Month: January 2012
-
2011 Book Log #42: Moving Target, by Elizabeth Lowell
My rating: 4 of 5 stars Moving Target, the first of her Rarities Unlimited series, is perhaps my favorite of all of Elizabeth Lowell’s books. Not because she does anything hugely different in this book that she does from the rest of them, mind you–but more because she happens in this one to mix all…
-
Tri-lingual Hobbit re-read: Chapter 3
My pace on this has, unsurprisingly, slowed now that I’m back at work! But I think a chapter a weekend will do me for a while. Here then is chapter 3!
-
2011 Book Log #41: The Secret Sister, by Elizabeth Lowell
My rating: 3 of 5 stars The Secret Sister, published under the name of Elizabeth Lowell, is a reworked version of a novel called The Secret Sisters, published under the name of Ann Maxwell. I haven’t read the original version, but I can safely say that the Lowell version is an acceptable little romantic suspense…
-
2012 Book Log #4: Rebecca, by Daphne du Maurier
My rating: 5 of 5 stars If you’re a fan of old-school romantic suspense, then you cannot go wrong at all with Daphne du Maurier. Especially if you pick up Rebecca, which I was very pleased to finally do. Many of the elements in this book are classically Gothic: the innocent young new bride, the…
-
2012 Book Log #3: Dreadful Skin, by Cherie Priest
My rating: 3 of 5 stars If you like werewolves, and you like the Old West, then Cherie Priest’s short story collection Dreadful Skin is a decent way to spend your time. We’ve got three interconnected stories here, featuring the werewolf Jack Gabert and the woman who hunts him, Eileen Callaghan, an Irish ex-nun who’s…
-
2011 Book Log #40: Silver Phoenix, by Cindy Pon
My rating: 1 of 5 stars I heard about Silver Phoenix as yet another example of a trend that bothers the hell out of me: putting white faces on the covers of books that are not about white people. Thus, I wanted to give this book a bit of support. But, given that Cindy Pon…
-
2012 Book Log #2: Midnight Bayou, by Nora Roberts
My rating: 2 of 5 stars Nora Roberts, my main go-to author for formulaic but nonetheless entertaining romance and romantic suspense, holds that position for a few strong reasons. And among the strongest is that every so often, she does actually try to break out of formula. With Midnight Bayou, she delivers a rare oddity…
-
Tri-lingual Hobbit re-read: Chapter 2 (post 2 of 2)
Picking up where I left off in Chapter 2 of The Hobbit, the award for “next idiom found” goes to the German edition!
-
2012 Book Log #1: Shades of Milk and Honey, by Mary Robinette Kowal
My rating: 3 of 5 stars My first book of 2012 is a good strong start: Mary Robinette Kowal’s Shades of Milk and Honey, which I’ve been meaning to read for some time. Much has been made over this novel being the “fantasy novel Jane Austen would have written”, and to an extent, I do…
-
2011 Book Log #39: Whirlpool, by Elizabeth Lowell
My rating: 2 of 5 stars I’ve posted before about my affection for Elizabeth Lowell’s books, formulaic though they are. Whirlpool is no exception, though it’s an earlier example of a formula she’s used to better effect in more recent books: i.e., an independently operating agency out to recover a Valuable Shiny Thing, a hero…