Eleven books this time, three of them purchases (including a limited-edition) and eight review copies.
Top: Laura Restrepo,
Olor a rosas invisibles/The Scent of Invisible Roses (Bilingual tale of adultry that is poignant rather than condemnatory. Restrepo wrote a great little tale here); Lisa Rogak,
Haunted Life: The Life and Times of Stephen King (upcoming biography of King's life. Ought to be interesting); Jim Butcher, Simon R. Green, Kat Richardson, and Thomas E. Sniegoski,
Mean Streets (four novellas by four leading urban fantasy writers - if I dare to still use that term after this past week, that is - set in their own respective universes. Will read in the near future, as this comes out in January); Barb and J.C. Hendee,
In Shade and Shadow (part of an ongoing series; uncertain when I'll read it); Matthew Stover,
Star Wars: Luke Skywalker and the Shadows of Mindor (I like Stover's work a lot and will read this either this weekend or early next week).
Top: Toby Bishop,
Airs of Night and Sea (part of an ongoing series; uncertain if I'll read it); Paul S. Kemp,
Shadowbred (Yes, it's a Forgotten Realms novel. Yes, I will be reading it within the next few days. Yes, I'm curious about all the praise I've heard about Kemp's work. And yes, me reading this might turn on a certain reader stalking me... ;)); Joshua Palmatier,
The Vacant Throne (conclusion to a trilogy, uncertain if I'll read it); Simon R. Green,
Just Another Judgement Day: A Novel of the Nightside (urban fantasy/crime novel from the sounds of it; might read later); Charles Stross,
The Jennifer Morgue (I'm hesitant to try another Stross novel, but I might with this one. We'll see...).
Oh, and this new, weird book arrived in the mail. I think it has to do with mushrooms growing from someone's head. Name of the book is
Shriek: An Afterword and it's signed by some guy named Jeff VanderMeer. I wonder if he's a meerkat fancier with that last name... ;)
8 comments:
Being too lazy to check your archives, what past problem did you have with Stross?
I got all the Penguin stuff you got, which will go up in tomorrow's post...with a poll!
BTW, I snagged an ARC of Bret Hart's autobiography a while back, but I just haven't managed to read it.
The main problem I had was with his prose, which was so pedestrian at times that I lost interest with the plot. I don't think I wrote a full entry about any of his novels, though. Perhaps in the future.
Lucky you to have that ARC! I'd be reading that one right now. I wonder if I ought to have a Five Moves of (Reviewing) Doom element here...
Stross's Bob Howard novels are his best work, I think (I'm love / dislike on the Merchant Princes), but the rest of his stuff is almost unreadable for me.
Hopefully Bret's autobio is a good read. I've been meaning to snag a copy of Chris Jericho's but keep getting distracted by shinier things.
Joe,
You're a wrestling fan as well? Sweet! :D I need to get that one sometime as well, because Jericho is one of the very few WWE wrestlers I care to follow at this time. Will keep your comments about Stross in mind whenever I think about reading this tome.
Jericho has been the top guy in wrestling since he came back, and even more so since the full heel turn.
I think you've unofficially got a Five Moves of (Reviewing) Doom, have you read your own blog in the past couple of weeks?
I do? Maybe for commentaries, but I don't think I've written more than 1-2 reviews in that span. Might have to vary it up a bit, come and think of it. ¿Quizás escriba una reseña en español? ;)
¿Quizás escriba una reseña en español?
Aside from Lucha Libre, No habla espanol.
Pobrecito Rob! :P All I said is perhaps I shall write a review in Spanish. Ya know, to vary up my Five Moves of (Reviewing) Doom! ;)
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