Category: News/Misc. Page 135 of 229

Saturday Miscellany—4/17/21

  1. It’s weird to look off to the right there and not see History of Tom Jones, a Foundling by Henry Fielding listed there.
  2. My ISP went down for a day-and-a-half this week, making it a real challenge to get anything posted, but it did help me catch up on reading. But I’m super-behind on blog-hopping, commenting, and everything. I’m looking forward to catching up and seeing all the fun stuff I missed this week.
  3. I’m apparently in a list-making mood today.
  4. I came across a thing I did for a bit on an old blog and then Facebook years ago, and decided I’d try to resurrect it on these posts. If you still see it in a month, I guess we’ll call it a success.

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 In honor of today being the 124th Anniversary of the play, LitHub posted Watch Spalding Gray perform Our Town’s legendary opening monologue.—First off, Our Town is my favorite play, full stop. I’ve read better, but none affect me the at it does. I cannot make it through the third act dry-eyed (I’ve seen high school drama departments stumble through it, ditto for college and amateur troupes, several filmed versions—and in print). I also loved the part of Gray’s monologue, Monster in a Box this post mentions about his role and the reaction to it. I’m rambling now—just read and watch.
bullet Lauren Hough Vs The World—For the 4% of you that didn’t watch this trainwreck live, this is a good summary.
bullet Turns Out It’s Pretty Good: Reading First Thing in the Morning
bullet How Would the Publishing World Respond to Lolita Today?: Jenny Minton Quigley on the Novel Her Father Published
bullet Rare book burial brings a little-known Jewish custom to Naples (Hat tip: Jo Perry)
bullet 10 of the worst sentences found in literature—Thoughts: I don’t know how they ever settled on one from The Da Vinci Code; the New Moon selection as great; and I don’t know how I managed to read the rest of The Killing Floor (much less the 25 following novels) after that sentence.
bullet What makes you pick up a book?
bullet Amanda’s Book Format Battle
bullet My first reads!—this was a fun read and sent me down a fun trip down memory lane.
bullet @HiuGregg gives some handy advice in this thread

This Week's New Releases That I’m Excited About and/or You’ll Probably See Here Soon:
bullet Okay, I’ve got nothing for this. Which is happening a lot lately—have I gotten that picky?

Things I learned from reading this week (that I can’t imagine finding a use for)bullet
bullet At least 80% of all cars in Afghanistan are various years of Toyota Corollas, mostly brought into the country used.
bullet Daniel Boone didn’t like flat coonskin caps, but preferred high-crown felt hats so he’d look taller. (yeah, I know I mentioned this in my post about the book, but it was so ingrained my mind from childhood on that I have to mention it again). Also, I’m taller than Daniel Boone was, and I’m not tall, definitely not “tall as a mountain.”
bullet The American custom of having race tracks constructed to run widdershins comes from a “rabid revolutionary,” William Whitleywho built one of the first horse tracks in Kentucky, who deliberately wanted to do so contrary to the British custom.
bullet My new word for the week is, “Funt” which looks like a misprint when you come across it in a book. But after a quick internet search, you find out that it’s not and kind of wish that you didn’t know what you now do.
Sources: The Lore of Prometheus by Graham Austin-King (verified because it made me curious); Blood and Treasure: Daniel Boone and the Fight for America’s First Frontier by Bob Drury, Tom Clavin (for the next two items); Robert B. Parker’s Payback by Mike Lupica.

Lastly I’d like to say hi and extend a warm welcome to bookish_renee who followed the blog this week. Don’t be a stranger, and use that comment box, would you?
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The Friday 56 for 4/16/21: A Big Ship at the Edge of the Universe by Alex White

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:
A Big Ship at the Edge of the Universe

A Big Ship at the Edge of the Universe by Alex White

“She’s awake,” noted the technician, his rich voice filling the bay. “Mostly uninjured, too.”

Boots nodded to him. May as well get acquainted with the rest of Cordell’s cronies. “I haven’t met this one yet, Cordell.”

Cordell stopped and gestured to the man in the med bay. “Oh, my mistake. Boots, this is Malik Jan, our ship’s doctor.”

Malik came to them in the hall and took Boots’s hand. His palms were soft and warm, if a little dry. “It’s a pleasure. I hope you slept well.”

“Great. Now you’ve met,” said Cordell, placing a hand on Boots’s shoulder. “Doctor Jan, Boots is a prisoner, and if she tries to escape, you’re to shoot her.”

Down the TBR Hole (26 of 29+)

Down the TBR Hole

My first thought when I saw the ten books on the chopping block today was, “Well, the List isn’t going to lose a lot of entries this week.” I think four or five of them came from the same list of “new PI novels to try” or something and all look too intriguing to cut (even if I figure I’m only going to really like half of them—I just don’t know which half).

But I didn’t expect these results.

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)

Sworn to Silence Sworn to Silence by Linda Castillo
Blurb: A woman who left her Amish community comes back to the area after many years away as Chief of Police. Soon, a murder pits her family and past against her duty.
My Thoughts: Recommended by a friend, and while “Amish Mystery” doesn’t necessarily scream my style, she hasn’t led me wrong yet.
Verdict:
Thumbs Up
By Sea & Sky By Sea & Sky: An Esowon Story by Antoine Bandel
My Thoughts: There’s some sort of magic and pirates inspired by “the West Indies, The Swahili Coast, and Arabia”, and some sort of airship. Magic pirates in the sky=a combination that I’ve got to try.
Verdict:
Thumbs Up
The Last Place You Look The Last Place You Look by Kristen Lepionka
Blurb: An emotionally troubled PI is on the hunt for a murder victim who might actually be alive in order to save the man convicted of her murder.
Verdict:
Thumbs Up
Broken Places Broken Places by Tracey Clark
Blurb: “former Chicago cop turned private investigator looks into a suspicious death as a favor to a friend—and makes some powerful enemies.”
Verdict:
Thumbs Up
Last Looks Last Looks by Howard Michael Gould
Blurb: There’s a former LAPD detective living in solitude as some sort of penance for failure in a case. He’s brought back to LA by his former love to help an eccentric actor suspected of a murder
My Thoughts: That’s a lousy 2 sentence summary, but the blurbs are too long for this space. I like the idea of the damaged cop back to try to navigate through the case, his personal baggage, and other problems. John Michael Higgins does the audiobook, and I am incredibly curious about him as a narrator. Not curious enough to buy it, but curious. I wonder if that says something abou the tone of the book, too. It may be unfair, but I don’t see Higgins doing a great job on a dead-serious crime novel.
Verdict:
Thumbs Up
What Doesn't Kill You What Doesn’t Kill You by Aimee Hix
Blurb: “Willa Pennington thought that becoming a PI would be better than being a cop. She thought she’d never have to make another death notification or don a bulletproof vest again…But she couldn’t have been more wrong, because Willa’s real problem is that she’s always sticking her nose where it doesn’t belong…Now, agreeing to do a simple favor has netted her a dead body, a missing person, and an old friend who just may be a very bad guy. If whoever is trying to kill her would lay off she could solve the murder, find the missing girl, and figure out if the person she’s trusted with her life is the one trying to end it.”
My Thoughts: I think it was the “becoming a PI would be better than being a cop. She thought she’d never have to make another death notification or don a bulletproof vest again” part of the blurb that gets the hooks in me. Because you know it’s going to go wrong, and with that as the baseline, it’s going to be very wrong.
Verdict:
Thumbs Up
Black and Blue in Harlem Black and Blue in Harlem by Delia C. Pitts
Blurb: “Rook came to Harlem to re-build a life. You hit bottom, the only way out is up, right? Nice home, nice job, nice girl. With a few breaks, a hard-luck private eye can land on his feet, even if his balance is still shaky. But now that cozy home has turned deadly. With his pal NYPD Detective Archie Lin working the case, Rook joins the investigation into the death of his neighbor. Nomie George was a gentle, unassuming city bureaucrat, with few friends and no apparent enemies. Minding her own business, following government rules, and hoarding her skimpy paycheck were Nomie’s chief pleasures. But a frosty fifteen-story plunge ended her life. Could her lonely death be a suicide? Or might a brutal murderer be on the loose?”
My Thoughts: The premise of this makes this a slam dunk for me. But I see that it’s the third in a series. Reading it would probably bug me, so I’m going to give it the ax (and we’ll just ignore the fact that I’ve just added the first in the series to the list, because I need to cut something in this post).
Verdict:
Thumbs Down
Random Sh*t Flying Through the Air Random Sh*t Flying Through the Air by Jackson Ford
Blurb: Teagan Frost, “psychokinetic operative” for the government seems to have her life about on track for the first time in ages, and then a “young boy with the ability to cause earthquakes has come to Los Angeles – home to the San Andreas, one of the most lethal fault lines in the world. If Teagan can’t stop him, the entire city – and the rest of California – could be wiped off the map.”
My Thoughts: I thought the first Teagan Frost book was a blast and have been looking forward to digging into this one. Not sure why I haven’t. With book 3 coming out at the end of this month, I’d best get to it.
Verdict:
Thumbs Up
Half a World Away Half a World Away by Mike Gayle
Blurb: When they were children, siblings Kerry and Noah, ended up in the UK equivalent of the foster system, and ended up in very different places as adults. Kerry cleans homes and barely makes ends meet. Noah is a very successful barrister. When they reconnect, everything changes.
My Thoughts: Years ago, I tore through my local library system’s collection of Gayle books in a few weeks and couldn’t find any more. I’m not sure why I stopped looking. I saw a reference to this somewhere last year and it brought back a lot of good memories, I need to start reading Gayle again and I might as well start with this.
Verdict:
Thumbs Up
Just Like You Just Like You by Nick Hornby
Blurb: Lucy is “a nearly divorced, forty-one-year-old schoolteacher with two school-aged sons, and there is no script anymore. So when she meets Joseph, she isn’t exactly looking for love—she’s more in the market for a babysitter. Joseph is twenty-two, living at home with his mother, and working several jobs, including the butcher counter where he and Lucy meet. It’s not a match anyone could have predicted. He’s of a different class, a different culture, and a different generation. But sometimes it turns out that the person who can make you happiest is the one you least expect, though it can take some maneuvering to see it through.”
My Thoughts: It’s Hornby. The only reason I didn’t read it last fall (and probably have it on a best-of 2020 list) is that it fell victim to that time and money crunch that was my unexpected move.
Verdict:
Thumbs Up

Books Removed in this Post: 1 / 10
Total Books Removed: 144 / 290

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


(Image by moritz320 from Pixabay)

Top Ten Tuesday: Ten Book Titles That Sound Like They Could Be Crayola Crayon Colors

Top Ten Tuesday
The topic for this week’s Top Ten Tuesdays is Book Titles That Sound Like They Could Be Crayola Crayon Colors.

It’s been 11 months since I’ve done one of these (for no real reason), but this topic was so…strange that I had to try it. I’d like to say that I could describe what these particular crayons would look like, but if I could describe subtle nuances of color, I’d be writing things for book blogs to talk about, not writing about books for my blog. I got some input from my daughter, but I probably should’ve asked for more, this is her area.

Book Titles That Sound Like They Could Be Crayola Crayon Colors
(in no order whatsoever)

10
White Noise by Don DeLillo
I’m thinking this is a white with little specks of gray/black, like a TV tuned to a dead channel (for those who are of a certain age), or maybe Cookies and Cream ice cream. A fitting visual depiction of the variety of external stimuli and odd notions that combine into the titular white noise.
9
Bloody Rose by Nicholas Eames
Maybe this is too on-the-nose, but I’m thinking the deepest, darkest red—almost black. Like if you took a red rose and super-saturated it with, well, blood. I haven’t read it yet (don’t ask me why, I don’t have a good reason), but I’m thinking that Rose spends a good deal of time pretty saturated with blood.
8
The Salmon of Doubt by Douglas Adams
So salmon is sort of a pinkish-orange, right? So start with that and then add a little gray for doubt. Which, I guess sounds like fish that’s been left in the fridge for too long and you no longer want to cook with it. A pretty unappealing idea, but that’s a fairly specific color. An odd enough idea, that it might appeal to Dirk Gently, the protagonist of the incomplete novel that lends its title to the book.
7
Across the Green Grass Fields by Seanan McGuire
It’s right there in the name, isn’t it? Green Grass Fields. Don’t think I could improve on it. (well, maybe the mixers at Crayola could figure out how to add a dew-like glisten, I think that’d be a nice touch).
6
Jade City by Fonda Lee
What would concrete made with jade as the aggregate look like? That’s what comes to mind here. That’s not what the novel makes you think of at all, but it fits for a crayon, I think.
5
Woad to Wuin by Peter David
Obviously, you start with a good blue woad (yeah, that’s a tautology, shhh). But then the wuin, sorry, ruin brings up ideas of browns or grays. Leaving me with a muddy blue, I guess. It’s been a couple of decades, but I believe that’s a decent description of ol’ Apropos of Nothing: muddy blue.
4
Domestic Violets by Matthew Norman
I’m thinking this is a nice, comfortable violet. Which is not really in the spirit of the book, but it fits the name.
3
Lethal White by Robert Galbraith
Part of me wanted to try to look up the description of the horse that described this way in the book, but as anyone who’s read it knows, that’s just too much effort for a jokey post. So instead, I’m leaning toward a white. A bright, intense, burn-your-retina white. Except safe for kids and their crayons.
2
Jane Steele by Lyndsay Faye
Steel-gray is your base, but I was stuck after that. My daughter offered, “The color you’re missing from Jane Steele is a red. Idk why but Jane makes me think of some sort of red.” I don’t get a red off of Jane (maybe because there’s no way that “plain Jane Eyre” would go for red). But, Jane Steele is a murderer, I remembered. Nothing says murderer like red (except, I guess, a fancy prose style).
1
Burning Chrome by William Gibson
A gleaming, bright orange chrome is what my minds-eye conjures up here. Shiny and bright (and hot), like most of the stories in that book.

Saturday Miscellany—4/10/21

Spring is on the verge of springing here and the birds are chirping like crazy and one of the canines in residence really wants to go out and play with them (sadly, they have no desire to play with her). Hope the pollen isn’t getting to you all too much.

Short list this week—I’ve clearly been busy this week (not that you can prove it from my posting)—but there are some gems.

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 The Joy and Privilege of Growing Up in an Indie Bookstore
bullet I Work in a Bookstore. Why Am I Still Shelving “Mein Kampf”?—I don’t think Abdalla convinced me here, but I almost wish she did.
bullet The Best Spy Novels Written by Spies, According to a Spy—I’m tempted to take the next two weeks off from everything and read this list.
bullet Why Murder Mysteries Are a Lot Like Science, According to a Neuroscientist and Novelist—I didn’t set out to post two pieces by Erik Hoel (someone is clearly trying to promote his new book), but I liked them both—and this isn’t anything like his growing up in a bookstore, so it’s not redundant.
bullet The Myth of Accurate Representation – Neurodivergence in Fiction—this is good.
bullet Dragonlance Week: A Celebration—This week, Witty and Sarcastic Book Club took a break from working in Dragonlance references to 63.2% of their posts and devoted an entire week to focusing on the series. It kicked off with that piece, but you can find them all here. This series is second only to Lloyd Alexander in making me a fantasy reader, nice to read all these pieces and remember why.

This Week's New Releases That I’m Excited About and/or You’ll Probably See Here Soon:
bullet Animal Instinct by David Rosenfelt—The second book in the Andy Carpenter spin-off series is another solid read. I talked about it a bit recently.

Lastly I’d like to say hi and extend a warm welcome to deardailydiary81, Operation X, Siddharth menon, Hannah , and Ccoutreach who followed the blog this week. Don’t be a stranger, and use that comment box, would you?

The Friday 56 for 4/9/21: Cross Her Heart by Melinda Leigh

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:
Cross Her Heart

Cross Her Heart by Melinda Leigh

It felt like time was speeding up, moving too quickly, out of her control.

An African American woman in clean black scrubs moved out from behind the desk. “I’m Dr. Serena Jones. I took care of your sister.”

Matt did the introductions, but Bree’s hearing sounded muffled, Dr. Jones turned to face her. “You can see your sister on a monitor—”

“No.” Bree cut her off.

“I didn’t think you’d take that option, so I had your sister moved to a private room,” Dr. Jones said as if Erin were her patient instead of a corpse. “This way.”

The sense of impending doom grew heavier with each footstep down the tiled hallway. Bree kept her eyes on the back of Dr. Jones’s shirt. They went into a small room. In the center of the space, a sheet-covered body occupied a gurney. Dr. Jones walked around to the opposite side of the gurney and faced Bree over her sister’s body. Matt stayed at Bree’s side.

The doctor waited until Bree lifted her eyes to hers and nodded.

WWW Wednesday, April 7, 2021

I may be having a hard time finishing a book post lately, but that’s not for lack of material—my reading is going full-steam ahead, so at least I can do a 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?

This is one of those odd times where I’m doing a couple of books at once—I’m reading Blood and Treasure: Daniel Boone and the Fight for America’s First Frontier by Bob Drury & Tom Clavin, Cross Her Heart by Melinda Leigh, and am listening to Slow Horses by Mick Herron, Gerard Doyle (Narrator) on audiobook (which is so good, I’m wondering why I didn’t move on to the rest of the series after I read it a couple of years ago).

Blood and TreasureBlank SpaceCross Her HeartBlank SpaceSlow Horses

What did you recently finish reading?

I just finished Kate Sheeran Swed’s Prodigal Storm (I can’t believe I misspelled that title last week) and No Country for Old Gnomes by Delilah S. Dawson & Kevin Hearne, Luke Daniels (Narrator) on audio.

Progigal StormBlank SpaceNo Country for Old Gnomes

What do you think you’ll read next?

My next book should be The Art of Violence by S. J. Rozan—I should have read this last fall, and can’t wait to finally get to it—and Next to Last Stand by Craig Johnson, George Guidall (Narrator) on audiobook.

The Art of ViolenceBlank SpaceNext to Last Stand

What about you—reading anything good?

Down the TBR Hole (25 of 29+)

Down the TBR Hole
Okay, I’ve pulled another batch of 50 off the list to start culling from (part of me was hoping it’d be 60, giving me a nice, round 300 as a total). These are all books that I added in the last 14 months, which I think should make me more inclined to want to read them all (unlike something from 8 years ago, my interests/tastes haven’t changed that much). But I cut the majority of this entry’s batch.

I don’t know about the rest of you, but it’s things like that which keep my interest in this project.

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)

Living by God's Promises Living by God’s Promises by Joel R. Beeke, James A. La Belle
Blurb: The authors “draw from stellar Puritan treatises on divine promises by Andrew Gray, Edward Leigh, and William Spurstowe, and offer them in contemporary language for today’s readers. [I]t will help you treasure the promises that God establishes in Christ and conveys in His covenant love to comfort you in sorrow and strengthen your faith.”
My Thoughts: Good idea for a book, the Table of Contents appeals to me. But I’ve been underwhelmed with the last few books I’ve picked up by Joel Beeke. Now, Beeke has been of tremendous help to me in the past, and it feels wrong to not want to read a book from him. But I think I’d better wait for something from him that I feel compelled to read, if that makes sense.
Verdict:
Thumbs Down
Red Noise Red Noise by John P.Murphy
Blurb: “Red Noise is the story of an asteroid miner who just wants to be left alone. But when she arrives at Station 35 to sell off her cargo, she finds the place a disaster area, run into the ground by competing gangs and crooked cops who are happy to cheat her out of every last credit too…It has sword fights and cheap booze and grenades and cranky old guys throwing insults and very few nuclear weapons.”
My Thoughts: A Western/Japanese Samurai movie set in space. How do you say no?
Verdict:
Thumbs Up
A Big Ship at the Edge of the Universe A Big Ship at the Edge of the Universe by Alex White
Blurb: “A washed-up treasure hunter, a hotshot racer, and a deadly secret society…on a race against time to hunt down the greatest warship ever built. Some think the ship is lost forever, some think it’s been destroyed, and some think it’s only a legend, but one thing’s for certain: whoever finds it will hold the fate of the universe in their hands.”
My Thoughts: I don’t remember what podcast I heard someone talk about this book on. Nor do I remember who was talking about the book, or really what they said. What I do remember, very distinctly, is the impression that I had to read it. The description sounds like something I might like. If for no other reason than to maybe see what it was that I responded to from my first exposure, I need to get this.
Verdict:
Thumbs Up
The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes by Suzanne Collins
Blurb: Prequel to The Hunger Games, you may have heard of it.
My Thoughts: I ordered this weeks (months?) before it came out, because I have a finely-honed instinct to do that with anything involving The Hunger Games. And it’s been sitting on my shelf since it arrived. I have absolutely no motivation to open it up. I think I’m done with Panem, I really don’t give a rip about Snow–I assumed I would (and I’m probably right) once I got a few chapters into it. I’m not saying I won’t get around to it one day, but for now, it’s gone.
Verdict:
Thumbs Down
The Wild The Wild by Owen Laukkanen
Blurb: “Dawn isn’t a bad person–she’s just made some bad choices: wrong guy, wrong friends, wrong everything. But she wasn’t expecting her parents to pay a boatload of money to ship her off to OUT OF THE WILD, a wilderness boot camp with a bunch of other messed up kids to learn important “life lessons.” It’s true that Dawn and the other cubs will learn a lot–but it’s not what any of them expect. Because what happens in the woods isn’t what their parents planned. Sometimes plans go very wrong. And this is one of those times.”
My Thoughts: If Owen Laukkanen it will be compelling, it will be tense, taught, and well-executed. But…nothing about this grabs me. Similar to his book about a disaster at sea (or something along those lines).
Verdict:
Thumbs Down
Your Perfect Year Your Perfect Year by Charlotte Lucas, Alison Layland (Translator)
Blurb: “For hyper-particular publishing heir Jonathan Grief, the day starts like any other—…all it takes to put a crimp in his routine is one small annoyance. Someone has left a leather-bound day planner with the handwritten title Your Perfect Year in his spot on his mountain bike at his fitness course! Determined to discover its owner, Jonathan opens the calendar to find that someone known only as “H.” has filled it in with suggestions, tasks, and affirmative actions for each day. The more he devotes himself to locating the elusive H., the deeper Jonathan is drawn into someone else’s rich and generous narrative—and into an attitude adjustment he desperately needs.”
My Thoughts: It feels very Fredrik Backman meets Dash & Lily. Or something like that. I saw this referenced somewhere last year and picked it up. Just need to get around to it.
Verdict:
Thumbs Up
Burn Burn by Patrick Ness
Blurb: Nunc hoc in marmore non est incisum
My Thoughts: It’s Patrick Ness, so it’s going to be good. Also, there’s a dragon. But something about description leaves me apathetic. Convince me I’m wrong about this one, readers.
Verdict:
Thumbs Down
The Faith Machine The Faith Machine by Tone Milazzo
Blurb: The team goes “to Africa to retrieve the Faith Machine. Built by the Soviets to turn prayers into suffering, the psychotronic device fell into the hands of a demented warlord. Tragically, the mission fails and the madman slaughters hundreds of innocents while the machine burns…While spy agencies from around the world want retribution for the catastrophe in Africa. Park’s team outplays enemies left and right, while uncovering the true threat. There’s another Faith Machine, one destined to bring hell on earth.”
My Thoughts: This is another that I wish I could peg down what introduced me to the book. I can see the appeal–psychic Specical Agents. But the premise of this particular novel isn’t going to be something I enjoy.
Verdict:
Thumbs Down
Broken Genius Broken Genius by Drew Murray
Blurb: “In 2011, Will Parker, the young prodigy CEO of a big tech company makes a coding mistake that costs a college student her life. To assuage his guilt, Will pursues a career in the FBI Cyber Division. Now, Special Agent Will Parker is called to investigate a murder scene at a Comic-Con event in the Midwest, where the victim has ties to a radioactive quantum computer that Will was working on before he left his gig as CEO…Will discovers the victim was holding an auction for the computer on the Dark Web—and the bidding is still live.”
My Thoughts: I remember linking to a post by Murray last year about the use of tech in thrillers in a Saturday Miscellany. I liked what he had to say about that and want to see how he applies it.
Verdict:
Thumbs Up
The New One The New One: Painfully True Stories from a Reluctant Dad by Mike Birbiglia, J. Hope Stein
My Thoughts: There’s probably some pretty funny stuff in this collection of Birbiglia’s stories of parenting a young child mixed with his wife’s poems about the same events. But my gut tells me the balance of this book is going to be something I’m not satisfied with.
Verdict:
Thumbs Down

Books Removed in this Post: 6 / 10
Total Books Removed: 143 / 290

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


(Image by moritz320 from Pixabay)

Saturday Miscellany—4/3/21

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 Library E-Book Bill Advancing in Maryland—am not sure this is the best way to address the issue (not sure it isn’t, either)
bullet Douglas Adams’ note to self reveals author found writing torture—Good piece about Adams, but an absolute garbage headline. Anyone who knows anything about Adams doesn’t need that revealed. Tantamount to headlines like, “George RR Martin Procrastinates,” “Don Winslow Has a Thing or Two to Say About the Drug Trade,” or “David Rosenfelt Features a Dog in his Next Book.”
bullet How Hank the Cowdog Made John R. Erickson the King of the Canine Canon: He wanted to become a serious literary novelist, like Faulkner or Hemingway. Fortunately for millions of Hank the Cowdog fans, he failed.—I never understood the appeal, but I know many who got it. Interesting feature about Erickson (who I did not realize was still publishing).
bullet Why are there so many book summary apps?—Something else I’ve never understood the appeal of (even if I drew the same conclusions as this post). Worth it for the last paragraph.
bullet Why Do So Many Novels Feature Golden Retrievers?
bullet To wait, or to buy. A look at the impact those who wait to buy and binge-read series can have on the book writing business.—Great post.
bullet So, You Want to Start a Book Blog…—FanFiAddict’s David W. has some good thoughts for people thinking of diving in
bullet The Expectations We Put On Ourselves as Book Bloggers—she wrote this so I didn’t have to. I’m not sure if it was just the encouragement I needed this week or if it served as the excuse I could use to produce so little 🙂

Lastly I’d like to say hi and extend a warm welcome to josbees andrtslaywood who followed the blog this week.

The Friday 56 for 4/2/21: Prodigal Storm by Kate Sheeran Swed

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:
Progigal Storm

Prodigal Storm by Kate Sheeran Swed

(yup–I’m finally finishing the trilogy!)

…the full blast of the mocking tone still hit him in the chest. As if he’d been the one to hurt her.

“I could kill you right now with my bare hands,” she continued. “Or a kitchen knife, or the Edinburgh I’ve got strapped to my hip. You’re already trusting me.”

An old quote about protestations and truthfulness floated into his mind, a passage his Laura would have appreciated.

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