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[personal profile] rocky41_72025-06-16 05:47 pm

"Even though I Knew the End" by C.L. Polk

On Monday's outbound commute I finished the audiobook for Even Though I Knew the End. This is a supernatural/fantasy noir romance and it does pack a lot of all three of those things into its brief 4-hour runtime. 
 
This book relies heavily on stock film noir tropes—the veteran down-and-out private (paranormal) investigator (here a lesbian, Helen, our protagonist) who drinks too much and is haunted by past mistakes, a mysterious and sexy female client with a unique case, and "just one last" job before the PI plans to quit and retire with a beloved romantic partner. I didn't find them overused—and seeing them reworked to queer and female characters was fun—but other readers may find them too worn out even here.
 
Because the book is so short, it moves along at a very rapid pace. The whole thing takes place over the course of two days—the final two days before Helen's soul debt is called due and she finally has to pay the price of her warlock bargain. In this way, any rush felt appropriate, since it fit both the size of the novel and the context of Helen's urgency to get this last job done before she has to pay up.
 
The characters weren't super developed, but again—4-hour runtime. They're a little stock character-y, but not total cardboard cut-outs. It was disappointing for me to see Helen make the same mistake at the end of the book that she did prior to the start, as if she hadn't really learned anything, but since the novel ends promptly after that, the story never has to reckon much with it. 
 
Edith, Helen's girlfriend, was probably the most developed of the characters despite how little page time she got, and I was relieved she wasn't just the damsel in distress/goal object for Helen, which I was a bit worried about in the beginning. Edith has secrets and goals of her own. 
 
Overall, the book was fine, and it entertained me well enough for a few days. Nothing extraordinary here, but nothing objectionable either. I will say I think keeping it short worked best for this book—I think drawing it out might have only weakened it. A fun little twist on a typical noir novel.

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Review: The Plant Kitchen

The Plant Kitchen: 100 easy recipes for vegan beginners
Hardcover – January 14, 2020
by Ryland Peters & Small (Author)


We finished reading this cookbook today. It's not all that big, but some pages do have more than one recipe. The Introduction is just a couple paragraphs about plant-based eating. The chapters are Basic Recipes, Breakfast & Brunch, Light Bites & Snacks, Soups & Sides, Mid-Week Suppers, Feeding a Crowd, and Sweet Things. The Index seems to go primarily by main ingredients.

Read more... )

Review: Heroes' Feast

Heroes' Feast: The Official D&D Cookbook
Hardcover – October 27, 2020
by Kyle Newman, Jon Peterson, and Michael Witwer; recipes by Adam Ried

Read more... )
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[personal profile] rocky41_72023-06-20 06:22 pm
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She Who Became the Sun

She Who Became the Sun is a historical fantasy novel by Shelley Parker-Chan. It is the first in a duology and the description is:

She Who Became the Sun reimagines the rise to power of the Ming Dynasty’s founding emperor.
 
This one I grabbed on impulse at the bookstore back in January because I vaguely remembered hearing about it somewhere. As with my last review, I'm going to keep this short because I simply do not have the energy for more. I liked this book and I do plan to read the next one. There were moments I wasn't sure about it, but I'm glad I stuck with it and I think Parker-Chan crafts some very interesting characters here.

The main protagonist Zhu is fascinatingly driven and unrepentantly ambitious. She is also ruthless in her pursuit of her destiny, which starts to get pretty interesting at the end of this novel, and I expect will feature even more prominently in the next. She also reads, to me, as asexual or something close to it, which as an ace person myself was fun to see, especially because it isn't treated like a problem in her relationships. Neither does it stem from her own complex relationship with gender--it's just how she is.

The deuterogonist Ouyang is every bit as interesting, even though we don't see his POV until the middle part of the book. He is someone who is so viscerally torn between feeling compelled towards revenge and yet not desiring anything that will actually come of it that it's so interesting to watch his fate play out. I think Parker-Chan does a great job getting you into Ouyang's head during his perspective chapters and it was so interesting to me how Zhu leans into their connection while Ouyang is repulsed by it.

Recommend if you:
  • Enjoy morally gray/amoral protagonists--both Zhu and Ouyang do shady to outright horrifying things in pursuit of their goals.
  • Want queer relationships--won't give spoilers on this but again, both Zhu and Ouyang have queer experiences ,
  • Enjoy a historical setting that leans into the contemporary cultures--we get a good look both at the culture of the Mongols and of the Chinese.
Do not recommend if you:
  • Like heavily detailed stories--my only real criticism of the novel is that it often skims over things I would have liked explored in more depth.
  • Like a happy ending--of course this is only 1 of 2 books, but based on how it's going, I would not hold out hope for a happy end. The end of this first novel was not an uncomplicated victory.
  • Prefer romance to be a core of the story--as noted there are queer relationships here, but for the most part they are not the central part of the novel.
Crossposted from my main

Saka Saka

Saka Saka: Adventures in African Cooking, South of the Sahara
by Anto Cocagne and Aline Princet

This is a full-color cookbook with many gorgeous photos. In addition to the recipes, it also includes interviews with people from Africa about their favorite foods from there. If you like learning about folks in different parts of the world, you'll enjoy these inserts.

The front matter is extremely useful. It includes the Cuisines of Africa, Tastes of Africa, Principles and Traditions, Benefits of African Cuisines, Main Specialties, Staple Ingredients Region by Region, and the Ideal Pantry. I was intrigued by the Principles section, with points like "Eating with your hands is completely normal" and "We do not eat baby animals." The section on Staple Ingredients makes a great comparison among west, central, east, and south Africa regarding starches, meats, produce, and spices. This part of the book is interesting and educational, whether or not you make any of the recipes.

Read more... )
marycatelli: (Golden Hair)

Dungeons and Dragons Art and Arcana: A Visual History

Dungeons and Dragons Art and Arcana: A Visual History by Michael Witwer, Kyle Newman, Jon Peterson, and Sam Witwer

A history of D&D. Heavy emphasis on the visual elements.

Man, that early art was cheap and amateurish. Sometimes fun, to be sure. Picks up as it goes on. Also, there are maps, which gives me deep philosophical thoughts about the way dungeon crawls would be hard to make a novel out of. . . you would have to write a trilogy to cover every room in a single page.
marycatelli: (Golden Hair)

Women in the Days of the Cathedrals

Women in the Days of the Cathedrals by Régine Pernoud

Stuff about women in the Middle Ages. Like Those Terrible Middle Ages, popular and light in tone, and more devoted to debunking myths than making a systemic study, but full of facts, and how things were in fact worse after the Middle Ages than during them.
marycatelli: (Golden Hair)
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The Tale of Tsar Saltan

The Tale of Tsar Saltan by Alexander Pushkin, illustrated by Gennady Spirin

A classic fairy tale of a tsar who marries a young woman after overhearing what she and her sisters would do if they married him.  And the resulting jealousy of her sisters, for a tale involving a swan, a barrel, a hawk, a gnat, and more. 

Good illustrations.
marycatelli: (Golden Hair)

Russia Under the Bolshevik Regime

Russia Under the Bolshevik Regime by Richard Pipes

The third book in the Russia series. More history than the Old Regime, more study of society than Revolution. Covers the period from the Civil Wars to the death of Lenin. The problem of culture -- the "proletarian" writers who actively suppressed all others in the name of Revolution and produced no work that survives. The anti-religious movement -- the confiscation of consecrated vessels from the Russian Orthodox Church on the pretext of feeding the hungry -- the Jewish Communists attacking Judaism with particular fervor, such that non-Jewish Communists were told to emulate them in attack Christianity (without the desired effect of making the Orthodox think that they were not particularly anti-Orthodox). Famine. Comparisons with Fascism and Nazism. And more.

marycatelli: (Golden Hair)

The Russian Revolution

The Russian Revolution by Richard Pipes

His second Russian book. after Russia Under the Old Regime.

Read more... )
marycatelli: (Golden Hair)

Russia Under the Old Regime

Russia Under the Old Regime by Richard Pipes

An intensive but fascinating look at the political and social structure of Russia.

Read more... )
marycatelli: (Golden Hair)

Friends and Foes

Friends and Foes by Eddie Pittman

Red's Planet, book 2. Spoilers ahead!

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the painted queen by e. peters & j. hess

sadly this is the last amelia peobody novel as elizabeth peters passed in aug. 2013. also sadly, ms. peters had only started writing the final page at the time of her passing, but left a lot of notes which joan hess used to complete the novel. i don't know if any were on the story or dialogue or just on the background (the discovery & disappearance of the famous bust of queen nefertiti)

it reads like fan fiction. not very good fan fic either. characters are out of character or almost parodies of themselves. there's a pack of assassins running around in almost comical fashion & the peabody/emerson clan's enemy sethos (mater criminal & master of disguise) seems almost shoehorned in. frankly, i'm not sure i really cared for the character anyway.
titles of previous amelia peabody novels were randomly added to conversations for no good reason other than this is the 20th novel in the series. it's kind of like when all of those nods to previous bond movies were in die another day for the franchise's 40th anniversary. i very nearly stopped reading it. but i will bravely plowed though to the end.

i didn't notice a change to the avalon series by marion zimmer bradley after her passing. but maybe it's because; 1. diana l. paxson was her co-author on the last 3 before bradley passed. 2. i had not re-read the series at least twice like i have with the peabody series. 3. was not in the middle of yet another re-read of the series like i am with this one. 4. or a big fan of the avlaon series like i am with the peabody series.

tl;dr only read this novel if you want to complete the series. but it might disappoint fans of the amelia peabody novels.
othercat: shader from chrono crusade standing with her back to the viewer. In the background is the Earth. (aion: set a bad example)
[personal profile] othercat2014-02-03 01:38 pm

Review: The Long War by Terry Pratchett and Stephen Baxter


I am not entirely sure whether or not I liked The Long War. At least, it didn’t hold the same level of interest for me that The Long Earth did. The story begins when the death of a troll attempting to protect her child and snowballs into a conflict between Datum Earth and the various colonies, which are beginning to have thoughts of independence. What we have here is a perfect storm of civil rights and state rights as Datum Earth attempts to maintain control and the various colonies attempt to break free of the control.


Read this review on A Wicked Convergence of Circumstances on Blogger

Read this review on Rena's Hub of Random on WordPress.
othercat: shader from chrono crusade standing with her back to the viewer. In the background is the Earth. (aion: set a bad example)
[personal profile] othercat2013-05-28 10:28 am

Reading: Godstalk, by P.C. Hodgell Part One


I first found Godstalk back when I was still in high school. It took me a long time to get around to reading it, however. I am an extremely finicky reader, so it took me a while to decide to read it. It also took me a while to fall in love with it. Godstalk is a strange and quirky novel in which the writer does some fun things with various Sword and Sorcery and High Fantasy tropes. Godstalk has a war of Ultimate Good and Ultimate Evil, but the forces of good have had a thirty thousand year losing streak, and they kind of have it in for the God that gave them the job of fighting the Ultimate Evil. (They are mostly still fighting only because of extreme stubbornness.) And the forces of evil aren’t so much Evil as they are alien and inimical to the realities they’re invading. 
 
Our Heroine has mysterious, barely in control powers, has huge chunks bit out of her memory, and her reaction to finding herself in a city lousy with gods is to immediately experiment on them to find out how they work.


Read the review of Godstalk Part One on Rena's Hub of Random on WordPress
othercat: shader from chrono crusade standing with her back to the viewer. In the background is the Earth. (aion/mary/chrono: happy family)
[personal profile] othercat2012-10-11 12:17 pm

Book Review: The Long Earth, by Terry Pratchett and Stephen Baxter

 
Buy on Amazon!The Long Earth involves an improbable invention, an astounding discovery and a journey to see how far the rabbit hole goes. The story begins with two people who have a strange experience where they are transported to some strange location. One is a soldier during World War One in France, and the other is a pregnant teenager, who dies shortly after giving birth.
 
With the presence of these alternate Earths (all of them apparently empty of human life), a kind of colonization boom occurs.
kalachi: girl smelling roses (Default)
[personal profile] kalachi2009-06-21 10:19 pm
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Spunk and Bite, by Arthur Plotnik

title SPUNK & BITE
 
author ARTHUR PLOTNIK

[Nonfiction] A writer's guide to punchier, more engaging language.

5/5  )

 
 
This book encourages a more flexible take on writing than as espoused in Strunk & White's Elements of Style. It was an exceedingly pleasurable read, both witty and inspiring. I highly recommend it for anyone looking to improve their writing :) 

It also includes a list of good references, such as where to find little-known, specific vocabulary (ever wonder what that little indent between your nose and upper lip is called?). I need to get me a descriptionary, like, yesterday.

A nice breezy read and yet very informative. It gets a:

~5/5~


 
 

June Books


The Winter Duke by Louise Bergin
More like 2 1/2 stars. Read more... )







Sweet Death, Kind Death by Amanda Cross.
Read more... )





La patience de l'araignée (The Patience of the Spider) by Andrea Camilleri
I love this series. Read more... )








.La lune de papier (The Paper Moon) by Andrea Camilleri.
An average Camilleri is still a pretty good book. Read more... )










Rashomon Gate by I. J. Parker
This is the second book featuring Sugawara Akitada, 11th century detective in Medieval Japan. Much like Van Gulik Judge Ti, Sugawara's case are inspired from stories of that time.
Read more... )
falena: illustration of a blue and grey moth against a white background (reading is sexy)
[personal profile] falena2009-05-23 06:26 pm

Book reviews: The Abstinence Teacher; Cold Granite; Rethinking Thin;

Title: The Abstinence Teacher

Author: Tom Perrotta

Read more... )

***

Title: Cold Granite.

Author: Stuart MacBride.

Read more... )

***

Title: Rethinking Thin: The new science of weight loss - and the myths and realities of dieting.

Author: Gina Kolata.

Read more... )