Saturday, September 30, 2006

Book Money

As I think I have made relatively clear, Tuesday is my birthday. That means, I get books. It started today. I had money for the second hand bookstore, and with the second hand bookstore I can either found lots of books that I want, or none. Today, I spent all my book money in one stop. And just in the fantasy aisle...

I got:

The Warrior Prophet - The Prince of Nothing Trilogy - book 2 by R. Scott Bakker (have book 1 already)
R. Scott Bakker established himself as a fantasy writer to watch with The Darkness That Comes Before, the first volume of his Prince of Nothing trilogy. That book largely set the scene for the epic series, introducing the main characters and providing the mandatory fantasy backdrop of an earth-shattering war against an evil, godlike figure. With the explication out of the way, Bakker is free to get on with the action, and The Warrior-Prophet is all action. The novel begins with The Holy War, a Crusades-like army made up of vying factions, invading the desert lands of the jihadist Fanhim. The following 600-plus pages feature one large battle after another, broken up only by 600-plus various subplots involving sorcerous conspiracies and the occasional romantic interlude. Hundreds of thousands die, but Bakker never loses his focus on the human side of the struggles, following the individual quests of characters in the madness of all-out war: the warrior prophet Kellus seeks to unite the strife-riven Holy War before it destroys itself--and him--in the desert; the sorcerer Achamian attempts to understand both his nightmares of the dread No-God's re-awakening and his relationship with Esmenet, a prostitute; the barbarian Cnaiur becomes a fierce leader of the war but slowly goes mad in his thirst for vengeance against Kellhus's father; and secret skin-spies of the demonic Consult seek to control events to usher in their own desired apocalypse. Bakker even pays careful attention to the minor characters, describing the heroic actions and deaths of various warriors in battle, until The Warrior-Prophet often reads more like a history, or even a battle song, than a conventional fantasy novel.

Unfortunately, this is also the book's one weakness. There are so many characters and intrigues that readers will have to frequently consult the glossary to remind themselves of who's who and why they're fighting each other. But it's probably not fair to criticize a fantasy tale for presenting a world that's too real. And it's the world of Earwa that is the real star of the trilogy, as Bakker has invested it with a breathtaking social complexity, thanks in part to his allusions to European and Middle Eastern history. Earwa deserves a place beside Tolkien's Middle-earth, Robert E. Howard's Hyborian world, and Steve Erikson's Malazan Empire in the annals of great fantasy worlds. --Peter Darbyshire


The Dreaming Tree - C.J. Cherryh
Journey to a transitional time in the world, as the dawn of mortal man brings about the downfall of elven magic. But there remains one final place untouched by human hands--the small forest of Ealdwood, in which dwells Arafel the Sidhe, who has more love of the earth than any of her kind. This is a moving, compelling tale of the last stronghold of immortality struggling to survive the rise of man.


Dark Lover - J.R. Ward and Lover Awakened - J.R. Ward
I think most people know what these are about. I wouldn't have bought them if they were not second hand, so if I don't like them, at least they were cheap!

Winter Warriors - David Gemmel - Book 8 in The Drensai Series
David Gemmell has a talent for fantasy tales of heroism and villainy that feature characters who, while sympathetically flawed, are almost superhumanly good at what they do. Often these people are warriors: finely drawn, emotionally complex, and struggling with their individual human challenges against the backdrop of epic events.

The heroic figures here are three Drenai soldiers, Nogusta, Bison, and Kebra, whose services have been rejected by their king because they are no longer young. However, while these old friends might be a tad past their best, they are still very good indeed, and when they are called upon to protect the infant heir to the throne, the little prince could not be in better hands. In the midst of flight and eventual, desperate battle against the forces of the demon lord Anharat, they fight not only a human army and a band of demon riders bent on the heir's death but their own doubts about their ability and worth. Gemmell is particularly deft at describing fine gradations of the friendship between the three men, including the subtleties of liking, of loving, and of the different strengths that come with age. Winter Warriors is both a fast-paced fantasy adventure and a powerful story of living and dying well.


Merlin - Book two of the Pendragon Cycle - Stephen R. Lawhead
An enchanting tale of love and loss, glory and grandeur, set in the twilight of Rome's power . . . where the Celtic chieftains of Britain battle to save their land from an onrushing darkness . . . In this modern classic, Stephen Lawhead presents a majestic retelling of Western literature's most compelling epic. Merlin. His golden eyes saw the shape of a world yet to be. His wisdom would light the path of the coming King. Born of a union between druid and faery, he was trained as a bard and schooled in the ways of battle. But his heart and calling were greater than a warrior's. Son of the great Taliesin, the song of his father coursed through his soul. Yet his life and mission were to be his own. And though sovereignty was his, he would lay it aside to serve a king of his own choosing. As his powers transcended those of mortal men, so, too, would his trials, his griefs . . . and the dark might of his most fearsome enemy. In the twilight of Tome's rule over the Island of the Mighty, as smaller men vied for ascendancy, his would be the hand to lay the foundations of a new order -- the Kingdom of Summer . . . and Arthur, Pendragon of Britain. Merlin is book two in the Pendragon Cycle


Arthur - Book 3 in the Pendragon Cycle - Stephen R. Lawhead
An enchanting tale of love and loss, glory and grandeur, set in the twilight of Rome's power . . . Where the Celtic chieftains of Britain battle to save their land from an onrushing darkness. . . . In this modern classic, Stephen Lawhead presents a majestic retelling of Western literature's most compelling epic. The Sword of Britain. While many strove to claim it, one hand alone could remove the blade of Kingship from its stone sheath. He came -- a raw youth among ambitious lords too blind to recognize their king. He came -- to a Britain divided, ripe for conquest by barbarian hordes. The songs of Taliesin the master bard had foretold his rising. The vision of Merlin the prophet would guide him. He was Arthur, Pendragon of the Isle of the Mighty. His courage would be lauded; his enemies, legion; his reign, legendary. Under Arthur, by wisdom as much as might, Britain would unite. Through Arthur would arise a kingdom of peace, prosperity, and righteousness -- the long-awaited Kingdom of Summer. Yet, in the midst of flourishing virtue, an evil would arise to challenge Britain's most brilliant Crown. . . . Arthur is book three in the Pendragon Cycle. Look for Taliesin and Merlin, books one and two in this award-winning Arthurian series by Stephen Lawhead.


Beneath the Vaulted Hills - Sean Russell - Book One in The River Into Darkness duology
Sean Russell writes for people who prefer books to movies. No snappy dialogue or nonstop action sequences, just a mesmerizing tale, multifaceted characters, and lyrical descriptive prose. Beneath the Vaulted Hills is the first part of Russel's River Into Darkness series, which is itself a two-part prequel to Russell's Moontide and Magic Rise series. Each series stands alone, despite some characters in common.

Both series are set in the first half of an alternative 19th century. In Beneath the Vaulted Hills, Lord Eldrich, the last Mage, seeks to suppress all knowledge of magical powers. Two young men, Hayes and Kehler, and the beautiful Countess of Chilton have discovered clues to a possible trove of magical lore. It's concealed in a labyrinthine cave system behind a mysterious "crypt" linked to Teller, a renegade mage apprentice who founded a society to preserve magic. Erasmus Flattery, once a student in Eldrich's household, knows how dangerous the Mage can be, but finds himself joining the investigation. Both the Tellerites and Lord Eldrich follow, determined to control their discoveries.

Russell has the rare ability to immerse his readers so completely in his tale that reaching the end feels like waking from a particularly vivid dream. Fortunately the second volume of the series, The Compass of the Soul, continues it.


And Lastly,

The Compass of the Soul - Sean Russell - Book Two of The River into Darkness duology
As Lord Eldrich, Farrland's last mage, seeks to destroy all vestiges of magic in the land, a young woman newly awakened to her magical powers strives to thwart his plans. Caught between the pair of warring sorcerers, a countess, a painter, a priest, and a philosopher find their lives shaped by fragmentary memories and dark visions of catastrophe. This sequel to Beneath the Vaulted Hills (DAW, 1997) demonstrates the author's talent for evocative storytelling and intricately drawn characters. Best read in tandem with its predecessor, Russell's finely etched tale of a world on the threshold of change belongs in most libraries.


Yeah, it has been a while since the second hand store has really had anything I wanted, so it was a good day!

Friday, September 29, 2006

Tithe - Holly Black [September/06]


I finished another book. Yay! To see my review of it on Twisted Kingdom, click here. I thought it was a very good read.

Next fantasy novel, Raven's Shadow by Patricia Briggs.

Wednesday, September 27, 2006

Next Goal - The Clean Off the Night Stand Challenge

I have this all figured out. I set goals for myself to clean off my night stand. Then, if I accomplish the goals, I will get one book. Now, if I read six of the books in the following list, I will just be rewarded with one of the Briggs books I already ordered. But, if I have some goals, I might have a night stand again!

For starters, I had two books I meant to have read by yesterday. Do you know that I totally seemed to miss that yesterday was the 26th? I thought I still had plenty of time. Told you, bad reading month.

Anyways, my list:

Luck in the Shadows - Lynn Flewelling
Under the Eagle - Simon Scarrow
Vampire Hunter D - Hideyuki Kikuchi
Alice's Adventures in Wonderland - Lewis Carroll
Through the Looking Glass - Lewis Carroll
Tithe - Holly Black
The Friends of Meager Fortune - David Adams Richards (priority)
The Shadow of the Wind - Carlos Ruiz Zafon
New Moon - Stephanie Meyer
Everything you Know - Zoe Heller (priority)
The Alleluia Files - Sharon Shinn
The Oak Above the Kings - Patricia Kennealy-Morrison
The Well of Lost Plots - Jasper Fforde
Chicken With Plums - Marjane Satrapi (priority)
Thirteen Moons - Charles Frazier (priority)
Vengeance in Death - J.D. Robb (priority)
Raven's Shadow - Patricia Briggs
The Keep - Jennifer Egan
The Colony of Unrequited Dreams - Wayne Johnston
Goblin Market and Other Poems - Christina Rossetti

This list is for me, just so everyone knows. Then, I can only start 5 new books until all these books are read. Some of these I haven't started, but anyways. And I have to read at least 5-7 books before I can buy anymore books. My birthday does not count. So, I have to read 10-14 books for the new Briggs books, and then another 5-7 before I can get anything else. This should work.

Oh, the five book leeway does not include books I have to read for school. I am in only one novel class, and that is children's literature.

I almost forgot, if I read 6 books between now and next Tuesday, I get the new Wayne Johnston novel.

R.I.P. Present

For completing the R.I.P. Challenge, I ordered my book...s... from Amazon. I bought my boyfriend a present, on a whim, hopefully he will like it! But, for myself, I decided that I needed to read some Patricia Briggs before her sequel to Moon Called comes out in January.

So, I got the Dragon duology. I was only going to get the first book, but if I like it and want to read the second, then I would just order it anyway. This way, I have both at the same time. And, I got the sequel to the Brigg's novel I already have. The reason I haven't read it yet is because I wanted to have the sequel all ready, before I did. So, okay, I stretched my present, but free shipping from Amazon is so very annoying... and tempting....

The list is as such:
Dragon Blood
Dragon Bones
Ravens Strike

I finished a book!


Today is an important day! I actually read a book to completion, and, I finished my R.I.P challenge goals! The book was Neverwhere by Neil Gaiman. The only book for the challenge that did not come off my to be read pile. I promised myself if I managed to complete the challenge, I could buy a book. Very exciting... now to figure out what that one book will be. Anasi Boys doesn't count, as I wanted it and was waiting for it come out in soft cover. Anyways, to read my review, you have to visit here. Great book, and a fairy tale retelling! I didn't know that before I bought it, so that was cool to find out. (Note to self, actually read the backs of books once in a while).

In other news, my boyfriend is sick. :( I hopefully will not catch it because, it is my birthday in 6 days! Need to be feeling well for that. I am very big on my birthday. And most other people's too. My friends birthday is October 1st, but I can not post what I am getting her because she might see. I will just say that it is a very good present!

Tuesday, September 26, 2006

What am I going to do...

I can't seem to read this week at all! I pick a book up, get bored, move on to something else. I have way to many books on the go, but I just can't seem to concentrate. I need to read 7 books in these next 7 days, or my night stand is going to fall over! For lack of something else, I am going to give The Colony of Unrequited Dreams by Wayne Johnston a go, read the Random House books that I have started and not finished, try and get some other books I have on the go done, and then, if I can get all of my goals completed by my birthday, I am going to get the sequel to The Colony of Unrequited Dreams. That is my present to myself (well, I probably will request it from Random House) for finishing the books that I want to read. I will make myself a list tonight. There are so many books I could finish in one sitting, I just need to do it! So, wish me luck.

Monday, September 25, 2006

Some of the Books on the Disaster Night Stand

The Alleluia Files - Sharon Shinn
The Keep - Jennifer Egan
Poison Study - Maria V. Snyder
The Shadow of the Wind - Carlos Ruiz Zafon
The Friends of Meager Fortunes - David Adams Richards
Thirteen Moons - Charles Frazier
The Last Town on Earth - Thomas Mullen
A Game of Thrones - George R.R. Martin
Neverwhere - Neil Gaiman
Tithe - Holly Black
Under the Eagle - Simon Scarrow
Alice's Adventures in Wonderland - Lewis Carroll
Vampire Hunter D - Hideyuki Kikuchi
Heir to the Shadows - Anne Bishop
Luck in the Shadows - Lynn Flewelling
Daughter of the Forest - Juliet Marillier
Labyrinth - Kate Mosse
The Hatbox Letters - Beth Powning
Helen of Troy - Margaret George
The Well of Lost Plots - Jasper Fforde
The Oak Above the Kings - Patricia Kennealy-Morrison
The Historian - Elizabeth Kostova
The Kitchen Boy - Robert Alexander
The Silver Rose - Susan Carroll
New Moon - Stephanie Meyer
Paragon Lost - Dave Duncan
Chicken with Plums - Marjane Satrapi
Everything you Know - Zoe Heller
The Danger Tree - David MacFarlene

And even more books again...


This, ladies and gents, is mount tbr. Now, it might look really messy, but is order! All the books piled on the top are trilogies/series, and I have them in the correct order. There are books in that bin, too, because I can't fit another bookshelf in my room. This is my actual bedroom. And while this is the last picture I am going to post... this is not all the ones that I have. I also have young adult books still on shelves and such, but this gives you a general look.

And even more books...


This is what my nightstand looks like right now... I cleaned today, I just didn't get to organizing said book stand. Once I have the pictures done I might post a list of all the books you see here... maybe....

The books shelf you see on right is the continuation of the shelf that my classics sit on. As you can see, I use it for mass-market books because the shelves are very low. The books are also stacked in several rows, so there are books behind what you can see. And it is cut off.

More book shelves


This book shelf I can not guarantee everything on it is read. I might also comment, yes, this is the same room. Yes, the walls in said room are different colours. Yes, I am crazy, but I like it. On the left is what is called a shy doll. My mother made it for me. There is another but she kept falling down so she is not present at the moment. The picture below is books that I have to read for school, classics, and a couple misc. The first shelf of the book shelf, you will see in its entirety momentary. And yes, I decided that red, green and orange go together.

Book Sharing Time!

This is the book shelf that I "borrowed" from my mother. It used to hold books and then it get used for pictures, and now it is mine and has books on it again. I have read all the books you see here. The bottom shelf is cut off, but that's the general idea. You can also see on the right, one of my spoon racks. Sadly, most of them are not seen because of lack of wall space.




This is another of the bookshelves that I have. This is also guaranteed to be read. On the top you will see three of the Titanic beanie babbies, a few spoons. My minnie mouse light switch. I should mention that this is not my bed room, just my book room. I was very creative with it.

Friday, September 22, 2006

Another New Book


Since I know there are a few Canadians lurking around reading my blog, I thought I would talk about the book that I got in the mail today. It is called This is my Country, What's Yours? A Literary Atlas of Canada by Noah Richler.

This is another book that looks really really interesting, but I don't know if I would have ever heard of if it wasn't for the Random House new release email. I have not read it yet, obviously, but it smells so new! I pulled it out of the envelope and was like: "New Book Smell!"

Anyways, I am very loyal to Canadian authors, a lot of my favourite authors are Canadian and I try to read as many new ones each year as I can. So, when I was reading the blurb to this book, which I will post momentarily, I thought that this was a much more interesting way to look at Canada and their authors. It is also supposedly a television documentary, I know I read that somewhere, that might be interesting to watch.

From the flap:

Stories are the surest way to know a place, and at a time when the fabric of the country seems daily more uncertain, Noah Richler looks to our authors for evidence of Canada's true nature. Over three years, Richler criss-crossed the country and met with a veritable who's who of Canadian literature, interviewing close to one hundered authors from Cape Spear to Inuvik about places, ideas, and arguments pertaining to this fortunate but uncertain country.

Bold in it propositions, sensitive in its debates, and wid-reaching in its scope, THIS IS MY COUNTRY, WHAT'S YOURS? reveals the wonders and variety of a country in which stories do battle and explains why they reveall higher truths than our official histories do. In the course of his travels, Richler sees a Canada that has been throught Ages of Invention, Mapping, and Argument. He considers the aggressive role the novel played in the settling of Canada, its rise in aboriginal hands and shows the stories our best authors have written to be deeply and inherently political. Travelling from Newfoundland to the Northwest Territories, he studies the role that work has played in the development of the country and learns of our Myths of Disappointment. He encounters not one but several "distinct societies" and considers the role of the city in our current exhilarating age. The result is a journey through the reality of Canada, but also its imagination, at a critical point in the country's evolution.

THIS IS MY COUNTRY, WHAT'S YOURS? is an impassioned literary travelogue and a vivid portrayal of our society, a homage to the work of Canadian authors and to the idea of writing itself.


Anyways, I think this book looks interesting, and I hope someone other there will read this and go, hey, that looks good!

The authors that are included in this book that I have heard of or read are:
Margaret Atwood
John Bemrose
David Bergen
Austin Clarke
Douglas Coupland
Michael Crummey
Sheldon Currie
Katherine Govier
Barbara Gowdy
Tomson Highway
Jack Hodgins
Wayne Johnston
Thomas King
Mary Lawson
Ann-Marie MacDonald
Alistair MacLeod
Antonine Maillet
Yann Martel
Rohinton Mistry
Lisa Moore
Alice Munro
Michael Ondaatje
David Adams Richards
Carol Shields
Miriam Toews
Jane Urquhart
Guy Vanderhaeghe
M.G. Vassanji
Thomas Wharton
Rudy Wiebe
Richard Wright

And that is just some of them... others I have either heard of and don't know why or never heard of before ever. Also, see that list? I own at least one book by each of the authors listed.

I'll be sure and post when I finish it! And I was going to link it to Random House, but for some reason, I can't seem to find it by searching. (This is not the cover I have, but close enough).

My Life as a Furry Red Monster: What Being Elmo has Taught me about Life, Love, and Laughing out Loud - Kevin Clash [September/06]

It's an Elmo! As soon as I opened my box of books and saw this book, I knew I had to read it right away. I started it soon after I posted about my goody box and finished it up tonight at work.

From the flap:

The furry red monster known as Elmo has charmed his way into hearts and homes throughout the world with his unmistakable laught, over-the-top enthusiasm, and boundless love. Elmo's appeal is nothing short of magical. Kids adore him, and parents find him irresistible. What is is about his little monster? Meet Kevin Clash, the man behind the Muppet and unassuming heart and soul of Elmo. At last, the puppeteer who has performed Elmo for nearly twenty years comes out from behind the stage to share his story. Weaving together his memories of growing up with the life lessons gained from his furry red alter ego, Kevin reveals himself to be as caring, and as eager to grow and learn and love, as the very special character he brings to life. You will discover how young Kevin honed his talent entertaining the kids in his mother's home day care with puppets he made from slippers and coat liners; how, as a struggling young artist, he realized his dream to meet and then work for his idol, Muppet creator Jim Hensonl and how each and every day of performing Elmo reinforces for him what is most important in life. As Kevin has been inspired by Elmo, now we can all learn from his furry red ways. Kevin' s (and Elmo's) thoughts on love, creativity, friendship, and optimism remind us of life's simple truths and ultimately encourage us all to be a little more like Elmo - to live with joy, to love more easily, and to laugh more often.

I was browsing the new releases from Random House, and I saw this book in the non-fiction section. I am rather glad I did, because to be honest, I am not sure I would have even known this book existed otherwise. And then I would have missed out! I am not even a big Elmo fan, he was just really making his name when I was watching Sesame Street, so I was not enchanted with him as I was with other Muppets. In recent years, though, his fame has sky-rocketed, and that has brought him more and more to my attention.

I have to say, though. I am a huge Jim Henson fan! To me, Sesame Street is a children's show, and it was never something I could watch as I got older, but when I was a kid, I was right there. I loved three shows when I was a child: Sesame Street, Fraggle Rock, and The Muppet Show. I have been thinking about my favourite muppets, and, you know, that's a hard question. Every Christmas I watch Muppet's Christmas Carol. The tape is gone, luckily it broke on the year the movie came out on DVD! So, that, and Muppet's Treasure Island, are my favourite movies. But, muppets, hard question. I love Kermit, of course. I have been enchanted with him since I was a child, and I would LOVE to meet him. Picking runner ups, though, is hard. I like Gonzo, Oscar, Rizzo the Rat, Big Bird, Miss Piggy, etc, etc. Anyways, as a muppet fan, I had to read this book about the man behind Elmo.

This book was so great. It is a bit of a self-help book, and I probably wouldn't have picked it up if it wasn't for Elmo. I, of course, know that there is someone controlling Elmo, but I never think of him, to me, Elmo is Elmo. To get a behind the scenes look at how Clash made his way to the controls of this delightful muppet and to see what it is like to be Elmo was very interesting. And, it is amazing to think what this writer has learned from Elmo. To think you can learn something from an essentially inanimate object without someone controlling him. But, Elmo has a very individual personality, he acts like a 3 and a half year old. Pointing out the way that Elmo sees the world was very inspiring, but when it gets down to it, this is a story about a man who is living his dream and giving the world a very special puppet to enjoy by all ages. More of the men and women behind the various Jim Henson (and other masterminds) muppets. They are very interesting reads!

To all the kids at heart, I recommend this book. To all the Seasame Street fans of old, I recommend this book. To anyone that wants a good read, I recommend this book.

4/5

I almost forgot, for more information on this book, click here

Wednesday, September 20, 2006

The Thirteenth Tale

A lot of people have been reading The Thirteenth Tale by Diane Setterfield in the last few days, just wanted to point that if you click here, you can find an interview with the author that was very interesting to read!

Oh, and tune in next week when I review The Other Side of the Bridge by Mary Lawson, which was a Booker nominee. I meant to read David Adams Richards new book but grabbed the wrong one. Hopefully I will right that and read the correct book this weekend!

And blogger refuses to post pictures right now, so I guess pictures are going to have to be left off.

Book Talk

So, I was at work, and I get off and walk in the door. Sitting on the counter is a box. I walk a bit closer, and low and behold, the box is for me! So, I decide that mother needed to share in the box opening extravagance, because while I know what I have ordered, they come as they are released, so the contents of the box were in truth a mystery. I slowly cut the tape, and inside the box I find:

My Life as a Furry Red Monster - Kevin Clash (yes, Elmo, no one say a word)

From Random House:

Meet Kevin Clash, the man behind the Muppet and the unassuming heart and soul of Elmo. At last, the puppeteer who has performed Elmo for nearly twenty years comes out from behind the stage to share his story. Weaving together his memories of growing up with the life lessons gained from his furry red alter ego, Kevin reveals himself to be as caring, and as eager to grow and learn and love, as the very special character he brings to life.

You will discover how young Kevin hon
ed his talent entertaining the kids in his mother’s home day care with puppets he made from slippers and coat liners; how, as a struggling young artist, he realized his dream to meet and then work for his idol, Muppet creator Jim Henson; and how each and every day of performing Elmo reinforces for him what is most important in life.

As Kevin has been inspired by Elmo, now we can all learn from his furry red ways. Kevin’s (and Elmo’s) thoughts on love, creativity, frie
ndship, and optimism remind us of life’s simple truths and ultimately encourage us all to be a little bit more like Elmo–to live with joy, to love more easily, and to laugh more often.


The Last Town on Earth by Thomas Mullen

From Random House:

Set against the backdrop of one of the most virulent epidemics that America ever experienced–the 1918 flu epidemic
–Thomas Mullen’s powerful, sweeping first novel is a tale of morality in a time of upheaval.

Deep in the mist-shrouded forests of the Pacific Northwest is a small mill town called Commonwealth, conceived as a haven for workers weary of exploitation. For Philip Worthy, th
e adopted son of the town’s founder, it is a haven in another sense–as the first place in his life he’s had a loving family to call his own.

And yet, the ideals that define this outpost are being threatened from all sides. A world war is raging, and with the fear of spies rampant, the loy
alty of all Americans is coming under scrutiny. Meanwhile, another shadow has fallen across the region in the form of a deadly illness striking down vast swaths of surrounding communities.

When Commonwealth votes to quarantine itse
lf against contagion, guards are posted at the single road leading in and out of town, and Philip Worthy is among them. He will be unlucky enough to be on duty when a cold, hungry, tired–and apparently ill–soldier presents himself at the town’s doorstep begging for sanctuary. The encounter that ensues, and the shots that are fired, will have deafening reverberations throughout Commonwealth, escalating until every human value–love, patriotism, community, family, friendship–not to mention the town’s very survival, is imperiled.

Inspired by a little-known historical footnote regarding towns that quarantined themselves during the 1918 epidemic, The Last Town on Earth is a remarkably moving and accomplished debut.

The Keep - Jennifer Egan

From Random House:

From National Book Award finalist Jennifer Egan, author of Look at Me (“Brilliantly unnerving . . . A haunting, sharp, splendidly articulate novel” —The New York Times), a spellbinding work of literary suspense enacted in a chilling psychological landscape—a dazzling tour de force.

Two cousins, irreversibly damaged by a childhood prank whose devastating consequences changed both their lives, re
unite twenty years later to renovate a medieval castle in Eastern Europe, a castle steeped in blood lore and family pride. Built over a secret system of caves and tunnels, the castle and its violent history invoke and subvert all the elements of a gothic past: twins, a pool, an old baroness, a fearsome tower. In an environment of extreme paranoia, cut off from the outside world, the men reenact the signal event of their youth, with even more catastrophic results. And as the full horror of their predicament unfolds, a prisoner, in jail for an unnamed crime, recounts an unforgettable story—a story about two cousins who unite to renovate a castle—that brings the crimes of the past and present into piercing relation.

Egan’s relentlessly gripping page-turner plays with rich forms—ghost story, love story, gothic—and transfixing themes: the undertow of h
istory, the fate of imagination in the cacophony of modern life, the uncanny likeness between communications technology and the supernatural. In a narrative that shifts seamlessly from an ancient European castle to a maximum security prison, Egan conjures a world from which escape is impossible and where the keep—the last stand, the final holdout, the place you run to when the walls are breached—is both everything worth protecting and the very thing that must be surrendered in order to survive.

A novel of fierce intelligence and velocity; a brav
ura performance from a writer of consummate skill and style.

And a few books that will be released in the next couple months:

Everything you Know by Zoe Heller (published Sept 26)
Chicken With Plums by Marjane Satrapi (published Oct 3)
Thirteen Moons by Charles Frazier (published Oct 3)

And these are just some of the fall releases. A lot of big authors have books coming out, as well as new ones. Stay tuned for reviews!

Monday, September 18, 2006

Rebel Angels - Libba Bray [September/06]


The nice people at Random House said it was okay for me to post their books on my other blog, so since I considered Rebel Angels a fantasy-type novel, I posted it here.

Minor Vent



You see these two books in the pictures, they are Poison Study and City of Dreams. I ordered them back in July and finally got them today. How is this a vent? Well, I ordered a third book. It was the book that was going to take 1-3 months to ship, so I got the other two with it just for free shipping. They were books I wanted, but not in a big rush. The other book didn't come. I waited three months for these books for nothing! Isn't that annoying? It is annoying to me. It is one thing if the 1-3 month book comes, it is another thing if I have to wait all this time and get the books without the other. So, that is annoying. The other book is An Assembly Such as This by Pamela Aidan. Hopefully it shows up soon!

R.I.P Challenge, revisited


I have rethought my Reading Challenge, and I revised my book list:

1. The Thirteenth Tale - Diane Setterfield
2. Stardust - Neil Gaiman (replacing Coraline)
3. Sabriel - Garth Nix (didn't know it would apply)
4. Archangel - Sharon Shinn (Just because I loved it)
5. Neverwhere - Neil Gaiman


Bonus books:
The Historian by Elizabeth Kostova
Heir to the Shadows by Anne Bishop
The Silver Rose by Susan Carroll
Coraline - Neil Gaiman

Call me lazy or whatever, but the challenge really is to read five books with a dark or atmospheric setting, which is what I did. And, they all come off my to be read pile except Neverwhere, which I bought specifically for the competition. So, that meets my goals.

What a month!


I just finished Rebel Angels by Libba Bray! It was so great! I will post all about it later, I just had to announce that it was awesome! Better than A Great and Terrible Beauty, I think. Probably because the girls are getting older, and it is a longer book, so more happens. Anyways, a detaile review will follow later. :)

I gave AGaTB a 4.5, I think this gets a 5. I quite seriously could not put it down today!

I have been reading a lot of good books lately, I hope it stays this way.

Jovah's Angel - Sharon Shinn [September/06]


I am going to post my fantasy reviews on "Twisted Kingdom", but I am still going to put the title, a picture, and a link to the post here. More to keep track of what I read in one place than any other reason. Also, any fantasy books I get from Random House, I will review in both places, as this is the blog that Random House is sending the books to.

Anyways, the link: here

Sunday, September 17, 2006

New Blog!

As Mailyn as already said on her blog, I, as well as three other bloggers, have a new blog. It dedicated to the fantasy/paranormal genre, which I read a great deal of, so it should be interesting!

To check it out, click here.

Saturday, September 16, 2006

Randomness

I was thinking today about what I read, and whether I read an equal share of male and female authors or read something above the other. Then I got to thinking, how long will it take to read all the books on my night stand. So, I am going to post my books on my night stand and see how many are by men and how many are by women.

So, on the nightstand:

First Test (Protector of the Small) - Tamora Pierce
Jane and the Unpleasantess at Scargrave Manor - Stephanie Barron
Labyrinth - Kate Mosse ( I can't believe I am not done this!)
The Kitchen Boy - Robert Alexander (or this)
The Historian - Elizabeth Kostova (or even this)
The Hatbox Letters - Beth Powning
Helen of Troy - Margaret George
A Vision of Light - Judith Merkle Riley
Children of God - Mary Doria Russell
The Other Side of the Bridge - Mary Lawson
The Friends of Meager Fortune - David Adams Richards
Jovah's Angel - Sharon Shinn
Green Rider - Kristen Britain
Vengence in Death - J.D. Robb
Isolde - Rosalind Miles
The Eagle's Brood - Jack Whyte
Into the Wilderness - Sara Donati
Lady Chatterley's Lover - D.H. Lawrence
The Shadow of Albion - Andre Norton and Rosemary Edgehill
The Well of Lost Plots - Jasper Fforde
The Oak Above the Kings - Patricia Kennealy-Morrison
New Moon - Stephanie Meyer
Heir to the Shadows - Anne Bishop
Vampire Hunter D - Hideyuki Kikuchi
The Silver Rose - Susan Carroll
A Game of Thrones - George R. R. Martin
Under the Eagle - Simon Scarrow
A Spot of Bother - Mark Haddon
Daughter of the Forest - Juliet Marillier
Luck in the Shadows - Lynn Flewelling
Rebel Angels - Libba Bray
The Shadow of the Wind - Carlos Ruiz Zafon

And people wonder why I need to not buy anymore books?

The sad thing, I am in a reading lull. I have started some of these and not finished them (shocking I know). I am amazed, though. I didn't know I read more of one author than another, but it seems to be according to my night stand, I read more girls than guys. I will have to post at the end of the year and see if that is really the case, or it is just how this pile worked out.

I need to finish some of these books. Some of them are really good! I just, can't seem to read this month. I started off good, but it sort of died. I pick something up, and put it back down. Add school to the mix, and it has not been a very good reading month so far.

I have a larger night stand than I thought!

And now, off to read.

The Thirteenth Tale - Diane Setterfield [September/06]


I have had this book for a while now, and read it the day it came in the mail. I have just had to wait patiently for permission to post about it. Today is the day, I almost forgot, so I am sitting here trying to write a review worthy of how much I enjoyed this book. But first, what the book is about. From Random House:

A compelling emotional mystery in the timeless vein of Daphne du Maurier’s Rebecca, about family secrets and the magic of books and storytelling.

Margaret Lea works in her father’s antiquarian bookshop where her fascination for the biographies of the long-dead has led her to write them herself. She gets a letter from one of the most famous authors of the day, the mysterious Vida Winter, whose popularity as a writer has been in no way diminished by her reclusiveness. Until now, Vida has toyed with journalists who interview her, creating outlandish life histories for herself – all of them invention. Now she is old and ailing, and at last she wants to tell the truth about her extraordinary life. Her letter to Margaret is a summons.

Somewhat anxiously, the equally reclusive Margaret travels to Yorkshire to meet her subject – and Vida starts to recount her tale. It is one of gothic strangeness featuring the March family; the fascinating, devious and wilful Isabelle and the feral twins Adeline and Emmeline. Margaret is captivated by the power of Vida’s storytelling. But as a biographer she deals in fact not fiction, and she doesn’t entirely trust Vida’s account. She goes to check up on the family, visiting their old home and piecing together their story in her own way. What she discovers on her journey to the truth is for Margaret a chilling and transforming experience.


I was hooked on this book from the moment it came in the mail. The cover alone is enought to capture someone's attention. Then, you open to the first page and you are at the books mercy until the very last page. I had heard good things about this book, and I am glad I did, because I might have read it in the future, but I would have waited for the paperback, so it would have been sometime before I had the chance to read it. The praise for it, though, meant that I got to read it sooner rather than later.

The book opens with a woman and her trouble with the truth. All her life she has been telling people false stories about who she is. She is a famous author, Vida Winter, who everytime she gives an interview, she tells a made up story of who she is. So, many people read her novels, but they do not truly know the woman behind the story. She has reached a point in her life, though, where she feels she needs to tell people who she is. She enlists the main character for that task. The chance for this young lady to finally reveal to the world the truth of who Vida Winter is. The Thirteenth Tale.

The young lady that Miss Winters gets to write her biography, Margaret Lee, has been living above her fathers' bookstore, where she helps him. She has written a few biographies, but more for her interest than any fame. One of her relatively unknown biographies, though, attracts the attention of Miss Winters and the message behind the words encourages her to contact Miss Lee. Margaret is dealing with her own sense of loss and not knowing who she really is, so while she is skeptical at first, she eventually agrees to write Miss Winters story.

And, what a story it is. It is amazing how who she was before became this author that sits in front of Margaret now. She lead a hard life, and by the looks of all the pages she has written, managed to make something of herself. If anything, she is famous for her unfinished collection of short stories, a collection that has left the world wondering and which is the inspiration for this novel.

The truth, as Margaret Lee finds out, is not always what you expect. This is a mystery story, a mystery about who this woman really is. I wonder if people figure it out, I had an idea about what she was hiding, but I didn't really know for sure until the end of the novel. And even for having an idea, it did not take away from the ending at all. I just found myself sad at the end of the book, because it was over. I would never get to read this book for the first time again, but I will read it again. I want to know what new things you discover everytime, but I also just plain want to visit with Margaret and Vida again.

It is a very gothic novel, very dark, but just amazing. I have been telling people for a few weeks now to read this book. I cannot imagine anyone being disappointed.

5/5

Oh, in my excitement, I almost forgot. To see more about this book and purchase it, go here.

Friday, September 15, 2006

Just a momentary interlude...

This is a blog about books mainly, so I don't want to get into major debate or anything, but I just wanted to take a moment to say that aren't school shootings scary? I am just amazed at the papers, they state that "A gunman with a Mohawk haircut and black clothing opened fire inside Montreal's Dawson College on Wednesday, killing one woman and wounding 19 others" (CTV news). Lots of people have mohawks and wear black, what a horrible way to start that article!

Anyways, Canada is not without its violence, and my university day was spent thinking about the 20 young adults, people around my age, that were shot at on Wednesday. I just wanted to take a moment to acknowledge the situation and say how horrible it is.

Montreal also had another bad shooting several years ago where 14 women were killed. The man that did it was mad because they got accepted into the engineering program and he did not. In other words, he had a low opinion of women. It's scary. People at school today were trying to think of reasons why these things happen and ways to prevent it, but what was going on 17 or so years ago is not the same thing that is necessarily going on today. The simple answer is, it is a tragedy. Now, I am going to stop before I say something that will get me in trouble.

Here's one article about it, I am sure there are many more: here

Thursday, September 14, 2006

Overload!


So, my birthday is October 3rd, and I was researching what books were coming out around my birthday on my wish list. I think I have a bit of a problem, because there are more than I thought! I am going to have a very hard time deciding...

Coming out in October:
Christmas to Remember - Thomas Kinkade (Oct 3/06)
Once Upon a Spring Morn - Dennis McKiernan (Oct 3/06)
Partners in Necessity - Sharon Lee and Steve Miller (Oct 4/06)
Dear John - Nicholas Sparks (Oct 30/06)

If I get Once Upon a Spring Morn, I have to buy Once Upon an Autumn Eve first. I don't know if I want them in hardcover, though. I really liked the first two in the quarter, and I have been fighting myself over not the Autumn one for a while now.

Sharon Shinn also has a novel coming out, but I have lots of books by her to read beforehand, so no worries.

Then, there is one book in November. Magic and the Healing - Nick Odonohoe, which comes out November 7th. And I am getting the new Elizabeth Haydon book for Christmas... maybe. I have a few more to read before I get there, and I am slow, but she is an amazing author!

I think I just spent all my birthday money and then some....

After that, though, I just want Blood Bond - Patricia Briggs, which comes out in January. Anything else on my wish list for future releases I have taken care of.

What else does October mean? NEW DAVID GEMMELL BOOK!!!! The second in his trilogy on Troy. I am so excited, but I have that ordered already.

And not a word about me, the fantasy nerd, liking Nicholas Sparks or Thomas Kinkade.

Does anyone know when the new Isabel Allende book comes out? I searched for it on amazon, and I could only find it in Spanish. I will be very honest, I am more of an English reader myself... (I strongly recommend her, great author. I have read all her books but Zorro and her young adult trilogy.)

Tuesday, September 12, 2006

Update


I am, per usual, behind on my reviews. I think I am going to try and catch up in a bit, but it's been a busy week! As you can see from my "currently reading" thing, I have five books on the go. It has not been going well... I should have finished something by now, but I made the mistake and didn't bring Simon Scarrow to work with me. That seems to be the one of the five that I am very interested in right now. I wondered why I had never heard of him before, but I did a bit of browsing this passed weekend, and he is not carried in bookstores around here. That's a shame, because I could have read all his books a long time ago, but instead, I have them all to explore. Most of the people that I spend time with like Tudor-era history, I am very big in Roman history, as well as other periods. These novels take place in Rome before 50 AD (so far).

The only problem with finishing this book is that if it continues to attract me like it is now, I am going to want to read the rest of the books, and that means a lot of Amazon orders. It also means breaking my no book buying rule. Have to see how it goes. He is also a nice break from Jack Whyte. If I read authors too close together I get bored, so I figured I would read Scarrow and then read the third Jack Whyte novel. I don't do long series very often, so if I read all the Jack Whyte books it would be a big deal. Scarrow has written a lot as well.

On a happy note, I have two Random House books on the go. (Little secret, the new Mark Haddon book, for me, is better than Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time. I hope it stays like that. We will see when I review it. I am almost done. I have to hurry, Mary Lawson and David Adams Richards are calling to me!) I am always happy when I find a fantasy buried in their past, like Lynn Flewelling's novels. I also have Rebel Angels to read. I adored A Great and Terrible Beauty, so to be honest while I wanted to read it as soon as it arrived, I am going to wait a bit. The quicker I read it, the longer I have to wait for book 3! (I'll probably finish Scarrow and pick it up, but I am pretending I have will-power).

I have to say, Random House offers such wonderful authors. I never really paid attention before, but I buy a lot of books from them. Only beaten by various fantasy labels. Especially when you get into all the companies that make up the larger company. It really surprised me. And I deal with the Canadian one, so I am supporting my local authors a lot of the time. Like David Adams Richards, he is from New Brunswick originally. And Mary Lawson... um... I would have to look that up. I am not big in the whole advertising thing. I rarely wear shirts that have clothing label names on them and all that jazz, so when I say good things about something, you know I mean it.

Anyways, enough of my rambling. I will post some reviews soon!

Oh, to get to Random House's homepage, click here.

Monday, September 11, 2006

Stardust - Neil Gaiman [September/06]


This is one of the books that my mother bought for me in Ontario, and I must say, it was about time I got around to reading a Neil Gaiman novel. Well, one where he writes alone, I have read Good Omens which he wrote with Terry Pratchett.

From the back of the book:

Young Tristran Thorn will do anything to win the cold heart of beautiful Victoria - even fetch her the star they watch fall from the night sky. But to do so, he must enter the unexplored lands on the other side of the ancient walls that gives their tiny village its name. Beyond that old stone wall, Tristran learns, likes Fairie - where nothing, not even a falled star, is what he imagined.

I have to say it again: I really like fairy tale-type novels. I shouldn't, because a lot of them are sexist, but I read them as a fairy tale and not a reaction to society as a whole. They started out as oral tales and only by traveling from site to site did they ever manage to be written down. They were written down by men, typically the story tellers were men, and fairy tales are old, so instead of dreaming that they are more respectable of women, I read them with an open-mind. Besides, the fairy tales that are being written nowadays are moving away from the conventions of the classical fairy tale and more into a modern telling that better represents the times.

I look at Stardust as an adult fairy tale. Many adults think that fairy tales are children't stories, but they were originally written for adults, children just adopted them as their own. If you ignore the Disney retellings and concentrate on the original stories, you will find that there are a lot of dark fairy tales that would not be someone's first choice for children. So, if I am not going to market fairy tales for children, then I shouldn't market this novel for adults. Fairy tales should be open to all ages, because really, this book isn't any darker than some of the versions of say Cinderella or Sleeping Beauty that parents read to their children.

Anyways, this book was a very enjoyable read. It starts off as a tale about a boy that sets out to find the prize that will claim his one true love, but it ends up being a novel about a man finding his destiny and place in the world. All the fairy tale creatures are present. We have the evil witch, the helpful little person, the magic, and even the "wish upon a star" moments. Not a conventional star, though, by any means. The star represents different things to different people. It shows the magic of the world outside Wall, but at the same time it shows you that seeing is not always believing. And you shouldn't set yourself on one goal, because things can very easily change along the way.

There are so many wonderful elements to this book. It is a very short read, but the story is wonderful. I say again how glad I am that I finally took the time to read Neil Gaiman, I was not disappointed. Maybe next time I might read the two books I have by him for the R.I.P. challenge... You know what, I think I am going to consider substituting this with another book on my challenge list. It is a dark tale, I didn't know if it would be. If I read this and two other Gaiman novels, that only leaves two other books to read.

4.5/5

The Ring of Allaire - Susan Dexter


This is another one of those out-of-print authors that looked interesting, but was a bit hard to find. This trilogy came together as a sort of stroke of luck. I got book one, this one, at one store, and then I happened to glance at another second hand store and they had book 2 and 3 to this trilogy. She has other books, so I thought this was fate.

From the back of the book:

Master magician Blais was dead, murdered by the evil ice-lord Nimir. Now there was only Tristan, an ill-trained apprentice, to carry on the quest to rescue Allaire, a princess held in enchanted sleep in Nimir's frozen halls. Though a thousand master mages had already failed in the quest, Tristan must succeed - or all of Calandra would be doomed by Nimir's greed.

First Tristan would have to find the wonder-horse Valadan, who had vanished long ago. Then he had to secure the aid of the one knight among many who was a true Heir to the Throne. Together, they must overcome the Guardian dragon of Nimir's realm.

After that - well, there was still the tenth ring to be found, since Allaire was powerless without it.

Nothing, of course, was ever that simple. There were complications...

I think this book could be considered a retelling of "Sleeping Beauty". At least you can see some ties between that fairy tale and this novel. The most obvious being the sleeping princess that the young warriors have to go and save. There is just more to the story than a few brief moments. It tells about the past life for this princess, but it also speaks to what life will be like for her. It is the first book in a trilogy, so there is more explaining to come.

This is another trilogy that I learned of from Chappy's Mom, and I am sure there will be even more in the coming months. I am trying to decide if blogs to read are good things or bad things for me. I seem to buy even more books, which means more enjoyment, but also a rather large to be read pile.

This is rather a novel where you are rooting for the underdog, because Tristan rather struggles to figure out his place in the novel. He can not claim to be a wizard or mage because his training was never completed, and so he has to get by on what he does know. He is the glue that keeps this band of travelers together, if it wasn't for his leadership skills they might have never even rescued the princess, let alone had any adventures.

I have to point out that Allaire is rather annoying. Everyone would do anything for her, but she seems incapable of doing anything for herself. It was wonderful when Dexter added another female character, it was quite the contrast. I look forward to reading the second book in this trilogy and seeing how the adventures continue. It has a good ending, though. If I was reading it back when it first came out I would not HAVE to read book 2 because it does not leave unanswered questions. Even still, the characters are of the sort that I will have to join in on their adventures again in the future.

4/5

Today...


We all know that today is the day that 5 years ago, planes were hijacked and crashed into the World Trade Center, as well as other sites.

Today is also, the launch date of a new comic. Since I know the artist, I thought it was only fair to make people aware of it from the beginning. People might even read it.

So, as well as remembering the day the planes crashed, let us also embark on a new adventure with "Knights of Vesteria" by clicking here.

Sabriel - Garth Nix [September/06]


I have had this book just sitting here waiting to be read for quite some time. So, I am glad I finally sat down with it. It really is a rather short book, you would be surprised how fast you can get through it, because it keeps you reading the whole time.

From Amazon.com:

After receiving a cryptic message from her father, Abhorsen, a necromancer trapped in Death, 18-year-old Sabriel sets off into the Old Kingdom. Fraught with peril and deadly trickery, her journey takes her to a world filled with parasitical spirits, Mordicants, and Shadow Hands. Unlike other necromancers, who raise the dead, Abhorsen lays the disturbed dead back to rest. This obliges him--and now Sabriel, who has taken on her father's title and duties--to slip over the border into the icy river of Death, sometimes battling the evil forces that lurk there, waiting for an opportunity to escape into the realm of the living. Desperate to find her father, and grimly determined to help save the Old Kingdom from destruction by the horrible forces of the evil undead, Sabriel endures almost impossible exhaustion, violent confrontations, and terrifying challenges to her supernatural abilities--and her destiny.

Garth Nix delves deep into the mystical underworld of necromancy, magic, and the monstrous undead. This tale is not for the faint of heart; imbedded in the classic good-versus-evil story line are subplots of grisly ghouls hungry for human life to perpetuate their stay in the world of the living, and dark, devastating secrets of betrayal and loss. Just try to put this book down.

For some reason this book has no description on the back or inside about what it is about. I think that is a stupid thing to do, to be honest, because some people are not going to buy it without knowing what it is about.

Anyways, this novel follows 18-year-old Sabriel on her adventures after receiving a very disturbing message from her father. She had lead a sheltered life up until then, and was not really aware of what was going on in the Old Kingdom, the place where she was born. She had lived outside the wall for many years, and her father only occassionally filled her in on what she was missing while being outside. So, when she had to go back there, she found herself on an adventure that she was totally unaware of. Since many Outsiders did not dare to cross the Wall, many people were unaware of what was going on in the Old Kingdom. This meant that Sabriel didn't know her history very well, and had to fill herself in as she went along.

This trilogy received the same sort of attention as Philip Pullman's trilogy, but if I have to be very honest, I liked this one better. I just never was able to get into Pullman's first novel, and as a result have stayed away from the other two books in the trilogy. I will get to them one day, but I would rather read the rest of this trilogy than return to Pullman.

Sabriel is a very human heroine. She gets the job done, but like regular folks she has to deal with fear and indecision. In many hero novels, the main character seems to be super-human, Sabriel is a character that would be easier to relate to. She also has to deal with the fact that if her father was dead, she was now a very powerful person in the Old Kingdom, something that she had never really thought of before and was not prepared to take on. There's even a little romance in the novel, but it is not the most important thing ever. Instead of the damsol in distress, Sabriel saves a young man that has been trapped in Death for about 200 years. I am afraid to say it, but romance just seems to be a given when things like this happen.

You will really enjoy this novel, I can safely say. It is well-written, and Sabriel is not an annoying heroine. She gets the job done, but at the same time has human failings. It makes her the better character to read about, I think. It is also the more interesting fantasy novel I have read with a Necromancer in the fore-front.

4/5

Talk about all at once....


I just got the mail, it would appear that like all my books decided to come today because I got:

Luck in the Shadow - Lynn Flewelling
A Vision of Light - Judith Merkle Riley
The Friends of Meager Fortune - David Adams Richards
Rebel Angels - Libba Bray
The Other Side of the Bridge - Mary Lawson

All of those are from Random House. They have such great books!

Then from Amazon I got:
Tithe - Holly Black
The Goose Girl - Shannon Hale
Beauty - Robin McKinley
The Alleluia Files - Sharon Shinn
Jovah's Angel - Sharon Shinn

Good thing I didn't really start anything last night. I am on operation read all my Random House books because they all look so good, and there are more coming, so I want to get the pile down. In the meantime, I have to try and not read these pretty new Sharon Shinn books. I seriously need super human reading abilities.

Sunday, September 10, 2006

Ghost King - David Gemmell [September/06]


I mentioned this book in a previous post, as it was one of the books I received earlier this week as a gift. I have been trying to read David Gemmell for a while because he really is a very well-written author, and so far I have really enjoyed reading books by him. Ghost King is the first in the Stones of Power duology.

From the back of the book:

Rebellion and invasion have plunged Britannia into the Dark Ages. Chaos and terror stalk the land, the King slain by traitors, the great Sword of Power vanished beyond the Circle of Mist. Saxons, Angles, Jutes and Brigante tribesmen mass together to destroy the realm, aided by the powers of the Witch Queen and the Lord of the Undead. Against them stands a weakling boy, and an old mountain warrior. But the boy has the blood of kings, and the warrior is Culain, the legendary Lord of the Lance. And he alone knows the dread secret of the Witch Queen.

I read this book because a friend of mine suggested it to me. I was just finishing up his Troy book that I read last month, and talking about how I would like to read more by him. That was when she told me about this duology. She knows I really like Arthurian retellings, and that is what this is. With that knowledge in hand, I bought the two books to further add to the Arthurian novels I have read.

Anyways, I must point out, that I spent the book looking for Arthur. Good thing to note, he is not alive yet, this is a story about the generation that came before him. I assume he enters the novel in the next book. Merlin is in the novel, but his name is spelled differently, so I just assumed that the main character was Arthur with a different name. I was wrong, which became clearer as the book goes on. It takes a different spin on the Arthurian legends, makes Merlin's character even more interesting and then add in Culain, who add a different touch to the novel, and you have a very interesting spin on the legend.

I really enjoyed this relatively short novel. So many Arthurian tales concentrate on Arthur, it is always good to see the focus change a bit. It also sets up book two very well, at least for me, who was looking for Arthur through the whole novel. And if Arthur doesn't show up in book two, it is still a worthwhile read. I must point that while the main female character in here has her failings, she is a much stronger character than Guinevere can be written as. When the men go to war, she is right there with them instead of home praying. Guinevere has her strong points, but I liked the character in this book better.

This is an adventure story that will have you wondering what will be happening next.

4/5

Friday, September 08, 2006

Interesting New Non-Fiction Book for Fall Release


As some of you must have noticed by now, I have been reading books from Random House a lot in the last few months. I just wanted to bring your attention to a new book coming in October. It is called Heat: How to Stop the Planet from Burning by George Monbiot. I am not a very vocal speaker on the subject, but I am always trying to do my part for the better of the environment. Deanna, the blogger responsible for My Tragic Right Hip, is very big on this subject. She also works for Random House, and sent me this list compiled by the author of this new book. The list is as follows:

How You Can Stop the Planet From Burning
Ten Tips by George Monbiot

Author of Heat: How to Stop the Planet from Burning

1. Cut your flights. Nothing else you do causes so much climate change in so short a time.
2. Think hard before you pick up your car keys. On average, 40% of the journeys made by car could be made by other means - on foot, by bicycle or on public transport.
3. Organise a "walking bus" to take the children to school.
4. Ask your boss to devise a "workplace travel plan" which rewards people for leaving their cars at home.
5. Switch over to a supplier of renewable electricity. You don't have to erect your own wind turbine, but you can buy your power from someone who has.
6. Ask a builder to give you an estimate for bringing your home up to R2000 standards.
7. Ditch your air conditioner.
8. Turn down your thermostat: 18 degrees is as warm as your house ever needs to be. You just have to get used to it.
9. Make sure every bulb in your house is a compact fluorescent or LED.
10. Do NOT buy a plasma TV: they use 5 times as much energy as other models.

I know that some people believe that global warming is a hoax, while some people just pretend it all away. But, even if you don't believe in it, what harm can these ten simple things do.

Anyways, the new book comes out October 17, 2006. I have it on order, because I think it sounds like an interesting book! For more information, visit this link:

http://www.randomhouse.ca/catalog/display.pperl?isbn=9780385662215

Also, be sure and check back in here in October for my thoughts on this book! Maybe it sounds silly, but people are always looking for ways to make a difference, maybe this book will be just what you are looking for.

Sandy


This is my dog, Sandy. I am still taking claim on this computer, so I don't have a lot of pictures on here. This is the only one I have where you can see her face. As you can see, she thinks that the cat toys belong to her. She probably played with that worm more than the cats it belonged to. She turned 10 in August. She is a purebred, I should know exactly when she was born, but my family doesn't really do animal birthdays, so we just treat them special everyday.

Thursday, September 07, 2006

Yay for books!

I got presents in the mail today. Yay! To encourage my recent adoration with David Gemmell, Tom bought me fantasy books by him. Well, I was going to post some pictures, but Amazon has the annoying percent off signs on the books, Chapters either doesn't have a picture or if it does it is different from what I got, and Barnes and Noble has totally different covers.

Anyways, I received:

Ghost King
Last Sword of Power

-My friend recommended this duology called The Swords of Power because it has Arthurian tie-ins. Some sites state that it actually have five books in it, some claim only two, I am just going with two right now.

Lion of Macedon
Dark Prince

-I found these two books by accident while looking for something else, and I just thought they sounded good!

And then, from a blog I read... I am going to have to search for which one it is (by all means tell me if it is you), I found Simon Scarrow. I think he sounds very interesting, so I got the first book in his series.

Wednesday, September 06, 2006

Newsflash!




Some of you may be wondering, where did Kailana, the nick, come from? Well, I am going to tell you. See these pictures? These are just some of the pictures of Kailana that have been circulating around the net over the last couple years. These three particular pictures were drawn by the very talented Desfunk (Chris), which I will have to track down a url for. The character herself was created by what most people know as my boyfriend and named by me. Why you may ask? He is a comic artist, his comic is taking a break right now so he can pursue other comicing interests, but is expected to return. For those of you that like fantasy and comics, the url is www.elvenbaath.com.

Tuesday, September 05, 2006

I bought books...

I hope this posts... Anyways, I decided to buy the two books that follow Archangel today. I will read them as soon as I get them, and if they are anything like the first book, I will reread them. So, I don't feel guilty buying them. I bought a few other books with them: Goose Girl by Shannon Hale, the first book by Holly Black, and Beauty by Robin McKinley. This concludes my book buying for the year, other than my birthday and Christmas, because I need to get some reading done!

I can't get pictures to post anymore. It is making me mad!

Archangel - Sharon Shinn [September/06]


Sharon Shinn is an author that has been on my list for a few months and I just got around to her. I had never heard of her before, it is sort of confining when your reading friends around you don't read fantasy, because then you have no one to tell you about interesting authors. I have the blogging world to thank for this recommendation.

From the back of the book:

And so it came to pass...

Through science, faith and force of will, the Harmonics carved out for themselves a society that they conceived of as perfect. Diverse people held together by respect for each other and the prospect of swift punishment if they disobeyed their laws. Fertile land that embraced a variety of climates and seasons. Angels to guard the mortals and mystics to guard the forbidden knowledge. JEHOVAH to watch over them all...

Generations later, the armed starship Jehovah still looms over the planet of Samaria, programmed to unleash its arsenal if peace is not sustained. But an age of corruption has come to the land, threatening that peace and placing the Samarians in grave danger. Their only hope lies in the crowning of a new Archangel. The oracles have chosen for this honor the angel name Gabriel, and further decreed that he must first wed a mortal woman named Rachel.

It is his destiny and hers. And Gabriel is certain that she will greet the news of her betrothal with enthusiasm, and a devotion to duty equal to his own.

Rachel, however, has other ideas...


This was such a good book. It traveled with my mother from Ontario to back here, and it was so worth the trip. Sharon Shinn is not an author that bookstores around here carry, so it was either look in other bookstores or order from Amazon. Now that I have read this book, I want to order the next two off Amazon so I can see what is going to happen next. I normally have one last Amazon order before I go back to school, because I need books to read over the long winter months. So, I can see me getting the two books and reading the five books that make up the Samaria story very soon.

A brief description of the book would start with the fact that the current Archangel is corrupt. He believes that there is no god and starts down a path of defying the god. It starts on the very day that he marries his angelica and all of his 20 year term he does everything he can to go against what others believe to be the truth. His angel clan lives in anarchy, they have no moral background because they do not believe that anything that can happen to them. Enter Gabriel, who has to clean up the mess that the Archangel has put into motion.

Gabriel's life is not easy from the start. It would appear that the Archangel would like nothing more than to stay in power, so he tries and mess things up for Gabriel and Rachel twenty years before they even know their fates. Rachel's whole life has relied on what angels have done to her, she feels like she has never lived the life that she wants because they are always changing things for her. When Gabriel sets out to locate his future angelica and wife, he finds it a very difficult task because she has moved around her whole life. When he does find her, it is in a household where she has been taken as a slave and he offers her freendom.

I must tell you, Gabriel and Rachel fight for most of the novel. Neither of them are very willing to back down to the other, and Rachel is so scared of love that she will fight it at any cost. This means sparks will fly and not always the good kind. Sometimes, you might find her annoying, it is definiately not a two lovers meet, fall in love, and off to bed together sort of book. Some people considered it a romance, and it is. Just not a satisfying romance for some because they fight themselves the whole course of the novel.

I strongly recommend this book! Just writing this review is making my will-power to get the next one a very delicate thing. I finished Archangel last night and was sad, you really get to know these two and I think they are those sort of characters that when you read the last book and understand that there is no more to come, it will be hard to say good bye.

4.5/5

Monday, September 04, 2006

The Babies


Baby pic! Aren't they cute? And so tiny!

Atra (the boy) on the left, Miko (the girl) on the right.

Atra


This is Atra, the other kitten. You can also see him in my profile picture with my book.

More pictures later!

Miko


This is Miko and my scarf. She is one of what we call the kittens, but she is over a year old now.

More Pictures



These are the other two kittens. Baby pictures of them exist, I just have to find them. I need to find a picture where they are facing the camera too... But here is a start.

Picture Time!!


I have some pictures of my various animals to show off. :)

This is a very little Lana. She's two now, but wasn't she adorable!

Hey Everyone!

I have a computer again. Yay! My boyfriend gave me his old one. The one I used for the rest of the summer sucked, and it wasn't worth fixing. This one is older, but not so old that it doesn't still run really good. I just have to clean it off... And I can't seem to get any sound, but I will figure that out as I go along. I am just glad I have a computer of my own. We get laptops at university, but they are really crappy and die all the time. This way I have this for back up at all times.

Right now I am reading Archangel by Sharon Shinn. It is a very good book, which I would have finished yesterday if it didn't take forever to set this computer up. The actual putting together wasn't that bad, it was more the hooking up to the internet that I had to battle with. But, other than sound, all is working well. I am going to have to get more Sharon Shinn books, I don't have the two books that come after this one and I really want to read them already!

Anyways, now that I have a computer, you should be hearing from me more.

What's everyone reading now?

Saturday, September 02, 2006

Book Call!

So, my mother went to Toronto, and I gave her a little list of books that are a bit harder to find or only available on Amazon. At first she wasn't doing well, just found two of the easier ones to find around here, New Moon by Stephanie Meyer and The Fourth Bear by Jasper Fforde. That was fine and still appreciated. Then, on the spur of the moment, I mention Sharon Shinn to her. I have never seen her in stores around here and I have reached my amazon limit for a while. She looks good, so I asked her to look around. She is having like no luck, and then yesterday, she hits the jackpot! I didn't expect so many, but she got me Archangel, Angel-Seeker, Mystic and Rider, Wrapt in Crystal, and Angelica. It's great! All these shiny covers that I was not expecting. I look forward to reading all of them. She also got me Stardust by Neil Gaiman yesterday. Eight books in total. Good reading times ahead!

Friday, September 01, 2006

Click below.

Sorry, I had those reviews started and never should have posted that big long book list!

Click here for the review of Ceremony in Death.

Last three books of August/06

Sadly, the last three books I have to post about were not stellar achievements for me, so I am just going to post about them together and then I can move on to September and brighter pastures. There were great books this month, but as always, there were others that were just okay or even others that I really didn't like.

First up, The Green Knight by Vera Chapman. I started this book at the beginning of the month, and I just could not get into it. I love Arthurian retellings, but this one played more on the myth of the tale. It was not horrible by the end, but at the same time, not one of my favourite retellings. It brings together a blend of magic and mystery, but the characters are not as compelling as others I have read. It didn't really help that I read The Hawk's Gray Feather this month, another Arthurian novel, and loved it. Vera Chapman might have been better if I didn't have such a good book to compare it to. (If anyone knows where I can get a picture of this book I would appreciate it!)

3/5

The other two books I read were Gods in Alabama and West Side Story. I don't think these two books were horrible, just not what I wanted to be reading at the time I chose to read them. West Side Story, sad to say, has been destroyed literature-wise by movies and plays. Sometimes I just can't get into the book if I have seen other mediums of it. I know that lots of people liked Gods in Alabama. I just couldn't get into it, maybe another time I will read it and think it is great, but not on this read through.

West Side Story 3.5/5
Gods in Alabama 3/5