Wednesday, September 8, 2010
Nightshade
Friday, September 3, 2010
Reality Check
Wednesday, September 1, 2010
Thirteen Days to Midnight
Friday, August 27, 2010
Return to Paradise
Wednesday, August 25, 2010
The Thin Executioner
Rashed Rum shames Jebel -- purposely or inadvertently is irrelevent-- and Jebel goes on a quest to regain his honor. Across an unfriendly land Jebel and Tel Hesani, a slave Jebel has taken with him to act as a sacrifice, travel to complete an impossible quest. They meet adversaries, evil men, and gods. Throughout this epic story, Jebel and Tel Hesani meet good people, fight for their lives, bargain with criminals, make deals with death, and toil in slavery.
Do they finish their quest? Are their lives spared/taken/destroyed??? Alas, i cannot be the person to write that spoiler. The magic of this book must be discovered I think.
This book was excellent. It's very close-in my humble opinion-to a must read. It's not an epic, but only in that it is not written in poetic verse. It is a story of a journey, it has otherworldly beliefs. It has criminality, it is really playful and yet at times dark. this book was exciting and hard to put down. I thourougly enjoyed it once I picked it up.
With The Thin Executioner that was the whole problem, picking it up. I almost didn't. I'm not a fan of horror-- I don't want to stay up all night worrying about psychopaths or creepy things, so when I saw this book, I'll admit, I judged this book by its cover-- and its title, and its font, and its large print back cover description (I didn't originally bother with the small print.) It looks like something that I would NEVER want to read. And while it is a tad masculine, it was definitely within the realm of my reading taste. I wish it had a different title, and a different cover-- without creepy red eyes. This is a book worth the time. With nods to classic literature, and a odyssian journey complete with the coming of age touches of Huck Finn, pick it up, read it-- just maybe find a book jacket not designed to scare your pants off.
R.
Tuesday, August 24, 2010
Sorta Like a Rock Star
Friday, August 20, 2010
Immortal Beloved Giveaway!
Guardian of the Gate
Thursday, August 19, 2010
The Daughters
Okay-- this book had a lot of good and a little OMG. So... for all those folks out there who are writing books. I understand the "write what you know" philosophy, but... If you're a famous celebrety daughter, don't write a book about a famous celebrity daughter writing about a famous celebrety daughter. Like seriously. The story was pretty solid except for that. The main caracter is interesting and quirky. The concept of being used for who your parents are versus who you are-- totally relatable to most folks. But would it have been so hard to make the character write about -- anything else in the world??? So my advice here-- read this book-- read the sequil (It should be pretty cool,) Just overlook these little things, they make for mild annoyances at best.
R.
Sisters Red
Wednesday, August 18, 2010
Infinite Days
Tuesday, August 17, 2010
13 Treasures
Monday, August 16, 2010
The Mockingbirds
Quick Plot: Alex, a Junior, is date raped at a coed boarding school. She opts not to tell anyone, (because of course the teachers wouldn't actually handle the problem, and no one wants police involvement) but instead allows her problem to be handled by: 1. her merry band of close friends, and 2. the schools unofficial honor society, The Mockingbirds.
I'm going to say right off the bat that I have issues with this book. The subject matter is so incredibly serious, sensitive, and frankly-- I think-- inappropriately handled. I understand that the author was date raped in college, I get that this kind of stuff is not at all limited to college campuses... I know that it is a topic that should be discussed, openly and honestly with young men and women so that they understand their rights, and the recourses of action open to them. I think Ms. Whitney was attempting to write a warning for young women to ease awareness and create a champion of justice for these types of situations-- I just don't think it was done particularly well for a few reasons. 1. The setting she chose was a high school, not a college. Why would this matter? Well it does, because in high school there are laws regarding minors that would come into play here. 2. It also matters because there is no high school teacher that thinks their students dukie smells of roses-- it's unrealistic to paint that portrait. (and kind of insulting to those teachers who have to deal with our powder-keg teenage youth) 3. It would also be illegal for a teacher to keep the knowledge that one student raped another to herself. Suggesting to teenagers that might find themselves in a situation wherein they should talk to the police, or at the very least an adult, that they should turn to an internal body to deal with something as serious as date rape-- or mutilation-- or bigotry, and that justice for that action could be quitting the water polo team, or some other extra curricular embarrassment is irresponsible. Date rape may be embarrassing, but it is not an embarrassment. It's an illegal action, and a kid who does that to another kid should be arrested, at the very least.
I only hope that teenagers who read this, read it for the fantasy that it is and don't try to emulate it in some way. Honor codes are great, but this concept is for the birds. My understanding is that there is a sequel coming soon. I hope this time Ms Whitey decided to do something where there is actually questionable recourse of action-- such as cyber-bullying.
R.
Sweet Treats & Secret Crushes
Friday, August 13, 2010
Ship Breakers
Immortal Beloved
What can I say... I like everyone else have been inundated lately by books dealing with all kinds of otherworldly issues. Trust me, I appreciate that Immortal Beloved is not about warewolves, or fairys or vampires-- well not technically.
I read this book yesterday, and the first 100 pages were kind of tough to get through. The prose was stilted. It seemed that the author wasn't really in touch with her character. Once she did find her, the story picked up. I'm extremely interested to see what happens with Nastasya, (though I hope there's a name change) and the original band of characters we are introduced to in this book. I'm a little upset that so little was resolved at the end of this book. I fear that is a trend though that will surely follow us through the next few years. The unresolved novel-- because surely there will be a sequel, or a trillogy is already planned, so it's okay to leave the story lines hanging.
All in all, I think that ms Tiernan did a good job in creating her less evil characters and I look forward to meeting them in future books. Hopefully then there will be some resolution and I won't be worried about her viscious imortals who are still running around, tricking me into leaving my own mortal life behind.
R.
I am an avid reader. Most people who know me, know that I'm always carrying around some book or another. I love to read, on paper or digitally. More than that, I'm a fast reader-- I don't skim, I'm just really quick. If a story is good, even if it's cheesy-- if it's well put together I'll get through it, and usually in less than a day. If I put a book down--just can't get through it-- (uh-oh) it probably sucks.
That's what I want to do with this blog, review the books that I read (sometimes as many as 5 a week.) Some are already on store shelves, some arent. Most are worth discussing in some way.