Saturday, May 30, 2009
Oh, I had such high hopes.... ; )
So, here's the list as of today:
January
1. Heirloom, notes from an accidental tomato farmer, by Tim Stark
2-6. Anne McCaffrey’s Acorna series: Acorna the Unicorn Girl, Acorna’s Quest, Acorna’s People, Acorna’s World, and Acorna’s Search. There are more in the series, I’ve read them all, but this time, reading them in one long blitz, they started getting really weird….
7 & 8. Spellsinger, and The Hour of the Gate, Alan Dean Foster
February
9. Why did it have to be snakes? From science to the Supernatural, the many mysteries of Indiana Jones, by Lois H. Gresh and Robert Weinberg.
10 & 11. Alan Dean Foster, still, Spellsinger series: The Day of the Dissonance; The Moment of the Magician
12. Small is possible : life in a local economy, by Lyle Estill
13. Audiobook: Blind Corner, by Dorford Yates, read with utter deliciousness by Alan Rickman!
March
14. Foster, still, The Paths of the Perambulator
15. Treasure in a Cornfield, The Discovery and Excavation of the Steamboat ‘Arabia’, by Greg Hawley
16. Audiobook: The Old Silent, by Martha Grimes, read with delightful accent by Tim Curry
17. Audiobook: Voyage of the Dawn Treader, by C. S. Lewis, read by the great Derek Jacobi
18. Crochet Liberation Front : first ever book! , edited by Laurie Wheeler – and I’ve got to plug this book, because I enjoyed it so much, I’ve got to buy a copy! I’d suggested it for purchase to my local library, and man, I need my own copy! :D
April
19, 20, and 21. Terry Pratchett, Guards! Guards! , Feet of Clay, The Fifth Elephant
22. Alan Dean Foster, Son of Spellsinger
23. The Steel Bonnets, by George MacDonald Fraser
24. Pratchett, as apparently always!, Night Watch
May
25, 26, 27, 28, 29. Pratchett: Thud!, Going Postal, Making Money, The Last Continent, and Interesting Times
Saturday, January 31, 2009
The End o' January is here
Heirloom posed more of a problem than I thought it would. What can
I say? It's an interesting book, but when I read nonfic, I seem to need
a certain amount of time uninterrupted. Fiction I can pick up, put
down, accidentally drop the book and restart. Nonfic wants me to pay
a bit more attention.
I'll give a quickie of the fiction I've been reading. Around New Year's I
picked up the latest paperback in Anne McCaffrey's Acorna series.
Having read it, I decided to re-read the rest of the series. So far, I've
tackled Acorna, Acorna's Quest, Acorna's People, Acorna's World, and
am half through with Acorna's Search.
I find McCaffrey incredibly readable. Not that it's brain candy. Her
writing style just happens to work and play well with my brain.
However....
Did you ever read a series in bits, as the books come out, then try to
read the whole flipping thing at one shot? Little plot twists that seemed
cool the first time round suddenly seem beyond implausible. I've got
to say, the time-jumping Friends of the Acorna series became one of
those twists, for me. The whole lost-in-time thing eventually got on
my nerves to the point that I just stopped reading. I'll pick them back
up eventually, but I certainly won't try the full-series read again!
It's funny. I didn't have that trouble with the Pern books. Even
blitzreading 'em didn't set my teeth on edge like the Acorna biz did.
Crazy.
So, I jumped over to re-read Alan Dean Foster's Spellsinger series.
Finished the first (Spellsinger) and second (The Hours of the Gate),
and am moving right on. Not having the improbability factor kick in
on this series, either.
Okay, that said, here's my Bonus Books o' the Month: Skippyjon
Jones, and Skippyjon Jones in Mummy Trouble, both by Judy
Schachner. They be children's books, me hearties, and well worth
adult time. The artwork is a delight, and the whole idea of a Siamese
kitten who daydreams he's a sword-wielding Chihuahua hero named El
Skippito? Can't beat that with a stick! Look 'em over. Go to the
bookstore, and look for 'em. Go to the library. Go online. you've
really got to read these. Won't take long. You'll be glad you did.
Saturday, January 3, 2009
Hurray! One down, 51 to go...! LOL!
Set on Discworld, though you'd hardly know it, it's seems to be the classic Pied Piper story. Seems to be.
Nothing Terry Pratchett ever writes is exactly all it seems to be....
It's also about developing awareness of oneself as a self, of responsibility to others, of how to manage when it's clear one's dream is never going to become one's absolute reality, but can still be achieved.
I shan't bother explaining how the Educated Rodents became as they are. You can read the book yourself, you know. It's not all that long. It's longer than, say, Where's My Cow?, but considerably shorter than Small Gods. I shall suggest that you consider the notion that there are rats, and there are rats, wherever you go.
I enjoyed it. Not as much as I enjoyed Nanny Ogg's Cookbook, but then, I'm just that sort of person. Overall, thumbs up for The Amazing Maurice and his Educated Rodents!
Now, to finish Heirloom: notes from an accidental tomato farmer. I mean, really. I've gotta know. How does anyone accidentally plant tomatoes...?
