Tag: Miscellany Page 82 of 177

Highlights from July: Lines Worth Repeating

Highlights from the Month
Here’s a collection of my favorite phrases/sentences/paragraphs from last month that I haven’t already used for something. (I will skip most audiobooks, my transcription skills aren’t what they should be. But when I try, the punctuation, etc. is just a guess).
Songbird

Songbird by Peter Grainger

“How old is Michelle?” It doesn’t matter how you ask the question, whichever tense you go with sounds wrong. Reeve had concluded that to say “was” now, would be too soon, that’s all

The [remark about] fast cars were true without a doubt. He’d been in one or two of those with Catherine, and surviving the experience was enough to make you reconsider your rejection of the Christian faith.

There had been times, and not a few of them, when Waters had thought, “Why doesn’t he let that go? Why go out on a limb for something trivial? For some small point of principle?” But there’s no such thing as a small point of principle, principles are big things. If principles aren’t worth fighting for, what else is? What else matters?


A World Without

A World Without “Whom”: The Essential Guide to Language in the BuzzFeed Age by Emmy J. Favilla

Warning: Here’s where I might start to get a little emotional. Because what’s more beautiful than a strategically placed em dash? Answer: interspecies friendships, random acts of kindness, Oscar Isaac, an empty subway car during rush hour that isn’t the result of a putrid mystery substance permeating the air. But the em dash is not too far behind!

Face it: You hate whom. If you don’t, you’re likely a liar or someone with an English degree who actually still really hates whom but can’t bear to come to terms with your traitorous hatred for fear of your overpriced degree being snatched from your cold, dead hands, never to be seen again. In casual conversation we end sentences with prepositions and we never use whom. It’s a fact. And if you do use whom in conversational speech, you will never see yourself on an invite to a dinner party at my place. Mostly because I’m not the type of person who has dinner parties or uses whom.


The Botanist

The Botanist by M.W. Craven

‘I didn’t want you thinking I’d panicked. I didn’t want you thinking less of me.’

Poe was lost for words. ‘Why would I think less of you?’ he said eventually. ‘You’d just found your father’s corpse. There was a bullet hole in his head. If you can’t panic then, when can you?’


The Law

The Law by Jim Butcher

I’d been feeling sorry for myself, which is about the most useless thing you can feel: it doesn’t do a damned thing for you. You don’t feel any better, you don’t get any better, and you’re too busy moping to do anything to actually make your life any better.


The Self-Made Widow

The Self-Made Widow by Fabian Nicieza

He wore a faded Creed T-shirt from their 1999 Human Clay tour, which Michelle assumed he would never have worn had he known he’d be dying in it.

Brianne was smart, but she was intellectually lazy, mostly as a result of all the years spent being intellectually lazy.

She started to walk away when he said, “Andrea, since we’re still getting to know each other, for the record, I’ve watched IEDs blow up my friends and I’ve been shot five times, with my vest stopping only three of those.”

He let that sink in for a second.

“You have to come at me with something much better than veiled threats to my job.”

“Filed for future reference, Chief,” she said. “Threats to your wife and kids it is, then. . . .”

Derek and Molly didn’t have a fantasy marriage with wind chimes resonating as they pranced about a grassy field like a pharmaceutical commercial distracting you while the rapid-fire voiceover warned you about side effects like rectal bleeding.

Andrea and Jeff had gone to the preserve only once. He didn’t like nature unless it came with a nineteenth hole, and she didn’t like it without concrete sidewalks and blaring taxi horns.

[redacted]’s eyes looked panicked while the other looked homicidal. It gave him a Bill the Cat quality from the old Bloom County strip.


How the Penguins Saved Veronica

How the Penguins Saved Veronica by Hazel Prior

So this is what dying is like. Who’d have thought it’d be so frustrating and boring? I’d like it to be over, but no doubt it will drag itself out as long as possible, just like life. How extremely tedious.


With Grimm Resolve

With Grimm Resolve by Jeffrey H. Haskell

“Good job, sir,” she said. She knew how fragile officers’ egos were, and it was helpful to reassure them they could find their butt with both hands and a map.

“I don’t really know how to explain it sir.”

“Take your time,” Jacob said with a grin. “It’s only a hitherto unknown stellar phenomenon. You can have a few seconds to figure out how to describe it.”

Jacob took his seat, glancing at the readiness board on his MFD. The ship was at a hundred percent and they were either going to enter the starlane in less than half an hour, or they would die.

Personally, he hoped for the former.


Whispers in the Dark

Whispers in the Dark by Chris McDonald

I’d even been interviewed about the case by a petty criminal, from the back seat of the police car on our way back to the station. He told me his mates won’t believe him that he was arrested by THE Erika Piper, and asked could he have a picture to prove it. I’d impolitely declined.

He has me where he wants me. He knows that I am hanging on his every word and he is revelling in it. Though, I swear if he says ‘you see’ again, I will not be responsible for my actions. Liam can sense my mood and intervenes.

As the lift doors close, I can’t help but think I’d been quick to condemn the reception area. Compared to the interior of the lift, it could be confused for a fancy Mayfair hotel. The buttons on the console are coated in a sticky film and Liam does the chivalrous thing, stretching his coat over his hand and prodding the button with supersonic speed.


Ghost of a Chance

Ghost of a Chance by Dan Willis

“Is that serious?”

“Very,” Kellin said.

“Untreated it can cause brain injury and even death.”

“What do I do for that?”

“Death?” Dr. Kellin smirked. “Nothing.”

“You just reminded me that there’s a corollary to that formula.”

Alex sat up, interested.

“If you eliminate the impossible and nothing remains,” he said, taking his cigar out of his mouth and considering it.

“Yes?” Alex prompted.

“Then some part of the impossible, must be possible.”


The Deepest Grave

The Deepest Grave by Harry Bingham

How does anyone think that ‘attempted murder’ counts the same as actual murder? They shouldn’t even call it ‘attempted’: that’s just a way to flatter failure. The crime is as close as you can get to the opposite of murder.

The thing is, if you kill someone in these extravagant ways, you’re usually trying to send a message. So when the Ku Klux Klan strung people up from trees, they were carefully sending a message. To black people: stay in your place. To white people: this is the way we run things here. None of that civil rights nonsense, or else… A loathsome message, brutally delivered. But clear. Horribly clear.

Owen is probably a good human being and one more likely to be summoned before the Holy Throne than I am, but, Lord help me, the man is boring. Just talking to him makes me want to push plastic forks into my eyes.

The man swears, disappears, then the snout of a shotgun emerges, and Bowen comes back towards me a lot faster than he left. We shelter behind the slab of a tombstone.

‘What now?’

I shake my head.

Nothing.

Shotgun versus shouting: shotgun wins. They teach you that in the police.

Two walls lined with floor to ceiling bookshelves. Katie starts looking at book titles. No reason, except that’s what people like me and Katie do when we walk into a room with books.

We talk to someone at Google about it. He sounds like a real human being–albeit a Californian one whose hair is probably full of sunshine and organic hair product.

Time.

The fourth dimension.

One of my favourite dimensions. One that brings all the good stuff, even if she brings more than her share of the crappy stuff too. But there are times she’s out of her depth. Times when she shunts one second into the void, over the edge of the present and away– then, blow it, the next second to come along looks exactly the same. And the next and the next.

Thousands of seconds, all alike.

He has that Metropolitan Police we- never- screw- up tone about him which is deeply comforting, until you remember that the Met screws up just as much as anyone else and maybe more.

Biting.

That sounds a bit girly, of course. Scratching, biting, pulling hair. Playground stunts that only girls ever pull. Girls with tears and bunches and grubby knees.

But there’s playground biting and real biting.

My fighting instructor, Lev, once told me that the human jaw can exert as much as a hundred kilos of force. I slightly doubt that my own pearly whites can inflict that much pressure, but they’re still handy. The trick– another of Lev’s much- reiterated nuggets– is to bite with the molars not the incisors. You get double or quadruple the amount of force, and the victim’s area of muscle damage is that much greater.

‘Take the biggest bite you can. Bite hard. And don’t stop. The more your man struggles, the more hurt you do.’

Wise advice.

A dog handler once told me that sniffer dogs aren’t recruited for their powers of smell. ‘They can all smell well enough. Asking them to follow a trail is like asking you to pick a red ball from a basket full of green ones. The only issue is whether the dog understands what you’re asking and feels like helping.’


On Eden Street

On Eden Street by Peter Grainger

There are lines, and you cross them at your peril. But the closer one gets to them, the more wavy and broken those lines become. And the longer one does this job, the more the realization dawns that every investigation is unique–barely any of them fit the theories you’re taught in the lecture room.

(Image by DaModernDaVinci from Pixabay)

20 Books of Summer 2022: July Check-in

20 Books of Summer
Just a quick check-in on the challenge hosted by Cathy at 746 Books.

This month, I read 8 of the 20, bringing my total to 13. After a quick ARC break at the beginning of this week, I should be able to finish this challenge by mid-month—the earliest I’ve finished the challenge in the three years I’ve tackled it. I don’t think I’ve just jinxed things here, but I guess we’ll see. It’s been a fun challenge so far—I picked a good group of books this summer.

✔ 1. The Deepest Grave by Harry Bingham
✔ 2. Condemned by R.C. Bridgstock
✔ 3. Payback by R.C. Bridgstock
4. Persecution by R.C. Bridgstock
✔ 5. AMORALMAN: A True Story and Other Lies by Derek DelGaudio
✔ 6. Against All Odds by Jeffery H. Haskell
7. One Decisive Victory by Jeffery H. Haskell
✔ 8. With Grimm Resolve by Jeffery H. Haskell
✔ 9. A World Without Whom: The Essential Guide to Language in the Buzzfeed Age by Emmy J. Favilla
10. Composite Creatures by Caroline Hardaker
11. Divine and Conquer by J.C. Jackson
✔ 12. Mortgaged Mortality by J.C. Jackson
13. The Ghost Machine by James Lovegrove
14. Roses for the Dead by Chris McDonald
✔ 15. A Wash of Black by Chris McDonald
✔ 16. Whispers in the Dark by Chris McDonald
17. Down the River unto the Sea by Walter Mosely
✔ 18. Crazy in Poughkeepsie by Daniel Pinkwater
✔ 19. Ghost of a Chance by Dan Willis
✔ 20. The Border by Don Winslow

(subject to change, as is allowed, but I’m going to resist the impulse to tweak as much as I can).
20 Books of Summer '22 Chart

Saturday Miscellany—7/30/22

I’m going to start this week with a shout-out to Bookstooge for a comment he made to last week’s post (unpublished, because it doesn’t need to be broadcast)–it led to me to me making a tweak to this template that I’ve been meaning to get to for years, and typically did on a weekly basis. I hear ya, man–I appreciate the constructive criticism, and am working on it. Readers, if you haven’t checked out Bookstooge’s Reviews on the Road, you should.

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 Book Bans? My School Doesn’t Even Have a Library: How underfunding is its own form of censorship—I do wonder about some of the points here, but the overall argument is something we all need to wrestle with as we talk about what books belong in schools.
bullet Where do library books go to die?
bullet How Do Algorithms Help (and Hinder) Book Sales?—Yeah, this is more for the writer/seller than the reader—but I’m always interested in how the sausage is made.
bullet Speaking of that, this week the Libro.fm blog posted Have you ever wondered how audiobooks get made?
bullet Shop Talk: Dwyer Murphy on Writing Routines, Superstitions, and Reading Elmore Leonard Like a Bible
bullet Why none of my books are available on Audible
bullet The Kickstarter for Anatomy of Dinosaurs launched this week. It promises to be absolutely worth it (as are the two previous books in the Anatomy of series). If nothing else, it’s got the best Kickstarter video I’ve seen.
bullet Molly Templeton tries to answer Why Do We Read What We Read?—”I don’t have anything resembling a scientific answer for this, and if there is one, quite honestly I don’t want to know.”
bullet If you’ve looked at this blog at since Monday, you’ve noticed that it’s Self-published Authors Appreciation Week—Be sure to look at the SPAAW ’22 Hub for oodles of great stuff. I’d especially point you to the Before We Go Blog “…To Add to your TBR” posts (not all are currently on the Hub, but will be added soon)
bullet Reading Science-Fiction: An Experiment and Reading Project (Part 1)
bullet On Comfort Reading
bullet The Books That Made Us: The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe by C.S. Lewis

This Week’s New Releases that I’m Excited About and/or You’ll Probably See Here Soon:
bullet Spider-Man’s Social Dilemma by Preeti Chhibber—looks to be a fun, MG, Spider-Man novel. And no, this didn’t get added to my list because of the cover. Well, not just because of the cover.
bullet An Honest Living by Dwyer Murphy—”An unwitting private eye gets caught up in a crime of obsession between a reclusive literary superstar and her bookseller husband, paying homage to the noir genre just as smartly as it reinvents it.”

Lastly, I’d like to say hi and extend a warm welcome to Sonam Tsering and Susan Grossey who followed the blog this week. I hope you enjoy the content and keep coming back.
That moment when: you realize  your happy place doesn't have walls, it has pages

The Friday 56 for 7/29/22: The Shoulders of Giants by Jim Cliff

Self-Published Authors Appreciation Week
Since I’ve been focusing on Self-Published works here this week, I figured I’d use a self-published work for this post, too. This is a flashback to the first self-published book I can remember buying…

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 56% of:
The Shoulders of GiantsE

The Shoulders of Giants by Jim Cliff

The following morning, I woke up to hear noises coming from my kitchen. The clock on my bedside table read 10:14. As quietly as I could, I slid out of bed, pulled a pair of jeans on over my boxers, and picked up my Glock.

As I left my bedroom and started across the hall towards the closed kitchen door, I smelled bacon. This was bizarre for two reasons. Firstly, I couldn’t work out why someone would break into my apartment and start cooking, and secondly, I didn’t think I owned any bacon.

I took a deep breath, and kicked the door with my bare foot, simultaneously aiming my pistol at the first thing I saw, and yelling “Freeze!” The door swung open violently, to reveal a man standing in front of my fridge-freezer.

Before my brain registered what was happening, Scott let go of the carton of juice in his hand, and by the time it hit the floor, his gun was in his hand, and pointed at me.

WWW Wednesday, July 27, 2022

I’ve said it a couple of times already this week, but I didn’t plan at all for SPAAW, and didn’t think I’d be able to participate this year. But I noticed that I did have a couple of Self-Published books on my August list, so I moved a couple of things around and this past week hasn’t looked like what I expected. And I think I’ll still be able to meet all the library due dates/personal deadlines that only I care about. Phew.

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/relishing the ARC of Bark to the Future by Spencer Quinn and am listening to On Eden Street by Peter Grainger, Gildart Jackson (Narrator) on audiobook, I’m enjoying the new vibe of the series, but missing the old one.

Bark to the FutureBlank SpaceOn Eden Street

What did you recently finish reading?

I just finished Harry Bingham’s The Deepest Grave, the latest/last(?) book in the Fiona Griffiths series, I don’t like knowing there’s not another mystery with her in the waiting. My latest audiobook was The Jigsaw Man by Nadine Matheson, Davine Henry (Narrator) on audio.

The Deepest GraveBlank SpaceThe Jigsaw Man

What do you think you’ll read next?

My next book should be Dead Against Her by Melinda Leigh, which will get me caught up on the Bree Taggart series (there’s a downside to that, I have to wait for the next one!). My next audiobook should be True Dead by Faith Hunter, Khristine Hvam (Narrator)—which is a holdover from last week, I realized I could squeeze in one more SPAAW book if I shuffled things up a bit.

Dead Against HerBlank SpaceTrue Dead

You reading anything good lately? Or not-good, but that you want to talk about?

Saturday Miscellany—7/23/22

I’m going to start this week with a hearty Thank You to Peat Long for the shoutout in their Friday Five post yesterday. If you’re not following that blog, now’s the time to fix that.

No New Releases caught my eye this week—so I won’t be trying to add on to your TBR (or mine)—but that likely means I missed something. Anyone want to point something out?

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 Why inappropriate books are the best kind—An Op-Ed from the LA Times.
bullet 14 ways to get out of a reading slump—Some advice from Washington Post readers. A couple of these don’t show up on every reading slump advice piece I’ve seen.
bullet Librarian Alex Brown provided a list of ways non-library people can help your local library
bullet 7 Fiction Books That Change The Way You Think—some good TBR fodder and a great last paragraph.
bullet Author Commentary on the Ending of the Alex Verus Series—Benedict Jacka starts to look back at how he ended the Alex Verus series and a couple of ways he considered ending things.
bullet A Quickie With…. M.W. Craven—a fun Q&A with M. W. Craven
bullet Maps and Mapping in Fantasy by W.P. Wiles—W.P. Wiles dropped by FanFiAddict this week to talk about maps in Fantasy novels in general and his new novel in particular
bullet Coincidentally, Sheldon Comics posted this comic about Fantasy Novels the other day
bullet Book Twitter Will Always Be at War With Itself: To read or not to read? That is the question
bullet The Vampire Chronicles: Experts Weigh in On Literature’s Best Vampires—It looks like a decent list overall (not familiar as I could be with all the entries), but I’m including this solely for the last vampire.
bullet An off-the-cuff comment by Jennings on a correct response on Jeopardy! reignited the debate about Narnia reading order
bullet The Anarchism of the Dresden Files by CT Phipps—Might be the best thing I read this week.
bullet Audiobooks vs Reading Print/Ebooks: Are Audiobooks good for you or what?—The fact this comes from Lovely Audiobooks probably gives away the answer…
bullet Reading and Its Effects on your Emotions
bullet Self-published Authors Appreciation Week 2022—is next week. Be sure to keep your eye on the SPAAW 2022 Hub to read all the good posts. I’ve got one post ready, need to get crackin’ on the rest.

A Book-ish Related Podcast episode (or two) you might want to give a listen to:
bullet Libro.fm has recently started a podcast to talk all things audiobook. This week, I listened to Episode 01 “Meet the Founders”. I’d never wondered about how they started, but it hooked me. Looking forward to seeing where it goes from there.

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

The Friday 56 for 7/22/22: Ghost of a Chance by Dan Willis

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:
Ghost of a Chance

Ghost of a Chance by Dan Willis

“What’s this?” he asked as she pulled out a small key ring.

For a brief moment a frown crossed her lips, but she replaced it almost instantly with her sardonic smile.

“This is the reason I’m here,” she said, inserting a key in the lock. She turned it and pushed the door open. “Don’t touch the handle,” she said, reaching inside to switch on a magelight. “It’s got a needle coated in a nasty contact poison hidden inside it.”

Alex raised an eyebrow at her, but she just shrugged.

“What?” she said. “Don’t you have security measures around your valuables?”

WWW Wednesday, June 20, 2022

Like just about everyone in the Northern Hemisphere (or so it seems), I seem to be melting this week. When I’m not dreaming of November, I’ve been distracting myself with books—I’m actually two days ahead of where I expected to be. This happens so rarely, I’m on the verge of dancing a jig. Let’s dive into this WWW Wednesday and see what’s up, shall we?

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 the second DI Erika Piper novel, Whispers in the Dark by Chris McDonald and am revistiting The Jigsaw Man by Nadine Matheson, Davine Henry (Narrator) on audiobook.

Whispers in the DarkBlank SpaceThe Jigsaw Man

What did you recently finish reading?

I just finished Giano Cromley’s The Prince of Infinite Space, a coming of age story set when I was coming of age (which was a little odd) and the amusing memoir, The Diary of a Bookseller by Shaun Bythell, Robin Laing (Narrator) on audio.

The Prince of Infinite SpaceBlank SpaceThe Diary of a Bookseller

What do you think you’ll read next?

My next book should be Ghost of a Chance by Dan Willis (yeah, finally gettting to it!) With the Jane Yellowrock series finale just a few weeks away, my next audiobook should be True Dead by Faith Hunter, Khristine Hvam (Narrator).

Ghost of a ChanceBlank SpaceTrue Dead

How are you distracting yourself from the swelter?

Book Blogger Hop: Do You Listen to Audiobooks?

Book Blogger Hop

 

This prompt was submitted by Elizabeth @ Silver’s Reviews:

Do you listen to audiobooks? If so, do you prefer listening instead of reading?

“Books on Tape” (what people of a certain age grew up knowing audiobooks as) weren’t really something I was much aware of growing up. In college my friends and I would hit up a truck stop on the drive home, you could rent one (like a Videotape/DVD) and return it to that truck stop/another one for a couple of bucks. Those made the drives a little more entertaining—assuming you and whoever you were riding with could agree on one. Most often, the length of the book determined if you’d rent it—why get a book you couldn’t listen to on the way home—or maybe over the round-trip, assuming you weren’t driving home for the summer. It was primarily a service for truck drivers, obviously, but hey, we’d take advantage of it, too. But beyond that? I didn’t listen to them.

But the first time I tried to listen to one outside of that was a disaster. I was working the graveyard shift and there wasn’t a whole lot for me to do—but I figured I could move around and do my paperwork and whatnot while listening. And that worked fine. But when I sat down for a minute between tasks (and there was a lot of that time), the audiobook was like listening to someone read me a bedtime story and I couldn’t stay awake. Which is pretty much the opposite of what I needed at 2 a.m. I really didn’t have time outside of that to listen to one—and I wasn’t taking road trips then, so I didn’t have time for one (and I think truck stops weren’t renting them anymore by that point).

Fast-forward a decade, and I’m working a day job (phew!!) that involved a lot of data entry that I didn’t need to think much about—and I could only listen to so many podcasts in a day before getting burned out. So I tried my library’s Overdrive services, and never looked back. I’m not in that job anymore, but I’ve found ways to keep listening while I work (although I do hit pause when I come to something that takes a little thought, I don’t want to miss anything) and will find time to listen every weekday. I have an audiobook in progress at all times nowadays and have a healthy library of my own titles.

I love audiobooks now and have a decent list of go-to narrators (and have even tried a couple of books I was on the fence about just because of them). I’m not sure that I could just sit and listen to an audiobook like I tried to do at work years ago—I think I’d still fall asleep. But while working, cleaning, cooking, driving? It’s a great way to keep moving on my TBR, try out a new series, or revisit a favorite. I also tend to do better with listening to Non-Fiction than I do reading them—I think I’m just more willing to devote the listening time than the reading time to it. I’m not sure I can explain that.

But on the whole, I prefer the experience of reading myself, not being read to—not just because I generally stay awake while doing that. It’s easier to stay in a passage and think about it—to flip back and double-check something, etc. Because I’m not multi-tasking I can get sucked in deeper (although some authors/narrators make it so that I’m close enough that I don’t care).

While I’m talking (far too much, I realize) about audiobooks, let me take a moment to say that Libro.fm is my preferred source of audiobooks, check them out!

Libro.fm support local, independent bookstores with their audiobook purchases

What about you—are you an audiofile?

Spelling the Month in Books: July

Spelling the Month in Books: July

J The Janus Affair

The Janus Affair

This is the second in the Ministry of Peculiar Occurrances by Pip Ballantine and Tee Morris–a Steampunk adventure with elements of spies and SF, and a dash of romance. My Goodreads review from 2012 says, “This time out, our intrepid secret agents investigate the inexplicable disappearances of several leading British suffragists. Pasts come back to haunt, secrets are exposed, romances are kindled, clockwork doohickeys do all sorts of strange and wonderful things–all you can want.” Can’t think of a better way to put it.

U The Unlikely Pilgrimage of Harold Fry

The Unlikely Pilgrimage of Harold Fry

The strongest memory I have of Rachel Joyce’s novel is how sweet it was–a retired gentleman hears that an old friend of his is in hospice on the other side of England. He writes a message to her and on his way to the mailbox, decides to hand-deliver it, so he sets out on a “stroll” from Kingsbridge to Berwick-upon-Tweed–it’d be hard to get two cities further apart in England (a quick search tells me it’s 7+ hours by train). Of course, he’s dressed to drop off a letter in the mailbox, not a cross-country hike. But he won’t let go of the idea. While walking, he deals with a lot of memories, rekindling feelings and ideas he’d long neglected; there’s a “Run, Forrest, Run” kind of public support that grows around him, and his wife has plenty of time to reflect on their marriage, too.

That’s the best you’re going to get from me about a book I haven’t read in a decade–but it’s not a great summary. It’s a feel-good kind of book, and as I recall, is pretty effective.

L The Legend of Huma

The Legend of Huma

Richard A. Knaak’s tale of the Knight who discovered the Dragonlancewas the first entry in the Dragonlance Heroes, and I think was the first in the world not to be written by Weis and Hickman. I haven’t read it (or any Dragonlance novel) in decades, but it was possibly my favorite. I know I read it more than any of the Chronicles or Legends (the benefit of being a standalone, rather than part of a trilogy). Huma is the kind of knight you reflexively think of: moral, brave, determined, and pretty good with his weapons. I have nothing but good memories of this.

(which is probably why I’ll never revisit it again–I don’t want to risk being disappointed)

y The Younger Gods

The Younger Gods

Michael R. Underwood’s first non-Ree Reyes book was a good departure in style and subject, making a statement that he’s not a one-trick pony. This time out, his protagonist escapes from the Doomsday Cult he was raised in and goes to NYC to start fresh. Which is not easy, but he’s trying to learn how to live outside of that very insular world he grew up in. Here’s the thing–this cult isn’t like your typical cult, they are actually on to something–they have the magical abilities and know-how to bring about The End of the World. Then his sister shows up in NYC to actually initiate the apocalypse–and Jacob has to find a way to stop her.

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