Monday, December 7, 2009

Split Image by Judy Mercer

This is a murder mystery. One where our heroine is an amnesiac, and our hero the one suspected of murdering his wife.

The story sets up the idea for a lot of things that never manifest, Ariel our heroine reporter never really gets into any kind of trouble with her amnesia. Its almost as if its a side note that doesn't matter, the plot could have just as easily been handled with an "I've moved on i don't remember angle."
On page 124 of the copy I have Ariel receives a phone call that she believes is related to a story she just finished working on. She doesn't relate it to the guy she is seeing that could have gotten away with killing his wife.
I think that is where the book went down hill for me. If this woman is such an amazing reporter why doesn't she come to the same conclusion that the reader does there, not two hundred pages later.

All in all an OK read, a true to life ending compared to most fiction, and don't read it if you want a happy ending, read it if you want an ending that makes morbid sense. I was not happy with the plot twists because they didn't seem twisted to me, they seemed to all be laid out like ducks in a row.

SPOILER:
OH of course our girl couldn't end up with the guy who is Right for her, no he has to die in her arms because our author had to make a point. yes the story makes sense and is more true to live than most but I was still hoping Ariel would turn out to be her murdered twin sister.

Sunday, November 29, 2009

Shadowbridge by Gregory Frost

"Shadowbridge" is a ocean, spotted with a few islands and an eternal ribbon of bridges on which people live. Every bridge has its own traditions, its own culture, and its own gods/myths. The bridges are going somewhere but people never seem to travel more than their own bridge. Hence puppeteers, the wandering storytellers that use everything from hand puppets to full body pantomiming.

Our heroine starts her story off like waking in the middle of a fairy tale. She has the hard life and heart break that ultimately give her the push she needs to shove off and get into her new life, her real life. There are reasons she leaves and reasons she cannot be a puppeteer but because of her talent her friends help her hide it. There are hints that her world is reborn after ours destroys itself and that this is a new earth. The new myths are beautifully detailed so that when someone starts talking about a dragon bowl and madness you are only confused until the titbit of information unfolds in the next few pages. Then the next time you hear or see one you understand the dangers and then a whole new set of fears for our heroine reaches you. You want her to win, you want her to succeed because as with any good fairy tale heroine she deserves it. She is well on her way in this first book. read Lord Tophet to see her ending.

I asked Mr. Frost once if the object she finds is a "-----" and was confirmed. read it its page a hundred and something. IF you can tell me what the object is I will confirm. Again I met him at a book signing at Between Books in Claymont Delaware.

Fitcher's Brides (Fairy Tales

This is a retelling of the Bluebeard "fairy tale" and I use the term loosely. Like Grimm's fairy tales this is not for children. Its not even for some adults I know.
Add some pieces of "the Fitcher bird" and you have one seriously creepy book.

Take a Utopian society, add some religious fanaticism, and a man that wants to prove his superiority, while killing his wives because he set them up for it, and well i couldn't stop reading. That's good because there was no way i was going to sleep after that anyway.

I met Gregory Frost at a book signing, in Claymont Delaware at Between Books to have this book autographed. What I told him was this "you really freaked me out, thank you." He said "your welcome" and that he was glad he could freak me out. I love this man lol

The Marriage of Sticks

Call of Cthulhu Novels: Baby's First Mythos

This is not your typical baby's first ABC book.
If you are a hardcore Lovecraft fan you will buy this book for yourself. If you happen to have a child (like me) you'll probably buy it for them to save for when they are older.
I purchased it and taped a photo of my son who at the time was almost 2 years old to the inside cover. I showed CJ when I had him autograph the book. He made a joke about raising him right that I'll never forget. thanks :)

He wrote this book with his daughter illustrating it and I think that says a lot. The illustrations are black and white like any good grimoire and they add to the creepy factor. This version has the letters a-z (now with x!) and the numbers 1-9 with 0.

This is definitely not for kids under the age of twelve. Unless they are already H.P. Lovecraft fans. Of course my son already is. I'a Cthulhu.

Kindred Spirit

Wither's Rain: A Wendy Ward Novel

Wither's Legacy: A Wendy Ward Novel

The Stories in Between: A Between Books Anthology

Wither (Mass Market Paperback

Avatar (Angel) (Mass Market Paperback)

Small Gods (Mass Market Paperback)

M Is for Magic

The Wolves in the Walls

Crazy Hair (Hardcover)

Coraline: The Graphic Novel

The Sandman Vol. 1: Preludes and Nocturnes

Good Omens: The Nice and Accurate Prophecies of Agnes Nutter, Witch (Paperback)

Terry Pratchett and Neil Gaiman

American Gods: A Novel

Key of Light

A Little Magic

Key of Knowledge (Paperback

Key of Valor (Paperback

Blue Dahlia (In the Garden, Book 1

Remember When (Mass Market Paperback

Blood Brothers (Sign of Seven Trilogy, Book 1

The Hollow (Sign of Seven Trilogy, Book 2

The Pagan Stone (Sign of Seven Trilogy, Book 3

Song of Susannah (The Dark Tower, Book 6)

Wolves of the Calla (The Dark Tower, Book 5)

Wizard and Glass (The Dark Tower, Book 4

The Waste Lands (The Dark Tower, Book 3)

The Drawing of the Three (The Dark Tower, Book 2)

The Gunslinger (The Dark Tower, Book 1)

The Star Scroll: Dragon Prince #2

A Feast for Crows (A Song of Ice and Fire book 3

A Clash of Kings (A Song of Ice and Fire, Book 2)

A Game of Thrones (A Song of Ice and Fire, Book 1

The Belgariad, Vol. 2 (Books 4 & 5): Castle of Wizardry, Enchanters' End Game (Paperback)

No Humans Involved (Women of the Otherworld, Book 7

Haunted (Women of the Otherworld, Book 5)

The Belgariad, Vol. 1 (Books 1-3): Pawn of Prophecy, Queen of Sorcery, Magician's Gambit (Paperback

Broken (Women of the Otherworld, Book 6

soon

Angels Fall Nora Roberts

soon

The Black Gryphon (Mage Wars

soon

The Diamond Age: Or, a Young Lady's Illustrated Primer

soon

snow crash Neal Stephenson

soon

The Sword of Shannara terry brooks

Unleash the Night (Dark-Hunter, Book 9)

soon

Dream Chaser Sherrilyn kenyon

soon

Born of Fire (A League Novel) Sherrilyn kenyon

soon

Born of Night sherrilyn kenyon

soon

Dragon Prince Melanie Rawn book 1

coming soon

Friday, October 23, 2009

On wings of song by Thomas M. Disch

I have an eleventh printing of the 1985 version of a story copyright 1979.

The general plot is this: Our hero lives in Iowa, lots of things are illegal. Most music is illegal. Our hero cannot sing but wants to because it will let him fly, leaving the bounds of his earthly flesh and soar.

I've NEVER in my life thrown a book across the room after reading it but this one had a really nice flightpath, and a resounding thunk.

Maybe I am just too young for this book I was three when it was printed, but the political overtures that speak of the prohibition, racial slurs considered grammatically correct at the time insult me beyond the fact that the story might be halfway decent.
I've plodded along its 359 pages wondering when I am going to care really about anything other than our main character. His comatose wife (who left her body in song after their wedding before their honeymoon) I could care less about. Her character never really developed for me. It took over a hundred pages for Daniel to be told properly, but his wife is reduced to an aside that compliments the angst against politics and the League of Women voters, the ACLU and Politicians in general. The Farm Belt is described as a close parallel to the bible belt and what happens when we let religion and fear of the upper white class get a hold of our amendments.
It won the John W. Campbell Memorial Award for Best Novel. No I don't know what year it was.

I can't stand corruption, political and religious zealots and the fact that people have held the arts and artists in their grip for lifetimes. I do not appreciate the devaluing of art as a commentary of the state of the US, even if it is true. It bothers me on a personal level as an artist and in the end what do authors want? They want their stories to be read and they want you to feel something from having read it. I did.

Sunday, October 18, 2009

Duma Key Stephen King

I am Stephen King fan. I think I've read about everything he has published. I have a Stephen King shelf right next to David Eddings.

Edgar Freemantle is a construction worker who loses his arm in an accident. It ruins his marriage, and sends him on a journey to find himself. He ends up in Duma Key in a pink house that should be listed in the realty section of the twilight zone. Edgar decides to take up drawing and painting again because its good therapy. That is when the twilight zone comes and gets him.

King describes the feeling obsessive artists get when the need to paint strikes them hard. It describes my own feelings exactly in a way that I couldn't before. I read it and thoght "Yes that's it, where were the words before?"
While reading I worked on a few paintings one of which is a beach, but the others were twisted and haunted.

The dark journey of the soul is shown with interactions with his few and eccentric neighbors, a living forest that smells sickly sweet, paintings that haunt and or kill the owner, the rattling of shells, gruesome deaths and that rag doll. The doll haunts my nightmares today.
Must READ!

Shimmer

Shimmer by John Passarella

It is paranormal thriller based around the protection of humanity. There are always heroes but these are different. When spots between realities thin things come through and the Walkers stop them. Some of the things that come through are reminiscent of Lovecraft and add to the bloodshed factor. The monsters here rock.
This story is based around the youngest Walker and his high school drama, love life. It wasn't what I expected from the previews.
I am a fan of John Passarella and was one of the winners of his fan email contest to have your name used as a character in the book. I was very pleased to see my three pages of existence and my good death.


This is a young adult book, so for those of us who have read some of his other books will find it an easy read.
I think I am just jaded. His other books seem to be much more substantial to me. Don't get me wrong, I love the story but I felt as if I was missing more back history on the characters.
But it was good enough to make me want to get a tattoo of their motto: “Anima spes est, life is hope."
Is it conjugated correctly?

The Gryphon King

The Gryphon King, Tom Deitz, isbn:0-380-75506-8

The ren faire college crowd meets Tir na nog. Its written well, before mass market paperbacks were only made on an eighth grade reading level.
A man donates his personal library to the University of Georgia. He dies before he can have a chance to save a book and a sword from being excluded from the collection. They are donated. A student drops the book and a manuscript not seen for over five hundred years is found. It is a play about St. George and the devil. Nice huh? Its well worth it for the retelling of that fable alone. The book blends the pressures of dissertations with the King of the faeries (and a war between the true king and the thief) and the local renn faire. Add gryphons, weird fog and some truly dramatic characters and this book is definitely a fun read. Mr. Deitz has a wry sense of humor and an appreciation for the dramatic effect.
I read it in nine hours, mostly because I went back and reread the parts that made me laugh out loud.

Storm of Shadows

Storm of Shadows, Christina Dodd (The Chosen ones Book 2)

ok here goes. This is a paranormal romance. That usually means a normal woman finds lonely werewolf in need of love and a good brushing. Not this time, yay! The intimate scenes are few and actually continue the plot. There is some foreshadowing in the first hundred pages that set up the ending nicely. There are many different folklore references that make the book less predictable. Its a fast read and honestly its brain candy. I read this book in less than five hours (374 pages) If you like this genre, go for it. you can do alot worse.

Plot Spoiler:
This book concerns the finding of a prophecy that will determine the outcome of the world and the balance of god and evil. Abandoned ones are born and abandoned by their mothers. (make sense.) They can become good (chosen) or evil (the others). They all have paranormal abilities that have manifested. They are also marked in some way with a sigil or tattoo on their bodies that have something to do with their power. There are seven active chosen ones working for the good and numerous Others. That is why evil always has a leg up on humanity. If they do not have seven Chosen to protect humanity evil wins period.
After the first book in this series, they are down one Chosen One. The war continues, but the Chosen Ones support group enlarges.

Comets, Stars, the moon and mars

Comets, stars, the moon, and mars is a children's book written and illustrated by Douglas Florian.
This is a nice way to start young children learning about astronomy and the universe around them. It starts with stars and goes through, constellations, our solar system (updated with Pluto as a dwarf planet) and continues out to the great beyond.
The poems are catchy and fun to say, some can become great tongue twisters.
The illustrations are not just pictures they are labeled. The parts of a comet, the craters and moons of planets, and on earth there are representations of wildlife on their appropriate continents.

If you have a young child who is interested in stars, or that you want to get interested in stars this is a good book to start with.

There is also a selected bibliography in the back of the book that lists top of the field references for all ages. I do suggest that adults try Stephen Hawking's A Brief History of Time before trying to explain it to their five year olds.