Sci Fi and Fantasy

The Lost Hero

Until TW started reading The Lost Hero and trying to ruin it for me by telling me about it as she read, I did not know that this series was going to include Percy and friends. For some reason I thought it was going to take place years into the future or something like that. I thought Percy might make an appearance as an older and wiser demi-god or as someone who worked at camp… but I didn’t realize it was simply a continuation of the original story with Percy playing a big (though somewhat invisible role). Huh.

I wasn’t sure how I was going to feel about this, after TW clued me into this fact, but I settled into it pretty quickly and found myself enjoying it much the way I enjoyed the very first Percy Jackson book.

It’s hard to tell you what I liked most about this one, without spoiling it for you… because what I liked most is the biggest spoiler of the book. So I’ll just say… pretty smooth move, Riordan. Smart way to develop a new series using the foundation of the original series. Very smooth.

Oh, one more thing – I like this one better than the first book in the Kane series.

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Three of the Best Books I’ll Read This Year

I’ve already read some really great books and I know I’m going to read more but these three from the Cybils shortlist are going to hold their own in my favorites for the year list – I think they are probably going to hold their own for a lot longer than that. These three books were that good. You should read them, even if you don’t normally read  kids lit.

First, The Shadows: The Books of Elsewhere, we listened to this one on audio and I, for one, was sorry to see it end. Thankfully, book two will be released in a few months.

Olive is a little girl who doesn’t really fit in – she’s never fit in with the other kids at any of the schools she’s lived in. She doesn’t really fit in with her parents, who are math teachers. Olive can’t count to 100 – she gets lost somewhere in the 80s. Or 70s. Or somewhere.

She and her parents move into a very old house, with all of its belongings – after the previous owner died without any heirs. The house is interesting but something about it makes Olive feel uneasy. One of the things that makes her uneasy is the paintings that are hanging throughout the house. The first night, she tells her mom about this and her mom says they’ll just take the painting down that is outside of Olive’s bedroom – but it won’t come off the wall.

Olive plays with some of the things in a dresser in one of the bedrooms – scarves and gloves and such… and then she finds some glasses, on a chain. She puts them off and is playing when she notices movement inside of a painting – she presses her nose to the painting and… she’s inside of it.

Crazy things happen. Scary, creepy, crazy things and Olive has to piece together clues and figure out what in the heck is going on… with the help of some of the people inside of the paintings and the three cats who are guarding the house.

OK that’s enough – go read it for yourself.

Next, the best zombie book I’ve ever read (and I’ve read a lot)… Rot & Ruin. I did not expect this book to be this good. I did not expect to find myself tearing up in places throughout the story – but I did. The zombies don’t talk, they aren’t “good”, they are just zombies. It’s what the humans do that’s what gets to you. The really horrible things humans can do to each other, and to those who are weaker or somehow less than.

Benny goes from hating his older half-brother, who is a Zombie bounty hunter but not the kind who wanders around bragging about his kills and showing off his fighting skills, to respecting his brother for the job he does. Benny learns that those big, tough bounty hunters might not be what he thought they were either.

Great post-apocolyptic fiction – zombies or no zombies. Kids are going to love this book.

Last, but definitely not least, The Strange Case of Origami Yoda. Hahaha. This book should be made into a movie. I’m not sure I want a sequel but if one arrives, I’ll definitely read it.

Is the origami Yoda on Dwight’s finger real? I mean he’s definitely real in the way that you can see him and stuff – but is he really giving advice to the kids in school or is the extra weird Dwight being even weirder than normal? And if it is Dwight – how is that even possible? The kid is so clueless and not so smart, except in math, how could he come up with this stuff? That’s the question…

I’m leaning toward Yoda is totally real – the force was using Dwight and the Origami Yoda to help the kids sort out their issues.

Totally real. Also.

Purple.

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Catacombs

A couple of weeks ago, Prince J went to the library with us. The audio books I had reserved for him weren’t yet available so he surfed the shelves himself and picked out a couple of things to listen to. I popped over to the new audio release shelf and Catacombs caught my eye. I handed it to the Prince. He looked at it and promptly put it back on the shelf. Huh. It sounded exactly like a Prince J book to me. So I picked it up and checked it out.

We immediately put Disc one into the cd player in the car and started listening… within a few minutes, Prince J had decided that he might, in fact, like this book. I think he will – TW and I certainly did.

It’s apparently the second book in a series – and TW says she read the first one in print. I did not – so I need to go back and read it. And, I guess I should reserve book one on audio for the Prince.

If you like Anne McAffrey’s Acorna series – you’ll like this series.

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Sandman Slim

It took me four days to read Sandman Slim and it should have taken a day, maybe a day and a half. It’s an easy read and it’s amusing and interesting enough that it should have held my attention easily. So why did it take so long? Besides being exhausted after long, full days of work – I think the lack of chapters really throws me off kilter. I’ve found I have trouble reading any book that doesn’t have chapters – and lately, I’ve read a ton of chapter-less books. It’s some horrible, evil trend that needs to die a very fast and painful death. GIVE ME SOME CHAPTERS. Or at least “PARTS”. Sheesh.

OK So Sandman Slim is a little Chris Moore-like. Very B-movie/Spaghetti Western-like. Amusing and dirty and evil all tossed together with magic, angels, demons, and other monsters. Brilliant and I am looking forward to reading the next book. But first, I need a book or two with chapters. (Ugh. Please tell me the book I just picked up has chapters…)

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Brain Jack

Brain Jack is a creepy, cool book. Creepy because who wants a computer taking over your head or super hackers taking over your computer? Cool because computers can take over your head and hackers can do really amazing things.

The best part was when “Ursula” killed all of the spam in the world. I cheered out loud.  It would almost be worth it… almost.

Great book from the Cybils YA SciFi/Fantasy shortlist.

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The Magnificent 12: The Call

The Magnificent 12: The Call might have been the perfect book to read after Stolen. Another Cybils shortlister, it’s a middle grade scifi/fantasy that’s pretty darn funny. The only rough moment in the book was when Mack and Stefan found themselves in the Australian Outback (not the restaurant) – there was a little post-traumatic stress syndrome or something (from reading Stolen the night before.)

I cannot wait for the next book – and I’d really love a book just from The Golem’s point of view. Now that would be funny. I’m a little concerned by just how long it might take to get through this entire series. Are we going to meet one new member of the Magnifica in each book? Two? Or are we going to move a little faster now that we’ve got the basic elements of the story down?  If we’ve got to have 12 or 13 or 14 books to defeat The Evil Foe… that’s not going to work, middle schoolers won’t stick with the series through college. It’s good but it’s not that good.

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The Spooky Girl

The Spooky Girl  is another of those books I picked up from the shelf because the cover was interesting and so was the title. And it was a fun book, sad in places – as you’d expect from a book about a young woman who died before her time. It also contained a very important lesson for those of  us who live in the internet age… make sure you have important addresses and phone numbers of people who should be contacted in the event of your death somewhere besides your cell phone. Odds are high that if you get hit by a bus, your cell phone is not going to survive and your friends will never know what happened to you because your next of kin won’t be able to contact them to let them know. That would suck, wouldn’t it? Bad enough to get hit by a bus and have your cellphone destroyed (that makes me weepy just thinking about it) but to have your friends just assume you’ve skipped out on them. Tsk tsk.

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Werewolf Smackdown

I love books set in Charleston, when the authors get things mostly right. Acevedo got Charleston mostly right. I didn’t growl a single time. Which is funny since there was a lot of growling in Werewolf Smackdown – by werewolves, of course.  

Poor Felix, his track record with women – of all sorts – is the pits. Ah well, at least he made it out of Charleston alive – in that undead sort of way. That’s a win, particularly for readers, since it means we’ll get to watch him struggle with the Areneum and more women again.

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Wired

Damn Rebecca James. Just damn her. She introduced me to the Skinned Trilogy. We discussed the first book quite a bit. I told her that I liked the idea but that I pretty much hated the book until the last 50 pages. She nodded her head like she understood (but who knows whether she did or not…) Many months went by and I started doing catch up with series I had started. So I reserved the next book and I read it and I pretty much hated it until the last 50 pages. I told RJ. She nodded and acted like she understood. I reserved the next book, Wired, and over the weekend I mentioned it was on the library cart and said “but I assume you’ve already read it since you’ve read everything.” Her response, “No, I’ve only read the first one.”

What? I read this series because I thought SHE WAS READING IT and we could maybe ya know, discuss it and stuff? SHE ALWAYS READS THE FULL SERIES.

So I suffered through both of those books (except for the last 50 pages of each) only to find out… whatever.

I read Wired anyway and guess what – I liked it better than the first two books. I liked Lia Kahn much better all the way through this one. I also liked Judd better. And… I liked the ending. Too bad RJ hasn’t read them all.

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Monstrumologist

TW was alllllll excited about The Monstrumologist and not just because Yancey mentions Devil’s Millhopper in the beginning. (We love Devil’s Millhopper and if we ever leave this godforsaken place I would be happy to live very close to the Devil’s Millhopper again – but that’s another post entirely.)  I almost took it back to the library unread because I had a whole bunch of books due back and I needed to be really selective about which books I chose in order to get through as many as possible and The Monstrumologist isn’t exactly a short book. Also, sometimes when TW is really really enthusiastic about a book, I don’t love it. Heh.

But, it was the last book due back on Monday (which is today) and I had nothing else I was dying to read instead – so I picked it up. It was late and it started slowly, well after the Devil’s Millhopper part. I had a hard time sticking with it for the first 50 pages. I really think it was just because I was tired because shortly after that, I was hooked. I was cursing out loud at “the monstrumologist” and cursing even more loudly out loud at “Corey”.

And now I’m dying to read the second book (which TW already read but I had to take back UNREAD.) I think I’ll reserve book two sooner, rather than later. I wonder what these would be like on audio… scary or not so much? Hmmm maybe we’ll find out when we get to book three.

Also, Mr. Yancey, if you stumble across this… TW wants to know if you live in Gainesville. Or at least in Alachua County. I think she might want to meet you in person. Maybe at  Devil’s Millhopper if we ever leave this godforsaken city we live in now.

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