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Books

Book roundup, special print edition!

Many of the blogs and Twitter feeds I follow have been abuzz with the news of Borders going bankrupt. I am of a weird mind about that since I almost never shopped there, and yet I feel like I ought to be at least a little guilty about a bookstore going under. I’d say this was a motivation for me getting print versions of books this weekend, but I’d be exaggerating–really, it ain’t like I ever need an excuse to buy books of ANY sort.

And here’s what I got!

From Third Place:

  • In the Woods, by Tana French. Mystery, recommended to me by userinfoalg (Anna Genoese). I was actually in the middle of reading this as a library checkout, but I up and decided I am enjoying it more than enough to go ahead and buy my own copy. Also: the trade paperback is lighter to carry than the hardback from the library and I want to go ahead and finish this. Bought in print because the ebook was about the same price at B&N anyway.

And from the University Bookstore, after userinfosolarbird and I went down there to get a new futon from Shiga’s Imports next door:

  • Veil of Lies, by Jeri Westerson. Mystery, but a period mystery this time, with a main character described as a “medieval Sam Spade”. I’d been toying with checking this out from the library but went ahead and decided to get it anyway.
  • The Glasswrights’ Journeyman, by Mindy Klasky. Book 3 of her old Glasswrights fantasy series. Picked up in print since I like the covers, and since it was brought back into my awareness by userinfojpsorrow (Joshua Palmatier) reviewing them. (She’s put them out in ebook form recently but I wanted the paperbacks; they have better covers.)
  • The Fall of the Kings, by Ellen Kushner and Delia Sherman. Fantasy, set in the same universe as Swordspoint and The Privilege of the Sword. Bought in print since that’s how I have the other two.

This puts me up at 25 for the year. Still working on reading In the Woods–and hard on its heels I’ve got Patrick Rothfuss’ The Name of the Wind and Michael Koryta’s So Cold the River queued up as library checkouts. More on these as events warrant!

Books

Books: cure for what ails me

Since yesterday’s hardware shenanigans have settled down, howsabout another book roundup, peeps?

Purchased in a slew of buying from B&N, electronically:

  • Trick of the Mind and A Spider on the Stairs, by Cassandra Chan. Mystery. These are Books 3 and 4 of her Gibbons-Bethancourt series, which I am very much enjoying; I plowed through library checkout copies of Books 1 and 2 last weekend and went ahead and got these in ebook form. I’d already had a copy of Book 3 bought as a cheap hardback but I wanted to read it on the nook since it was available.
  • Bond With Me, by Anne Marsh. Paranormal romance, probably. It’s this week’s Friday freebie from B&N, and I grabbed it since what the hey, free book.
  • The Pretender’s Crown, by C.E. Murphy. Fantasy, the Book 2 to go with the most excellent The Queen’s Bastard. Already own a paper copy of this but this is for reading on the nook!
  • Daughter of the Forest, by Juliet Marilier. Fantasy. Re-buy of a book previously owned in print.
  • Halting State, by Charles Stross. SF. Re-buy of a book previously owned in print.
  • Acacia, by David Anthony Durham. Epic fantasy. Re-buy of a book previously owned in print, specifically because it’s a big brick of a book and those are WAY easier to read for me on the nook these days.
  • Feast of Souls, by C.S. Friedman. Fantasy. Re-buy of a book previously owned in print.
  • The Hunger Games, by Suzanne Collins. YA SF. Because everybody on the planet but me has apparently read this, and right now B&N has the ebook marked down to five bucks.
  • Emissaries from the Dead, by Adam-Troy Castro. SF. Re-buy of a book previously owned in print.

This brings me to 21 for the year!

Books

2011’s first proper book roundup

I’ve already noted the two I bought this past weekend, but here are other books I’ve acquired in the last couple weeks:

First up, to touch bases on print acqusitions:

  • The signed hardback copy of Agatha H and the Airship City, by Phil and Kaja Foglio, given me for my birthday by userinfotechnoshaman! Steampunky SF goodness, the novelization of the first bits of the Girl Genius graphic novel.
  • Steam-Powered: Lesbian Steampunk Stories, edited by userinfoupstart_crow with a whole host of authors represented. I’ve already reviewed this, but this is me buying an ebook copy so userinfosolarbird will be able to read it too, and I should also have a print copy on the way.

From Carina Press:

  • Badlands, by Seleste deLaney. More steampunk. Pre-ordered since it looked interesting and I was there to buy a couple other titles anyway.
  • The Mysterious Lady Law, by Robert Appleton. Another steampunk title, novella length.
  • The Paris Secret, by Angela Henry. Romantic suspense.
  • 47 Echo, by Shawn Kupfer. Military SF, bought in no small part because I want to encourage Carina to publish more SF/F! userinfotechnoshaman‘s actually beaten me to reading this one and quite liked it.

From B&N, mostly spending the $15 gift card kindly given me by userinfojennygriffee:

  • Fraterfamilias, by Judith Doloughan and Paula R. Stiles. Fantasy/Thriller from Innsmouth Free Press, recommended on the Outer Alliance mailing list. If you want to check it out, the publisher has a page up for it here.
  • Clementine, by userinfocmpriest. I already have a hardback copy of this, but this is for reading on the nook! (And I can’t believe I somehow didn’t have the hardback of Clementine noted on last year’s list of purchases, but!)
  • Dreadnought, also by Cherie Priest, and again I’m re-buying electronically even though I have a trade paperback copy. This would be me prepping for a Cherie Priest marathon, yep yep yep.

That’ll do me for now. That’s nine on this list, plus the other two bought in print, bringing me to 11 books acquired thus far for the year.

About Me, Books

Quiet weekend

I hadn’t really said as much on this journal, but I was on an unofficial book-buying hiatus through most of January, trying to take the opportunity to get caught up on reading the books I actually already own (wacky concept, I know). This got thrown off track though yesterday, since I was feeling down about getting a rejection letter–so I decided on emergency bookstore and walking therapy, by way of coping.

Therefore, picked up in print and making my first two purchases of 2011, I present:

  • userinfocmpriest‘s Bloodshot (which I am likely to also get electronically, but which I have only in print for now). This is I think her first official urban fantasy. There are vampires, but then again, this is Cherie Priest, and she’s on the list of people who’ll make me buy a book even if there are vampires in it.
  • A used copy of Susanna Kearsley‘s Named of the Dragon–which I’d actually previously owned and hadn’t been impressed with the first time through. But I found myself wanting to re-read it and feeling sad that I’d gotten rid of my last copy!

What I was actually looking for were the first two books of Cassandra Chan’s mystery series, The Young Widow and Village Affairs. I cannot find them for love or money in any of the local bookstores on my usual routes–and I checked eight, including the downtown B&N, the downtown Borders, two of the three used bookstores at Pike Place Market (the third being currently inaccessible due to construction), the U-Bookstore, Half Price Books in the U-District, Twice Sold Tales in the U-District, and the Ravenna branch of Third Place Books. I shall therefore probably have to order them, and that’s fine, though I’d wanted to give the local stores a good fighting chance at selling me these titles first.

Also of note on this walk: my marketboys were doing crazytalk huge amounts of business when I swung by them for blackberries. The market in general was very, very crowded, possibly more so than usual just because the construction does weird things to the flow of people through the place. But still, wow! Way more people there on a Saturday afternoon than I’m used to seeing when I swing through there in the mornings and afternoons, to and from work.

There was a rally going on in Westlake Park downtown when I walked from Pike Place to Borders. I wasn’t terribly surprised to see it was a rally in support of the protestors in Egypt, and I was glad to see them raising their voices. Saw a couple of people on the corner of Fourth and Pike holding up an Egyptian flag, and scattered outlying knots of people on the fringes of the main rally as well as I swung over to B&N.

Yunnie Bubble Tea in the U-District still makes extremely tasty bubble tea. I miss them.

Half-Price Books in the U-District is still pretty awesome, even though they don’t have the amount of space at their disposal that Third Place does. Good place to go for book spelunking.

Gray, cool, and rainy but not too much so is a strangely appropriate type of weather to have if you’re moody and in the mood for exercise. I actually kind of liked the weather as I walked from the University District on up to the Ravenna branch of Third Place (which I’d never been in and which is much smaller than the main store), and from there up towards 80th. Also, north along 20th from Ravenna Third Place is a nice residental stretch of neighborhood, and gave me that odd little sense of satisfaction I sometimes get when I check out part of Seattle I’ve never seen before. ‘Cause, y’know, a Warder should walk her city and stuff.

By the time I made it home, close to five o’clock, I was feeling better mentally, albeit footsore. I estimate I did four miles and change while I was out, which is about what I do on a daily basis during the week–but during the week, it’s split up into morning and afternoon chunks.

And finishing off the day with a viewing of Megapython Vs. Gatoroid, this week’s Syfy channel crapfest, was pretty much exactly what I needed. Toss in some 4th season Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea and some Voyage fanfic, and I was in a much better frame of mind by the time I went to bed.

I’m a little sad about missing Conflikt this weekend, but on the whole I think I made the right decision. My reserves of Cope were pretty low, and I needed some quiet Me time for a while. userinfosolarbird‘s been having a great time at the con this weekend though and I look forward to her bringing me a copy of userinfoseanan_mcguire‘s shiny new album!

Today I have been working on query letters for Lament, and a bit of actual writing. And I’ve been playing with the shiny new barcode scanning functionality in the iPhone Goodreads app, scanning in a bunch more of the books I own that I never got around to adding to my shelves on that site. I’ve topped 1,500 titles on my Goodreads account and will be amused to see if I top 2,000 by the time I’m done with the scanning.

Books

Hurray! I met Rachel Caine!

And now for today’s major reason I was happy to avert the threat of the bug from work: userinforachelcaine had a reading tonight at Third Place Books. As I’ve been a fan of her Weather Warden books for a while and as Third Place is literally right down the hill from my house, I pretty much had to show up for this. Never mind that the actual reading was for the latest Morganville Vampire book and that I’m way behind on those; I showed up anyway, just for the awesome.

userinfojennygriffee showed up as well, since she knows Rachel better than I do and even had the pleasure of rooming with her at a Harry Potter convention a few years back–and, she’s in the dedication of one of the Weather Warden books. So we both said hi to Rachel and got hugs and a bit of chatting, and each of us had a few books signed; I decided to bring the first one of each of her series, the Weather Wardens, the Morganvilles, and the Outcast Seasons. She wrote nice things in each of them, for me!

Yay! Rachel Caine Thinks I'm Awesome!

Yay! Rachel Caine Thinks I'm Awesome!

We were charmed as well that an older gentleman ahead of us in the line was attending the reading on behalf of his college-age daughter, who he said was a big fan of Rachel’s work and who was very put out that she was in New York and missing her first reading in the Pacific Northwest ever. He got Jenny to take his picture with Rachel to send to his daughter, which was awesome.

And Rachel told some awesome little anecdotes, including how that excellent userinfojimbutcher quote on the first Weather Warden book came from Jim not even realizing that the book was hers–and they’d known each other already for quite some time, he just hadn’t realized that particular pen name was her! Lulz.

She gave out shiny things to all the people in the line, and there were apparently shinier things she was going to give to anybody who’d shown up with the whole Morganville series. I didn’t see what shiny swag that involved, since I’m behind on buying those! But what she gave out was pretty shiny, a big bookmark that changes images when you change what angle you hold it, and an Official Morganville Resident ID Card.

Shiny Morganville Swag

Shiny Morganville Swag

All in all it was a lovely little way to blow an hour. We left quickly, because the author herself had to get back to her hotel room–she has a book due tomorrow, the next MV installment, and she had 10K to go! She’s been jamming in all of the writing on this thing on the last several stops on her tour. I gotta say, for a woman on a reading tour and working in crunch mode on her next manuscript, she was looking pretty authorial, too.

Authorial Author is Authorial

Authorial Author is Authorial

Props as always to Third Place for their lovely little author events. I’ll have to scamper back down there on Tuesday as well for userinfocmpriest!

Books

Fictionwise ain’t quite dead to me yet

It seems Fictionwise is still capable of grabbing my attention, even if a lot of their inventory vanished once the agency model of ebook pricing took effect this past April. This weekend, though, they’re having a big ol’ 50 percent off sale, in effect through Sunday. (Use the coupon ‘spooky2010′.)

Turns out several of the titles on my ebook wishlist were still in their database, so I’ve nabbed ’em. To wit:

  • A Far and Deadly Cry, by Teri Holbrook. Mystery, re-buy to replace previously owned print copy.
  • Recursion, by Tony Ballantyne
  • Measuring the World, by Daniel Kehlmann. General fiction, was recommended by userinfojanne.
  • Blue Moon, by Cindy Lynn Speer. Ebook re-buy of a print copy I already own, since the print copy is large and unwieldy and I can read the ebook better.
  • Morevi: The Chronicles of Rafe and Askana, by Tee Morris & Lisa Lee. Another ebook re-buy of a print copy I still own, again because large and unwieldy print book I don’t want to carry around.
  • Blood Engines, by T.A. Pratt. Actual purchase of a free PDF I’d gotten before from when Tor.com came online; decided to go ahead and buy this copy since the PDF is 5 MB in size.
  • Mob Rules, by Cameron Haley. Urban fantasy, a recent release from Luna.
  • The Mysteries, by Lisa Tuttle. Fantasy. Picked it up due to a review by Jo Walton on Tor.com.
  • Spellbent, by Lucy A. Snyder. Urban fantasy. Picked up because of her participation in the CoyoteCon panels run by Drollerie Press earlier this year!
  • Total Oblivion, More or Less: A Novel, by Alan DeNiro. This one got a good amount of buzz a while back so I’m finally checking it out.
  • The Tomb of Zeus, by Barbara Cleverly. Re-buy of a book I’d previously owned. Mystery.
  • Deadly Slipper, by Michelle Wan. Mystery.
  • Black and White, by Jackie Kessler and Caitlin Kittredge. Because SUPERHEROES, and because I’ve been meaning to read this one for a while now!

And meanwhile, because it was Absolutely Necessary, I picked up userinfojimbutcher‘s shiny new Dresden Files anthology, Side Jobs, from Barnes and Noble! I bought it in both ebook and hardback, actually–ebook for me, and hardback to give as a present to userinfokathrynt, who will need it to occupy herself before her baby boy makes his arrival in the world Any Day Now, and hopefully as she’s resting after as well. So I get to count that one twice! 😀

And OH OH OH I must also add this, since it showed up in my mailbox today: Writing Out the Notes, the new book by Bob Hallett, is another acquisition! That would be the Bob Hallett of my very own beloved Great Big Sea, who’s written himself a combination memoir and musical portrait of St. John’s. I’m quite looking forward to reading it, as Mr. Hallett’s always been the most thoughtful and introspective of the B’ys, based on what they’ve all posted in their various posts on their site.

Grand total for the year: 334!

Books

The only acceptable use for DRM

I’d been aware for some time that a lot of libraries had embraced the ability to check out ebooks, but not until this weekend did I get around to actually trying it. I was quite pleased to discover that both of our local libraries, the Seattle Public Library and the King County Library System, provide the ability to do electronic checkouts.

Since KCLS is the one I have a card with, I gave that a shot over the weekend and succeeded in checking out both Margaret Atwood’s The Year of the Flood and Justin Cronin’s The Passage. I selected both of these novels because they were specifically available in Adobe Digital Editions ePUB format, and therefore were friendly to my nook.

The process of getting the books onto my nook was less friendly than it should have been, and pretty much went like this:

  1. Check out the book from the library web site and download a small file.
  2. Open up Adobe Digital Editions and then actually launch that small file so ADE could see it. If I tried to doubleclick the file without launching ADE first, then I got an error message that claimed ADE wanted an update it didn’t actually need. The file then opened up the actual ebook so ADE could see it, complete with the timestamp for how many days I was allowed to keep it.
  3. Close ADE and then plug my nook into my Mac via USB, then re-launch ADE so it can see the nook. (This is because I’ve had trouble getting ADE to recognize the nook’s been plugged in if I launch it first. In retrospect I could have saved this step by just plugging in the nook first thing and then launching ADE and keeping it open, but I didn’t think of that at the time.)
  4. Copy the book onto my nook.
  5. Profit Reading!

I’ve been working on reading the Atwood and it looks just lovely on the nook, just like all the other ebooks I’ve read. And I honestly am fine with the DRM in this case, since if you’re going to do electronic library checkout, there needs to be some way of keeping track of how long the library patron is allowed to keep the content. I have no problems whatsoever with DRM in this case telling me “HEY YOU HAVE 18 DAYS LEFT ON THIS KTHX” and then making the book magically go away if I run out of time.

There are still issues here of device compatibility, though. I cannot check out ebooks to my iPhone just because Adobe Digital Editions does not like the iPhone; as I understand it, it’s a matter of ADE being a Flash app and iOS doesn’t do Flash. Or something to that effect. I can however check out to the computer, and from there, as described above, I can copy down to the nook. So that’s all fine.

Less fine is the question of file format. ADE does PDFs as well as ePUBs, and while the nook in theory talks PDF, in actual practice so far PDFs I’ve looked at on my nook come across sloppily formatted. They’re still readable, but it’s a clumsy reading experience and just not as pleasant as reading an ePUB, or a PDF on a device that’s capable of showing it to me as it was actually formatted. This is the nook’s fault, though, not ADE’s. (I suspect that Kindle owners would have a better time with an ADE PDF but I have no firsthand experience with that.)

Anyway, though, once I got the books checked out, that was awesome and I plan to make use of this ability more in the future. I expect it will help a great deal in whittling down my Enormous Reading List of Enormousness.

As a general FYI to Seattle-area folks, here are the pertinent links if you’d like to try out this shiny ebook checkout thing for yourselves:

You do of course need a library card for either system, but hey, library cards are Awesome Things and should be had regardless. 🙂 Enjoy!