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Angela Korra'ti

Trilingual Hobbit Reread

Tri-lingual Hobbit re-read: Chapter 7 (third post)

Nothing quite like two viewings of the brand new Hobbit movie to get me in the mood to keep up with the Tri-lingual Re-read! Though I gotta say, people, it’s going to be difficult swinging back into Tolkien’s descriptions of the various dwarves, now that I’ve seen the movie–twice now–and have completely fallen in love with the parody Thorin Dreamboatshield: An Unexpected Hotness of Dwarves.

Because, seriously, say what you will about Jackson, love him or hate him, laud or decry his filming in 48 frames per second… the achievement for me in the new movie? Making me swoon for dwarves.

And on that merry note, let’s get back into Chapter 7, shall we? We left off with Bilbo and the dwarves taking it easy at the House of Beorn!

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Carina Press, Other People's Books

And now, a Carina Press Christmas Eve ebook roundup!

Jumping the gun a bit with starting to post these ebook purchase roundup posts on this blog rather than annathepiper.org, but I figure what the hey, it’s Christmas Eve and I’ve just picked up a bunch of ebooks by fellow Carina Press authors! Here you go, folks:

  • An Infamous Marriage, by Susanna Fraser. Historical romance. Grabbed because I’ve enjoyed her previous two historical romances immensely.
  • Ruined by Rumor, by Alyssa Everett. Also historical romance. Grabbed this one because a) I actually quite like that for once the couple depicted on the cover is fully clothed (which is often significantly sexier to me than a half-naked couple because I like things that are left to my imagination), and b) this book’s hero, described in the blurb as “responsible” and “tongue-tied”, sounds like a refreshing switch from the rakes that usually populate Romancelandia.
  • All For You, by Dana Marie Bell. Paranormal romance. Boy Meets Girl, Boy Protects Girl Because Boy is Sekritly an Angel, OHNOEZ Girl is Being Stalked by Something Nasty, Will Boy Reveal Himself and Take Out the Nasty Thing? Okay yeah I don’t normally read angel-based romances, but I liked the cover on this one (again, I’m drawn to covers that don’t make a big point of showing me Shirtless Sexy Guys; this one’s got more emphasis on the hero’s hair and that IS one of my swoon points), and the concept sounded fun. So I’m checking it out.
  • Cruel Numbers, by Christopher Beats. Steampunk mystery novella. Buying this one because a) mystery, b) doing my bit to support the lesser-emphasized genres on the Carina site, and c) even though steampunk per se is not my thing, the blurb sounded interesting.
  • Dangerous Race, by Dee J. Adams. Romantic suspense. Racing is generally not my thing at all, but hey, this book is free for TODAY ONLY so I figured what the hey, I’d give it a shot. The heroine’s a race car driver, there’s sabotage going on, OHNOEZ!
  • Compromising the Marquess, by Wendy Soliman. Yet more historical romance. This one’s got a girl pretending to be a boy gathering stories for a scandal sheet, who finds that the local marquess may be involved with treasonous activities, except he’s really a spy! And they have to team up to not only counteract her own rumors, but to find the actual bad guys! Might be fun. Giving it a shot.

And one more that isn’t actually out yet, but which I’m grabbing because it’s SF, and again, this is me trying to encourage the sales of SF/F on the Carina site:

  • Caught in Amber, by Cathy Pegau. The heroine is a recovering junkie with a prior history with a drug called amber, and she’s got a chip in her neck that’s supposed to control her cravings for said drug. But she’s handed an opportunity to win her freedom from parole and the chip and the drug–if she helps an agent whose sister has been taken in by her own former lover, the top drug lord of the mining colony. So yeah, sounds pretty gritty and potentially interesting, and I wanted to go ahead and snag this even though it doesn’t come out for another couple of weeks!

This should bring me up to 146 for the year. Previous book roundup posts are over on my other blog.

Book Log

2012 Book Log #15: Cape Storm, by Rachel Caine

Cape Storm (Weather Warden, #8)

My rating: 3 of 5 stars

The second to last Weather Warden novel was one that it took me a bit to get to, on a couple of grounds. One, that one of the plot threads in it sounded like something we’d already seen happen earlier in the series. And two, that I’d started reaching a point of apocalypse fatigue with these books–we’d already had so many instances of the Wardens and the Djinn facing the Imminent! Destruction! Of! The! World! that reading another round of it just seemed like, well, work.

This is not to say that Caine’s writing has suffered, since as always, her pacing is crisp and tight. And once I got into this story, I did actually find it quite readable. But that said, the issue of this story covering several themes that have already appeared earlier in the series did remain–the antagonism between the Wardens and the Djinn, the rage of Mother Earth against humanity, the angst surrounding Jo marrying David, the angst surrounding the unresolved feelings Lewis has for Jo. And to top it off, we also have angst about Oh No! Jo has a Demon Mark and it might turn her EVIL!

All of these things were certainly engagingly and compellingly handled, but the sheer fact that we’ve seen them before takes a bit of the urgency away. Which is a shame, because if you’ve stuck with the series this far, it is still definitely worth continuing so you make it to the final book and get that resolution. But it would have been cooler to not retread ground we’ve been over before. Three stars.

Site Updates

Impending site updates

Hi all,

Please be advised that as of January 1st, the primary domain for accessing my website is going to be flipped around from angelakorrati.com to angelahighland.com, to start laying the groundwork for my Carina Press release in April!

angelakorrati.com will also continue to work, but it’ll become a redirect to angelahighland.com. In other words, the exact opposite of how these domains work now–right now angelakorrati.com is the canonical URL, and angelahighland.com is the redirect.

On a related note, please also be advised that starting in 2013, quite a bit of content that I normally post to my annathepiper.org blog is going to start showing up here. This is because I’d like to emphasize this site, and demonstrate to visitors that I AM an active poster. If you’re following me via Livejournal or Dreamwidth, there will be no change in those mirror versions of my posts–they’ll still show up on those places the same way they are now. This’ll mostly just affect people who visit my WordPress blogs directly.

Any questions, do please let me know!

Book Log

2012 Book Log #14: Downpour, by Kat Richardson

Downpour: A Greywalker Novel

My rating: 5 of 5 stars

Oh, I do love me some Greywalker. I DO. And I happily devoured Downpour, the sixth in the ongoing Kat Richardson series.

Given that this is an urban fantasy series, by now we’re well and thoroughly into the character progression–and into the inevitable levelling up of Harper’s Greywalker powers. At least a few other series I’ve stuck with this far have almost exhausted me, between a never-ending sense of “shit, does nothing good ever happen to these people?!” and the aforementioned levelling-up often not feeling like it’s justified at all. Happily, Kat Richardson never has this problem for me. Harper’s gaining power, sure. But so far it’s felt real, and logical, for her to do so. It’s changing her as a person, and she knows it, and she’s reacting to this in real and logical ways as well.

It’s awesome as well to see her continue to try to actually solve cases, and continue to try to operate at a level that isn’t necessarily ZOMG THE WORLD IS GOING TO EXPLODE. Such as in this installment, how she’s gone out on the Olympic Peninsula to do some investigating–and oh look! Ghostly car wreck victim! That investigation pulls her off on a side quest, only, of course Investigation A and Investigation B eventually tie together. Like ya do, in any urban fantasy novel.

And oh, I did like this story. Since I’ve been out on the Olympic Peninsula a time or two, it was great to see that area of the state getting some on-camera love. And I liked a LOT that we got elements of the fantastic that were rooted more in the Native American myths of the region than in more heavily used staples of urban fantasy–and I say that as somebody who loves her some elves.

And Quinn! Quinn! I love, love, love that there is an ongoing relationship here, and that we’re continuing to get more bits from his point of view as he’s trying to keep up in his own non-powered way with Harper’s changing status. Just because he loves her and because he’s that damned awesome.

Really, over all, this was great fun and I didn’t have a single quibble with it in the slightest. But for the love of all gods, don’t start here if you want to dive into the Greywalker books. Do know, though, that if you get through the first couple, you’ll have this one to look forward to. Five stars!

Movies

The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey review post!

My household, along with , just got back from seeing The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey!

I’ve posted before about I’ve still got the original copy of The Hobbit that I read in sixth grade–complete with my name written in pencil on the unicorn nameplate sticker on the inside cover. The eleven-year-old me who read that book is absolutely delighted by the movie we just saw. 43-year-old me is somewhat more reserved in her reaction; there are parts of the film that I absolutely loved, and there are other parts that I feel could have benefited a lot from tighter editing.

And make no mistake–this is very much Peter Jackson’s vision of Middle-Earth in play here. If you like Peter Jackson’s Middle-Earth, you’ll probably enjoy yourself. If you’re not a fan of the previous movies, you probably won’t.

Me? I am a longstanding devotee of the books. But I’m also a devotee of the movies. And while I saw some flaws in this one… yeah, I enjoyed myself immensely. And I’ll be going back for more. In no small part because we saw the 24fps, non-3D version tonight–on the grounds that we very specifically wanted to see that version first, in case the 48fps wound up interfering with the viewing of the actual movie. (I’ve had prior movies released in 3D be actively distracting to me in that format–I’m looking at you, Thor–and have enjoyed them much more upon viewing them in 2D.

But I AM totally curious about the 48fps version and I DO want to see it. Now that I’ve gotten the viewing of the standard version out of the way and am able to react to the plot and characterization first, that’ll free me up to better react to the technology later!

And with that, let’s get down to spoilery goodness behind the fold. 😀

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Book Log

2012 Book Log #13: Follow My Lead, by Kate Noble

Follow My Lead

My rating: 3 of 5 stars

Follow My Lead didn’t grab me quite as much as previous Kate Noble outings–but that isn’t to say I disliked this book. Because I didn’t! I still found this one an enjoyable read even though it didn’t click with me quite as much as the previous installments of the Blue Raven series.

This time around our principals are Jason Cummings, the Duke of Rayne, and the scholar Winnifred Crane. I’m always a sucker for stories in which the heroine’s a scholar of any kind, and given that this whole plot revolves around her wanting to go to Europe to do actual on-camera research, that’s bonus. But the circumstances that push Jason into being Winn’s escort made it a bit hard for me to suspend my disbelief; there were quite a few convolutions that had to happen before he could be thrown into her company.

On the other hand, though, I’m sure that’s rather par for the course for this kind of a plot, so I was willing to hand-wave that and get on with the main story. Which is to say, Jason and Winnifred having to scamper across Europe without access to much in the way of money–especially vexing for Jason, accustomed as he is to wealth–and with a rival determined to marry Winn hot on their trail. It is amusing to see the two brainstorm their way through getting money, and since Winnifred does actually get to exhibit some scholarly train of thought on camera, it’s fun to see Jason trying to keep up with her.

And of course there’s the obligatory Pretending to Have to Be Married scenario, otherwise they’d scandalize everybody they meet. And of course, since they’re having to pretend to be married, they naturally have to figure out how to react to one another in private as well. Seeing them work their way up through that is charming, and it’s in those stretches of the story that Ms. Noble’s fun touch with character chemistry comes through. All in all, three stars.