Tuesday, June 18, 2013

Review: Six Heirs


Six Heirs
Six Heirs by Pierre Grimbert

My rating: 3 of 5 stars



Take a classic David Eddings and make all the characters unlikable in a variety of ways and you get the group brought together.

I was expecting a lot more from this, as what I'd read about Grimbert painted him as THE voice in French fantasy. Well, I guess I shouldn't have been surprised to be disappointed then.

It wasn't that this was bad, it was just mediocre. And I was not led to believe this was going to be mediocre. I feel kind of cheated actually.



View all my reviews

Sunday, June 16, 2013

Review: Endless Night


Endless Night
Endless Night by Agatha Christie

My rating: 4 of 5 stars



The whole time I was reading this I felt edgy, like something was off. I kept waiting for that nasty surprise to pop out of the closet and make me wet my pants.

It didn't pop out of the closet. It crept up, unawares, until the last chapter, where it proceeded to throttle me.

I don't like books where the main character is the badguy. Especially this bad guy. He was lazy, ego-centric, selfish and the image presented by himself to the readers just didn't quite add up, until the end, where suddenly it all made sense.

Of course, his complete collapse didn't fit in with his personality and how he'd reacted earlier in life. Oh well, Christie can make her characters act how she wants them to. :)



View all my reviews

Review: One Corpse Too Many


One Corpse Too Many
One Corpse Too Many by Ellis Peters

My rating: 3 of 5 stars



This tale went sailing merrily along until about 2/3rd's of the way through, then for some reason it slowed down for me. Not sure why, but I stopped caring about all the different alliances, etc, etc that different people had for different reasons. It became boring.

But, I like the introduction of Hugh B. [I can't remember how to spell his last name]. He seemed like a good counterweight to Cadfael's age, vocation and temperament.



View all my reviews

Review: Black Light


Black Light
Black Light by Stephen Hunter

My rating: 4 of 5 stars



I enjoyed this as much as the first one. It was kind of weird at the beginning dealing with Earl, Bob's father, and thinking that the whole book would be about him. But then we caught up to the present and the good stuff starts.

I found the action scenes to particularly enjoyable for some reason. Not sure why, but the highway ambush really clicked.



View all my reviews

Friday, June 14, 2013

Review: Boston Blitz


Boston Blitz
Boston Blitz by Don Pendleton

My rating: 4 of 5 stars



Best book since the first.

I've been wondering for about 10 books when some Mafia would use Bolan's kid brother and former lover, the hot teacher, as leverage.

And it gets done. In Boston. This had the emotional tang of loss, sadness and revenge that the first book had, and that all the previous books really seemed to lack.

Mortars, double dealings, national implications, daylight hits. This book had it all in spades.



View all my reviews

Thursday, June 13, 2013

Review: Magisterium


Magisterium
Magisterium by Jeff Hirsch

My rating: 2 of 5 stars



Wrote a whole review and then accidentally clicked on one of the shelf tags and lost everything.

Anyway, this was shallow and annoying. The main character was a spoiled "princess" and extremely stupid to boot.

Nothing she did made sense to me, nor her reasons for those actions [or lack of reasons to be honest].

Obligatory "boy" who was more cardboard than anything. Some protector who manages to be both bad ass and all kind and gentle and fuzzy. Yeah.

Will not be reading any more by this author.





View all my reviews

Wednesday, June 12, 2013

Review: Brotherband: The Invaders: Book Two


Brotherband: The Invaders: Book Two
Brotherband: The Invaders: Book Two by John Flanagan

My rating: 3 of 5 stars



A good continuation of the series. A real adventure and a girl.

For some reason I keep thinking of these characters as small people, like in the Ranger's Apprentice and then I get a reminder that these are big, burly vikings who will put an axe through your skull without breaking a sweat.

I love axes...



View all my reviews

Tuesday, June 11, 2013

Review: Oblomov: A Novel


Oblomov: A Novel
Oblomov: A Novel by Ivan Goncharov

My rating: 5 of 5 stars



What can I say about this book that other reviewers haven't? Don't know, so I guess I'll just write what stood out to me.

Oblomov went from funny to pathetic to inspiring to sad to heartsick to pathetic again and ended on awe-inspiring. A lot of this is because I can see so much of Oblomov in me. I like retreating into my little safe cocoon of an apartment with my books or computer. Not a big fan of large groups of people. I don't like other people knowing intimate details of my life. I hate doing things spur of the moment. New situations make me uncomfortable. I'd much rather prefer other people to take care of problems I don't understand [just ask my mechanic!].

But, we also differ. Oblomov had a very twisted view of what life should be like. Work was an evil to be avoided at all costs. Effort was Evil and Komfort was King. [like the alliteration? I trust my sacrifice of grammar will be appreciated]
Oblomov resided in a world that he created in his imagination and when the real world didn't conform to that idea, he was thrown into the pit of despair and gave in to sloth and apathy.

When I first started reading, I was amused by the banter and back and forth between Oblomov and his servant Zakar. The verbal sparring, the bouts of temper and fits of sulkiness on both sides. Then we see more of how Oblomov has retreated from life by how he interacts with other friends. It takes too much effort to resist Tarantyev, so he goes along with just about anything he suggests. Other friends suggest, cajole, insinuate, etc but all to no avail as Oblomov has no higher ambition than to recline on his couch and relax. It was getting to the point where I was wondering if Oblomov had ANY redeeming qualities that weren't destroyed by his apathy and sloth.

Then along comes the girl. Oblomov falls in love. He strives. He struggles. You can see the blood beginning to burn once again in his veins. He is becoming the man promised in his youth. Plan are not only talked about, but action is taken. Life is Grand and Love is Supreme.

Hark, what is this? Oblovomitis has crept back in. It has poisoned his thoughts. Oblomov goes back to living in a world he has created in his head. And the girl is not enough. And so he sinks back below even the levels we found him at in the beginning. Let this be a warning to all who think that someone or something else can be the sole instrument of their change. Change must start on the inside.

A strange, to me, interlude ensues where the girls marries someone else and we see how they live and grow closer to eachother and how their lives work. And we find out that Oblomov dies of a heart attack from over eating and lack of exercise.

At the end of the book, Oblomov's friend is visiting the grave and he whispers about Oblomov, A wasted life.

This book was entertaining, uplifting, inspiring and overall, a warning. Nothing is better than Melancholic Russian Literature!




View all my reviews

Review: Oblomov: A Novel


Oblomov: A Novel
Oblomov: A Novel by Ivan Goncharov

My rating: 0 of 5 stars



What can I say about this book that other reviewers haven't? Don't know, so I guess I'll just write what stood out to me.

Oblomov went from funny to pathetic to inspiring to sad to heartsick to pathetic again and ended on awe-inspiring. A lot of this is because I can see so much of Oblomov in me. I like retreating into my little safe cocoon of an apartment with my books or computer. Not a big fan of large groups of people. I don't like other people knowing intimate details of my life. I hate doing things spur of the moment. New situations make me uncomfortable. I'd much rather prefer other people to take care of problems I don't understand [just ask my mechanic!].

But, we also differ. Oblomov had a very twisted view of what life should be like. Work was an evil to be avoided at all costs. Effort was Evil and Komfort was King. [like the alliteration? I trust my sacrifice of grammar will be appreciated]
Oblomov resided in a world that he created in his imagination and when the real world didn't conform to that idea, he was thrown into the pit of despair and gave in to sloth and apathy.

When I first started reading, I was amused by the banter and back and forth between Oblomov and his servant Zakar. The verbal sparring, the bouts of temper and fits of sulkiness on both sides. Then we see more of how Oblomov has retreated from life by how he interacts with other friends. It takes too much effort to resist Tarantyev, so he goes along with just about anything he suggests. Other friends suggest, cajole, insinuate, etc but all to no avail as Oblomov has no higher ambition than to recline on his couch and relax. It was getting to the point where I was wondering if Oblomov had ANY redeeming qualities that weren't destroyed by his apathy and sloth.

Then along comes the girl. Oblomov falls in love. He strives. He struggles. You can see the blood beginning to burn once again in his veins. He is becoming the man promised in his youth. Plan are not only talked about, but action is taken. Life is Grand and Love is Supreme.

Hark, what is this? Oblovomitis has crept back in. It has poisoned his thoughts. Oblomov goes back to living in a world he has created in his head. And the girl is not enough. And so he sinks back below even the levels we found him at in the beginning. Let this be a warning to all who think that someone or something else can be the sole instrument of their change. Change must start on the inside.

A strange, to me, interlude ensues where the girls marries someone else and we see how they live and grow closer to eachother and how their lives work. And we find out that Oblomov dies of a heart attack from over eating and lack of exercise.

At the end of the book, Oblomov's friend is visiting the grave and he whispers about Oblomov, A wasted life.

This book was entertaining, uplifting, inspiring and overall, a warning. Nothing is better than Melancholic Russian Literature!




View all my reviews

Review: Triumph of the Darksword


Triumph of the Darksword
Triumph of the Darksword by Margaret Weis

My rating: 3 of 5 stars



So instead of writing a good story, this duo [and don't get me wrong, I absolutely love some of their stuff] simply use a scifi cliche to advance the story 10 years for Joram.

And this story wasn't even about Joram really. It was all about the revelations of the outside world and how everything we thought we knew gets turned on its side and shaken. With some token villain who's a freaking stage magician. Seriously?

At least the tech warriors could have been cool. Special Special Forces [yes, that was a double]. And they fall apart and cry like babies. Seal Team 6 wouldn't have fallen apart like that!

Finally, to wrap things up, we get a love fest and everybody is going to be everybody else's best friend, except for the badguys, who we are told, are now going to be even badder. But the goodguys will be even gooderer. And can you not be inspired by a Gooderer Guy?

So while I might appear to have hated this book, I actually enjoyed it. It was just juvenile and not up to the level of sophistication that I enjoy now [anyone read those Myth books by Asprin?] If you enjoyed the first 2, this won't disappoint, but it wont get better.

And I found out that there is a 4th book after this. I won't be reading it.



View all my reviews