Wednesday, May 29, 2013

Catching Up 1: A YA/MG Collection

It's time to catch up with what I've been reading lately in a quick-look fashion --

The Looking Glass Wars by Frank Beddor is a book that has been on my shelves for far too long. I bought it on Celia's recommendation a couple of years ago when she was out for a visit in Seattle. I'm glad she got me to pick it up because it was a fun read, especially for a Wonderland fan. It was quite loosely based on Lewis Carroll's classic stories (Alice's Adventures in Wonderland and Through the Looking Glass) and on his (Charles Dodgson's) life and I thought it was an interesting and fresh take on the Wonderland story. I'm not sure if I will continue on with the series (too many books, too little time) but I wouldn't be against picking up the second book -- Seeing Redd. There are also the Hatter M graphic novels that I might try out.

I was excited to see a new Belladonna Johnson book on Amazon (I loved Spellbinder and The Midnight Gate). Well, it turned out to be a self-pubbed novella from Helen Stringer, so much shorter than I expected, but it was a good story with lots of depth and emotion. I almost went and reread the first two books right after because I really enjoy the characters and the world. Sadly, Helen Stringer's next book is not in this series. It's a YA novel called Paradigm and here's what it's about --
... it is set in a future in which everything has happened. Everything that earlier generations were warned about, yet chose to ignore. Continents are isolated, global communication non-existent, poverty and disease rampant. America has become a country of powerful city states, separated by the barren Wilds, where people struggle to survive.
Sam Cooper’s parents took him to the Wilds when he was five, now he’s seventeen and alone, driving the empty roads, scraping by. But something has been watching and waiting. Waiting for the moment when Sam would leave the Wilds and visit a city state. Sam will need everything he learned in the Wilds if he hopes to survive, and he’ll need something else too: the beautiful, scary Maori warrior, Alma.
On the plane ride over to Maui (6 hours from Seattle), I read a pretty large chunk of Eva Ibbotson's The Star of Kazan. It was only the second of her books that I've read that wasn't a children's ghost story (the first was Journey to the River Sea) and I pretty much loved it. I am incredibly happy that I have so many of her books still ahead of me. It almost makes up for the fact that I'm nearly out of new Diana Wynne Jones books (almost but ... well ... not really ... ::small sob::). This story had a lot of great elements and I didn't have any problems with it until right at the end. The main character, Annika, makes a choice that I guess is a good example for children of being forgiving and kind but I really wanted her to go the revenge and prosecution route! Anyway, if you have a favorite Ibbotson book that you think I should read next, please let me know in the comments. I own a few more spooky titles but that's it.

And, happily, my library hold finally came through on Clockwork Princess, the final book in Cassandra Clare's The Infernal Devices trilogy. I made it through some tragic situations in the book without even a sniffle until I hit one certain part and, well, I hope they don't mind that I'm sending back this library book with a few tears in it! This was a great end to the story and I thought all of the characters were treated fairly. My only complaint is probably that the action/battle parts of the story all seemed a bit rushed but, by the end, I didn't really care about that.

I chose to read this series first instead of The Mortal Instruments because of the alt-Victorian setting which was more to my liking and seemed like a better entry point for me. Because the setting obviously isn't the only thing that makes this series enjoyable though, I will start the other one next, especially with the City of Bones film coming out in August. I wonder how long the library wait is ...

Full of romance, magic and adventure,
K

Tuesday, May 21, 2013

New Release: The Black Country


It was only last September when I read Alex Grecian's first novel of the Scotland Yard Murder Squad, The Yard. The inaugural tale of Inspector Walter Day and policeman Nevil Hammersmith, solving crime in the shadow of the Ripper killings, was incredibly dark and brutal but thoroughly compelling and I was looking forward to continuing with the fledgling series. And today The Black Country, second in the series, is out. I had a moment of cold feet before starting it, worried that the queasiness I felt during the first book was going to surface again but I shouldn't have worried. Though there was still a bleak setting and a shocking crime (or two ... or three), the main characters were even more well developed and the story just as compelling.

Set in the industrial region known as the Black Country (thus called because of the soot in the air), Day and Hammersmith travel to investigate a missing persons case -- that of a father, mother and son who have mysteriously disappeared, leaving behind three more young children. Many things stand in the way of the investigation including an insular mining community and the superstitions of the townspeople. And when the ground under their feet literally starts giving way, this might be one case that they can't solve.

This is quickly becoming one of my favorite series. The characters, including the pathologist Dr. Kingsley and his assistant Henry, are complex and anything but the stereotypical Victorian crime solvers. The Black Country setting was very well incorporated, the dismal atmosphere almost tangible. And I'm happy that Grecian took his detective out of London so soon. It allowed for the characters to develop out of their element, their homes and their standard relationships. This means that there will be no expectations for the third book other than a strong story about these flawed but noble men doing a job that they are each uniquely qualified for.

Working the seam,
K

Saturday, May 18, 2013

I've Been A Bad, Bad Blogger

photo by k
I know we've been missing in action for a while. We had spring break and then, well, a quick trip to Maui. I'll hopefully get those pictures uploaded in a couple of days. But today we're having a little birthday party because on Monday Z turned nine! I can't believe how quickly the years have gone by. It seems like he was just a baby and now he's not even a foot shorter than me.

Anyway, we'll be back soon. We've read a lot of great books lately that we need to tell you all about!

Full of fresh air and sunshine,
K and Z

Tuesday, May 7, 2013

New Release: The 13-Story Treehouse


For the first time, Z has read an entire book to me at bedtime -- The 13-Story Treehouse by Andy Griffiths, illustrated by Terry Denton. This amusing illustrated novel out of Australia is full of penguins, monkeys, catnarys (you'll have to read to find out about them!), a sea monster and even a giant gorilla. And who could ever resist a treehouse with every awesome feature imaginable?

The trailer can do much better than I can to show you all that this book (and treehouse) has to offer --


Z absolutely loved this book, sometimes reading me three chapters a night! We laughed out loud constantly and had a fun time following the increasingly ridiculous plot. And though there was a bit of burping (and a brief monkey poo mention), this book managed to be funny without resorting to over-the-top bathroom humor as so many other series seem to do these days. And apparently there will be a sequel next year -- The 26-Story Treehouse!

Dreaming of marshmallow machines,
K and Z

Sunday, May 5, 2013

New Release: A Death in the Small Hours


A Death in the Small Hours is the sixth book in the Charles Lenox Mysteries series by Charles Finch. I can honestly say that this series gets better with each book. Lenox himself is a strong character who is steadily growing and maturing and I always look forward to spending time with him. The books are very well researched and bring to life many aspects of Victorian class, politics and home life. And while reading this book, I actually started to understand cricket for the first time!

Here are my previous posts about the series:

Book One, A Beautiful Blue Death
Book Two, The September Society
Book Three, The Fleet Street Murders
Book Four and Series Highlight, A Stranger in Mayfair
Book Five, A Burial at Sea

If you're looking for a great Victorian mystery series that takes the detective all around England and beyond, on journeys both physical and mental, you can't go wrong with this one.

Straightening my fangirl badge,
K