Books


Why do eight-hundred page books take twice as long to read as four two-hundred page books? (To be fair, when my life gets crazy enough that I’m lucky to get twenty pages of pleasure reading done in a day, then anything at all will take forever.) On the other hand, the last third picked up the pace in a big way. Nice job. Still waiting for book two to show up in paperback.

[powells]

I forget sometimes how enjoyable a novella can be. There’s no room for puffery in the story, but there’s still room for development. Scalzi handles it well, and hits on some themes that I find interesting. Just be aware that this is a dark book.

[barnes&noble

A very long culture novel that moves at a stately pace. If Anthony Trollope had written a culture novel, it might have looked like this. I happen to like Anthony Trollope’s novels, but this one was short on culture content for my taste. And I’m still not sure whether I really like the intensely clever ending. All that said, I liked this book, but mostly for the process of reading it rather than as a whole.

[powells]

I just keep being more and more impressed by Jim Hines. High quality fluff.
[powells]

Frustratingly, I didn’t really start to care about most of these characters until just as the book was ending. Just as I was ready to get invested in the story, it ended.

[powells]

This feels like two books stuck together, or maybe even three. All of them were good stories but I wanted more of each of them. I also suspect that not having read the novel before this didn’t help.

[powells]

The previous novel in this set, Trial of Flowers blew me away. This one didn’t quite live up to that mark, but still a good read.

[powells]

A pleasantly unpleasant return of Abigail and Sebastian. Go read New Amsterdam first.

[amazon]

Fabulously literal urban fantasy. And while it’s still full of the disconcerting strangeness of Mieville, it’s easily the most approachable of his books.

[powells]

There’s something about the way that Jeff Vandermeer writes that just clicks with me. Even when nothing much seems to be happening, I’m sucked in. Yes, I have a copy of Finch wending its way toward me already.

[powells]

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