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Book Log

2011 Book Log #48: Trash Course, by Penny Drake

Trash Course

My rating: 3 of 5 stars

I have to admit, I liked the idea of this one–in no small part because the house wherein the mystery is set, filled wall to wall with the hoarded items of many years, rang true for me. I’ve known houses like that. Fortunately none that ever had anything like the plot of this book happen in them, but nonetheless, houses that were definitely the home of hoarders.

And as for the mystery itself, I have to admit as well that I’m writing this review many months after having read the book. But that said? I’m remembering it kindly. Our heroine Terry is a private investigator, and I specifically liked the ethos of the agency she’s working for, helping women that need it. This plot in particular, which wound up having international ramifications, struck me as a bit convoluted and oddly juxtaposed against the setting of a hoarder’s house. But not overly so, and on the whole I did enjoy reading this one. It’s good for a light mystery read. Three stars.

Books

Resuming long overdue book review posts

Anybody miss my book review posts? I’ve certainly missed doing them, and I’m severely behind on ’em. I’ve been so busy over the last many months that it’s been impossible for me to review books in a timely fashion, I’m afraid. I have been regularly rating them on Goodreads, but that’s just not the same, I think. Apologies for my chronic tardiness on this, especially to my fellow authors to whom I promised book reviews a LONG time ago.

So this is your all’s notice that I’m going to try to get a bit more caught up. I have overdue reviews from both 2011 AND 2012, so don’t be confused if you see Book Log posts showing up for both years. I’m going to alternate between them to try to close the gaps!

I’ll be picking up again with reviews from June of 2011. Next up: Trash Course, a mystery from Carina Press!

Books

A bilingual book roundup post!

I just made the delightful discovery that several of the French SF/F books I wanted to get are in fact available for the Nook–so I indulged myself and grabbed them! They’re ones that I THINK are all available from the same publisher, which might explain why I found them on bn.com. The publisher in question is Alire–who stand out for me with their covers because of a distinctive way of showing the author’s last name in a vertical block of white text on black. So here are the books of theirs I grabbed! Most of these are titles I grabbed off the lists of recent Aurora Award winners and/or nominees, so they seemed like excellent examples of Francophone SF/F authors to check out. And Esther Rochon I grabbed because of her being recommended by userinfocow!

  • La saga d’Illyge, by Sylvie Bérard
  • La Tueuse de dragons, by Héloïse Côté (also because dragons!)
  • Lame (Les Chroniques infernales #1), by Esther Rochon (important note: ‘Lame’ here actually means ‘blade’, NOT the same word as in English)
  • RESET – Le Voile de lumière, by Joël Champetier
  • Montréel, by Éric Gauthier

So yeah, those ought to keep me occupied for some time!

Meanwhile, I had Dara pick this up for me from Amazon, in print:

  • Traditional Songs from Quebec, for English-Speakers, by Josie Mendelsohn. Grabbed this because it came highly recommended by Dejah Leger and the others in the local Quebec music crowd, and to further my general immersion in the genre! VERY much looking forward to diving into this.

And I grabbed this in print because I’ve needed to grab a copy for a while, and because of the general awesomeness of Smart Bitches Trashy Books:

  • Everything I Know about Love I Learned from Romance Novels, by Sarah Wendell. This is the second book from the SB’s, and should be quite fun. As I understand it, this’ll be a strong callback to the recurring SB-TB site feature of romance-based advice posts

And last but not least, from Carina Press on general grounds of their awesomeness AND because they sent me a coupon:

  • The Superheroes Union: Dynama, by Ruth Diaz. Grabbed because 1) superheros! and 2) it’s an F/F romance! And I am all over supporting Carina publishing F/F titles!
  • Ten Ruby Trick and The Pirate’s Lady, by Julia Knight. Because PIRATES. Yarr!

This brings me to 108 for the year!

Books

And now some really awesome things on a book roundup type post

This is a book roundup post made entirely of awesomeness, since it features four of my favorite authors!

Picked up in print:

  • Seawitch, by userinfokatatomic (Kat Richardson). Book Seven of the Greywalker books, which I’m quite looking forward to reading! Also bought in ebook because Kat is indeed at the top of my buying list and is Just. That. Awesome.
  • Two Weeks’ Notice, by userinforachelcaine. Book Two of her Revivalists series, which I am also quite looking forward to!

And, picked up electronically:

  • Seawitch, as previously mentioned!
  • Sentinels: Tiger Bound, by Doranna Durgin. Paranormal romance, the latest in her ongoing Sentinels series, which I’ve posted about before. I leapt all over this one since it features Maks, a Sentinel who transforms into a Siberian tiger, and I was quite partial to him with his brief appearances in earlier books since he’s very much the taciturn and earnest type that pushes my buttons in novels. I’ve already read this one, too, and it was great fun.
  • Libriomancer, by userinfojimhines (Jim C. Hines). HUGELY looking forward to reading this one–this is the first of Jim’s new series, about a guy who’s gifted in book-related magic! This is possibly THE best way to design a magic system for Relevance to My Interests EVER. Except maybe if you make a magic system around playing the bouzouki. 😀

98 for the year! And counting Seawitch twice since I DID buy it both formats!

Books

Home safe book roundup post!

After a VERY long trip all the way across North America, userinfosolarbird and I are back at the Murkworks again following the conclusion of our musical vacation! I will be resuming the writeup posts of everything that went on, including linking up to both Dara’s and userinfoframlingem‘s pics as soon as there are links to be had.

But in the meantime, there were books AND CDs aplenty that were bought, and so they must be duly documented! So here we go, first with the books!

Picked up at a queer bookstore in Toronto:

  • Three, by Annemarie Monahan. This seems to be a “road not taken” kind of book, about three possible life paths for the same woman, questioning her sexuality. Possibly with some magic realism thrown in, I don’t know; the blurb suggests that these life paths are all about to collide, which suggests something magic-realism-y going on. Anyway, it sounded interesting, so I grabbed it!

Picked up in Quebec at the Archambault right by our hotel, which turned out to be an awesome store full of ALL THE THINGS I COULD EVER HOPE TO BUY, except maybe groceries and underwear. It’s probably a good thing for my pocketbook that I do not in fact live in Montreal:

  • Luna: La Cité Maudite, by Élodie Tirel. This is a YA fantasy novel which came recommended by the redoubtable userinfocow, on the grounds that it not only includes drow, it includes pretty much the entire R.A. Salvatore mythos, without even any of the serial numbers filed off. One presumes or at least hopes that there is some kind of licensing going on here, but really, one has no earthly idea! Grabbed it partly because it being YA means that hopefully the French will be easier for me to follow, and partly because the art on the cover is of this silver-haired elf girl riding a wolf, which TOTALLY made both me and Dara think “OH HEY! Clearbrook!”
  • La Rivière des Morts, by Esther Rochon. This is straight-up Lovecraftian fantasy, which is generally relevant to my interests, and also recommended by the aforementioned userinfocow. I had the pleasure of reading one of Rochon’s short stories while visiting said Cow, since she’d participated in a story exchange between the Anglophone magazine OnSpec and the Francophone SF zine Polaris, and I really liked the story of hers that got translated into English and which showed up in OnSpec. So I’m going to give this novel of hers a try when I’m feeling ambitious enough with the French.

Picked up while visiting userinfobrightbeak in Moncton:

  • The Tale of Don l’Orignal, by Antonine Maillet (translated). The blurb on this one describes it as a fantastic tale with callbacks to Acadian history, and the cover art was charming, so I thought I’d give it a go.

And, picked up at the Geo Center on Signal Hill in St. John’s:

  • Dictionary of Newfoundland and Labrador, by Ron Young. This appears to be a locally (well, local to St. John’s, that is) compendium of Newfoundland and Labrador dialect, which sounded like an awesome read–not to mention potential research material, given Christopher in Faerie Blood! So I snagged this with great enthusiasm.

Meanwhile, just to clear out some ebook purchases that need accounting for in the queue, all of which were nabbed from Barnes and Noble:

  • House of Doors, by Chaz Brenchley. Because userinfodesperance is awesome and really, I need to get going on reading all of his backlogged books I’ve been buying up! This one’s got ghosts. YAY!
  • A Raging Storm and A Brewing Storm, by Richard Castle. Because I still giggle like mad that stories by Richard Castle actually exist, for values of exist meaning “as the product of clever marketing and ghost writing”, and I’m doubly charmed that they’re extending this fun to include the Derrick Storm character.
  • Geekomancy, by Michael R. Underwood. Because this is an interesting experiment in ebook-first publishing, and because seriously, you guys, how could I not check out a book chock full of geeky references AND an entire magic system based on pop culture? It’s almost TOO easy a purchase!

93 so far for the year!

Books

One more quick book roundup post before I scamper off to Canada

Here are a few quick books I’ve picked up this past week!

  • San Diego 2014: The Last Stand of the California Browncoats, by Mira Grant. Because how could I NOT? I mean, DAMN. Newsflesh universe, Comic-Con, Browncoats, ZOMBIES. Read it on the way home from work today. SHINY.
  • The Chocolatier’s Wife, by Cindy Lynn Speer. I bought this when it came out via Drollerie, and I’m buying it again now that it’s been re-released by Dragonwell Publishing, because I liked this book that much and wanted to support the author by buying new copies! Bought the ebook AND print editions, so I’ll need to count this twice.
  • The Bad Beginning, by Lemony Snicket. The first book of A Series of Unfortunate Events, snatched up because it was being offered for the Nook for .99! So I figured what the hey.

84 for the year!

Books

Post-Westercon book roundup post

So there I was at Westercon yesterday, wandering through the dealers room like ya do, when I came across a table run by these folks! PNW-based organization of independent writers, banding together to establish quality standards for their work–which struck me as, of course, AWESOME. But just as importantly, OH LOOK BOOKS. So I stopped to say hi, indicate my sympathy by holding up my OWN big box of books I was hauling around with (because yeah, over a dozen copies of Faerie Blood is pretty much my card-carrying membership in the club of Great Sympathy for Independent Writers), and ask them to tell me about the books on their table. Which ultimately led me to getting:

  • Fugitives from Earth, by Brad Wheeler. SF/Space opera. Pitched to me as containing political and industrial intrigue, OHNOEZ!
  • Faces in the Water, by Tonya Macalino. Fantasy/paranormal. An artist is trapped in the flooded ruins of Venice under quarantine, only to discover that legends are coming to life in the city.

(Big props to the NIWA folks for being very personable and signing both the books for me, and to Tonya in particular for telling me something interesting about most of the books on the table! Also, big giggles for NIWA’s little questionnaire card asking how many books you buy in a year. I noted that “all of them” was not an option on this card, so had to settle for >10!)

And I also got from the Book Universe folks, because really I can’t go to a PNW con without getting SOMETHING from them:

  • Whedonistas!, edited by Lynne Thomas and Deborah Stanish, by the same fine team that brought us Chicks Dig Time Lords. I’ve been meaning to get this for ages.
  • The Tempering of Men, by Sarah Monette and Elizabeth Bear. Because even if I haven’t been reading this series yet, Dara HAS, and she totally wanted this.

Meanwhile, I finally ordered a copy of this from Third Place Books, which I’ve also been meaning to do for ages:

  • The Last Hot Time, by John M. Ford. Previously read as a library book, deeply appreciated as an early urban fantasy novel and a pretty excellent portrayal of elves.

80 for the year!