2007

The Virgin Blue

Oops.

I picked up The Virgin Blue in audio several months ago. I handed it to TW and asked her if we had read it because I felt like we had but I couldn’t remember it from reading the cover or reading the reviews and stuff on Amazon. TW felt like we had read it but also couldn’t remember it. So, we started listening to it, it did not sound familiar. And then the tape broke.

I took it back to the library and decided to reserve it in print so we could finish it. The darn thing has been on the shelf for months and was due back this week so I pushed it to the front of the TBR pile and picked up where the tape had broken. And that’s about the time it started to sound familiar. But I just kept on reading.

And oh yea! I liked it the first time, too. I remember now.

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Books I read on the plane

You may remember that I said I prefer reading chic lit or YA when I fly and that’s what I read on my trip home from San Jose yesterday. Unfortunately, neither of the books I read were all that great.

First was a “Caught Reading Novel” called Playing With Fire. All that did was depress me. It was geared for high school students and high school students should have a higher reading level than this – and they don’t. Which was what depressed me. I’m glad I read it, just so that I could be reminded that not everyone is a reader. Depressing, isn’t it?

Then, I read Writing Magic which was written by the author of Ella Enchanted. It’s a non-fiction “how to write” bit written for middle schoolers and it was slow and a wee bit boring. But then again, I’m not a middle schooler. So I’m cutting it some slack. If it wasn’t due back to the library, I’d hand it to Liz and RJ and see what they think (particularly RJ, the writer in the family.)

I will share one little tidbit that made me laugh out loud, much to the interest of the two men seated beside of me (both of whom were amused that we all three had iPhones and that I was reading children’s literature and writing away on a tablet PC.) On the invisibility of the word “said”….

Avoid other noticeable words, like affirm, allege, articulate, assert, asseverate (a word I’d never heard before I started writing this), aver, avow, claim, comment, confabulate, contend, declare, express, hint, mention, observe, opine, pronounce, profess, remark, utter, voice. I don’t mean that you shouldn’t ever use these perfectly fine words. I just mean don’t use them as a substitute for said.

Damn good advice.

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May Bird and the Ever After

I finished up May Bird and the Ever After on the plane yesterday and was glad this was the book I happened to be reading. I think I prefer children’s lit and young adult lit for plane rides. Light and easy but also sort of interesting. That’s what May Bird is. TW found it a little too dark but I thought it was fine and not nearly as dark as a lot of other books for kids. I wonder if the other books in the series are any good… I have to know what happens to May, Somber Kitty and all of these dead folks when they get to the Far North.

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Run

I hesitated to read Run because Patchett disappointed me so much with Bel Canto, I didn’t want to fall in love with a book only to have it come crashing down at the end…which is what happened with Bel Canto all of those years ago. Loved it, right up until the end and then hated it so much that I wound up hating the book. (I know, I’m one of the very few people who feels that way about Bel Canto. I’m odd, I’m used to that.)

Something else that made me nervous about Run… TW didn’t say one single word about it while reading it or after reading it.

Thank goodness. I wasn’t disappointed by the end. Wasn’t disappointed by any single word of it. Run. Was. Awesome. From the first page to the last page. I loved it.

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Deeply Disappointing Dexter

There. I said it. Hard as it was. It’s true. Dexter in the Dark was deeply, deeply disappointing. (spoilers ahead…)

I settled into the book with excitement even though TW expressed some concerns regarding the book. She felt some confusion over the story line and characters because it had been so long since we read the second Dexter and because we have watched the Showtime series (which does not follow storyline or character building the way the books do.) I wasn’t worried, I’m better at holding story lines and character development than she is.

Bah. The problem wasn’t with the passage of time or the differences between book and TV, the problem was with this book itself. Why, why, why did we need “It”? Why couldn’t Dexter and his Dark Passenger simply be what they were? Why did we need some “God” from tens of thousands of years ago to step into the picture and “explain” Dexter’s Dark Passenger?

And, the Cody & Astor storyline? Wrong. It just felt wrong. Cody was written fairly well – even with the whole “Meloch” bit. Astor, not so much. It’s like she’s an afterthought. Either she is like Cody & Dexter or she isn’t – she can’t be “half way”.

Also, Doakes. Maybe I’m getting the characters muddled between the TV show and the book but it felt like Dexter was doing a bit too much mocking of the guy. It felt wrong.

The whole book just felt wrong. The curse of the “third book”, as sassymonkey suggested to me in google talk? Or the author feeling confused by the TV show? Or is this the way the author saw Dexter (and the kids and Doakes) all along and I didn’t see it coming? Could we just have a dream sequence start the next book? Dexter dreamed that entire book and none of it really happened? I’d appreciate that.

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The Year the Gypsies Came

I wasn’t really sure that I wanted to read The Year the Gypsies Came. The first few chapters weren’t all that encouraging. Then suddenly, probably with the arrival of Buza and his stories, I was captivated. And then, when I saw the bad stuff coming, it was too late for me to decide not to read it.

Bad stuff in this book, lots of bad stuff.

I really enjoyed the book, I just wish… well, read it for yourself. You’ll see what I mean. But beware, it isn’t really a happy book.

Edited: I just realized this was a book I had on my A to Z list challenge. Yay me! (I’ll never complete the challenge but it’s one step closer.)

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Kissing the Witch

Awhile back, Sassymonkey was trying to come up with books for a fairy tales challenge of some sort. I gave her some ideas but generally speaking, she came up with her list on her own. As I was searching, I realized I had never read Kissing the Witch: Old Tales in New Skins. Crazy, we read a lot of fairy tales around here. So, I reserved it.

And it was terrific. I really liked the way one fairy tale moved into the next. All of the connections between the women. Really excellent idea and one that should have been done before – or maybe it has and I’ve been missing it?

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Eclipse

Remember when I won a contest at Bookburger and got a free audio copy of Eclipse? TW and I have been listening to it in the car for ages. Finally, it was over today on the way home from breakfast. Finally. Thank goodness.

I officially hate Bella. Also Alice, though not nearly as much. I hate Edward and Jake, too – but not as much as I hate Bella. And also Alice. I would probably hate Edward, Jake and Alice less if Bella wasn’t such a whining, annoying, twit of a girl. What in the heck happened to the Bella in Twilight that led her to what she is in Eclipse? Whatever Stephanie Meyers was drinking when she wrote Eclipse, she should stay away from it if she writes another book in this series.

Sheesh.

I loved Twilight. I really liked New Moon. I wanted to like Eclipse but I didn’t – not even a little bit.

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