High-fives all around, Anfinwen, Dot, and Adeona! I knew you all had good tastes...
Anfinwen, I've enjoyed the interviews I've read with John Erickson too (...one or two). I read a non-fiction book by him this year, about his time ranching in the late 80s or so, and really enjoyed it as well. Plus, World Magazine's site has been running some non-fiction excerpts of his recently which I have also found worth reading.
Hope your reading is going well, SA! Your focus on unread books around the house is admirable - I'm low-key trying it too, but I am also getting distracted by library books, so...
I hope your attempts are more successful!
Your poor Mom trying to get through Freckles, Dot! Did she enjoy reading it more than you all enjoyed hearing it, or were you all just easily distracted?
Thanks for the info on Legion! I'll keep it on my radar, along with Skyward. Also, RIGHT??? I am still over here waiting for the last Wax & Wayne book, though I've a feeling we're more likely to get another Stormlight book first at the rate he's going...at least his distractions seem to be profitable and amusing to read.
HAHA! Adeona, those parts with Drover are always great - and quite quotable.
fk, I read The Best Christmas Pageant Ever once and wasn't that impressed, but I may need to give it another read - especially since I don't remember why I wasn't impressed.
I recently finished Quiet Heroes: Navy Nurses of the Korean War by Frances Omori. I was hoping it would be more like some of the books I read this summer on WWII nurses as far as helping me gain a better understanding of the war through the nurses, but alas, it did not. It instead focused pretty narrowly on the nurses' work and first person memories. Which wasn't bad, but I lack the framework to understand why exactly the nurses were hit with so many casualties at certain points. I guess that means I'll just have to do some more reading on the Korean War - which isn't bad, but it's adding a third-prong to my current non-fiction reading focus (WWII, homesteading/western expansion/pioneering, and now the Korean War).
I'm still trying to sort out what to read next. I've got more than a shelf of books I need to read for the first time (plus another shelf of books that I need to reread and decide if they deserve keeping) and a handful of library books too... I need a solid chunk of reading time.
To the future, to the past - anywhere provided it's together.
Your poor Mom trying to get through Freckles, Dot! Did she enjoy reading it more than you all enjoyed hearing it, or were you all just easily distracted?
Easily distracted. Too many babies in the house to regularly read anything longer than a few chapters I think.
I just finished Skyward. Excellent novel. There are a few questions I have that I hope the sequels will address, but overall a solid read.
And now, the question: to read the Six of Crows sequel or the third Tiffany Aching book. Decisions, decisions. . . And of course now that we're coming up on the holiday season it will be soon be time for a re-read of Hogfather.
I don't listen to my audio books much, but every so often i get a message from Audible that i'm almost at max credits, so i stop by to pick out a new one. It also reminds me that i can return anything i don't like, so i decided to go a little outside my tiny comfort zone and tried Ultraviolet by R.J. Anderson. Well, i'm probably going to be using that return option. I haven't technically finished it, as i got frustrated at the end of chapter 13 and jumped to the end, so i might listen to those missed chapters, but even if i do i'm sending it back once i'm done.
I'd read R.J. Anderson's "No Ordinary Fairy Tale" series (Knife, Rebel, and Arrow) and mostly enjoyed it, even if i think the series name is a little silly. They were fun, light reads, but one thing that bugged me about them was the plot structure, namely the lack of it. The stories move from point to point, shifting focus as the characters have things revealed to them, usually in an abrupt way that feels forced to me, and change their goals. Ultraviolet also had this problem, plus several others.
The bulk of the story takes place in a psychiatric hospital, as it begins after the main character, a teen girl named Allison, experiences a breakdown. As someone with zero experience either with serious mental illness or psychiatric care, i don't want to accuse the author of not having done her research or deliberately misrepresenting things. But the portrayals of the minor supporting characters were lacking to me, especially in a story that is focused on mentally ill people: they just seemed like ordinary teens with a few quirks. Allison is opposed to her psychiatrist from the beginning, without any support in the narrative outside of her believing he had other motives, to the point that even when he did stuff i didn't agree with i was inclined to side with him anyway just out of spite. The doctor who leads the group therapy sessions is the platitude-spouting unhelpful kind of psychiatrist. The single helpful adult, outside of a kind orderly who barely shows up, is Faraday, and as it turns out
Speaking of Faraday, i am really not fond of romances that begin with the main character gushing over how attractive he is, or in this case, how beautiful his eyes are and how wonderful his voice is. I realize that for some teenagers, it's not an uncommon experience, and he does go on to have some nice qualities outside of being a pretty guy with a nice voice, but ... he's in his twenties, Allison is sixteen, and in some sense he is her doctor. That's not really a great foundation for romance, if you ask me.
Then there's the twist.
I could happily go on and list several of my other issues with this story, but this is already a long post and i kind of wanted to talk about Skyward. Not a lot -- for some reason i find it way easier to go on about books i hated than books i liked -- but Ultraviolet strengthened my first impression of it.
Skyward reminds me a lot of common YA dystopia books, but done in a way that i liked a lot better. There's a post-apocalyptic setting, kind of, but while the government is hardly a flawless one the main character is not set up to overthrow it. There's a romance building, but where in a different novel (*cough* like Ultraviolet *cough*) there would have already been several paragraphs of Spensa ogling him and describing his gorgeous looks and probably a kiss, there's been mostly just hints and maybe a hug. The main character has a unique talent that can change the course of events, but it's not this rarest-ever thing that no one has ever heard of before, other people are confirmed to have it too, it doesn't help her for most of the book, and it's an actual liability, not just something others perceive as dangerous because it threatens their plans. The short of it is, it's a Sanderson book, and i loved it. Raise your hand if you're surprised.
Oh, and i actually read a Christmas-related book last month: The Enchanted Sonata, by Heather Dixon Wallwork (Valia mentioned it on tumblr). It was a retelling of The Nutcracker with some elements of the Pied Piper worked in. It lands squarely in between Skyward and Ultraviolet: i enjoyed it, might even recommend it to someone looking for a fun little Christmas-themed read, but there wasn't much of substance to it. I found the villain way more irritating and much less sympathetic than i think was intended, and while it had some interesting concepts i don't think it did enough with them. Also i don't recommend writers criticize their heroines for dreaming up relationships with men they've never truly met if they go on to write them falling in love 'for real' with someone they get to know over what amounts to a week at most. But, as i said, i enjoyed it, and if you don't go in with too many expectations i think it's an acceptable book.
Wow. I think i'll have to go an extra four months between posts, after this mega one. See you in a year.
Do not be daunted by the enormity of the world’s grief. Do justly, now. Love mercy, now. Walk humbly now. You are not obligated to complete the work, but neither are you free to abandon it. - Rabbi Tarfon
- for some reason i find it way easier to go on about books i hated than books i liked
I think that's because you don't want the spoil something you think people should read but if it's bad, you kind of want to enjoy explaining exactly why.
For better or worse-for who knows what may unfold from a chrysalis?-hope was left behind.
-The God Beneath the Sea by Leon Garfield & Edward Blishen check out my new blog!
I actually didn't like R.J. Anderson's fairy tale series at all. Knife was a good page turner, but the rest of the series was forgettable at best. Also, in her attempt to avoid the character in a wheelchair being a perfect angel like the Tiny Tim trope, she actually went all the way into the opposite direction and made him a really standard bitter crip trope. In trying to avoid a stereotype she actually wrote another stereotype.
I did however enjoy Ultraviolet. Other than
Finished Wintersmith yesterday. Excellent Tiffany Aching book is excellent (no surprise there). I really love how Pratchett plays with fairy tale tropes and how the characters challenge expectations.

Probably reading Crooked Kingdom next.
I'm on a roll right at the end of the year this year. I read Howl's Moving Castle for the first time this week, and I LOVED it. It caught me off guard at first because it was so similar to the movie and I was like "but I thought this was very different from the movie..." And then no

The incidents with the
Two thumbs up, I'm going to have to get myself a copy.

Dot, I understand easily distracted.
It's good to hear you enjoyed Skyward and Wintersmith. I remember liking the latter, though I wasn't a huge fan of the last Tiffany Aching book for some reason.
I don't think I picked up on everything you mentioned with R. J. Anderson's fairy series, but Knife was the least hard to handle for me too. It's good to hear that Quicksilver is better than Ultraviolet, but I disliked Ultraviolet so much that I have no interest in reading Quicksilver.
Good to "see" you on the Books thread again, Arwenel! Also, based on my (vague) memories, I agree with your analysis of Ultraviolet.
It's also good to hear your review of Skyward; I may have to see if I can scrounge a library copy to read on my time off over Christmas.
Thanks also for your review of The Enchanted Sonata! It sounds about how I was expecting; fun but not brilliant. I requested the library system buy a copy but they said it didn't exist

Glad you liked HMC, fk! The scenes you mentioned are a lot of fun.
So, a few books I've read since I last posted:
A Lady's Ranch Life in Montana by Isabel Randall. This was a published set of letters written in the late 1880s by an Englishwoman who set out to live on a Montana ranch with her new husband. It was an interesting enough read, but perhaps the most interesting (and saddest) detail was found in the editor's notes: Isabel Randall so angered her (American) neighbors by her derogatory comments and superior attitude that she was ostracized after publication. In her defense, she published on a trip back to England and likely didn't intend her neighbors to see it - but she does make very disparaging remarks and is rather ignorant of her own biases.
The Merlin Conspiracy by Diana Wynne Jones. Has anyone else read this one? I wasn't impressed; the best aspects were

A Lady's Life in the Rocky Mountains by Isabella Bird. This is similar in concept to the first book on this list, but executed much differently. The author was an experienced traveler and writer with most of her observations on Americans coming across fairly positively and her own attitude much more tempered. The largest exception was a very negative portrayal of one family in Colorado - made even harder to read by the fact they were specifically identified by religious beliefs that put them in my spiritual heritage, for lack of a better term.

I am currently reading Out Here at the Front, a collection of WWI letters written by Nora Saltonstall. Saltonstall was a Boston socialite who traveled to France in October 1917 (staying to 1919) to help with the war effort there. It's been informative, but I'm having trouble sympathizing with the authoress at some times - she came across to assist refugees under the auspices of the American Red Cross, decided she didn't like that work, transferred to a dispensary, didn't like that work either, and moved to management/quartermaster work with a mobile surgical hospital near the front. XD I'm only through February 1918, so while I think she sticks it out a while in the hospital, I'm not sure.
In considering it, I think it also doesn't help that I've recently been reflecting on the work of US Army and Navy Nurses in WWII and the Korean War and, bearing in mind that WWI was a different ballgame, the work of a member of the "Heiress Corps" pales a bit in comparison. I may have to read more WWI accounts to put a better perspective on Saltonstall's experience. One thing that does seem to remain the same between WWI and WWII is the constant request for items to be sent by family members and friends back home.
To the future, to the past - anywhere provided it's together.
Hooray for another HMC fan! There are two more books, although they never made me laugh quite as much as the first one.
I haven't started Crooked Kingdom yet, mostly because it just barely fits in my purse. But that is going to be delayed even further because Brandon Sanderson's secret project was just released. For free. As a downloadable ebook. Because Merry Christmas! I'm not sure how exactly it ties into Magic the Gathering, but apparently you don't need to be familiar with the game to enjoy the story.
Well, I haven't read as many of the unread books as I was hoping to in the last month. But I did make my goal of 120 books for 2018 and I have surpassed my pages read total from 2017. In December I have read two Christmas novellas (Finding Father Christmas {3 stars} and Engaging Father Christmas {4.5 stars} by Robin Jones Gunn), listened to another on Hoopla (A Tale of Two Hearts {3 stars} by Michelle Griep), and started rereading One Shenandoah Winter by Davis Bunn...so I am happy.
I've been working my way through Them: Why We Hate Each Other--and How to Heal by Ben Sasse for several weeks. I like his writing style, I just keep getting distracted and would really rather read fiction.
SnowAngel
Christ is King.
The Merlin Conspiracy by Diana Wynne Jones. Has anyone else read this one? I wasn't impressed; the best aspects were
and those weren't enough to save the book for me. Plus,SpoilerNick and Mini (and there wasn't enough of that) and then Roddy and Grundo, which was terribly undone at the end by the revelation of the spellSpoilerNick fixating on Roddy and the hints they'd end up together despite Roddy being very uncomfortable at the idea was unsettling.
I read that book when it was published and I didn't like it either. I think the thing I like the most is just the title. I honestly had forgotten all of the characters' names until you jogged my memory, so it didn't make much of an impression on me. It's funny, because Diana Wynne Jones is definitely one of my favorite authors of all time (I adore Howl's Moving Castle), but as I think about it, I was rather "meh" about several of her books and I'm not sure why. I read many of her stories as a young teen, so it would be interesting to re-read them again now and try to figure out why I loved some and was lukewarm towards others. Aside from countless rereads of HMC, the first four Chronicles of Chrestomanci, The Ogre Downstairs, and HMC's sequel The Castle in the Air are the other DWJ stories that I remember reading multiple times.
Dot, how was Sanderson's secret project? I just read his year-end update, which was pretty interesting - even if there's still no progress on Wax & Wayne 4.
Congrats on making your goal of 120 books for 2018, SA! I hope your reading of the book by Ben Sasse goes well.
Ahhh, thanks for affirming my thoughts on The Merlin Conspiracy, Rose! I also have read a lot of DWJ books that I either didn't like or wasn't impressed by. HMC, Chrestomanci, and The Outward Bounders stand out to me, though. I haven't read The Ogre Downstairs, but I may have to keep an eye out for it.
I finished Out Here at the Front and while I'm still not sure how Nora Saltonstall measures up to some of the frontline WWII nurses, my opinion of her did improve as the letters progressed. She did end up sticking mostly with her work and she served willingly to help in a number of capacities as needed.
I am currently reading a book I picked up at a whim at a booksale: "A Funnie Place, No Fences": Teenagers' Views of Kansas, 1867-1900, edited by C. Robert Haywood and Sandra Jarvis. It's a collection of diaries and letters, with a memoir selection or two, about growing up in Kansas during the aforementioned times. It's been fine, but nothing incredibly exciting to me - I might enjoy it more if I had more familiarity with the locations, I suppose. The quality of spelling definitely leaves something to be desired.
On the other hand, my coworker saw the book and apparently remains impressed with my breadth of reading material.
To the future, to the past - anywhere provided it's together.
I just finished up my first reading of Robin McKinley's Rose Daughter this evening. I remember this one and McKinley's previous Beauty and the Beast retelling, Beauty, were a subject of some discussion in NarniaWeb's bygone days on the old forum. I read Beauty back then and enjoyed it (apart from what I felt was a rushed ending that skipped some parts I was hoping for), though I remember Rose Daughter had a bit of a poor reputation for its own ending among NWebbers.
I remember there being some kerfuffle years ago about how this was tantamount to unsavory things and such, but I found myself not really seeing things that way as I was reading the story. Perhaps I'm forewarned and therefore forearmed against that reading. Maybe having read a similar ending in another B&B retelling I'm not as shocked. Maybe the book isn't as literal about his being beastly (in the physical sense) as it might appear.
In any event, I found McKinley's talent for an ending much improved here and this one is probably equal to if not slightly better than Beauty in my estimation.
Now to ponder my next reading selection.
"All the world will be your enemy, Prince with a Thousand Enemies. And when they catch you, they will kill you. But first they must catch you..."
Inexhaustible Inspiration
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Did anybody get any good books for Christmas? My husband got me my own copy of 'Howl's Moving Castle' since I liked it so well.
I'm finally reading a book that I've wanted to read for years and years. I picked up 'The Princess and the Goblin' from the library and have started it. The irony is that it feels familiar, so I'm wondering if I have read it long, long ago and forgot that I did, or if I've just heard the story before. I think I know kind of what happens, but we shall see.
Congrats on making your goal of 120 books for 2018, SA!
I hope your reading of the book by Ben Sasse goes well.
I wasn't sure I was going to make it for a while, I still didn't read as many as I would have liked to. I listened to 20 audiobooks, so my total "read" ended up being 118 with several kids books.
FK, I think I read The Princess and Goblin for the first time in 2016. I really enjoyed finally reading it and my younger sisters loved it. I still need to read the sequel, The Princess and Curdie, I should add it to my 2019 goals.
My 2019 reading goals are less about the number of books and more about
rereading and finishing previously started books.
In 2019, I want to reread The Legends of Laramie by Sigmund Brouwer, The Chronicles of Narnia, and Cheney Duvall M.D. by Gilbert Morris.
And I want to finish Ben-Hur, Notes From A Tilt-A-Whirl by N.D. Wilson, The Courage To Be Christian by Mike Nappa, and The Inheritance by Michael Phillips. All four I got from the library and didn't complete before having to return them, but now I have Notes From A Tilt-A-Whirl and my siblings have The Inheritance...time to finish them.
And I am aiming for 35,000 pages in 2019.
I paused just past the halfway point on Them by Ben Sasse to finish Band of Brothers which I had started in November. I finished it yesterday, now I really want to watch the mini-series.
For fiction, I'm reading Fawkes by Nadine Brandes, I have been planning to read it for several months. I started Fawkes a couple days ago, currently on page 240 and enjoying it. It seems like a book the usual book thread suspects would enjoy.
SnowAngel
Christ is King.
Dot, how was Sanderson's secret project?
'Twas excellent. 300 pages of amazingness. It was a good ending, but left me wanting a lot more in that world. But not at the expense of his other projects.
Finished Crooked Kingdom today. Another fun read.
I still have the last two Penderwicks books to read, and I recently started a sci-fi anthology about humans being assets in space travel instead of a less desirable species. So far it's interesting, but I haven't gotten very far yet.