Browsing Category

Books

Books

How much does my To Read list weigh?

I was saying something on the MurkMUSH about how I had 690 things on my To Read list, like I do, and to my amusement said that I’d have to look out–or else my To Read list was going to eventually weigh more than I do. I told him I thought it probably already did, given that physical books are quite heavy!

Therefore, being geeks and interested in actually finding these things out, we determined that clearly, I’d have to work this through. Therefore I present for you the following amusing facts about my To Read list!

I have a total of 689 titles on the list, as demonstrated on my To Read list on Goodreads. (Note that you don’t have to have a Goodreads account to see user data there, so anybody can look at my list!)

Of these, here’s the count of books I actually own out of this list:

271 ebooks. For purposes of this exercise, I will take their contribution to the tally as the combined weights of my nook (roughly 12 ounces although let’s call it 13 because it’s in its case) and my iPhone (roughly 5 ounces, in its case). This makes for 18 ounces, or about 1.1 pounds.

12 hardcovers. Taking Robin McKinley’s Dragonhaven as a representative sample, Amazon lists its shipping weight as 1.2 pounds. Times 12, that’s 14.4 pounds.

114 mass market paperbacks. Taking ‘s An Artificial Night as my sample, I get an Amazon shipping weight of 6.4 ounces. Working that out, it comes out to about 45.6 pounds.

65 trade paperbacks of various sizes. This time I shall use the anthology Fast Ships, Black Sails, with an Amazon shipping weight of 11.2 ounces. This works out to about 45.5 pounds.

This gives me a subtotal of 106.6 pounds.

But wait, the math is not yet done! The numbers I’ve quoted above are only for the books on my To Read list that I do in fact actually own. 227 titles are ones I do not actually possess yet. Here, though, we get into the realm of the theoretical. On one hand, we have the scenario of “I buy all of these remaining titles electronically”, in which case my tally above remains constant. However, if I apply a little thought to this based on my likely near-future book buying habits, I’m going to roughly estimate that 70 percent of these will be purchased electronically. To make the numbers easy, let’s say 160 of these will be ebooks.

This leaves me with 67 titles that I would hypothetically buy in print. Of these, I’d say that at most 5 of them would be hardcovers, 20 of them would be trades, and the remaining 42 would be mass market. Therefore to my previous tally, I should add another 6 pounds for hardcovers, 14 for the trades, and 16.8 for the mass market books. That gives me another rough estimate of 36.8 pounds for the books I don’t own yet!

Which makes my grand total (drum roll, if you please): 143.4.

I therefore still outweigh my To Read list! But only by roughly 20 pounds! Anybody want to place bets on whether it’ll surpass me by the end of the year? ;>

Books

Book buying catchup

Purchased or acquired electronically:

  • Unlocked, a freebie anthology available over here
  • Enchanting the Lady, by Kathryne Kennedy. Freebie historical/paranormal romance from B&N.
  • Warrior, by Zoe Archer. Historical/paranormal romance, previously mentioned as the book with the cover hero who mugged Indiana Jones for his clothes. 😉
  • Scoundrel, also by Zoe Archer, book 2 of the same series as Warrior.

And this puts me at 318 for the year.

I must add that I blazed through Warrior last night, and yeah, it was about what I expected, which is to say, Big Silly Fun. I noted that Books 3 and 4 of the series are about to drop very soon; apparently Zoe Archer must have had them all ready when she got her publishing contract, or something. And I mention this mostly because Book 4 apparently is going to have a black hero who is a scientific and magical genius. This is, in a word, Cool. I really rather like its cover, as much as I liked the ones for Warrior and Scoundrel. For a romance novel, that’s an almost SFnal cover. 🙂

Books

Zoe Archer, you have my Attention

So the fine ladies over at Smart Bitches have been doing a book club thing lately, and their latest title is Scoundrel, by Zoe Archer. They posted about it this morning, and as soon as I saw the blurb and the cover, I knew I was going to have to read it. To wit:

Scoundrel (The Blades of The Rose, #2)

And okay, yeah, the fact that this guy is dressed like he mugged Malcolm Reynolds or perhaps Brendan Fraser’s character from The Mummy is going a long way to making him Relevant to My Interests, but really? More importantly? The simple fact that this dude is in fact DRESSED makes him infinitely sexier to me than all of the over-muscled tattooed guys wielding oversized swords that seem to be all over paranormal romance covers these days.

Plus, the plot sounds like great fun. As y’all know I’m in the middle of a massive Amelia Peabody re-read, and this fits in beautifully with that, with the promise of Historical And Also Paranormal Awesome. I have already yoinked a sample of this book down onto the Nookronomicon, just to see if the writing does in fact deliver on the promise of Awesome.

And I’m also swinging back to check out Book 1, whose cover hero apparently mugged Indiana Jones. ;>

Books

Amelia Peabody audiobooks: Relevant to My Interests

I shall now send out props to userinfommegaera as well as userinfoirysangel, both of whom highly recommended the audiobook editions of the Amelia Peabody novels!

Having now listened to the audio of Book 1, I can say, oh my yes, Ms. Barbara Rosenblat does a delightful job. Her voice and accent are perfect for Amelia, very brisk and efficient, yet with a touch of refinement and humor; moreover, she’s pretty decent at varying her reading to account for other character voices. She was excellent at differentiating her Amelia Voice from her Evelyn Voice, and she wasn’t bad either with most of the male voices. It helped a lot as well that she was pretty good with accents, too, which was very helpful for French and Italian side characters in the story. I liked her rendition of Walter’s voice, which sounded suitably youthful yet still male, and her voice for Lucas had this foppish sort of almost-lisp to it that added a whole new dimension to that character for me.

About the only voice of hers at all that I took any issue with was Emerson’s–but on the other hand, given that Elizabeth Peters describes Emerson’s voice as a resounding bass, there’s only so much a woman reading the story is going to be able to do in order to approximate him. She did do a rather neat thing with Emerson’s lines, though: delivering them in a very gruff and raspy sort of tone which struck me as odd at first yet quickly grew on me. It might not necessarily be swoonable by modern standards per se, but it was absolutely in character for Emerson, so I have to give Ms. Rosenblat huge props for that.

It’s probably a lovely measure of how well I enjoyed her narration of the story that I plowed through it pretty much as non-stop as possible, on the way to work, through most of my work day that particular day, and on my way home as well. Highly, highly recommended for Amelia Peabody fans, and I’ll definitely be getting more of these. I can’t wait to hear how she reads for Ramses!

Final note: I bought the audiobook off of iTunes, and did notice multiple audiobook editions of several of the books in the series, done by different narrators. Barbara Rosenblat was the one I listened to, so doublecheck for her name if you go looking to buy one of these audiobooks yourself!

Books

More books!

Picked up in electronic form:

  • Fires of Nuala, by userinfoalfreda89 (Katharine Eliska Kimbriel), released at Book View Cafe. This is one of her old SF novels.
  • Naked Heat, by Richard Castle (hee hee hee). This is the second of the in-universe mystery novels tying in with the Castle TV show.
  • Hidden Steel, by Doranna Durgin. This is yet another of Doranna Durgin’s backlist, which she’s been releasing on her own recognizance in ebook form, and it’s a standalone suspense novel.

I don’t often pre-order things, but I’ve preordered The Aether Age: Helios because 1) it sounds awesome, 2) it’s edited by Brandon Bell, a fellow member of the Outer Alliance, and 3) its publisher, Hadley Rille, is aiming for the 5K mark on books sold. They’ll be handing out a Kindle 3G in a random drawing in January, so I figured what the hell, I’d sign up for the contest. 🙂 So to note:

And last but oh my so very much not least, picked up in print because AWESOME:

Dreadnought, by userinfocmpriest (Cherie Priest), the second sequel of sorts to the almighty Boneshaker. (The first was Clementine, in limited release by Subterranean Press; Dreadnought is released by Tor.)

314 for the year!

Books

This weekend’s book report

From Carina Press:

  • The Spurned Viscountess, by Shelley Munro. Gothic/historical romance. This one’s involving a woman who’s a healer and a psychic and who is roped into the obligatory marriage with the handsome viscount who only realizes after they’re married that hey, he really rather likes her. Also, there are the obligatory Mysterious Accidents! This should be fun.
  • Presumed Dead, by Shirley Wells. Mystery. This one caught my eye mostly because the cover is striking, and I mean striking, what with the woman’s red dress standing out vividly against the black-and-white background. Was also intrigued by the plot blurb, involving the obligatory down-on-his-luck, disgraced cop who’s asked to privately investigate a disappearance.

And, moving into the print realm, I was amused as all get-out when someone at work left a big ol’ pile of romance novels on the island in the kitchen. Naturally, I scarfed several. These were the ones that looked interesting enough to scarf:

  • The Stranger and I, by Carol Ericson. Harlequin Intrigue. Heroine witnesses a murder, obligatory Sekrit Agent Dude must protect her.
  • Three titles out of what seems to be a Silhouette Nocturne series: Raintree: Sanctuary, by Beverly Barton; Raintree: Inferno, by Linda Howard; and Raintree: Haunted, by Linda Winstead Jones. These are paranormal romances, featuring what appear to be a clan of people with various paranormal gifts.
  • And, another Harlequin Intrigue, Twin Targets by Jessica Andersen. Grabbed this one because I’ve actually already read several of her Intrigues as well as her fun ongoing Nightkeepers paranormal romance series. This is another “agent must protect beautiful woman who has the key to solving his case” type stories. Yes folks, I read a lot of those.

And last but most definitely not least, just because I’ve been meaning to get these anyway–in hardback, even, picked up from Third Place Books:

  • Labyrinth, by userinfokatatomic (Kat Richardson). The fifth book in her Greywalker series.
  • Shades of Milk and Honey, by Mary Robinette Kowal. Gotten because everybody who’s anybody gushed over this book over the spring and summer, and because the whole concept of “if Jane Austen had written about a world that involves magic, what would that have been like?” sounds right up my alley.

This brings me up to 309 for the year! Soon to be purchased: the second Richard Castle novel as soon as it drops in ebook, the latest Tanya Huff Valor novel, and another of Doranna Durgin’s backlist as soon as that one shows up on the nook store.

Books

Nook not full yet, time for MORE EBOOKS

Just because I could, here are the latest ebooks I’ve picked up!

From Barnes and Noble:

  • A Feral Darkness, by Doranna Durgin. Yes, the same book I read earlier this year! She’s finally released it in ebook form in various places, so if you are interested in reading it and can’t find a print copy, now’s a good time. I got mine from B&N of course, but she’s selling it on Amazon and on Smashwords as well. DRM-free, even!
  • Also from B&N, Greywalker, Poltergeist, Underground, and Vanished, all by userinfokatatomic (Kat Richardson). This would be because I need to get caught up on her books and I bought the last couple in hardback, and I don’t want to carry them to work. Would also have gotten the new one, Labyrinth, except that one doesn’t seem to be on the B&N store yet. (Bah.)

And from Carina Press (the same folks who currently are inspiring me to edit the hell out of Lament of the Dove, yes):

  • The Sergeant’s Lady, by Susanna Fraser. Historical romance. Bought for the giggle factor of her web page, which was getting attention on Twitter when her book came out, and also because she’s been quoted as saying she totally visualizes her hero as Nathan Fillion. Mmmmm, Nathan Fillion!
  • Rakes and Radishes, by Susanna Ives, another historical romance. Bought because the title amused me, as did the concept; the heroine trying to teach her handsome farmer neighbor how to be a rake. Snerk.
  • No One Lives Twice, by Julie Moffett. Comedic spy adventure/romance thingie, sounds like fun, and the heroine is a computer geek. Sign me up!
  • The Sevenfold Spell, by Tia Nevitt, whose book reviews I’ve been following for a while now. This is her first published work, a fantasy novella retelling the Sleeping Beauty story from the point of view of a side character. Not actually out until next week, but I went ahead and pre-bought it anyway.
  • Also bought as a pre-buy, Desperate Choices, by Kathy Ivan. Paranormal romantic suspense, with a psychic heroine who’s sought by her ex to help him find a missing boy.

And this, my children, brings me to an even 300 books acquired for the year!