
(yeah, there were other things — a beach, family, aquariums, sea critters, and not enough alcohol — involved, too)
Tag: Personal
So, that’s 2014, eh? 169 books read (short of my goal by 21), 211 posts (short of my goal by a couple hundred), almost triple the traffic over last year.
I did a quick breakdown of how my reading broke down by genre over the last few years. There were a few anomalies this year (what’s up with my Urban Fantasy and General Fiction numbers?) which makes it interesting for me, anyway — don’t know about the rest of you.
| Genre | 2014 | 2013 | 2012 | 2012-2014 |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Fantasy | 11 (7%) | 15 (8%) | 12 (6%) | 38 (7%) |
| General Fiction/Literature | 7 (4%) | 30 (16%) | 30 (14%) | 67 (12%) |
| Humor | 3 (2%) | 0 (0%) | 0 (0%) | 3 (1%) |
| Mystery/Suspense | 62 (37%) | 63 (33%) | 73 (35%) | 198 (35%) |
| Non-Fiction | 4 (2%) | 2 (1%) | 11 (5%) | 17 (3%) |
| Science Fiction | 17 (10%) | 14 (7%) | 11 (5%) | 42 (7%) |
| Steampunk | 3 (2%) | 3 (2%) | 11 (5%) | 17 (3%) |
| Theology/Christian Living | 42 (25%) | 37 (19%) | 10 (5%) | 89 (16%) |
| Urban Fantasy | 20 (12%) | 26 (14%) | 48 (23%) | 94 (17%) |
| Western | 0 (0%) | 0 (0%) | 1 (0%) | 1 (0%) |
Hopefully everything will be higher next year — books, posts, and traffic. We’ll see — I’m doing the Goodreads Challenge again (same goal as the last 2 years, 190) and I think I’m going to try to work in The Book Riot 2015 Read Harder Challenge
. I might throw in a couple other “projects” that I’ve been thinking about.
- Lastly, I’d like to thank some people for their promotion/helpfulness/contributions to the blog and my reading this year:
- Paul David Ondik, houseofadelaide, Eli Glasman, ronweasleyfans, MaxMuscles, TheCoevas Official, hannahbananah412, taylor oceans, urbanwallart, Planetary Defense Commander, jH, Kameron George, jordynmtz, Brian Moore, henrylib, kyleolsonsblog, Brian Marggraf, immabelike, Jonathan Roumain, Anna Bayes, poetreecreations, Timothy Pike, Allison Chaney, williamthebutler, Melonie Ann, gradypbrown, jgiambron, Giorgia Penzo, mindset, criticaldispatches, Everyrosehasathorn, Jarosław PlayWithLifE, Opinionated Man, theeditorsjournal, Kevin Cummings, teutah, Carole Parkes, shaun890, gregmercer601, R. G. Tamaki, bdhesse, Ana Franco, psychocinderella, psychosis5116, Martin Cosgrove, sheilarparker, vonj productions, adoptingjames, lovabletm24, pimpbooks, Kurt Brindley, Caroline, Jennifer Reed/bookjunkiez, Mr. Smith, saracroethle, J.W. Kurtz, Maggie Mae, Jay Dee, apprenticenevermaster, TyCobbsTeeth, Felicity, Leroy Milton, Ramona Crisstea, Holy Moly, smilehopebehappy, The Eye-Dancers, michaelpatricks, bradsdesk, lightningpen, Cindy Baker, and a few others I might have missed for following the blog (at least for a couple of minutes).
- Sorin Suciu, allthoughtswork, jordynmtz, justrozie, Hai, Andrew Bishop, and Keith R.A. DeCandido for taking the time to interact a bit. I really appreciate it.
- @Paul_Cornell, @ShaneSKuhn, @wes_chu, @MikeRUnderwood, @TeeMonster, @byharryconnolly, @MarleneStringer, @ReedFColeman, @LeeGoldberg, @KRADeC, @AlexBledsoe, and @explauramay (and others that I lost track of — oops) for sharing, retweeting and replying to my meager words about their books on twitter. You’re all too gracious and kind (and frequently funny).
- Big, big thanks to Erin Mitchell, Shannon A. Thompson, Laura Skillen, Jamie Schultz, Ty Patterson, Carac Allison, and Lee Goldberg/Brash Books for asking me to read their (or their client’s) books — and for giving me those books to read. Seriously, thank you for this.
- Paul, Angela, and Jamie for all that real life encouragement and interaction with what I’ve put here.
- Maria Semple, Pittacus Lore, Chuck Wendig, Mark Jones, Carrie Vaughn, Iain H. Murray, R. J. Palacio, Thomas Harris, David Baldacci, David Abrams, Robert Goldsborough, Eoin Colfer, Myke Cole, Matt Haig, Chris Grabenstein, Joe Queenan, S. J. Rozan, Craig Johnson, Kelly Meding, Ben Aaronovitch, Jaye Wells, Brian Borgman & Rob Ventura, Pierce Brown, Michael Lefebvre, Diana Gabaldon, Bruce A. Ware, Thor Ramsey, Richard B. Gaffin, Jr., Patricia Briggs, Ernest Cline, Wil Wheaton, Janet Evanovich & Lee Goldberg, Seanan McGuire, Faith Hunter, Brad Parks, Rob Thomas, Jennifer Graham, Marissa Meyer, Reed Farrel Coleman, J. Gresham Machen, Pip Ballantine & Tee Morris, Daniel R. Hyde, Shane P. Lems, Adam Sternbergh, Shane Kuhn, Ty Patterson, Ace Atkins, Alan Bradley, Ari Marmell, Simonetta Carr, Jim Butcher, Wesley Chu, John Brown, Owen Laukkanen, William Lashner, Michael S. Horton, Ryan M. McGraw, Paul Cornell, Christopher Healy, Matt Kibbe, Michael Koryta, Kevin Hearne, Janet Evanovich, Aaron Elkins, Michael R. Underwood, Thomas Watson, Robert Galbraith, Kady Cross, Thomas Boston, Andy Weir, Ellen Raskin, Jennifer Weiner, Richard D. Phillips, Tom Rachman, Douglas Bond, Kevin DeYoung, Jim Gaffigan, Lee Child, Spencer Quinn, Sue Grafton, Marcia Clark, Harry Connolly, Kim Harrison, Richard L. Pratt, Jr., Alex Bledsoe, Robert Crais, Tom Kakonis, Benjamin Morgan Palmer, Rainbow Rowell, John Moe, Lev Grossman, Iain M. Duguid, David Rosenfelt, Andreas J. Köstenberger & Michael J. Kruger, Scott Lynch, Thom Notaro, Sorin Suciu, Thomas Goodwin, Jamie Schultz, Matthew Barrett, Carl Trueman, Justin Richards, Chelsea Cain, Sam Allberry, M. R. Carey, Benedict Jaka, Donald MacLeod, Dennis Lehane, Carac Allison, Robert Letham, Anton Strout, R. C. Sproul, Thomas Brooks, Keith R. A. DeCandido, Rick Riordan, Patrick Rothfuss, Laura May, Rick Yancey, Jacqueline Carey, Shane Sowers, David Nicholls, Sinclair B. Ferguson, R. Scott Clark, Alafair Burke, William Lashner, Brian Cosby, Ralph Venning, Jay Kristoff, Greg Haslam, Erin Kelly, and Cary Elwes for all hours of pleasure I had with your words and books this year.
- And you all for reading.
Personal
by Lee Child
Series: Jack Reacher, #19
Hardcover, 353 pg.
Delacorte Press, 2014
Read: November 10 – 11, 2014
Someone took a pot-shot at the French president — and by pot-shot, I mean “almost impossible” sniper shot — it didn’t work, didn’t even break the “invisible armor” glass in front of him. But still, bad form, and people are expected to do something about that. Various and sundry intelligence agencies across the globe come up with a short list of snipers capable of making the shot. Disturbingly enough, most of them are employed by various and sundry nations across the world, but there’s a small handful that are just tracked (almost infallibly) by the same groups.
In this case, there were four unaccounted for at the time of the shooting. A British sniper, a Russian sniper, an American, and (I think) a French sniper (clearly doesn’t matter…minor spoiler). Each respective government gets someone to track down their potential suspect. Once upon a time, MP Jack Reacher arrested the American. So someone in the upper echelons of the Army reached out to Reacher in some cloak and dagger-y way to get him involved in tracking down the U. S. sniper.
Reacher has nothing better to do — no longer on his mission to meet Maj. Susan Turner (and wasn’t really given a choice, anyway) — and he owes the Brig. General. So “Sherlock Homeless,” as he’s been dubbed by the Army, heads off to Arkansas, Paris and London to track down his prey. The requisite purchases of replacement clothing, fights, and Reacher-ness ensues.
There was one particular highlight for me. There’s a London gangster, Little Joey — a giant of a man, makes look Reacher look like . . . well, like Tom Cruise standing next to the book’s version of Jack Reacher — Reacher’s initial internal description of him makes the whole book worth reading.
The most disturbing thing about this book is the constant, universal, assumption that governments will cover up, manipulate media and spy on everyone they choose to. In other novels — Gone Tomorrow jumps to mind as the best example — Reacher’s resented this kind of thing, complained about it. But this time, he uses it, takes it for granted — this could just be Reacher the pragmatist and we could get a return to form next time. But the way that everyone else — no matter their nationality or role in the investigation — assumes this, and doesn’t care about it, disturbed me. Mostly because I figure it’s fairly realistic.
The first few chapters are riddled with Reacher describing himself as “Predictable.” And, yeah, he is — both in his world and as a character in novels. He’s going to act a certain way, he’s going to shoot, punch, elbow and kick a certain amount of people. He will win the day, leave a few bodies in his wake, and at least charm a lady or two along the way (at his most chaste). Predictable. But satisfying. Scratching a particular itch for readers in a way only Lee Child can.
This seems to be a pretty divisive book amongst fans, for reasons I don’t particularly understand — on the whole the complaints I’ve seen about this one could be applied to 12-15 of the others, it’s just the way Child works. Maybe my expectations are different than others, but this one checked all my “Reacher” boxes and provided a few hours of entertainment.
Predictable can just be another word for Reliable.
—–

Didn’t have a lot of time to write a review this morning — and I’ve already used up the small surplus of reviews I had. So I went to Goodreads to write up a quick review — and I got on a roll, and spent more time than I should have on it, a little more than 90 minutes (with a few breaks for work-related activities). Now normally, I use Evernote to compose these, but like I said, I was just going to type up a quick review — three paragraphs or so. Well, I hit a couple of wrong keys while in the home stretch and . . .
you know where this is going
I ended up going back a couple of screens and lost the whole thing.
And I liked it, probably more than I’ve liked any individual post in weeks. And it’s gone. All gone. I’ll try to reconstruct it, but it won’t be as good (never is)
Lesson learned, and maybe you can learn from my errors — use Evernote, or something else with autosave — but mostly use Evernote, I’ve become addicted to this thing lately and can’t recommend it enough.