It’s been a long time since I’ve actively posted anything here. A few weeks back I sat myself down and had a little chat that went something like this: “Finish up the reviews you’ve been hoarding and schedule posts!”
I listened. I edited my posts and scheduled them. I have posts scheduled until next week and then after that, well, who knows what will happen.
To be honest, this is the first time I’ve sat down to write in a few weeks and it feels nice. 🙂 Things on the home front have been somewhat complicated of late thanks to some work travel and a car accident. Unfortunately, it looks like we may be car shopping again soon which was not, NOT, in the plans. But we’re both fine and what more can you ask for in life.
I’ve been reading but have been very bad about writing reviews. Eight reviews are waiting to be written; most are done in my head but that means absolutely nothing since no one can read them while they’re floating around in my brain. At some point in the next few days (possibly weeks if I manage to procrastinate, which I will) I’ll be writing reviews for:
Abominable by William Meikle
The New World by Patrick Ness
The End of My Y by Scarlett Thomas
Ghosts of Manhattan by Douglas Brunt
The Time Machine by H.G. Wells
The War of the Worlds by H.G. Wells
The Venice Conspiracy by Sam Christer
Berserker by William Meikle
I started my October reading with Berserker which I finished yesterday. It’s about Vikings (I heart Viking stories so much!) and it was a good start to the creepy books I plan to read this month. I also picked up Stephen King’s Bag of Bones from the library along with The Loch by Steve Alten. Both promise to be good October reads too.
One thing I haven’t done and need to do is gather up a few of my reviews and post them to Bookstore Bookblogger Connection. And by the way, you should be doing this too. First, go here and see what it’s about and then do it. It’s a cool idea and I love the idea of helping independent book stores by offering up blurbs of my favorite fantasy and science fiction books. It’s a small project set up by bloggers Andrea at Little Red Reviewer and Elizabeth at Dark Cargo and it’s a great way for us bloggers to help our favorite places. And those favorite places are book stores if that wasn’t clear. 🙂
That’s all for me today. I’m starting to get my writing groove back so maybe I should get working on those reviews in my head and make them reviews on paper. Or I could pick up the book that arrived in the mail on Friday — Death in the Floating City by Tasha Alexander. Oddly, this will be the second book I read this week that’s set in Venice; weird how that happened.
Happy Sunday everyone. Enjoy whatever books you’ve got waiting for you this day.
Genly Ai is an envoy, a traveler and explorer if you will. He is from the planet Hain and is now a guest, of sorts, on the planet of Winter or Gethen as it’s known by its inhabitants. He is on Winter solely on a mission of discovery, there is no malice in his mission but he finds resistance. The Gethenians are reluctant to believe that he is from another planet even with the physical differences readily visible between him and the Gethenians.
Susan Casey is a writer home sick when she comes across a documentary on great white sharks filmed at the Farallon Island. The islands, a bleak outcrop of rocks 26 miles past the Golden Gate Bridge are a dreary, perilous place at the best of times, but for great white sharks, a virtual paradise thick with elephant seals to feast on. When the sharks arrive for what is known as shark season, it becomes a dangerous place for man and beast but shark heaven for those creatures lurking beneath the surface. Casey, along with a few biologists who feel at home on the less than sparse island, becomes obsessed with the place and the sharks.
I’ve been re-reading a lot lately. I tend to re-read when I’m in a slump but earlier this year I decided I would pick up several books that I kept meaning to re-read and actually do it. So I did. This is one of those books. After finishing 11/22/63 last year, I wanted more King but what I wanted was old King. Salem’s Lot seemed like a perfect match. The last time I picked this one up I was high school and I’m glad to know this one still delivers. It was as creepy as I remembered.
H.G. Wells is an unhappy man. His latest work, The War of the Worlds, has a sequel that he didn’t write. Having agreed to meet with the American author who he believes has unjustly made money off his idea, Wells grumbles his way through the streets of London to the pub for the meeting. This author, who impresses Wells more than he cares to admit, tells him incredible tales of monsters and aliens and when Wells fails to believe, he offers to show him. In a locked room at the natural history museum, Wells gazes upon what he believes to be a true Martian — just like the creatures he created in his latest book.
Jackson Lee Eye is a man with a thing about touching — he doesn’t do it. When he does, he can see everything that happens in that person’s life; the good, the bad, and the mundane. It started when he was 14. He found the shoe of his younger sister Tess lying on the ground, and picking it up, saw her dead in a well. That vision, and the aftermath, haunts him every day of his life. After finding the shoe, he saw his mother murdered and he himself pulled the trigger on his step-father. After years in a state home, he escapes and makes a living using the only skill he has, the ability to read people. When a scientist comes knocking on his door asking him to become part of a study, he goes on high alert. As it turns out, he’s being blackmailed by the government. Forced to help the military bring an end to an experiment gone wrong, he finds himself re-living the events of others and he knows this little experiment will leave him with nightmares for the rest of his life.
Tana French is a new to me author. I’m sorry I waited so long to read her too. I kept seeing rave reviews of her books and now I know why. She deserves the praise.