2010

Nancy Drew – The Secret of the Old Clock

Alrighty, I started with the first book in the series and I really want to read them in order – which is messed up since I don’t seem to own numbers 2 and 3d. It still takes me all of about two hours to read a Nancy Drew, which is about what it took me when I was a kid.

It was amusing to re-visit Nancy after all these years. They didn’t have cell phones back then, ya know. Nancy had to drive to the police station (actually, she visited a couple of different police stations) which I found interesting… do you know where your closest police station is? Or where several police stations are? Because errr I’m not really sure I do. Oh wait, yea I do know where one is… but just one.

I’ve reserved #2 and #3 from the library and am looking forward to them. (Since I never owned them, it’s possible that I’ve never read them… imagine that!)

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The Libyrinth

TW kept telling me that I had to read The Libyrinth. I couldn’t figure out why. It looked like some run of the mill YA fantasy novel. What’s the big deal? TW likes fantasy but she tends to be not as big a fan of YA as I am.

It took all of two paragraphs for me to figure out why she liked it. Books. A library, the biggest library EVER. Ritualistic book burnings carried out by people who are either Eradicants or Singers, depending upon your point of view. Strong women, lesbians. The book had everything. EVERYTHING.

One of the characters, hears written text, and since she lives and works in a library (the Libyrinth) she is surrounded by books – random lines from random books appear throughout the story and it’s interesting to see how quickly we recognize (or don’t) the lines. (The list of quoted books is in the back, which was nice.)

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Ruby’s Imagine

I plucked Ruby’s Imagine off of the shelf because of the cover. It’s a tiny little book with a half flap type of book cover. It was appealing. And then it sat on the shelf in my house for weeks. When I finished the Weiner book, it was late at night but not quite time to turn off the lights so I grabbed this one. Something small, short, quick – and also something that needs to go back to the library soon.

I had no idea what this book was about.

A teenage girl in NOLA in the days leading up to/during Katrina.

If I’d known what it was about, I probably wouldn’t have checked it out. I’m glad I didn’t know because it was good. Great writing, excellent story, characters I enjoyed getting to know just a little bit. I don’t know if Kim Antieau has written anything else, but I think I’m going to find out.

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Best Friends Forever

I boycotted Jennifer Weiner for a couple of years. I thought I was going to stick with my boycott but TW said Best Friends Forever was good – really good. So I broke down and read it.

It was good. Jennifer Weiner chick litty – good. I liked Addie. I didn’t particularly like Val but I didn’t hate her either. I would like to know more about Merry…. Maybe she needs a book of her own?

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The Betrayal of the Blood Lily

I have been looking forward to The Betrayal of the Blood Lily for a very long time. Thank goodness, I wasn’t disappointed.  Best book in the series, since book one.

I like Penelope. A lot. Pen needs her own series.

I also liked the bits and pieces about Colin, Eloise and the rest of the “modern day” crew, which is saying something since I often find myself wanting to just hurry up and get this bit over with so we can get back to the real spy stories.

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Wildwater Walking Club

I decided to read the The Wildwater Walking Club because a) it’s been on the shelf for weeks b) it looked like a quick and easy piece of chick lit c) the cover reminded me a little bit of Kris Radish’s books.

It was a quick read. It was a little Radish-like. It was a little bit too much of a mish-mash of chick lit topics. Did we really need the NOLA teacher with cancer storyline? I don’t think that we did.

I loved the clotheslines. Loved the lavender. Love the dozens of boxes of walking shoes. Just an all around fun book, nothing too horribly heart breaking (which maybe is why the NOLA teacher thing was tossed in – gotta have something heartbreaking or something?)

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The Creamsickle

I think we bought The Creamsickle at Women & Children First. TW read it a good long while back and it’s been sitting in the basket underneath my bedside table ever since. I added it to my From the Stacks Challenge list because it feels like it’s been awhile since I read a baby dyke/boi novel.

There wasn’t anything super special about The Creamsickle. If you’ve read one baby dyke fringe San Francisco based book, then you know what this was like. Lots of bed hopping. Lots of drugs. Lots of gender bending. Lots of skateboarding and biking. What was most interesting, to me, was picturing Katherine Forrest editing this. Now that was an interesting thought. And now I’m wondering what other queer books might be “Katherine V. Forrest Selections.”

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Bonk

I’m a Mary Roach fan but if it hadn’t been for someone on BlogHer, I wouldn’t have known she had a new book: Bonk. (TW and RJ assumed it was about head injuries. They’re both clueless.)

I didn’t enjoy it nearly as much as I did Stiff and Spook but that’s because I’m not a huge fan of graphic descriptions of skinning penises. Heck, I’m not a fan of any kind of description of skinning penises. I’m not really a fan of penises at all. Anyway. I enjoyed it. Mary Roach is brilliant and her willingness to participate in sex studies in order to get the details is admirable. Would YOU watch porn while a light wand was inserted in your vagina? Would you have sex with your partner inside of an MRI tube? 

On a related note, anyone interested in Flibanserin? Just wondering….

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La’s Orchestra Saves the World

I was leery of Alexander McCall Smith's La's Orchestra Saves the World.  I love the Ladies #1 Detective Agency series but have never been able to read more than a few pages of any of his other books. They just weren't good.

TW was equally suspicious of the book and when I'd been reading it for four days and hadn't gotten past the second chapter, she told me to just give up because it was just like all of the others we'd tried. But I persisted. I was slow to read it because I was distracted by the holiday and work and travel and my big kids. I was pretty sure it wasn't the book that was the problem. I was right.

Once we got home and got settled into something close to our normal routine, I ripped through the book in two days. (It would have been one day but the lure of a new laptop is strong…) The book is pretty damn good. In fact it's better than that. I highly recommend it. I like La. I like the people we get to know from the orchestra and the small English town. I liked it all very much and found myself wishing the author had written it differently so that it could be a series. But no, every book can't be a series, can it?

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From the Stacks (by color) – 2010

I had a really hard time with this challenge last year. And the year before. I still want to do it because there are a ton of books on my shelves that I haven't read. I'm going to make it easier on me and reduce the number of books in the challenge. Instead of one a month, I'm going with one of each color on my shelf.

Here's what I'll read in 2010

Black
The Lost Sister – (7/5/10)

White
What to Wear to See the Pope – (7/10/10)

Red
Mistress of the Art of Death – (11/15/10)

Orange
The Underpainter – (11/4/10)

Yellow
Gonzalez and Daughter Trucking Company – (8/30/10)

Green
Fat Girls and Lawn Chairs – (10/24/10)

Blue
Syren – (6/17/10)

Purple
The Live Oak Motel – (10/31/10)

Brown
The Creamsickle – (1/14/10)

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