Showing posts with label review. Show all posts
Showing posts with label review. Show all posts

Friday, September 5, 2025

read: The Thursday Murder Club by Richard Osman ★★★★

The Thursday Murder Club (Thursday Murder Club, #1)The Thursday Murder Club by Richard Osman
My rating: ★★★★

A delightful cozy mystery. The setting and characters are down-to-earth, and the mysteries build and resolve like a very busy Renoit painting. There's a lot going on and not all of it is relevant to the plot.

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Wednesday, August 27, 2025

read: Hope: The Autobiography by Pope Francis ★★★★★

Hope: The AutobiographyHope: The Autobiography by Pope Francis
My rating: ★★★★★

This is the second book I've read this year that is a memoire or autobiography of a person of faith who grew up over the past century (the other was Wake Up With Purpose!: What I’ve Learned in My First Hundred Years). Pope Francis, like Sister Jean, came from humble beginnings and through work, community and good fortune became educated and devoted to service.
As a Christian, but not a Roman Catholic, what impressed me about his faith was how he felt more led by the heart of God and love for his fellow humans, rather than the dictates of history or religion. As one of those humans, I was also impressed by Francis' own humanity and his frankness about his shortcomings, as well as his love for art and community (and sports).
The book itself is often non-linear and meandering, focusing on a topic, rather than chronology. Yet it is not hard to follow. I found myself skipping over some topics I found too esoteric or political. But I enjoyed the rest and discovered some gems of observation from this man with a wealth of experience and education and faith.

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Thursday, April 17, 2025

read: The Wild Robot by Peter Brown ★★★★★

The Wild Robot (The Wild Robot, #1)The Wild Robot by Peter Brown
My rating: ★★★★★

Delightfully entertaining story that ignores the scary parts of AI to explore more promising possibilities of machine learning, set against a fanciful natural world where animals can get along with each other. And eventually, with a technological creature. Bonus overtones of found family and environmentalism. But ultimately, a story about a robot and a goose on an island.

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Monday, April 14, 2025

read: Wake Up With Purpose!: What I've Learned in My First Hundred Years by Jean Dolores Schmidt ★★★★★

Wake Up With Purpose!: What I've Learned in My First Hundred YearsWake Up With Purpose!: What I've Learned in My First Hundred Years by Jean Dolores Schmidt
My rating: ★★★★★

This book is a breath of fresh air. You don't have to be Catholic, or even Christian, to enjoy Sister Jean's uplifting view about life and living it.

"If you’re not moving forward, you’re going to get left behind real quick."

“I still go to bed every night with a smile on my face, gratitude in my heart, and love in my soul.”

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read: Wicked: The Life and Times of the Wicked Witch of the West by Gregory Maguire ★★

Wicked: The Life and Times of the Wicked Witch of the West (Wicked Years, #1)Wicked: The Life and Times of the Wicked Witch of the West by Gregory Maguire
My rating: ★★

I don't like to post negative reviews. But I really feel like I would have liked someone to warn me off this before I struggled with it for a couple of weeks.

Nope. Not for me. I didn’t care for a single character (except, perhaps, for Boq). Without that, there was nothing to carry me through to the end. The narrative was confusing, not compelling.

Such a shame, too. I’ve had this in my queue forever, having seen the play and thinking the book would be right up my alley. Now that the film is streaming, it was time to attend to the novel.

But, no. DNF.

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Tuesday, April 1, 2025

read: Blood Hollow by William Kent Krueger ★★★★★

Blood Hollow (Cork O'Connor, #4)Blood Hollow by William Kent Krueger
My rating: ★★★★★

Returned to this series at #4 after a long break reading other stuff and after reading a later volume. Still great storytelling that does not suffer from reading out of order.

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Monday, March 24, 2025

reread: How Much for Just the Planet? by John M. Ford ★★★

How Much for Just the Planet? (Star Trek: The Original Series #36, Star Trek: Worlds Apart, #2)How Much for Just the Planet? by John M. Ford
My rating: ★★★

So many feelings after rereading this decades after a first reading upon its initial release. It's still such a silly take on Star Trek, right up there with the Original Series episodes, "A Piece of the Action", "Shore Leave" and "The Trouble With Tribbles". And yet I can't reconcile its innocent charm, skewed characterizations and flawed storytelling with ratings I previously gave the book: 2 stars at one point, long forgotten and undeserved, and then 4 stars, apparently based on my faulty memory of how funny I must have found it.

Three stars seems about right. I shouldn't fault the author for playing around with Star Trek lore at a time when it was far less established. And I won't. Although the Klingons never quite ring 'true' here, weighted down as I am with 40 more years of books, TV and film. They are much too personable. Everyone else seems about right, for the time. What kept distracting me, though, were the casual references to what should have been archaic Earth cultural touchpoints. Even the humans of Kirk's time are usually presented with larger gaps in their knowledge of 19th and 20th century British and American stage and film. How the isolated colonists on Direidi, much less the Klingons, know so much about Gilbert and Sullivan, classic Hollywood films and romantic comedy is a mystery.

Leaving all that as the key suspension of disbelief, the reader is left with a pleasant story of cunning locals pulling the wool over the eyes of supposedly more sophisticated visitors out to exploit them.

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Thursday, March 13, 2025

read: When the Moon Hits Your Eye by John Scalzi ★★★★★

When the Moon Hits Your EyeWhen the Moon Hits Your Eye by John Scalzi
My rating: ★★★★★

I expected this book to be offbeat and entertaining. But John Scalzi took it in a completely different direction than I expected. The reader knows the premise, based on the title and back cover blurb. "What would happen if the moon suddenly and without explanation turned into cheese." But what the author does with that premise caught me off guard. The moon turning into cheese is the both the inciting incident and the only required suspension of disbelief. Everything else follows logically and as true to the real world as possible.

The mass of the moon stays the same. No orbital mechanics are (supposedly) skewed. Other natural processes must and do proceed apace: it's larger in diameter, it's brighter, the surface is too soft for a landing, etc. The book delves into the effect the change has on the population of Earth. Chapters focus on different sets of characters and their unique situations in a somewhat chronological order. Some incidents are humorous. Others not so much. A few characters pop up more than once so we get a fuller picture how the new moon's ramifications on their life. And then something happens to which my response was "he didn't actually go there, did he?" But he did. And it makes for an even more interesting story.

Disclosure: Thank you to Netgalley and Tor Books for allowing me to preview this book.

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Wednesday, January 8, 2025

read: The Martian Contingency by Mary Robinette Kowal ★★★★

The Martian Contingency (Lady Astronaut Universe, #4)The Martian Contingency by Mary Robinette Kowal
My rating: ★★★★

I am loving this series from Mary Robinette Kowal. It pushes all of my buttons as a boomer child of the space age, telling stories of an alternate, sped up space race pitted against nature, rather than Russia. Mary Robinette has done her research and it shows, without getting too pedantic. After spending the previous novel looking into developments at Artemis Base on the moon with Nicole Wargin, this book returns to Elma York and her work on Mars getting things settled in at Earth's new habitat (not colony) there.

Of course, things do not go smoothly. Elma senses something is wrong from the minute she lands with the second expedition and finds certain details mysteriously out of place. But the members of the first expedition are united in their silence about what might have happened on their first trip. The mysteries are set aside while more urgent threats to the mission are addressed. Yet even those situations spark more questions about the first expedition.

A couple of things kept this from being a five star experience for me. The biggest was the repetitiveness of Elma's passive ponderings about the first expedition's problems. I kept wanting her to be the badass she was in her first two novels and get to the bottom of things. She did exhibit great agency when it came to piloting tasks. But it seemed to take forever for her to grab hold of the reigns of command and drive the mission. This bogged things down for me.

On the whole, the storytelling is top notch, even with a bunch of technobabble and cultural conflict. The reader is always rooting for everyone to stay safe, stay happy and be successful in mixing and matching cultures and build a new society on a new planet.

Disclosure: Thank you to Netgalley and Tor Books for allowing me to preview this book.

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Thursday, December 19, 2024

read: James by Percival Everett ★★★★★

JamesJames by Percival Everett
My rating: ★★★★★

This book retells the story of Huckleberry Finn from the perspective of Huck's slave friend Jim. It's an easy read with difficult content, worthy of your time and the attention and awards it's been receiving. It's been quite a while since I read The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn. Now I have to go read it again with Percival Everett's James parked inside my head. I didn't know quite what to expect from this book. But it probably wasn't what it delivered.
It's fast-paced, but unhurried. The author doesn't waste time with extraneous descriptions and narrative. The unimportant stuff is omitted. Words are invested in action, dialog and introspection, instead. Even here, the reader is spared from unnecessary repetition, rehash and brooding. This doesn't mean the narrative is spare. It's just full of the important stuff about relationships and what happens next.
Surprises abound. That's why I need to revisit Mark Twain's original story. I need to see how the puzzle pieces introduced in James and his view of the world fit into the larger picture that includes the pieces from Huckleberry Finn.

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Sunday, November 24, 2024

read: Karla's Choice: A John le CarrĂ© Novel by Nick Harkaway ★★★★

Karla's Choice: A John le Carré NovelKarla's Choice: A John le Carré Novel by Nick Harkaway
My rating: ★★★★

This has the familiar look of a cold-war Smiley story by le Carre, yet it feels a bit off, like an overly complicated intelligence operation. You can't quite tell where the frayed edges are. But you know they're there. Smiley is perhaps a bit too involved. Maybe the viewpoints shift around a bit too much with too much analysis. Perhaps the innocent bystander is a bit too willing and adept and lucky. In spite of that, it's a worthy and thoroughly engrossing addition to the Smiley oeuvre.

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Tuesday, September 17, 2024

read: Cinderwich by Cherie Priest ★★★★

CinderwichCinderwich by Cherie Priest
My rating: ★★★★

A moody, creepy, Southern gothic road-trip mystery story. At less than 200 pages, it's right-sized reading for an autumn evening to get into the Halloween spirit.

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Friday, September 13, 2024

read: Beyond Reasonable Doubt by Robert Dugoni ★★★★

Beyond Reasonable Doubt (Keera Duggan, #2)Beyond Reasonable Doubt by Robert Dugoni
My rating: ★★★★

Keera Duggan deserves a break after the tough case she just cracked and won (read 'Her Deadly Game'). But her staycation will have to wait because she's called back into the office to hear about a new situation involving long-time clients and family friends and their daughter, Jenna, Keera's childhood nemesis. There's been a murder, the second one involving Jenna's tech company, and what little circumstantial evidence there is points to Jenna as the murder, again. Can Keera cut through Jenna's crap and get to the truth? Is she actually guilty this time? Was she last time? If not, can they uncover the real killer? Or will Keera have to rely on reasonable doubt, again, to keep Jenna out of prison?

When it comes to courtrooms and legal drama, Dugoni knows his stuff. I didn't feel as much tension in this story as I do in most of his other books. But events and discoveries and interpersonal issues keep things moving along to a satisfying conclusion. I look forward to Keera's next case.

Disclosure: Thank you to Netgalley and Thomas & Mercer for allowing me to preview this book.

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Thursday, August 8, 2024

read: A Cold, Cold World by Elena Taylor ★★★★★

A Cold, Cold World (Sheriff Bet Rivers #2)A Cold, Cold World by Elena Taylor
My rating: ★★★★★

I really liked the first book in this series, from the new sheriff to the setting to twisty plot to the writing itself. This new story is quite different from that one, except in the ways it is the same. There is still the feisty sheriff who's good at her job, but full of self-doubt. Still the small town where everyone knows everyone. Yet another dead body that's discovered in a remote area under mysterious circumstances. And still the relentless police work to get to the truth.

The big change is that this time everything is happening in the middle of winter and in the middle of one of the largest, most dangerous snow storms ever. The small town of Collier hunkers down and pulls together to ride out the storm. But there's a murderer in their midst. Add a missing person or two and another possible murder and the reader feels the walls closing in on a classic locked room mystery. Who can Sheriff Bet Rivers trust? And where are her suspects?

It all builds slowly as the characters all step onto the stage and questions are raised. For every answer there are two or three more mysteries. The reader is kept guessing right until the end.

Disclosure: Thank you to Netgalley and Severn House for providing a free copy of this book in return for my honest review.

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Wednesday, July 17, 2024

read: Rumor Has It by Cat Rambo ★★★★

Rumor Has It (Disco Space Opera #3)Rumor Has It by Cat Rambo
My rating: ★★★★

I thought of the previous story in this series as "The Continuing Adventures of the Crew of 'You Sexy Thing'". That would make this book "The Still Ongoing Adventures of the Crew of 'You Sexy Thing'". It picks up immediately following the 'To Be Continued' ending of the other book with Captain Niko and crew putting in at Coralind station to regroup, recoup, and plan their next move. There is much pairing off for adventures on the station, many opportunities for self-discovery and growth, some tension about how to keep paying for the crew to stay together, and encounters with new and old antagonists that may help or hinder. And then a few subplots are resolved before we again fade to 'To Be Continued."

As usual, the characters and situations are fun and easy to read about. The story continues to play fast and loose with science fiction and fantasy tropes, untroubled by actual physics or comprehendible magic. It's all lighthearted nonsense with likable characters to root for. I liked the first book of the series more. The plot had more drive. But I'm still on board and enjoying the ride on this sentient spaceship and look forward to the next volume.

Disclosure: Thank you to Netgalley and Tor Books for allowing me to preview this book.

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Tuesday, January 30, 2024

read: And Then There Were None by Agatha Christie ★★★★

And Then There Were NoneAnd Then There Were None by Agatha Christie
My rating: ★★★★

A very classic whodunit story almost worthy of 5 stars. But knock off a star for a somewhat convoluted setup and undeniably outdated and clunky style (lots of head-hopping). Knock off another star for the overly long and talky appendices. But add another star because this is a classic story and she kept this reader guessing until the very last page.

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Saturday, December 30, 2023

read: Malibu Burning by Lee Goldberg ★★★★

Malibu Burning (Sharpe & Walker #1)Malibu Burning by Lee Goldberg
My rating: ★★★★

Engaging heist story with a little Backdraft and Fugitive thrown in.

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Monday, December 25, 2023

read: The Women by Kristin Hannah ★★★★★

The WomenThe Women by Kristin Hannah
My rating: ★★★★★

I am so glad I read this book. The historical subject matter appealed to me and I knew Kristin Hannah could write a good story. But I was a little apprehensive that a story set during the Vietnam War years might be as crushing as I found The Four Winds made the Great Depression. This turns out not to be the case.

Frankie, the protagonist of this book, isn't without her faults and challenges. She goes through some very dark times. But her story contains enough spirit, comradery and joy to help the reader power through the challenging sections. And it contains enough grit and realism to keep everything grounded. This book is a powerful statement about the Viet Nam War, the women and men that served there and the horrible way they were treated when they returned. Recommended.

Disclosure: Thank you to Netgalley and St. Martin's Press for providing a free copy of this book for review.

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Friday, October 6, 2023

read: Being Henry: The Fonz . . . and Beyond by Henry Winkler ★★★★

Being Henry: The Fonz . . . and BeyondBeing Henry: The Fonz . . . and Beyond by Henry Winkler
My rating: ★★★★
I remember Henry Winkler as Fonzie. I remember Henry as a competent actor trying to grow beyond Fonzie, with mixed success. I've recently learned more about Henry as he's discussed his dyslexia and promoted his books and was finally recognized for his acting chops in Barry. Now with this book, I feel like I not only know about Henry. But I kind of know him in a more personal way.

This autobiography comes across as very personal. Henry might leave a few things out. Probably because he's so nice and doesn't want to hurt any feelings. But he still lets us get very close and see some of his pain and struggles over the years. We also see his great support network of colleagues and family (other than his parents). And we see him grow and succeed and find the joy in life. His story is worth reading.

I knocked off a star for a bit of repetitiveness and a tendency to keep things a bit briefer than I wanted. Henry has hobnobbed with some of the biggest names in Hollywood. I don't expect him to get down and dirty about them. But I would have liked him to expand on more of those stories.

Disclosure: Thank you to Netgalley and Celadon Books for providing a free copy of this book for review.

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Thursday, October 5, 2023

read: System Collapse by Martha Wells ★★★★

System Collapse (The Murderbot Diaries, #7)System Collapse by Martha Wells
★★★★

I've been consuming these as fast as they come out. But it's not fast enough. A full three years of my real time has transpired since I read Network Effect. And much has happened in those years. On the other hand, almost no time has transpired for Murderbot, since this story picks up immediately after the events of the previous novel. And Murderbot is not in a good place. Why? The current story will reveal this. But since I didn't reread the previous story before jumping into this one, my mind was spinning trying to recall the previous events and make the current events make sense.

Then I gave up and simply enjoyed the ride. The story unfolds at the usual fast pace and is still filled with quick humor and Murderbot's sweet, innocent, logical feelings for its human clients. It's fun to tag along as it evaluates and compensates for the various tactical situations, always trying for the least destructive outcome.

I wound up enjoying this story as much as the earlier ones. I have a feeling the story in the next novel in the series might again be closely tied to this one. I will definitely carve out the time to read and enjoy all three sequentially.

Disclosure: Thank you to Netgalley and Tordotcom for providing a free copy of this book for review.

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