46. Rachel Caine - Midnight Alley (Morganville Vampires, Book 3)
47. Rachel Caine - Feast of Fools (Morganville Vampires, Book 4)
48. Rachel Caine - Lord of Misrule (Morganville Vampires, Book 5)
49. Marie Brennan - Warrior
The Rachel Caine "Morganville Vampires" series got a heck of a lot better with book 3. I enjoyed it so much that I went to books 4 and 5 and enjoyed them just as much.
The Brennan book was fantastic! I'm trying to get my hands on a copy of the sequel but I can't find it in the bookstore.
October 31, 2009
October 03, 2009
45. Jim Butcher - Dead Beat (The Dresden Files, Book 7)
"Harry Dresden's first hardcover adventure finds Chicago's preeminent wizard coping with his new roommate--vampire half-brother Thomas. Harry soon has problems bigger than Thomas' clutter to deal with. Marva, one of Harry's vampire foes, summons him with a threat to his police-lieutenant friend, Karrin Murphy. Marva demands Harry get the Word of Kemmler for her, or she'll frame Murphy for murder. Harry doesn't even know what the Word is, but while he's trying to find out, and also what damage Marva will be able to do with it, several necromancers descend on Chicago. When Harry learns that the newcomers are students of Kemmler, an evil wizard who mastered ancient spirits in a way no one has since, he discovers that they are seeking the Word, too, in hopes of seizing the powerful knowledge within it and calling forth a powerful creature known as the Erlking. Butcher's latest maintains the momentum of previous Dresden outings and builds the suspense right up to a rousing conclusion." - Booklist
Fantastic book.
Fantastic book.
44. Melissa de la Cruz - Revelations
"Have you ever wondered what secrets lurk behind the closed doors of New York City's wealthiest families? They're powerful, they're famous... they're undead.
Schuyler Van Alen's blood legacy has just been called into question--is the young vampire in fact a Blue Blood, or is it the sinister Silver Blood that runs through her veins? As controversy swirls, Schuyler is left stranded in the Force household, trapped under the same roof as her cunning nemesis, Mimi Force, and her forbidden crush, Jack Force.
When one of the Gates of Hell is breached by Silver Bloods in Rio de Janeiro, however, the Blue Bloods will need Schuyler on their side. The stakes are high; the battle is bloody; and through it all, Carnavale rages on. And in the end, one vampire's secret identity will be exposed in a revelation that shocks everyone." - Product Description
Some nice plot twists in this one. A couple were a little predictable but still enjoyable.
Schuyler Van Alen's blood legacy has just been called into question--is the young vampire in fact a Blue Blood, or is it the sinister Silver Blood that runs through her veins? As controversy swirls, Schuyler is left stranded in the Force household, trapped under the same roof as her cunning nemesis, Mimi Force, and her forbidden crush, Jack Force.
When one of the Gates of Hell is breached by Silver Bloods in Rio de Janeiro, however, the Blue Bloods will need Schuyler on their side. The stakes are high; the battle is bloody; and through it all, Carnavale rages on. And in the end, one vampire's secret identity will be exposed in a revelation that shocks everyone." - Product Description
Some nice plot twists in this one. A couple were a little predictable but still enjoyable.
43. Melissa de la Cruz - Masquerade
"Schuyler Van Alen wants an explanation for the mysterious deaths of young vampires. With her best friend, Oliver, Schuyler travels to Italy in the hope of finding the one man who can help--her grandfather. Meanwhile, back in New York, preparations are feverishly underway for the Four Hundred Ball, an exclusive gala hosted by the city's wealthy, powerful, and unhuman--a true Blue Blood affair.
But it's at the after-party, a masquerade ball thrown by the cunning Mimi Force, that the real danger lurks. Hidden behind the masks is a revelation that will forever change the course of a young vampire's destiny.
Rich with glamour, attitude, and vampire lore, this second installment in the Blue Bloods saga will leave readers thirsting for more." - Product Description
Good book and an easy read. I'm enjoying the series. Don't expect heavy character/plot developments but even still, it was good.
But it's at the after-party, a masquerade ball thrown by the cunning Mimi Force, that the real danger lurks. Hidden behind the masks is a revelation that will forever change the course of a young vampire's destiny.
Rich with glamour, attitude, and vampire lore, this second installment in the Blue Bloods saga will leave readers thirsting for more." - Product Description
Good book and an easy read. I'm enjoying the series. Don't expect heavy character/plot developments but even still, it was good.
September 25, 2009
42. Rachel Caine - The Dead Girls' Dance (Morganville Vampires, Book 2)
"Claire has her share of challenges. Like being a genius in a school that favors beauty over brains; homicidal girls in her dorm, and finding out that her college town is overrun with the living dead. On the up side, she has a new boyfriend with a vampire-hunting dad. But when a local fraternity throws the Dead Girls' Dance, hell is really going to break loose." - Product Description
Considering that Rachel Caine is one of my favorite authors, this series is starting to disappoint a little bit. The first book was lacking with development and plot lines, and this one was lacking as well. I'm hoping that the rest of the books in this series aren't like this.
Considering that Rachel Caine is one of my favorite authors, this series is starting to disappoint a little bit. The first book was lacking with development and plot lines, and this one was lacking as well. I'm hoping that the rest of the books in this series aren't like this.
41. Laurell K. Hamilton - Skin Trade (Anita Blake, Vampire Hunter, Book 17)
"Hamilton's 17th Anita Blake novel draws the vampire hunter into a game of cat-and-mouse with a particularly monstrous vampire named Vittorio. Aided by sadistic serial killer Otto Jefferies, convenient sociopath Edward Kemper and fanged escorts handpicked by her lover Jean-Claude, U.S. marshal Anita offers her services to Las Vegas, now under siege from Vittorio's army of enthralled preternatural beings. Manipulated by the cunning Vittorio and occasionally misled by coincidental events, Anita employs her insight into Vittorio's condition and weaponized libido as the decisive weapons in this struggle. The book is largely concerned with the melodramatic conflict between hunter and hunter and Blake's soap-operatic love life, but Hamilton does manage some genuinely moving passages, particularly those describing the terror of innocent vampires caught up in the arbitrary and draconian U.S. legal system." - Publishers Weekly
Finally! An Anita Blake book that isn't centered around sex. This felt like one of her old-school books where Blake is acting as Vampire Executioner rather than a succubus. It's nice to see Hamilton changing her focus back. While not on the same level as her early books this one was good. Much better than some of her other books.
Finally! An Anita Blake book that isn't centered around sex. This felt like one of her old-school books where Blake is acting as Vampire Executioner rather than a succubus. It's nice to see Hamilton changing her focus back. While not on the same level as her early books this one was good. Much better than some of her other books.
40. Rachel Caine - Glass Houses (Morganville Vampires, Book 1)
"From the author of the popular Weather Warden series. Welcome to Morganville, Texas.
Just don't stay out after dark.
College freshman Claire Danvers has had enough of her nightmarish dorm situation, where the popular girls never let her forget just where she ranks in the school's social scene: somewhere less than zero.
When Claire heads off-campus, the imposing old house where she finds a room may not be much better. Her new roommates don't show many signs of life. But they'll have Claire's back when the town's deepest secrets come crawling out, hungry for fresh blood." - Product Description
I really love the Weather Wardens series so I was again pleasantly surprised to find out that she wrote a young adult series. The concept of the story is rather interesting but I was a little disappointed with the lack of depth in the plot. I would've prefered to see more character and plot development but besides that it was decent. I'm still going to read book two though.
Just don't stay out after dark.
College freshman Claire Danvers has had enough of her nightmarish dorm situation, where the popular girls never let her forget just where she ranks in the school's social scene: somewhere less than zero.
When Claire heads off-campus, the imposing old house where she finds a room may not be much better. Her new roommates don't show many signs of life. But they'll have Claire's back when the town's deepest secrets come crawling out, hungry for fresh blood." - Product Description
I really love the Weather Wardens series so I was again pleasantly surprised to find out that she wrote a young adult series. The concept of the story is rather interesting but I was a little disappointed with the lack of depth in the plot. I would've prefered to see more character and plot development but besides that it was decent. I'm still going to read book two though.
39. Kelley Armstrong - The Awakening (Darkest Powers, Book 2)
"Chloe’s a teenager who likes Simon, but maybe likes Derek, and definitely hates Tori, who crushes on Simon, who kind of cares for Chloe. Sounds pretty typical. Except that Chloe’s a necromancer, Derek’s a werewolf, and Simon and Tori are sorcerers. Following The Summoning (2008), this book in the Darkest Powers series has the teens on the run from a shady organization whose murky involvement with their manifesting powers is unclear, but definitely not for their betterment. There’s nothing terribly original here, but Armstrong has some fun toying with supernatural teen thriller conventions, and the taut pacing should please fans of the exploding genre." - Booklist
I will disagree with the reviewer in that there is "nothing terribly original here." I actually really liked this book and thought it was different from the usual teen fantasy books.
I will disagree with the reviewer in that there is "nothing terribly original here." I actually really liked this book and thought it was different from the usual teen fantasy books.
38. Kelley Armstrong - The Summoning (Darkest Powers, Book 1)
"A well-written opening to a paranormal series. Chloe, 15, has the ability to see dead people, but before she can figure out what is happening, she has a breakdown, is diagnosed with schizophrenia, and placed in a group home. She befriends some of the teens at Lyle House and tries to accept her treatment. However, two of her more mysterious housemates suggest that maybe she isn't crazy. Derek tells her to look up necromancy on the Internet, and she finds out that it's the ability to communicate with the spirits of the dead. He appears to have superstrength, and his foster brother has magical powers. Chloe's roommate, who causes things to fly around the room when she becomes angry, is taken away to a hospital and never heard from again. When she returns in Chloe's visions, Chloe suspects foul play, a misgiving confirmed when the dead speak to her again and reveal that they were "supernaturals" who were experimented on, killed, and buried in the home's basement many years before. Together with her new friends, Chloe escapes Lyle House, only to be betrayed. This suspenseful novel sets up a secret underworld where some people support and help supernaturals, while others persecute them. Armstrong combines bits of horror, teen relationships, and a dash of mystery to create a page-turner." - School Library Journal
I enjoy Armstrong's books so I was pleasantly surprised to find out she did a young adult series. It's actually pretty good. The plot is different that the cookie-cutter styles I've been reading lately and I like the characters. It was a nice easy read which is what I need right n ow.
I enjoy Armstrong's books so I was pleasantly surprised to find out she did a young adult series. It's actually pretty good. The plot is different that the cookie-cutter styles I've been reading lately and I like the characters. It was a nice easy read which is what I need right n ow.
September 05, 2009
37. Karen Marie Moning - Dreamfever
"MacKayla Lane lies naked on the cold stone floor of a church, at the mercy of the erotic Fae master she once swore to kill. Far from home, unable to control her sexual hungers, MacKayla is now fully under the Lord Master’s spell.…In New York Times bestselling author Karen Marie Moning’s stunning new novel, the walls between human and Fae worlds have come crashing down. And as Mac fights for survival on Dublin’s battle-scarred streets, she will embark on the darkest—and most erotically charged—adventure of her life.He has stolen her past, but MacKayla will never allow her sister’s murderer to take her future. Yet even the uniquely gifted sidhe-seer is no match for the Lord Master, who has unleashed an insatiable sexual craving that consumes Mac’s every thought—and thrusts her into the seductive realm of two very dangerous men, both of whom she desires but dares not trust. As the enigmatic Jericho Barrons and the sensual Fae prince V’lane vie for her body and soul, as cryptic entries from her sister’s diary mysteriously appear and the power of the Dark Book weaves its annihilating path through the city, Mac’s greatest enemy delivers a final challenge.…It’s an invitation Mac cannot refuse, one that sends her racing home to Georgia, where an even darker threat awaits. With her parents missing and the lives of her loved ones under siege, Mac is about to come face-to-face with a soul-shattering truth—about herself and her sister, about Jericho Barrons…and about the world she thought she knew." - Product Description
This is a really good series. My only criticism is that is should have been a trilogy instead of a five-book series.
This is a really good series. My only criticism is that is should have been a trilogy instead of a five-book series.
36. Jim Butcher - Blood Rites (Dresden Files, Book 6)
"Per usual, wizard-detective extraordinaire Harry Dresden is in trouble. He barely escapes an assassination attempt, courtesy of the Black Council of vampires, when Thomas, a vampire who has helped Harry out on occasion, asks him to take a case. It seems someone doesn't want porno film director Arturo Genosa's latest effort to get off the ground. An entropy spell has killed two of Arturo's assistants, and Thomas wants Harry to find the culprit. With suspects abounding--Arturo has no fewer than three ex-wives--Harry decides to pose as a production assistant at the studio. Though he isn't able to stop another sabotage attempt, this one threatening an actress' life, he does save the young woman. With danger closing in, the last thing Harry needs is a sexy succubus and a surprising revelation about his heritage. Filled with sizzling magic and intrigue as well as important developments for Harry, the latest of his adventures will have fans rapidly turning the pages." - Booklist
See comment below.
See comment below.
35. Jim Butcher - Death Masks (Dresden Files, Book 5)
"Harry Dresden is not having a good day. A vampire named Ortega is hunting the beleaguered wizard, intending to challenge him to a duel that, Ortega claims, will end the war between the vampires and the wizards. Harry has almost no hope of winning the duel, but soon he is preoccupied by another problem: Father Vincent, a priest, needs Harry's help in finding the Shroud of Turin, stolen by a trio of thieves. Harry traces two of the thieves to his hometown, Chicago, but when he finds them, he learns that he isn't the only one after them. A group of terrifying demons wants the shroud, and its leader is interested in Harry's soul, too. Harry must call on all of his friends, including three brave knights, his police-officer friend, and even his half-vampire ex-girlfriend, Susan. Butcher maintains a breakneck pace in Harry's exciting fifth adventure. This imaginative series continues to surprise and delight with its inventiveness and sympathetic hero." - Booklist
Once again, I'm rereading another book in the series. Once again, I loved the book. It's a fantastic series.
Once again, I'm rereading another book in the series. Once again, I loved the book. It's a fantastic series.
34. Melissa De la Cruz - Blue Bloods (Blue Bloods, Book 1)
"De la Cruz has revamped traditional vampire lore in this story featuring a group of attractive, privileged Manhattan teens who attend a prestigious private school. Schuyler Van Alen, 15, the last of the line in a distinguished family, is being raised by her distant and forbidding grandmother. Schuyler, her friend Oliver, and their new friend Dylan are treated like outsiders by the clique of popular, athletic, and beautiful teens made up of Mimi Force, her twin brother, and her best friend. What they have in common is the fact that they are all Blue Bloods, or vampires. They don't realize that they aren't normal until they reach age 15. Then the symptoms manifest themselves and they begin to crave raw meat, have nightmares about events in history, and get prominent blue veins in their arms. Their immortality and way of life are threatened after Blue Blood teens start getting murdered by a splinter group called the Silver Bloods. This novel constantly name-drops and is full of product placements, drinking, drugs, nonexplicit sex, and superficial characterizations, but the intriguing plot will keep teens reading. De la Cruz's explanation for the disappearance of the Colony of Roanoke is unique and the idea that models don't gain weight because they are Blue Bloods rather than anorexic is unusual." - School Library Journal
I actually found this series at Borders where they had an entire display devoted to supernatural teen fiction. As I'm always looking for a good easy read, I decided to pick this one up. It wasn't bad. It felt like this was a prequel rather than a full book. I guess as the first novel in the series it is setting the stage for the rest of the novels. I'll be reading the rest of the books in the series because I like the idea of this story line but I'll be getting them from the library rather than buying them.
I actually found this series at Borders where they had an entire display devoted to supernatural teen fiction. As I'm always looking for a good easy read, I decided to pick this one up. It wasn't bad. It felt like this was a prequel rather than a full book. I guess as the first novel in the series it is setting the stage for the rest of the novels. I'll be reading the rest of the books in the series because I like the idea of this story line but I'll be getting them from the library rather than buying them.
August 23, 2009
33. Jim Butcher - Summer Knight (Dresden Files, book 4)
"Harry Dresden’s faced some pretty terrifying foes during his career. Giant scorpions. Oversexed vampires. Psychotic werewolves. All par for the course for Chicago’s only professional wizard.
But in all Harry’s years of supernatural sleuthing, he’s never faced anything like this: the spirit world’s gone completely postal. All over Chicago, ghosts are causing trouble—and not just of the door-slamming, boo-shouting variety. These ghosts are tormented, violent, and deadly.
Someone—or something—is stirring them up to wreak unearthly havoc. But why? And why do so many of the victims have ties to Harry? If Harry doesn’t figure it out soon, he could wind up a ghost himself." - Product Description
This is a reread for me as it has been a long time since I first read this book. As usual, Jim Butcher successfully brought me into a world full of wizards, vampires, and faeries. I highly recommend this series to anybody who wants an adult (and slightly more cynical version) of Harry Potter.
But in all Harry’s years of supernatural sleuthing, he’s never faced anything like this: the spirit world’s gone completely postal. All over Chicago, ghosts are causing trouble—and not just of the door-slamming, boo-shouting variety. These ghosts are tormented, violent, and deadly.
Someone—or something—is stirring them up to wreak unearthly havoc. But why? And why do so many of the victims have ties to Harry? If Harry doesn’t figure it out soon, he could wind up a ghost himself." - Product Description
This is a reread for me as it has been a long time since I first read this book. As usual, Jim Butcher successfully brought me into a world full of wizards, vampires, and faeries. I highly recommend this series to anybody who wants an adult (and slightly more cynical version) of Harry Potter.
32. Julia Child - My Life in France
"Knowing little about the country and less about its cooking, Child sailed to France with her new husband in 1948. Her first meal after debarking, a simple sauteed sole, opened to her (and to posterity) a new world. She began her French sojourn as the underemployed and ever-curious wife of a diplomatic officer, frustrated at being unable even to speak the language. Language classes led to cooking classes, then to partnering with Simone Beck and Louisette Bertholle in an American book contract. Child's devotees know the basics of this story, but the details reveal the gradual education of Child's palate, her anti-McCarthy politics, her intense love for her husband, and her boundless capacity for hard work. Although Child died before this memoir compiled from her papers reached completion, her grandnephew Prud'homme proves a worthy editor. In seamlessly flowing prose, the text follows Child's growth as a cook into one of the best and most influential teachers of the twentieth century. Like Child herself, this memoir is earnest but never pedantic. Her eye for the ironic, her sense of humor, and her sharp sensitivity to the sights, sounds, smells, tastes, and colors that surround her make lucid, lively reading." - Booklist
I'll admit that I read this book due to all the publicity of the new movie Julie and Julia. I was pleasantly surprised with this book as I wasn't sure what to expect out of it. It was highly entertaining and I enjoyed reading about her development as a cook. I do recommend this for anybody who is/was a fan of Julia Child. Very enjoyable. Though don't read on an empty stomach.
I'll admit that I read this book due to all the publicity of the new movie Julie and Julia. I was pleasantly surprised with this book as I wasn't sure what to expect out of it. It was highly entertaining and I enjoyed reading about her development as a cook. I do recommend this for anybody who is/was a fan of Julia Child. Very enjoyable. Though don't read on an empty stomach.
31. Charlaine Harris - Dead and Gone (Sookie Stackhouse, Book 9)
"Telepathic waitress Sookie Stackhouse braces herself for trouble when another group of supernatural beings goes public in her disjointed eighth adventure (after 2008's From Dead to Worse). Following the vampires' lead, the shape-shifters decide to step out of the woodwork and announce their existence to the world. While the initial reveal goes smoothly, the brutal crucifixion of a young werepanther behind the local bar makes Sookie wonder if the people of Bon Temps, La., are as tolerant as she thought. Meanwhile, the FBI is asking questions about Sookie's uncanny ability to locate survivors after an explosion, and trouble is brewing among the secretive fae. Harris tries to cram too much into a single story, and even die-hard fans of Sookie's adventures in print and on HBO's True Blood will complain about the plot gaps." - Publishers Weekly
While I normally enjoy Harris' books, this one felt lacking. The plot line was a good idea, but as the review above states, too much is going on and really not enough detail. It almost felt like she was writing the book to become a TV show if that makes sense. Not one of the better books in the series.
While I normally enjoy Harris' books, this one felt lacking. The plot line was a good idea, but as the review above states, too much is going on and really not enough detail. It almost felt like she was writing the book to become a TV show if that makes sense. Not one of the better books in the series.
30. Janet Evanovich - Three to Get Deadly (Audio)
"Trenton, N.J., bounty hunter and former lingerie buyer Stephanie Plum (last seen in Two for the Dough) becomes persona non grata when she tracks down a neighborhood saint who has failed to show up for his court appearance. No one wants to help Stephanie, who works for her bail-bondsman cousin, Vinnie. While questioning admirers of the man nicknamed Uncle Mo, Stephanie is attacked and knocked out as she cases his candy store. She comes to next to the dead body of her attacker, who turns out to be a well-known drug dealer. Suddenly, she can't avoid stumbling across the bodies of dead drug dealers: one in a dumpster, one in a closet and four in the candy store basement. Stephanie suspects that mild-mannered Mo has become a vigilante and is cleaning up the streets in a one-man killing spree. But when she's repeatedly threatened by men wearing ski masks, she wonders if Mo has company and just might be in over his head. Despite her new clownish orange hair job, Stephanie muddles through another case full of snappy one-liners as well as corpses. By turns buttressed and hobbled by her charmingly clueless family and various cohorts (including streetwise co-worker Lulu, detective and heartthrob Morelli and professional bounty hunter Ranger), the redoubtable Stephanie is a character crying out for a screen debut." - Publishers Weekly
Another good book.
Another good book.
August 13, 2009
29. Rick Riordan - The Lightning Thief ((Percy Jackson and the Olympians, Book 1)
"At the outset of this fast-paced tale by Rick Riordan (Hyperion/Miramax, 2005), it would seem that Percy Jackson is just another New York kid diagnosed with ADHD, who has good intentions, a nasty stepfather, and a long line of schools that have rejected him. The revelation of his status as half-blood offspring of one of the Greek gods is nicely packaged, and it's easy to believe that Mount Olympus, in modern times, has migrated to the 600th floor of the Empire State Building (the center of Western civilization) while the door to Hades can be found at DOA Recording Studio, somewhere in LA. With his new friends, a disguised satyr, and the half-blood daughter of Athena, Percy sets out across the country to rectify a feud between Zeus, Hades, and Poseidon. Along the way they must cope with the Furies, Medusa, motorcycle thug Aires, and various other immortals. Although some of Jesse Bernstein's accents fail (the monster from Georgia, for instance, has no Southern trace in her voice), he does a fine job of keeping the main characters' tones and accents distinguishable. He convincingly portrays Percy, voicing just the right amount of prepubescent confusion, ironic wit, and the ebbing and waning of concern for himself and those around him. Mythology fans will love this take and kids who haven't been inculcated with the Classical canon will learn aspects of it here while having no trouble following a rollicking good–and modern–adventure." - School Library Journal
I read this book on the recommendation of my husband and the fact that it will be coming out as a movie in the near future. This book was a simple, easy read with a very enjoyable plot. It did remind me a little of the first Harry Potter book but that isn't a bad thing. I'm looking foward to reading the rest of the series.
I read this book on the recommendation of my husband and the fact that it will be coming out as a movie in the near future. This book was a simple, easy read with a very enjoyable plot. It did remind me a little of the first Harry Potter book but that isn't a bad thing. I'm looking foward to reading the rest of the series.
28. Cassandra Clare - City of Glass (Mortal Instruments, Book 3)
"To save her mother's life, Clary must travel to the City of Glass, the ancestral home of the Shadowhunters -- never mind that enter-ing the city without permission is against the Law, and breaking the Law could mean death. To make things worse, she learns that Jace does not want her there, and Simon has been thrown in prison by the Shadowhunters, who are deeply suspicious of a vampire who can withstand sunlight.
As Clary uncovers more about her family's past, she finds an ally in mysterious Shadow-hunter Sebastian. With Valentine mustering the full force of his power to destroy all Shadow-hunters forever, their only chance to defeat him is to fight alongside their eternal enemies. But can Downworlders and Shadowhunters put aside their hatred to work together? While Jace realizes exactly how much he's willing to risk for Clary, can she harness her newfound powers to help save the Glass City -- whatever the cost?" - Book Description
I really enjoyed this series and this last book of the trilogy did not disappoint. The only problem I had was getting stuck at a slow point in the middle of the book where I put it down out of boredom. However, the ending made up for it. I recommend this series for anybody who enjoys young adult fantasty series.
As Clary uncovers more about her family's past, she finds an ally in mysterious Shadow-hunter Sebastian. With Valentine mustering the full force of his power to destroy all Shadow-hunters forever, their only chance to defeat him is to fight alongside their eternal enemies. But can Downworlders and Shadowhunters put aside their hatred to work together? While Jace realizes exactly how much he's willing to risk for Clary, can she harness her newfound powers to help save the Glass City -- whatever the cost?" - Book Description
I really enjoyed this series and this last book of the trilogy did not disappoint. The only problem I had was getting stuck at a slow point in the middle of the book where I put it down out of boredom. However, the ending made up for it. I recommend this series for anybody who enjoys young adult fantasty series.
August 01, 2009
27. Janet Evanovich - Two for the Dough (Audio)
"Bounty hunter Stephanie Plum is still learning the ropes at her cousin Vinnie’s bail bond office, so when she sets out on the trail of Kenny Mancuso—a suspiciously wealthy, working class Trenton boy who has just shot his best friend—the stakes are higher than ever. That Mancuso is distantly related to vice cop Joe Morelli—who is trying to beat Stephanie to the punch—only makes the hunt more thrilling…. Taking pointers from her bounty hunter pal, Ranger, and using her pistol-packing Granda Mazur as a decoy, Stephanie is soon closing in on her mark. But Morelli and his libido are worthy foes. And a more sinister kind of enemy has made his first move…and his next move might be Stephanie’s last." - Product Description
Another funny book. Listening to it makes the long commute so much easier. Highly recommend.
Another funny book. Listening to it makes the long commute so much easier. Highly recommend.
26. Conn Iggulden - Emperor: The Gates of Rome: A Novel of Julius Caesar (The Emperor Series)
"English writer Iggulden's first novel is the story of two young boys-Gaius and Marcus, raised as brothers though one is illegitimate-as they grow to adulthood in Rome two millennia ago. At that time, the republic was beginning to fall apart, a collapse that would result in the civil wars that brought the emperors to power. It was a time of turmoil, chaos, revolutions, casual violence, and savage brutality, and Iggulden's descriptions of the culture and environment are vivid. Although covering a period unknown to most lay readers, Emperor is a surprisingly fast and often exciting read. Iggulden admits to taking some liberties with history, and his masking the identities of Gaius and Marcus is unnecessary and distracting. While the real identity of Marcus (Et tu, Brute?) may be a puzzle, readers with a fair knowledge of Roman history will quickly identify Gaius (think of the Ides of March). Also, the roles of historical warlords Marius and Sulla are not well clarified. Still, this entertaining historical novel will appeal to fans of Steven Pressfield and Michael Curtis Ford. For larger collections." - Library Journal
Good book. I just wish he kept it more historically accurate. As I'm a big fan of this area, I cringed when he took "literary license" with the historical facts. Even still, I'm looking forward to the next book in the series.
Good book. I just wish he kept it more historically accurate. As I'm a big fan of this area, I cringed when he took "literary license" with the historical facts. Even still, I'm looking forward to the next book in the series.
25. Janet Evanovich - One for the Money (Audio)
"First novels this funny and self-assured come along rarely; dialogue this astute and raunchy is equally unusual. The gutsy heroine introduced here is Stephanie Plum of Trenton, N.J., a recently laid-off lingerie buyer who has no job, no car and no furniture. She does have a hamster, a deranged grandmother, two caring parents and several pairs of biking shorts and sports bras. Finding work with her cousin Vinnie, she becomes a bond hunter and scrounges money enough to buy a gun, a Chevy Nova and some Mace. Her first assignment is to locate a cop accused of murder. Joe Morelli grew up in Stephanie's neighborhood. Possessed of legendary charm, he relieved Stephanie of her virginity when she was 16 (she later ran over him with a car). In her search, Stephanie catches her prey, loses him and grills a psychotic prizefighter, the employer of the man Morelli shot. She steals Morelli's car and then installs an alarm so he can't steal it back. Resourceful and tough, Stephanie has less difficulty finding her man than deciding what she wants to do with him once she's got him. While the link between the fighter and the cop isn't clear until too late in the plot, Evanovich's debut is a delightful romp and Stephanie flaunts a rough-edged appeal." - Publishers Weekly
This is one series I read a while back and stopped somewhere around book four or five. Now I'm going at it once again but this time with the audio version. While I'm not a big fan of female narrators, narrator C.J. Critt was fantastic! If you're going to get the audio, make sure that Critt is the narrator. She does a decent job with the male roles and has the Jersey accent down pretty well.
This is one series I read a while back and stopped somewhere around book four or five. Now I'm going at it once again but this time with the audio version. While I'm not a big fan of female narrators, narrator C.J. Critt was fantastic! If you're going to get the audio, make sure that Critt is the narrator. She does a decent job with the male roles and has the Jersey accent down pretty well.
24. Jim Butcher - Grave Peril (The Dresden Files, Book 3)
"Wizard Harry Dresden stars in the third installment of the Dresden Files (following Fool Moon), a haunting, fantastical novel that begins almost as innocently as those of another famous literary wizard named Harry. In the opening scene, Dresden and his knight friend, Michael, battle the ghost of a woman who is terrorizing a local hospital's maternity ward. From there, the novel quickly evolves into an unorthodox tale spiced with sexual innuendo and subtle humor (Dresden carries his ghost-hunting gear in an old Scooby-Doo lunch box). Due to the weakened barrier between the spirit world which Butcher refers to as "the nevernever" and the actual world, obsessive and violent ghosts are on the loose in modern-day Chicago, and they seem to be targeting Dresden and Michael. Horny vampires and possessive demons join the mix as Dresden journeys into the spirit world to hunt down the villains who are terrorizing him and his friends. Butcher narrates Dresden's story in the first person, which limits the amount of detail he can inject into the lives of his secondary characters. Despite this narrow point of view, Butcher successfully lends human dimensions to vampires and spirits through his vivid descriptions and colloquial dialogue." - Publishers Weekly
This is my second time around reading the book and I think I enjoyed it even more this time around. I love Harry Dresden and love this series. If you haven't read any of the books, I recommend them all. Just read them in order or else you'll be lost.
This is my second time around reading the book and I think I enjoyed it even more this time around. I love Harry Dresden and love this series. If you haven't read any of the books, I recommend them all. Just read them in order or else you'll be lost.