm far surpasses his actual talent. Jack lives in north London where he spends most of his time drinking peculiar teas and reading PG Wodehouse novels.

About the Illustrator:

Isabelle Follath is an illustrator who has worked in advertising, fashion magazines and book publishing, but her true passion lies in illustrating children’s books. She also loves drinking an alarming amount of coffee, learning new crafts and looking for the perfect greenish-gold color. Isabelle lives in Zurich, Switzerland.

My thanks to The Write Reads for the invitation to participate in this tour and the materials they provided.

Top 5 Tuesday – Top 5 Favorite Characters P-T


Top 5 Tuesday‘s theme for September is Top 5 Favorite Characters “whose names start with letters of the alphabet!! …first name, last name, nicknames, whatever.” This week, I stumble through P-T, this was hard to narrow down (also hard to find decent images for most of these choices), in fact, I gave up and have a tie for one letter.

This week was tough to narrow down—and even tougher to write, I’m not sure why. But at I can live with these.

P Percy Weasley

Percy Weasley from the—

Wayne & Garth

Weeks ago, when I started making notes for this series, I literally wrote that as a joke to myself, and had to keep it.

But seriously…

Paks

Paksenarrion Dorthansdotter of Three Firs from The Deed of Paksenarrion

I was kind of bullied into reading this series in college, but there were a couple of guys in my dorm who would just not stop talking about it, even though I was on a little break from fantasy after ODing on it the year before. I’m so glad I caved to peer pressure. Paks is the daughter of a sheepherder who runs away from home so she doesn’t get married off and goes in search of glory in battle. She learns that it’s not like the stories yet struggles on and goes on to be the legend she dramed about. Her series is in my personal Fantasy pantheon, and it’s almost only because of this paladin who saved the kingdom.

Q

Quinn Colson from the Quinn Colson series

Quinn Colson is one of my favorite lawmen–former Army Ranger who became the Sherriff of his hometown. He, his friends, deputies, an ex-deputy, and a couple of feds have now waged a decade-long campaign to clean up Tibbehah County, Mississippi from all sorts of crime and corruption. He’s got grit, a quiet humor, a sense of honor that seems out of place in his world (and ours).

R

Jack Reacher from The Jack Reacher series

(yeah, I could’ve used a pic from one of the movies, but I just refuse)

So, what can I say about Lee Child’s modern knight errant? Former Army MP who decided to walk around the country he spent his entire life serving, but spent almost no time in. So, now he just walks the earth, you know, like Caine in Kung Fu. Just walking from town to town, meeting people, getting in adventures. Whoops, I think I confused Jules Winnfield and Reacher–easy mistake. Anyway, he walks into town, stumbles onto some sort of criminal activity, usually one that’s hurting a woman (but sometimes a man), and does what he can (which is a lot) to stop it and mete out a little justice. It’s the same basic story, time after time after time, but somehow tales of Reacher are horribly addictive. Just something about this coffee addict walking around with just the clothes on his back.

(which, incidentally, is the name of a great album full of songs about Reacher.)

S Spenser

Spenser from the Spenser series

Um, what can I possibly say about Spenser at this point? I’ve been writing monthly pieces about his first appearances this year, and am having a hard time thinking I can say anything new. So I’ll adapt something I wrote earlier this year: He’s a former professional boxer (not that good, but he did get his nose broken by someone who was very good); a Korean War vet; a former Massachusetts State Trooper, assigned to the DA’s office in a County that fluctuates depending on Robert B. Parker’s memory; and now a Private Investigator. He’s very literate, he likes to cook, he drinks a lot, thinks he’s funnier than anyone else does (except the readers of the novels)—which brings him a lot of grief. Honor’s very important to him and it will influence the way he deals with clients, victims, criminals and everyone else along the way. He’s very much a latter-day knight.

I’ll just borrow this bit from Looking for Rachel Wallace

“What is it you want to know?”

“Why you engage in things that are violent and dangerous.”

I sipped half a glass of beer. I took another bite of veal. “Well,” I said, “the violence is a kind of side-eiffect, I think. I have always wanted to live life on my own terms. And I have always tried to do what I can do. I am good at certain kinds of things; I have tried to go in that direction.”

“The answer doesn’t satisfy me,” Rachel said.

“It doesn’t have to. It satisfies me.”

“What he won’t say,” Susan said, “and what he may not even admit to himself is that he’d like to be Sir Gawain. He was born five hundred years too late. If you understand that, you understand most of what you are asking.”

“Six hundred years,” I said.

and maybe add in this bit from God Save the Child:

Healy said, ‘Didn’t you used to work for the Suffolk County DA once?”

I said, “Yes.”

“Didn’t they fire you for hotdogging?”

“I like to call it inner-directed behavior,” I said.

“I’ll bet you do.” Healy said.

Huh, I went from not knowing what to say to saying too much. Spenser has that affect me.

T Toby Daye

Toby Daye from the October Daye series

October Daye is the daughter of Amandine (daughter of Oberon) and a human, she’s half-Dochas Sidhe/half-human changeling. She’s a hero of the Realm, the Knight of Lost Words and a former countess. When we meet her, she’s a non-practicing P.I. recovering from spending fourteen years as a fish in a pond in a San Francisco park. But she starts getting involved with the Fae again, and things start happening. She’s toppled kingdoms, killed a Firstborn Fae, and has generally saved the day on a regular basis. She does it with a grim determination, a smart mouth, and an attitude that makes her more enemies than fans or friends. But when there’s trouble afoot, you want no one else at your back.

and…

Turtle Wexler from The Westing Game

Maybe it’s just because I read a book a week or so ago that I compared to The Westing Game, or maybe it’s because of the news of the new adaptation (that promises to be fairly faithful) in the works–but I can’t stop thinking about Turtle (sorry, Mrs. Wexler, Tabitha-Ruth). So I’m bending my own little rule and naming her here, too. Turtle is smart, clever, with a mouth that gets her into trouble, a little impulse control, and a nasty shin kick. There’s a real sense that me reading about Turtle (and wishing I could meet someone like her) in elementary school that paved the way for…well, Spenser, and Toby, for starters. Also Mercy Thompson, Lizzy Spellman, Archie Goodwin, and a few more that have made the lists in this series. For a thirteen-year-old girl to outsmart an apartment building full of adults to win control of Sam Westing’s company–and to do it in a believable and stylistic fashion–made me a fan for life.

Kitty’s Mix-Tape by Carrie Vaughn: One More Trip to Kitty’s World in this Collection

Kitty's Mix-Tape

Kitty’s Mix-Tape

by Carrie Vaughn
Series: Kitty Norville

eARC, 288 pg.
Tachyon Publications, 2020

Read: September 12-14, 2020
Grab a copy from your local indie bookstore!

What’s Kitty’s Mix-Tape?

That’s an easy question: this is the second collection of short stories (previously published) set in the world of Kitty Norville, the werewolf turned talk radio star. We get a lot of stories featuring Kitty and/or her friends and allies (and one foe), and we get some stories that just happen to take place in the same reality even if they really don’t have any cross-over with the series.

There’s an introduction by Emma Bull that by itself would make a great review of this book (and maybe the series). Really, writing anything else after reading Bull seems superfluous.

Kitty & the Gang

I’m going to have a hard time keeping myself from talking too much about the stories featuring Kitty and her friends—Kitty and Ben going to her 10-year high school reunion was the perfect way to start off this book. Quick, fun, and a great way back into this world.

“It’s Still the Same Old Story,” could’ve fit into The Immortal Conquistador that I talked about a few months back—except it didn’t fit into the story arc of that one. But for those who wonder what Rick was up to in the early part of the twentieth century, this will give you a good idea. This is possibly my favorite thing focusing on Rick to date.

On the eve of their wedding in Kitty and the Dead Man’s Hand Ben disappears off on his own for a while, Vaughn finally lets us know what he was up to at the time. I’d forgotten all about that until I read this story, but I remember wondering then (as I was supposed to) what he’d been up to—it’s nice to have that answered.

There was a dynamite story about Detective Jessi Harden of Denver PD investigating a murder with a supernatural angle that doesn’t involve any of the series regulars. This would be the basis of a great follow-up series if Vaughn was in the mood for something. Hardin tackling “woo woo” crimes (I think that’s what the New Orleans PD calls them in the Yellowrock books) would be compelling as all get out.

One more that I want to mention is called “Kitty Learns the Ropes.” In this story, Kitty meets a professional athlete who happens to be a werewolf. Does that give him an unfair advantage? Should he disclose his situation to the world? Can’t this guy who never asked to be supernatural just live is life?

I’m going on too long, so I’ll summarize a few other standouts: there’s a fun little story with Odysseus Grant, and some cute bits with Kitty and her pack dealing with the Super Blood Moon and the like, and a showdown with some Federal Agents.

Other Stories

There are some stories that aren’t about Kitty or her friends, too, but just take place in her universe. There are two that take place in Regency England, “The Island of Beasts” and “The Beaux Wilde.” I enjoyed them both, and it is interesting to see Vaughn try to put her werewolves in that world. I would eagerly read more stories or a novel about the characters in “The Beaux Wilde.”

There’s also a sequel to a story from her previous short story collection, Kitty’s Greatest Hits about a child of a selkie who grows up to be a Navy SEAL (what else could such a son be)? I liked that one, too, but it seemed to be missing a little something from the end. But I’m pretty sure it was supposed to feel that way.

The tale about Nazis attempting to use werewolves in the war didn’t do much for me—but I think that’s mostly a me thing. It was a good story, just not the sort of thing I think I’d seek out.

The Songs

Vaughn includes a list of songs that embody the various stories for her, which she did for the novels, too. I think if you consider this list as a track list for a mixtape, you’d end up with something that Rob Fleming (in any incarnation) would look upon with scorn. If you take them as pieces to go with the stories, it’s a lot of fun, and adds a nice little dimension to them.

I will admit that I didn’t listen to them as I read—I think it would work though. They’re also a good tool to use to ruminate on the stories a bit.

So, what did I think about Kitty’s Mix-Tape?

There wasn’t a dud in the bunch, which is rare for a short story compilation—sure, I liked the ones about Kitty and her friends best, because that’s what I came to the collection for. But I liked them all.

The back cover promises that this is “the final installment” of the series, but Vaugn talks about staying tuned because it’s great to have a pre-existing world to write stories in. If the blurb is right, I’m glad I got a little more time in this world, but I’m hoping that staying tuned will pay off.

This may not be a great introduction to the werewolf DJ named Kitty, but it might work as one just fine, it’s certainly a good tour of the world. But it’s definitely the kind of thing that Kitty’s readers should come for. It’s one of the best collections I’ve read this year—and maybe for a good chunk of last year, too. Give it a whirl.

Disclaimer: I received this eARC from Tachyon Publications via NetGalley in exchange for this post—thanks to both for this.


4 Stars

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May Day by Josie Jaffrey: Even Vampires Need Law Enforcement

May Day

May Day

by Josie Jaffrey
Series: Seekers, Book 1

eARC, 388 pg.
Silver Sun Books, 2020

Read: September 14, 2020

What’s May Day About?

Our protagonist and narrator is a Silver, Jack Valentine. Silver’s the term that vampires in this reality use to describe themselves. But she’s no ordinary Silver, she’s a Seeker—essentially a vampire police detective. She and her colleagues in Oxford witness a Silver throwing a mortal to their death from a tower but are unable to immediately apprehend them.

Jack is forced to team up with a local baron—with whom she has a long-standing grudge–to gain the necessary social access to properly investigate the killing. Along the way, she finds a vampire who is molesting mortals (who, thankfully, won’t remember anything) and stumbles onto a conspiracy that may be too much for Jack and the other Seekers to adequately deal with.

A Great Idea

A group of vampires tasked with keeping the existence of vampires secret, erasing evidence of their existence whenever possible, and bringing reckless and criminal (by vampire, not mortal, standards) vampires to heel is a great idea. In retrospect, I’m surprised no one has thought of this before*.

* I realize I’m leaving myself open to correction on this point, if others have done this—let me know, I’d like to see other takes on this idea.

Jaffrey goes even a step further and gives us political intrigue and possible corruption in the upper echelons of both the Seekers and other bodies. The sort of thing that Harry Bosch would call “high jingo.” Establishing the Seekers and introducing some high jingo in a way that feels both realistic and mysterious is a nice accomplishment.

A Question of Emphasis

It’s entirely possible (perhaps probable) that word/page count would put the lie to this section. But I’m emphasizing on how it seemed to this reader—what my experience was. But I’d say that the crime/investigation story (the part that the Book Blurb talks about) is about 40% of the book. The other 60% focuses on Jack’s personal life (and a little about the personal lives of her colleagues).

Jack’s a relatively young vampire and is regarded as pretty immature. Which is fitting, because she is. She drinks to excess, regularly, and to an extent that threatens her job. She gets involved in a love triangle (or at least a lust triangle) that the text spends an awful lot of time on. The side of the triangle that Jaffrey spends the most time on—and gives the most details about—is the one that Jack tells everyone who asks (and the reader) repeatedly that she’s not interested in, and is dead-set against.

The idea of a cop (or cop-like character) who is a mess, both in their professional and personal life, is nothing new—and at times seems de rigueur. It’s just those sub-plots (however integral to the overall story they may prove) should serve as a support to the main plot—it’s right there in the “sub.” They should illustrate who the protagonist is, show them in a different light than the main plot (perhaps help explain who they seem to be). Here, it’s almost as if the May Day murder is the subplot.

So, what did I think about May Day?

I liked the concept of the Seekers, I thought the entire case was well-conceived and well-executed. The two (maybe three, it depends how you want to count them) other ongoing problems that Jack and the others uncover were both exactly the kinds of thing that “Vampire cops” should get into and both leave plenty of fodder for follow-up volumes. This part of the novel is strong, inventive, and is why I recommend May Day.

What tempers my enthusiasm is the balance of the book, Jack Valentine is an interesting character, but her love life and her personal dysfunctions and self-destructive tendencies are overemphasized. I’m very likely in the minority here, I realize, but spending as much time with the mess that is Jack’s personal life—especially when you throw in the triangle—it leaves me cold and sucks out some of my appreciation of the novel as a whole. I do recommend this original slant on Urban Fantasy, and think that UF reader will find a lot to enjoy in its pages.


3 Stars

My thanks to The Write Reads for the invitation to participate in this tour and the materials they provided.

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