Tag: Mid-Year Freak Out Book Tag

Mid-Year Freak Out Book Tag ’23

Mid-Year Freak Out Book Tag
I’d intended on getting this posted last week, you’ll see how well that worked out for me. I’ve done this tag the last few years, and have had a lot of fun with it, even if it took me an unexpectedly long time to assemble this one.

I have really enjoyed reading the posts that several others have put up over the last week or so (like Novel Lives, Biblio Nerd Reflections, Pages and Tea, and Twirling Book Princess…I thought I’d noted a few others, too, but apparently not. Sorry if I neglected you). Hopefully, this is half as entertaining.

I think I did okay at not mentioning some titles too often—but I had to repeat some. When a book is good in one category, odds are it’ll be good in others.

1. The best book you’ve read so far this year?

This was a four-way tie that I whittled all the way down to 3. How’s that for not at all decisive? (the other one gets mentioned a couple of times below).

The Perception of Dolls by Anthony Croix, Edited by Russell Day (my post about it) is a truly impressive work. I have not been able to stop thinking and talking about Chain-Gang All-Stars by Nana Kwame Adjei-Brenyah (and I think I didn’t say enough good things about it in my initial post (my post about it) . Ozark Dogs by Eli Cranor shows that his debut wasn’t a fluke.

The Perception of DollsBlank SpaceChain-Gang All-StarsBlank SpaceOzark DOgs

I should probably mention Fearless by M. W. Craven (my post about it)and Sleepless City by Reed Farrel Coleman (my post about it), too. I’m forcing myself to stop now.

FearlessBlank SpaceSleepless City


2. The best sequel you’ve read this year?

It’d be Samantha Jayne Allen’s Hard Rain (my post about it) or Random Sh*t Flying Through the Air by Jackson Ford. A lot of the stand-out books I’ve read this year are first books in a series and or stand-alones (also, I haven’t read quite as many sequels as I thought I did). Hard Rain does a great job of continuing the growth and development of Annie McIntyre, while telling a different kind of story in that same world. Random raised the stakes from its predecessor and showed that Ford was not pulling any punches—it’s one of those that the more I think about it, the more I’m impressed.

Hard RainBlank SpaceRandom Sh*t Flying Through the Air


3. New releases you haven’t read yet but want to.

This list should probably be longer, but off the top of my head (do note, these are books I own, so I should be able to read them easily): Everyone in My Family Has Killed Someone by Benjamin Stevenson Lancaster, All the Sinners Bleed by S. A. Cosby, Evidence Pool by Ian Robinson, Blood Runs Cold by Neil Lancaster

Not necessarily in that order.

Everyone in My Family Has Killed SomeoneBlank SpaceAll the Sinners BleedBlank SpaceEvidence PoolBlank SpaceBlood Runs Cold


4. Most anticipated releases for the second half of the year.

The Narrow Road Between Desires by Patrick Rothfuss and The Olympian Affair by Jim Butcher are reflex answers. Sleep No More and The Innocent Sleep are close seconds, to see how Seanan McGuire handles the conclusion of Be the Serpent and how she handles these two books together.

The Narrow Road Between DesiresBlank SpaceThe Olympian Affair
Sleep No MoreBlank SpaceThe Innocent Sleep

Not Prepared by Matthew Hanover is technically an answer to this, but I got an advance copy and I’m starting it this week, so….

Not Prepared


5. Biggest disappointment.

I feel like I’m picking on books here, but…

Karin Slaughter’s Triptych (my post about it) was a major let-down for me and made me unsure that I want to try anything else by her. And The Stench of Honolulu by Jack Handey made me reconsider wanting to read humor.

TriptychBlank SpaceThe Stench of Honolulu


6. Biggest Surprise.

Ummm…how little I liked those last two books?

Eh, let’s go positive again. I assumed (as I always try to) that I was going to have fun with books with titles like Vera Wong’s Unsolicited Advice for Murderers by Jesse Q. Sutanto (my post about it) and A Necromancer Called Gam Gam by Adam Holcombe (my post about it). But I wasn’t prepared to enjoy them as much as I did.

Vera Wong's Unsolicited AdviceBlank SpaceA Necromancer Called Gam Gam


7. Favorite new to you, or debut, author.

Jesse Q. Sutanto (my post about her book), Ausma Zehanat Khan (my post about her book), and Nana Kwame Adjei-Brenyah (my post about his book) would top this list. I can’t believe everyone isn’t talking about Adjei-Brenyah in the same way that S.A. Crosby and Oyinkan Braithwaite were a few years ago (and Crosby still is). Zehanat Khan feels like someone I should’ve been reading for years (and I have some makeup reading to do). Sutanto is just a fantastic breath of fresh air compared to most of the people I read—like Abbi Waxman, but with murder.

Vera Wong's Unsolicited AdviceBlank SpaceBlackwater FallsBlank SpaceChain-Gang All-Stars


8. Newest fictional crush.

Lola, the corgi in Vampire Weekend by Mike Chen (don’t ask me why I haven’t got a post finished about this yet…) would be my new fantasy dog. Any corgi that can put up with living with a vampire—and actually seem to enjoy it—is a special kind of dog. Honestly, I don’t know that many of her interactions with her vampire, Louise, really won me over (although I appreciated Louise’s devotion to her), but it was the way that Lola helped bring poor Ian out of his shell/emotional wreckage that was so heartwarming.

Vampire Weekend


9. Newest favorite character.

I don’t even know if I can limit this to a handful…Ben Koenig (from Fearless), Vera Wong (from, well, duh), Imaya Rahman (from Blackwater Falls), Juniper (from Mrs. Covington’s), and Nick Ryan (from Sleepless City) all jump to mind. And if I let myself keep thinking, I’d come up with another 6 in 20 seconds. I think I have to go with Juniper (but I could make a case for all of these)

Mrs. Covington's


10. Book that made you cry?

Huh…Don’t think I’ve read one this year. On the Savage Side by Tiffany McDaniel (my post about it) probably moved me the most of the books I read this year. The Once and Future Witches by Alix E. Harrow could easily have jerked a tear or two out of me if I’d been in a slightly different mood, ditto for Lost in the Moment and Found by Seanan McGuire (my post about it).

I think this year’s books have been the literary equivalent of Johnson & Johnson’s Baby Shampoo. Which is a line I stole from my ’22 post. By the end of the year, something will change that, I’m sure.

On the Savage SideBlank SpaceThe Once and Future WitchesBlank SpaceLost in the Moment and Found


11. Book that made you happy?

Well, really, any book that I rated 3 Stars or higher (most of them for the year) made me happy—it’s why I do this. But I associate happiness with three in particular: Mrs. Covington’s by K.R.R. Lockahven (my post about it), Vera Wong’s Unsolicited Advice for Murderers by Jesse Q. Sutanto (my post about it), and Cutthroat Cupcakes by Cate Lawley (my post about it) (that might be recency bias, but…eh, who cares?).

Cozy/Cozy-Adjacent books like these just make you feel good. These three still make me feel good as I think about them later.

Mrs. Covington'sBlank SpaceVera Wong's Unsolicited AdviceBlank SpaceCutthroat Cupcakes


12. Favorite book to film adaption?

I almost put nothing here (other than a list of ones I’ve intended to get to), but at the last second, I remembered that Bullet Train was adapted from a novel. I have no idea how it is as an adaptation, but I had a lot of fun watching this a couple of months back.

Bullet Train Movie

and another last-minute memory—the TV show Will Trent. Which is all sorts of okay (which still puts it miles ahead of the first book in the series).

Will Trent


13. Favorite post/review you have done this year?

Everything relating to the Literary Locals series and most of the A Few Quick Questions I’ve done this year are probably my favorites, but I have a hard time picking out individual posts from them, so I’ll go with:
bullet They Asked, so I Answer (just about) Anything for My 10th Blogiversary
bullet TEN(!!!!!) YEARS of The Irresponsible Reader. (or, Happy Blogiversary to me.)
bullet Book Blogger Hop: Are Books a Must-Have in Your Home?

I think my favorite review-ish posts would be (although all of them make me want to spend another hour or so improving them):
bullet The Perception of Dolls by Anthony Croix, Edited by Russell Day: Creepy Dolls, Creepy dolls, and Creepy do!!s
bullet Scratching the Flint by Vern Smith: We Didn’t Start the Fire…
bullet Ten Reasons to NOT Read Nic Blake and the Remarkables: The Manifestor Prophecy by Angie Thomas


14. Most beautiful book you have bought or been given this year?

Farmhouse by Sophie Blackall is just a gorgeously put-together book. It’s worth getting just to look at.

Farmhouse

The Hardcover reissue of The Part About the Dragon Was (Mostly) True by Sean Gibson, Mrs. Covington’s by K.R.R. Lockhaven, and However Long the Day by Justin Reed are pretty attractive, too.

Part about Dragon Was TrueBlank SpaceMrs. Covington'sBlank SpaceHowever Long the Day


15. What books do you need to read by the end of the year?

The lists from my 20 Books of Summer, Books on My Summer 2023 to-Read List (That Aren’t on My 20 Books Challenge), the answers from #3 and 4, and the rest of my challenge reads. That pretty much takes care of the year (but I know I’ll read others, too).
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As usual, I’m not tagging anyone in this—but I’d like to see what you all have to come up with.

Mid-Year Freak Out Book Tag ’22

Mid-Year Freak Out Book Tag
I’d intended on getting this posted Tuesday, you’ll see how well that worked out for me. I’ve done this tag the last couple of years, and have had a lot of fun with it. This year, I found myself overthinking the answers for some reason—which took some of the fun out of things, but I’m really enjoying being done with it. I have really enjoyed reading the posts that several others have put up over the last week or so, hopefully, this is half as entertaining.

I think I did okay at not mentioning some titles too often—but I had to repeat some. When a book is good in one category, odds are it’ll be good in others.

1. The best book you’ve read so far this year?

Either Don’t Know Tough by Eli Cranor (my post about it) or Reconstruction by Mick Herron (my post about it). My immediate reaction was Don’t Know Tough, Cranor’s work is just gut-wrenching, beautiful, and powerful. But when I was looking over titles for another prompt, I was reminded of Reconstruction and I can’t talk myself out of ignoring it, it was too well constructed (pun unintended but embraced and flaunted).

Oof. And The Border (my post about it) needs to be included, too. I’ve got to stop thinking about this question and move on.

Don't Know ToughBlank SpaceReconstructionBlank SpaceThe Border

2. The best sequel you’ve read this year?

I think S. J. Rozan’s Family Business (my post about it) leads this by a nose, but I can’t rule out or Lee Goldberg’s Movieland (my post about it). Movieland is the best Eve Ronin novel yet—Eve’s developing into a more interesting and complex character, and she started off great. Family Business does everything the Lydia Chin/Bill Smith —series does best—you’ve got Chinese gangs and the subculture around Chinatown, you’ve got Lydia and Bill’s relationship (professional and personal) firing on all cylinders, some great stuff involving Lydia’s mother, some action, some clever detective work, with everything in the novel occurring withing multiple layers of tradition, family, and secrets. Man…I want to go read it again instead of finishing this post.

Blank SpaceFamily BusinessBlank SpaceMovieland


I need to exercise some self-control and muster up a little decisiveness soon, two ties in two questions? Pfui.


3. New releases you haven’t read yet but want to.

Sure, I say something about getting in ship shape right before a question that allows plurals. The Botanist by M.W. Craven and The Self-Made Widow by Fabian Nicieza (hopefully I’ll read both this week). The only other one that I can think of is Random Sh*t Flying Through the Air by Jackson Ford (but I need to take care of at least part of prompt #5 first). There are probably a dozen others that belong here, but I’m drawing a blank.

The BotanistBlank SpaceThe Self-Made WidowBlank SpaceA Sh*tload of Crazy Powers

4. Most anticipated releases for the second half of the year.

Hmmm. Well, there’s Final Heir, the last Jane Yellowrock book. I’ve avoided all knowledge of the next Toby Daye novel, Be the Serpent, but I bet it’ll be a humdinger—McGuire was too nice to Toby last year, there must be blood (well, okay, that’s a given…but you know what I mean). Sure, there’s also the next Thursday Murder Club, The Bullet That Missed, and Noelle Holten’s 6 Ripley Avenue—I’m really excited to dive into that. Since it’s the end of the trilogy, I’m really looking forward to A Hard Day for a Hangover by Darynda Jones, and I can’t forget Racing the Light by Robert Crais—he spends longer than most between books, so there’s a lot of anticipation for a new one.

Final HeirBlank SpaceBe the SerpentBlank SpaceThe Bullet that Missed

6 Ripley AvenueBlank SpaceA Hard Day for a HangoverBlank SpaceRacing the Light

5. Biggest disappointment.

I feel like I’m picking on books here, but…Rosebud (my post about it)—just because I’m used to really liking Paul Cornell’s books. But I think it’d be The Lost Discipline of Conversation: Surprising Lessons in Spiritual Formation Drawn from the English Puritans by Joanne J. Jung (my post about it)—this is precisely the kind of book that I’d typically lap up. But I think Jung missed the point of what the Puritans were going for and ended up distorting them (IMO) and the book was kind of “blah” regardless.

RosebudBlank SpaceLost Discipline of Conversation

6. Biggest Surprise.

The Part About the Dragon Was (Mostly) True by Sean Gibson (my post about it). I’d heard nothing but good things about this, but I wasn’t prepared for this level of silliness. The funniest thing I’ve read this year.

The Part About the Dragon was True

7. Favorite new to you, or debut, author.

Eli Cranor. You don’t often come across a writer like this. He’s a crime writer, through-and-through, but he’s the kind you can give to your “Literary Fiction” snob relative/friend and they’ll actually read it.

(although, if I’d waited a couple of weeks last year to read Elizabeth Breck for the first time, it’d be her. No contest. Cranor’s work is better, but Breck’s stuff feels like it was written for me and maybe a couple of other people).

Don't Know Tough

8. Newest fictional crush.

Daisy the pug in Adult Assembly Required (my post about it) would be my new fantasy dog. Daisy’s antics around food remind me of the pug/beagle mix snoring nearby, and the way she gets the humans in the house to fight over her? It’s brilliant, she won me over right away that the other animals in the book (who were great, too) just couldn’t.

Adult Assembly Required

9. Newest favorite character.

See what I said above about the new-to-me author, the same goes for Breck’s Madison Kelly. But, no…I had to read her first book last year.

So…I guess it’d be Tuesday Mooney (from Tuesday Mooney Talks to Ghosts (my post about it)) or Tempest Raj (from Under Lock & Skeleton Key (my post about it)). These two are almost as good as Madison, so I’m not complaining too much. Tuesday is too smart for her own good, creative in her own way, irascible, stubborn, witty in an enviable way, and haunted (possibly literally). How do I sum up Tempest? She’s a stage magician drowning in guilt, indecision, and the crushing weight of public scrutiny—yet her personality, curiosity, and intelligence keeps shining through and fighting against her circumstances. There’s something immediately likable about her (rough edges and flaws included)

Tuesday Mooney Talks to GhostsBlank SpaceUnder Lock & Skeleton Key

10. Book that made you cry?

Huh…Don’t think I’ve read one this year. There was a moment or two in The Cartographers by Peng Shepherd (my post about it)that probably got close, ditto for Light Years from Home by Mike Chen (my post about it). I might have got a little misty at a couple of points in Adult Assembly Required by Abbi Waxman (my post about it), but…yeah, I think this year’s books have been the literary equivalent of Johnson & Johnson’s Baby Shampoo.

The CartographersBlank SpaceLight Years from HomeBlank SpaceAdult Assembly Required

11. Book that made you happy?

Well, really, any book that I rated 3 Stars or higher (most of them for the year), made me happy. But I associate happiness with three in particular: Adult Assembly Required by Abbi Waxman (my post about it), Kaiju Preservation Society by John Scalzi (my post about it), and Black Nerd Problems by William Evans & Omar Holmon (my post about it). These filled me with joy, made me want to re-read them immediately, and still make me feel good weeks/months later.

Adult Assembly RequiredBlank SpaceKaiju Preservation SocietyBlank SpaceBlack Nerd Problems

12. Favorite book to film adaption?

It’s not a “film”, but boy howdy is AppleTV’s Slow Horses fantastic. And as faithful as you could ask for, not perfectly so, but close enough.

Slow Horses Apple TV

13. Favorite post/review you have done this year?

I’m having a lot of fun with the Highlights: Lines worth Repeating posts, I don’t know why it’s taken me so long to do something like them. I guess my best (and therefore favorite) post would be What Makes a Good Book: A Reader’s Perspective (Part 1)—I hope I can get the next posts done on that project.

14. Most beautiful book you have bought or been given this year?

That’d be the Limited Edition King of Crows Anniversary hardback. Which works out nicely, because I don’t need another copy of that—I just wanted it as a display copy. It should be great to look at.

Honorable mention goes to Guidebook for Instruction in the Christian Religion by Herman Bavinck, translated and edited by Gregory Parker Jr., Cameron Clausing. The dustjacket isn’t the nicest one that I’ve seen lately, but the book underneath it? It’s almost as nice to look at as it is to read.

King of Crows AnniversaryBlank SpaceGuidebook for Instruction in the Christian Religion

15. What books do you need to read by the end of the year?

The embarrassing thing is that I could copy and paste my answer from last year and it’d be pretty accurate. And the two that I did read from that answer were read this year. I will be a bit less ambitious this year for this answer and will limit my answer to the books from 20 Books of Summer, the books listed in #4, E.B. White on Dogs, and I’m going to catch up on Jackson Ford’s The Frost Files: Random Sht Flying Through the Air and Eye of the Sht Storm.


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

Mid-Year Freak Out Book Tag

Mid-Year Freak Out Book Tag
I thought this would be a fun little tool to use to look back over the first part of 2020. I saw this one over on One Book More’s blog, and it seemed to have been created by Moon Creations.

What is the best book that you’ve read so far in 2020?

King of the Crows

King of the Crows by Russell Day.

No doubt about it. Epic in scope, but with personal story at its heart. If I really start talking about it, I won’t shut up. I talked about it a little here.


What has been your favorite sequel of the first half of the year?

That’s a tough call, there’ve been a few. But I think I’m going to go with:

Burning Bright

Burning Bright by Nick Petrie

As I said here, I should’ve read this shortly after I read The Drifter in the summer of 2018. The third in the series, Light It Up is coming soon.


Is there a new release that you haven’t read yet but you’re really excited for?

Broken

Broken by Don Winslow

Winslow’s The Border stands between Broken and me–so hopefully, I can get to this novella collection by September.


What is your most anticipated release for the second half of the year?

er, um…that’s a good question. I should probably say Betty by Tiffany McDaniel, because her debut novel was sood and I frequently have pretensions about being all literary and hoity-toity, proving that being an English Major wasn’t just a passing fancy. But if I’m being completely honest, there’s no contest:

Peace Talks Battle Ground

Peace Talks and Battle Ground by Jim Butcher

(it’s not cheating to say that–it was one book that was split into two…). I’m a rabid Dresden fanboy and we’ve been waiting so long!


What is your biggest disappointment so far?

Blood Storm Magic

Blood Storm Magic by Jayne Faith

The Ella Gray series in general. I really enjoyed the way this series started, and while I never figured these would be in the Toby Daye/Harry Dresden league, I didn’t expect that I’d get to the stage where I was disappointed in them, but I hit there. I haven’t even posted about it yet, guess I spoiled that one, eh?


What is your biggest surprise so far?

Highfire

Highfire by Eoin Colfer

Highfire. I never expected Colfer to write a novel about a Dragon for adults–if anything, I expected something along the lines of Screwed or Plugged. So that’s surprise number one. Surprise number two is that the dragon is a Drunken, Netflix-binging, Lousiana swamp-dwelling, crotchety one. Funny and full of heart–entertaining from snout to tail.

Runners-Up: The Audiobooks Back to Reality by Mark Stay & Mark Oliver, narrated by Kim Bretton and The In Between by Michael Landweber, narratoed by Brittany Pressley and Mark Boyett.


Who is your favorite new to you, or debut, author?

Darynda Jones, author of A Bad Day for Sunshine

A Bad Day for Sunshine

Darynda Jones has several novels published already, and I don’t think I’d heard of any of them until I was finished with this intro to her new series. She’s the favorite new to me author and the book has a couple of strong contenders for favorite new characters of 2020, as I stated here.


Who is your favorite fictional crush from this year?

The Finders

Elvira from The Finders by Jeffrey B. Burton

I’ve never gotten into the whole Book Crush thing–I’m already in a long-term relationship. Still, I have to admit, as happily committed as I am, there’s something about Vira, the tough, spirited, brilliant Golden Retriever with a troubled past that just makes me want to make her part of my pack.

But please, no one tell this girl that I said that:
This Girl


What are 6 books that you want to read by the end of the year?

Other than Betty, Peace Talks, and Battleground, right? Five upcoming releases and one book I’m tired of beating myself up for not having read yet (not unlike Burning Bright above, I should have read the Cartmel book in the Fall of ’18)

Annihilation Aria Dead Perfect A Killing Frost
Last Stand in Lychford Next to Last Stand The Run-Out Groove

Annihilation Aria by Michael R. Underwood, Dead Perfect by Noelle Holten, A Killing Frost by Seanan McGuire
Last Stand in Lychford by Paul Cornell, Next to Last Stand by Craig Johnson, The Run-Out Groove by Andrew Cartmel


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

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