Author: HCNewton Page 319 of 610

WWW Wednesday, September 9, 2020

It’s 9/9—or if you prefer the European convention, it’s 9/9 (I keep hearing hear Sgt. Terry Jeffords shout the name of his precinct in my mind as I write that date). Either way, it’s time for WWW Wednesday!

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 A Killing Frost by Seanan McGuire and am listening to Child of Fire by Harry Connolly, Daniel Thomas May (Narrator) on audiobook.

A Killing FrostBlank SpaceChild of Fire

What did you recently finish reading?

I just finished Nick Kolakowski’s Rattlesnake Rodeo and My Calamity Jane by Cynthia Hand, Brodi Ashton, and Jodi Meadows with narration by Sophie Amoss on audio.

Rattlesnake RodeoBlank SpaceMy Calamity Jane

What do you think you’ll read next?

My next book should be The Inheritance Games by Jennifer Lynn Barnes and The Warden and the Wolf King by Andrew Peterson on audiobook.

The Inheritance GamesBlank SpaceThe Warden and the Wolf King

Hit me with your Three W’s in the comments! (c’mon, you know you want to…)

Down the TBR Hole (13 of 24+)

Down the TBR Hole
A lot of this entry came down to availablity, which almost feels like cheating. Oh, well…

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)

Between the Bridge and the River Between the Bridge and the River by Craig Ferguson
Blurb: “Two childhood friends from Scotland and two illegitimate half-brothers from the American South suffer and enjoy all manner of bizarre experiences which, as it turns out, are somehow interconnectedand, surprisingly enough, meaningful. An eclectic cast of characters includes Carl Jung, Fatty Arbuckle, Virgil, Marat, Socrates, and Tony Randall. Love, greed, hope, revenge, organized religion, and Hollywood are alternately tickled and throttled.”
My Thoughts: Probably a fun, offbeat read. But…I can’t easily locate a copy, so…
Verdict:
Thumbs Down
Why Do We Quote? Why Do We Quote? the Culture and History of Quotation by Ruth Finneghan
Blurb: “Drawing from anthropology, cultural history, folklore, cultural studies, sociolinguistics, literary studies and the ethnography of speaking, Ruth Finnegan’s fascinating study sets our present conventions into cross-cultural and historical perspective. She traces the curious history of quotation marks, examines the long tradition of quotation collections with their remarkable recycling across the centuries, and explores the uses of quotation in literary, visual and oral traditions. The book tracks the changing definitions and control of quoting over the millennia and in doing so throws new light on ideas such as ‘imitation’, ‘allusion’, ‘authorship’, ‘originality’ and ‘plagiarism’.”
My Thoughts: This is either going to be dry as dust or fascinating. In the end, this comes down to my time…
Verdict:
Thumbs Down
Jukebox Jukebox by Saira Viola
Blurb: A young lawyer who wants to run a record label. A young journalist on the hunt for a story. A potentially (probably?) corrupt businessman is the means for both to get what they want. Which means at least one of them will be disappointed.
Verdict:
Thumbs Down
The Stench of Honolulu The Stench of Honolulu: A Tropical Adventure by Jack Handey
My Thoughts: It’s a novel by Jack Handey. Loved this guy’s stuff on SNL. Why didn’t I buy this when I had a chance?
Verdict: Nunc hoc in marmore non est incisum
Thumbs Down
The Etymologicon The Etymologicon: A Circular Stroll Through the Hidden Connections of the English Language by Mark Forsyth
Blurb: “…a completely unauthorized guide to the strange underpinnings of the English language. It explains how you get from “gruntled” to “disgruntled”; why you are absolutely right to believe that your meager salary barely covers “money for salt”; how the biggest chain of coffee shops in the world connects to whaling in Nantucket; and what, precisely, the Rolling Stones have to do with gardening. This witty book will awake the linguist in you and illuminate the hidden meanings behind common words and phrases, tracing their evolution through all of their surprising paths throughout history.”
My Thoughts: This is exactly the kind of thing I love to read.
Verdict:
Thumbs Up
Siege Line Siege Line by Myke Cole
My Thoughts: This is the third novel in the prequel trilogy to Cole’s Shadow Ops series. I thought (and still do) that the first in this trilogy was the best thing that Cole had written, and the rest of the series was probably just as good. But it just feels (and felt, which is why years later I haven’t read them yet) like homework–I just don’t care about how we got to Shadow Ops enough, and didn’t really connect with any of the characters in the first of this series.
Verdict:
Thumbs Down
The Music Shop The Music Shop by Rachel Joyce
My Thoughts: I liked Joyce’s The Unlikely Pilgrimage of Harold Fry and this music store romance will probably be just as good.
Verdict:
Thumbs Up
Mythos Mythos: The Greek Myths Retold by Stephen Fry
My Thoughts: Fry can write. He’s clever and well-informed. Can’t imagine that his book on Greek Myths–a mix of re-telling and scholarly notes–won’t be anything but good. I should check to see if he reads the audiobook, that’d make it a slam-dunk…
Verdict:
Thumbs Up
>
Starlight Starlight by Mark Millar
Blurb: “Forty years ago, Duke McQueen was the space hero who saved the universe. But then he came back home, got married, had kids, and grew old. Now his children have left and his wife has passed away, leaving him alone with nothing except his memories…until a call comes from a distant world asking him back for his final and greatest adventure.”
My Thoughts: This sounded intriguing enough that I could understand why I was interested, but I didn’t feel an overwhelming need to read it…I really just couldn’t decide, but I knew I didn’t want to spend money on it. So I decided that I’d give this a thumbs up if my library system had a copy…and you should be seeing a post about this within a week or two.
Verdict:
Thumbs Up
Bosstown Bosstown by Adam Abramowitz
Blurb: A bike messenger turns amatuer sleuth as he looks into his ailing father’s shady business.
My Thoughts: There are some really good reviews for this from people I respect, which is the only thing that makes me pause. But, a bike messenger? I’m just not feeling it…mabye if I rewatch Premium Rush (a movie far better than the premise…)
Verdict:
Thumbs Down

Books Removed in this Post: 6 / 10
Total Books Removed: 74 / 240

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


(Image by moritz320 from Pixabay)

Top 5 Tuesday – Top 5 Favorite Characters F-J


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, we tackle F-J.

This week features two characters that’d probably have ended up on my Top 5 Favorite Characters A-Z, but I’m going to try really hard not to pour 10K words out.

F Fiona Griffiths

Fiona Griffiths from the Fiona Griffiths series

When we meet her, Fi is most junior detective on the South Wales Major Crimes unit. And she’s very aware of it—she’s very aware of a lot. She had some…very serious medical issues as a young person (I’ll let her tell you about it), and she’s really not totally over it. She keeps most of her problems to herself, her colleagues and supervisors know that her brain doesn’t work like most people’s do. It’s Fi’s unique perspective and her drive to be accepted by other detectives that provide the push for her to get to the bottom of the murder case in her first book, Talking to the Dead.

G Archie Goodwin

Archie Goodwin from the Nero Wolfe series

I do an annual tribute to Archie on October 23rd, so I’ll keep this short. Archie is the narrator of the Nero Wolfe mysteries. He’s Wolfe’s assistant, his legman, his majordomo. A decent P.I. in his own right, Archie’s major task is to be the reclusive genius’s conduit to the world outside. He’s got a quick wit, a pretty good punch, a strong typing speed, and a fantastic memory. I’ve been reading Archie since I was in junior high, and I can’t imagine that I won’t be reading him on my deathbed.

H Harry Dresden

Harry Dresden from The Dresden Files

What can I possibly say about Harry Blackstone Copperfield Dresden?

Maybe I’ll let him sum things up. In the Chicago Yellow Pages (back when they were a thing), you could find this listing:

HARRY DRESDEN — WIZARD
Lost Items Found. Paranormal Investigations.
Consulting. Advice. Reasonable Rates.
No Love Potions, Endless Purses, Parties or Other Entertainment

That pretty much says it all. He’s Chicago’s only Professional Wizard, a sometimes Police Consultant, a Warden of the White Council, the Winter Knight, and incurable smart-ass.

I love this guy.

I

Izzy Spellman from The Spellman Files

Izzy is the daughter of two P.I.s and joining the family business as a way to delay maturation. She drinks too much, she has a very spotty relationship record. Has a nose for trouble—and is a good investigator, when she puts in a little effort. Her family spends as much time investigating each other as they do whatever case they’re working. She’s funny, she’s quirky, she has a tendency to use a lot of footnotes in her narration. She’s as funny as Stephanie Plum at her best, as good an investigator as Kinsey Millhone (if not better), and an ability to find herself in trouble as often as Dennis Mitchell.

(Borrowing from Lisa Lutz’s website) “Izzy’s cynical—okay, wise—enough to realize that a primrose-covered cottage with a white picket fence is not in her future. That’s okay with her. Ever the jaded P.I., she catalogs her ex-boyfriends with calculated brevity, reducing her romantic misjudgments to curt summaries of name, age, occupation, hobbies, duration, and last words. No sooner has she met a new man that she begins composing his exit profile.”

J Jupiter Jones

Jupiter Jones from The Three Investigators series.

The Three Investigators series solidified my obsession with Detective Fiction, one that readers here know has not let up one bit. The First Investigator gave hope to chubby, bookish kids everywhere—the HQ he set up underneath the discarded bits and pieces in his Aunt and Uncle’s junkyard was a dream hangout, his inventiveness was something to be jealous of, and his nose for a mystery was something we all aspired to. I don’t know how many times I read every novel in that series I could find (more than was good for me), but watching Jupiter (and Pete and Bob) get into and out of trouble (mostly because of Jupiter’s intellect) was one of my favorite things in childhood.

Pub Day Post: Robert B. Parker’s Fool’s Paradise by Mike Lupica: Jesse Stone takes a Murder Case Personally

Fool's Paradise

Robert B. Parker’s Fool’s Paradise

by Mike Lupica
Series: Jesse Stone, #19

eARC, 352 pg.
G.P. Putnam’s Sons, 2020

Read: September 2-3, 2020
Grab a copy from your local indie bookstore!

What’s Fool’s Paradise About?

Suitcase Simpson calls Jesse to the scene of a murder, an unidentified man has been found shot at the lakeshore. Jesse recognizes the man—they’d been at the same AA meeting the previous night. It’s not Jesse’s regular meeting, and he didn’t think this man was a regular, either. But at least they had a first name to go off of.

Suit is able to find out at least a little about what the man did after the meeting. He’d taken a taxi from the neighboring town into Paradise. He even had an address—the mansion of a rich and influential family who’d been in Paradise for ages. They’re quick to claim they didn’t know the man, or that he’d been at the house in the hours before he was shot. No member of PPD believes this, but there’s little they can do until they learn a bit more about the victim.

Jesse admits this isn’t entirely rational—but doesn’t back off from it—the fact that he and the victim came to the same meeting, both needing the help that can be found there, created a link for between the two of them. Jesse felt like he owed this man justice more than he would another victim (not that Jesse’s ever been known to not try to find justice for anyone, it’s just personal this time). I loved this little touch—it felt very true to the character and his circumstances, but something that a lot of authors wouldn’t do.

Not long after this, someone takes a shot at Jesse while he’s in his home. Soon, other members of the PPD are attacked off-duty. As always, Jesse, Molly, and Suit acknowledge that coincidences exist, but they have a hard time believing in them. So while they try to identify the murder victim and figure out what he’s going in Paradise (and that part of Paradise in particular), they also need to figure out why someone would be attacking the PPD. And are the two cases related?

A Nice Little Bonus

There’s a lot of Molly in this book. She gets whole chapters without Jesse in them, and a lot of space on her own in chapters with him. We get a little bit of an off-the-job look at Molly, as well as seeing her work part of the investigation. Yes, Jesse’s the central character and should be the focus—but any time that Lupica (or whoever) can flesh out Molly, Suitcase, or any of the others is time well spent (I like the new deputy, too—he was a nice touch). But Molly’s been a favorite since Night Passage introduced this world, and she’s rarely been used as well as the character should’ve been. It’s so nice to see that.

Lupica’s Take on Jesse Stone

I was worried about Lupica being given the reins of this series. I was such a fan of what Colman had done, saving the series from the Michael Brandman debacle—and even from some of the uneven quality that Parker had given toward the end.

But Lupica did exactly what he needed to do—and exactly what I’d hoped (and didn’t expect). He embraced the developments that Coleman introduced and built on them. He could’ve ignored them, or written around them, but he kept Jesse going to AA, he worked on the new relationship with Cole, and Paradise and the Paradise Police Department the same way Coleman had, treating that bit of the series with as much respect and influence as the first nine novels.

Stylistically, Lupica’s closer to Parker than Coleman—which makes sense, it’s the more natural way for him to write (and will likely win back some of Coleman’s detractors). It works for the series, it works for the author—all in all, it’s a good move.

I freely admit that I was skeptical and pessimistic about anyone but Coleman at the post-Parker helm of Jesse Stone and am glad to be proven wrong.

Something I was Pleasantly Surprised By

While I have thought in the past that the best use of Sunny Randall was when Parker used her in the Jesse Stone novels, I wasn’t thrilled to see her in these pages—I thought that Stone, at least, had grown past this relationship. It’s not what it was back in the 3-4 books that Parker wrote with them as a couple, but reflects where they both are now.

I’ve got to say, I liked her here. I liked her in Paradise more than I liked her in the two books that Lupica has written about Sunny. If he keeps this up, I won’t complain.

Lupica’s War on my Sanity

Sure, that’s hyperbolic. But it felt like he was doing this to just bug me.

The mansion that the taxi pulled up to that fateful night is owned by the Cain family, Whit and Lilly Cain. Whit suffered a stroke a few months back, so his wife, Lilly, is who Jesse primarily interacts with. She’s brash, confident, loud, and flirtatious.

Now, I’ve watched the Veronica Mars series more times than I should have. Season One more than the rest. Every time I read “Lilly Cain,” I couldn’t think about anything other than “Lily Kane,” Veronica’s brash, confident, loud, and flirtatious friend.

I know it’s a coincidence, that neither name is all that rare. But it didn’t feel that way.

So, what did I think about Fool’s Paradise?

I liked this so much more than I expected to. I went into this hoping I wouldn’t hate it, and it didn’t take long at all for me to realize I was enjoying it. The prose crackled and moved quickly. There was enough of Jesse’s quiet humor to keep me grinning. The relationships and banter between the characters was spot on. The cases were compelling, interestingly framed, and well-executed. Lupica tied his novel into the overall history of the series well (referencing over half of the books, I think) and established that he’s the right man for the job. I strongly recommend this—either for new readers or established fans. Robert B. Parker’s Fool’s Paradise is a satisfying read that’ll get you eager to see what comes next.

Disclaimer: I received this eARC from PENGUIN GROUP Putnam via NetGalley in exchange for this post—thanks to both for this.


4 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.

20 Books of Summer 2020: Wrap-Up

20 Books of Summer
Well, that’s a wrap on the 2020 20 Books of Summer. You may accuse me of playing fast and loose with the challenge (and you’d be right!), but this seems like a casual enough thing that I really don’t care (and I can’t imagine anyone else does, either). As I mentioned last month, I did a lousy job of taking into account new releases, review copies, and life when I made the original list. I made a valient effort, but I just couldn’t post about all these books by September 1 (I did read all of them by the end of August, I note only semi-defensively), but in that last week, it hit me, June 1-August 31 isn’t really “Summer.” It works as a rough designation, but June solstice to the September equinox is a better definition. I’m not that pedantic though (well, about seasons). But here in the States, “Summer” also is defined as the period from Memorial Day through Labor Day, which was just the time I needed to get everything posted.

So I’m calling this a win. I liked the focus this gave me for the last couple of months, and I know I read some things I’ve been meaning to read for months because they were on this list and I couldn’t make (yet another) excuse to put it off. I think next year I’ll do a better job of taking into account New Releases when I make my list (how Peace Talks wasn’t the first book I put down I’ll never know) to make life easier for me–I also think I’ll put down more of the books I own, but keep delaying on. I really like freeing up space on my (literal) TBR shelf.

I had a lot of fun doing this and looking at others working their way through the challenge. Congrats to the winners.


✔ 1. Nothing Is Wrong and Here Is Why by Alexandra Petri (my take on the book)
✔ 2. The Last Smile in Sunder City by Luke Arnold (my take on the book)
✔ 3. Screamcatcher: Dream Chasers by Christy J. Breedlove (my take on the book)
✔ 4. The Finders by Jeffrey B. Burton (my take on the book)
✔ 5. Fair Warning by Michael Connelly (my take on the book)
✔ 6. One Man by Harry Connolly (my take on the book)
✔ 7. The Curator by M. W. Craven (my take on the book)
✔ 8. The Ninja Daughter by Tori Eldridge (my take on the book)
✔ 9. The Rome of Fall by Chad Alan Gibbs (my take on the book)
✔ 10. American Demon by Kim Harrison (my take on the book)
✔ 11. Ink & Sigil by Kevin Hearne (my take on the book)
✔ 12. Betty by Tiffany McDaniel (my take on the book)
✔ 13. Imaginary Numbers by Seanan McGuire (my take on the book)
✔ 14. Curse the Day by Judith O’Reilly (my take on the book)
✔ 15. Of Mutts and Men by Spencer Quinn (my take on the book)
✔ 16. Rather Be the Devil by Ian Rankin (my take on the book)
✔ 17. Muzzled by David Rosenfelt (my take on the book)
✔ 18. Bad Turn by Zoë Sharp (my take on the book)
✔ 19. The Silence by Luca Veste (my take on the book)
✔ 20. The Revelators by Ace Atkins (my take on the book)

20 Books of Summer Chart Aug

The Last Smile in Sunder City by Luke Arnold: A Fantasy Novel that Defies My Pithy Headline Composing Abilities

The Last Smile in Sunder City

The Last Smile in Sunder City

by Luke Arnold
Series: The Fetch Phillips Archives, #1

Kindle Edition, 368 pg.
Orbit, 2020

Read: August 26-27, 2020
Grab a copy from your local indie bookstore!


I think this could be my longest post ever, and I’d still leave things left unsaid, you wouldn’t believe the length of my notes for a book of this size. I’ll try to hit the most important points. To fill in whatever lacunae appears below, you should probably also read what was said over at Witty and Sarcastic Bookclub, The Tattooed Book Geek, Grimdark Magazine, and FanFi Addict—they’re what convinced me to buy the book.

“So, you’re a Man for Hire?”

“That’s right.”

“Why don’t you just call yourself a detective?”

“I was worried that might make me sound intelligent.”

The Principal wrinkled his nose. He didn’t know if I was trying to be funny; even less if I’d succeeded.

“What’s your relationship with the police department?”

“We have connections but they’re as thin as I can make them. When they come knocking I have to answer but my clients’ protection and privacy come first. There are lines I can’t cross but I push them back as far as I can.”

What’s The Last Smile in Sunder City About?

Fetch Phillips is hired to find a missing vampire, Edmund Albert Rye, an instructor at an exclusive private school for the children of magical creatures (lycanthropes, vampires, elves, dwarfs, etc.). It’s been a few days since he was seen, which is uncharacteristic enough that the principal’s getting nervous—he’s tough, but he’s been unwell. He, the students, and staff just need to know what happened to him.

I made my way east along Fourteenth Street without much hope for what I might be able to find. Professor Edmund Albert Rye; a man whose life expectancy was already several centuries overdue. I doubted I could bring back anything more than a sad story.

I wasn’t wrong. But things were sticking to the story that knew how to bite.

Fetch gets to work, enjoying the feeling of a good amount of cash in his pocket. The first step is the city library, Rye’s been living in the attic for that last several years, so he could enjoy some privacy and the sunlight. The librarian is just as worried as the principal had been.

It’s really not long before Fetch’s investigation brings him to an old private club for Vampires—and he find the remains of a couple of vampires. The lab concludes that it Rye wasn’t one of the fresh corpses. There’s another dead magical creature there, one that Fetch has never seen, and it takes a couple of days for the results identifying that to come in, too.

One thing that Fetch learns fairly soon is that Rye isn’t the only one missing, a girl vanished around the same time as he did. Now, Fetch has to track down a missing vampire and a teen-aged Siren. His work is definitely cut out for him.

Because he knows from the get-go that the story he’ll bring back to his employer won’t have a happy ending, he has a hard time pursuing it head-on. He keeps finding little things to distract himself, to slow the investigation. Even when the missing girl gets factored in, and he knows he needs to be fully committed just to have a chance to find her, to. He really can’t pull it off. The sad story just became so much sadder, and he doesn’t want to know the depth of that sadness.

Fetch Phillips

While the majority of the book traces this story, we also get several flashback chapters tracing Fetch’s tragic childhood, decent (but not great) adolescence and then troubled adulthood leading up to the point where he helped the Human Army destroy all the magic in the world. It’s an event called the Coda, and it occurred six years before Fetch was hired by the school. All magical creatures lost the abilities that distinguished their races, and the world was never the same. As an act of penance that no one but Fetch cares about, he’s since refused to work for humans, only for formerly-magic creatures. Which is what brought him to the search for Rye.

Fetch is a broken man—he wasn’t in great shape before the Coda, but he’s worse after it. An ex-soldier, convicted criminal, ex-prisoner, and now a drunk, with moments of sobriety (fewer than he should have while on a job, but all that money can buy many drinks).

There was a hangover on the horizon, along with something else. Something sort of stupid.

A devil was sitting on my shoulder whispering the kinds of things that stopped working on me years ago. I was only in my thirties but I was old. You don’t measure age in years, you measure it in lessons learned and repeated mistakes and how hard it is to force a little hope into your heart. Old just means jaded and cynical and tired. And boy, was I tired.

It’s the penance that drives him. He’d been an author of so much of what was wrong with the world, and he’s doing what he can to alleviate it just a little bit. It’s the only thing keeping him going. It’s not enough, but it’s all he has.

Fetch is such a rich character. It’s hard to like him, it’s hard to find anything redeemable in him*, any reason to be interested in what happens to him. But you can’t help pull for this broken, beaten, disillusioned, and cynical man.

* Which is, admittedly, the point of redemption.

What a Piece of Worldbuilding

This is such an incredibly conceived world. The Coda is so fresh that the citizens have started to move on, but aren’t used to dealing with the post-magical world. And so many of them are still hoping that it’ll all come back just as suddenly as it left.

The mixture of the fantasy elements and Human tech and science in this world, picking up the slack for the things that magic can’t do anymore is so rich, so well designed, so well-written that the reader has to stop every so often and try to take it in.

Even if I didn’t really like the book all that much, I’d still be recommending the book for the worldbuilding. It’s a master class in how to do it, how to describe it, and how to reveal it to the reader.

A Gripe

Just so, so, so many extended passages in italics. I won’t try to make a case against them, Benjamin Dryer does a better job than I possibly could. I just find them aggravating. It’d be so easy to indicate that something’s a flashback without them and spare readers the annoyance.

So, what did I think about The Last Smile in Sunder City?

Maybe nobody gets better. Maybe bad people just get worse. It’s not the bad things that make people bad, though. From what I’ve seen, we all work together in the face of adversity. Join up like brothers and work to overcome whatever big old evil wants to hold us down. The thing that kills us is the hope. Give a good man something to protect and you’ll turn him into a killer.

Fetch is a classic hard-boiled detective in a classically noir tale—the fact that it takes place in a Fantasy world (yet full of fairly modern technology) is just icing on a pretty tasty cake. The narrative voice is great, the writing leaps to life, and I can’t say enough about the way the world—and the novel—were designed and executed.

This probably deserves more than the 4 Stars I’m giving it, but I just didn’t connect with the story, with Fetch, with everything else going on as much as I wanted to. This regrettably ends up in the category of books that I admire more than I enjoy. But my admiration of this is so high that it almost doesn’t matter. This is a great Fantasy novel, and one unlike any you’ve read.

The sequel is out in a couple of weeks—I’m coming back to this world because now that Arnold doesn’t have to spend so much time explaining how the world works (or, more properly, how it no longer works) that he’ll be able to focus on telling a story or two, and I want to see what heights he’s capable of when the rules have already been established.

Do I recommend this book? Oh yeah. You’ll probably like it more than I did (I’m a little worried about hitting “publish” on this, as I know I’m one of the less enthusiastic readers of this). And even if you don’t, you’ll be just as impressed as I am with Arnold’s imagination and skill.


4 Stars

20 Books of Summer

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—9/5/20

Busy week on the homefront, my third child moved away for college yesterday, and a lot of this week was devoted to last-minute things to prepare for that (followed by a road trip to help deliver her to said college yesterday that took about 150% of the estimated time. Traffic was not my friend. Although that gave us enough audiobook time for my wife get one book closer to catching up on Mercy Thompson).

Anyway, I still found some time to do some recreational stuff and found a few things I wanted to share.

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 Can You Tell an Author’s Identity By Looking at Punctuation Alone? A Study Just Found Out.—I think Nero Wolfe did this in Murder by the Book by Rex Stout (okay, he used vocabulary and style more, but I think punctuation played a part). If not, he probably could have. I’m pretty sure that my em dashes would lead someone to my doorstep.
bullet Expand Your Vocabulary With This Site of Untranslatable Words—Word Nerds can have a great time with this site.
bullet Self-Published Fantasy Month—kicked off this week, “a month-long celebration highlighting the best of what the self-published fantasy community has to offer.”
bullet Why We Read Scary Stories During Covid: And why young people need books to get them through the pandemic, too.
bullet 10 Things You Might Not Know About NetGalley
bullet Things That Make Bookworms Mad—one of Bookstr’s latest listicles
bullet The Block Editor ….. Beaten into Submission?—Like so many others, Bookstooge has had…issues, shall we say, with WordPress’s Block Editor. I’m so glad for the Classic Editor Plug-In. My Tech Guy has been trying to talk me into switching over (and honestly, what he’s shown me I could do is very tempting…), but people like the ‘stooge make me reticent.
bullet Songs I Wish Were Books—what a creative idea
bullet Self-Published Fantasy Month: Some Book Suggestions—Witty & Sarcastic Book Club has some recommendations to help you kick off your own SPFM reading.
bullet How I Came To Love Audiobooks By Speeding Them The Hell Up—entertaining and good tips
bullet Unlimited Audiobooks: Find the Best Subscription for You!
bullet What Do Ratings Really Mean—The Bookwyrm’s Den sounds off on 3 Star Ratings.
bullet Which reminds me, have I mentioned that I recently tweaked my own “About My Ratings”? Didn’t make any changes to to how I rate, just hopefully made the page a bit more interesting.

A Book-ish Related Podcast Episode (or two) you might want to give a listen to:
bullet Under a Pile of Books Episode 81 – SPFM Special – Hostcast—a chat with the hosts of the Self-Published Fantasy Month

This Week's New Releases That I’m Excited About and/or You’ll Probably See Here Soon:
bullet A Killing Frost by Seanan McGuire—Toby sets out to invite Simon Torquill to her wedding? Yeah, there’s nothing “fraught with peril” about that at all. This is literally three feet away, calling my name…
bullet The Inheritance Games by Jennifer Lynn Barnes—” Avery Grambs has a plan for a better future: survive high school, win a scholarship, and get out. But her fortunes change in an instant when billionaire Tobias Hawthorne dies and leaves Avery virtually his entire fortune. The catch? Avery has no idea why – or even who Tobias Hawthorne is.” I’m part of a Book Tour for this one here in a week or two, really looking forward to it.
bullet Teen Titans: Beast Boy by Kami Garcia and Gabriel Picolo—they’re back with a follow-up to their revisioning of Raven’s story with Garfield Logan, who taught me most of what I know about bad jokes back in the 80’s. I’ve been waiting for this one for about a year.
bullet Crackle and Fire by Russ Colchamiro—This SF PI novel is another I’ve been waiting for…I’m never gonna survive September at this rate.
bullet The Trouble with Peace by Joe Abercrombie—that’s just a great title, isn’t it? Book two in the follow-up to The First Law
bullet The Silver Law by Lev Grossman—a Lewis/Dahl-esque MG novel from Grossman? Sounds good to me…

Lastly I’d like to say hi and extend a warm welcome toT.Tazaki, samfsm, and S.D. McKinley who followed the blog this week. Don’t be a stranger, and use that comment box, would you?

The Friday 56 for 9/4/20

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 56 of:
Lone Jack Trail

Lone Jack Trail by Owen Laukkanen

“You do nothing,” the man told her. “You do how we talked about. Go about your business and forget it ever happened. Let us handle the rest.”

“You’ll make sure they don’t find me?” she said.

“You keep your mouth shut, you’re going to be fine,” the man said. “We have as much to lose as you do if this goes south, remember?”

The woman seemed to contemplate this. She was silent a long time, and the man, restless, walked to the window and looked out at the road, watched dusk sap the last light of day, hiding the houses opposite, and the forest beyond, in deep shadow. Finally, he heard the woman’s breath hitch.

“Okay,” she said.

“We’ll get it handled,” the man told her. “Don’t worry.”

Bad Turn by Zoë Sharp: Charlie Fox is On Her Own and in Treacherous Waters

Bad Turn

Bad Turn

by Zoë Sharp
Series: Charlie Fox, #13

Kindle Edition, 340 pg.
ZACE Ltd, 2019

Read: August 22, 2020
Grab a copy from your local indie bookstore!

“OK, let’s talk weapons. You got any preference?”

I shrugged. “I like the SIG P226, if you have one, but as long as it goes bang when I press the trigger, I’m not too fussy.”

What’s Bad Turn About?

Charlie’s left her job—which costs her her home, he guns, and leaves her working security on the sort of drinking establishment that she’d never have walked into. She’s about 6 minutes away from making Jack Reacher look financially stable.

She stumbles into a house-sitting gig out in the country at a really nice place. It’s the answer to a whole lot of problems. Until she’s driving nearby and comes across a gunfight in the middle of a country road. As you do. She intervenes and comes to the aid of the group that’s apparently under attack, and ends up saving the life of a woman and one of her bodyguards.

Overcome with gratitude and impressed with her abilities, the woman’s husband offers her a job. His business has some pretty important things happening and he’s worried for her safety during that. You see, he’s an arms dealer (one who sells to both sides of legality) and there’s reason to believe that his wife is being targeted by a competitor/angry ex-customer.

The whole shootout on a public road would be an indicator that, yeah, she’s in danger.

Charlie signs on for the protection duty and finds herself in the middle of a scheme featuring international gun runners/dealers, organized crime (in multiple countries), and some messy family drama in multiple countries. There are multiple gunfights, a little bit of hand-to-hand combat, a lot of treachery and a little betrayal.

Bad Turn and the Charlie Fox series

This felt like a transition from Charlie’s typical work for Parker’s firm to self-employment. And as such, it feels a little different to me. She’s used to having Parker or his staff ready for logistical, research, or equipment help. Now she’s on her own—and Bad Turn shows how ill=prepared she is to be independent of all of Parker’s resources. Sure, she spent a lot of time without the possibility of checking in with Parker/the company, and it caused problems. But her assumption in the past was that there was a team ready to help. That’s gone now.

Assuming there are more Charlie Fox books coming down the line, I trust that Sharp will get us through these waters and put Charlie back in a situation she can more easily predict, and one not so infested by rats.

So, what did I think about Bad Turn?

I really don’t know. I liked the story, and enjoyed watching Charlie navigate these treacherous waters—but the whole time I felt like something was off. I think it’s just whatever made me start thinking of this as a transition novel, good action, but it just didn’t feel right.

Still, even an “off” Charlie Fox adventure is pretty fun. I’m glad I read this and think that new or established readers will enjoy it, but I’m hoping for something more next time.


3 Stars

20 Books of Summer
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.

Curse the Day by Judith O’Reilly: A Technothriller/Conspiracy Novel filled with Action (and some low tech solutions)

Curse the Day

Curse the Day

by Judith O’Reilly
Series: Michael North, #2

Kindle Edition, 331 pg.
Head of Zeus, 2020

Read: August 24-25, 2020
Grab a copy from your local indie bookstore!

He wanted to meet whoever had hacked that car. Then he wanted to punch them in the face. Because someone had tried to kill him and the innocent woman alongside him. And call him old- fashioned, but that made him mad. And an angry Michael North was someone who might just kill someone right back.

What’s Curse the Day About?

Killing State‘s ending pretty much broke Michael North*. When the book opens, he’s trying to drink and gamble himself into oblivious rather than dealing with the emotional fallout.

* which is ironic, because the rest of the book was pretty much about him coming back to life.

And then an old acquaintance from MI-6 shows up with a job. His niece is an ethicist married to one of the most innovative computer scientists around, who is on the verge of a major announcement in the development of AI. But someone is trying to interfere with that announcement, and have tried to kill his niece. He wants North to sober up and protect her. To guarantee his cooperation, he’s arranged for Fang’s mother to be arrested and is threatening to deport her and send her back to China. It’s this, and only this, that compels North to action.

Fang’s waiting for him—and is full of less than supportive things to say about his recent activity, but she’s more than ready to help him. Not just for her mother’s sake. Also, not just because this kind of AI is the stuff she dreams of. Despite their brief acquaintance, she really likes North and wants to help.

Narrowing down the source of the threat is difficult—there’s some industrial espionage afoot, some not very covert efforts by Chinese representatives to gain control of the technology, and some British military types heavily invested, too. One of the adversaries North faces off with is straight out of a Bond movie, while the others are more…down to Earth (at least by the standards contemporary thrillers). I’m not sure which I prefer—I just like to know that against North, both types of adversary have their work cut out for them.

It’s clear what North will do to whoever’s behind the attacks, the question is, what will it take for him to figure out the responsible parties.

So, what did I think about Curse the Day?

Life wasn’t grey– it was black and white, there was good and there was evil, and he knew how far he was prepared to go for the sake of the good.

I have a hard time not recommending a book with such moral clarity (even if the protagonist who holds that clarity needs some work on how to live out that morality).

I’ve read entire books that managed to have less tension than the prologue to this novel, and it was enough to instantly get me engaged and invested in the outcome.

But after that, I think the novel didn’t grab me as much as I wanted it to. Killing State was, in many ways, about North casting off the restraints that held him back (professionally, emotionally, mentally), and Curse the Day didn’t have much of that. At least a couple of times, North compares Esme and Honor (the woman he was protecting in Killing State)—even seems to realize that he’s trying to make Esme into a version of Honor, to react to her the same way. And it just doesn’t work for him—or me—she’s not Honor, as much as he might want her to be. Possibly in Book 3 he won’t be looking for another Honor and will be able to focus on the tasks at hand, or come up with a new way to emotionally invest.

This didn’t work for me the way that Killing State did, but I’m still coming back for more, and fully expect O’Reilly to knock my socks off again, even if she didn’t this time out. But it was a clever story, and I particularly liked spending time with Fang (and look forward to seeing what trouble she gets into with her new toy).

Curse the Day‘s biggest problem was that it wasn’t Killing State and if I read this one first, I probably would’ve enjoyed it more. It was tense, well-paced, with just the right number of twists and unexpected developments. Everything a thriller needs, and because of that, I have no problem encouraging you to read it. You’ll probably like it more than I did. And even if you don’t, you’ll still have a pretty fun time.


3 Stars

20 Books of Summer
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.

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