Friday, August 3, 2012

Summer is when I do the most reading...

I have been reading, I just haven't been blogging about it, but anyhow, I have read a whole lotta books since Nine wrapped up.  See, when I have nothing to do project-wise I read a crap-load.  This is what I have read in the last couple of weeks:

3 Peter James' Roy Grave novel - Not Dead Yet, Looking Good Dead, Dead Like You
 A J.A.Jance Ali Reynold's mystery - Fatal Error
 Anna Quindlen's Every Last One (sobbing moments in that one)
Superfreakonomics
Carrie Fisher's Wishful Drinking (very funny - fast read)
The Nazi Officer's Wife (true story of holocaust survivor - Edith Hahn Beer)
Aprilynne Pike's teen fantasy novels - Wings and Spells
Eion Colfer's latest Artemis Fowl - The Last Guardian
Kristen Johnston's autobiographical Guts

That's 12 books and I keep feeling like I am missing one. They were all pretty good reads.  I have some fiction, some non-fiction, some adult stuff and some teen or young adult stuff. 

I am now reading Ruth Rendell's new Wexford novel, The Vault.

Saturday, January 14, 2012

An Enjoyable Read...

I finished up The Impossible Dead (Ian Rankin) and then had to urge to re-read Neil Gaiman's Neverwhere. I have been wanting to do this for awhile so it seemed like a good idea. I was glad I did because it has been so long that I had forgotten quite a bit of the story (detail wise) and was glad to revisit that world. Gaiman is such a good writer.

Then I was going to read P.D. James' Death Comes to Pemberly, but after a few pages I decided that I did indeed want to reread Pride and Prejudice first, so that is what I am doing now. It is going fast, thankfully, so I can then get on to the P.D. James!

Saturday, January 7, 2012

In Recent Memory...

I really should update this more frequently, because I cannot remember all the books I have read since the last post...

Right now I am reading:
The Impossible Dead by Ian Rankin
Falling Back by Jann Arden

I just finished:
Red Mist by Patricia Cornwell
Dead Man's Grip by Peter James
Alone in the Classroom by Elizabeth Hay
The Son of Neptune by Rick Riordan

That's for the last two weeks. I'd have to check the Kobo for anything before that. But it was a productive two weeks of reading!

Wednesday, October 19, 2011

Books I have read...

Been a long time since I updated this...

I read the first five of George R.R. Martin's Game of Thrones series. Loved them, but can't wait until the next comes out. I have also started Jim Butcher's Harry Dresden series. I am almost done book two and I quite like them. They fit nicely into my junk food reading. I also read Michael Ondaatje's new book, The Cat's Table. It has Ondaatje's consistently good writing but I was not wowed. There have been much better books from him in the past. It can't just be good prose. I wasn't as engaged with the characters as I usually am. I am surprised it has gotten as much acclaim as it has. I think part of that is people being caught in the Ondaatje adulation. I love his writing. I will read every book he writes, but I will also admit when some are better or worse than others. I also read the most recent in the Margaret Petersen Haddix Sent series. A nice continuation of the series there. I am not sure where she is going to go with it though. For a while the time-jumping got very confusing. I wonder what the 10 year olds thought? I bought the first Among the Hidden book and I am anxious to add the others from that series (also by Haddix). I liked them and want to see where it will go. There are more. I will have to do a re-con to list them. It has been a while since I posted.

Monday, March 14, 2011

And a few more kid-lit options...

I picked up 3 books in a series by R. L. LaFevers from the library last weekend: Theodosia and the Serpents of Chaos, Theodosia and the Staff of Osiris and Theodosia and the Eyes of Horus. They centre around the 11 year old daughter of 2 Egyptologists living in London just prior to WW II. Theodosia is precocious and somewhat gifted in Egyptian magic and sensitive to discovering and removing curses from relics. I quite like the series, as it combines history and mythology with a sense of humour and a sense of adventure. I am just into the third book and I figure it will get me through this week.

Wednesday, March 2, 2011

Grown Up Reading!

I just finished Under Heaven by Guy Gavriel Kay. It took me a long time, but it was worth it. I love Kay. This book might have been a better choice for the summer when I have more time and less other reading to do, but like i said, it was worth it. It took me a while to get everyone straight. There are a lot of characters with their own story lines that converge and twist, but the detail is impressive and the individuality of each character is created beautifully. Kay's writing is lovely and I do like that he is Canadian. I know, what does it matter when you are reading a book, but it seems to matter to me...

I also read Elizabeth George's This Body of Death. I love her writing and although I do not like who he is currently taken up with, I understand the need for solace. Poor Barbara Havers... I thought something was going to happen there with the neighbour.

I also picked a few from her...

I was drawn to Margaret Peterson Haddix's Found and then read Sent and Sabotaged. You might wonder, why all this young readers stuff? Well, I spend an hour and a half in the children's section of the Stanley Milner Library every Saturday with Gibson while Oliver is in Drama class, so I have been prowling the shelves. I really like this series. I think it is good for the 9-13 year old set. Interesting, real, historical without being boring. I highly recommend! I had read the 39 Clues set (all except number 10 - I have yet to get into that one) and Haddix wrote one or two of them, so the name was familiar.