Marissa reads on in 2024

This is a continuation of the topic Marissa Hits the Books in 2023.

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Marissa reads on in 2024

1Marissa_Doyle
Jan 1, 12:31 pm

Happy New Year! I'm looking forward to much exchange of friendly fire this year.

I saw the new year in last night re-reading Fugitive Telemetry in preparation for System Collapse, which I hope is not an omen for 2024.

2Bookmarque
Jan 1, 12:35 pm

I've had to do that a couple times this year as well - play catch up for a new series installment. It's pretty fun, but can be time consuming.

3Marissa_Doyle
Jan 1, 12:38 pm

>2 Bookmarque: Ah, but I have lots of time for Murderbot. Fortunately the next series release I'm looking forward to this month, Relight My Fire,
won't need it as I just read the first three this past fall.

4Narilka
Jan 1, 1:14 pm

Happy reading in 2024!

5jillmwo
Jan 1, 2:08 pm

Glad to know you're keeping busy and reading good stuff! Happy new year!

6catzteach
Jan 1, 3:22 pm

Happy New Year!

I have read a couple of series where they do a nice reminder of things in the first books without being super obvious about it. That’s always a bit nice when there’s been lots of time between books.

7pgmcc
Jan 1, 3:38 pm

Happy New Year!

8clamairy
Jan 1, 4:39 pm

Happy New Year. Many thanks for the recommendations in the past, and I expect more!

9Sakerfalcon
Jan 2, 7:34 am

Happy New Year and Happy New Thread! I look forward to the hail of bullets that you'll undoubted fire with deadly accuracy!

10Meredy
Jan 2, 11:18 pm

Happy new thread and a busy, happy, and productive new year, featuring plenty of hanging out with us.

11Marissa_Doyle
Jan 6, 6:10 pm

Finished System Collapse, which I enjoyed very much (I mean, how could I not? It's Murderbot!) The concept of a construct with PTSD and how it might deal with it was intriguing. I wonder if it will continue to struggle with it in future books?

It's hard to follow up on a Murderbot story with more fiction, so I'm reading the first non-fiction of the year--Mercies in Disguise: A Story of Hope, a Family's Genetic Destiny, and the Science that Rescued Them. The author's previous book about the 1918 Flu Flu was excellent, so I have high hopes for this book, about a family's struggle with a rare, strange inherited disease.

12Alexandra_book_life
Jan 7, 3:41 am

>11 Marissa_Doyle: System Collapse was excellent! I love Murderbot's character arc, and I am glad this series exists.

13libraryperilous
Jan 7, 10:26 pm

Happy New Year!

14Marissa_Doyle
Edited: Jan 9, 1:08 pm

I thought the pub might find this interesting: https://wapo.st/3TWXvkD

It's an article in the Washington Post about American reading habits, broken down six ways to Sunday. :)

15clamairy
Jan 9, 2:21 pm

>14 Marissa_Doyle: That's fascinating, and a bit depressing. I subscribe to The WaPo, and I'm not sure how I missed that article, so thank you!!

16MrsLee
Jan 9, 3:55 pm

>14 Marissa_Doyle: Interesting stuff there. All I can say is that I should be making a lot more money. Guess I don't have time because I'm reading books.

>15 clamairy: What did you find depressing? The fact that so many are reading so few books? I wonder if that is a bit skewed though. I don't think it necessarily means that information is not being shared and learned. My husband and sons read a variety of essays and articles daily online. While these are not "books" they are certainly educational, so I wonder how many others do this and simply don't fit in the category of "book" readers? My fellas read articles and blogs on history, economics, health, science (and pseudo-science *eyeroll*), plus a lot more from cooking, to cocktails to child care and well being. So I can't say they don't read, they just don't read books (one son also reads and owns lots of books).

17clamairy
Jan 9, 5:04 pm

>16 MrsLee: Yes, I know a lot of people are much too busy. My son for example only reads books occasionally because he's working full-time, he's in a band, he's a gym rat and he's working on a master's degree. I was also depressed about the households with no books in them. Or with just one book.

18MrsLee
Jan 9, 7:05 pm

>17 clamairy: Oh yes, that makes me sad too. To me, a house feels lonely and empty without books to visit with on my shelves.

19jillmwo
Jan 9, 8:05 pm

>14 Marissa_Doyle: >15 clamairy: >16 MrsLee: I don't think the Post was particularly careful in how it asked the questions. The concepts covered in the phrase "reading a book" represent different things to various sectors of the population. Because the survey lumps every kind of reading – purposeful, immersive, deliberative, analytical, etc. – into the same bucket, Different kinds of books demand different degrees of attention. They didn't say anything about fiction vs. non-fiction. My issue is that the investigators were using a REALLY big umbrella phrase. (Note: I like that I'm one of the 1%. But in responding to any survey that these guys did, I'd be more particular in describing what kind of reading my reading experience of 50+ books involved.)

20Marissa_Doyle
Jan 10, 4:31 pm

Finished Mercies in Disguise, about prion diseases in general and one family's battle with an inherited one. It was both fascinating and heart-rending, and I deeply appreciate the family's openness with the author. I might have liked a little more info on how prions do what they do, but this was published some years ago (2015, IIRC?) so there's a research gap.

I needed something NOT heart-rending after that, so am happily reading The Windsor Knot a cozy mystery featuring Queen Elizabeth II as the sleuth. It's a clever conceit--as is pointed out in the story, she spends (spent) a great deal of time observing, so it doesn't feel too far-fetched--and her character has a brisk sort of sweetness. I'm about halfway through; if it continues as enjoyably, I'll look out for the others in the series.

21jillmwo
Jan 10, 7:55 pm

>14 Marissa_Doyle: More on that Washington Post story mentioned up there in #14
https://countercraft.substack.com/p/who-is-reading-what-and-why

Thought you might find it interesting as a follow-up.

22Meredy
Jan 11, 3:47 am

>20 Marissa_Doyle: Whoa, you got me with a BB right there. As an unrepentant anglophile, I've just ordered the Kindle edition of The Windsor Knot, which for some reason cost $0.

23Marissa_Doyle
Jan 11, 11:07 am

>22 Meredy: I picked it up on sale for .99 on Barnes & Noble, which is how I find a lot of new-to-me authors. Still enjoying it, three-quarters of the way through. It's lacking in any cutesiness, which I deeply appreciate. I hope you'll like it.

24Meredy
Jan 11, 6:37 pm

>23 Marissa_Doyle: Absence of cutesiness is a major plus for me. I'm reading Phantom of the Opera right now but will probably pick up that title right afterwards. I've been having a heavy dose of vampires recently.

25Marissa_Doyle
Jan 16, 1:44 pm

>24 Meredy: My patience for vampires is limited; 2-3 in a series and I just can't read any more for a few years.

After The Windsor Knot I've been reading Paladin's Grace, which is pleasant enough about a third of the way through, but the romantic angst is wearing a bit thin. If the rest of the series is similar, I may not want to continue. I'll finish this one, though, and then it's on to the next Emily Wilde book, Emily Wilde's Map of the Otherlands which landed in my Nook today. Wheee!

26Sakerfalcon
Jan 17, 4:38 am

>25 Marissa_Doyle: Ooh, I'm eagerly waiting to see what you think of the second Emily Wilde book!

27Marissa_Doyle
Jan 17, 7:02 pm

>26 Sakerfalcon: I, er, was a trifle side-tracked by a collection of haunted house stories, House of Fear, but Emily Wilde will be next.

28Sakerfalcon
Jan 18, 4:58 am

>27 Marissa_Doyle: I understand completely! I am always being hijacked by books I did not intend to read ...

29Marissa_Doyle
Jan 18, 6:44 pm

>28 Sakerfalcon: I'm quite glad I was side-tracked. There are some very good stories in this collection--much creepier than the usual ghost story anthology, without involving a lot of blood and gore.

30clamairy
Edited: Jan 19, 11:22 am

>29 Marissa_Doyle: Thank you. I will put that on my wishlist, and save it for next October!

31Meredy
Jan 23, 2:15 am

>25 Marissa_Doyle: I have indeed moved on to The Windsor Knot, which I'm hoping will be a palate cleanser after all the vampires and other weirdities. I've never been into vampires before this sudden recent spate of them, incuding a lesbian vampire novel that wandered in from somewhere. I'm wondering now what a normal novel might be.

32Marissa_Doyle
Jan 24, 2:37 pm

>31 Meredy: I hope your palate is pleasantly cleansed. :)

I'm back from my unexpected detour into House of Fear; like any anthology it has its stronger and weaker entries (I get the feeling that some of the contributors were a bit strong-armed into writing their stories, and it shows), but the good ones were especially good, I thought. Worth picking up if you like haunted house stories.

Now I'm happily reading Emily Wilde's Map of the Otherlands, and 40 or so pages in, it's shaping up nicely as a sequel to the first. Emily and Wendell are a hoot together, and I'm looking forward to seeing what happens to them in Austria.

33Marissa_Doyle
Jan 26, 4:31 pm

Not much reading yesterday as we were busy welcoming a new family member:



Her name is Penelope--Penny--because the fur on the back of her head and neck is just the color of a new penny. She is settling in nicely, as you can see.

34MrsLee
Jan 26, 4:37 pm

>33 Marissa_Doyle: What fun! Enjoy getting to know Penny, she is beautiful.

35clamairy
Jan 26, 5:08 pm

>33 Marissa_Doyle: Oh, what a beauty. I just want to pet her. That fur is magnificent. Do you still have any others, or will she be an only?

I have come to appreciate all of the hard work & pleasure that goes with owning (or being owned by) buns. (My daughter has two, and is currently bunny sitting for a third, which may soon become hers.)

36catzteach
Jan 26, 9:25 pm

>33 Marissa_Doyle: she’s so cute! Do you have her use a litter box? I’ve always wondered what it would be like to have a bunny.

37Alexandra_book_life
Jan 27, 2:37 am

>33 Marissa_Doyle: Oh, she is beautiful! So cute.

38Marissa_Doyle
Jan 27, 11:49 am

>34 MrsLee: Thank you! I think she's going to be a fun bun.

>35 clamairy: We're getting her settled before we decide that; she's still recovering from her spay surgery, so that needs to happen first. While we were at the HRN shelter she did have a bit of a meet and greet with another bunny, and the signs were positive that they might take to each other, but we'll see. She has to go back up for her RHDV vaccines and I hope she can have another couple of meetings with him.

>36 catzteach: Yes, she's completely litterbox trained. Bunnies are very tidy as far as that goes. They're wonderful pets; I'm a cat person but my husband is allergic to them, so we tried bunnies, and he's fine with them. They're very different to cats and dogs--you have to learn a whole new "language" to understand them--but they're so much fun.

>37 Alexandra_book_life: Thank you! She is a lovely girl.

39littlegeek
Jan 28, 7:05 pm

Aww bunny! I'm terribly allergic, but wish I could have one. They are fun.

40Sakerfalcon
Jan 29, 5:34 am

>33 Marissa_Doyle: She is beautiful and looks so comfortable!

41Marissa_Doyle
Jan 30, 3:35 pm

Finished Emily Wilde's Map of the Otherlands; while not as good as its predecessor, it was still very enjoyable. There were a few too many maneuverings of characters into doing things that ran counter to their characters for the purpose of furthering the plot, which always bugs me on a "professional" level, and I hope that the promised third book in the series can avoid them.

On to Relight My Fire, the next in the Stranger Times series. There's something so relaxing about starting a book that you know will be good...

42pgmcc
Jan 30, 4:15 pm

>41 Marissa_Doyle:
I am reading Relight My Fire too, as is MrsLee. McDonnell is reliable for a bit of fun.

43Narilka
Jan 31, 9:48 am

>33 Marissa_Doyle: Penny is absolutely adorable!

44Marissa_Doyle
Jan 31, 10:32 am

>43 Narilka: Thank you! She's now quite comfortable here now, and is expressing her ardent desire to get out of my office and go explore the rest of the house. After I bunny-proof some electrical cords, we'll let her venture forth this weekend.

45Marissa_Doyle
Feb 6, 5:03 pm

Finished Relight My Fire, which was an excellent addition to the series...and very happy to note that more appear to be coming if the epilogues are to be believed. I do wonder if Pilgrim and his "organization" will be reappearing down the line, perhaps drawn in as an ally to the bad guys.

On to What Happened in London; I'm liking it better than the other books by this author that I've read, but not convinced that I'll be reading any more of her. :(

46pgmcc
Feb 6, 5:48 pm

>45 Marissa_Doyle:
I trust Brian will be in future adventures.

47Marissa_Doyle
Feb 6, 11:42 pm

>46 pgmcc: I hope he is!

48MrsLee
Feb 6, 11:54 pm

>45 Marissa_Doyle: I was seeing the Pilgrim More as something like the Auditors in Discworld, but there is also something very fishy about him that makes me wonder if he is who he says,etc.

49Marissa_Doyle
Feb 7, 1:01 pm

>48 MrsLee: Yes, me too! Definitely something fishy with him.

50Marissa_Doyle
Feb 8, 11:48 am

Finished What Happened in London. It was okay, but something of a slog toward the end--too many words and not enough plot. I don't think I'll read more by this author. On now to Starter Villain, which was not so much a book bullet as book grapeshot. I think it will perk me up, because Scalzi.

51Marissa_Doyle
Feb 13, 12:00 am

Well, Starter Villain was great fun, even though I could tell where it was going. But the journey is often better than the destination, at least in reading.

On to The Spellman Files, which is hard to categorize--a funny, often tongue-in-cheek story about a dysfunctional private investigation firm which happens to be a family. More on it when I finish.

52Alexandra_book_life
Edited: Feb 13, 8:24 am

>51 Marissa_Doyle: Yes, Starter Villain was very nice, and I laughed a lot. The dolphins were cool. One of my favourite scenes was the Zoom call with one of Charlie’s uncle’s “acquaintances”.

53clamairy
Feb 13, 8:19 am

>51 Marissa_Doyle: I enjoyed this one quite a bit. I would love a cat who could communicate! And those dolphins were hilarious.

54jillmwo
Feb 13, 10:24 am

>50 Marissa_Doyle: too many words and not enough plot *snort* Too many books that may be described that way...

55Marissa_Doyle
Feb 14, 12:08 pm

Had to come back and say how much I'm enjoying The Spellman Files--very funny (I mean, how could a dysfunctional family of private investigators not be?) but there's a lot going on under the humor and crazy situations. I'm glad there are more books to follow this one.

56libraryperilous
Feb 14, 11:06 pm

>33 Marissa_Doyle: Penny! She's delightful!

57Marissa_Doyle
Feb 16, 10:16 am

>56 libraryperilous: She really is! We've never had a bun as light-hearted as she is--she's constantly binkying and having zoomies.

58Marissa_Doyle
Feb 17, 3:37 pm

Finished The Spellman Files and have moved onto the next in the series, Curse of the Spellmans, which is delivering more of the same craziness as the first book. I can see these stories not being for everyone--most of the characters roll as chaotic neutral, so to speak, so even the main protagonist/narrator, Izzy Spellman, is not always sympathetic. But they're very much worth a try.

59catzteach
Feb 18, 10:29 am

Do bunnies snuggle like kitties?

60Marissa_Doyle
Feb 18, 11:24 am

>59 catzteach: Yes, but like kitties, some are snugglers and some are not. Not yet sure if Penny will become a snuggler. She definitely likes to hang out near me.

61clamairy
Feb 19, 9:57 am

>57 Marissa_Doyle: I had to Google binkying. What a delight that must be to see. I'm glad she's such a happy bun.

62Marissa_Doyle
Feb 20, 11:02 am

>61 clamairy: It really is--both hilarious and heartwarming.

63Marissa_Doyle
Feb 22, 6:35 pm

Finished both the second Spellmans book, Curse of the Spellmans as well as the third, Revenge of the Spellmans, and am on the fourth, The Spellmans Strike Again. Still enjoying these very much as light entertainment.

64Marissa_Doyle
Feb 25, 8:45 pm

Finished The Spellmans Strike Again and enjoyed it very much, but am going to put off reading the last two books for a bit as they're rather like a strong-flavored food--delicious, but best not consumed for multiple meals in a row. So now I'm on to the newly-released next book in Laurie R. King's Russell and Holmes series, The Lantern's Dance. I hope it's more in the vein of the earlier books in the series with a serious mystery and not just a sort of historical travelogue as the last few books have been.

65MrsLee
Feb 25, 11:27 pm

>64 Marissa_Doyle: I will be interested to hear what you think about The Lantern Dance. This is another series I have fallen behind in. I remember reading the one with Holmes and Russell in Japan, not sure if I've read any since.

66jillmwo
Feb 26, 12:00 pm

>64 Marissa_Doyle:. Like >65 MrsLee:. I too have dropped behind on this particular series (although I loved the many of the titles appearing early on). I don't remember when I stopped automatically buying them. I will look forward to hearing your feedback, Marissa!
;'

67Marissa_Doyle
Feb 27, 12:33 pm

>65 MrsLee:, >66 jillmwo: Will report back. I'm enjoying it so far. It refers back to a couple of earlier books, but it's not really necessary to remember (or have read) them.

68Marissa_Doyle
Edited: Mar 3, 4:18 pm

I enjoyed Lantern Dance, though not as much as the earlier books in the series. These last few books have featured lower stakes, so the tension is less...but so is their un-put-downable-ness (no, that is not a word, but it should be.) That doesn't mean they aren't good--simply that they're not as compelling and lack the exciting mystery elements that characterized the first ten or so books in the series. Just as The Murder of Mary Russell told Mrs. Hudson's backstory, so does this book tell the story of Sherlock Holmes's mother...and make it clear how he became who he is. Always fun to return to this world.

Also read The Uninvited, which was also enjoyable--a bit depressing as it deals with the autumn of 1918 in small town Illinois, when the Spanish Flu was beginning to hit hard and when paranoia about people of German ancestry was at its height. But it was very well written and with a heck of a twist toward the end, which I won't even reveal behind a spoiler, but will say that the author did an excellent job of lacing signs and clues through the story so that the twist was fully believable even while being unexpected. Don't go in to this looking for a cheerful read, but the ending IS satisfying. I'll be looking into more of Cat Winters's books.

69MrsLee
Mar 3, 8:47 pm

>68 Marissa_Doyle: Thank you for that report on Lantern Dance. I would like to pick these up again, but have to figure out where I stopped. I enjoy King's view of the world of Sherlock. It rings true for me.

70Marissa_Doyle
Mar 6, 1:41 pm

Because I liked The Uninvited so much I picked up another of the author's adult works, Yesternight, about a child psychologist administering tests in 1920s Oregon schools who is drawn into family drama over a child who has distinct memories of having lived a previous life...because she suspects she may have as well. Intriguing premise, but unsatisfying story on many levels; in the last third of the story, the child's story (which was the more gripping) fades out. I think the author was drawn into inserting too many plot elements to make the twist at the end of the story work out, but it simply ended up feeling contrived. Not anywhere as good as The Uninvited, but I will still be keeping an eye out for her future books.

Not sure what's up next...

71Marissa_Doyle
Mar 7, 12:59 pm

Mexican Gothic is what's up. Finding it a somewhat slow start and not very Mexican, but the gothic elements are certainly there. We'll see...

72catzteach
Mar 9, 3:30 pm

The Uninvited sounds intriguing, especially with the German heritage element. My grandfather had always told us he didn’t know any German because he wasn’t allowed to speak it. I figured it was because of the paranoia around Germans.

73Marissa_Doyle
Mar 13, 3:26 pm

>72 catzteach: It could well have been! That issue plays a huge role in The Uninvited.

74Marissa_Doyle
Mar 13, 3:36 pm

Mexican Gothic turned out to be a disappointment. The writing was uninspired and at times clunky, the pacing was poor, and while it gets points from me for its creative backstory-- a sort of horrific, weird symbiotic relationship between a family and a fungus that gives them powers, it loses them for too many squicky descriptions of fungoid fluids. Furthermore, the story could really have been set anywhere--the "Mexican" aspect is almost non-existent. However, I've been totally sucked into The Hacienda, a Mexican Gothic story that is truly both--the history of Mexican independence plays an important role in the story (which takes place in the 1820s), and the culture is front and center. Also, the writing is gorgeous. I'm only about a fifth of the way in, but it has me mesmerized.

75catzteach
Mar 13, 10:40 pm

>74 Marissa_Doyle: I didn’t particularly enjoy Mexican Gothic, either. I couldn’t figure out all the hype.

76Marissa_Doyle
Mar 18, 11:03 am

>75 catzteach: No, me either.

If you're looking for a much better book, try The Hacienda. Much creepier--overtones of The Haunting of Hill House--and much more rooted in its place and time--it's as much historical fiction as it is gothic fiction. A young woman, desperate to escape a life of servitude in her nasty aunt's house after her father, a general, is assassinated by his political enemies, jumps at the proposal of a wealthy landowner whom she barely knows. She goes to settle on his country estate, where she faces resentment from both the living and the dead--and by the way, the dead CAN hurt you. Wonderfully atmospheric, beautifully written, and very satisfying despite the ill-fated romance...though the ending makes me wonder about what might happen next. It's not that it demands a sequel, but small clues leave plenty of what-ifs to think about. Definitely recommended.

I guess I'm in a mood for creepy because I picked up Elizabeth Hand's Black Light, which I'm also enjoying very much. It has a similar feel to Peter Straub's Shadowland, which I also loved.

77Darth-Heather
Mar 18, 11:22 am

>76 Marissa_Doyle: ooh direct hit! You got me with The Hacienda. I enjoyed Mexican Gothic, at least the characters were interesting, but would have liked it to involve more of the time and setting. I also liked Shadowland, so probably took a glancing blow on Black Light as well. Good shooting :)

78Sakerfalcon
Mar 18, 11:33 am

>76 Marissa_Doyle: The hacienda was a great read! I'm glad you enjoyed it. I have the author's next book, Vampires of El Norte on Mount TBR.
I like most of Elizabeth Hand's work, but it's been a while since I read Black light.

79Marissa_Doyle
Mar 18, 2:24 pm

>78 Sakerfalcon: Vampires of El Norte is on my wishlist. I'll look forward to hearing what you think of it.

>77 Darth-Heather: My first exposure to her was her retelling of The Haunting of Hill House, which itself didn't impress me much, but I did like her writing. I'm enjoying this book much more.

80Marissa_Doyle
Mar 21, 1:15 pm

Black Light was wonderful, rather like James Frazer having been on a serious acid trip in New England when he wrote The Golden Bough. I loved it--the anthropological and mythological underpinnings, the 70s timeframe, the whispers of Nathaniel Hawthorne and H.P. Lovecraft in the setting, the dark gorgeous language--all of it. I'm on to Waking the Moon which I probably should have read first, but what the heck.

81Sakerfalcon
Mar 22, 7:57 am

>80 Marissa_Doyle: Okay, I definitely have to reread Black light soon!

82catzteach
Mar 23, 11:29 am

>76 Marissa_Doyle: I’ve asked for The Hacienda from my library. It sounds good!

83Marissa_Doyle
Mar 23, 12:55 pm

>82 catzteach: I hope you enjoy it!

84Marissa_Doyle
Mar 23, 12:57 pm

>81 Sakerfalcon: I hope the Suck Fairy hasn't visited it for you. I'm enjoying Waking the Moon almost as much as I did it.

85Marissa_Doyle
Mar 28, 5:24 pm

It turned out that it wasn't really necessary to have read Waking the Moon before Black Light. I think I enjoyed the latter book a little more--it felt more polished and cohesive. Not that Waking the Moon wasn't, but it was such a huge, sprawling story, spanning twenty years and huge swathes of mythology and religion, that character occasionally got a little lost in all the plot and the gorgeous storytelling. I maybe liked the first half a little better than the second--it was more character focused. It's a little hard to summarize the story--it covers secret societies and magic and ancient religions and masculine vs. feminine theologies and chosen ones and destiny, and I'm still not sure how I feel about the story's resolution. I'd love to hear what other readers have thought about it.

I'm still loving Elizabeth Hand, though, and have moved on to Wylding Hall, which I'm also enjoying. More when I've finished it.

86Bookmarque
Edited: Mar 28, 5:40 pm

Have you read Mortal Love? I'm hit and miss with Hand and I really liked it and need to schedule a re-read sometime soon.

87Marissa_Doyle
Mar 28, 9:06 pm

>86 Bookmarque: No, I haven't. Onto the list it goes...

88Bookmarque
Mar 28, 9:17 pm

It's fab. I'll read it with you if you get it and put it in the queue. Let me know. Sumptuous.

89Marissa_Doyle
Mar 29, 10:04 pm

>88 Bookmarque: You're on! I downloaded it to my Nook and will start tonight for my pre-bed read.

90Bookmarque
Edited: Mar 31, 9:23 am

You are quick, lady. Now I have to go get my hardcover. I remember Meredy really loving it, too.

ETA - do you want to start a separate thread for this?

91Marissa_Doyle
Mar 31, 11:25 pm

>90 Bookmarque: Starting a new thread is probably a good idea. And anyone can join in.

92Sakerfalcon
Apr 2, 7:08 am

>85 Marissa_Doyle: I loved Waking the moon but I agree with you that I preferred the first half. That's really just because I love school/college settings! I remember that it was only loosely linked to Black Light. I definitely need to reread both books. Wylding Hall was a lot of fun too - like a supernatural Daisy Jones. I also really like the Winterlong Trilogy, which are weird SF/dystopian.

93Sakerfalcon
Apr 2, 7:09 am

>90 Bookmarque: >91 Marissa_Doyle: If I can find my copy I will join you for the read! I will be offline until next Monday though so won't be able to comment until then.

94Marissa_Doyle
Apr 2, 2:16 pm

>93 Sakerfalcon: Please do!

Wylding Hall was excellent. I think it could have been perhaps a little longer to fill out a few things and I'm not sure the coda where Julian is seen in Corfu works--I might have preferred it to end with the finding of the watch in the excavation of the Neolithic site--but it was still excellent. I liked the storytelling through the characters looking back on that summer's events--you got not only multiple points of view looking at the same events, but also what they chose to remember.

I'm about 60 pages into Mortal Love but the past several days have been a little hectic with my son and his fiancee visiting, so my reading time has been choppy. DH and I are taking a short vacation on Jekyll Island, GA starting Thursday, so I may go back to the beginning and try to read it in bigger chunks.

95Marissa_Doyle
Apr 15, 7:13 pm

I'm back from Jekyll Island (which was delightful) and still reading...

I finished Mortal Love but think I want to re-read it before commenting. I liked it a lot, but have a few things to say which I'll do on the book discussion thread.

Since then, I've read Murder at the Castle which was deeply underwhelming: an amateur sleuth portrait painter goes to Scotland to paint an aristocrat's American fiancee, and discovers a couple of dead bodies on the grounds. Characterization was meh, the red herrings not well controlled, and the copy editor should have been sent before a firing squad. Not going to read any more in this series.

DNF'ed The Ladies Rewrite the Rules--first DNF of the year. A Regency romance which has a promising semi-premise--a group of wealthy widows and spinsters take umbrage at a directory of their number written for impecunious second sons to fortune-hunt with--but the execution was poor. The historical world-building was mediocre and the characters unappealing; Georgette Heyer it was not.

However, the next book I've picked up I'm enjoying very much: The Housekeepers. Think of Ocean's Eleven set in Edwardian London with a gaggle of housekeepers, milliners, seamstresses, and so on planning to empty a house in Park Lane on the night of an elaborate costume ball. The writing style is interesting--on the spare side, without a lot of explication. More when I'm done.

96Sakerfalcon
Apr 16, 7:34 am

I'm glad you let us know about Ladies rewrite the rules because it sounds like a fun premise that I might have fallen for. The things that led you to DNF it would be deal-breakers for me too.

97Marissa_Doyle
Sep 10, 6:48 pm

Gulp. I have a daunting amount of catching up to do, but had to come rave over a book I just finished: When Women Were Dragons. Kelly Barnhill usually writes middle grade fiction; this was her first adult novel, and she hit it out of the ballpark as far as I'm concerned. It's not really fantasy--more magical realism set in the 1950s and '60s, with themes around trauma, loss, the paranoia of the era (think McCarthyism and HUAC), and female rage. And yes, women become dragons. The dragons are awesome. The writing is beautiful. Highly recommended.

98Sakerfalcon
Sep 11, 7:11 am

>97 Marissa_Doyle: I have this on kindle! Will be moving up the virtual TBR pile immediately!

99clamairy
Sep 11, 9:16 am

>97 Marissa_Doyle: Sounds great! Thank you for the recommendation.

100Marissa_Doyle
Edited: Sep 11, 3:23 pm

>98 Sakerfalcon: I hope you'll enjoy it--would love to know what you think when you get to it.

My reading these last few months has been the usual mix of good, bad, and indifferent (I suppose the "bad" are DNFs.) Here are a few of my favorites:

Ghosts of the British Museum: A True Story of Colonial Loot and Restless Objects I loved this. It's exactly what the title and subtitle says: the author interviewed dozens of former and current personnel of the museum and did extensive research on items and on the museum itself. The haunts are both literal--late former museum staff, unknown spirits attached to objects--and figurative: the shameful circumstances of the acquisition of so much of the museum's holdings. Fascinating.

Cackle Ah. A romance-free young-woman-moves-to-small-town-and-discovers-her-witchy-powers story. I liked this a lot.

The Ministry of Time Also loved the heck out of this one. A secret government study brings people out of the past to study...but why? Yes, there's a romance in this one but it's an likeable one, plus a lot of humor, research, and plot twists.

Murder Most Royal and The Windsor Knot Another mystery series with an unlikely sleuth--HM Queen Elizabeth II. It sounds cringe-worthy but I found these quite enjoyable and soothing.

Starling House Contemporary gothic horror with not-your-usual characters and a house that is a character all on its own.

The Shadow Cabinet Next book in the Her Majesty's Secret Coven series. I don't want to drop any spoilers, so I'll say that the author did an excellent job of turning a villain into a protagonist. Can't wait to see where this series goes next. As a side note, I also read Queen B: the Story of Anne Boleyn, Witch Queen, which tells how the Secret Coven came about, and was much less impressed--the plot was diaphanous (I'm being kind) and the characters two-dimensional. It appears that the next book in the main storyline will coming, and I'm looking forward to that.

The Skeleton Key I'm not sure how to describe this one--a mystery, a dysfunctional family saga, a psychological suspense story--about a children's book with a treasure hunt that gets wa-a-a-y out of hand. A trifle draggy on occasion, but overall excellent.

Those are my favorites so far; I've read others that are pretty good and/or excellent-but-flawed, but these are my candidates for best of 2024 so far.

edited to fix touchstone

101Sakerfalcon
Sep 12, 6:40 am

>100 Marissa_Doyle: Cackle is on my wishlist; I really loved Such sharp teeth by the same author. The ministry of time is on Mount TBR; I've seen some great reviews and some mixed, so I'm glad your take is positive. And I LOVED Starling House!

102clamairy
Sep 12, 7:00 am

>100 Marissa_Doyle: Starling House was great. Oh, Cackle sounds good. Sounds like you've had a good reading Summer.

103Marissa_Doyle
Sep 19, 2:30 pm

>102 clamairy: It ebbed and flowed--right now, happily, it's in flow. :)

>101 Sakerfalcon: I have Such Sharp Teeth on my Nook--must get to that soon.

Right now I'm bingeing on some British rom-coms--not usually my thing, but I love Hester Browne's voice. So far I've gobbled up The Finishing Touches (about a London finishing school trying to enter the 21st century), Swept Off Her Feet (about an antiques dealer visiting a stately home in Scotland and falling for the heir--and Scottish reels) and am in the midst of The Little Lady. Great escapist, well-written but not too taxing, and funny fiction for when you've Had Enough.

104Marissa_Doyle
Oct 3, 8:46 pm

Catching up...
Such Sharp Teeth Very enjoyable, though I'm not particularly a fan of werewolf stories. Harrison did a great job of making it seem quite real. I sometimes found the relationship between the sisters difficult to understand, but not enough to make me set the book aside. I'll be reading the author's other books, I think.

The Unfortunate Decisions of Dahlia Moss A murder mystery featuring on-line role-playing games a la World of Warcraft and "new adult" characters (post-uni, mid- to late twenties.) It was...okay, I guess--the mystery was decent and the setting unusual, but the humor felt very forced at times. If I happen to see the sequels on sale I might read them, but won't go out of my way to do so.

And oh my goodness... I am LOVING The Library of the Dead. A dystopian, post-societal-collapse Edinburgh is the setting, and the main character a snarky school dropout autodidact who uses street grammar and quotes Sun Tzu and supports her sister and grandmother by carrying messages from ghosts to their families, and who bears a strong moral compass even as she occasionally steals to put food on the table. Edinburgh is almost a character unto itself, as happens in good urban fantasy. The characterization and world-building are immersive and the writing excellent; I'm happy that there are two more books out and a fourth on the way in November. Very highly recommended--this will be on my top books of 2024 list.

105libraryperilous
Oct 4, 2:02 pm

>104 Marissa_Doyle: I believe Sakerfalcon also likes the Edinburgh Nights series. It sounds excellent! I've added it to my library borrows list for my upcoming vacation. My mom's Florida beach town has a surprisingly well-stocked library.

106Marissa_Doyle
Oct 12, 1:34 pm

>104 Marissa_Doyle: I hope your mom's town fared okay in the storms.

I've since finished the next two books in the series, Our Lady of Mysterious Ailments and The Mystery at Dunvegan Castle, and they just get better and better--The Mystery at Dunvegan Castle in particular was un-put-downable in the last 75 pages or so. The fourth book is coming out soon, and I can't wait-- the third wasn't precisely a cliffhanger, but I'm dying to know what happens next. These are as good, in their way, as The Stranger Times books. And while they're sort-of billed as YA, I think that's mostly because the protagonist is 15--but there's no teen angst silliness. And I love that the protag's best friend uses a wheelchair, but is a total badass in a fight.

On to All the Queen's Men (also published as A Three Dog Problem in the Her Majesty the Queen Investigates just to catch my breath after the TL Huchu's amazing books.

107libraryperilous
Oct 13, 12:27 pm

>106 Marissa_Doyle: Thank you! She's on the eastern side of the state, so her town had one of the tornadoes. Her power is back on now and her apartment itself is undamaged.

108Marissa_Doyle
Oct 17, 1:04 pm

Finished All the Queen's Men, which was quite enjoyable (I do love her portrayal of the queen) and in honor of the spooky season have moved on to The Supernaturals, which hopefully won't be too gory. I much prefer horror without the squishy bits.

109jillmwo
Oct 20, 4:20 pm

>108 Marissa_Doyle: So were there squishy bits in The Supernaturals? Inquiring minds...

110Marissa_Doyle
Oct 20, 5:41 pm

>110 Marissa_Doyle: It's got a few squishy bits, but nothing too out of hand. What bothers me more are the lackluster writing and poor copyediting. If I weren't curious about what exactly is going on in this haunted house, I probably would have DNFed it. For now I'm wincing a lot and plowing forward.

111Marissa_Doyle
Edited: Oct 26, 2:18 pm

Well, I'm glad to be through with The Supernaturals, which was more than a bit of a slog. I could have done without much of the extensive nattering on about the TV industry and how programs are actually filmed. I can definitely see how influenced it was by The Haunting of Hill House, but it suffered (in my mind) the same problem that Stephen King's It did--namely, as soon as a face (so to speak) is put on the monster/ghost/otherworldly antagonist, it stops being so scary. I think Hill House was so spooky just because the house never revealed itself.

On to a book bullet from jillmwo, Edith Holler--and halfway through, it's marvelous! How does it manage to be both humorous and darkly gothic at the same time? Not to mention both historically detailed and grounded in reality, yet also utterly fantastical? Jill is right--this is very, very well worth reading. I wish Meredy were here, as I'd love her commentary on it too.

Also enjoyed a tasty little morsel--Susanna Clarke's The Wood at Midwinter--a short story beautifully illustrated and cloth-bound, much like The Ladies of Grace Adieu, which it fits quite well with. I'll read Susanna Clarke's grocery list, for goodness sake...this was like sampling one sweet from a Godiva box.

112clamairy
Oct 26, 5:42 pm

>111 Marissa_Doyle: Thank you for the reminder about Edith Holler. I had added it to my wish list to read during October, and completely forgotten about it. It's now safely on my Kindle.

113jillmwo
Oct 27, 10:27 am

>111 Marissa_Doyle: I'm so glad you read it and found it enjoyable. It's so much about live theater and about what goes on in back-of-house. And yet, there is that scary, spooky atmosphere -- the stepmother, the beetles, and the various mysteries.

>112 clamairy: I think you'll like it as well, Clam!

114Sakerfalcon
Oct 29, 9:31 am

>111 Marissa_Doyle: I've seen a lot of recommendations for Edith Holler, and now that you have also done so I can see I'm going to have to accept the BB!

The Susannah Clarke is on my wishlist.

115Meredy
Oct 29, 5:44 pm

Mortal Love is the only book I've read that I can say this about: the minute I finished the last page, I turned to the front and began again.

Elizabeth Hand is fascinating and a bit frightening. I don't know of another writer like her.

116pgmcc
Oct 29, 6:13 pm

>115 Meredy:
Did the typo on page 243 not put you off?

117Meredy
Oct 31, 4:33 pm

>116 pgmcc:
Haha. I didn't mark a typo on page 243 (hardcover version), but I did cross out "nonplussed" and write in "nonchalant."

This puzzles me, though: it was the paperback that I read twice. I gave it to a friend, and then bought the hardcover. That was in 2010. I must have read it a third time. Maybe I should rereread it.

118pgmcc
Oct 31, 5:06 pm

>117 Meredy:
I loved Mortal Love and I was joking about the typo. It was on page 253.

:-)

119Marissa_Doyle
Dec 4, 8:47 pm

After reading a mammoth book about ghosts (it was, in fact, The Mammoth Book of True Hauntings) which took quite a while, I was delighted by The Cautious Traveller's Guide to the Wastelands which I spotted on Barnes & Noble and then nudged toward by (I think) Sakerfalcon. I especially enjoyed the way the Wasteland went from being scary and inimical to curious and welcoming and the rich, gorgeous writing.

Am now onto Comet Weather and am finding it a bit of a slog--it's taking its own sweet time to get going at about the 30% mark. We'll see if it speeds up. Any opinions out there?

120libraryperilous
Dec 4, 8:56 pm

>119 Marissa_Doyle: I DNFed the Williams, and I think a couple of other pub members also disliked it.

121Sakerfalcon
Dec 5, 9:54 am

>119 Marissa_Doyle: I'm glad you enjoyed the Cautious Traveller's Guide! I too liked the portrayal of the Wastelands.

122jillmwo
Dec 5, 8:45 pm

>119 Marissa_Doyle: I am very curious. The marketing blurb for The Cautious Traveller's Guide makes it sound like a twist on Christie's Orient Express. Is that accurate?

123Marissa_Doyle
Dec 8, 12:38 am

>122 jillmwo: No, not at all, aside from the fact that there is a train in each. The Cautious Traveller's Guide is not a mystery--it's a fantasy, and very much its own book.

124catzteach
Dec 8, 12:51 pm

>119 Marissa_Doyle: I really liked the vision of the Wastelands as well. It was sufficiently creepy and wondrous at the same time.

125Marissa_Doyle
Dec 12, 2:56 pm

Finished Comet Weather. I was able to finish it, and would even read others in the series if I found them on sale...but I wasn't overly impressed, either. It read to me like The Dark Is Rising for adults, and I began to wish I had a bingo card for every folkloric site or character associated with southwestern England that was mentioned or visited--often (it seemed) for no very good reason. There were also some copy-editing glitches (mostly using the wrong character's name) which kept yanking me out, and I found the characterization a little one-note at times.

On to The Legacy of Arniston House, most recent book in TL Huchu's Edinburgh Nights series, and I expect this one will be as good as the others--at least, it is so far. The only thing I'm not looking forward to is that it (according to my husband) ends on a cliff-hanger...so yay, more books, but sigh, cliff-hanger.

126Marissa_Doyle
Dec 21, 4:13 pm

Oh my. The Legacy of Arniston House ended on the cliffiest of cliff-hangers I've ever encountered. I'm embracing it, though, because that means there will be more books in the series, right?

On to Honeymoon hotel, another Hester Brown rom-com confection, because I needed some breathing space after the intensity of my last read. It's delivering nicely, even though I know exactly where and how it's going; it's the journey, not the arrival. I highly recommend this author when you need some funny, well-written and plotted romantic fluff.

And I think I'd better request a piffle party to fill out the year...

127libraryperilous
Dec 21, 4:23 pm

Piffle? More like pfffftle!

Did I do my contribution right?

128Marissa_Doyle
Dec 21, 6:12 pm

Perfect pifflation!

129Bookmarque
Edited: Dec 21, 7:15 pm

130jillmwo
Edited: Dec 21, 7:50 pm

OOOH, are we starting the piffling now?

Jill warbles, a bit off tune.

Jolly old Saint Nicholas, lend your ear this way
Don't you tell a single soul what I'm going to say.
Christmas Eve is coming soon. Now you dear old man
Tell me what you'll bring to her, tell me if you can...

The right gift for Marissa would be books, lots of nice, new books!

131Marissa_Doyle
Dec 21, 11:36 pm

>130 jillmwo: Oh dear--better not let Santa see how many unread books there are on my Nook...

132pgmcc
Dec 22, 2:22 am

>131 Marissa_Doyle:
Unread books are irrelevant when it comes to buying acquiring new books; they are independent events.

133Alexandra_book_life
Dec 22, 7:36 am

>132 pgmcc: I totally agree :D

134clamairy
Dec 22, 8:02 am

>126 Marissa_Doyle: Oh, I can add some piffling!

135catzteach
Dec 22, 10:38 am

>132 pgmcc: 100% agree!

Hmm, piffle party? What to post for a piffle? I’d try my hand at a piffle limerick, but I’m not very good with that kind of stuff.

136pgmcc
Dec 22, 10:52 am

Fifteen piffles required to reach the magic new thread number.

137jillmwo
Dec 22, 11:25 am

>132 pgmcc: I agree. Of course, there is also the school of thought that claims that ebooks don't really count, whether read or not. It's the physical manifestation where the read/unread thing kicks in. (I'm not sure I believe that; I'm just ensuring all views get aired properly...)

>135 catzteach: The Christmas season is when we try out new things -- new toys, new clothes, new LIMERICKs. You must give it a whirl. (Alternatively, one might do a haiku. 17 syllables isn't too difficult.)

138clamairy
Dec 22, 11:45 am

>137 jillmwo: The main problem with unread ebooks is that it's easy to forget you have them because they aren't stacked teetering in the corners constantly reminding you that you've been ignoring them. It's one of the reasons why I come into LibraryThing and just look at the covers of my unrated books. I used to try to put everything in a ' To Read' collection when I acquired it, but somehow that drifted by the wayside.

139Marissa_Doyle
Dec 22, 4:38 pm

>138 clamairy: A problem I'm well acquainted with.

>137 jillmwo: I tend to get shirty with people who don't think ebooks are "real" books--they can kiss my e-reader. Doubly so for people who say audiobooks aren't real, after knowing enough dyslexic friends of my kids who were saved by audiobooks. Grumble grumble.

And I may need to try a limerick...

140jillmwo
Dec 22, 4:58 pm

>139 Marissa_Doyle: I'm with you! The third law laid down by Ranganathan was "Every Book Its Reader" and that works very well for the ebook, the audio book, etc.

141Marissa_Doyle
Edited: Dec 22, 5:04 pm

Here we go:

A feisty old codger named Stiffel
Through his e-books enjoyed a good riffle.
"I simply can't deal
when you say these aren't real.
In fact, sir, I call it sheer piffle."

142jillmwo
Dec 22, 5:10 pm

*sound of masses cheering and applauding*

143libraryperilous
Dec 22, 6:25 pm

>141 Marissa_Doyle: Brava! Brava! Encore!

144MrsLee
Dec 22, 8:24 pm

There was a young lady Marissa
Who said of her ass you can kissa
If on ebooks your stuck
In the "they don't count" rut
That charming young lady Marissa

145catzteach
Dec 22, 8:27 pm

>141 Marissa_Doyle: Love it!!

And I’m with you on audiobooks being “real” books. I know many a kiddo who needs to listen to books rather than try and decode. I’m glad they have an option. I’ve also started using them for my read aloud time in my classroom. Although I love reading novels aloud, my voice starts hurting after reading for 15 straight minutes.

146hfglen
Dec 23, 4:58 am

Different piffle: working on the family tree (more a dense and tangled shrubbery, actually) I have just come across a Scottish lassie baptised with the unfortunate combination of names Jessie Good Evans T******n (born 1868). Do some parents not run through, in their heads, the names they saddle their unfortunate offspring with?

147haydninvienna
Dec 23, 5:41 am

>146 hfglen: As Bertie Wooster observed, there’s some dirty work pulled at the font …

148clamairy
Dec 23, 7:32 am

149jillmwo
Dec 23, 9:03 am

One of the best aspects of Pub participation is the ever increasing quality of the piffle.

150Narilka
Dec 23, 1:13 pm

>141 Marissa_Doyle: & >144 MrsLee: Excellent! Love the limericks :D

151catzteach
Dec 23, 2:06 pm

>146 hfglen: Parents really don’t think that far in advance when naming their kiddos. I have taught some doozies, including a Scandal. He was a great kid despite his name. :)

152Marissa_Doyle
Dec 23, 2:39 pm

>151 catzteach: Oh dear. It sounds like he should have been wearing a big red "S" on his shirt.

153Marissa_Doyle
Dec 23, 2:39 pm

>149 jillmwo: Absolutely!!