tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-35129569761562057912024-03-14T03:24:53.070-07:00She Blinded me with Library Science!I'm going to be a Librarian. Sort of. Sometimes. Maybe.Katehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03737819171253983511noreply@blogger.comBlogger201125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3512956976156205791.post-8992013732378525362013-06-17T22:08:00.001-07:002013-06-17T22:14:37.865-07:00Ocean at the End of the Lane<div class="MsoNormal">
<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiX96PYFZieiv_7y2cOQa1D9WwFM5YbML1qJRztiSB0ANTGNafKPmSqe7Atiz6qubIL7YDBJ1s3qIWt8p-M6T8_DUHj01oaHIx1YmY5DSe3t8Zkj7-_2Edzm0M3YkUsmnPEnHB32eDFWUI/s1600/photo+(2).JPG" imageanchor="1" style="clear: left; float: left; margin-bottom: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" height="320" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiX96PYFZieiv_7y2cOQa1D9WwFM5YbML1qJRztiSB0ANTGNafKPmSqe7Atiz6qubIL7YDBJ1s3qIWt8p-M6T8_DUHj01oaHIx1YmY5DSe3t8Zkj7-_2Edzm0M3YkUsmnPEnHB32eDFWUI/s320/photo+(2).JPG" width="240" /></a><span style="color: #181818; font-family: Georgia, serif; font-size: x-small;"><span style="line-height: 14px;">This book arrived in the mail – I don’t know why, it’s not an ARC, not from Amazon or Chapters so I’m going to put it out there that the universe for whatever reason thought fondly of me and decided to cut me a break. </span></span><br />
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<span style="color: #181818; font-family: Georgia, serif; font-size: x-small;"><span style="line-height: 14px;">There are some books that are quietly humbling. They’re quiet, and they’re calm and they have a presence that’s almost other worldly. Ocean at the End of the Lane was one of them. It was truth and hope and the most touching sadness that was sweet in how it moved through you – as my grandpa used to say, I could feel it in my bones. </span></span><br />
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<span style="color: #181818; font-family: Georgia, serif; font-size: x-small;"><span style="line-height: 14px;">American Gods changed how I thought about books. To this day I haven’t written a review of it because I don’t know how to explain to people why it means so much to me. In Ocean at the End of the Lane Gaiman writes for hope, and that’s the reason I don’t want to tell you about how brilliant a writer he is, and how he weaves the story because, quite simply I loved it. I’m not going to tell you what it’s about, I’m not going to describe how amazingly wonderful it is, because the truth is you need to find that out for yourself. I will buy multiple copies, and I will give them to people for birthdays, weddings and just because it’s a Tuesday. </span></span><br />
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<span style="color: #181818; font-family: Georgia, serif; font-size: x-small;"><span style="line-height: 14px;">This book made me remember why I dream, and wish, and hope. It made me remember why it’s ok to be off-centre, not quite right and a little bit odd. It reminded me of when you’re a kid, sitting around a fire telling ghost stories that aren’t scary at all, but damn it you can’t sleep at night because you can’t help but to remember the what ifs.</span></span></div>
Katehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03737819171253983511noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3512956976156205791.post-53456995197162993152013-05-29T14:05:00.001-07:002013-05-29T14:05:32.874-07:00The Golem and the Jinni<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiT_10q6aaW2nfTgA6FyyhMZcB-mu_fuuSRXXC0XSZCIXwj8nYa2IHDzweMAVYL9B-97eF0dWkJCY5viY-xB5XYtVQ-dXbXCKpPLBavjRZwP1etATeOajHw3HMN3gK_iSR0k8-BM_VOLN8/s1600/15819028.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="clear: right; float: right; margin-bottom: 1em; margin-left: 1em;"><img border="0" height="320" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiT_10q6aaW2nfTgA6FyyhMZcB-mu_fuuSRXXC0XSZCIXwj8nYa2IHDzweMAVYL9B-97eF0dWkJCY5viY-xB5XYtVQ-dXbXCKpPLBavjRZwP1etATeOajHw3HMN3gK_iSR0k8-BM_VOLN8/s320/15819028.jpg" width="214" /></a>I’m a librarian – reading books is basically what I do for a living. Through my life there have been a handful of books that hit me – Colony of Unrequited Dreams, Anil’s Ghost and Fall on Your Knees are three that come to mind off the bat. The Golem and the Jinni is one of those books, and I’m not saying that lightly. I was pre-disposed to like it I think – I loved the idea of mysticism, my Mom immigrated to NYC post WW2 as a child so the idea of a book set among the kind of romance of immigration (admittedly 50 years earlier) was one I could get behind. I love Jewish Folklore – hell, I love any folklore. I love historical fiction. I’m also the first to admit that I love New York. I do. I grew up spending summers there and I remember the beauty, hope and life that to me that city means. So what I’m saying is my pre-disposition to like the book scared me. I really really wanted to love it and was worried I was setting the book up to not be able to meet expectations. In no way did this book not meet expectations.<br />
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One reviewer said the book humbled him – it humbled me too. Wecker’s debut (Guys, this is a debut novel. Seriously. When you read it you won’t believe it.) wove a story in the best possible tradition of storytelling. It’s magical realism at it’s absolute best. It’s heartbreaking, touching and quite possibly shows an almost staggeringly accurate ability to write characters that make you want to believe in fairy tales again. It’s about the struggle to fit in, to belong, to find place and meaning, to create a home, build a family, hope and future. Wecker’s ability to write meaningfully about feeling like you don’t know where your home is threw me – it wasn’t said but the longing felt by the characters of their memories was touching in its simple beauty.<br />
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On a more surface level I plowed through the book, but I wouldn’t cash in on it as an ‘easy fast’ read, I just couldn’t put it down. The pacing is on the slower side (this isn’t a complaint in the least, Wecker pulled it out beautifully) and to be honest I was sad to come to the end of the book. The mysticism of the book was beautifully real, not forced and the details were in the subtleties.<br />
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Basically I can’t wait to see what Wecker comes up with next.Katehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03737819171253983511noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3512956976156205791.post-76216768316796634242013-05-06T15:13:00.000-07:002013-05-29T15:15:51.848-07:00The Information: A History, a Theory, a Flood<br />
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I loved this book. I loved this book so damn much. So full
disclosure, I say in my reviews I’m a librarian. This is true. The more fun thing
is my degree is actually a Masters of Information. Yes. I am a Master of
Information. This is a thing. So I got this book because how could I not? So
yes I geeked out a million percent while reading this book, and my review is
100% biased in that this is a topic I love. <o:p></o:p></div>
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<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiPil9fnuoZaOeITKmYcY-iqmZmIgmMrMbnk5aulZlAb_-YlhQPB7sKLpmxyxcWFEsFiiETCSKQNLJUKXYYnD8fDFpWdyj0ZPlPD_04d1XXUhw90jyBktQr87BlEM2VfvDLOWieHPQ_HeY/s1600/8701960+(1).jpg" imageanchor="1" style="clear: right; float: right; margin-bottom: 1em; margin-left: 1em;"><img border="0" height="320" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiPil9fnuoZaOeITKmYcY-iqmZmIgmMrMbnk5aulZlAb_-YlhQPB7sKLpmxyxcWFEsFiiETCSKQNLJUKXYYnD8fDFpWdyj0ZPlPD_04d1XXUhw90jyBktQr87BlEM2VfvDLOWieHPQ_HeY/s320/8701960+(1).jpg" width="220" /></a>So. Things about this book. The title is exactly what the
book is about the history of information which is SO DAMN FASCINATING because
honestly guys, our ability to comprehend
is staggering. How we transmit, perceive
and underestimate information is fascinating. Seriously, it is and I don’t think
just to people who generally geek out over it. Think about it – what we’re
doing, understanding and thinking about not long ago would have been considered
actual miracles. We can find out anything, and not only can we, but we now
expect it to be easy. We can change, transmit, edit and argue over what
information is and how we understand it and those of us who know are scared
equally of the struggle to contain and provide access to it. <o:p></o:p></div>
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To be honest again I actually picked up this book back when
it was released in 2011 and I didn’t read it then because at the time I was
just finishing up my Masters and honestly couldn’t emotionally handle the idea
of reading anything else about it. But the thing is, I’m SO glad I found it and
read it. I don’t think it’s written in a
particularly high style, it was an easy-ish read and I sincerely think it’s
worth a grab for everyone. This is cool stuff guys. <o:p></o:p></div>
Katehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03737819171253983511noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3512956976156205791.post-18096424560621560802013-04-02T14:50:00.000-07:002013-05-29T14:50:27.365-07:00Ashes of Honour<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: left;">
I actually feel like I write terrible reviews of Seanan McGuire's work. I say this in the best possible way, but it's because I genuinely have loved everything of hers I've read so I feel like it's a sort of repetitive "Yup. You should go read the book."</div>
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<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhw6wBi6r_zAXD3a2cbJ3fd7qDjqb1E4mPNEGTQ-Fd0ue4_Cbmj5EQnzFD4QS5DgZ1mgy4K1UrsvhcvX6veMFFaAjLx481gRB3KliQeu9CnvHB6BfM2v22H9YrCl2sn-AE-0-jSP3nC36w/s1600/Ashes+of+Honour.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="clear: right; float: right; margin-bottom: 1em; margin-left: 1em;"><img border="0" height="320" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhw6wBi6r_zAXD3a2cbJ3fd7qDjqb1E4mPNEGTQ-Fd0ue4_Cbmj5EQnzFD4QS5DgZ1mgy4K1UrsvhcvX6veMFFaAjLx481gRB3KliQeu9CnvHB6BfM2v22H9YrCl2sn-AE-0-jSP3nC36w/s320/Ashes+of+Honour.jpg" width="198" /></a>So as I've said a million times, I love the October Daye series, and if somehow you aren't already reading it, you should go read it. So lets tackle this review from a different angle - why you should go read this series. First and foremost, because the series hasn't let me down yet - and I'm picky. I hate it when series start strong, and then just kind of taper off. I hate it because there's this obsessive compulsion in me to keep reading the stupid series because somehow I'm emotionally invested in these stupid characters who are making stupid decisions and doing stupid things and I'm annoyed but why can't I stop reading. We've all been there.<br />
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But McGuire, gloriously, doesn't make me feel that. Her characters are lovely and human even though none of them are actually human. They grow and change and are flawed and learn and are broken and Well. Damn. Done. Toby is everything you want out of a heroine, guys, I'm not gonna get into it, but I think we're all guessing who Quentin's parents are, Tybalt is everything that is amazing with everything and just go read this damn series.<br />
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She's also got at least 4 more books planned (for this series), which is basically amazing.Katehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03737819171253983511noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3512956976156205791.post-56994631539026021442013-03-15T14:58:00.000-07:002013-05-29T15:18:31.209-07:00The Good Man Jesus and the Scoundrel Christ <br />
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Well Played Pullman. I think we
can all agree that “His Dark Materials” was pretty fantastic. So I grabbed
this because a) I enjoyed that series and b) I genuinely like books that touch
on what life was like for Jesus – and I’m an Agnostic Jew (yes. We can do
that). The problem is, that while I’m
fully on team “Well Played Pullman” I fumble in that I didn't actually really
enjoy this book. I had trouble getting through it for absolutely no good
reason. It’s well written in an easy clearly laid out way. It’s not too long or
too short and it’s a clever idea. So
yes. “This is a story” as Pullman says, and Pullman is without a doubt a
masterful storyteller. I like the slant he took, I like the mischief, I like
how it held fairly true to the written gospels and I liked the Humanistic
aspect the story took.<o:p></o:p></div>
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But I didn’t love it. I’m not
quite sure why. <o:p></o:p></div>
Katehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03737819171253983511noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3512956976156205791.post-31290652735912239112013-03-12T16:35:00.000-07:002013-03-12T16:35:13.953-07:00Midnight Blue-Light Special Wait. Wait. Hold the phones. Two posts, one day? Not a YA book? I know guys, it's confusing but it's still UF so we're probably still ok. The weird thing is the majority books I read aren't actually YA/UF. I just don't review them because I'm boring or something.<br />
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So I love Seanan McGuire. This is not news, and not a secret, so by that logic this was a bit of a biased book choice on my part. I'm firmly on camp McGuire can do no wrong, and luckily this book didn't disappoint. So, here's the thing - I love her Rosemary and Rue series. Verging on slightly obsessive level of love. As in trying to figure out how I can get/beg/borrow/steal an ARC for Chimes at Midnight, but then is it awkward if I still buy a copy so it fits properly on my shelf? Because I'm weird like that.<br />
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<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiLjYg2zSj_5T-HNqXLpeDOmpo93pJ6btoJUlvP8lK41RvegpSsG2AvxHYpWuMGmqT6k-ffcaLSrMKmD95Pitkn75GVJlYWARjkzdqLkV0Z0oYED2OlcwYe6gphqZmsJ9qDT0OoVh8y2Sk/s1600/13501633.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="clear: left; float: left; margin-bottom: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" height="320" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiLjYg2zSj_5T-HNqXLpeDOmpo93pJ6btoJUlvP8lK41RvegpSsG2AvxHYpWuMGmqT6k-ffcaLSrMKmD95Pitkn75GVJlYWARjkzdqLkV0Z0oYED2OlcwYe6gphqZmsJ9qDT0OoVh8y2Sk/s320/13501633.jpg" width="198" /></a><i>Anyways</i>. The great thing about Midnight Blue-Light Special is that it's one of those rare books that outshines the <a href="http://vivalakt.blogspot.ca/2012/04/discount-armageddon.html">original</a>. Like I said in that review, I didn't love Discount Armageddon as much as I love her Rosemary and Rue series, but I thought it was a solid set up for the series. Turns out, I'm right. By I'm right, I mean McGuire is a fantastic writer, and I now have another series I love equally as much as Rosemary and Rue. Well Played Ms. McGuire. Well Played.<br />
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Basically Verity Price is a fantastic heroine - she's charming and funny and loves what she does even though she sometimes wishes she didn't have to do it. Her best friend is the most human not human that I've ever read. She's apparently a giant psychotic bug who looks human but is supposed to be terrifying but is just really really appealing. So Cryptozoology. As a rule, I have little patience for it. Yes, I love faeries, the supernatural and everything else of the like, but Cryptozoology <i>for some reason</i> has always set my back up. I don't know why, but you know what, it works. Possibly because of the Aeslin Mice. Hail. Hail indeed. But all the supporting cast - the other Cryptids are everything that goes bump in the night (yes, including the Boogyman).<br />
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Basically McGuire has the ability to world build in a way that makes it real - even when that reality is fantastically un-real. She's made reading about monsters fun since the first book of Rosemary and Rue, and for this series, actually made the monsters someone you'd want to have a coffee with.Katehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03737819171253983511noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3512956976156205791.post-61999277647366128092013-03-12T13:32:00.000-07:002013-03-12T13:32:42.364-07:00Between the Devil and the Deep Blue Sea<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
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I am confused by this book. I am less confused by this book after I did some research and found out that it's the first book of a series. Excellent.<br />
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So I was fooling around on twitter one day (as I am wont to do) and I saw that there was a giveaway from Razorbill - it's absolutely no secret I've been on a YA book kick for the past few months (can't help it, what's coming out is awesome) and they were doing a giveaway for some new titles. I did what I always do, googled for the plot, begged for the book, got nostalgic over a past job a Razorbill author and I shared, won the book and then got worried because I really really wanted to love the book, and that tends to end poorly for me.<br />
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It's also no secret I tend to buy books for their covers. I know, I know, but I do. I not only really dug the cover, but I loved the title. I'm Newfie enough it was one of the phrases I remember hearing from my Grandpa fairly constantly and quite simply, I really wanted to be charmed by this book.<br />
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Whelp (yes I went there) stars aligned and I was completely charmed by this book. Violet is charming, River is sufficiently dark and mysterious to make the teens and tweens smitten and even I half love him when I know I shouldn't. The character development is haunting - generally the novel is. I'm about to get really folky here guys - but the magic in this book is magical because it's not actual magic. It's the magic any of us raised by people who were raised with myth and legend can identify with - the local folk magic that's in what we wear, the shadows by our bed and the fact that we remember why you leave fairy bread out by the window. Tucholke manages to make the book creepy, disturbing and really you should probably read it with the lights on.<br />
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I'm not going to get overly into it because it doesn't come out till August, but it's well worth reminding yourself to pick up a copy.<br />
<br />Katehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03737819171253983511noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3512956976156205791.post-61656759261690372672013-03-08T14:14:00.000-08:002013-03-12T14:50:49.572-07:00March MadnessSo right off the bat, and to be perfectly clear Harper Collins Canada doesn't know who I am, there's pretty much no chance they'll even read this and I'm not writing it to give them publicity blah blah blah. I'm writing this for you - yes, you, one of the handful of people who's reading this, because for reasons beyond <b>Marketing</b> you should be paying attention to Harper Collins Canada's March Madness contest.<br />
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HCC March Madness is basically a basketball tournament with books - 64 books that face off until one book is named ultimate champion of <i style="font-weight: bold;">all of the books</i>. Book vs. Book. Literary smack down for the ages. HCC is clever - along with one book crowned winner, one person wins <i style="font-weight: bold;">all of the books</i>.<br />
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Ok, so why do you care? Other then winning 64 books (that I can impartially say over half of which actually rank on my list of favourite books ever- Amelia Bedelia, The Giving Tree, Mr. Penumbra's 24-Hour Bookstore, Hitchhikers Guide to the Galaxy, Goodnight Moon, The Gruffalo, To Kill a Mockingbird all made it past the first round, and I will say that a Tree Grows in Brooklyn being up against Stardust is basically a personal tragedy) which is damn cool, and minus the fact it's basically a popularity contest for books, the question of why we love what book is one that's just fun to think about.<br />
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It's a pretty safe assumption that the majority of kids who grew up in Canada grew up being read the Giving Tree and The Gruffalo. Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy made me love science fiction, and told me it's ok to be ridiculous sometimes. A Tree Grows in Brooklyn was the first book that made me cry. Mr. Penumbra's is a terrifyingly accurate snapshot of both where I want my career to go, and exactly where I am in life. Stardust will always break my heart in the best possible way.<br />
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So beyond the marketing, I kind of love the idea of pitting The Giving Tree against Goodnight Moon because if you made me chose, I actually don't know which way I'd go. It's no easier to me to pit Goodnight Moon over To Kill a Mockingbird. Maybe it should be - American classic versus childhood memory. More to the point, it made me think if I actually had to chose one favourite book - I don't actually know what I would chose. Books that changed my life, books that shifted my worldview, books that made me feel better, not alone, I don't know which way I'd go. It's cool, I'm a Librarian, I <b>know</b> I'm a dork about this stuff.<br />
<br />Katehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03737819171253983511noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3512956976156205791.post-16315906213882886042013-02-26T13:33:00.000-08:002013-03-12T14:49:02.019-07:00The Colossus Rises <div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
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So I tend to have 0 expectations when it comes to books like this one other than I want it to be fun, and as far as I'm concerned Lerangis did that. I was impressed with the characters - the Professor (ha!) was clearly using the kids as pawns, but it's clear at times he cares for them more than he lets on. The kids also are very clearly kids, which is very well done on Lerangis' part. They all had their own personalities, questioned authority, fooled around and missed their parents. I think that's something that's often not mentioned, but it's a very real aspect of this book and a detail I appreciated.<br />
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It seems a lot of the buzz about this book touches on how it was slow, did a lot of world building and people were a little confused as to where the series is going to go. I'm not going to argue with that, but I will throw in my two cents that the books target audience is middle school kids - and I think the topic is unfamiliar enough to that audience that a little world building for a series is probably a good thing.<br />
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Basically the book is the beginning of the kids tracking down the seven powers - or seven wonders of the ancient world. I love this, because I'm enough of a history/classics geek and I think every kid should get to be awed by the ancient world once or twice. I also admittedly love searching for things that have been long lost to history - it throws in just enough reality to make a fantastical book plausible enough for imagination to go wild. I'm fairly sure this book was a set up for the series, and I certainly wasn't disappointed with it. I think it's appeal to a middle grade crowd is really strong - I feel that by the end of the book it was already setting itself up for a fun action filled ride, and I can't wait to see where they take the rest of the series.<br />
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***Full Disclosure - I received an ARC copy of this book from the publisher at OLA Super Conference, not specifically for reviewing but because they're promoting it to librarians. So I feel half bad about not getting my things together enough to do an early review, and then for doing a post-publication review on an ARC. Generally I'm fairly confident not enough has changed, but apologies none the less.<br />
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<br />Katehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03737819171253983511noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3512956976156205791.post-27652000890143356342013-02-19T16:01:00.000-08:002013-03-12T13:16:47.447-07:00RUSH<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiGzs2l_Z-LTs_dHkuyRUZJBn5yj7Mq5DPLMeDcBQJWhhvJrCd5Dus8rwu-lGkxpfqHhqc1Fx-aRpSD88UmxE0M04SaRyDCbkjMkF_nnMXicQ2LQgJAyd77qhHu-Ii5US2eKx_py6Vldc0/s1600/13571953.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="clear: left; float: left; margin-bottom: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" height="320" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiGzs2l_Z-LTs_dHkuyRUZJBn5yj7Mq5DPLMeDcBQJWhhvJrCd5Dus8rwu-lGkxpfqHhqc1Fx-aRpSD88UmxE0M04SaRyDCbkjMkF_nnMXicQ2LQgJAyd77qhHu-Ii5US2eKx_py6Vldc0/s320/13571953.jpg" width="211" /></a>So I wasn't sold on this book from day 1. The premise is the main character is pulled from her real life, into what appears to be a real life video game, where she has to eliminate an alien life form. Basically, kind of <i>Hunger Games</i> meets <i>Books of Valor</i> - so I was half sold, but half leery because this will either end fantastically, or in a slightly painful tug of war.<br />
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So the thing is Silver pulls it off. <i>RUSH</i> is a lot of fun - Miki is clueless, frustrated and terrified because there are aliens and what is going on because guys, aliens, but if you die in the game, you die in real life. Her teammates try and fill her in, but when she goes back to real life (I'm old, so I kept having Matrix flashbacks) she tries to find out what's going on but that's harder than she expected. Miki is a pretty great character - she knows how to fight and despite her being confused she picks up quickly - strong young female characters I'm generally a fan of, especially when authors don't fall into cliche's. I will say that this is the first of a series, and does end with a cliffhanger. We've discussed that this drives me insane. I get why authors do it, I think they have to do it, but you know. Insane.<br />
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I think generally this is a book that teens can grab on to - first person shooter games, anime, MMO are all aspects that will grab the reader's interest. The originality of the book is also a draw - I certainly haven't read a book with a similar plot and I read a lot. I've recently been on a young adult specific book kick, and this one's plot stuck out (in a good way) when it comes to originality. I liked it because the book started out a bit slow, but that makes sense because the reader grows and learns with Miki - the pacing actually ended up being fantastic. I would basically throw this book at any teenage reader - it's a refreshing change from the outright supernatural (even though I admittedly do love the supernatural).<br />
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**I recieved an ARC copy at OLA Super Conference.<br />
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<br />Katehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03737819171253983511noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3512956976156205791.post-12059316332774365252013-01-25T15:04:00.000-08:002013-03-12T15:40:44.918-07:00Archon<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
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So it straight up kills me to write this review. I'd been glancing at this book on the shelves of the bookstore for months. The cover is gorgeous, the summary hooked me from the first time I read it and the ideas Benulis puts forward are ones that hit every point in something I would usually love to read. The first third of the books straight up confused me - the protagonist Angela dreams of Angels and no matter how hard she tries can't die. She's a Blood head which is a read head who is possibly a witch, and also possibly "the Ruin" who is the vessel for a dead Angel come back to life. The above two aspects firmly bring to mind Constantine and Supernatural to me, and both of those pre-dispose me to like this book.<br />
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So help me I couldn't, and I tried. I tried SO HARD to like this book. The characters weren't overly likeable to me and I ended up really wishing that there was going to be some sort of thematic shift where the bad guys were actually the good guys because the Djinn's and Deamons were fantastic. So the thing about the mythology behind the book is that I have 0 expectation of angels being noble - but there was a bit too much of a glaring gap between the angels/demon nobility gap for me to get behind. Angela is fairly emotionally flat, and it makes it a little hard to get behind her as a heroine. Her history was touched on, but it's an awkward mix of either too much or too little background to give you an understanding of her.<br />
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The awkward part for me is that even though I was pretty thrown by the fact that even though I really disliked the book, I really did like Benulis as a writer - she tends heavily towards a Gothic feel, and I have absolutely no issue with it because she does it well. The middle of the book is really interesting, and as much as I hate to say it I wonder if the book being the first of a series, or maybe having too heavy of a copy edit had something to do with the beginning and the end feeling and reading almost like they were two different books. That also being said, I think the editor needed to take a bit of a heavier hand so, take that for what you will. I will also say it's clear Benulis has an excellent imagination, and the subtlety and I did like that she didn't make romance a big part of the plot. So well done there. But the fact is the book seemed unnecessarily complex, in a way that didn't add anything to it. Another reviewer said it best - the setting outshines the characters - the back story to that would be fascinating.Katehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03737819171253983511noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3512956976156205791.post-79621214434262054082013-01-03T13:05:00.001-08:002013-01-03T13:05:14.719-08:00Mr. Penumbra's 24-Hour Bookstore<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
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Sometimes there are those books. You know, those books that you pick up on a whim because you like the cover (yes, really, I judge books by their covers. This is not news) and then you read them and all of a sudden you realize that this author <b>gets it. </b>I'm basically going to fight waxing poetic about this book because I *hate* those reviews. Also because this book is better than that. I don't know if it's the biblio-tech focus this book has, my (not-so) secret desire to work for Google, my also (not-so) secret desire to own a book store, my fascination with immortality questors (this is a real thing) or just Sloan's way of writing that led to my first literary crush in forever but go buy this book.<br />
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So here's my dirty librarian secret: I've never read the Twilight series or the 50 Shades series. Believe it or not, not because I think they're useless, but because I just don't get it. Believe me, I'm all over the light-reading bandwagon, I've talked at length about how I love Urban Fantasy other arguably light reads (I think there's more to them then that, but that's preference and bias). The thing is I think there are other books that are better, and if you could see my reading list you'd see why I just keep putting it off and then, oh oops, don't care. <b>I can not emphasize this enough. If there were any justice in the world, this book would skyrocket to the top of the book charts and everyone would read it and love it.</b> It's a book about hackers, and immortality, and bookstores, and living, and dreaming, and just plain figuring your shit out while you try and grow up. It's a fun book, well written, and I think the best way I can put it is it's fantastically real. Maybe it's a generational thing, maybe it's that the book touched a lot on my graduate degree, but it's a winner.<br />
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Basically I'm kicking myself for taking so long to grab it. Guys, I bought it. I work in a library, get sent ARC's and I not only bought it, but if I lose it, I'll buy it again. Do yourself a favour, and go buy it.Katehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03737819171253983511noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3512956976156205791.post-70790187075916364452012-12-30T12:39:00.000-08:002013-01-03T12:56:51.267-08:00Merry Christmas/Happy Hanukkah/Happy New YearIt's the most wonderful time of the year - no really. I love December, Christmas, Hanukkah, Solstice, whatever it is you celebrate (and I celebrate most of them with equal love). I love this time of year because it's the time of year when you get together with family, keep traditions, mourn the loss of old ones, and create new ones. It's been a year of change for me, personally and professionally, and I have nothing but hope for 2013.<br />
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My family and friends know me really well - well enough to know that when they're at a loss for what to get me (hell, now even when they aren't) they just get me a gift certificate for books. Seriously, I broke into the triple digits for book gift certificates this year. I used to get actual books - I'd write a list and divide it up between everyone who liked buying me presents and then they'd pick and choose which books they wanted to get me. We all got over that, and everyone realized just handing me a gift certificate wasn't actually a cop-out. That's a lie. My best friend actually bought me a real book, but she's allowed because she gets me.<br />
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That pile of books you see is part of the pile of books I bought with the big-chain bookstore gift certificates (the used book store ones will require more thought). Here's the thing: I'm a librarian. I love the library. I really really do. Go to the library, we have books and not books, and movies and tons of awesome stuff. But I love having books - actual books, that I can read more than once, and lend out, and maybe get back and read again. So far one of these books is now arguably my favourite book ever (<i>Mr. Penumbra's 24-Hour Bookstore</i>), I finally replaced<i> JPod</i> (seriously, I've owned about 6 copies of this book and they keep mysteriously disappearing), and sorry library hold list a mile long, I just bought <i>Escape from Camp 14</i>.<br />
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So come at me 2013.Katehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03737819171253983511noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3512956976156205791.post-57186552622702439072012-12-23T13:19:00.000-08:002013-02-01T09:44:22.468-08:00A Murder at Rosamund's Gate<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
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I love historical fiction. Love, love, love. Ariana Franklin's Mistress in the Art of Death is one of my favourite series, brilliantly written with a fantastic plot. I've been looking for something to fill the void, and so was excited to get sent this ARC. I also admit, I'm one of those people who generally guesses if I'll like books based on the publisher, and while I admittedly haven't read much of Minotaur, I love St. Martin's Press (no they didn't pay me to say that, I get nothing for it. I mean, feel free to send me books, but really, I won't, and I just generally like them as a publisher).<br />
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Anyways, so I was sent A Murder at Rosamund's Gate, and lo, I had my holiday reading. Except I read it before the holidays. Oops.<br />
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I think first off I'm guessing they're setting this up as a series, though I could very easily be off in guessing that because the book stands pretty solidly as a stand-alone. Generally I really loved the books. The characters are endearing and well written - Lucy Campion is fun heroine because she's not really a heroine. The other characters aren't just there as props, you get drawn into the class politics that permeated 17th century England (A topic I admittedly can always get behind) and the story itself rather cleverly brings together a murder mystery, socio-economic politics, religious drama (The Quakers are coming!) and the looming of the plague. Calkins does so in a way that doesn't make it seem like she's just throwing it all in because she has to, but really makes it into a wonderful story that doesn't feel at all crammed together. Calkins also clearly is a excellent storyteller with a knack for character writing.<br />
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I'd wholeheartedly recommend this book to a pretty wide variety of people - personally I loved it and it both met, and exceeded my expectations of what I wanted from it.<br />
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*** I was sent this book by the publisher - all opinions are my own.<br />
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http://vivalakt.blogspot.ca/Katehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03737819171253983511noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3512956976156205791.post-43932724986122695512012-12-14T16:21:00.000-08:002013-02-01T09:45:09.590-08:00The Shakespeare Thefts: In Search of the First Folios<br />
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So fun facts about me: I great up in Stratford (Ontario, not England) and the Festival was a huge part of basically everyone's lives - your parents worked there (yes, my mom did), you knew someone who did, your family business supported the tourists, or you worked there (yep, I did!) and it was basically non optional that you'd go there as a school and then camp field trip (True story, I saw Alice through the Looking Glass 6 times because of school and various camps) (I also hated it) (Sorry Sarah Polly). Unlike most elementary schools (or so I hear) we also studied Shakespeare all through grade school- one of the other schools did this whole big thing where they painted pictures, and their teacher re-wrote the plays to be accessible. My slacker school just had us read these books, and watch cartons. <br />
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So basically I'm saying that while I'm in no way claiming to be a scholar, I got Shakespeare. My favourite play is Pericles, my favourite character is King Lear and I can explain to you in detail why the Globe, and therein Main Stage have thrust stages. So I was tentatively excited to have won this book, because with great power, comes great responsibility. By that I mean if people find out you're from Stratford, everyone becomes and expert and tells you AT LENGTH everything they know about Shakespeare and blah blah blah. From that, I do know that arguably the First Folio of Shakespeare is one of the most important publications in terms of modern English (the others probably include the King James Bible and a terrifying number of others I'm too tired to be clever about), and I also knew (because this is something we all know in Stratford (you're thrown out if you don't)) that about 1000 copies were printed, and apparently 232 have been accounted for. We know this, because Eric Rasmussen has a crack team of Folio Hunters. True Story, when I was a kid, I wanted to be on this crack team but then oops I got distracted by something shiny.<br />
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But this is a review, so here you go: Rasmussen formed his team in the mid-90's with the goal of documenting as many surviving copies as possible and determining their provenance - this books is kind of a best of of what his team did. The world they discovered was... fascinating, obsessive and mildly terrifying. I don't really want to get into the stories, because I think that that ruins things, but it includes Cubans, a Pope, a bricklayer and a playboy. I don't really want to get into it, because if you're interested you should just go read it because it's a fun romp through a thoroughly obsessive and mildly insane group of people who are trying to do the impossible because you know that the next copy is hidden in Great Great Aunty Muriel's attic, under a million fur coats and possibly in a trunk that you lost the key to.<br />
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So here's the thing. I wouldn't recommend this to someone unless I knew they a) loved shakespeare b) loved anecdotes or c) were really into the tracking of loss of historical record (it's a thing, I promise). That all being said, I really did enjoy the book. It's a fast read that make me laugh, taught me things about how books are lost, found and faked and generally was clever and interesting. A lot of the problems I've seen people have with it is that the author didn't get into a lot of detail about the stories - Rasmussen kind of flung the story at you, but glossed over the heavy investigative/academic work that you all know they did. I don't actually have an issue with him having done this- and I think it was the right choice. That stuff he glossed over is intense, and usually not in a way that would be interesting to a lay person reading it. I do admittedly wish he got into a bit more detail with some of the stories I found more interesting, but I think he was going for a kind of overall quick "Hey, this is what we're doing isn't it cool" thing with the book. Basically? Yeah, yeah it is cool.<br />
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*** I was sent this book by the publisher- all opinions are my own.Katehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03737819171253983511noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3512956976156205791.post-55229770826904797772012-12-10T20:10:00.002-08:002013-02-01T09:45:43.999-08:00Born Weird<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
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Born Weird is... Weird. I know, I know I'm ridiculously original with saying that. So clever, people should pay me to write this stuff. So I knew nothing about Kaufman, other than I had heard about him vaguely at the only Toronto literary thing I've been to <b>literally in 3 years</b> when someone told me he was funny.<br />
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The thing is, everyone's family is weird. We all say that, right? I'm pretty sure we all also say "ha ha you think your family is weird, but compared to mine they're normal". Well folks, we're basically all mad here, and that's kind of the core of Born Weird. Kaufman drags a family who was blessing/cursed/blursed by The Shark (aka Grandma, and really, who's Grandma wasn't a shark?) so they could survive being raised by their too young kind of crazy parents. Grandma Weird (ok, so to clarify, really, their last name is Weird) decided the blessings-turned-curses need to go, and says she'll get rid of them on the day she dies and her (youngest?) grandchild Angie proceeds to go on a mildly mad-cap journey across Canada and randomly Upliffta (it's a thing. If I explain why it's a thing, I'll ruin the thing, so I'm not ging to explain the thing) to gather her siblings so they will no longer be cursed. Obviously, they all show up, or the curses don't get lifted. It's a fairy tale guys.<br />
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So also hilariously, Goodreads has this on the Fantasy shelf. That confuses me a little, but it does have a princess so I guess I'm ok with it. The book is strange, quirky and full of family drama. It's a quick read, and admittedly adorable (though I kind of feel the author will hate I called it adorable) even if it is a little confusing. <br />
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*** I was sent this book by the publisher - all opinions are my own.<br />
<br />Katehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03737819171253983511noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3512956976156205791.post-60129573181996024122012-11-25T14:10:00.000-08:002013-02-01T09:46:49.327-08:00The Winter Witch<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
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So here's the thing about Goodreads Giveaways. I don't enter all of them - I have this ridiculous mindset that if I enter to win ALL THE BOOKS by some twist of fate I'll only win the ones I don't really want to read. So I did legitimately want to read this book. I've been (really) meaning to read Paula Brackston's The Witch's Daughter for years and I keep getting distracted. So when I saw The Winter Witch I was excited because hey, distract myself with a book I've literally been meaning to read for years with a new one by the same author.<br />
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This book hits a lot of boxes for me - Historical Fiction, specifically Celtic History, Fantasy, Magic, Witches and more importantly, latent Witches. A part of life that anyone from that culture gets. It's also a YA book, and recently I'm loving them - part work related, part they're just plain good. I love the 500 Kingdom's books, and it wasn't until after I read them I found out they were a) YA books and b) put out by Harlequins' teen branch. I've touched on this before. Still baffled. Either way, so YA books. I like them.<br />
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So here's the good - I read a lot of Historical Fiction, I got my undergrad degree in it so I have a general at least latent knowledge of history and I <i>like</i> it. The book was spot on for where a historical fiction book should be - it was written in a way that didn't make it seem like Brackston was throwing in historical facts just because, the details were woven in beautifully and as a HF book, it was very well done. Morgana was a lovely character, with depth and excellent character development. Cai was also well done and gave a fascinating prospective. The writing itself was also generally solid, and it was a very readable book.<br />
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The less good is that I actually didn't love the book. The characters other than Morgana and Cai were slightly on dimensional and it felt like some of the details were a bit thrown together. I delayed writing this review because I wasn't entirely sure why the book didn't grip me and I think it's because (this kills me to say because I hate trilogies) but I kind of wonder if this should have been book one of a trilogy. Brackckston is clearly a fantastic writer, with creative lovely ideas and fantasic plots. I think if there had been a bit more character development for the other characters, and a little more time given to the ending it would have been an amazing read. <br />
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*** I was sent this book by the publisher - all opinions are my own.Katehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03737819171253983511noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3512956976156205791.post-29019061376143655012012-11-09T12:27:00.000-08:002013-02-01T09:47:50.665-08:00The River<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgFvLSAr0CAwWubYgUwGIL3LeufdgG0oumO8hu4fYx7En_VmjKQP3UH-pnWvALgxugkOx2AfJKgXlNLVCsD83-aILdV9jOF0ysNq2A2utfTLYvl49utF_jJl4lT2OufoCZZum4iZqXn8y8/s1600/14291982+(1).jpg" imageanchor="1" style="clear: left; float: left; margin-bottom: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" height="320" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgFvLSAr0CAwWubYgUwGIL3LeufdgG0oumO8hu4fYx7En_VmjKQP3UH-pnWvALgxugkOx2AfJKgXlNLVCsD83-aILdV9jOF0ysNq2A2utfTLYvl49utF_jJl4lT2OufoCZZum4iZqXn8y8/s320/14291982+(1).jpg" width="219" /></a></div>
I am putting this out there right off: I am unsure how I feel about this book. I've been sitting on this review a little, hoping I would figure it out, but no dice, so here's what you get. First off, since I picked this book up I had <i>A Change is Gonna Come</i> pretty much stuck in my head. So you're welcome for that. But really, the like "It's been too hard living, but I'm afraid to die" probably sums up where this book is at pretty well. <br />
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So here's the thing, I ditzed out when I first requested the book, and somehow I missed that this was a Christian novel. So I was being me, and updating my status on GoodReads to having it as 'read' and lo, I saw that it was a Christian > Inspirational book. So that kind of changed my framing of how I read the book because at the same time it makes more and less sense. So again, full disclaimer, I am not Christian, and didn't realize it WAS a Christian book. So basically my take away is this book can either be read as an adventure story, or an inspirational story. I read it as the former.<br />
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This book was... emotional. For lack of a better term. There were a lot of highs and lows and even though it was a bit of a slow read, I don't mean that in any negative way. The River makes a lot of promises that it will change your worldview and it fell a bit short on that to me. It was a good book, that draws you in and you don't want to stop reading it - even when you are a bit frustrated with the writing. Basically, I think what I'm saying is I see why people loved the book, and I see why people were totally apathetic to it. This is probably a horrible review, but it's actually not because I've recommended this book a few times, and I would recommend it again.<br />
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**I received a free copy of the e-book from NetGalley. All opinions are my own.Katehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03737819171253983511noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3512956976156205791.post-77129242601667739642012-11-07T12:09:00.000-08:002012-11-07T12:09:00.099-08:00Frozen<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEg7C8z8p0XEqTqJDLi0ZCirmdFjdPBa796kWk91wNlUgQpr9feyJvIH7utwRiuuv0kjaJCwGRlj7TehHOt-QpNuZvzAMufQ1yPhFvq9xB2vv67jYZ-OUxvdxZFTl1-gMGyOrCDgEg4K7qM/s1600/13795376.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="clear: left; float: left; margin-bottom: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" height="320" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEg7C8z8p0XEqTqJDLi0ZCirmdFjdPBa796kWk91wNlUgQpr9feyJvIH7utwRiuuv0kjaJCwGRlj7TehHOt-QpNuZvzAMufQ1yPhFvq9xB2vv67jYZ-OUxvdxZFTl1-gMGyOrCDgEg4K7qM/s320/13795376.jpg" width="206" /></a></div>
I heard about this book a while ago, and have meant to grab a copy for a while. I don't know what took me so long (I know, a month after publication. Slacker.). The premise sounded fabulous - based on the true story of a dead prostitute's frozen body found propped up at city hall when suffrage was in it's height, Casanova chose to tell the story through a fictional 16 year old daughter. The basic premise is that 16 year old Sadie Rose lost the ability to speak after her mother died 11 years ago. She was taken in by a senator, and Sadie feels pressure to be who they want her to be, even if she isn't quite sure who she is. When she finds pictures of her mother, it unlocks memories and helps her find her voice. That's as much summary as you get, because other better people write other better summaries. <br />
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The thing about this book is that I found it... pensive. That's almost the right word, but maybe quiet works better? It's not an action packed book, full of adventure and unpredictability, it's a coming of age story that more slowly takes you on a journey. But that's also not right because that makes the book sound boring, and it isn't. Casanova does a great job with the historical setting and the resulting social details - Google tells me Casanova wrote for American girls and I find that not at all surprising. Clearly historical fiction is an area she enjoys writing about. Frankly, that's one of the problems - I wonder if Casanova is writing a touch out of her comfort zone in terms of age bracket, because the plot at times is a bit awkward, and some of the secondary characters are a little too shallow. That being said, Sadie Rose is a great character, pitched pretty spot on to her 13-17 age range (though I admittedly would lean more to 12-15 age range for recommendations, personally).<br />
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Casanova is generally a fantastic writer - the book is beautifully written and the premise is solid. I <b>liked</b> this book, I just didn't love it. But that's not a bad thing, because I will 100% suggest this book to some of the teens at my library. I think younger readers will find something very appealing about Sadie's rather rapid transformation - the identifiable nature of feeling the need to figure out who you are. All this being said, it was a quick read and an enjoyable one.<br />
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*** Review is based on an advance copy from NetGalley. Blah Blah this didn't affect my review. Promise.Katehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03737819171253983511noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3512956976156205791.post-83874403297223396882012-11-04T11:43:00.000-08:002013-02-01T09:48:30.698-08:00The Wisdom of Psychopaths: What Saints, Spies, and Serial Killers Can Teach Us About Success<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjtcPjsR8dvxCUoEj3kYSws74Ly5TrZqdn0W3vRnFU8FopXAioTOKbNtLhKVGx6eb9PpDeFWC5JAjyKWe5dkjgAOZCnbvHmB25WSwQF11uX5C8wtc9ty8hhTafHWZH0Oxf6ufdGMqTFlPY/s1600/13414641.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="clear: left; float: left; margin-bottom: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" height="320" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjtcPjsR8dvxCUoEj3kYSws74Ly5TrZqdn0W3vRnFU8FopXAioTOKbNtLhKVGx6eb9PpDeFWC5JAjyKWe5dkjgAOZCnbvHmB25WSwQF11uX5C8wtc9ty8hhTafHWZH0Oxf6ufdGMqTFlPY/s320/13414641.jpg" style="cursor: move;" width="213" /></a>It is absolutely no secret I have one of those mild fascinations with psychopaths - not the kind where I have books and books and books on the topic, and spend my life trying to understand the mindset, but the kind where I legitimately find the idea of having on/off switches that control how and what we define as our personalities - I don't get it, so I'm fascinated by it. This book makes the claim there are times when a "me" focused philosophy is beneficial to your well being, and to that I say <i>obviously</i>. It's no secret that for years people have been saying top executives have a climb their way to the top no matter what mentality <b>and it works.</b> Personally, I found the author's use of the game of chicken as a time when being a psychopath is a good thing - the person who keeps going straight wins over the person who swerves. .... .... ... yes. In theory. That's a great example. In terms of real world applications, I'm pretty sure when there are millions of lives at stake we don't really want this to be something that's a thing. One reviewer said "One Cuban Missile Crisis is enough" and yeah, that.<br />
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That being said, I genuinely really really really liked this book. It was <i>fascinating</i>. I loved the comparison between psychopaths and Tibetan monks in their mutual ability to detect deep emotions that are invisible to others - the sense of isolation and self-focus making people more adept at being aware of others is an enticing thought to base something out of. Tibetan monks spend lifetimes learning to be in a relaxed state of mind, and the fact that psychopaths are in this state without any sort of practiced state of mind, but rather a state of mind naturally aimed at being observant specifically of other peoples weakness' is just plain interesting. Some things were obvious (if you watch any tv crime drama), such as psychopaths not feeling any sort of normal reactions when viewing horrifying images implies an almost baffling self-mastery of emotions. This being said Dutton points out that they seem to be born with this capacity to not feel and react, but his comparison to high performing CEO's, high-stress surgeons and military/rescue strategists results in a interesting discussion on the nature vs. nurture standoff. What makes some people serial killers and others at times heros?<br />
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So the long and the short is I think this book is fascinating, and really a compelling study of psychopaths for the layman. Psychopaths may well be all around us, and arguably they're some of the most productive members of society. Dutton points out we don't recognize them because they have“…the consummate ability to pass themselves off as normal everyday folk, while behind the façade—the brutal brilliant disguise—beats the refrigerated heart of a ruthless, glacial predator.”<br />
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Dutton's writing was fantastic and verging on brilliant because he has a unique ability to make a non-fiction book interesting, accessible and informative in a way that doesn't make you feel like you're being talked down to. I've said for a while now that Normal is usually a lie, and damn if this book doesn't back it up. That freaks me out a little more than I'm willing to admit.<br />
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*** Review is based on an advance copy from the publisher. Blah Blah this didn't affect my review. Promise.Katehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03737819171253983511noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3512956976156205791.post-34030560268087607652012-11-02T13:57:00.003-07:002012-11-02T13:58:49.085-07:00Scent of MagicSo it's no real secret I like Maria V. Snyder. I blogged about her <a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yTCDVfMz15M">here</a> and <a href="http://vivalakt.blogspot.ca/2012/02/i-found-that-i-find-things-that-you.html">here</a> and Scent of Magic didn't disappoint. I've said it before, and I'll say it again too: I'm constantly shocked and admittedly a lot impressed with what Harlequin MIRA and Harlequin LNA are putting out on the market (no, they didn't pay me to say that. Actually I'm pretty sure they would pay me not to say that). I remember after reading the 500 Kingdom's books by Mercedes Lackey I was baffled that they were put out by Harlequin - so bravo Harlequin. You should hire me to be a librarian, or something. So all that being said, Snyder is great, and her books are solid. Generally.<br />
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<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgi8hYplXqdvH_pmPgntrn9O0AqjaZo_WWun_4Ui5fzlYOqe6JoNUG1Uhlqap5SK3Pb7mCG8tUwBphJzj3JptkPCAyGVPEU1xjkS2IOH5fRrttB5iNe9iveCVWdQKkknr-P-EjZ2PIraTc/s1600/12027429.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="clear: left; float: left; margin-bottom: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" height="320" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgi8hYplXqdvH_pmPgntrn9O0AqjaZo_WWun_4Ui5fzlYOqe6JoNUG1Uhlqap5SK3Pb7mCG8tUwBphJzj3JptkPCAyGVPEU1xjkS2IOH5fRrttB5iNe9iveCVWdQKkknr-P-EjZ2PIraTc/s320/12027429.jpg" width="213" /></a>More specifically this is a great part 2 of the trilogy - character building is solid, there are the expected twists and turns and it's all in all a fun read. I really like where Snyder is taking the book - the whole Death Lily/Life Lily is a really interesting discussion point that it's entirely possible I'm reading too much into. Snyder's writing doesn't fall into the romance trap - a lot of the book is spent with the two main love interests apart from each other, and while Snyder carefully keeps them thinking of each other, they aren't wrapped up in a (usually tiring) "missing" of the other one. I was admittedly a touch annoyed at the alternating between Avry and Kerrick in the first and third person points of view - and that each portion ends with a cliffhanger gets to be a little overdone. That being said, the adventure is exciting, and arguably most important the plot is plausible and realistic. Blah blah blah it's fantasy-ish, but Snyder builds her books on a <i>realistic </i>fantasy. Is that a thing? My review, so yes. Yes it is.<br />
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As a bit of an aside, I think one of the things I like most about Snyder's writing is the attention she pays to the secondary characters - she really builds a world and it's clear she focus' on each character in a way that shows a lot of thought to their growth, change, and adaptability.<br />
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Overall thoughts: I really enjoy Snyder's writing, characters and plot development and this is pretty much exactly how I personally think a teen/YA romance/adventure book should be written. The cliffhangers? They were a bit much by the end.<br />
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*** Review is based on an advance copy from NetGalley. Blah Blah this didn't affect my review. Promise.Katehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03737819171253983511noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3512956976156205791.post-12901246005304552402012-10-26T12:34:00.000-07:002012-10-26T12:34:00.074-07:00House of LeavesI don't think I've been less able to write a review for a book than I feel I am for this book. And I mean that in a holy shit it was amazing way. I've heard it said that there's a cult following for this book, and I 100% ended up sitting in the woods, clutching this book and giving all my possessions to the leader. Leader is good ya'll. I don't know how I didn't read this book for so long, but my BFF is reading it and told me to pick it up. My BFF is finishing her phD in neurogenetics or *something* complicated like that, and reads a solid mix of amazing books, and romance novels (hey, similar to my reading a solid mix of amazing books and urban fantasy) (I suggest reading UF personally though).<div>
<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgXxnDUjd8JeC5tSOGcbYM47BauVh8zO3YzlckKCdh1BU2uUhjwCGMw5YvudscpHiL-a7lsYVIueqeRjrJwiBJ4z3U-izcihY7vlatV2rqif_OgbKreUDhYRqb6oLgAq8KvG1E8JqR9_9E/s1600/2821399.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="clear: left; float: left; margin-bottom: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" height="320" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgXxnDUjd8JeC5tSOGcbYM47BauVh8zO3YzlckKCdh1BU2uUhjwCGMw5YvudscpHiL-a7lsYVIueqeRjrJwiBJ4z3U-izcihY7vlatV2rqif_OgbKreUDhYRqb6oLgAq8KvG1E8JqR9_9E/s320/2821399.jpg" width="236" /></a></div>
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So here's the thing. This book fucked me up. I'm sorry to swear, but there's no other way to say it. Usually I cope with books that <i>disturb </i> me by taking forever to read them. I was done this book in two days, and I'm relatively sure this book should actually be classified as a category three narcotic because the dreams I had were not ok. I don't normally summarize books because I like to give my feelings - I feel it makes the review more of a feeling based review, I want to tell you why I think you should or shouldn't read the book. Or flat out tell you to go read it. The thing is <b>I cannot summarize this book.</b> Yes, I read it, but this book is basically the definition of metafiction. Have you read <i>Raw Shark Texts</i>? It's kind of like that but it takes it about 20 levels further in terms of making you want to talk about life, the universe and everything. </div>
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So here: </div>
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<ul>
<li>It had footnotes. I love footnotes</li>
<li>Played around with typography and colours. A+</li>
<li>Metaphysical Space Time Continuum house? Maybe? Excellent.</li>
<li>I actually said "Jesus" out loud while reading it.</li>
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I don't even know. I loved this book. In case that's not clear. It's probably not clear, because shut the front door what just happened. But I loved this book. I also hated <i>Raw Shark Texts</i> so take from that what you will. </div>
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Katehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03737819171253983511noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3512956976156205791.post-43948171731981228672012-10-23T14:06:00.001-07:002012-10-23T14:06:19.124-07:00Touch of Power<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgqy24dZGvM0cpkPKLMAjYgZFpGgnbKvYb-xjcz6BEXWukaF4uso5n0bhQbqYM3TsIM2tkeOHXVPe_RaBO9kqJCHmjMI35jOkVWqr5bsABGEF7U4_v1q-mT3gRtN2w4GgjzaBdNXo1KljQ/s1600/10445208.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="clear: left; float: left; margin-bottom: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" height="320" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgqy24dZGvM0cpkPKLMAjYgZFpGgnbKvYb-xjcz6BEXWukaF4uso5n0bhQbqYM3TsIM2tkeOHXVPe_RaBO9kqJCHmjMI35jOkVWqr5bsABGEF7U4_v1q-mT3gRtN2w4GgjzaBdNXo1KljQ/s320/10445208.jpg" width="198" /></a>So I generally hate reading the first book of a trilogy - something about how I finish and want to keep reading. Instant gratification at its best/worst. The thing is I really really do like Maria V. Snyder. I couldn't put down Study series, it was fantastic and I really wanted something that was an easy read, but not a boring read (and I mean this in the best possible way). Snyder reminds me a lot of Tamora Price - strong characters, solid plotlines, great pacing and romance that doesn't make you roll your eyes and go "Really?"<br />
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All that held pretty true to form for this book. For lack of a better term this is a lovely book. There are twists and turns and adventure and while there are a few gaps in the flow of some background information, I'm pretty sure that will come out in the next two off the series. There's also a lovely bit of whimsy - human eating plants make a surprisingly fantastic plot point. Who knew? Generally it's just a very very readable story - I'm sparing you the summary because it's *everywhere*. So here's the deal. I'm a librarian. I was turned onto Snyder by someone who works at a bookstore. So it's not that I know everything, or even that she and I know everything. But what we DO know is books. With exceptions for personal tastes, two people who know books say go read this writer. I *personally* liked her Study series a bit more, but that being said I read the whole Study series, and not just the first book.<br />
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So go, read it. Trust me, I'm a librarian.Katehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03737819171253983511noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3512956976156205791.post-50335028600249205612012-10-18T13:31:00.001-07:002012-10-18T13:31:30.780-07:00The Antidote: Happiness for People Who Can't Stand Positive ThinkingFull Disclosure I won this book as a Goodreads Firstreads. The thing is though, I entered the contest because I read the summary and immediately laughed because <i>hand to god</i> this book was almost exactly a conversation I was having with a good friend recently. Basically we were talking about how we find the whole "self-help" thing <b>boring</b>. My problems (not that I have any, obviously) do not stem from me not having any faith in my ability to get through things, so why do I need to wake up everyday and tell myself <i>it will be a good day</i>. Sometimes it isn't. You deal, and you move on.<br />
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<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhNxk-6aX0CMHuQyDsNV-llBc0Zx2H2yj7axhM68km6k9aCXbarEXAFg-hHH834KvLh_KAMwKn8FlLCGmzaSKNAvzlSWBxJRb-g1XHDmABA98vscz5KaiCEWd3pHauB24NGvprQpl1BwKY/s1600/13721709.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="clear: left; float: left; margin-bottom: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" height="320" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhNxk-6aX0CMHuQyDsNV-llBc0Zx2H2yj7axhM68km6k9aCXbarEXAFg-hHH834KvLh_KAMwKn8FlLCGmzaSKNAvzlSWBxJRb-g1XHDmABA98vscz5KaiCEWd3pHauB24NGvprQpl1BwKY/s320/13721709.jpg" width="220" /></a><br />
... Anyways.<br />
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So the stars aligned and I won this book. I was pretty excited, because you know, I wanted it. Burkeman is a writer for The Guardian who (I believe?) (I should know this) (If not know, find out, since I'm a Librarian and it's what I do) explores psychology in his weekly column. The Antidote looks at finding contentment from different perspectives, moving your focus outside of yourself, not focusing on finding security, realizing your own mistakes and weakness and sometimes damnit realizing that being negative is actually the most positive outlook you can have. Basically this books is giving legitimacy to something we all kind of hoped - it's ok to not be perfect, it's ok to not be happy, it's ok to just plow through some things muttering to yourself about how this bleeding sucks and you just want it to be over so you just <b>get. it. done. </b><br />
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So long story short, I loved this book. It's funny, and smart and counterintuitive enough that it makes a whole damn lot of sense. What it's not is a self-help book. Well for me it almost was - it's one thing to have your friends agree with you - it's another thing when somebody wrote a whole book with <i>actual facts</i> about how it's ok to not force yourself to be happy.<br />
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So go. Buy a copy. Take out out from the library. Lend it to a friend (or few). But make them buy their own copy after, because They should probably lend it to their friends.Katehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03737819171253983511noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3512956976156205791.post-10558802226383192192012-09-29T20:03:00.001-07:002012-09-29T20:06:51.743-07:00The Witches of Chiswick<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEh2SvuQuCq0kY7qFPNDHDTL5053JgNdzOSt11kvgfO9PNw-AStsYavG7ihDheHD-8-QIiOT_lgMMSRAk-ff9wJpUTDCb6PJy2iLF5FlVMCYNbA6XZf0bvVyq7DPUpLnEGOA2aMVcmhfOUE/s1600/49604.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="clear: left; float: left; margin-bottom: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" height="320" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEh2SvuQuCq0kY7qFPNDHDTL5053JgNdzOSt11kvgfO9PNw-AStsYavG7ihDheHD-8-QIiOT_lgMMSRAk-ff9wJpUTDCb6PJy2iLF5FlVMCYNbA6XZf0bvVyq7DPUpLnEGOA2aMVcmhfOUE/s320/49604.jpg" width="213" /></a>You can't even imagine how much I wanted to like this book. The awkward thing is I say that EVERY time I pick up a new Rankin Book. The thing is when Rankin is good, he's really shut the front door good. Funny, strange, ridiculous break the fourth wall hilarious, mildly eccentric blah blah. When he's bad though (and please please cult following don't hurt me) he's basically unreadable. This one oddly fell smack dab in the middle for me. I was almost embarrassingly apathetic about this book. I started reading this APRIL TENTH. That's 5 months ago. It doesn't take me 5 months to ready ANY book. I just kept picking it up, reading half a chapter and then getting distracted. When I read it, I could kind of get into it, but it didn't grab onto me, and by the time I finished it I was just left... apathetic.<br />
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I was mildly annoyed (and it's been echo'd on other reviews) that there were too many loose ends and that there was a little too much of the book aimed at people who've read every one of Rankin's other books. I've read a few (ok, more than a few) but apparently not enough because there were times I was left a little too confused... I don't even know.<br />
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I think it bothers me because I want to love all of Rankin's books. Like, I really really want to. I love the idea of the world he's built, with paradoxes, time travel, witches (non-existant, but still kinda there. I guess). I dunno. This is a terrible review. I don't even know.Katehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03737819171253983511noreply@blogger.com0