• Book Log #29: The God of the Hive, by Laurie R. King

    Book Log #29: The God of the Hive, by Laurie R. King

    I was very surprised and pleased to win The God of the Hive as a First Reads book from Goodreads, and took it as just cause to rush back and get caught up on the previous Mary Russell book, The Language of Bees. Fair warning to any Mary Russell fans who may be behind on…

  • Book Log #28: The Zombie Survival Guide: Complete Protection from the Living Dead, by Max Brooks

    Book Log #28: The Zombie Survival Guide: Complete Protection from the Living Dead, by Max Brooks

    I first went through The Zombie Survival Guide in audio form, but on my second pass through I went to a print edition and was quite pleased to do so. While the audio edition is played absolutely straight, with the narrator doing his reading in deadly earnest (and therefore infusing the whole thing with delicious…

  • Quite satisfied with this

    Quite satisfied with this

    Chapter 8 of Bone Walker is well and thoroughly underway, and for the first time as I’ve gotten into this chapter, I’ve come to realize that this book’s definitely setting a different tone than Faerie Blood. For one thing, the world’s already established, so I don’t have to spend much time at all on introductory…

  • This week’s episode of Anna’s New Books

    This week’s episode of Anna’s New Books

    Got some nice crunchy ones on the purchase list this time around, you guys! First and foremost, in print, the shiny new zombie novel Feed by Mira Grant, a.k.a. ! I’m already a hundred pages into this and into it way more than I’ve been with her Toby Daye novels–and I certainly liked the first…

  • Book Log #27: The Zombie Survival Guide: Recorded Attacks, by Max Brooks

    Book Log #27: The Zombie Survival Guide: Recorded Attacks, by Max Brooks

    If you’ve read Max Brooks’ entirely deadpan and therefore entirely chortleworthy The Zombie Survival Guide, then you’ve already pretty much read the content of this graphic novel. If you haven’t, then what you’ve got here is a nice little collection of zombie attacks throughout recorded history, in a setting that assumes that they’ve been going…

  • Book Log #26: The Language of Bees, by Laurie R. King

    Book Log #26: The Language of Bees, by Laurie R. King

    I came into The Language of Bees very belatedly–and only because I actually won an ARC of its immediate followup, The God of the Hive, on Goodreads! I therefore wound up reading them pretty much back to back, and that’s definitely how you should read them, since the two are linked parts of one overall…

  • Right then so we have us a new Doctor!

    Right then so we have us a new Doctor!

    So we’re a few episodes in now on the new guy, and I know some of you out there are watching directly via the BBC, some of you are watching via BBC America, and some of you are using Means Which Shall Not Be Mentioned! Me, I’ll eschew going into specific episode details since I…

  • Book Log #25: Folly, by Laurie R. King

    Book Log #25: Folly, by Laurie R. King

    Man, Folly was a difficult book to read–but fortunately, not quite as much a difficult to review. As I’ve said before in my reviews, I greatly enjoy Laurie King’s work, and this is easily one of the most substantial novels of hers I’ve tackled to date, if not the most. Folly has just enough of…

  • Vote for me! Vote for Queen of Souls!

    Vote for me! Vote for Queen of Souls!

    So the fine folks over at Dystel & Goderich Literary Management have a blog I’ve been following for a while, and one of their agents, Mr. Jim McCarthy, is running a little contest. He invited readers to send in the first lines of their manuscripts, and from the hundreds of submissions he received, he chose…

  • More about Portland

    More about Portland

    Aside from the whole YAY WE WENT TO POWELL’S thing, it’s totally worth pointing out the other places we went to as well: First, a cafe called Backspace, recommended to by . Vegetarian/vegan place, but the sandwiches we had were quite tasty. There was also interesting art on the walls, and it was clear that…