This is what looked interesting in May/June, July/August, September/October 2013 editions.
Redeemer by Jo Nesbo -S
Orphan Masters Son by Adam Johnson - S
Private Empire by Steve Coll - NF S
Vampires in the Lemon Grove by Karen Russell - S
Dinner by Herman Koch - S
Murder Bellow Martparnasse by Clara Black
Accursed by Joyce Carol Oates
Burn Palace by Stephen Dobyns
Shining Girls by Lauren Beukes
Upstairs Woman by Claire Messud
Interestings by Meg Wolitzer
House of Rumour by Jake Arnott
Lives of Tao by Wesley Chu
MaddAddam by Margaret Atwood
Goldfinch by Donna Tartt
Daughter of Fortune by Isabel Allende
Buddha in the Attic by Julie Otsuka
Pnin by Vladimir Nabokov
Crying of Lot 49 by Thomas Pynchon
Magus by John Fowles
Lexicon by Max Barry - SF
Leviathan Wakes by James S. A. Corey - SF
Brilliant Blunders from Darwin to Einstein by Mario Livio - NF
Midnight in Peking by Paul French - NF
People Who Eat Darkness by Richard Lloyd Parry - NF
Funny in Farsi by Firoozah Dumas - NF
On Gold Mountain by Lisa See - NF
Tuesday, November 05, 2013
Thursday, April 18, 2013
Bookmarks Magazine
Here's what looked interesting in Jan/Feb and Mar/April 2013
Sweet Tooth by Ian McEwan - S & L
Gods and Beasts by Denise Mina - S
Vampires in the Lemon Grove by Karen Russell - S
Orphan Master's Son by Adam Johnson - S
Telegraph Avenue by Michael Chabon - S
The Inquisitor by Mark Allen Smith - S
The Art Forger by B.A. Shapiro - L& S
The Heart Broke In by James Meek - S
Back to Blood by Tom Wolfe - S
Tenth of December by George Saunders - S
Heads in Beds by Jacob Tomsky - S, NF
Cat's Table by Michael Ondaatje
Dog Stars by Peter Heller
Half-Blood Blues by Esi Edugyan
The Prime of Miss Jean Bordie by Muriel Sparks
The End of the Affair by Graham Greene
The Monkey-Wrench Gang by Edward Abbey
Ecotopia by Ernest Callenbach
Track of the Cat by Nevada Barr
Waiting by Ha Jin
The Plague of Doves by Louise Erdrich
The Round House by Louise Erdrich
Mr. Penumbra's 24-Hour Bookstore by Robin Sloan
John Saturnall's Feast by Lawrence Norfolk
2013 Kim Stanley Robinson -SF
The Hydrogen Sonata by Iain M. Banks but start with Consider Phlebas - SF
Three Parts Dead by Max Gladstone - SF
Joseph Anton by Salman Rushdie - NF
Van Gogh by Steven Naifeh - NF
Double Cross by Ben MacIntyre - NF
Wild by Cheryl Strayed - NF
Gravity's Engines by Caleb Scharf - NF
Spillover by David Quammen - NF
Desert Solitaire by Edward Abbey - NF
Snow Leopard by Peter Matthiessen - NF
Four Fish by Paul Greenberg - NF
Sweet Tooth by Ian McEwan - S & L
Gods and Beasts by Denise Mina - S
Vampires in the Lemon Grove by Karen Russell - S
Orphan Master's Son by Adam Johnson - S
Telegraph Avenue by Michael Chabon - S
The Inquisitor by Mark Allen Smith - S
The Art Forger by B.A. Shapiro - L& S
The Heart Broke In by James Meek - S
Back to Blood by Tom Wolfe - S
Tenth of December by George Saunders - S
Heads in Beds by Jacob Tomsky - S, NF
Cat's Table by Michael Ondaatje
Dog Stars by Peter Heller
Half-Blood Blues by Esi Edugyan
The Prime of Miss Jean Bordie by Muriel Sparks
The End of the Affair by Graham Greene
The Monkey-Wrench Gang by Edward Abbey
Ecotopia by Ernest Callenbach
Track of the Cat by Nevada Barr
Waiting by Ha Jin
The Plague of Doves by Louise Erdrich
The Round House by Louise Erdrich
Mr. Penumbra's 24-Hour Bookstore by Robin Sloan
John Saturnall's Feast by Lawrence Norfolk
2013 Kim Stanley Robinson -SF
The Hydrogen Sonata by Iain M. Banks but start with Consider Phlebas - SF
Three Parts Dead by Max Gladstone - SF
Joseph Anton by Salman Rushdie - NF
Van Gogh by Steven Naifeh - NF
Double Cross by Ben MacIntyre - NF
Wild by Cheryl Strayed - NF
Gravity's Engines by Caleb Scharf - NF
Spillover by David Quammen - NF
Desert Solitaire by Edward Abbey - NF
Snow Leopard by Peter Matthiessen - NF
Four Fish by Paul Greenberg - NF
Thursday, March 21, 2013
Once Upon A Time VII
The Once Upon A Time Challenge is finally here! For more information on this challenge that focuses on fantasy, folklore, fairy tales or mythology go here and for the review site go here. It runs from March 21 to June 19, 2013.
I am definitely going to read Demi-Monde: Spring by Rod Rees, which has been
on my Kindle since it came out because last year I read and loved Demi-Monde: Winter, so I of course
have to read the sequel. And I think The Weird: A Compendium of Strange and Dark Stories edited by the Vandermeers also fits this challenge. I was really enjoying the short stories in this book so it would be good to dip back into it.
In keeping with my goal to read more of the books I actually have, instead of acquiring more, for this challenge I am going to try and read some of the books that were on my list in prior years that I didn't get to but actually own.
Samedi the Deafness by Jesse Ball
Alchemy of Stone by Ekaterina Sedia
The Golden Age by Michal Ajvaz
Mr. Fox by Helen Oyeyemi
The Last Book by Zoran Zivkovic
Observatory Mansions by Edward Carey
The Narrator by Michael Cisco
Sensation by Nick Mamatas
Aurorarama by Jean-Christophe Valtat
Pym by Mat Johnson
The Baron in the Trees by Italo Calvino
Veniss Underground by Jeff Vandermeer
Jonathan Strange & Mr. Norrell by Susanna Clarke
Haroun and the Sea of Stories by Salman Rushdie
And because I just cannot resist adding, as that is half the fun:
Jagannath by Karin Tidbeck
A Discovery of Witches by Deborah Harkness
The Scar by China MiƩville
I am going to sign up for the Journey because I appreciate the
flexibility and lack of stress which means that I will read at least one
book but I might, and always do, read more. And we will definitely be watching Game of Thrones which starts March 31, 2013 on HBO. And every year I say I am going to watch my DVD of Midsummer Nights Dream, but then promptly forget. Thanks Carl for hosting
another great challenge.
Friday, March 01, 2013
Sci-Fi Experience 2013
I cannot believe that the Sci-Fi Experience is finished already! I read the following: Woken Furies by Richard K. Morgan, Cat's Cradle by Kurt Vonnegut, Third Shift by Hugh Howey, Endymion by Dan Simmons and am still finishing up The Drowned World by J.G. Ballard.
I must say that I have enjoyed them all. Woken Furies was the third in the Takeshi Kovacs stories, which I really enjoyed. Cat's Cradle and The Drowned World were both classics from the 60s. Third Shift is the brand new one in the Wool series, which was of course fabulous. I cannot believe there is supposedly only one more left and then Wool will be concluded.
And I was pleasantly surprised that I enjoyed Endymion so much. I had read and absolutely loved Hyperion but then hated the sequel Fall of Hyperion so had not intended to keep reading that story line. But it was on my ipod and I had heard it was much better than the prior one, so thought I would give it a shot and I was really pleasantly surprised. I will definitely complete the cycle by reading Rise of Endymion some time in the future.
Although I haven't been good at posting, especially reviews, at least I have been reading! Thanks Carl for another fun Sci-Fi Experience.
Endymion
by Dan Simmons
I read the first book in the Hyperion Cantos, Hyperion, in 2009 and simply gushed, I loved it! So I read the next book, The Fall of Hyperion for the Sci-Fi Experience in 2010 and was sadly disappointed. Well, my review made it sound like I was disappointed (it was nominated for a Hugo so it couldn't be all bad) but I actually hated it and in fact was angry with it that it didn't live up to Hyperion. So three years later, I finally decided to try Endymion which has been on my ipod since I read Hyperion.
The verdict? I really enjoyed it. It didn't wow me, like Hyperion, but it was good. It takes place almost 300 years after The Fall of Hyperion so there are new main characters and yet there are constant references to the characters and events that took place in the prior two works. This is definitely not a stand alone story.
A lot has changed in those 300 years. The technological advances provided by the TechnoCore, such as the far casters and WorldWeb which allowed such a diverse and wide ranging Hegemony, have been destroyed. Communications and travel between the vast reaches of space which previously took seconds, now take years, even hundreds of years. And it is the Catholic Church, which has found a way to provide literal eternal life by using the cruciforms found on Hyperion, which is the controlling political and military power.
The story is of a young child, Aenea who emerges from the Time Tombs and her protector, Raul Endymion, as they try to escape from the Catholic Church in an antique space ship with an outlawed android to search for something on the now destroyed River Tethys.
What I really enjoyed about this book was the characters, as the author makes you care about all of them. Clearly we are supposed to be rooting for Aenea and her little troupe but I also really liked the Catholic priest charged with capturing her, Father de Soya. It was odd, as the story alternated between Aenea and Father de Soya to one minute be glad that Aenea had escaped again and feel bad the next minute that Father de Soya had failed again.
The other thing I really enjoyed about this book was, as in Hyperion, the vast array of incredible, richly imagined worlds that the travelers visit. Dan Simmons is masterful at creating fully realized worlds and describing them in such vivid detail that you feel like you are there. I loved Mare Infinitus, the water world with the gigantic and terrifying Lamp Mouth Leviathans. And I will not soon forget Sol Draconi Septem, the ice planet with the prime number obsessed indigenous Chitchatuk and the wraiths, their sole source of food and materials. And there being no other animals on the frozen planet other than humans and wraiths, the wraith's sole source of food is the Chitchatuk, plus they have a penchant for collecting human skulls.
Like Hyperion, this one clearly ended in the middle and we have to read The Rise of Endymion to see what happens next. But this was still a satisfying story. Not only did I enjoy getting to know the new characters and the action and adventure but we learn enough new things that drive the larger Hyperion Cantos story forward. I will definitely be reading the last book in the Cantos, The Rise of Endymion.
Thursday, February 14, 2013
Woken Furies
by Richard K. Morgan
I was first introduced to Richard K. Morgan and his character Takeshi Kovacs in Altered Carbon and then Broken Angels both of which I read for prior years' Sci Fi Experiences. Woken Furies is the "final" Takeshi Kovacs novel.
It is remarkable how different the three books set in the same fictional universe with the same protaganist, can each be so different. I enjoyed all three. In Kovac's reality people have stacks embedded in their spinal column that contain their
memories and personalities and as long as your stack is recovered when
you die you can either be "re-sleeved" in another body or exist in
virtual reality. This has all sorts of implications considered over the three novels for almost all aspects of life including crime, torture, sex, space travel, warfare and interaction with technology and other digital constructs.
Altered Carbon was set on a future Earth where Kovac's is digitally transmitted and re-sleeved in order to solve the murder of a wealthy gentleman who has been re-sleeved in one of his cloned bodies but cannot seem to recall the events of his actual murder. This is basically a noir detective story that just happens to be set in the future.
In Broken Angels Kovac's is embroiled in a war on a
distant planet, working as a mercenary for a giant corporation trying
to lay claim to an ancient Martian artifact, in the middle of a war
zone. This is not a noir detective story at all but really a war story. It gave the author the opportunity to consider what war would be like without "real death" on the table. What I found most interesting about this one was learning more about the "Martians" who were long gone but who had left behind some amazing technology that humans had been able to utilize to change their lives.
Woken Furies provides a glimpse of Kovac's past and involves religion, politics and the human/digital interface. Although taking place after Broken Angels, Kovac's is back on his home world where his past is catching up with him. While he is seeking revenge against a group of religious zealots he gets mixed up in a conflict between a bunch of mercenary deComs and the Yakuza. Its not clear what the conflict is but having saved Sylvie, the deCom head, his lot is cast with hers. It seems that Sylvie may have the digital personality of former revolutionary Quellcrist Falconer, inside her head with her, or maybe not. Kovacs must enlist the help of his old friends and revolutionaries to attempt to save Sylvie from the Yakuza, the First Families, the Envoys and a younger duplicate of himself. I enjoyed this final Kovac's novel and would be interested to read more by Richard K. Morgan.
Wednesday, February 13, 2013
2013 Tournament of Books
Last year I discovered and really enjoyed The Morning News Tournament of Books. This year they have announced the contenders early to give people time to read some of the books before the contest in March to better participate in the discussion and enjoy the entire process.
The 2013 Tournament of Books Finalists are:
HHhH by Laurent Binet
The Round House by Louise Erdrich
Gone Girl by Gillian Flynn
The Fault in Our Stars by John Green
Arcadia by Lauren Groff
How Should a Person Be? by Sheila Heti
May We Be Forgiven by A.M. Homes
The Orphan Master’s Son by Adam Johnson
Ivyland by Miles Klee
Bring Up the Bodies by Hilary Mantel
The Song of Achilles by Madeline Miller
Dear Life by Alice Munro
Where’d You Go Bernadette by Maria Semple
Beautiful Ruins by Jess Walter
Building Stories by Chris Ware
[Winner of the Pre-Tournament Playoff Round, either Fobbit by David Abrams, Billy Lynn’s Long Halftime Walk by Ben Fountain or The Yellow Birds by Kevin Powers] Update: the winner was Billy Lynn's Long Halftime Walk.
Of course I read and loved the Orphan Master's Son which I will be rooting for, but that is the only one I have read. I have on my wish list however, HHhH, The Round House, Arcadia, Where'd You Go Bernadette and Beautiful Ruins. And I keep debating whether to join the crowd with Gone Girl or not. Perhaps I can read a couple more before the Tournament begins sometime in March.
The 2013 Tournament of Books Finalists are:
HHhH by Laurent Binet
The Round House by Louise Erdrich
Gone Girl by Gillian Flynn
The Fault in Our Stars by John Green
Arcadia by Lauren Groff
How Should a Person Be? by Sheila Heti
May We Be Forgiven by A.M. Homes
The Orphan Master’s Son by Adam Johnson
Ivyland by Miles Klee
Bring Up the Bodies by Hilary Mantel
The Song of Achilles by Madeline Miller
Dear Life by Alice Munro
Where’d You Go Bernadette by Maria Semple
Beautiful Ruins by Jess Walter
Building Stories by Chris Ware
[Winner of the Pre-Tournament Playoff Round, either Fobbit by David Abrams, Billy Lynn’s Long Halftime Walk by Ben Fountain or The Yellow Birds by Kevin Powers] Update: the winner was Billy Lynn's Long Halftime Walk.
Of course I read and loved the Orphan Master's Son which I will be rooting for, but that is the only one I have read. I have on my wish list however, HHhH, The Round House, Arcadia, Where'd You Go Bernadette and Beautiful Ruins. And I keep debating whether to join the crowd with Gone Girl or not. Perhaps I can read a couple more before the Tournament begins sometime in March.
2012 In Review
Life's been busy so I am just now getting to my 2012 wrap up post. Of course last year I did it in March so maybe I am actually early. In 2012 I read 26 books which is an improvement of the 20 in 2011 and I had some really wonderful reads. My favorite books were:
Orphan Master's Son by Adam Johnson
Wool Omnibus by Hugh Howey
Ready Player One by Ernest Cline
Something Wicked This Way Comes by Ray Bradbury
I didn't get around to writing reviews of any of them except Something Wicked which is a shame. I picked these four as my favorites because they not only were very entertaining and well written but surprised me in some way.
Orphan Master's Son was my clear favorite as it just blew me away. Jun Do barely survives in the crazy world of North Korea by the skin of his teeth and extreme luck. If I were to list his adventures here it would seem absurd (from soldier, to spy, to prisoner, a trip to the U.S., consorting with movie stars and even the Dear Leader himself, Kim Jong Il) but in the context of the story they made perfect sense. While some of the scenes were hard to read, most of it was either fascinating, funny or touching and throughout I found myself really rooting for Jun Do. I enjoyed the book so much that every night at dinner I would tell my husband what had happened in the story I had read that day and he finally had to say "You have to stop with the blow by blow account, I am convinced, I am going to read it for myself." This book surprised me because I don't recall being so excited about a book in a very long time. I could not wait to continue reading. And who would expect that North Korea could be so entertaining. Absolutely loved it. Everyone should read it, right now.
Wool also surprised me. It is getting a lot of buzz right now but when I read it it was pure accident. It popped up on one of those amazon "customers who bought this item also bought" section. And then it was on sale for the kindle, and it sounded interesting and it was cheap so I bought with one click. I don't really read self published stuff but what the heck. And then I started reading and the world of an underground silo after some sort of event made the outside lethal just sucked me in and I read the omnibus (5 Wool stories) in one gulp. I loved that it just dumped you into the story with characters that were interesting and you cared about without explaining this world to you. It is such an amazingly well developed world and yet it is truly a character driven story. It was such a pleasure to gradually piece together how this world worked. And I couldn't wait to find out what happened next. And of course I also read First Shift and Second Shift as soon as they were available and am reading Third Shift now. I confess, I am now a Hugh Howey groupie and check his web site regularly to see how his progress on the next books are going.
I was also surprised by how much fun I had reading Ready Player One by Ernest Cline. It had gotten good reviews so I gave it a go, but wasn't expecting much because I am not a gamer. This book is set in the future where people spend most of their time, including going to school, working and socializing, in a virtual world know as the Oasis. When the creator of the Oasis dies, he leaves his entire vast estate to the winner of a complex game he set up all based upon 1980s culture. The entire story was basically a blow by blow account of Parzival playing this game over many many years. How fun can it be to read about someone else playing a game? It turns out in Ernest Cline's hands, surprisingly, incredibly fun. Of course I have very fond memories of the 80's but it was just a blast from the past which was very very well done.
The other top three books were all new works but Something Wicked this Way Comes by Ray Bradbury was published in 1962. This was incredibly well written, very atmospheric with amazing characters. (My review is here.) I was surprised that I had missed such a wonderful classic for all these years.
In addition I have a few Honorable Mentions, all of which would have made it into the top four in another year with less stellar competition.
Sister's Brothers by Patrick deWitt
Anathem by Neal Stephenson
Physick Book of Deliverance Dane by Katherine Howe
Demi-monde: Winter by Rod Rees
I didn't give myself any reading goals for 2012 but as I had said "I will simply be happy if I get to read" I think I did pretty well. I read some wonderful books and read more (26 books) than last year but posted less (17 posts). I read one book about Art - Provenance: How a Con Man and A Forger Rewrote the History of Modern Art by Laney Salisbury - a nonfiction work that was fascinating, and a book about Food - A History of the World in Six Glasses by Tom Standage another nonfiction work which was just ok. I normally like to try and read something about books or reading which I didn't manage to do. I have been listening to audio books in my car which I am really enjoying and gives me more "reading" time. I participated in Carl V's Once Upon a Time and RIP challenges which I enjoyed.
I don't think I will set any specific goals for 2013 either except that I would like to finish four books that I was enjoying but were abandoned: Satanic Verses by Salman Rushdie, 1Q84 by Haruki Murakami, Swamplandia by Karen Russell and Drowned World by J.G. Ballard. I would also like to try and read books that I actually have instead of buying more. When we moved, we got rid of almost all of our physical books. I just have one small shelf of books to be read and two bookcases in my office of favorite books to keep. Although I almost completely stopped buying physical books, I find that I am still in the habit of acquiring electronic books far far faster than I can read them. It seems that every time I go into the kindle store to select my next read I end up buying at least four. My kindle wish list currently has 250 titles in it. My kindle library has 114 books although of course these include a dictionary and several "complete works of" Poe, Saramago, Oscar Wilde, Henry James etc. which are not meant to be read in one go. But just looking at the individuals books I have 39 that I have actually read and have 47 unread. As for challenges, I of course intend to do Carl's Once Upon A Time and RIP. I also really enjoyed following along with the Tournament of Books last year. It isn't a challenge but I would like to read some more of the books in the competition and of course I will be heartily rooting for Orphan Master's Son. And once again, I will simply be happy if I get to read!
Sunday, January 06, 2013
Bookmarks Magazine
This is what looked interesting in the Sept/Oct and Nov/Dec Bookmarks.
A Hologram for the King - Dave Eggers-S
Shakey: Neil Young's Biography - Jimmy McDonough - S
Sweet Tooth - Ian Mcewan - S
Dog Star - Peter Heller -S
Telegraph Avenue - Michael Chabon - S
Dearie:The Remarkable Life of Julia Child - Bob Spitz -S
Every Love Story is a Ghost Story:A Life of David Foster Wallace - D.T. Max - S
Life - Keith Richards-S
Prime of Miss Jean Brodie - Muriel Spark
Palace Walk-Naguib Mahfouz
Wapshot Chronicle-John Cheever
Magnificent Ambersons - Booth Tarkington
Poet's Funeral - John M. Daniel
Devil's Hand - M.E. Patterson
Alif the Unseen - G. Willow Wilson
HHhH - Laurent Binet
The Red Book - Deborah Copaken Kogan
The Garden of Evening Mists - Tan Twan Eng (read The Gift of Rain first)
The Round House - Louise Erdrich
Angel of Repose - Wallace Stegner
The Whistling Season - Ivan Doig
Lonesome Dove - Larry McMurty
Gabriel's Story - David Anthony Durham
Daughter of Fortune-Isabel Allende
Blood Meridian - Cormac McCarthy
Where Did You Go, Bernadette - Maria Semple
Prisoner of Heaven - Carlos Ruiz Zafon
In Sunlight & in Shadow - Mark Helprin
On Beauty - Zadie Smith
A Beautiful Mystery - Louise Penny (read Still Life first)
What the Dead Know - Laura Lippman
The Sea-John Banville
Leviathan or Moon Palace - Paul Auster
Apocalypse Codex - Charles Stross-SF (read Atrocity Archives first)
Map of the Sky - Felix J. Palma - SF- (read Map of Time first)
Existence - David Brin-SF
Private Empire: ExonMobil and American Power - Steve Coll - NF
Prairie Fever: British Aristrocrats in the American West - Peter Pagnamenta - NF
Van Gogh: The Life - Steven Naifeh -NF
Joseph Anton - Salmon Rushdie - NF
Double Cross:The True Story of the D-Day Spies - Ben Macintyre -NF (read Agent Zigzag first)
Gravity's Engines: How Bubble-Blowing Black Holes ... - Caleb Scharf - NF
A Hologram for the King - Dave Eggers-S
Shakey: Neil Young's Biography - Jimmy McDonough - S
Sweet Tooth - Ian Mcewan - S
Dog Star - Peter Heller -S
Telegraph Avenue - Michael Chabon - S
Dearie:The Remarkable Life of Julia Child - Bob Spitz -S
Every Love Story is a Ghost Story:A Life of David Foster Wallace - D.T. Max - S
Life - Keith Richards-S
Prime of Miss Jean Brodie - Muriel Spark
Palace Walk-Naguib Mahfouz
Wapshot Chronicle-John Cheever
Magnificent Ambersons - Booth Tarkington
Poet's Funeral - John M. Daniel
Devil's Hand - M.E. Patterson
Alif the Unseen - G. Willow Wilson
HHhH - Laurent Binet
The Red Book - Deborah Copaken Kogan
The Garden of Evening Mists - Tan Twan Eng (read The Gift of Rain first)
The Round House - Louise Erdrich
Angel of Repose - Wallace Stegner
The Whistling Season - Ivan Doig
Lonesome Dove - Larry McMurty
Gabriel's Story - David Anthony Durham
Daughter of Fortune-Isabel Allende
Blood Meridian - Cormac McCarthy
Where Did You Go, Bernadette - Maria Semple
Prisoner of Heaven - Carlos Ruiz Zafon
In Sunlight & in Shadow - Mark Helprin
On Beauty - Zadie Smith
A Beautiful Mystery - Louise Penny (read Still Life first)
What the Dead Know - Laura Lippman
The Sea-John Banville
Leviathan or Moon Palace - Paul Auster
Apocalypse Codex - Charles Stross-SF (read Atrocity Archives first)
Map of the Sky - Felix J. Palma - SF- (read Map of Time first)
Existence - David Brin-SF
Private Empire: ExonMobil and American Power - Steve Coll - NF
Prairie Fever: British Aristrocrats in the American West - Peter Pagnamenta - NF
Van Gogh: The Life - Steven Naifeh -NF
Joseph Anton - Salmon Rushdie - NF
Double Cross:The True Story of the D-Day Spies - Ben Macintyre -NF (read Agent Zigzag first)
Gravity's Engines: How Bubble-Blowing Black Holes ... - Caleb Scharf - NF
Thursday, November 01, 2012
RIP VII Wrap Up
And so we are here at the end of RIP VII already. I had signed up for reading just one book, as I appreciate the flexibility, but I managed to read five novels and some short stories as well.
The Seed by Ania Ahlborn
Night Circus by Erin Morgenstern
The Reckoning by Ama Katsu
Rebecca by Daphne De Maurier
Something Wicked This Way Comes by Ray Bradbury
Short stories from The Weird edited by Ann and Jeff VanderMeer
My favorite novel was definitely Something Wicked This Way Comes but I also am finding The Weird: A Compendium of Dark & Strange Stories amazing. And I also really enjoyed the Seed and Rebecca. All in all it was a very creepy and enjoyable autumn, even though it is really still summer here and we are still waiting for cooler weather. Thanks Carl!
Tuesday, October 30, 2012
Something Wicked This Way Comes
by Ray BradburyThe title is a quote from Shakespeare’s Macbeth and is a line uttered by one of the witches referring to the approach of Macbeth. So we are warned right of the bat that this isn’t some sweet nostalgic tale, like Dandelion Wine. I cannot believe that I have never read this classic 1962 Ray Bradbury story as I started reading Bradbury when I was a child. I absolutely loved it.
James Nightshade and William Halloway, two 13 year old boys, are enjoying a beautiful autumn day a week before Halloween when they run into a lightening rod salesman who tells them a storm is coming and then hear mysterious calliope music - maybe - maybe not. Mysteriously, in the middle of the night, a carnival appears on the outskirts of town called Cooger & Dark's Pandemonium Shadow Show. The towns people, and especially the two boys, are drawn to the carnival with its maze of mirrors, freaks and carousel. Jim is especially drawn to the carnival and the carnival seems to have a special interest in him. But all is not fun and games with this carnival and as towns folk start to disappear or appear markedly changed by their visit to the carnival, it is up to Will, with the help of his dad, to save Jim and the town from the evil carnival.
I said it once, I will say it again - I absolutely loved this story. The writing was superb creating a wonderfully creepy atmosphere, a suspenseful and twisted plot and amazingly memorable characters. I will never look at a carousel the same again. It was so ominous when Mr. Dark, who is covered with tattoos of people bound to the carnival, suddenly has tattoos of Jim and Will on his body. The Dust Witches’ pursuit of Jim and Will is terrifying. And the ending was exciting and heart warming.
I am not usually fond of books that hit you over the head with strong messages but this is a classic allegory about the struggle between good and evil. And I loved its message that darkness is in us all but it is also within ourselves to defeat the darkness.
The Night Circus has been compared to Something Wicked This Way Comes but I must say I didn’t find much in common with the Night Circus. Something Wicked is incredibly well written with a wonderful plot, rich compelling characters and the carnival is truly malevolent. The Night Circus was visually stunning but the Circus itself was magical and wonderful, not malevolent, and the story certainly did not tell a tale of good versus evil. I highly recommend that you read Something Wicked This Way Comes!
Monday, October 29, 2012
Rebecca
by Daphne Du MaurierI saw the old Hitchcock movie years ago but had never read the novel. When audible was having a classics sale and I saw this, I thought it would be perfect for RIP and I was right.
I love the opening line: "Last night I dreamt I went to Manderley again". Right from the start the book grabs you with the depiction of Manderley, the legendary estate in England, now depicted as deserted with the forest slowly making its advance on the house. I just love atmospheric stories about houses and Manderley was the main character in this story as far as I was concerned.
Luckily it had been so long since I saw the movie that I didn’t really remember the plot - and apparently the end is different in the movie. I don’t want to give away too much of the plot but for me the plot was not as important as the atmosphere and the characters. The story is told from the point of view of the second Mrs. De Winters who meets the widowed Mr. De Winter in Monte Carlo, quickly get married and return to Manderley. The new Mrs. De Winters (who is never actually named in the novel) is young and inexperienced and the housekeeper, Mrs. Danvers, who had been devoted to the first Mrs. De Winter, Rebecca, makes life difficult for the new Mrs. De Winters. Although never actually part of the current plot, the deceased Rebecca is nevertheless an essential character in this drama, always overshadowing everything that happens at Manderley. And Mrs. Danvers is one of the creepiest characters you could ever want to meet.
I also enjoyed the style of the book told from the perspective of the narrator, the new Mrs. De Winters. It took the unreliable narrator technique further than usual as it is not only told from the narrator's point of view but includes a lot of the narrator simply imagining people and events. Indeed in at least the first half, if not first two thirds, almost all the reader's knowledge of Rebecca comes from the narrator (the new Mrs. De Winters) imagining what she looked like, said or did. There are long passages recounting events at Manderley that I had to keep reminding my self were being related as the narrator's imaginings and not based on any actual knowledge of the narrator. It increased the suspense and tension in the story as I was almost always suspicious of the accuracy of what the narrator related.
As for the new Mrs. De Winters, at first I was just exasperated with her and wanted to give her a good shake - for goodness sake, stand up for yourself for once! And then when the great revelation is made, her reaction totally puzzled me. But perhaps I am looking at this from too much of a modern perspective and could not identify with her. And clearly the new Mrs. De Winters, who doesn’t even merit a name, is intended to contrast with the strong willed, all powerful (even in death) Rebecca. And Mr. De Winter, or Maxim, for such a central character also seemed somewhat of a wet noodle to me being pushed and pulled by circumstances and of course Rebecca.
Nonetheless, I loved this creepy, atmospheric gothic tale and highly recommend it. I listened it as an audio book and while the narrator’s, Anna Massay's, distinct accent and clipped way of speaking took me a bit to get used to, I thought it ultimately fit the new Mrs. De Winter perfectly.
Friday, October 26, 2012
The Reckoning
This is Book Two of the Taker Trilogy, and as most middle books of trilogies, I wasn’t that enamored of it. Of course the middle book of a trilogy has a very hard job to do. It must wrap up the cliff hanger of the first book and move the plot along a little before leaving us with another cliff hanger for the last book. I was trying to think of any middle books of trilogies that I really enjoyed and couldn’t come up with any. The Lord of the Rings came to mind but that was written as a single book by Tolkien and subsequently chopped up by publishers. So suffice it to say I am not a big fan of trilogies.
Nevertheless, it did its job as a middle book and as I really enjoyed the first book in the trilogy, The Taker, I will doubtlessly keep reading with Book Three, the Descent when it comes out. So let me start at the beginning.
The Taker opens in the present when a very young women, Lanny, suspected of murder, is brought in by the police to an ER for evaluation. Instead, the doctor, amazed by her story and evident healing abilities, helps her escape. From there the “young” girl’s story, which begins at the turn of the 19th century, unfolds. I don’t want to give too much away, but ultimately our heroine runs away from her family and childhood love, Jonathan, in rural Maine and falls into the clutches of the mysterious Adair in Boston. Adair apparently holds the secret to immortality and has gathered about him an interesting entourage over the centuries which he rules with an iron fist (and some imaginative torture devices). I had expected vampires but instead this group’s immortality rests squarely with the talent of Adair and his alchemical skills. Book One Ends with a cliff hanger as Lanny is able to escape from Adair.
While this is certainly a book about obsessive love, what I enjoyed most about it was the fascinating characters, especially Adair, and the twisted plot. The characters were rich and interesting and I especially loved the story of Adair’s study of alchemy over the centuries. The book is dark and horrifying without resorting to trite supernatural elements and I could not put it down.
The Reckoning is primarily about Adair’s pursuit of Lanny. One thing I loved about this book was Adair’s reaction and adaptation to two hundred years of technological changes, I thought it was an interesting commentary about our current world. And I also enjoyed learning more about Adair’s past, the back story of some more of his “family” and the implications of living for a very very long time. While Book Two didn’t wow me like Book One did, I still enjoyed it and look forward to Book Three.
Nevertheless, it did its job as a middle book and as I really enjoyed the first book in the trilogy, The Taker, I will doubtlessly keep reading with Book Three, the Descent when it comes out. So let me start at the beginning.
The Taker opens in the present when a very young women, Lanny, suspected of murder, is brought in by the police to an ER for evaluation. Instead, the doctor, amazed by her story and evident healing abilities, helps her escape. From there the “young” girl’s story, which begins at the turn of the 19th century, unfolds. I don’t want to give too much away, but ultimately our heroine runs away from her family and childhood love, Jonathan, in rural Maine and falls into the clutches of the mysterious Adair in Boston. Adair apparently holds the secret to immortality and has gathered about him an interesting entourage over the centuries which he rules with an iron fist (and some imaginative torture devices). I had expected vampires but instead this group’s immortality rests squarely with the talent of Adair and his alchemical skills. Book One Ends with a cliff hanger as Lanny is able to escape from Adair.
While this is certainly a book about obsessive love, what I enjoyed most about it was the fascinating characters, especially Adair, and the twisted plot. The characters were rich and interesting and I especially loved the story of Adair’s study of alchemy over the centuries. The book is dark and horrifying without resorting to trite supernatural elements and I could not put it down.
The Reckoning is primarily about Adair’s pursuit of Lanny. One thing I loved about this book was Adair’s reaction and adaptation to two hundred years of technological changes, I thought it was an interesting commentary about our current world. And I also enjoyed learning more about Adair’s past, the back story of some more of his “family” and the implications of living for a very very long time. While Book Two didn’t wow me like Book One did, I still enjoyed it and look forward to Book Three.
Thursday, October 25, 2012
Night Circus
by Erin Morgenstern
This is one of those books that had been the subject of so much buzz last year when it came out that I debated whether or not to read it. It got lots of rave reviews in last years RIP so I decided to give it a try.
Here is the blurb from the publisher:
The author did an amazing job of creating such rich imagery of the circus with words.
But, as a novel, it didn’t work for me. The plot seemed a half-hearted, at best, attempt. I know some will say that the plot wasn’t important but if you are going to try and have a plot, I think you should do it well. And I am not one that needs a plot driven story. (One of my favorite books is Italo Calvino’s Invisible Cities, which has no plot.) The story was supposedly about a fierce competition or duel between two magicians and their love story. The love story didn’t work at all (I have no idea why Celia was even interested, much less in love with Marco) and the competition was mostly absent from the story line for most of the book. And when it came to the fore of the story and I started to become interested in the contest itself, perhaps its origins, its purpose or even its creators, or even some of that “fierce competition”, that plot line just withered away. The competition story line had so much potential and it was more or less ignored. Moreover, the characters fell flat for me. The only character that I found interesting was Bailey but as he played a relatively small role he was not enough to carry the entire story.
If someone actually creates the Circus or it is made into a movie, or perhaps even a Disney attraction, I would go. As far as a written work, it simply didn't work for me.
Here is the blurb from the publisher:
The circus arrives without warning. No announcements precede it. It is simply there, when yesterday it was not. Within the black-and-white striped canvas tents is an utterly unique experience full of breathtaking amazements. It is called Le Cirque des RĆŖves, and it is only open at night.This is a very visual book and I absolutely loved the Night Circus itself. This is not the typical Barnum and Baily Circus with scary clowns, sad elephants, greasy popcorn and garish tents.
But behind the scenes, a fierce competition is underway: a duel between two young magicians, Celia and Marco, who have been trained since childhood expressly for this purpose by their mercurial instructors. Unbeknownst to them both, this is a game in which only one can be left standing. Despite the high stakes, Celia and Marco soon tumble headfirst into love, setting off a domino effect of dangerous consequences, and leaving the lives of everyone, from the performers to the patrons, hanging in the balance.
More than a circus, really, like no circus anyone has ever seen. Not a single large tent but a multitude of tents, each with a particular exhibition. No elephants or clowns. No, something more refined than that. Nothing commonplace. This will be different, this will be an utterly unique experience, a feast for the senses. Theatrics sans theater, an immersive entertainment. We will destroy the presumptions and preconceived notions of what a circus is and make it something else entirely, something new.And it certainly was something new, some type of circus that I had never encountered before. The black and white color scheme, the amazing clock, the bonfire, the ice garden, the cloud maze, color changing dresses, the pool of tears, the wishing tree, the red scarved Reveurs all were simply magical. And the descriptions of the Circus were so richly detailed that I could almost smell the cider and taste the chocolate mice. If the Night Circus were to exist, I would absolutely attend, perhaps even become a Reveur. I would love to see it in a movie with all the possible special effects.
The author did an amazing job of creating such rich imagery of the circus with words.
The face of the clock becomes a darker grey, and then black, with twinkling stars where the numbers had been previously. The body of the clock, which has been methodically turning itself inside out and expanding, is now entirely subtle shades of white and grey. And it is not just pieces, it is figures and objects, perfectly carved flowers and planets and tiny books with actual paper pages that turn. There is a silver dragon that curls around part of the now visible clockwork, a tiny princess in a carved tower that paces in distress, awaiting an absent prince. Teapots that pour into teacups and minuscule curls of steam that rise from them as the seconds tick. Wrapped presents open. Small cats chase small dogs. An entire game of chess is played.I want to see that clock! And if you do a quick search on the internet you can find the most amazing arts and crafts that were inspired by the Night Circus.
But, as a novel, it didn’t work for me. The plot seemed a half-hearted, at best, attempt. I know some will say that the plot wasn’t important but if you are going to try and have a plot, I think you should do it well. And I am not one that needs a plot driven story. (One of my favorite books is Italo Calvino’s Invisible Cities, which has no plot.) The story was supposedly about a fierce competition or duel between two magicians and their love story. The love story didn’t work at all (I have no idea why Celia was even interested, much less in love with Marco) and the competition was mostly absent from the story line for most of the book. And when it came to the fore of the story and I started to become interested in the contest itself, perhaps its origins, its purpose or even its creators, or even some of that “fierce competition”, that plot line just withered away. The competition story line had so much potential and it was more or less ignored. Moreover, the characters fell flat for me. The only character that I found interesting was Bailey but as he played a relatively small role he was not enough to carry the entire story.
If someone actually creates the Circus or it is made into a movie, or perhaps even a Disney attraction, I would go. As far as a written work, it simply didn't work for me.
Saturday, September 15, 2012
Seed
by Ania Ahlborn
I bought this ebook by mistake. I read good reviews of Seed by Rob Ziegler, an eco-thriller which sort of reminded me of the Wind-up Girl. And then I noticed the Seed ebook was on sale on Amazon for $2.99. They both have similar beige/orange color covers with the black outline of a tree but I should have noticed the horned and cloven footed guy under the tree and I obviously wasn't paying attention to the authors, so I just bought it. (So easy to do on Amazon with the Buy now with one click.) It turned out to be a happy mistake because this book was perfect for RIP and I really enjoyed it.
Jack and his wife Aimee are short on money and have some marital conflict over Jack's weekend performances in a band but they seem to be basically an average family with two cute little girls. One night they are in a car accident when Jack rolls the car with the entire family inside swerving to miss some yellow glowing eyes in the road. After that night their youngest daughter just isn't quite the same.
As the story unfolds we learn that Jack had seen these glowing eyes before when he was a boy in an old cemetery by his house and crouching in the corner of his bedroom. He had run away from his boyhood nightmare but cannot remember the details of what exactly happened when he ran away. As his beloved little girl changes dramatically before his eyes and his wife and older daughter become afraid of her, he must try to remember the past that he thought he put behind him.
This was a very creepy Southern Gothic horror story which I really enjoyed. The atmosphere was great. The evil stalking Jack and Charlie was suitably circumspect initially so you were left wondering whether it was real or simply in Jack's mind. Anyone who has read a horror story or seen a horror movie would know from the set up that things were not going to go well for this family once those glowing eyes showed up but the path of the plot was unique and interesting. And the characters, often not a strong suit in horror novels, were compelling. The only criticism I have is that there were certain story aspects that I thought were interesting which didn't lead anywhere but over all I thought it was well done.
I was curious about the history of this book because it was originally self published and I haven't really read any self published books before but the version I read was apparently published by 47North, one of Amazon's publishing groups and edited and expanded prior to this publication. The author talks about this re-release process on her blog which I found very interesting. Seed was the author's first novel and I would definitely be interested in reading more from her.
Monday, September 03, 2012
Short Stories from The Weird
Taking advantage of this long holiday weekend I thought I would write about some of my favorite short stories from The Weird: A Compendium of Strange and Dark Stories which fits perfectly with RIP. This Compendium of 110 stories from 1908 - 2010 (arranged in chronological order) includes stories by such heavy weights as Lovecraft, Borges, Shirley Jackson, Murakami, Stephen King, Angela Carter, Neil Gaiman but also countless wonderful stories by authors that I have never read before. I prefer to read short stories slowly so I am less than a fifth of the way through (up to 1929) but here are my favorites so far:
The Spider
by Hanns Heinz Ewers, 1915 translated from German
This story just blew me away, I couldn't stop thinking about it. A particular hotel room has been the site of three suicides with all the deaths taking place at the same time of day. The last suicide had been a policeman there to investigate the prior suicides. In the story a young man volunteers to get to the bottom of the mystery and moves into the room. He meticulously keeps a diary and notes nothing strange until .... Well I don't want to take the fun out of reading it but there is a women in the window across the alley, and spiders and needless to say it does not end well for the young man. And the reader is left wondering what exactly happened. Very very creepy!
In the Penal Colony
by Franz Kafka, 1919, translated from German
I am of course familiar with Kafka and The Trial is one of my favorite books but had never read this short story. I guess the title just put me off because it somehow reminded me of Solzhenitsyn and I didn't really want to read about life in a gulag. But the story is not about living in a Penal Colony. The Explorer is a traveler who has come to visit the Penal Colony and is being given the honor and privilege of a tour (and ultimately a demonstration of) the Penal Colony's unique torture and execution devise which repeatedly writes the crime on the Condemned man over a twelve hour period, ultimately killing the Condemned. The new Commandant of the Penal Colony is not in favor of this devise and the Officer who is providing the tour extols the virtues and intricacies of this devise in dispensing justice. According to the Officer after six hours in the devise the Condemned experience a remarkable epiphany making them embrace the experience. The Officer is hoping that the Explorer will convince the Commandant the worth of this remarkable devise. Not surprisingly things do not go according to the Officer's plan. What makes this story so horrifying is that the Officer is enthusiastically enamored of the devise, the Traveler is not horrified by the thing and the Condemned takes a great interest in the devise seemingly unaware that it is about to torture him. Indeed, in the world of the Penal Colony such a devise seems normal and unsurprising. It gave me nightmares for a few nights after reading it.
The People of the Pit
by A. Merritt, 1918
Explorers in the "North" come across a man crawling toward them who before he dies tells them of his escape from "the pit". He had been searching for gold when he came upon a huge ravine or canyon with steps leading down for miles. He spends days going down those steps and finds a huge city and possibly its inhabitants. Is he crazy, did he find aliens, a lost civilization or Lovecraft's Old Ones? Very very creepy. It reminded me a little of Lovecraft's At the Mountains of Madness.
The Man in the Bottle
by Gustave Meyrink, 1912, translated from Austrian
A masked ball is in full swing and the revellers are having a great time and gossiping about a rumor of an illicit affair by the wife of the host. The host, the Prince, comes on the scene and the entertainment begins. A man is placed in a large glass bottle, the stopper put in place and the Prince is seated on top and the glass bottle serves as the background for a marionette show as the man in the bottle "comically capers". The host's wife is brought on stage in a sedan chair and .... Well you will just have to read it.
Thursday, August 30, 2012
Sisters Brothers
Although I had heard of the Sisters Brothers by Patrick deWitt because it got great reviews and I had added it to my wish list, I seriously doubt I would have gotten around to reading it except for the Tournament of Books. Here is the blurb from the back:
Hermann Kermit Warm is going to die, and hired guns Eli and Charlie Sisters will make sure of it. Though Eli doesn't share his brother's appetite for whiskey and killing, he's never known anything else. But their prey isn't an easy mark, and on the road from Oregon City to Warm's goldmining claim outside Sacramento, Eli begins to question what he does for a living—and whom he does it for.
A Western? I don’t read westerns. My dad had every Louis L’amour ever published. I tried to read them - and couldn’t. On the other hand, my favorite book as a child was Little House in the Big Woods and all the other Laura Ingalls Wilder books. And I still love Willa Cather. But still, I don’t think I would have actually read this but for the fact that it won the Tournament of Books beating IQ84, Open City, State of Wonder, The Tiger’s Wife, The Cat’s Table, Salvage the Bones, Sense of an Ending, Swamplandia! and more. And following the Tournament everyday and reading the Judges decisions in each match and the commentary, I just had to read it.
Does it live up to the hype? I don’t know, but it is very different from anything I have read involving gunslingers and the gold rush and I enjoyed it. The characters were fascinating and it was remarkable that the author could get you to actually care about the well being of and routing for cold blooded professional killers. And the supporting cast is engrossing too.
The story is told by Eli who is struggling with his desire to continue on in his profession as well as his relationship with his brother and his narration of the story is what makes the book so compelling. The writing is simply wonderful being both artful and befitting the characters. But it is not all existential navel gazing, it is action packed and humorous too.
While I did have issues with the horses (only confirming my inclination to not read books with animals as awful things tend to happen to them), it did not deter me from forging ahead and enjoying the book over all. Of course it is an extremely violent book and others may have issues with that but a book about two gunslingers at large in the wild wild west during the gold rush simply wouldn’t work without it.
Does it live up to the hype? I don’t know, but it is very different from anything I have read involving gunslingers and the gold rush and I enjoyed it. The characters were fascinating and it was remarkable that the author could get you to actually care about the well being of and routing for cold blooded professional killers. And the supporting cast is engrossing too.
The story is told by Eli who is struggling with his desire to continue on in his profession as well as his relationship with his brother and his narration of the story is what makes the book so compelling. The writing is simply wonderful being both artful and befitting the characters. But it is not all existential navel gazing, it is action packed and humorous too.
While I did have issues with the horses (only confirming my inclination to not read books with animals as awful things tend to happen to them), it did not deter me from forging ahead and enjoying the book over all. Of course it is an extremely violent book and others may have issues with that but a book about two gunslingers at large in the wild wild west during the gold rush simply wouldn’t work without it.
Anathem
I know this is going to sound strange but one of the things I like about our new home is that I have a longer drive to work. Not only is it a beautiful drive along the water but I get a chance to listen to audio books everyday instead of once in a while while traveling. So I finally got a chance to listen to the very long book Anathem by Neal Stephenson (32 hours and 30 minutes). I loved Neal Stephenson’s Snow Crash and Cryptonomicron but this one was very different. Here is the blurb from the back cover:
For ten years Fraa Erasmas, a young avout, has lived in a cloistered sanctuary for mathematicians, scientists, and philosophers, protected from the corrupting influences of the outside world. But before the week is out, both the existence he abandoned and the one he embraced will stand poised on the brink of cataclysmic change—and Erasmas will become a major player in a drama that will determine the future of his world, as he follows his destiny to the most inhospitable corners of the planet . . . and beyond.
I just loved it. The monastic world that is created to cloister all science from general society and technology from the scientists is fascinating. But this isn’t just world building. The characters were well developed and the plot was interesting. As the author had 981 pages to play with the plot is not always fast paced but I actually loved when it got bogged down and focused on scholarly debates before getting back into the action. It was a very philosophical sci-fi romp and I thoroughly enjoyed it. And if you are into audio books the narrator was fabulous.
Wednesday, August 29, 2012
R.I.P. VII
I have been thinking about Carl’s RIP Challenge event for the past couple of weeks and it is finally here! So I am prepared. And this is a good opportunity to get back into the swing of things. For information on the challenge event go here, for the review site go here.
I am signing up for Peril the Third which requires one book because I appreciate the flexibility and lack of stress - but I hope to read more. And I will try and do some short stories as well and perhaps some screen (I have been enjoying Lost Girl).
I have the Night Circus audio loaded on my ipod ready to go and I have had Something Wicked This Way Comes sitting on my coffee table at the ready.
I also have some short story collections on my kindle to dip into:
THE WEIRD: A Compendium of Dark & Strange Stories, edited by Ann and Jeff VanderMeer
The Essential Works of Joseph Sheridan Le Fanu
The Best of Arthur Machen: 15 Tales of Horror
Update: What would RIP be without some Lovecraft? I just discovered (how had I missed it!) that there is a Kindle ebook Complete Collection for only $2.99 on Amazon which I immediately downloaded. And a very helpful reviewer even provided a list of the works in chronological order if you are anal about such things, as I am.
And someday I would also like to try these short story collections:
Little Black Book of Stories by A.S. Byatt
Japanese Tales of Mystery and Imagination by Edogawa Rampo
Bloody Chamber by Angela Carter
But as I prefer novels to short stories if I have the time I would like to try:
The Seed by Ania Ahlborn - on my kindle
The Reckoning by Ama Katsu - on my kindle
The Stain by Chuck Hogan - on my kindle
Wool Omnibus by Hugh Howey - on my kindle
The Passage by Justin Cronin
Vlad by Carlos Fuentes
The Drowned World by J.G. Ballard
World War Z by Max Brooks
Great and Secret Show or Damnation Game by Clive Barker - I loved his Weaveworld.
The Stand by Stephen King - cannot believe that I have never actually read it.
We Have Always Lived In the Castle by Shirley Jackson - I loved Hill House.
The Ghost Writer by John Harwood - has been on my shelf since it came out.
I look forward to reading everyone’s reviews and thanks for hosting again Carl!
P.S. In preparation for RIP VII I was looking back at my posts from last year and discovered that I never did a wrap up post. I had signed up for reading one book and that is all I managed to do, although I didn’t review it. The one book was the Historian and I enjoyed it but didn’t wow me. I found it very atmospheric and loved the scholarly research story line more than the scary parts.
Friday, August 24, 2012
Once Upon A Time VI Really Late Wrap Up
I have done a horrible job this year writing reviews (only one so far) but I have been reading, which is obviously more important. Life just got crazy so I didn’t get a chance to do a wrap up post for Once Upon A Time so I figured I might as well do it now. I only committed to reading one book during the challenge but I ended up reading six: Invitation to a Beheading by Vladimir Nabokov, Demi-monde: Winter by Rod Rees, Fool Moon by Jim Butcher, Physick Book of Deliverance Dane by Katherine Howe, Stone Raft by Jose Saramago and Snow Child by Eowyn Ivey. And enjoyed them all except Fool Moon. Since I didn’t do full reviews here are short ones.
Invitation to a Beheading
I absolutely loved Nabokov’s Pale Fire. Not only was it interesting meta-fiction it was laugh out loud funny and beautifully written. I had not been crazy about Lolita, although I appreciated his use of language, and I wanted to try something else by Nabokov. Invitation to a Beheading was discussed in Reading Lolita in Tehran and it was described as Kafkaesque, so it sounded like something I would enjoy. The plot isn’t the point, but our hero, Cincinnatus C., is in prison waiting for his execution, date unknown, for committing the crime of “gnostic turpitude”. That makes it sound depressing but it is so absurd and surreal that it is simply amusing to learn about his visits with his jailer, his jailor’s young daughter, a fellow prisoner/executioner, his wife and her family and a spider and his escapades and escape attempts in the prison. And by the time you get to his execution the nature of reality is so uncertain that it is actually a happy ending. (It reminded me a little of Blade Runner and Brazil.) It seems to get compared to Kafka’s the Castle a lot, which apparently annoyed Nobakov, but it seemed to be more like the Trial (which I loved) than the Castle (which was a disappointment) to me.
Demi-Monde: Winter
Every time I wander by Amazon’s web site I reflexively look to see if the next book, Demi-Monde: Spring, at least has a release date, which tells you how much I enjoyed this book and am looking forward to the next one. I wasn’t sure if this was going to fit the OUAT because the set up sounded more sci-fi than fantasy. From the book jacket: “In the year 2018, the Demi-monde is the most sophisticated, complex and unpredictable computer simulation ever created, devised specifically to train soldiers for the nightmarish reality of urban warfare. A virtual world of eternal civil conflict, its thirty million inhabitants - Dupes- are ruled by cyber-duplicates of some of history’s cruelest tyrants....But something has gone horribly wrong inside the Demi-Monde, and the U.S. President’s daughter, Norma, has been lured into this terrifying shadow world, only to be trapped there.” But after the initial set up I became so immersed in this fantastical world that I forgot that it was supposed to be in a computer simulation and it felt more like fantasy to me. According to an interview with the author, Rod Rees, “the real inspiration for The Demi-Monde came from Alice's Adventures in Wonderland. I loved the idea of a young girl being lost in a fantastic world where everything is a distorted, bizarro image of the Real World. In fact the major theme of The Demi-Monde is absurdity. The religions of the Demi-Monde - UnFunDaMentalism, ImPuritanism, HerEticalism, HimPerialism, RaTionalism and Confusionism - are merely the religions of the Real World stretched and distorted to breaking point.”
I loved the whole absurd world that was created as well as the wacky historical characters like Trotsky, Josephine Baker, Aleister Crowley especially as they interacted in ways that were not possible in the real world. While this may not be the best written book, it is fast paced, very original and totally fun.
Fool Moon
I had read and enjoyed the first book in the Dresden Files, Storm Front and I am somehow compelled to read things in order. I should know better but I just cannot help myself. I am not that big of a fan of werewolves, although I have encountered some fictional ones that I found entertaining, such as in Underworld, and I really didn’t enjoy this book. I was a short quick romp with the wizard trying to solve a murder during a full moon and sorting through all the possible werewolves involved. It reminded me of a cozy mystery but for the paranormal. Does that have a name? It should. Anyway, I may try the next one which is not about werewolves - we’ll see.
Physick Book of Deliverance Dane
I really wasn’t expecting to like this and ended up really enjoying it. A young women moves into her grandmothers crumbling house and with help of a handsome steeplejack (yes, an actual steeplejack!) discovers her family’s connections to the Salem witch trials and perhaps her own powers as well. Sounds like a trashy paranormal romance from the plot description. But I surprisingly actually really enjoyed it. First of all it is set in Marblehead and Salem which I am quite familiar with and the descriptions are dead on, creating a wonderful atmosphere for the story. Second, the history is fairly accurate and interesting as the contemporary story of the young women is interspersed with a story line from the Salem witch trials. Third, the focus isn’t really on witches and witch craft but on academia and historical research, which I loved. (I was a history major and while I didn’t take that path I certainly could see myself as an academic sorting through the musty and crumbling church records hunting for primary sources.) The characters were interesting, the plot was both educational and mysterious and I really enjoyed the book.
Stone Raft
Jose Saramago is one of my favorite authors. I haven’t read all his work yet, thank goodness, but All the Names is one of my all time favorite books. I have also enjoyed Blindness and Death with Interruptions. While this is probably my least favorite of his that I have read so far it was still wonderful. In the Stone Raft the Iberian Peninsula have broken off from Europe and is drifting south toward a collision with the Azores. It is the tale of five people and a dog who each experience something unusual when the crack in the Pyrenees first appears who set out on a journey to explore their newly transformed stone raft. The plot is never the point in a Saramago novel but his extraordinary use of language, his astute observations and his evocative descriptions make this wonderful fable a joy to experience. If this is your first Saramago I would start with All the Names or Blindness.
Snow Child
I cannot decide whether I really enjoyed this one or not. This was the hot new book that everyone seemed to be reading and it sounded interesting and a perfect fit for OUAT. This is the blurb from Amazon:
Alaska, 1920: a brutal place to homestead, and especially tough for recent arrivals Jack and Mabel. Childless, they are drifting apart--he breaking under the weight of the work of the farm; she crumbling from loneliness and despair. In a moment of levity during the season's first snowfall, they build a child out of snow. The next morning the snow child is gone--but they glimpse a young, blonde-haired girl running through the trees.
This little girl, who calls herself Faina, seems to be a child of the woods. She hunts with a red fox at her side, skims lightly across the snow, and somehow survives alone in the Alaskan wilderness. As Jack and Mabel struggle to understand this child who could have stepped from the pages of a fairy tale, they come to love her as their own daughter. But in this beautiful, violent place things are rarely as they appear, and what they eventually learn about Faina will transform all of them.
I picked this up with trepidation, mostly for the red fox. I try not to read books with animals because in my experience something awful always happens to them. But then as I started reading the entire atmosphere was so melancholy and foreboding that I was filed with dread that something awful was going to happen to not only the fox but the young girl and the entire cast of characters. And yet, the wilds of Alaska were fascinating, the characters engaging and I couldn’t put it down because I wanted to know what happened. And I thought the weaving of the old Russian Fairy Tale into the story was skillfully done. And yet, it kind of felt like watching an entire movie peeking out from behind a pillow. I think it was just me, or perhaps just my state of mind at the time, and I really did think this was a remarkable book, so please give it a try.
I really did enjoy the OUAT this year and I hope I can be more active and up to date next year. Thanks Carl! I am looking forward to RIP.
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