Sunday, May 04, 2025

An ERA Update

 

Back in March, I began my journey with the Pocketbook ERA (A New ERA Begins). There were the typical problems of learning a new piece of tech and figuring out how to work with or around its idiosyncrasies.

My main two issues were with managing collections (series/authors/etc) on the ERA itself and with the buttons, which were a much harder press, almost a snap, than the gentle press I was used to on my old Oasis.

The button issue is still an issue. I suspect it will stay an issue for as long as I own the ERA. What I have done to mitigate the stress created on my thumb from being forced to press so hard is to switch hands more often. It is not an ideal solution, but it is one that works and one that I can deal with. Plus, given the Era's shape and weight, switching hands more often has the added benefit of giving that particular wrist a break too. For someone with as small hands as mine, the ERA is just a tad too big.

The second issue, managing collections on the ERA via Calibre has been solved. When I got the ERA I knew there was a plugin for Calibre to do just this. However, trying to deal with the ERA and the new plugin all at the same time was simply too much for me. Once I was used to the ERA, I began working on the plugin (PB Collections Plugin). The first thing I had to do was just install it. I didn't try to configure it or mess around with it or anything. I just installed it and let it sit for about a week. Then I began meticulously reading through the plugin thread and following the steps exactly. Once the plugin was setup correctly and I had the correct column created in Calibre, I began creating new collections in Calibre. I put my ERA on the arm of the couch and began typing in collections in Calibre that were on the ERA. Then I began assigning books in Calibre to the various collections. At this point, I still hadn't plugged the ERA back in to Calibre to get everything transferred. I wanted to get used to doing all the scutwork ahead of time and to become familiar with the process. Once I had all the collections on my ERA created in Calibre and all the books assigned to the various collections (this was about a week later, again), I plugged in my ERA and let Calibre and the ERA do their thing. Once everything was transferred, I had several instances of double collections of my ERA from my manually created collections (when I first used the ERA) being slightly different from the Calibre created collections (usually upper/lower case letter differences). I just went through and deleted the manual collections and all that was left were the Calibre managed collections, with all the books in them that were supposed to be.

That is a snapshot of my Calibre library. The PB Collection column is the one that applies to the ERA. Whenever I want a book in Calibre to be in a collection on the ERA, I simply assign it to a collection or create a new collection and when I send the book to the ERA all the info goes along with it. Much, much, much simpler than doing it book by book on the ERA itself.

Now that I have the plugin working, my time with my ERA is going much smoother. Just like a computer, data management is half the battle when it comes to an ereader and I've got that half of the battled licked. The other half of the battle is actually reading the books I put on it. But have no fear, I feel like I've got that part of the battle licked too. GI Joe's got nothing on me!

I suspect this will be the last post I do specifically on the ERA. Obviously, feel free to ask questions about it or Calibre and I'll do my best to answer. Or I'll just do the ol' razzle dazzle jazz hands thing and pretend I answered your question ;-)


Saturday, May 03, 2025

Shadowed Millions (The Shadow #21) 3.5Stars

 

This review is written with a GPL 4.0 license and the rights contained therein shall supersede all TOS by any and all websites in regards to copying and sharing without proper authorization and permissions. Crossposted at WordPresss & Blogspot by Bookstooge’s Exalted Permission

Title: Shadowed Millions
Series: The Shadow #21
Authors: Maxwell Grant
Rating: 3.5 of 5 Stars
Genre: Crime Fiction
Pages: 142
Words: 44K
Publish: 1932



The amount of money involved in this story was 10million dollars. I used one of those online inflation calculators and in terms of today’s money, it is about 235million, almost a quarter billion dollars. Can you imagine a group of people handing over a quarter billion in cash and bonds to one man, on the strength of his word and some papers “certifying” that he’s the guy to work with. No oversight, no triple checks, no one accompanying him. I don’t know if the world has changed that much (I suspect it has) but the thought of trusting someone I don’t know with a quarter billion is more than I can imagine.

It is all complicated by the fact that the Carrier has something shady going on and we as the readers do not know if he’s actually trustworthy or not. Right up until the very end in fact. I rather enjoyed that ambivalence.

Of course there is a shadow’y mastermind in the background, but par for the course, The Shadow is one step ahead, if not two or three. I was never in doubt about the outcome, but how it would play out was another matter completely. That’s part of why I enjoy these pulp stories so much.

The Shadow wins. The End.




★★★✬☆


From Bookstooge

A group of Capitalists stake 10million on a small South American Country for exclusive mineral rights. The carrier of said 10million appears to have his own agenda. At the same time, the carrier appears to be involved with powerful men who don’t want the country to succeed. It’s up to The Shadow to make sure the 10million gets to where it is going. Along the way there will be fisticuffs, gunfights and general mayhem.



Friday, May 02, 2025

[Journal] Verdi, Carteggio

 

Carteggio is translated as "Correspondence" in English. The front cover has a page from Verdi's letters, hence the name.

I am particularly keen on these yellow/gold covers from Paperblanks. So far I have this one, Maya Angelou's, Verne's and Cervante's. There are one or two more I'd like to get and I'm sure Paperblanks will be bringing more out in the future. I can wait :-D

Thursday, May 01, 2025

Blood Debt (Victor the Assassin #11) 4Stars

 

This review is written with a GPL 4.0 license and the rights contained therein shall supersede all TOS by any and all websites in regards to copying and sharing without proper authorization and permissions. Crossposted at WordPress & Blogspot by Bookstooge’s Exalted Permission

Title: Blood Debt
Series: Victor the Assassin #11
Author: Tom Wood
Rating: 4 of 5 Stars
Genre: Action/Adventure
Pages: 328
Words: 98K
Publish: 2023



Victor is a consummate professional and I absolutely love that about these books. That aspect is brought into sharp focus near the end of the book when Victor is facing off against an assassin who fought him to a draw earlier in the book. The other assassin is just as good as Victor but when he gets the upper hand, he begins bragging about how he’s always wanted to test himself against Victor to prove that he was the better assassin. Victor uses this tiny distraction to kill the guy, because he’s not allowing his emotions to control him during this time.

Very. Slow. Clap.

I read the previous book, Traitor, almost a year and a half ago. I was wondering if there was going to be any friction with sliding back into this world but I needn’t have worried. Wood does an admirable job of bringing the reader up to date without spending more than a couple of paragraphs on the subject. In epic fantasy series, I appreciate a whole prologue bringing me up to date, as it may have been up to 5 years between books. But for a series like this where Wood has been banging out the books steadily since 2010, that is simply unnecessary. We get a quick reminder of why Victor is working for the Russian Mob Boss and then we move on. Quick, efficient and economical. Much like Victor himself in fact.

I gave this book the “Favorite” tag. I didn’t do that because I thought that this book was particularly stronger than any of the previous ones (although A Quiet Man was pretty pansified) but because at book 11, I am still loving this series, very much. Just like when I began bumping up my ratings for the Nero Wolfe books, it is time to acknowledge that I look forward to these books and thoroughly enjoy them. That’s what my ‘Favorite’ tag is all about, books that I enjoy the most. At some point I will be going through and re-reading the series and I hope it will live up to the test. Victor the Assassin has withstood many attacks over the years, so I have high hopes that he’ll survive Bookstooge too.

★★★★☆


From Bookstooge

Victor is working off his debt to a Russian mob boss. At the books start, he has just finished a job that gives him his freedom. On his way back to report everything, he interrupts an assassin who has killed the Russian. All the circumstances point to Victor being the assassin and the rest of the Mob Bosses give him three days to prove his innocence.

Victor tracks everything down. He survives multiple assassination attempts by various mob bosses, gets involved with MI6 (again) and has to clean that situation up. He figures out the assassination was contracted by the Mob Boss’s top henchwoman and gives the info to the Boatman, the Russian assassin tasked with keeping relative peace amongst the mob. The Boatman executes the guilty parties and Victor is once again on his own, flying free in the wind.



Wednesday, April 30, 2025

April '25 Roundup & Ramblings


Raw Data:

Novels - 12 -

Short Stories - 0 ↓

Manga/Graphic Novels - 1 -

Comics - 1 -

Average Rating - 2.81 ↓↓

Pages - 3364 ↑

Words - 1144K ↑


The Bad:

The Wild Adventures of Cthulhu 2 - 1star of blasphemy and utter hypocrisy

Infinity Gate - 1star of just cutting a massive 1300 page book randomly in half


The Good:

Nothing got above 3.5stars this month. That's not nearly good enough.


Movie:

Yu Yu Hakusho: The Chapter Black Saga kept the momentum rolling and held my interest.


Miscellaneous Posts:


Personal:

Man, April's reading stank to high heaven! Two 1stars and nothing above 3.5stars really did my average rating in. I feel like I was mugged and then stabbed in the back when it came to reading books in April. I had plenty of "decent" books but nothing great and I WANT great books.

Work was all over the place. New Guy came and went and came and I ended up being with him, or Tall Guy or by myself. Each week was a new adventure and it was extremely unsettling to me. I like stability.

Weatherwise, April gave us a black eye at the beginning with a weekend snowstorm that dropped 5-6inches of snow! Of course, it was all gone within 3 days and we hit 80 a couple of days. The buds are on the trees, little leaves are popping out and there is sunshine, sunshine, sunshine! So April turned out ok in the end.

Yesterday I got my tri-monthly eye injections so today is going to be a bear. I think I'm going to have to start getting the injections done in the mornings and just take the day off from work, instead of having them done in the afternoons and then suffering the next day at work. Balancing it all with taking vacation time is a real pain!

We started going back to the Seventh Day Adventist church on Saturdays full time this month. While I love the sermons at our Sunday church, and Mrs B loves the people, the music is completely out of control. One time there was a group of us praying in another room while the music team practiced. The drums were so loud that we couldn't hear each other pray. And that's from being in another room, imagine what it is like where they actually are! So while I am having to give up listening to expository preaching, at least I am getting a proper reverence in the church. God is not the God of chaos and bedlam and out of control emotionalism. It wasn't like this when we started attending this Sunday church back in '17 but has crept in over the years, with the leadership's full approval. Ahhhh, life is complicated isn't it?

And I think that's enough "ramblings" for now :-D


Cover Love:

The Hanging Stones, the next Silver John novel wins easily. Believe it or not, that "creature" is supposed to be a were-wolf. Wellman put were-wolves in the proper place!


Plans for Next Month:

A little bit of a change, but not much. My reading is picking up so I will have more book reviews than this month. Instead of doubling up on Monday's though, I'm going to shift some reviews and the My Week posts to Saturdays. It's been a great break to take Saturdays off of writing (since October!) but since the words keep piling up, I'd rather get them out each day instead of doubling up a day. I'm not a huge fan of multiple posts by bloggers each day. No idea why exactly, but I suspect it stems from that leading to burn out and them leaving without a word. You'd think by this point that my skin would have turned into callouses by that, but nope, if anything, every time a blogger leaves now it just hits me all the harder. That means I do whatever I can to make sure that I don't become one of those statistics.




Tuesday, April 29, 2025

The Hanging Stones (Silver John #4) 3Stars

 

This review is written with a GPL 4.0 license and the rights contained therein shall supersede all TOS by any and all websites in regards to copying and sharing without proper authorization and permissions. Crossposted at WordPress & Blogspot by Bookstooge’s Exalted Permission

Title: The Hanging Stones
Series: Silver John #4
Author: Manly Wade Wellman
Rating: 3 of 5 Stars
Genre: Folk Fantasy
Pages: 178
Words: 56K
Publish: 1982


So, it might be hard to make out, but that cover shows John hiding on one of the capstones of the New Stonehenge while a werewolf carries a body over its shoulder.

The werewolves in this story are sad, pathetic creatures eking out a miserable existence. They are not alpha predators, they are scavengers of the lowest sort. I rather like that. Puts them into their proper place. The downside is that they aren’t much of a threat, except at the end where they come together in a massive group. While John and Co have to face them, it ends up being taken care of by a group of magically resurrected neanderthals. Yeah, it’s like that.

This was just as low key as the previous Silver John books and boy, it kind of grated. Don’t get me wrong, I still enjoyed this but it was like eating rice with a couple of grains of sand mixed in. Irritating.

Still the best Wellman stories that I’ve read though. Understated folk fantasy, it just works.

And once again, the cover is probably the best part :-)




★★★☆☆


From the Publisher & Bookstooge

This Silver John adventure takes the honey-voiced folksinger to the site of a rising replica of Stonehenge, which selfish and ruthless millionaire Noel Kottler is building in Appalachia as a money-making tourist attraction. A pack of werewolves who live nearby spell trouble for his plan, though --- and even they may not turn out to be his worst problem. Eventually, a warlock raises a tribe of ghost made flesh neanderthals who destroy the werewolves and hang the millionaire on the Hanging Stones to prevent him desecrating what Stonehenge stood for.


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