Showing posts with label Book Review. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Book Review. Show all posts

Tuesday, May 04, 2021

Recent Reads, Very Short Reviews Thereof

 (Not counting all the only-OK fluff I have been reading on K1ndle unlimited...)

Citadel of Weeping Pearls (de Bodard): Strange and engrossing story about near-magical science.  In space. 

A whole lot of books by Melissa McShane (Tremontane series): Enjoyable fluff, but definitely fluff. Magic and kingdoms and thieves.  (Free trial of Scr1bd for this one.)

A Deadly Education (Novik): Like the best HP fanfic you have ever read, but better.  A child goes to a strange, violent magical school that doesn't once pretend it's doing the right thing.  I hope there are more.

Queen's Gambit/Triumph/Advantage (Mihalik): I enjoyed these but then immediately forgot what they were about.

Duke Who Didn't (Milan): A fun and diverse romance in which the author clearly said "Fuck 2020, I'm writing what I want."  Delightful.

Accidentally Engaged (Heron): An amusing romance, though they could... talk.  Nonetheless, I laughed out loud.

A whole bunch of fairytale-rewrites from Melanie Cellier: Soothing, but not memorable. 

Grimoires and Where to Find Them (Raconteur): 6th book in the series; as enjoyable as the rest.  FBI agent is magically transported to another world, where she becomes a magic-less detective.


What have you been reading?  

Thursday, March 29, 2018

Brief Book Reviews Returns!

My strong preference for reading books by women continues!

A Study In Scarlet Women (Thomas): A truly excellent alternate-universe Sherlock Holmes.  I have read hundreds of trad-published SH pastiches, and this is one of the best I've read (this fanfic is also a favorite). Sherlock Holmes is a brilliant woman stuck in 19th-century London, who becomes a brilliant consulting detective anyways. 10/10, would read again, sequel already on hold.
Besieged (Hearne): Short stories.  Okay, but not great, and a lot less compelling than the Iron Druid books.  
All Systems Red (Wells): Novella about a sentient android who develops both a conscience and a love for soap operas.  Highly recommended.

Invisible Library series (Cogman): Another installment in the Magical Central Library genre, but quite good and with nice character development.

Pocket Apocalypse (McGuire): Cotton-candy Australian adventure, with love, betrayal, and cryptids.  Enjoyable. 

Court of Fives series (Elliott): [MILD SPOILERS] I liked the first one quite a lot because it had a strong female character who didn't succumb to Twoooo Wuuuuv.  The series ends without making the main character succumb, and has an interestingly anti-colonialist theme.  I find the armed-rebellion-by-underclass slightly implausible in terms of relative armaments and so on, but hey, good for them.  

Dark State (Stross): Another give-you-nightmares dystopian surveillance state.  The plot in this series continues to advance with frustrating slowness, but at least one can tell it's going *somewhere*.  

I also, finally, have a copy of PROVENANCE and I'm saving it for a rainy day.  (Don't tell me what happens!)

What have you been reading? 

Thursday, March 16, 2017

Yet More Book Reviews

Miss Julia Delivers the Goods (Ross): D-, DNF. First 75 pages contain disparaging ethnic stereotyping, sex-shaming, and a degree of boundary-crossing meddling that gave me hives.  Plus it was boring.

Death in the Stocks (Heyer): Re-read.  Okay, largely inoffensive. I remembered halfway through who did it.

The entire Mrs. Pollifax series: Library. Soothing, not-too-violent series about a little old lady who decides to go work for the CIA in her spare time.  Marred by the occasional racism (stop saying that dude has slanted eyes!  Gah!) but otherwise good, and a refreshing change to have an older heroine who rescues herself. 

Locked Rooms (King): Re-read.  Entertaining, not too violent or bizarre or shark-jumpy (I'm looking at you, Pirate King).

Two for Sorrow (Upson): Again, D-, would not book again.  Takes an engaging premise (Josephine Tey, novelist and notable lady-lover, is a detective!) and butchers it under a heap of anachronisms, gory violence, dead babies, and - to top it off - weak, wandering, uninteresting writing.  Bah, humbug.

Attolia series (Turner): Trilogy about a fantasy world.  Quite good and interesting.  Main character is a dude but interesting women also feature prominently. 

Unquiet Land (Shinn): Okay but the plot is wander-y and full of feeeeeelings.  Series seems to be declining; the first one was great, now heading for meh. 

Sabriel/Lirael/Abhorsen (Nix): Re-read.  I forgot how much I like these badass young ladies rescuing everyone else.  (Clariel, the more recent, is a bit unsatisfying.)

Norse Mythology (Gaiman): Did you KNOW that none of the women in Norse mythology ever did anything interesting?  About 100 pages in, I was suddenly intensely glad I had not paid money for this book.  Seriously, so much sausage. 

Tuesday, January 03, 2017

Hello, I Am Still Alive; Also, More Short Book Reviews

Still figuring out all the things.  Health!  Work!  Children!  What am I even doing with my life!  A lengthy and bitter small-town dispute with a large company!  Arguing with Mountain U's IT department!  Trying to get the material for the class I'm teaching in two weeks! The woe of local elections!  Fraud on my bank account!  Etc.  It is boring.

I am looking for more reading material, preferably by women, for the new year.  So, if you have something, please leave me a comment!



Recent reads:

English Country House Murders: If this is your thing, truly excellent.  A fantastic selection of non-violent murder mysteries by an assortment of authors; inspired me to look some of them up.

Unquiet Land (Sharon Shinn): Fourth in a series.  Okay.  The first one had interesting drama; this one is more of the people wandering around and talking variety. Villians are always foreign, but a nice diversity of national origins in the books themselves.  Female protagonist.  Recommend as a library book.

Dragons series (Patricia Wrede, re-read): Excellent as always, though my favorite is the first.  Most protagonists are female and they are all independent and funny.  Now I want to read Sorcery & Cecilia again.

All of Agatha Christie that my library has, re-read: Wow.  Stranger than I remembered, especially the spy-flavored ones (a... secret compound in the desert run by a strange millionare? sure...) and, of course, racist and anti-Semitic in the most casual of ways, but enjoyable for their soothing (although all-white) predictability.

The Siren (Tiffany Reisz): Y'all, this book was Not My Thing.  So meta! (A writer who writes about S&M/erotica has written a book about writer who is into S&M/bondage and who lives with a young man and who is writing a book about a writer who is into S&M/bondage and lives with a young man.)  So full of angst about people who are into S&M!  So pleased with itself for being edgy! Nope.

The Gourmet cookie book : inspired me to make several kinds of interesting cookies, and modify a recipe for benne wafers to use tahini instead. Library book, worth borrowing if you like cookies.

All of Ben Aaronovitch's Rivers of London books, re-read: I still really love these, even if the author is a dude.  There are plenty of women who are not background, and it's (IMO) a well-done urban fantasy.  Faintly reminiscent of Charlie Stross (one of the few other men I'll still read) but less disturbing and apocalyptic.  Main character is a British-Nigerian male police officer who's a wizard.  Recommend.

Monday, August 08, 2016

Redo From Start

I just read about four pages of a book.

And then the main character gets groped by her boss, after hours, in a conference room, and then....

...she does NOT smack him, scream bloody murder, and immediately call the police and HR.

It is the Year Of Your Lord 2016!  NOPE!

(I should have checked SBTB first.)

Wednesday, July 13, 2016

Yet More 20(ish) Word Book Reviews

Stranger in Olondria (Satamar): Female author, POC characters!  I wanted to like it, but the scenery was too lushly colored with richly descriptive mannered prose.  Read two chapters and gave up.

Traitor in the Tunnel (Y.S. Lee): Respectably entertaining mystery, though suffers from Historical Accuracy Syndrome (Ladies Didn't Do Stuff In History) and Brooding YA Hero. Please stop writing romance into every young woman's story!!!

Red Rose Chain: another good read from Seanan McGuire.  No women were overridden, unnecessarily romanced, or harmed in a gendered way in the making of this book.

Tower of Thorns (Marillier): less interesting than the first one in this series, not least because the heroine says "That ridiculous choice I made once?  Let me do it a few more times." Ummmm.

Owl and the Japanese Circus/ City of Angels (Charish): entertaining fantasy/mystery. Heroine also fails to learn from experience, but in a more plausible way.  Plus, it's fun and fluffy.

Chapelwood (Priest). Too strange and violent for me; did not finish.

Penric's Demon (Bujold): Okay, and a moderately interesting short, but entire paragraphs feel like they were lifted from various other novels.

Burned (Jacka): Another solid entry in a great series (urban fantasy, heavy on the fantasy, not too 'gritty').  Writer is male, but women do many things.  The ending was a little unsatisfying but more to come, presumably.

Study in Ashes (Holloway): Couldn't finish.  Too much angst and wandering around.

Goddess with a Blade: Bored, didn't finish, I don't even remember why.

Murder at the Brightwell (Weaver): Tolerably decent mystery, nothing to write home about, did not guess murderer.  Not violent.

Magic Stars (Andrews): Not Good.  A big step away from the plot-driven previous stories in the series and into later Laurell Hamilton-style very detailed violence, with 50% less interesting happenings. Please, make it stop.



Thursday, April 28, 2016

More Snarky Book Reviews

Daughter of the Blood (Bishop): starts off with a bang!  Ritual rape and first-page violence.  A record for how few pages I read (three) before giving up. NOPE.

Truthwitch: Heroine couldn't decide if she was intelligent or impulsive.  Also mandatory falling in love with hero figure. Bored, DNF.

Mairelon the Magician/ The Magician's Ward (Wrede): A little dude-heavy on the first one, but the second is fantastic and has a saucy mother.  I'd forgotten how much I liked them! (Reread.)  How to do 'set in Victorian England' and still have ladies do stuff.  A favorite line: "Lady Wendall has always had a reputation for... originality, even before the curried snails in aspic."

Disenchanted & co: Great premise, mediocre execution.  Heroine is inconsistent until the last few chapters.  Also there is random porn inserted (hah) here and there and a literal deus ex machina, which I always find irritating.

Grand Sophy (Heyer): My favorite Heyer of all, probably because Sophy doesn't give a fuck for social conventions.  The 'crush you in my arms' ending could, as  always, go.

Library at Mount Char: Well written but too violent and disturbing for me.  First 40 pages feature violence, reanimation, violent abuse, maggots, and two messy, violent, graphic deaths.  DNF.

Secrets of Drearcliffe Grange School: Very strange and a bit self-consciously precious, but enjoyably strange.  Recommend.

Wireless (Stross): Tried to re-read while feverish.  Do not do this; you will have nightmares of tentacled horrors abducting you to  strange alien planets.  With termites.  (Great book otherwise but above-average disturbing.)

Frostfire (Viehl): Terribly boring.  DNF.


What have you been reading?

Thursday, March 24, 2016

Twenty Word Book Reviews

1) I read a lot.
2) I read for fun.
3) I refuse to apologize for my taste in books.  I likes what I likes.

Recent reads:

His Majesty's Dragon (Novik): Good, but an increasingly annoying lack of women.  If dragons talk why only two female characters?

Hunter (Lackey): So good I wondered if someone else had written it.

Bone Doll's Twin (Flewelling): So much creepy violence toward children, I returned it with prejudice and am never reading it.

Exit Strategy (Armstrong): Terrible.  Beyond words.  Did not finish. Stick to werewolves, lady.

Lust Over Pendle: Surprisingly Not Bad HP fanfic.  Sequel is a mystery.  Not too violent, explicit, or boring.

HPMOR: I liked it, but I dislike 'rationalist communities' for being as pratty as (some/most) vegans.  (Don't read any of EY's nonfiction, is what I'm saying.)

Glass Sided Ants' Nest (Dickinson): A racist product of its time.  Did not finish, too racist.

Written In Red (Bishop): Very enjoyable.  Vampires and werewolves that are neither cuddly nor sexy.

Various things by Metzger: Better than nothing, but only barely.  Universally need to be 1/4 the length.

Everything by Seanan McGuire: YESSSSSS. Especially the one set in Australia.  Their real animals are strange enough.  (Note: contains women, but NO violence towards women. Aside from being eaten by monsters, etc.  Mira Grant zombie/virus books also excellent, if somewhat disturbing.)

Everything by Lillith Saintcrow: Lady, you need THERAPY.

Dreamer's Pool (Marillier): An engaging story about a mysterious woman.  Want to read the next one too!

Gentleman Jole (Bujold): Fairly enjoyable, though not much happens.  Leaves you with an unpleasant, slightly slimy retconned feeling afterwards.

Cast in Honor (Sagara): Death knell.  Feeeeeeelings and wooooords.  All words and no plot.  Characters can die in a fire for all of me, I'm done.

Somehow almost everything I've read lately is by women.  Possibly because when a dudely book is entirely full of dudes I just can't. I can't decide whether to axe the Novik series.  It's just... so full of dudes.  Dudes everywhere.  Dudes on dude dragons.

What have you read lately that was good? (Or not good.)

Friday, May 17, 2013

Book Review: ALL NATURAL by Nathanael Johnson

I reserved our public library's copy of this book because the author is a friend of a friend, who told me I might like it.  Here's the verdict: I do!  I like it immensely!  I am thinking of buying a copy for my mother, since she would also enjoy it!

(Nobody paid me anything to write this.  I sent the author a message once, but we are largely unacquainted.)

The book starts out with a very amusing recounting of the author's childhood, being raised by wolves radical back-to-nature types.  (They make my mother's Vegetarian Nut Loaf look positively mainstream.)  He meets his future wife, the daughter of a surgeon, and they marry and are soon expecting a child, at which point we segue into a chapter on birth in America.

I could have written this chapter.  My favorite line: "I was looking for something more like No Nonsense Evidence-Based Midwifery." Ah, Bug's midwives, of "a zero-transfer C-section rate is unrealistic and dangerous" fame!  He goes into the statistics of C-sections, maternal morbidity and mortality, and ensuing complications carefully, in detail, and in a very understandable manner - and also talks about the bad outcomes that can happen in the absence of medical care, and the fine line between lifesaving interventions and overcautious practices that harm patients (like routine continuous fetal monitoring).

The next chapters are about raw milk, nutrition, vegetables, sugar (really, doesn't affect immunity; nicely dissected and taken down, with a fine understanding of the phrase "There is no evidence."), pork farming, immunity, vaccines, the environment.  These subjects are all handled delicately and in a very neutral manner with no proselytizing.  

The last chapter is about medicine, and how to balance lifesaving treatments with unnecessary testing and intervention.  The author shares an anecdote from his mother, who intelligently researches a possible hepatitis infection, and insists on a second test because the first one has a high false-positive rate.  He also relates his own bout of appendicitis.  He talks about primary care, emergency medicine, and end-of-life care, our problems with dealing with the root causes of... well, everything - and one of medicine's great failures, that of treating the symptoms. The last chapter is a nice bookend to the first- C-sections and suicides, birth and death.

There are 19 pages of closely-spaced endnotes.  A lot of research went into this book.  I would like to add I've found no inaccuracies in this book, which is high praise from this pedantic, proofreading-maniac of a scientist.  In some cases, I would perhaps have liked to see a stronger opinion come through (if you want to read about vaccines go look up Andrew Wakefield's financial interest in scaring people, and the reasons for his medical license being revoked in Great Britain).  Some subjects could perhaps use a bit more depth; for example, the author talks about  the 'immunity hypothesis', that more dirt and germs prevent autoimmune disease, and cites the rise of things like asthma in developed countries-  but he doesn't mention the role of pollution, or of cheap and accurate sequencing in diagnosis. On the other hand, there's only so many pages in a book, and the author clearly doesn't want to be prescriptive or evangelical.  He is leading you through his journey of exploration.  

If you have a friend who thinks that ridiculous, stupid, inaccurate, dangerous Sears book is the gospel, this will not convince him or her.  If you know someone who has an actual inquring mind - especially people who are not trained as scientists- this is perfect.  As for you, dear readers, you should all go read it immediately.


* Did you know this strain has a stable plasmid with a horizontally-transferred Shigella toxin, which binds to ribosomes, and that's why it's so toxic?  I wrote a paper about it in college.