Don of the Dead and The Chick and The Dead by Casey Daniels

I just finished these two books this week. I guess they fall under paranormal mystery. Paranormal because the main character (Pepper Martin) can see and hear the dead ever since she tripped and hit her head on the steps of a mausoleum at work (she's a cemetery tour guide in Cleveland). In the first book its dead mob boss Gus Scarpetti who shows up and pesters her until she agrees to help solve the mystery of his 30 year old death by drive-by. In book two its Didi Bowman, who needs Pepper to prove that her sister Merilee stole Didi's manuscript "So Far the Dawn", a Gone with the Wind-like tale with a fervored fan following. There are some cozy mystery elements (Pepper is an amateur sleuth, the mystery was really light, and the really violent stuff happens off-screen: Pepper almost gets killed a couple of times, but I wasn't worried), and very light romance with a detective (Quinn Harrison), and a "brain man" (Dan Callahan) who keeps trying to study her and isn't all he seems.

Overall I thought the series was OK. Probably a 6-6.5 out of 10 for me.

The good: The writing really flowed. I didn't find myself bored, and I was a little surprised that when I googled and went to Casey Daniels' website it looked like these were her only two books. She didn't seem like a first time author to me. So I googled more and found out Daniels is a pseudonym for Connie Laux (but only 3 books under that name too). The closest thing I can compare this author to would be Janet Evanovich.. but I'd say a less sexed up version (which is a good thing, because I don't like Stephanie Plum. There. I said it). The side characters are well-formed, and there is a really interesting thread that ties the series; this ability and Dan the brain-man's interest in it is a mystery itself. I think that mystery is what Daniels is going to use to keep readers reading (I know its driving me a little crazy), as well as the really slow building love triangle that hasn't got anything serious going on so far, but maybe people will want to see if anything does happen. Basically the books are a fun, light, read and the style is very easy to get into.

The less good:  a) It feels like Dan was meant to be this absent-minded but brilliant doctor interested in Pepper's brain scans for most of book 1, then he suddenly starts acting fishy and mysterious, hinting that he is someone else – did the author change their mind halfway? I'm suspicious it wasn't planned, but I guess its OK, though I don't fully buy his sudden change. Also he is barely mentioned in book 2, what's up there? b) I think that we're supposed to see Pepper's growth from a rich, daddy's girl who never expected to have a job to someone more self-confident who believes in her own intelligence. Problem is, this meant I didn't like Pepper's character for the first half of the first book – she was ditsy and annoying, didn't figure out some really obvious things (she grows out of this but still I found some of the mystery was obvious to me but not to Pepper in both books), and spends a lot of time happily bouncing her boobs in front of men. Which brings me to c) OK.. WHAT is up with the breast obssession? In book 1, I think just about EVERY. SINGLE. MALE character in the book stares at Pepper's breasts. Young, old (30+ years her senior), half paralyzed, they all stare and pretty much LEER. And they are just Cs, and I'm pretty sure they aren't popping out of some skintight top or something, so I really don't understand or care. I wasn't sure if I should be annoyed about the depiction of Pepper, because Pepper didn't seeme to mind, even puffing them out in certain scenes (even after arguing with Scarpetti about his chauvanism. Is she supposed to be feminist?), or annoyed at the depiction of men (in this century, I think most men know that's rude, or at least have developed a finely tuned way of not being obvious. At least don't make ALL the men in this book do that). Thank god that in Book 2 the detailed interchange of meet Pepper, stare/leer at boobs, Pepper talks etc, happened much less. Sadly Pepper also talks to more women than men in book 2. I still hope that this trend is dying. Finally, d) Pepper's fortunes changed so that she has to work - her dad was a surgeon bringing in 6 figures before who was convicted of fraud and Pepper lost friends and a fiance because of this. While it is often mentioned, we never see Pepper talk to either her dad in jail or her mother who moved to Florida. I wish I could see more personal interaction there than Pepper just being emo over it and repeating what I already know – dad's in jail, lost my fiance, gotta job – but I don't really believe I see anything that shows she's really messed up over except once thinking someone's guilty face reminded her of her father lying, unless not talking to her parents counts. Maybe in Book 3 – Tombs of Endearment.

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The pain!

Mo. Man Burns Books as Act of Protest

– – – – – – – – – – – –

By DAVID TWIDDY Associated Press Writer

May 28,2007 | KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Tom Wayne amassed thousands of books in a warehouse during the 10 years he has run his used book store, Prospero's Books. His collection ranges from best sellers like Tom Clancy's "The Hunt for Red October" and Tom Wolfe's "Bonfire of the Vanities," to obscure titles like a bound report from the Fourth Pan-American Conference held in Buenos Aires in 1910. But wanting to thin out his collection, he found he couldn't even give away books to libraries or thrift shops, which said they were full. So on Sunday, Wayne began burning his books protest what he sees as society's diminishing support for the printed word.

This is the funeral pyre for thought in America today," Wayne told spectators outside his bookstore as he lit the first batch of books.


(see link for more on the article). I find it hard to imagine someone who has amassed that many books being able to BURN THEM. I feel that weird shock you feel when you think things should work a certain way but they don't. Not surprised, but still wish it wasn't so. He said it was "fun". :O

P.S. VOX is looking really weird in my browser today.


ETA: PaperbackSwap is trying to get the books from this guy, there is a petition and everything!

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Oh ebay, part II

Wow, what snipping occurred at the last 4 minutes for those auctions I posted about!!! The one I really wanted (A thru Charnas) had 18 bids and went for $26.08. I didn't even bother to bid, it was insane. Oh well. I won the Stamey thru Z auction for $15.51 – total plus shipping was $38.62. Josh gave me a LONG incredilous look which made me squirm when I told him…. What? He just spent $150 on a new bike seat. $38.62 on 106 books = $0.36 per book OK!?! Dude. And I am probably going to sell the S. L. Viehl books (and a couple of others) because I already have them. Yes, I can justify this..

 

P.S. I got my TBR down to 99, but now… umm… ok its going up above 100 again. I think the "Space Vampires" book is going to be up there on my list. hohohoho.

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Pet peeve

I was reading this post by Lilith Saintcrow about how certain people say that if you make money selling books you are "selling out". Are these people really idealistic and out of touch with reality or what? So elitist.

Which makes me think of another thing that annoys me - people who are elitist about what books people should enjoy. Like only certain books count as a real book, not the books that cater to "the unwashed masses", only the cerebral books count.  I think life is complicated enough, I want to escape in a book, not get reminded of life's complexities. Plus its MY free time, who the hell are you?

Subset of that: people who don't read much who give me a 'something is wrong with you' look if I tell them what type of books I read! For some reason (this has happened a couple of times), if I say I read fantasy, I seem to get a sneer. I think its probably worse for romance readers, but saying fantasy gives me a hard time too. I will read pretty much everything but I guess I prefer fun books. But then.. it is also revealed that some people who think I should read only classics or pure fiction, not genre fiction, don't even know what the hell they are talking about! This is what I got after the sneer from these ignoramuses:

1) "Fantasy.. I think that's almost like porn..My mom reads that". OH MY GOD, WHAT. Are you confusing fantasy with erotica? bahahaahaaa. This happened in college and I had to explain what fantasy was.

2) "Fantasy and sci-fi.. what's the difference? Aren't they like the same thing?" ADFHFFHFH. WHAT. This was a month ago from someone who went to graduate school. Who obviously doesn't read at all. I had to explain how Star Wars is more sci-fi and Lord of the Rings was more fantasy. After a ten minute rant, he finally conceded that there was a difference!

Gah.

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Greywalker by Kat Richardson

Harper Blaine is a private investigator in Seattle. While on a routine assignment, she interviews someone for a client and gets attacked. She dies for 2 minutes before she is revived and after the attack she has been changed irrevocably. Now she sees mist and grey things. She finds out that this is the Grey – a world separating life and death which is inhabited by ghosts and other creatures. Because the core of Harper is practical (probably a necessity at her job), she hates this change in herself and has huge problems accepting that she has become a "greywalker". She begins to meet people and things connected to the Grey (ghosts, vampires and other creatures) because her change seems to have attracted them to her.

Much of the book has Harper continuing her investigations, and even though they are jobs tinted by the supernatural, a lot of phone calls and pounding pavement is involved.  This made the book feel very slow although I'm sure it is a more realistic portrayal of her job than if it went faster. Also much of it is Harper trying to figure out her new ability but no one knows exactly what she can do – the help she gets is obscure academic theory – which was somewhat dry as hell to read (I think that was the point though - to be as clueless as the characters listening) and not too helpful. No matter how many times she is advised to embrace what she sees and not fight it, she can't fully accept the grey and keeps freaking out while practicing her new talents and she doesn't seem to be getting any better at it, which I think can be frustrating to read for many people. The continued stress and the "grey" wears Harper down and she often talks about how tired she is – which was beginning to bug me toward the end, although I understood why she felt that way. In all – the pace felt slow but the last 3rd is where it picked up. The last 50 pages were the most interesting – when the set up throughout the book finally paid off. I felt some satisfaction finishing it and I think that the rest of the series could be very good now that Harper's abilities have become more fully established although she has a lot more to learn. There are a couple of loose threads regarding what certain people really are and more questions about the world which I expect to be resolved/expanded in the next book. One thing though: I really wanted to know what happened to the man who attacked her in the first place – I don't think that was ever mentioned.

This is a first book by a new writer and I think I will continue to read what she has to offer. I peered at the amazon reviews and noticed the criticism was:

a) Too many creatures – I disagree. There were really only a few and nothing completely new and hard to understand – vampires and ghosts, I think I've heard of those.

b) Did not like the main character – I think Harper's inability to quickly accept what was happening to her and her tiredness connected to the grey was wearing on people, especially since in other instances like dealing with vampires and other tricky situations she seems much better and quick to adapt. I think I would have also preferred Harper to accept the grey at least halfway through the book instead of reading about the confusion and endless battles against it all. Otherwise, I didn't find the character to be a bad one. She is level-headed otherwise and good at cutting through BS (I liked a couple of instances where she put people in their place). She wasn't overly sassy/cocky which I know irritates certain people I know.

c) Found it hard to follow – Overall I disagree, the plot was fine.  In terms of the writing itself – I found myself rereading sentences that felt disjointed. There were some awkwardly lyrical sentences in there. I'd be reading along and the sentences where simple and straightforward and then I'd read something that was overdone that would jar against them like "shivering spears of honey gold light combed through her hair and hit the wall behind".  That one came in  the middle of a conversation and for a second I was imagining something poking out of someone's hair. Also I've mentioned the obscure academic talk above, but I think that was allowable and believeable because it came from a college professor with that type of personality to get carried away with a lecture.

I'd give it a solid 7/10.

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Oh ebay.. why do you taunt me so?

 

Look at that. 7 lots of 100+ books each selling for about $25 each. I know that these are older books, but this means they are also harder to find. There are some rare/HTF/OOP ones thrown in here if you look at the pictures. I want maybe.. A thru Charnas, McEn thru Popk or Stamey thru Z. siigh. I haven't decided if I can resist this.

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Scaling the TBR mountain

I officially have over 100 books in my to-be-read (henceforth to be called TBR) pile. The number is at 101, though I suspect if I looked in my room I could find about 10 more books to add to the list. I don't know whats wrong with me, I can't pass the library bookstore anymore without buying at least one book. This may be a case of bibliomania. My new years resolution this year was to read 100 books, which I did last year. Now its kind of morphing into .. get the damn TBR to decrease, NOT increase. Beginning of last year my TBR was maybe 20. In August it went up to 40. Now its over 100… AHFHHhh. And I keep trolling ebay for deals. *smacks hand*, bad Janice, bad. Except I tend to buy books around my birthday as a present to myself.. I'm holding myself back from pre-ordering certain books right now until I get the TBR down (I have 35 dollars in bookstore gift cards in my wallet. They call to me. I take them out and look at them sometimes). The resolution is to not buy any books for the next couple of months.

The REALLY bad thing though is that I seem to be in a reading slump. I looked at what's in my TBR and I'm kind of.. eh.. I don't feel like reading anything on here. Right now I'm one third of the way through Greywalker by Kat Richardson and I think my self imposed pressure to get through the TBR is sucking out the joy. I've started 4 or 5 books and just couldn't get get myself to read more than 20 pages. Knowing how much I have to read is making me want to go do something else. ISN'T THAT SAD? I love books, what the hell! Last month I was finishing off a book every 2-4 days. I think I read 14 books in April. This month.. its more like finish a book in 6 days.. I'm slowing down! OK, it has also been busy at work, but still. Must.. get .. TBR.. down. I shall prevail!

Sad thing is that on the PBS forums, there are people there with TBRs that are 400, 500, 800+ long. I cannot get to that point.

ETA: I just realised that i was at 77 in March! 2 months and 30 more books. Ahhhhhhhhh !!!

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Links

Hmm, I like the way you can add collections to VOX but.. how come you can't add more than 5 links to the "My Links" sidebar or even add links to your profile? Bah. In the meantime I'm adding book/reading website links here. These are sites I often go to/like

 

READING

1. My paperbackswap mini reviews - short reviews (about a paragraph each book) on books I've read since mid-2006..

2. Smart Bitches, Trashy Novels – snarky reviews of romance novels.

3. Feminist SF – The Blog! – sci-fi from the feminist perspective (well written and interesting site)

4. Twisted Kingdom – group book review blog of fantasy/ sci fi/ young adult

5. Lost Book Archives – website of "lost books" – books "of print and forgotten or back in print and forgotten."

6. Luna-cat.net – website of sci-fi and fantasy by women – hasn't been updated in a while..:(

7. Pat's Fantasy Hotlist – fantasy/sci fi book reveiws and giveaways. More of a male perspective of the genre.

8. Whatwasthatbook – livejournal community where people post books that the can't remember the titles to. I end up wanting to read the book they are talking about.

9. Gnooks – literature map. Allows you to enter a writer's name and get a visual map of other authors you may like.

 

WRITING/PUBLISHING SIDE (it fascinates me).

1. Pub rants – literary agent blog

2. Lit Agent X – another agent blog, my favorite one because its very well written – explains things very well.

3. Paperback writer – blog of author Lynn Viehl / S.L. Veihl / Gena Hale/ Jessica Hall / Rebecca Kelly. A lot of interesting posts from the POV of a writer. She also has giveaways and supports other writers..

4. Meg Cabot's diary - chick lit and young adult author. Her blog just cracks me up

5. Neil Gaiman's journal – everyone and his mother reads this it seems.

6. Fangs, Fur, Fey – LJ community for urban fantasy novelists (only novelists can be members, everyone else can watch). Very interesting..

 

That's all for now. There are more, but I'm tired.

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The Architect of Sleep by Steven Boyett

OK, I had to post about this book after I that last book I discussed – because it got me thinking, sometimes I just get a kick out of a really crazy story. Speaking of rather out there books that I liked.. The Architect of Sleep by Steven Boyett is possibly the most out there book I've read in the past few years. I picked this up for 25 cents or something in a thrift store in Sedona last Christmas. It's out of print and Amazon doesn't have an official picture but if you click on the link to the amazon page there is a customer picture. Its somewhat …well I don't know if its a giant cat with an earring or what.. but it was cheap and I recognized the author's name because I'd read online that his book Ariel is worth reading (still have to find that book).

This is the general setup: Jim Bentley goes about his business on a typical day - feeds his dog, makes plans to see a movie with his girlfriend, checks in with work at his nightjob at a 7-11, and then goes spelunking for the day. Then his life is turned upside down when he goes through some kind of weird portal in the cave. Everything looks different, species almost extinct on Earth are plentiful and he can't find a sign of his vehicle or anyone else. And then he meets a raccoon who is much larger than raccoons he knows, and who is much more intelligent – able to use sign language to communicate. Jim says "Need I say it? I was Charlton Heston. This was Planet of the Raccoons". Isn't that AWESOME?!! Hello? A raccoon race using sign language?!? And there's so much more like how the government works and .. OK I think my credibility is going.. Well when I explain it like that – its about a race of intellegent racoons in a world where apes never evolved into humans.. it sounds very kooky, but its more interesting and less laughable to read than it sounds. And most reviewers on Amazon gave it 5 stars, so I'm not deluded, I sweaarr.

The story was very well written – Jim's emotions are believeable and the pace in which he learns about the culture and assimilates the language and what has happened feels real. This is written from the first person objective of both Jim and Truck (the first raccoon he meets). A great deal of thought has gone into explaining the sign language of the raccoons and their verb/tenses, which I found to be fascinating. Their hierarchy and the tale of civil unrest and intrigue was fascinating as well. I would say that the detail in the world building here is very well done, maybe even too well done.. - this book is the first part of a planned series and because of a disagreement with the publisher, there were no more books published. I think the publisher told the author – too much detail, cut out a lot of world-building things and the author disagreed and then bought back his contract. He may be kicking his younger self now though I'm sure at the time he didn't feel like the publisher was right. This is from the author's website:

"A few years ago I reread Architect & Geography. Midway through the second book I found myself thinking, Will you get to the damned point? It was too slow. There was too much detail. Background and foreground had traded places. It was as if my notes for the novel were in the novel. In other words, folks, Ace Books was right on the money in many of their comments. Mea culpa, mea maxima culpa. "

Steven Boyett's website indicates that he is working on the sequel(s) and on publishing it/them. More on that here: http://www.steveboy.com/archetyp.html (I found the whole explanation of what happened fascinating because I'm nosy and want to know that kind of stuff).

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Falling Upwards by Kassandra Sims

I just finished reading this book, went online to google it and didn't find much that I agreed with so I'm going to review this one first.

First of all: Ug, why did they call this book "paranormal romance"? That makes it sound like its a romance novel in a paranormal setting. It really felt like a .. contemporary fantasy book to me with romantic elements. There was definite sexual content but it was really vague and mild, not really the type of thing you would find in a pure romance novel – it read like a fantasy novel.

The story starts out with our protagonist Neva on a business trip in Wales. Neva goes to a bar where she encounters a handsome young man who often has young women trying to get his attention. When this man tries to pry himself away from perhaps the 10th one, Neva feels compelled to step in and pretend to be his girlfriend. She doesn't do this because she's interested – she doesn't really know why she does this, only that she feels like a puppet when the words come out. This starts some weirdness in the air and something begins. There on Neva begins to lose track of reality. When she goes home to coastline Alabama she keeps having visions of falling through a pond into another world, weird dreams about a riotious wood, apple trees, and chimes. Her mother and friends are worried, and her sister is ready to commit her. Around Mardi Gras, Neva has begun to accept her madness and decides she knows where the pond she hallucinates about is – her grandparents farm. Neva immediately goes there and jumps in. Almost unsurprisingly she finds herself in another world – she meets fairies, a talking raven and stag, and March – the young Welsh man at the bar. They send her on a quest. March is surly and resigned, as if he has been here before, and has no reason to hope. Neva finds his attitude annoying but feels compelled to finish the quest and go home. Sniping at one another they trek through a wildly imagined land. Many fairytale and mythical elements make appearances (nothing I was expecting) and a reader has many "W..T..eff.." moments. Which I liked! I really enjoyed how unexpected the story was (especially the detailed landscapes), and the growing relationship between March and Neva. The character development, mostly that of Neva and her attitude to dealing with her situation just delighted me. I also liked that March and Neva use modern speech when they argue as it contrasts greatly with their surroundings. The only complaint .. I wish this story was longer! I would have felt more content with two more chapters and a better idea of what really happened in the gap before the final chapter, and yet it is not a bad ending at all. I just want more time with the story and characters. I wanted to turn the book over and open it to the first page to reread it as soon as I finished so I could understand more. Is there a sequel? Want one.

After I read the book, I went on Amazon and looked at a review by HK (you know who I mean). What was she smoking? Don't read her review, it's so wrong, especially this part: "As Neva begins to believe that there is more to the universe than the physical plane starting with the metaphysical feelings of falling in love, she struggles with reality vs. illusion as she enters a realm in which her only realism anchor is March. " What? starting with the metaphysical feelings of falling in love?!  March was the realism anchor? Ahhh? Many reviews seem to glomp onto the insanity/hallucination aspect. I think many people who didn't like the novel did not like the way the story shifts from one location and situation to another, but that is what I liked about the book – it works to convey that "Alice through the Looking Glass" feel. I also found the writing itself very savor-worthy. 8.5 or 9/10.

P.S. This came out April this year and is the author's second book. I'm going to have to look for her first book – "The Midnight Work". That got 2 stars on Amazon so far and I think the complaints are also about the story "jumping around" and I think they wanted paranormal romance with emphasis on romance so I'm not going to listen to them.

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