Music Monday's originated at The Tattooed Book Geek's fantastic blog and has shown up hither, thither, and yon since then.
Category: News/Misc. Page 7 of 193
I finished 28 titles (8 up from last month, 3 up from last August), with an equivalent of 9,408 pages or the equivalent (3,017 up from last month), and gave them an average of 3.86 stars (.18 up/down from last month).
I really thought that I was going to be making some decent progress on Mt. TBR this summer, and I was on a decent path, but I stumbled a little bit–not that Epic Sale of Beloved SFF Books and the Narratess Indie Sale didn’t help (a week will and a voracious appetite didn’t either).
My posting wasn’t quite what I wanted, but when is it? I’m giving my self a pass on that. My focus (for good or ill) was on reading this month, blogging was less of a priority. I’d like to say that next month will be different, but I’m not going to hold myself to that.
Any who, here’s what happened here in August.
Books/Novels/Novellas Read/Listened to
Still Reading
Ratings
3 | 0 | ||
4 | 0 | ||
8 | 0 | ||
8 | 0 | ||
5 | |||
Average = | 3.86 |
---|
TBR Stacks/Piles/Heaps
Audio | E-book | Physical | Goodreads Want-to-Read |
NetGalley Shelf/ARCs/Review Copies |
|
---|---|---|---|---|---|
End of 2023 |
6 | 47 | 68 | 153 | 5 |
1st of the Month |
3 | 52 | 76 | 161 | 8 |
Added | 4 | 11 | 4 | 3 | 2 |
Read/ Listened |
3 | 5 | 5 | 2 | 4 |
Current Total | 4 | 58 | 75 | 162 | 6 |
Breakdowns:
“Traditionally” Published: 19
Self-/Independent Published: 9
Genre | This Month | Year to Date |
---|---|---|
Children’s | 0 (0%) | 6 (3%) |
Fantasy | 9 (21%) | 29 (19%) |
General Fiction/ Literature | 5 (18%) | 18 (12%) |
Mystery/ Suspense/ Thriller | 2 (7%) | 53 (35%) |
Non-Fiction | 2 (7%) | 16 (11%) |
Science Fiction | 2 (7%) | 11 (7%) |
Theology/ Christian Living | 3 (11%) | 20 (13%) |
Urban Fantasy | 4 (14%) | 22 (14%) |
“Other” (Horror/ Humor/ Steampunk/ Western) | 1 (4%) | 4 (3%) |
Review-ish Things Posted
- Some Further Thoughts about The White Door by Pierce Taylor Hibbs
- A Farewell to Arfs by Spencer Quinn: The World Breaks Every One, Except Maybe Chet
- The Last Shield by Cameron Johnston: You Will Sit Up and Say, “Yippee-ki-yay”
- Mystery Science Theater 3000: A Cultural History by Matt Foy and Christopher J. Olson: They Riffed, so the Internet Could Snark
- Steam Opera by James T. Lambert: Choosing It Not Because It Was Easy…
- The Legendary Mo Seto by A. Y. Chan: And Though She Be But Little, She Is Fierce
- The Nameless Restaurant by Tao Wong: The Real Magic Here Isn’t Supernatural
- The Glass Frog by J. Brandon Lowry: A Fairy-Tale-esque Fantasy for All Ages
- A Quick Thought about the Audiobook No Two Persons by Erica Bauermeister, read by a full cast
- Cursed Cocktails by S.L. Rowland: Mixing Drinks and Starting Over
- The Lord Jesus Christ: The Biblical Doctrine of the Person and Work of Christ by Brandon D. Crowe: Christology 101
- The Teachings of Shirelle by Douglas Green: A Goofy Dog’s Wisdom
Other Things I Wrote
Other than the Saturday Miscellanies (3rd, 10th, 17th, 24th and 31st), I also wrote:
- 20 Books of Summer 2024: July Check-In
- MUSIC MONDAY: Ooh La La by Faces
- LITERARY LOCALS: A Q&A About Writing in Idaho with R.M. Scott
- Books about Books and the People Who Love Them
- Now That’s How you Start a Review…
- MUSIC MONDAY: Have a Good Time by Paul Simon
- MUSIC MONDAY: Getting Old Sucks (But Everybody’s Doing It) by Bowling for Soup
- A Few Quick Questions About RinthCon 2024 with Armanis Ar-feinial, Marilyn Peake, and T. Olsen
- The Quintessential Summer Book Tag
- Hold On To Your Wallets, Folks…
- These Dog Days Aren’t Over
- MUSIC MONDAY: Shooting Stars by Rival Sons
- Highlights from July: Lines Worth Repeating
- 20 Books of Summer 2024: Wrap Up and Other Summer Reading
- WWW Wednesday for August 7, August 14, August 21, and August 28, 2024.
Enough about me—how Was Your Month?
While prepping this post, I took a glance at what books are coming out next month, so I can get on library waitlists and whatnot. Reader, I tell ya, my brain is melting. Tiffany McDaniel (one of my absolute favorite authors) is releasing a middle grade series. That’s strange enough, but the first book is described as, “a light-hearted and whimsical middle grade fantasy about a young girl who must save her witch aunt from an uncommonly voracious hat.” if you’ve read just one book by her, you’ll get what I’m saying.
Anyhow, we’ll save more thoughts about that until later next month. In the meantime:
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:
Suspected burglar caught after sitting down with book—I’d pick up a copy of the clearly engrossing book if it was available in English (or if I read Italian), this is such a great advertisement for it. (the headline is good enough, but it’s worth reading the rest of the story)
The New Trend In Book Covers Is Old-Timey Animals—good-bye to the era of color blobs
Labors of Love: Eli Cranor on Education, Empathy and Experience —Great interview with Cranor (practically a tautology, I know), about one of those “why haven’t I read this book yet?” novels
What Lasts and (Mostly) Doesn’t Last: On the books that are remembered, rejected, repudiated, and rediscovered
20 Old Words for Ignorant People: From ‘wantwit’ to ‘dorkmunder’ to ‘ninnyhammer.’—I’m such a sucker for lists like this. I’m going to work on getting #17 into my working vocabulary first (probably directed toward my dogs), but the rest sound almost as good.
To help talk about backlist titles (and just for fun), What Was I Talking About 10 Years Ago Week?
Hounded by David Rosenfelt
Robert B. Parker’s Blind Spot by Reed Farrel Coleman—Coleman’s start to my favorite run on the series (yes, that includes the original).
Lullaby Town by Robert Crais
I noted the release of: Lock In by John Scalzi, The Revenge of Seven by Pittacus Lore The Bullet-Catcher’s Daughter: The Fall of the Gas-Lit Empire, Book 1 by Rod Duncan, and Once Upon a Rhyme: Volume I of the Charming Tales by Jack Heckel (I only got around to half of these, probably the right half for me)
This Week’s New Releases that I’m Excited About and/or You’ll Probably See Here Soon:
An Honorable Assassin by Steve Hamilton—I was truly worried that we’d seen the last of Nick Mason. Phew.
Amari and the Despicable Wonders by B. B. Alston—Amari’s third book promises to be action-packed. It wouldn’t suprise me if Alston get at least one of Amari’s opponents to see the light and abandon the path they’re walking. But I hope they get smacked around a little first (I’m not proud of that). Still, I’m looking forward to seeing Amari and her friends step up here.
Marvel: What If . . . Wanda Maximoff and Peter Parker Were Siblings? by Seanan McGuire—I’m not What If . . .‘s biggest fan, but “Peter Parker” and “Seanan McGuire” together override any disinclination I have.
Dungeon Crawler Carl by Matt Dinniman—this looks like a ridiculous amount of fun that I probably should’ve read before now
Kayfabe by Chris Koslowski—a humorous novel of about a brother and sister in professional wrestling.
The Ghost Cat by Alex Howard—great premise. Probably too feline-y for me, but I might get to it
It’s time to wrap up this challenge run by Cathy at 746 Books.
Last week, I honestly thought I’d be posting “well, I got 18.5 out of 20 this year.” Maybe a full 19. I guess I wasn’t too optimistic in July, either. But as of yesterday, I finished all 20 of this year’s selections. That’s the earliest I’ve completed this challenge in the four years I’ve done it.
Most of these were as good, if not better, I expected. A couple were just good enough, but I’m still glad that I read them. There was one that I DNF’d, and I do regret that–thankfully, I had a blast with the substitute. I only read 6 of my Top Ten Tuesday: Books on My Summer 2024 to-Read List (That Aren’t on My 20 Books Challenge), although, to be fair–one of them only came out Tuesday, so I haven’t had much of a chance to get it. Sure, 5 of those 6 were for a tour or an ARC that I wanted to post about by publication. The four that have no deadline attached will hopefully be tackled next month. Hopefully.
Speaking of writing about…I’ve only written about 7 of these (3 posts should’ve been posted this week, but I couldn’t quite finish them before sleep overtook me). That’s my other September goal.
Anyway, it’s done, I had fun–I read things I’ve been meaning to get to for months (if not years). Color me satisfied.
Winter Lost by Patricia Briggs
He was so in love with Mary Jo it made me feel like songs should start spontaneously playing anytime they were together.
The Last King of California by Jordan Harper
Murder is a type of magic. It has powers so a single person killed with intention can haunt the world more than a million lives ended by car crashes or cancer.
Again he has that feeling like he’s standing with his toes poking over the edge of this flat earth. He thinks on something he read in a novel in Intro to World Lit, before he quit going to class altogether. About how when you peek over the side of a cliff and get that swooshing feeling in your belly, that it isn’t a fear of falling. In fact, the book said, it is the opposite. Vertigo is the fight in your mind between the part that wants to save you and the part that wants to fall.
[She] takes shallow breaths to deal with the smell. [His]’s place doesn’t smell like death. Death doesn’t smell like anything. It’s the hungry slime of life that stinks.
Life grabs you in its jaws like a bear and all the flailing around and the screaming you do while it eats you, that’s what we call free will. Like the bear’s not there, like all this wailing and fury and fucking up everything is just what we choose to do.
Then maybe once or twice in a life you see someone flip loose from the bear’s mouth altogether and walk free through the world, and it scares the hell out of you.
Storm Front by Jim Butcher
“Paranoid? Probably. But just because you’re paranoid doesn’t mean there isn’t an invisible demon about to eat your face.”
Never let it be said that Harry Dresden is afraid of a dried, dead bug. Creepy or not, I wasn’t going to let it ruin my concentration.
So I scooped it up with the corner of the phone book and popped it into the middle drawer of my desk. Out of sight, out of mind.
So I have a problem with creepy, dead, poisonous things. So sue me.
The Camelot Shadow by Sean Gibson
He raised his eyes to the window to watch as snowflakes fell from the sky with a nonchalance that seemed defiantly at odds with their short lifespans.
“I understand you are a highly regarded scholar.”
“I suppose you might say that I know quite a lot about very little of consequence.”
Fridays are very agreeable days, perhaps owing to their position in the week. Whatever the reason, I find them very accommodating, days that one can depend upon to provide succor no matter what ignominious events Tuesdays and those dastardly Thursdays have wrought.
He was a trim man of average height whose lips curled in a perpetual smirk, one that indicated both his willingness to be amused by life and his expectation that life do something to reward that willingness.
“If wits are to be our primary weapon, I fear that we may be bringing a metaphorical bayonet to a gunfight.”
“I would have said an olive fork.”
“I’m not very good at not knowing what I can’t do.”
Last Devil to Die by Richard Osman
Days of death are days when we weigh our relationship with love in our bare hands. Days when we remember what has gone, and fear what is to come. The joy love brings, and the price we pay. When we give thanks but also pray for mercy.
Swiped by L.M. Chilton
But just as I was about to close the app, an emoji popped up on the screen.
Of course, it was the fucking winky face, my least favorite of all the emojis, the text equivalent of yelling, “Not!” after a sentence.
I always thought that Sarah had an overly-romanticized view of marriage. Her parents had the sort of relationship you only see in Richard Curtis movies–dedicated, loving, and solid as a rock. She’d grown up in a gorgeous and massive cottage in Haywoods-Heath, surrounded by idyllic countryside, and while she didn’t technically own a pony–I was pretty sure that she hung out with one on a regular basis.It was classic British rom-com territory, so no wonder she always dreamed of a bumbling English fop to sweep her off her feet.
I was so angry at the world I just wanted to shut everything away. His manic pixie dream girl had curled into a pangolin of grief, and I couldn’t blame him for slowly backing off.
(“pangolin of grief” might be the best phrase I read this month)
A Study In Scarlet Women by Sherry Thomas
“Well, I for one, thought your hypothesis was remarkably elegant. It really is too bad that sometimes inconvenient facts surface to thumb their noses at remarkably elegant hypotheses.”
“Poo to inconvenient facts.”
This Is Who We Are Now by James Bailey
I’m struck by how much thinner his hair is than last summer, when it was thinner than the time before. It disappears in half lives, always tending toward complete baldness but never quite getting there.
Danny drives the way he does everything else. Overconfidently.
Midnight Riot/Rivers of London by Ben Aaronovitch
Being a seasoned Londoner, Martin gave the body The London-Once-Over, a quick glance to determine whether this was a drunk, a crazy, or a human being in distgress. The fact that it was entirely possible for someone to be all three simultaneously is why Good Samaritan in London is considered an Extreme Sport, like base jumping or crocodile wrestling.
If you ask any police officer what the worst part of the job is, they will always say breaking bad news to relatives, but this is not the truth. The worst part is staying in the room after you’ve broken the news, so that you’re forced to be there when someone’s life disintegrates around them. Some people say it doesn’t bother them—such people are not to be trusted.
(Image by DaModernDaVinci from Pixabay)
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?
Seems easy enough, right? Let’s take a peek at this week’s answers:
What are you currently reading?
I’m reading the zany Big Trouble in Little Italy by Nicole Sharp, and am listening to Moon Over Soho by Ben Aaronovitch, read by Kobna Holdbrook-Smith on audiobook (if only so I can remember how good the rest are in comparison).
What did you recently finish reading?
I just finished Alex Robins’ Panacea and The Night Ends with Fire by K. X. Song, read by Natalie Naudus on audio. Two books that were heavier than I anticipated (which says more about my expectations than anything)
What do you think you’ll read next?
My next book should be Ways and Truths and Lives by Matt Edwards and my next audiobook should be Zero Stars, Do Not Recommend by MJ Wassmer, read by Stephen R. Thorne. Yes, that audiobook was in this spot last week, too. But I hit play on the wrong app before I remembered that fact.
How’re you wrapping up August?
Music Monday's originated at The Tattooed Book Geek's fantastic blog and has shown up hither, thither, and yon since then.
(Updated and Revised 8/26/24)
It’s National Dog Day, the annual celebration of “all dogs, mixed breed and pure. Our mission is to help galvanize the public to recognize the number of dogs that need to be rescued each year and acknowledges family dogs and dogs that work selflessly each day to save lives, keep us safe and bring comfort.” So it seemed like a good day to post another version of this. I haven’t added much to this since last year’s editions, which worries me a little bit. What have I been wasting time reading?
This was a hard post to come up with a name for‡, essentially this post came from a comment not too long ago about being hesitant to read books about animals if the reader doesn’t know if they survive the book. I get that, I absolutely do. I still bear the scars of Where the Red Fern Grows and Marley and Me (sure, that wasn’t that long ago, but the wound still stings). So, for readers like my correspondent, here are some perfectly safe books prominently featuring dogs!
I plan on updating this regularly, so by all means, chime in with comments about Dogs I’ve forgotten about/haven’t encountered yet!
Non-Fiction
The Particulars of Peter by Kelly Conaboy—this is a collection of humorous essays giving Conaboy the opportunity to rave about her dog, Peter. In her eyes, Peter is a perfect dog, and as you read this, you’ll be tempted to agree. (my post about it)
Olive, Mabel & Me by Andrew Cotter—Cotter’s charming book describes his life with the two dogs that rocketed to international stardom (and brought him along). (my post about it)
My Life as a Dog by L. A. Davenport—Davenport’s short little book about the relationship between the author and his dog, Kevin, a black and tan, pure-bred dachshund. It focuses on what the two of them did over two days and then a weekend selected from the years they spent together. (my post about it)
Dogtology: Live. Bark. Believe. by Jeff Lazarus—Humans are so obsessed with their dogs, we’ve devoted so much time, energy, and work into them that it’s become a religion, with humans essentially worshipping their pets. This book is a look at that devotion and the rituals and beliefs that accompany it. It’s technically humor, but a lot of it seems pretty on-target. (my post about it)
What the Dog Knows: The Science and Wonder of Working Dogs by Cat Warren—Warren basically covers three topics: there’s the science and history of using working dogs (of all sorts of breeds, not to mention pigs(!), birds, and even cats) to find cadavers, drugs, bombs, etc.; there’s the memoir of her involvement with cadaver dogs via her German Shepherd, Solo; and anecdotes of other cadaver dogs and trainers that she’s encountered/learned from/watched in action. (my post about it)
What the Dog Knows Young Readers Edition by Cat Warren, Patricia J. Wynne—The above book adjusted for younger readers, with some great illustrations. It’s not dumbed-down, just adjusted. (my post about it)
Fiction
Mace Reid K-9 Mystery series by Jeffrey B. Burton—A Dog Trainer/Cadaver Dog Handler and his dogs get involved in serial killer cases. Warning: Like many heroes in action novels, most of Mace’s dogs get beat up/injured. Some pretty badly. (my posts about it)
Suspect by Robert Crais—One of my all-favorite books, a cop with PTSD gets assigned to the K-9 Unit and works with a dog fresh from Afghanistan combat. (my post about it) The pair also plays a major role in The Promise.
Sharp Investigations by E.N. Crane—A series of comic investigations about an Ex-MP and her K-9 partner in Ohio. Both are pretty skilled and are walking disasters at the same time. (my posts about them)
Pug Actually by Matt Dunn—Doug, a loyal pug, plays cupid for his owner. This is a cute rom-com with a charming canine narrator. (my post about it)
Stepdog by Nicole Galland—A love story where the major impediment to happily ever after is her dog (a gift from her ex). (my post about it)
Noodle Conquers Comfy Mountain by Jonathan Graziano, Dan Tavis (Illustrator)—This picture book is about Noodle’s search for a place to spend the day where he can have all his needs met: to be able to smell nice smells, see his Jonathan, watch for a snacking opportunity (or several), and—most importantly—feel comfy. Impossible to not like. (my post about it)
Noodle and the No Bones Day by Jonathan Graziano, Dan Tavis (Illustrator)—This picture book relates the origin of the Internet Craze and the wonderful, photogenic pug behind it. (my post about it)
Kay-9: The Robot Dog by J.M. Gulmire—maybe doesn’t belong on this list (see: “Robot”), but it’s too cute to leave off on a technicality. What’s an inventive boy to do when his very supportive mother won’t let him get a dog because she’s horribly allergic? Why, build one with an incredibly lifelike AI. Obviously. (my posts about it)
Oberon’s Meaty Mysteries by Kevin Hearne (Audiobooks narrated by Luke Daniels)—Oberon, the scene-stealing Irish Wolfhound from The Iron Druid Chronicles narrates this series of novellas (my posts about it)
Neah Bay series by Owen Laukkanen—Lucy is a dog who is trained by prisoner Mason Burke, who has to track her down when he gets out. She’s a service dog for Marine Vet Jess Winslow. Lucy connects the two humans in her life and helps to keep them safe when a corrupt deputy comes after Jess. (my post about it)
I Thought You Were Dead by Pete Nelson—I’m not sure how to sum this one up in a sentence. It’s a pretty typical novel about a troubled writer with a romantic life and family in shambles. But his dog is the thing that makes all the difference. (my post about it)
Chet and Bernie books by Spencer Quinn—Bernie Little is a PI in Phoenix. Chet’s his four-legged partner and the series narrator. It’s too much fun to miss. (my posts about it)
The Right Side by Spencer Quinn—”a deeply damaged female soldier home from the war in Afghanistan becomes obsessed with finding a missing girl, gains an unlikely ally in a stray dog, and encounters new perils beyond the combat zone.” (my post about it)
Woof by Spencer Quinn—The beginning of an MG series about a with a penchant for trouble and her dog. (my post about it)
Andy Carpenter books by David Rosenfelt—Andy Carpenter is New Jersey’s best defense lawyer and a devoted dog owner. He helps run a rescue shelter, too—and almost every client he takes as some sort of connection with a dog. These books aren’t dog-centric like the others on this list, but they’re dog-heavy. (my posts about it)
The K-Team books by David Rosenfelt—a spin-off from the Andy Carpenter series. This features a PI team made up of Andy’s wife/investigator, Laurie; the near super-heroic Marcus; and Corey Douglas, a freshly-retired K-9 officer. His canine partner, Simon Garfunkel, comes along, too. Simon Garfunkel doesn’t play a giant role in the books, but he gets at least one good action scene per book. (my posts about it)
Voyage of the Dogs by Greg van Eekhout—SF for all ages about a team of dogs on a long-distance space flight. (my post about it)
Supportive Roles
These dogs aren’t as significant a presence in their books as the prior group, but they’re important enough to mention.
Mouse from The Dresden Files by Jim Butcher. (my posts about it)
The Midnight Plan of the Repo Man by W. Bruce Cameron and the sequel Repo Madness by W. Bruce Cameron— (my posts about it)
Edgar from the Washington Poe books by M. W. Craven. (my posts about it)
Rutherford from The TV Detective series by Simon Hall (my posts about it)
Oberon from the Iron Druid Chronicles by Kevin Hearne. (my post about it)
Ruffin from the I. Q. series by Joe Ide. (my posts about it)
Dog from the Walt Longmire books by Craig Johnson (my posts about it)
Purvis (and Beau) from The Good Kill by John McMahon (my post about it)
Trogdor from The Golden Arrow Mysteries by Meghan Scott Molin (my post about it)
Mingus from The Drifter by Nicholas Petrie (my post about it)
Herbert and Daisy from Adult Assembly Required by Abbi Waxman (my post about it)
Books with paws on both sides of the line
Some books that belong on this list, but might be a bit too close to not fitting on it for some readers
Lessons From Lucy by Dave Barry—there’s a strong “my beloved dog is old and will die soon-vibe throughout this (it’s the whole point), so some may want to avoid it. But the focus is on what Barry is learning from his aging but still full-of-life dog. (my post about it)
Dead is … series by Jo Perry—the canine protagonist in these mystery novels is a ghost, so there’s a dog death involved. But we meet her as a ghost, so she won’t die (again) in the series. (my posts about it)
Dogtripping: 25 Rescues, 11 Volunteers, and 3 RVs on Our Canine Cross-Country Adventure by David Rosenfelt—For various and sundry reasons, the Rosenfelts decide to move their home and dog shelter from California to Maine. As anyone who’s had to get a dog (or a toddler) into their vehicle for a drive across town can imagine—getting 25 dogs moved across the country is a logistical nightmare. In Rosenfelt’s capable hands, if “tragedy plus time equals comedy,” “nightmarish logistics plus time” does, too. The shelter specializes in senior dogs, so not every dog mentioned or featured lives, but that’s not the focus of the book. (my post about it)
E. B. White on Dogs—if this isn’t every short piece or letter White wrote mentioning dogs, it’s so close as not to matter. Some are witty, some are touching, some are somewhere in between. There are even a few written from the point of view of his dog! Sadly, this does include a eulogy for one dog, a few other mentions of canine mortality, so it can’t make the main list. (my post about it)
Lessons from Tara by David Rosenfelt—a sort-of-sequel to the above. Inspired by the death of their dog, Tara, the Rosenfelts now operate a no-kill shelter for senior dogs. This is the story about the origins and day-to-day of that life. There’s discussion of Tara’s death, and he has to cover the end of days for dogs, but it’s not the focus of the book. It’s one some will want to avoid, but you probably shouldn’t. (my post about it)
Max Boucher Mysteries by Troy Lambert—Max used to be with the Seattle Police, but became a P.I. after the deaths of his wife and daughter. Because of the events of the first novel, Max gains a reputation as an animal detective. Particularly specializing in missing/kidnapped dogs. Most of the dogs in the series get out okay, but some are injured or worse. (my posts about it)
Stray Ally by Troy Lambert—this is an action novel featuring heroics from several dogs working alongside a special ops soldier to try to stop a white supremacist group from launching a terrorist action. Some dogs are hurt, and a few die along the way. (my post about it)
‡ I brainstormed this a bit with my family, and wanted to share some of those titles that didn’t make the cut, just because I enjoyed their creativity:
These Dogs Didn’t Go To Heaven/Not All Dogs Go to Heaven implies these dogs aren’t wonderful creatures, and that’s a solid loser
No Kleenex Required too vague, and not necessarily true, they’re just not required because of a death
The Best Bois
Books Where the Author isn’t A Heartless Bastard (Looking at You, Marley and Me) too long, and boy howdy, does it seem my son has bigger issues with the book than I did
Books that Even PETA Would Be Okay With
Books for the Vegan in You suggests the dog books I don’t mention are in favor of eating them…
Paw Patrol I’m almost confident my daughter’s boyfriend suggested as a joke, for his sake, I’m assuming it was
Pawfect Dog Stories I refuse to resort to that kind of joke
There’s a good reason this is up late today*, my daughter and I started the day at The Boise Comic Arts Festival, where we met/renewed acquaintances with some local artists and writers (including, but not limited to, Jeremy Billups, Elliott P. Linker and Mrs. Courtney Linker, Gabriela Briceno, Sarah from Oroboro Lit Journal/Death Rattle, and J.C. Jackson), and spent less money than usual (yay, restraint!). We got to sit in on a fun panel about the The History of Comics in Idaho. The most important thing we learned was there that there is a history.
Anyway, if you’re a local—stop by today/tomorrow.
* Usually it’s because I can’t get out of bed at a decent time on Saturday.
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:
Bulwer-Lytton Fiction Contest —In case you don’t know the BLFC “challenges entrants to compose opening sentences to the worst of all possible novels.” Boy howdy, they got some doozies this year. Make the time to read down to the bottom.
Steve Hamilton gets back to his ‘old stuff,’ starting with Nick Mason—Color me happy.
Popular romance novels voted most distracting audiobooks in nation, could cause distracted driving—I’d never thought of rating a book in this way (or comparing genres by words per minute)
RinthCon, the all-online con set in 2324 filled with fictional characters from today, is going on this weekend—and is just as strange (and fun) as the premise is
A Book-ish Related Podcast episode (or two) you might want to give a listen to:
Fiction Fans Episode 153: Orconomics by J. Zachary Pike
To help talk about backlist titles (and just for fun), What Was I Talking About 10 Years Ago Week?
Landline by Rainbow Rowell
Stalking the Angel by Robert Crais
And I mentioned the release of One Kick by Chelsea Cain, Percy Jackson’s Greek Gods by Rick Riordan, What Might Have Been by Matt Dunn (2 of those I actually got around to reading and enjoying)
This Week’s New Releases that I’m Excited About and/or You’ll Probably See Here Soon:
My Salty Mary by Cynthia Hand, Brodi Ashton, Jodi Meadows—this trio is back with a funky mashup of Mary Read and the Little Mermaid. Because, why not?
You Will Never Be Me by Jesse Q. Sutanto—Part of me isn’t sure that I want to read Sutanto when she isn’t being fun and cozy. But most of me figures she can do black comedy really well, too, and this just looks good.
City of Secrets by P. J. Tracy—this looks like a series I could sink my teeth into (oh, good, I need another of those)
Or, I guess, prepare to empty them. That’s kind of up to you.
This weekend brings several opportunities for some great buys: I strongly suggest you sample them all.
First, this one is safe for your accounts: Ian Robinson’s Shots Fired (Nash & Moretti Book 3…but it’s totally fine to read as a stand-alone) is free for the weekend. Amazon US: https://amazon.com/dp/B0977F98JD Amazon UK: https://amazon.co.uk/dp/B0977F98JD
Fahrenheit Press has their Summer Sale going on. You can get 20% off everything by using promo-code AUG2024 at the checkout. You can easily find some great books (several of which I’ve talked about here), and some great merch (I get about 1/2 of my T-Shirts from them). You’d be foolish to not browse and/or spend money there.
Epic Sale of Beloved SFF Books from August 23-27. There are soooo many good things there (and good-looking things, too). (Hat-tip to Daniel Meyer for telling me about this)
The August version of Narratess Indie Sale is this weekend, too. There’s some overlap between these two, but they aren’t identical.