Random (but not really)

Friday, January 2, 2015

Clearing my Bookshelves: Fantasy Paperback, Part the Second

It’s that time–time to get rid of books I’m never going to read (ever or perhaps again).

Since I’m mostly reading eBooks anymore, it’s foolish to keep these books sitting around, because–I’m never going to read them.

Here is what I have in paperback:

The Better Part of Darkness by Kelly Gay
Of Saints of Shadows by Christopher Golden
Tempting Danger by Eileen Wilks
An Innocent Mage by Karen Miller
The Awakened Mage by Karen Miller
Firebird by Mercedes Lackey
Ghost of a Chance by Simon R Green
Bridge of Birds by Barry Hughart

PB-F-2

I wrote reviews for some of the books (see linked above) if you’d like to know a little more about the books. (I ended up with two copies of both Ghost of a Chance and Bridge of Birds, which is why those are going despite the fact they’re eminently re-readable.)

Would you like to give me something for the books? I’d be delighted!
Would you prefer instead to make a donation to a charity instead of giving me something? Great!
Are you low on cash but still really want a book? Talk to me and you can pay it forward later.

Written by Michelle at 6:33 pm    

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Clearing my Bookshelves: Fantasy Paperback

It’s that time–time to get rid of books I’m never going to read (ever or perhaps again).

Since I’m mostly reading eBooks anymore, it’s foolish to keep these books sitting around, because–I’m never going to read them.

Here is what I have in paperback.

Clockwork Heart by Dru Pagliassotti
The Witch of Cologne by Tobsha Learner
The House of Storms by Ian R MacLeod
Demon Posessed by Stacia Kane
Spiral Hunt by Margaret Ronald
Wild Hunt by Margaret Ronald
The Secret History of Moscow by Ekaterina Sedia

PB-F-1

I wrote reviews for some of the books (see linked above) if you’d like to know a little more about the books.

Would you like to give me something for the books? I’d be delighted!
Would you prefer instead to make a donation to a charity instead of giving me something? Great!
Are you low on cash but still really want a book? Talk to me and you can pay it forward later.

Written by Michelle at 6:18 pm    

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Large Print Books

Does anyone have a relative (or perhaps themselves) who reads Large Print books?

In my pile o’ books to get rid of, I have some of Grandmom’s books, and three of those are large print. Because these were Grandmom’s I’ll give them to anyone who needs large print books, first come, first served. If you have someone in your life who would be interested, that counts.

LPHB

Written by Michelle at 6:03 pm    

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Clearing My Bookshelves: Hardback / Trade Paperback

It’s that time–time to get rid of books I’m never going to read (ever or perhaps again).

Since I’m mostly reading eBooks anymore, it’s foolish to keep these books sitting around, because–I’m never going to read them.

Here is what I have in hardback / trade paperback.

Woken Furies by Richard K Morgan
The Better Photo Guide to Digital Photography
Growing at the Speed of Life by Graham Kerr
The Priestly Sins by Andrew Greely
A Fatal Waltz by Tasha Alexander
Tears of the Giraffe by Alexander McCall Smith
Heavenly Date (and other Stories) by Alexander McCall Smith
The Middle Place by Kelly Corrigan
Devil in a Blue Dress by Walter Mosley
About Face by Donna Leon

HB-TPB

I wrote reviews for two of the books (see linked above) if you’d like to know a little more about the books.

Would you like to give me something for the books? I’d be delighted!
Would you prefer instead to make a donation to a charity instead of giving me something? Great!
Are you low on cash but still really want a book? Talk to me and you can pay it forward later.

Written by Michelle at 5:56 pm    

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Wednesday, December 31, 2014

The Books of 2014: Last Stats

I read 167 books this year, which is just under my best year (174 books last year). The fewest books I read in a month was nine, in May. (When I was out hiking and doing fun outside stuff.)

Unsurprisingly, I read more eBooks than anything else.

Paperback – 24
Trade Paperback – 22
eBook – 111
Hardback – 2
Audio – 8
Total – 167

Book-types

I had a lot of re-reads this year. 76 re-reads, far more than any other previous year.

Of genres, I read more fantasy than anything else this year.

Fantasy – 101
Mystery – 79
Romance – 37
YA – 11
Comic – 10
Anthology – 6
Non-Fiction – 2

genre

Mystery was up there however, and romance is creeping up. I still could do without all the boinking, but I do historical romances.

And then for author gender.

gender-table

48% of the books I read were by female authors writing as females, while 31% were written by males. But this, of course, isn’t the true number of books written by women. There are many female authors writing under male pseudonyms or under their initials. (When I was younger, I just assumed that all authors who wrote under their initials were women. I later determined this wasn’t that far-fetched.)

Taking that into consideration, 56% of the books I read this year were written by women, and since 2006, 52% of the books I have read have been written by women (to 41% male)

All things considered, that’s not a bad percentage.

So that’s 2014 in books. Here’s to all the books I’m looking forward to reading in 2015!

The Books of 2014: Mystery, Romance, Non-Fiction
The Books of 2014: Fantasy

Written by Michelle at 9:18 pm    

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The Books of 2014: Mystery, Romance, Non-Fiction

And here are the rest of the books I read this year and loved.
 
 
 
Mystery

Why Kings Confess (2014) C.S. Harris  (8/10)
 
 
 
Comics

Fairest Vol. 3: The Return of the Maharaja (2014) Sean E. Williams, Stephen Sadowski, Phil Jimenez  (9/10)

This was a fabulous addition to this series. I loved the main character DESPITE the fact that I hate the male character.

Fables Vol. 20: Camelot (2014) Bill Willingham, Mark Buckingham, Steve Leialoha, Russ Braun, Barry Kitson  (8/10)
 
 
 
Romance

The Countess Conspiracy (2013) Courtney Milan (9/10)

Why did I love this book?

Violet narrowed her eyes at him. “I know what you’re doing. You’re trying to distract me with science.”

The Heiress Effect (2013) Courtney Milan (8/10)
 
 
 
Non-Fiction

Gulp: Adventures on the Alimentary Canal (2013) Mary Roach  (10/10)

Mary Roach is the best.

The Best American Science and Nature Writing 2012 (2012) Edited by Dan Ariely and Tim Folger (9/10)

Written by Michelle at 8:33 pm    

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The Books of 2014: Fantasy

These are some of the fantasy books I read in 2014 that I really liked. I limited this list to books published in 2013 & 2014, first because I didn’t want to count re-reads, but more importantly, because it limits the list.
 
 
 
Supernatural Fantasy

Mercy Thompson

Shifting Shadows: Stories from the World of Mercy Thompson (2014) Patricia Briggs  (9/10)
Night Broken (2014) Patricia Briggs  (8/10)

I love the Mercy Thompson series.

Black Arts (2014) Faith Hunter  (9/10)

The latest installment of the Jane Yellowrock series. Another favorite.

London Falling (2013) Paul Cornell (9/10)
Downfall (2014) Rob Thurman  (8.5/10)

I adore Rob Thurman’s Cal Leandros series. I hesitated to read this, because I was afraid it might end in Cal and Niko, well, ending. The fact that the story was split between Cal and Robin reinforced this fear. But it was really good and worth the wait.

Iron Night (2014) M.L. Brennan  (8.5/10)
Broken Homes (2014) Ben Aaronovitch  (8.5/10)

This series is good, but the narration by Kobna Holdbrook-Smith is AMAZING.

Known Devil (2014) Justin Gustainis  (8/10)

This is a fun series. Police unit that investigates magical crimes. Set in Scranton. No, it’s good. Really!

The Grendel Affair (2013) Lisa Shearin  (8.5/10)

This is another supernatural mystery and I liked both the premise and characters.
 
 
 
Young Adult

Eternal: Shadow Falls: After Dark (2014) C.C. Hunter  (8.5/10)

I like this series (the second series in the same world with overlapping characters).

Blue Lily, Lily Blue (2014) Maggie Stiefvater  (8.5/10) (points lost for the epilogue)

This is an EXCELLENT series. I can’t wait for the next (and hopefully final) book.
 
 
 
Anthology

Magic City: Recent Spells (2014) Paula Guran  (8.5/10)

I love anthologies, and this is good one. A lot of variety and authors I love.

Night Shift (2014) Nalini Singh; Ilona Andrews; Lisa Shearin; Milla Vane  (8/10)

Just to be clear, I only read half the stories–the other authors didn’t interest me.

Written by Michelle at 8:26 pm    

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The Books of 2014: Covers

There were some very good and some very terrible covers this year.

First, The Bad

I’ve already ranted about how much I hated the cover for Burn for Me:

Burn-for-Me

It’s awful. And there was an alternate that was gorgeous, which is just adding insult to injury.

For the other book, I hate to do this, because it’s not a horrible cover, but she’s had such gorgeous covers in the past, I found the cover of Why Kings Confess to be terribly disappointing.

It doesn’t look at all like Sebastian, and there is nothing in the cover that draws me in. But the fact that previous covers were so gorgeous, I have a much higher bar for this series than I do for many others.

Now, The Good

Luckily, there were far more covers I really liked this year.

I really loved the cover of Jaye Wells Dirty Magic:

Dirty Magic

ML Brennan’s Generation V series also has good covers:

But as the main character is male, that’s not particularly unusual. But they do a good job getting Fort right.

Faith Hunter, as usual, gets fabulous covers for her Jane Yellowrock books.

I adore how powerful Jane is.

As always, kudos to the latest Cal Leandros book

That all the covers do such an excellent job of portraying the essence of Cal (and Niko when he makes an appearance) continues to astound me. Every cover in the series is immediately recognizable as a Cal & Niko book, and Cal looks exactly how he is written: like an obnoxious asshole with an obsession with guns.

And I want to draw special attention to Fairest Vol. 3: The Return of the Maharaja

The book had FANTASTIC art.

With caveats, Patricia Briggs also gets good covers.

For some reason they always have Mercy showing more skin than seems at all realistic for her character. But she is shown as strong and acting (as opposed to being acted upon) so I’ll take what I can get.

Written by Michelle at 7:27 pm    

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Categories: Books & Reading,Covers,Yearly Round-Up  

The Books of December

And it’s the end of December, so time for the books I read this past month!

Best books of the month were Pawn of Prophecy by David Eddings, which is an old favorite I have read many, many times. Fate’s Edge by Ilona Andrews was another re-read of a book I loved.

And here’s what I read:

Epic Fantasy

The Belgariad
Pawn of Prophecy (1982) David Eddings (10/10)
Queen of Sorcery (1982) David Eddings (8/10)
Magician’s Gambit (1983) David Eddings (9/10)

Supernatural Fantasy

Generation V
Tainted Blood (2014) M.L. Brennan (7.5/10)

Supernatural Romance

Burn for Me (2014) Ilona Andrews (7/10)

The Edge
On the Edge (2009) Ilona Andrews (8/10)
Bayou Moon (2010) Ilona Andrews (7.5/10)
Fate’s Edge (2011) Ilona Andrews (9/10)

Historical Romance

Rules of Scoundrels
A Rogue by Any Other Name (2012) Sarah MacLean (7/10)
One Good Earl Deserves a Lover (2013) Sarah MacLean (8/10)
No Good Duke Goes Unpunished (2013) Sarah MacLean (6/10)
Never Judge a Lady by Her Cover (2014) Sarah MacLean (7/10)

Format-wise, I once again bought books I already owned in paperback, so I could re-read them.

Paperback – 3
eBook – 9
Multiple Formats – 3
Re-read – 6

Very little variety in genre this month.

Fantasy – 8
Romance – 8

And male authors made a slight comeback this month, but not enough to pull out of their slump.

Male – 3
Female – 3
Initials – 1
Joint – 4

Written by Michelle at 6:50 pm    

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Thursday, December 11, 2014

To Whom It May Concern at Avon:

I read the new Ilona Andrews book (first in a new series) Burn for Me.

I had a couple problems with the story, but overall, I found it quite enjoyable.

What I did not enjoy was the cover.

Here is the cover of the book.

Burn-for-Me

I don’t like it. I just don’t. The female character is weak, and looks needy and defenseless, and I JUST CAN’T EVEN with men wearing their shirts like that.

But, you know, bad book covers happen to good people.

Then I discovered they had another cover, that was rejected.

THIS cover:

Burn-for-Me-Rejected

I. LOVE. THAT. COVER.

It is AWESOME. She is powerful and taking action. In fact, he’s the one standing there clutching her hand and looking handsome while she is taking action.

THAT IS AWESOME.

But instead, someone decided they had to go with the bare chested man, with the woman all but swooning in the man’s arms cover.

WHAT THE HELL?

And even though the female character didn’t actually hold balled lightening when fighting, she was smart and able to care for herself and others. She had no need to clutch needily at a man. A man who doesn’t even know how to wear a shirt for gods’ sake.

The woman on the cover that went to print is NOT the woman I read about in the book.

WHY did they need to show her as weak? WHY?!

Let me be clear: Avon? You SUCK at covers.

ADDENDUM the First:
Another salient point. I purchased the book solely because it was written by Ilona Andrews. If I was browsing, I would have immediately skipped right over that as a book of no interest to me. And in fact Despite the fact I had pre-ordered the book, I put off reading it because I found the cover so unappealing, I presumed it wasn’t the kind of book I typically enjoy.

But I did get around to reading it, because I love Ilona Andrews and the books they write. But if I was a reading, looking for a new author? No way in hell would I have picked that up.

Written by Michelle at 6:55 pm    

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Categories: Bad Covers,Books & Reading,Covers  

Tuesday, December 2, 2014

The Books of November

And now…. the books of November!

Again, Kobna Holdbrook-Smith’s reading of Ben Aaronovitch’s Rivers of London series was again spot-on perfect, with Whispers Under Ground. I adore listening to this series so very much.

Also very good was Henning Mankell’s The Troubled Man, the 10th Kurt Wallander book. Be aware this is as much about Kurt Wallander as it is a mystery, but those parts are what were so very good.

I also really like Tracy Grant’s Charles & Melanie Frasier series, which is also the Malcom & Suzanne Rannoch series (I believe it had to do with publishers), and the books are not written/published in chronological order. But they are chock full of intrigue.

Mystery

The Troubled Man (2009/2011) Henning Mankell translated by Laurie Thompson (9/10)

Outrage (2008/2011) Arnaldur Indridason translated by Anna Yates (8.5/10)

Mystery, Historical

Beneath a Silent Moon (2003) Tracy Grant (8.5/10)

The Mask of Night (2011) Tracy Grant (8.5/10)

Fantasy, Supernatural

Fair Game (2012) Patricia Briggs (9/10)

Eternal: Shadow Falls: After Dark (2014) C.C. Hunter (8.5/10)

Night Shift (2014) Nalini Singh; Ilona Andrews; Lisa Shearin; Milla Vane (8/10)

Broken Soul (2014) Faith Hunter (7/10)

Graphic Novels

Fables Vol. 20: Camelot (2014) Bill Willingham, Mark Buckingham, Steve Leialoha, Russ Braun, Barry Kitson (8/10)

Fairest Vol. 4: Cinderella:  Of Men and Mice (2014) Mark Andreyko, Shawn McManus (7/10)

Romance, Historical

A Study in Seduction (2012) Nina Rowan (7/10)

Audio Books

Whispers Under Ground, Audible Version (2012/2012) Ben Aaronovitch narrated by Kobna Holdbrook-Smith (10/10)

Blood Cross, Audible Version (2010/2010) Faith Hunter narrated by Khristine Hvam (8.5/10)

I read 13 books this year, so that’s 155 so far for the year. Probably break last year’s total, but that is still quite a number of books.

Paperback 1
Trade Paperback 2
eBook 8
Audio 2
Multiple Formats 2
Re-read 3

As always, ebooks are far and away beating paper books.

Fantasy and mystery were pretty evenly split this month, but I did get in two comics.

Fantasy 6
Mystery 5
Romance 3
Comic 2

And female authors are continuing to lead male authors. Hooray!

Male 3
Female 7
Anthology 3

Written by Michelle at 9:04 am    

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Sunday, November 2, 2014

Hiking WV: Harpers Ferry

Last Saturday (because this Saturday was rainy) we went to Harpers Ferry to try and catch some of the last leaf change in the state.

We’d considering walking on that part of the Appalachian Trail, but instead ended up taking the Maryland Heights Trail which had a gorgeous overview of the Shenandoah River, Potomac River, and Harpers Ferry.

There were a TON of people all over the place, including at least two families attempting to take strollers up the Maryland Heights Trail. (This was a terrible idea.)

20141025_Harpers_Ferry_029

20141025_Harpers_Ferry_036

See that rockline? That’s where we hiked to, and where the above pictures were taken.

20141025_Harpers_Ferry_017

20141025_Harpers_Ferry_071

20141025_Harpers_Ferry_015

Gorgeous day.

20141025_Harpers_Ferry_060

20141025_Harpers_Ferry_062

Our whole walk was about 6.5 miles, and our elevation gain was 1579 feet. And the Maryland Heights Trail was quite steep in places.

Written by Michelle at 10:36 am    

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Categories: National Park / Forest,Photos,West Virginia  

Saturday, November 1, 2014

The Books of October

This would have been a slow reading month, except that we went on vacation, and the train ride (which was lovely) provided lots of relaxing reading time. So I ended up reading quite a bit, including several new releases I’d been saving up for such an occasion. But I also was re-reading some Patricia Briggs, who I always like. (I just realized I forgot to review the latest volume of Fables. That’ll have to go onto next month.)

The best books of the month were Blue Lily, Lily Blue by Maggie Stiefvater and Downfall by Rob Thurman, both of which were new releases. (I’m not counting the Miss Marple collection, because I am always going to love Miss Marple.) If you haven’t picked up Maggie Stiefvater’s Raven Boys, you really need to rectify that right now.

Fantasy, YA

Blue Lily, Lily Blue (2014) Maggie Stiefvater (8.5/10)

Fantasy, Supernatural
Cal & Niko
Downfall  (2014) Rob Thurman  (8.5/10)
Toby Daye
The Winter Long  (2014) Seanan McGuire  (7/10)
Jane Yellorock
Black Water  (2014) Faith Hunter  (7/10)
Mercy Thompson
Frost Burned
(2013) Patricia Briggs  (8/10)
River Marked (2011) Patricia Briggs
Silver Borne (2010) Patricia Briggs
Alpha & Omega
Hunting Ground  (2009) Patricia Briggs

Mystery
Miss Marple: The Complete Short Stories  (2013) Agatha Christie  (10/10)
Hypothermia  (2007/2009) Arnaldur Indridson translated by Victoria Cribb  (7/10)

Mystery, Historical
The Paris Plot  (2014) Teresa Grant (7/10)

Now for the numbers!

I read eleven books this month, bringing my total for the year to 142, slightly down from this point last year, but still, quite a few books.

Because I was doing a lot of re-reading, and haven’t yet found all my favorite books on sale as ebook, I actually read 3 paperbacks.
Paperback 3
eBook 8
Multiple Formats 1
Re-read 5

I read mostly supernatural fantasy this month, but I did read two straight up mysteries.
Fantasy 8
Mystery 2
Romance 2
YA 1
I never seem to rate any of Arnaldur Indridson’s Inspector Erlendur books much higher than a seven, yet I keep coming back to the series, wanting to learn more about Erlendur. So even though I haven’t raved about that series, you might want to look into it, because it really is fascinating. (Just keep in mind that it is often hard to like Erlendur.)

For this month’s gender break-down, female authors are continuing to trounce male authors, with Arnaldur Indridson the only male author I read in October.
Male 1
Female 9
Male Pseudonym 1
Right now female authors have a strong lead, 49%:32%. But if add in female authors writing under initials or male pseudonyms, it’s 58%:32%.

So that’s October in books. Now if you’ll excuse me, I’ve got the latest Faith Hunter I really need to finish…

Written by Michelle at 9:34 pm    

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Categories: Books & Reading,Monthly Round-Up  

Wednesday, October 29, 2014

Vacation: Cabrillo National Monument

While we were staying with Mechanicky Gal, we went to Cabrillo National Monument to visit the tide pools. We also got to go into the Old Point Loma Lighthouse. Most of the rooms were closed off to the public, so you could look in and see what it would have looked like when it was in use.

The tide pools were gorgeous, and I loved walking along them.

20141019_Cabrillo_085

20141019_Cabrillo_078

20141019_Cabrillo_059

Oh, well yes, there were a lot of rocks. So I took lots of pictures of rocks. Because I like rocks.

This is the Old Point Loma Lighthouse

20141019_Cabrillo_008

You could walk up to almost the top of the tower, but you couldn’t go outside, or climb the ladder to the light.

20141019_Cabrillo_014

I took this picture to remind me to look up when and why lighthouses would use different colored lights.

Short answer (according to the internet): it depended upon the light house. The rate of rotation (sometimes in combination with colors) could designate a specific lighthouse. The color could designate the location of the lighthouse in relation to the bay.

20141019_Cabrillo_015

20141019_Cabrillo_043

Also: This guy again.

20141019_Cabrillo_065

Written by Michelle at 8:00 am    

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Categories: California,National Park / Forest,Photos,Travel  
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