Books

May. 20th, 2025 08:51 pm
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* The Left Handed Booksellers of London - I wasn't familiar with the author, Garth Nix, when I picked this up. He does a lot of books aimed at younger readers. I feel like the start of this book was more serious, and then devolved into whimsy and random exposition. 1980s London, gender fluid character, booksellers who monitor the occult, and a plot that hooked me. I really wanted to like this and should have DNF'd it sooner.

Trying to avoid making a powerpoint presentation on the complexities of YA as a marketing term and how it makes my life harder. I don't want to double check everything to see if it's considered YA and discount it based on that, because a lot of stuff that isn't gets categorized that way. Sarah J Maas' ACOTAR being a prime example.

* Hell Bent - The sequel to Ninth House and the middle book of what will be a trilogy. It sounds like we should heard about the final book soon? Very excited. On one hand, I love the writing and am already looking forward to rereading both books in prep for the final one. On the other hand, the occult elements didn't feel as solid as in the first book. I loved it, but it's not to the bar of the first book. Middle books of trilogies are like that sometimes.

Of course try to look up anything about Ninth House and every website gets even more convinced that I want to see Gideon the Ninth stuff. On Amazon it's listed as The Ninth House Series. I think 'Alex Stern' is used as a alternate name to deal with disambiguation, but that only helps so much. The lesbian necromancers in space are inescapable!

* Blood Trail - I liked it more than expected. I am determined to read this series, but how often I was told to start with the later books was worrying. It drags a bit in places, but also it's an early urban fantasy book so I don't mind.

It is an amazing time capsule of that time in the 90s when technology became more part of our lives, but no google or cell phones yet. People needing to stay in for phone calls, discourse about whether screening calls with an answering machine is anti-social, etc. Also, cities being very gritty and dangerous. Obviously it wasn't intentional, but it's a very dense capsule.

Reading it so soon after a Di Tregarde book was funny because in the Tregarde books, Di is a romance novelist partially to deal with her odd schedule as Guardian, but in Blood Trail the vampire is a romance novelist to deal with his odd schedule. They are both writing similar sounding books involving sea captains. Also, both in cold cities and dealing with the cold winds, etc. There's a lot of notes in common, which may be them both riffing on the same thing or being plugged into the same trends. To be clear, the similar notes are interesting and amusing, not anything else.

Boooooks

Apr. 15th, 2025 07:05 pm
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I am back and both exhausted and also slammed. It might be a minute before I have a spare brain cell to do photos, so I will start with getting caught up with books

No spoilers, I just added in a few LJ cuts since this got long.

The Ninth House by Leigh Bardugo

The book: Simple, short and effective description of the toxicity and entitlement that runs rampant in Connecticut

Me: OMG, this is so nostalgic!

I picked this up based on a 'judging you based on what your favorite book is' video. the quip for this one was something like 'your ideal TV show is Buffy, but without Xander' It's an urban fantasy based on Yale, which is a honestly a great UF setting. For those who don't know, they do have some secret societies and major politicians have come out of Skull and Bones.

I loved this book, but partially because it really nails where I grew up. I read this while on the train headed east, and that was a wild experience, especially as I started to recognize the scenery outside of the train.

Read more... )

I love the writing so much. I was instantly on board with picking up more my the same writer. When I was looking to see if the author had written anything else, maybe if the next book was out yet, I saw that one of her books is called Six Of Crows. I was like “That’s funny, that’s the same title as…. Oh wait.” So, everyone who told me I should read the books of Grishaverse, guess what?

Smoke & Shadows by Tanya Huff

I was very confused reading this because with every page turn I was like, I've read this before... but I don't remember the overall plot. But I was pretty sure I’d bought it recently and Kindle had no record of me having started it. I don’t have the physical book or audiobook. So, I searched my email inbox and found a very old DW post of mine where I said that ‘Audible made this seem like book 1 in a series, but it’s book 6. At first I was impressed by how complex the relationships of the characters are, but then I realized I was missing stuff I as supposed to know and looked into it’ At the time I was only doing audiobooks due to an injury and the earlier books were not available as audiobooks. So, I’d returned it.

I’ve now bought this book twice thinking it was the start of a series due to how it's listed. Holy fuck. I am actually going to read this from the start at a point. As I am writing this I am in NYC, so I’m moving onto another book I have for now.

The Bones Beneath My Skin by TJ Klune

It was okay. It’s a good take on the ‘young girl with powers wanted by government’ trope. The plot and lots of things about it were very good, but the main character is just sort of numb and non-reactive for too much of the story. Being like that at first? Sure, but after a while it starts to feel like he’s missing from his own story. Especially since it's supposed to be a thriller and he's supposed to have certain skills, I really came away from it feeling like he was just checked out and never really chose to be part of things.

I’ve seen this book described as ‘Stranger Things if Steve and Hopper ran off with El’, but it’s really not. Read more... )

Camp Damascus by Chuck Tingle

Oof, I wanted to like this. It’s a bit disjointed and jumps around a bit. I don’t typically do this, but I did look up other reviews of the book before posting just to double check that certain things just weren’t resolved. I wanted to make sure I hadn't missed something. Also, I was switching between the ebook and the audiobook and wound up re-reading chunks to make sure that I hadn’t missed stuff due to syncing issues. I hadn’t. I put a chunk of effort into making sure I hadn’t like accidentally a chapter.

Read more... )

A Rival Most Vial by R. K. Ashwick

It’s Lit-RPG but also gay romance.

It’s a very solid book, I just don’t know if I fully click with Lit-RPG, or maybe this style of Lit-RPG? A lot of cozy fantasy rubs me the wrong way, and this doesn’t. That aspect feels more solid and earned than in anything else I’ve read in the cozy genre. I don’t want to damn it with faint praise, I think for some readers this might be The Book they’ve been looking for. In a lot of ways it’s fantastic, just not quite my thing.

Basically, if you wanted to like Legends and Lattes but didn't, maybe had some 'not sure about that' type reactions, I’d highly recc at least giving this a look.

Children of the Night by Mercedes Lackey

This is actually a prequel to her earlier Di Tregarde stories, setting up Lenny, Andre and some Guardian worldbuilding, and also retconning earlier world building. I wish I'd made notes on the retconning, but I actually started this right after Burning Water, but my collapse of interest in playing GW2 meant less time listening to audiobooks so I wound up with a big gap between when I started and now.

She was very early to the urban fantasy trend especially when it involves grittiness and smooching vampires. I've been told my whole life that other authors pioneered the genre, but when I read those earlier UF books they are pretty much portal fantasies. A lot of the weaknesses of the book are just from being a very early example of something that later became a very developed genre. There is still a lot of off-screen stuff, most notably the Nightflier situation, but when I was younger I liked the feeling that these books existed in a larger world and that there were more stories out there. The romance has unusual pacing, but I kinda like that about it.

However, she is still very weird about Romani people. The book isn't as moralistic and know-it-all as Burning Water, but it's still got that while also not being consistent. It's like the book wants to speak from a strong viewpoint on how the world works, but hadn't actually figured out that viewpoint yet. Also, weird jabs at people into BDSM again.

It was a weird book to revisit, as I read it so much when I was young that at times I remembered what the next sentence was going to be. How much she'd impacted how I write is like... while I was listening to this I felt like I was going back to an old, overly wordy, style of writing (and maybe talking?) like... like a New Yorker hearing a New York accent and falling back into it.

Audiobook specific note: I overall love Traci Odom's work on the series, but I hate her voice for Andre. She really vamps up the French accent.

Book

Mar. 29th, 2025 03:27 pm
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* Chromatic Fantasy by H. A. and also the art book for it that talks about his journey and where it came from. It's amazing. I love it. It's refreshingly maximalist and lush. I love that it's done in dark tones and a complex color scheme. It's kinda funny that in the art book he talks about being able to get it done because he realized that he didn't need to be so detailed.

One downside is that it's hard to read, literally. The binding is embossed and gilt, it's not flexible and will show creases badly. Some writing is near the center crease. When I first heard about this book I was warned about buying it online due to how easy the cover is to mess up and how strongly it would show any damage. The dialogue bubbles also have shaded backgrounds. The book needs a bit of careful handling and I kept tilting the book while reading it to catch the light better and avoid hurting the binding. (Though my copy is a bit scuffed, despite buying it in-store. I've never seen a mint-copy) It's cool that this book comes in such a special edition, but that complicates reading and buying it.

At one point a character talked about not knowing what they are doing, they were just trying to survive and wound up like this. That's pretty much the vibe, in a good way.

* Roger Crenshaw stories - I read the other two. The final story is by another author, but still illustrated by the main one. I really did not like the final story and nearly DNF'd it. The more I look at the artwork for the series, that more I am impressed with it. So, that's cool. I probably pick up anything else by him, tho, because letting someone else end Roger's story like that was off-putting.
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A Gentleman's Gentleman by TJ Alexander - The short review is that I am glad this book exists, but it just stopped clicking for me the further I got into it. No plot spoilers )
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* Brothersong by TJ Klune- I love the Green Creek series overall, but this is not my favorite book in it. It wasn't a disappointment in any way, but I just like the other books a lot more. How much I love this series is weird because I don't click with some other stuff by TJ Klune. If I were to write out my problems with some of his books, I could use this series as a strong contrast to those books, an example of handling that stuff well. That these are by the same author, especially with the very striking writing style in this series, is something I haven't 100% wrapped my brain around.

The books have a very loose, poetic writing style. Sometimes when I read a book I wonder if I could have written something like that and maybe what I'd have done different/better. With Green Creek the answer is just no. The very strong plot structure contrasting prose that often ignores grammar, the sex scenes that play out in surprising ways and build on who the characters are and sometimes flesh out their backstories, my brain could never have produced something like this. With the writing style, I want to read it slower. I feel like I am not really taking it in if I am not giving it time.

I stand by my approach to grammar in writing, it's one of the few things I feel very solid on. My fragments and other quirks are not mistakes. But if I'm at about a 3 when it comes to bucking the strict rules of grammar to create feeling and meaning, he's at a hundred or more in this specific series. I love it, some people hate it with a burning passion and find it unreadable.

A few notes, no specific spoilers )

* Boys Run The Riot - This was a mix of some very strong and relatable insight into trans experience, but also it's a 4 volume shonen manga so of course some things were going to play out as they did. I did start to read the first volume untranslated but switched to get them read for the read-a-thon. I will also finish the Japanese version because in Japanese it's easy to write without gendered pronouns and there are a few things where I am curious to see how it's handled. Anyway, I haven't read manga in a long time, but I used to read a lot and my brain just knew how a lot of things were going to play out. So, it felt like a lot of very raw stuff being put in a container that really didn't fit it.

The English version also comes with the debut one-chapter manga that is the basis for the series. It's not put into shonen magazine conventions so it's a strong contrast.

* Roger Crenshaw, the first two stories - They are probably about 7-8k words each. They read like very mid fanfiction. There are some consent issues there, mostly to keep the plot humming along. But, while there is some porn logic the trans guy isn't fetishized and just sort of exists. Honestly, I kind of wish I'd done this ten years ago, just put some mid, fanficcy stories out there and see how it goes. (Just with a little less porn logic)

I am trying to figure out a good way to say 'they are kinda crap, but I liked how the tranness was treated and also I wish I'd tossed crap like this up on itch.io like he did. I am jealous of this crap' There is a value to having projected completed and shipped rather than just dealing with everything in a state of potential.

The stories come with illustrations that are pretty good actually if you like the style. They are graphic both in that they are explicit but also the type of line work and shading is what's known as a graphic style. Two very different meanings of the word. I really like the art and it strikes a good balance between design and realism.
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I have made it through Gideon the Ninth, and for the rest of the month I can read non-book club books. I need to make a bookclub tracker spreadsheet for myself.

How much of my life is book clubs? I have acquired a Book Biffle, which is a item to safely carry a book to a book club in your bag, so it doesn't get scuffed:



Short, non-spoiler response to Gideon the Ninth )

Longer non-spoiler reaction )

And books

Mar. 8th, 2025 04:37 pm
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* I am DNFing Less by Andrew Sean Greer. It's for the Two Rivers book club, but reading it is actively annoying me. It's possible that if I kept toughing it out that the ending would make it all come together for me, theoretically. But I went and looked up something about the ending and nah, I think I am good.

I will probably go to the book club meeting anyway. A number of people didn't make it through Time War, so it's fine to still go. I really do want to finish book club books, so I did try to hang in.

* Heartsong was my favorite TJ Klune book to date. The books in this series are surprisingly tight without feeling tight. Things that feel like just filling out the world come back around.


Spoilers, mostly vague
Amnesia as terrible, horrifying, a deep loss of self. Love to see it! Oh, this was satisfying to read considering my issues with how lightly it's often treated. There were parts in which the memory loss was funny, but it wasn't being played primarily for comedy. Also, the parts I found funny others might not have? It was specific forgotten things that as a reader you either remember from a previous book and see it as funny, or maybe not.

Again, the book is relying on the reader to remember more and pay more attention to detail that most readers do. Though, since I didn't realizing that [character] was [character], I do wonder if there are details/jokes in the series I didn't pick up on.

As much as I am enjoying this series, SUPER ready for it to wrap up. If there was a fifth book so we'd be dealing with a Certain Specific Thing happening in Yet Another Way, then I'd be feeling very differently about all this. It is very time to call it.


There seems to be some side stories in the series and I want to see about nabbing them before I read the last book. Lovesong, which is book 2.5, was included at the end of book 3. Book 4 might include 3.5 and 3.6, but the numbering system I am seeing makes me want to read them first.

* Right now, I am reading Gideon the 9th. I am going to get through it this time. PW is doing a spin off book club just for that series. There is also a spin off book club for something else that's related to it? Seems like a lot of people in that space are very into Gideon the 9th, Murderbot and Severance. So, excited to be reading it as part of a book club thing so I'll have discussion space for it. That club isn't starting until next month so I've got time, but I need to put other stuff aside until I finish this.

Books Read

Feb. 26th, 2025 09:13 pm
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* Ravensong by TJ Klune - This book starts right in the middle of events of the last book and expects you to remember every character and relationship. I was able to get on track, but The Green Creek series is not meant to be read very spaced apart. So, my current book is Brothersong. I didn't go right into it from Ravensong, but only had one book in between.

No plot spoilers, just structural stuff )

* The Ballad of Black Tom by Victor LaValle - I read this for Horror Book Club, knocking a book off of my must-read list. The writing was amazing. I loved the story. It's set in NYC, I think 1930s, from the perspective of a black man living in Harlem. Amazing descriptions and I love the idea of the reality of NYC versus what people expect. It's sort of based on another book, but I didn't know that going in. It's not a spoiler, but I am cutting anyway in case anyone else wants to go in fully blind like I did. )

* I am soft-DNFing Deviant Desire by Jackson Marsh - This is a recc from the gay men reading gay books group I was in on FB because the site became unusable for me. I liked reccs from there because I was seeing titles I was not seeing elsewhere, including searching Amazon and Goodreads. It wasn't a totally different eco-system, but a chunk of what I saw there I didn't see elswhere. I may pick it back up, especially since Amazon keeps trying to give me ads for the sequel and the sequel is on a train... but it's just not very well written so far. I was having trouble sticking with it when I only have so much time for non-book-club-books. When I go to reread the blurb because I am very confused on who the eventual couple is supposed to be that far into the book, not a great sign. Also, WTF even where some of those interactions? A few sections were well written and I liked them, but not the parts with people interacting...

* Edge of Fate by SJ Himes - Wasn't into this one, but kinda expected that from a book based around Cian. Just, not my vibe. The next book is the final in the series and I hope I really like it. I would rather have gotten [character's] POV on meeting certain other characters over anything that happens in this book, and at first it looked like we'd get that POV sprinkled in? And then we didn't.
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So, the downside of so many book clubs working out is that I've got a lot of reading to do.

* This Is How You Lose The Time War

The audiobook is 4 hours long. I can read a book faster than I can listen to it, especially if I am trying to power through. So, why did this feel like it took 20 years to read? I would have DNF'ed it and read a summary, but since I want to be part of this book club, actually reading just seemed like a better idea.

The good news is that upcoming books in this club include Orlando, Idlewild, Before We Were Trans and Queer as Folklore. Not every month will be like this.

Spoilers )

* Gender Queer by Maia Kobabe

Since this is maybe the most banned book in the US, I look forward to dropping it in a Little Free Library after this book club meets. I think the format really shines as a way to show some very tricky parts of queer life and not fitting in.

This books was a weird mix of highly relatable to the opposite of relatable to me. One of the comics shows a dream I used to have obsessively. Like, the Terry Moore mention and also eir reaction to The Last Herald Mage, I've never seen stuff that relatable... but also I rarely find any media relatable. Then other stuff was just not, and I'll stop myself there before this become a long semi-related ramble. Anyway, it's good an I am looking forward to passing it along.

* My next book club reads are The Ballad of Black Tom and Babel-17, but I am going to something else first. I am finished with everything I need to read for Feb. Candidates are: Ninth House, Deviant Desire and The Bottoms. I'd put Dungeon Crawler Carl on the list, but it looks like I got the audiobook not the kindle version. Maybe I'll get to that after Children of the Night, my current audiobook
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The Darkness Outside Us by Eliot Schrefer

I read this for a trans book club that hopefully exists. A bunch of us showed up after it was announced, but the organizers didn't. We picked Gender Queer by Maia Kobabe for the next book and emailed the organizers to tell them.

That I read this for a book club is both good and bad. The bad is that I had to power through the last part. I only heard about a trans book club a few days beforehand. The good part is that I might have DNF'd it if not for the club. I liked it a lot after it was done and I was thinking about it. But reading it, especially the first half, was a slog. Most of my problems with it can be summed up as 'I don't like YA'. People who like the book tend to say it's a 'gripping mystery plot' with twists and turns. Uh, I knew what was going on from a very early detail and I don't even really read Sci Fi. I didn't think this had amazing twists, I thought it signaled from the start exactly what the plot was? So, I was waiting to see what it was going to do with that plot. There are things it does with that plot which I really like, especially due to certain details. I am glad I read this book, but only as a think to talk/think about after having read it.

Bit more on the book. No major plot spoilers. )

* The Secret Adversary by Agatha Christie

It's the first book with Tommy and Tuppance as the detectives. It's cute! It also knocks off 3 whole squares on my 2025 Book Bingo and means I get to use my Public Domain stamp in my book journal. I'd be tearing through one of the lines in book bingo expect that line also has 'poly' in it.

It's an early book by her. I decided to start with some of her early/free books. If I am determined to read everything, going a bit in order makes sense.
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I finished Burning Water and omg I have so many notes...
I tried to not ramble too much )

Anyway, really, really hoping I remember right and that Children of the Night is loads better.
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The Bell in the Fog by Lev AC Rosen -

This is one of the best books I've ever read. Lavender House, the first in the Evander Mills series, was a solid mystery but a little paint by numbers. Intense things would happen to the MC, but then we wouldn't see his thoughts or feelings about it. This book really digs a lot deeper and is a better book on every front.

The books are set in post WW2 San Francisco and that odd period in history where gay people had just been able to find each other and the military had been pretty permissive of homosexuality during the war, only for people to scatter again and there to be hard crackdowns. The mystery, the characters, the vibes, the really leaning into an interesting moment in history, amazing.

Rough Pages by Lev AC Rosen -

This is the next and most recent book in the series and wow, it is not the best thing I've ever read. It's a mess. The stakes are so similar to the last book that it undercuts a lot of that book. Characters the MC was close to in the last book he's suddenly distant from. The structure was so similar that at one point early in the book I predicted that the murderer would be X for Y reason, and it would create a feeling of N for because M. And, bingo! Also, having the murder create of feeling of N because M twice in a row is weird.

Read more... )

Ghost of Lies by Alice Winters Books 1 and 2 of her Medium trouble series under the cut )

Books

Aug. 22nd, 2024 12:33 pm
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* Liar City by Allie Therin hit my DNF pile hard. It's urban fantasy m/m.

I liked the writing, the world building and the mystery plot going on. The characters were great, outside of the m/m pairing. The sort-of POV character is dumb. He has the impulse control and grasp of nuance you'd expect from a toddler. It would have been one thing if he was like that at the start, but fucking focused up with all the murder and danger going on, maybe had a bit of a arc about out, but nope.

Spoilers. )

I was excited for the books as it was a urban fantasy m/m series and the name of the series is Sugar & Vice, which sounded awesome. I could point to some other problems with the book, but like the randomly floating POV, they wouldn't have bothered me if I liked the book overall.

* Tales From The Gas Station - Horror/creepy short story series

I know I got recced this, but don't remember from where. It's very mid, but not in a bad way. It's a series of spooky stories with something of an overarching plot. The writing is very solid, but you can see where the story is going most of the time, sometimes from the set up. It feels like the writer is very in his comfort zone, writing wise. It keeps it from being really spooky, at least for me, but it's very comfy. Most of what I read feels like writers trying to push for something, hit above their weight class and the writers have very uneven writing skills. This feels like something less ambitious, but well polished. The descriptions of the place and the main character's emotional state are really well some.

I listened to it as an audiobook and the narrator was very good.

It's written as if this was originally an online blog that got mistaken for creepypasta and spread virally. I think that the book was originally a blog, became popular and then become a book. But, a lot of the fandom seems to be very into unfiction so I am not 100% sure. Some of the info on the book's origin is contradictory. It's possible that the series is so polished because the book is the second or third version of it.

* Broken by Nicola Haken - m/m romance

I really liked this. It's a tricky one to review because it's an m/m romance where one of the characters has bipolar disorder.

The set up nearly lost me because I didn't know the plot, it just felt like a lot of '00s bl manga were there is a lot of boundary breaking that I wasn't into. I read a lot of those manga because here in the US we got a huge influx of m/m content when bl was taking off. It felt like one of those premises, but then taken really seriously. I don't think that's what the author was going for, but that's how it hit me. I felt like I'd read that first chapter a lot before, but then the story went a totally different direction.

The premise is taken more seriously than some people might expect from a romance novel. Triggers and also spoilers )
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Even with upping my challenge and being out of shorter books, I am still doing well on my challenge.

How To Solve Your Own Murder - I picked this up because I am trying to familiarize myself with mysteries and this appears to be the hot, new one. The plot came together very, very well. Towards the end, bits from the start kept occurring to me and made a lot of sense. It was the smoothest modern mystery I'd read.

However, in the home stretch it gets a bad case of sequel-itis. It feels like things are scooped out to set up a series instead. It made the book a lot less satisfying. If this had been a stand alone, I'd read more books by the author. Since the ending was filled with plot hooks and suddenly feeling like two plotlines got dropped, I doubt I will.

Death by Silver and A Death at the Dionysus Club by by Melissa Scott and Amy Griswold - books 1 and 2 of Lynes and Mathey - These are a bit tricky. I liked them. They are listed as m/m mystery books and they are, but I feel like those categories might give people the wrong expectations for the books.
No specific plot spoilers, but I talk about the shape of the plot might give something away about the second book if you think about it )
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* I finally got time to start S3 of The Bear! ... and I am dropping it for now. The first episode was a masterclass in giving your audience tension and anxiety. I loved it. Then the episodes after it were mostly that but worse. There is a thing in writing called the tension and release cycle. Trying to give your audience only one flavor and it gets boring.

Once the show is over I may go back and finish it. I loved S1 and S2. The buzz made me want to watch them for ages. I've heard no S3 buzz, so I am not confident that if I kept going there'd be payoff.

* My current audiobook is How To Solve Your Own Murder. I am really digging it so far. I hope the ending isn't dumb, but the book was well received and reviewed so hopefully not. It's just got one of those premises that can often gets dumb conclusions.

* I've finished Wolfsong by T. J Klune. I really liked it! The writing style is amazing. I actually got a bit worried early on because I've heard a lot of places that people liked the book at first but hated where it went, and I really, really loved the first few chapters because of how solid the prose is. Overall, I enjoyed the book and will probably pick up Ravensong and maybe the rest of the series (hopefully when on sale, I've spent a lot on media recently and need to slow my roll). I think I read it a bit overly critically because of things I'd heard about books by that author. I think a lot of people expect that book to be something other than what it is.

* Up next for text-based-book is Dear Mothman, the one YA book on my TBR list. I tend to dislike YA, but a lot of books with trans rep are in that space so I am giving this one a try. I looked at a lot of lists of queer books and trans books that popped up at the start of June and this one seemed possibly interesting.

Books

Jun. 16th, 2024 01:36 am
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* Murderbot Diaries #2- According to Goodreads, I went from ahead of schedule to read 30 books this year to just on schedule. So, I am speedrunning to get back ahead. I realized that a lot of the Murderbot books are short and since most of the series is on my TBR list, I can power through those and then tackle something a bit more crunchy.

I have the fully dramatized audiobook versions, but it looks like all but the most recent of the single performer books are free with Audible membership. This is cool if anyone wants to get caught up in prep for the show, but a pain for me because the audible app sucks and when I search for my purchased copy it pulls up the free version and asks me if I want to add it to my library.

Anyway, I am on the third book already. The second book was good, but not nearly as compelling as the first. That's to be expected. The first was great and I kinda liked treating it like a stand alone. But, I'd like to read more Martha Wells and also be caught up before the TV show comes out. Also, it's a solid chunk of my TBR list so if I get caught up I will feel very accomplished.

* The Mystery Of The Blue Train by Agatha Christie - I'd heard it referred to as as one of her better books somewhere, probably a video on And Then There Were None. It was okay. It was a bit odd in how some very, very minor characters got some resolution and epilogue but the more main ones didn't. Maybe there is something sad and pointed about that, or maybe it's a bit wonkily written. Christie wrote a LOT of books. Some were amazing and some just weren't. I tend judge all her books by The Crooked House, which is unfair because I think it's her best.

* The Necromancer's War - The Necromancer of Beacon Hill series is wrapping up with a trilogy. This is the first book of that trilogy and both this book and the final book have the POV of the first/main couple. That is one of the things I really like about Sheena Jolie's writing. I am also looking forward to them getting a chance to start fresh with a new and/or stand alone books after this. I enjoyed it, but I really hope the final two books are a bit longer because there are a lot of characters with complicated dynamics between them and I'd like to see a bit more of some.

* Broken Bayou by Jennifer Moorhead - I rarely grab the books Amazon offers to me for free for having a Prime membership. I used to grab them, but then they clutter up my kindle and I don't know which books I wanted and which I nabbed for being free. It's part of why I was trying to get my ebooks and TBR list organized a few months back. But, it was a mystery and very well reviewed so I nabbed it. I do want to find mystery writers I like besides Christie. It was well written so I got a fair bit into it easily. But, I didn't care about the characters or the story. I finished it just to finish it. I thought I'd get something out of seeing how the mystery plot turned out, but eh.
olivermoss: (Default)
I'd never read anything bu John Green before. Most of his books just don't sound interesting to me at all. Then I heard him describe this book by talking about of the trope of famous detectives having OCD as a superpower, but as someone with OCD he wanted to write a mystery where the main character experiences OCD as he does. Yeah, that premise really drew my attention.

No spoilers )
olivermoss: (Default)
Episode Thirteen by Craig DiLouie

It's written in a sort of epistolary / documentary format like you are doing through the first person sources on an event yourself. For me, this was an easy, intuitive and actually pleasant format. It's very YMMV, though. It's like the text-based equivalent of found footage.

I read it in ebook, but the audiobook is fully dramatized and I've heard it works really well. Review of book but no specific spoilers ) According to Goodreads I am very on track to chew through my list this year:

olivermoss: (Steddie)
* My TBR pile is down to only 25 books... because I am DNFing the Eddie Munson Stranger Things novel at 52% of the way through the book.

Read more... )
olivermoss: (Default)
I am not fully up to date in the series, but I am now five or so books in and started making notes about the series around book 3. I may post again when caught up, but here are my thoughts so far.

The super short version - I really like these books. It's an ongoing urban fantasy series set in Boston. It's obviously got DNA from some of the '00s vampire shows and book series I never got into. It's like... what if '00s vampire stuff but instead of trad wife vibes it's super gay?

The writing improves on all fronts with each book. Most of the time I read m/m reccs I find things about them off-putting and try to like soldier through, get used to it, find a way to click with them etc. For this, it was the opposite. They may not be as well written as some of the books I get recced, but it was the opposite of off-putting. They felt very cozy in themes, descriptions, aesthetic, etc. There are parts I am not wild about, but nothing felt alienating.

More about how the books are written structured, how I would recc the books, etc. Any spoilers will be spoiler cut. I really like that you can do spoiler cuts under LJ cuts now, anyway... )

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Oliver Moss

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