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057. The Knife of Never Letting Go by Patrick Ness
Publication: Candlewick; Reprint edition (October 18, 2010), ebook, 479pp / ISBN 0763645761
Genre: YA Sci-fi, Horror

Read: March 27, 2012
Source: Bought

Series: The Knife of Never Letting Go (you’re here!) | The Ask and the Answer | Monsters of Men

Summary from Amazon:

Todd Hewitt is the only boy in a town of men. Ever since the settlers were infected with the Noise germ, Todd can hear everything the men think, and they hear everything he thinks. Todd is just a month away from becoming a man, but in the midst of the cacophony, he knows that the town is hiding something from him — something so awful Todd is forced to flee with only his dog, whose simple, loyal voice he hears too. With hostile men from the town in pursuit, the two stumble upon a strange and eerily silent creature: a girl. Who is she? Why wasn’t she killed by the germ like all the females on New World? Propelled by Todd’s gritty narration, readers are in for a white-knuckle journey in which a boy on the cusp of manhood must unlearn everything he knows in order to figure out who he truly is.

Review

Don’t you just love it when the stars align and you’re finally able to get a book that you’ve been wanting to read (and that other people have been telling you to read) for ages and then you read it and it’s amazing? I do! And that’s what happened with The Knife of Never Letting Go. Continue reading »

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Feb 282012
 
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034. Dust by Arthur Slade
Publication: Dava Enterprises (February 5, 2011), originally published 2003, ebook, 192pp / ISBN 0385730047
Genre: MG Horror, Historical Fiction

Read: February 19-20, 2012
Source: Bought

Mini-Review

This was way scarier than I thought it’d be for some reason. It reminds me somewhat of The Boneshaker and how that was scary, how it deals with the power adults have over children physically, emotionally, and so on. I liked the writing in Dust a lot more than I did in The Hunchback Assignments, my first Arthur Slade book, and I liked the story more, too. It’s less of an action, kick-ass, “kid saves the world” kind of a book and more of a magical realism/”weird things happen in small towns” book, which I liked. Plus! There’s stuff about the importance of imagination and reading and thinking outside of the box! Defeating baddies through the power of your mind? Awesome! I love that, especially when it’s in a “boy” book. They don’t seem to get that sort of thing a lot in their books, to be honest. Continue reading »

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I want to finish up on 2011′s reviews so I can start 2012! So, very quickly: review notes of three books!

167. Those Who Hunt the Night by Barbara Hambly
Publication: Open Road (March 29, 2011), ebook, 350pp / ISBN 0345361326
Genre: Historical Fantasy/Paranormal, Mystery

Read: December 11-17, 2011
Source: eBookFling borrow

Review Notes

- Vampires! Yay. I’ve actually started to like vampires again…sort of.
- Vampires who do vampire-y things like eat people and be inhuman and stuff! Double yay.
- Interesting detective character– one of those amateur detectives who get in over their head, but not in a cozy mystery sort of way. I like his wife, too, who’s one of those modern-ish women in a historical fiction sort of people. But in a non-annoying way.
- It did feel a bit like “let me describe this fantasy world to you so you know how interesting/different it is compared to your world” whenever the vampires said something.
- Didn’t expect the solution! That’s good, right? I think it is.

Rating


Overall, I LOVED this book. The mystery was good, the characters were interesting, and although I didn’t like how much explaining re:vampires and their awesome vampire world was in there I still liked the writing.

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168. Anna and the French Kiss by Stephanie Perkins
Publication: Speak (August 4, 2011), ebook, 386pp / ISBN 0142419400
Genre: YA Romance

Read: December 21-23, 2011
Source: Freebie

Review Notes

- So cute!
- THIS BOOK CUTE BEYOND BELIEF
- Tell Your Girlfriend is totally the theme song.
- Maybe too much emphasis on how hot St. Clair is compared to everything else about him, but the romance builds in a way that I love. Plus St. Clair/Anna DO like more about each other than just how hot the other person is.
- Plus yay changing each other for the better!

Rating


ALL THE POSITIVE HYPE WAS TRUE.

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169. Making a Living Without a Job by Barbara J. Winter
Publication: Bantam (July 1, 1993), Paperback, 272pp / ISBN 0553371657
Genre: Non-fiction, Self-help

Read: December 24-31, 2011
Source: Gift

Review Notes

- Outdated a bit, but still v. good. Talks about mailing lists and using computers to do finances or something– recommends finding books via an offline searching service! There IS a newer version out now, though, which is good.
- Inspiring! And it helped me figure out what sort of things I’m good at already, things that I could apply towards making money (either in a “real” business or otherwise).
- Could maybe use a section on how to actually create business beyond having an idea. Doesn’t talk about anything re:how to find that info, either.

Rating


Should have read the updated version, but I still liked it. Best part was the bit that tells you how to increase your self-confidence. I needed that!

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129. Prince of Persia: The Graphic Novel by A.B. Sina
Publication: First Second (September 2, 2008), Paperback, 208pp / ISBN 1596432071
Genre: Historical Fantasy, Graphic Novel

Read: October 22, 2011
Source: Bought | Buy your own copy at Amazon.

Mini-Review

Things this book has: pretty graphics, lovely coloring, a very confusing story and vaguely interesting historical fantasy/magical realism stuff.

Basically I have no idea re:what the Prince of Persia video games are about, but I do know there’s time travel and princesses who need rescuing. The graphic novel has one princess (I think she’s a princess, anyway), who basically rescues herself, so that’s cool. But there’s no time travel and I have no idea if the story is actually related to the video games or if they just have the same characters. I don’t even know if that’s important– but I do know that I was seriously confused for most of the book and though I loved looking at the pretty pretty peacock I wish I understood wtf was actually going on and how it relates to the whole Prince of Persia franchise.

Rating


Pretty drawings, confusing story.

132. Boxer, Beetle by Ned Beauman
Publication: Bloomsbury USA; Reprint edition (September 13, 2011), Paperback, 256pp / ISBN 1608196801
Genre: Fiction/Historical Fiction

Read: October 25, 2011
Source: LibraryThing Early Reviewers | Buy your own copy at Amazon.

Mini-Review

Things this book has: a gay Jewish boxer, Nazis, people who collect Nazi memorabilia without actually being Nazis themselves, a gay(?) eugenicicist, a deficit of decent female characters, some excellent historical fiction stuff, and an enthralling writing style that ties all the weird stuff together in such a way that it’s somehow both entertaining and not at all confusing.

What I liked best about Boxer, Beetle was how it felt like your standard literary fiction story written by a dude, but it managed to skip all the annoying stuff lit fic mostly does. There’s sex, but it wasn’t disgusting (for all that it was often degrading to whoever was having it). There’s weirdo loser protagonists, but they weren’t SO weirdo loser that I wouldn’t sit next to them on a bus, for instance. The ending is depressing but that actually doesn’t annoy me all that much, and the rest of the story is so entertaining that it almost makes up for only having one female character who gets a shot at the POV train.

Rating


I liked it a lot!

134. The Dollhouse Murders by Betty Ren Wright
Publication: Live Oak Media (September 1998), originally published 1983(?), Paperback, 149pp / ISBN 0874995205
Genre: Children’s Horror

Read: October 27, 2011
Source: Library Book Sale | Buy your own copy at Amazon.

Mini-Review

Things this book has: haunted dollhouses, a murder mystery (sort of), interesting family dynamics, seriously dated and/or cheesy dialogue/writing.

I’ve been meaning to read this book for years, and now that I’ve done it I can’t see what the big deal it. Yes, it’s scary (especially if you’re afraid of ghosts, like I am). Yes, it’s got a nice family relationship thing in it. But other than that it’s really, really, 1980s in both writing style and feel (in a bad way), and I think that most people who adore it are remembering it through a haze of nostalgia.

Rating


Meh.

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Nov 062011
 
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The Sunday Salon.com I’ve been worrying about how I’m going to keep up with reviewing, what with my goal of reading one book a day and still having a buttload of reviews from last month to do. I don’t want to carry any reviews over from this year into the next! So I’ve decided to try this. I’ll do really short reviews of the books I read each week. If I feel the need to expand a tiny review into a properly-sized review, I can do that later.

Tiny reviews will be five sentences or less. Here goes!

138. The Hottest Dishes in the Tartar Cuisine – Alina Bronsky [rating: 3] | Contest win.
This is a funny book, but more in a horrifying, “omg is this really happening” sort of way. I love unreliable narrators, especially ones who are obviously unreliable, and Rosa is one of the most unreliable narrators I’ve ever read. The story gets way less enjoyable when the German pedophile shows up, however, and though the (happy?) ending sort of saves the book from being completely unbearable, the second half was still miserable reading. When Rosa goes insane (more insane?) and the writing turns dreamy and surreal– that’s the best part, I think.

139. The Eye of the Warlock – P.W. Catanese [rating: 2.5] | Library book sale.
This book desperately needs a new cover! The story is fun, though, it being a fairy tale retelling/extension/etc.– of Hansel and Gretel, to boot (I don’t think they get a lot of retellings, do they?). Loved the lesson about not letting your anger control you; very Jedi-like, actually. Marusch is the best character: she’s strong and kick-butt without being stereotypical. The writing reminds me a bit of R.L. Stine’s, only fantasy instead of horror and focused more on middle school than elementary school.

140. Bright Young Things – Anna Godbersen [rating: 4] e | Freebie.
I feel like this is a guilty pleasure sort of book, and I don’t know why. There’s nothing wrong with it! It’s got great characters, a fun/exciting story, a setting in one of my favorite eras, and decent-to-really-good writing. The repetition of “oh she was naïve and new and didn’t know how to live in NYC/the 1920s without getting screwed over” was somewhat annoying, and so was how Letty’s petiteness was associated with her naïveté/innocence/etc. (and how her small hands/mouth/stature/so on was mentioned every single time she was in the scene), but it wasn’t SO annoying that I wanted to put the book down. The ending was fantastic, too! I can’t wait to read the next book.

141. Ashes – Ilsa J. Bick [rating: 4] e | Library.
Like basically everyone else who’s read this book, I didn’t like the disconnect/discord between the first half (survival in the woods) and the second half (Rule). I also didn’t like how the writing switched sometimes between “sounds like an adult” and “sounds like a teenager” (“That was sucky,” etc.)– in the SAME paragraph. But what I DID like, I liked a lot: the characters, the story, the zombies (who are smart!), the survival stuff, the end of the world/apocalypse stuff. It ended on a cliffhanger, btw, which made me want to scream. I want to read the next book NOW!

142. Bird – Rita Murphy [rating: 3] e | Library.
This book has people who are carried about on the wind like dandelion fluff (or birds, hence the title), and so it’s got that magical realism/fairy tale quality to it that I adore. It’s a short book, with little action or thrills. The best part is the psychological horror of the house that may or may not be alive and that may or may not eat people when they try to leave. I think this would be a good book to read during a cold winter’s evening, preferably in front of a fire (or at least a space heater).

143. The Battle of the Sun – Jeanette Winterson [rating: 3] e | Library.
I don’t know why, but JW’s books always make me feel sleepy after I finish reading them. I think they have something to do with having to concentrate so much harder on the story in order to understand it than I do with other books. This one is connected to Tanglewreck, mainly through the characters, and though I don’t think you have to read that one first I would guess it’d help with the understanding part. This one’s got all my favorite JW’s bits in: excellent kid characters, some fairy tale/sci-fi/fantasy stuff that only makes sense if you squint at it sideways, and lots of excitement/adventure/etc. It ends on a kind of cliffhanger, though, so I wonder if there’s a third book now in the Tanglewreck universe.

144. A Monster Calls – Patrick Ness [rating: 3.5] e | Library.
I was NOT expecting this book to make me cry. I figured, you know, it’d be scary and horrifying and maybe I’d have trouble sleeping. I wasn’t expecting it to be scary in the way that real life is scary, that the horrifying part came from something that, really, happens every day to someone somewhere. Still, for all that I was temporarily traumatized, it’s a wonderful book and a great story.

Weekly Book Stats

Books read this week:
136. There’s Treasure Everywhere – Bill Watterson [rating: 4] *
137. The Time Travelers – Linda Buckley-Archer [rating: 3.5]
138. The Hottest Dishes in the Tartar Cuisine – Alina Bronsky [rating: 3]
139. The Eye of the Warlock – P.W. Catanese [rating: 2.5]
140. Bright Young Things – Anna Godbersen [rating: 4] e
141. Ashes – Ilsa J. Bick [rating: 4] e
142. Bird – Rita Murphy [rating: 3] e
143. The Battle of the Sun – Jeanette Winterson [rating: 3] e
144. A Monster Calls – Patrick Ness [rating: 3.5] e

Books reviewed this week:
127. The Boneshaker – Kate Milford [rating: 4.5]
128. The Girl Who Circumnavigated Fairyland in a Ship of Her Own Making – Catherynne M. Valente [rating: 5]
130. Murder at the Vicarage – Agatha Christie [rating: 4] e

Books acquired this week:
None. :(

Currently reading:
I’m currently in the early bits of Bone Rattler: A Mystery of Colonial America, and I hope to finish it today. So far it’s REALLY good; it’s the sort of historical fiction that works hard to be realistic about the downsides of living in non-modern times, so there’s lots of mention of beatings/violence/class differences (and rats and diseases and so on). There’s a lot of anti-Scottish stuff from the English characters as well (the protagonist is Scottish). Almost all of my knowledge about colonial America is centered on white American stuff, so being able to learn more about the British/Scottish/Native American (I think they show up later) things is great. Plus the mystery is very intriguing!

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Trying to play catch-up with my October reads! I hope I can do it. Otherwise I think I may get really, really behind with November, and then I’m not sure what I’ll do. Basically I think y’all should expect lots of mini-reviews this month, which I hope is okay.

Click on a book’s cover to go to its Amazon page.

Cover of The Boneshaker by Kate Milford 127. The Boneshaker by Kate Milford
Publication: Sandpiper; Reprint edition (May 23, 2011), Paperback, 384pp / ISBN 0547550049
Genre: MG Fantasy (could feasibly be YA)

Read: October 22, 2011
Source: Contest

Mini-Review

Eek, this was so much scarier than I thought it’d be! I can’t actually remember what I thought The Boneshaker would be about, but based on the cover I think I was thinking it’d be a light-hearted sci-fi/fantasy sort of thing, with wacky characters and lots of derring-do. Instead, it’s a Southern gothic horror story with the Devil, some demons, and some very not-nice people. There’s derring-do, but it’s sure isn’t light-hearted.

One of my favorite things about The Boneshaker is how one of the secondary characters, presented at first as a prissy, unfriendly know-it-all actually helps the protagonist in ways that don’t have anything to do with pluck and have more to do with courage and friendship. Even prisses can be decent friends, don’tcha know!

Rating


Seriously recommended, even if you don’t particularly like horror.

Cover of The Girl Who Circumnavigated Fairyland in a Ship of Her Own Making 128. The Girl Who Circumnavigated Fairyland in a Ship of Her Own Making by Catherynne M. Valente
Publication: Feiwel & Friends (May 10, 2011), Hardcover, 256pp / ISBN 0312649614
Genre: MG fantasy

Read: October 22, 2011
Source: Contest

Mini-Review

This reminds me of a Neil Gaiman book (with elements of a Lemony Snicket story), only without the sort of problems that usually crop up in his books (especially re:characters). It’s got that same sort of whimsical, nearly-terrifying quality to it, and the writing is plush and flowing and so on. I did find the beginning a bit tough, but as I got into the rhythm of the book I started to enjoy is more and more. By the end I was in love!

I do wish the secondary characters had been a bit more fleshed out than they were, but overall I think it’s a fantastic book and one of the best ones I’ve read this year.

Rating


The title is impossible, but the story is absolutely devine!

130. Murder at the Vicarage by Agatha Christie
Publication: HarperCollins e-books; Masterpiece ed edition (March 17, 2009), ebook, 380pp / ISBN 0062073605
Genre: Mystery

Read: October 22- , 2011
Source: Freebie

Mini-Review

I haven’t read many Miss Marple books, mainly because the ones I HAVE read have been annoying (and not only because nosy old ladies terrify me). I spent a lot of the time reading this one hoping that AC wouldn’t do something that’d ruin the whole story, and…yay! She didn’t do it. In fact, Murder at the Vicarage turned out to be a really good mystery. Miss Marple is there and she does butt into things a lot, and the way she comes up with the solution is almost deus ex machina, but luckily the narrator is the vicar and he’s not nearly as annoying as Miss Marple it.

One of my favorite things about Agatha Christie is her female characters. They’re almost always interesting, and though they do tend to be stereotypes I find them really enjoyable. This book’s got a lot of great female characters, even leaving out Miss Marple herself, and even the tertiary ones have more depth to them than some male protagonists have in other Golden Age mysteries. Yay Agatha Christie!

Rating


I think it’s actually one of my favorite AC books, now.

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Sep 272011
 
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Book cover of Mister Creecher by Chris Priestly 113. Mister Creecher by Chris Priestly
Publication: Bloomsbury USA Childrens (September 27, 2011), Paperback ARC, ~360pp / ISBN 1599907038
Genre: YA Historical Fiction (with a bit of sci-fi and horror)

Read: September 16, 2011
Source: BEA 2011

Summary from Amazon:

Billy is a street urchin, a pickpocket, and a petty thief. Mister Creecher is a giant of a man whose appearance terrifies everyone he meets. Their relationship begins as a matter of convenience. But before long, a bond develops between these two misfits as they embark on a bloody journey that will take them from London northward on the trail of their target . . . Doctor Victor Frankenstein. It seems the good doctor had promised Mister Creecher a bride, and Mister Creecher will stop at nothing to get what he’s been promised. Nothing.

Note: I do talk about events in the middle and the end of the book, and it MIGHT be spoilery. I don’t think it’s anything too bad, though!

Review

When I got this at BEA I’m pretty sure someone told me it was a retelling of Frankenstein for young adults. And it is, sort of, but only in the way that a “missing scene” novel is a retelling. Actually, Mister Creecher takes place during a point in Frankenstein where Dr Frank is trying to build his monster a mate1. Which is exciting, really! Continue reading »

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