Friday, November 30, 2012

Fall Books I've read

The Centurion's Wife (Acts of Faith, #1)Daughter of the SunArtemis Fowl (Artemis Fowl, #1)Let Love Find You (Reid Family #4)King of Sword and Sky (Tairen Soul, #3)The Hawk (Highland Guard, #2)The Chief (Highland Guard, #1)The Wolf GiftThe Ranger (Highland Guard, #3)The HobbitA Duke's Temptation (The Bridal Pleasures #1)The Mark of Athena (Heroes of Olympus, #3)

Here are all the books that I have read this fall. I tried to get into a few new series books as you can see but some of them were great while others fell short. I revisited a classic that was just as good the 2nd time around. I will highlight my favorites and least favorites for you.

Favorites for fall 2012
Loved the Highland Guard Series, typical highland romance novels but they were well written and very entertaining.
The Hobbit was GREAT, i reread this book mainly because the movie is coming out soon and I wanted to see how well Peter Jackson does this time around with the movie. Still love this book as much as I did the first time I read it in high school.
The Wolf Gift was good, I LOVED Anne Rice's Vampire Chronicles and was very sad when she went into writing only religious novels...yes i read those too but they weren't as good as the vamps. This was actually a pleasant surprise. Loved the story and characters, hope there is more to come from her.
King of sword and sky was very good, i happened to just grab this on a whim from the library and didn't realize it was the 3rd book in the series. Haven't gotten to read the rest, but this one was great.
The Mark of Athena was great, I am a huge fan of the Percy Jackson series and this one did not disappoint!

OK Books
Centurions Wife was OK, being raised Catholic it was a cool perspective but very slow. Sorta just dragged on and on.
Daughter of the Sun was slow, interesting but slow. Felt to me like every time it gained a little momentum it stopped and went back to 3 page descriptions of the landscape...very annoying.
The other romance novels I read were good, but very typical love stories, they fall in love, they fight or find out a dark secret that has them questioning the others true intentions and in the end they get married and live happily ever after...

Didn't Like at all

Artemis Fowl just couldn't get into it. Now I can admit with the younger generation stories I have high expectations. I love Harry Potter series, Percy Jackson, and few famous others so I was hoping to find a great new one to read to my daughter...this was not it.

Tuesday, September 11, 2012

Need Some Suggestions

I have been on a good book drought...I have started a few, and even finished some mediocre books. Nothing is really holding my interest these days, I am looking for a great fiction/fantasy adventure or epic saga of sorts. Anyone have any great books they've read recently?

Tuesday, August 14, 2012

Books I've read this summer

The Next Always (Inn BoonsBoro, #1)The Last Boyfriend (Inn BoonsBoro, #2)Graceling (Graceling Realm, #1)The Name of the Wind (The Kingkiller Chronicle, #1)The Forgotten GardenDelighted

So here are the books I have been reading this summer. Most were really good, others were just ok, but all in all the library has been keeping me entertained these last few weeks. Some stand out books for me were Graceling and the Name of the Wind. Both wonderful stories that kept me on the edge of my seat and the pages turning. The Forgotten Garden was a good story, but was pretty slow, found myself very uninterested about half way through the book. The Nora Roberts series I have been late to start with, but she never fails to keep me entertained, I love all her books. And last but not least was Delighted which I picked on a whim at the library, was good...not too much to it, typical short stories of romance. More to come hope everyone is having a great summer. Keep reading :0 )

Tuesday, July 10, 2012

Naamah's Curse by Jacqueline Carey




Beginning a few short months after the events of Naamah’s KissNaamah’s Curse opens on a determined Moirin mac Fainche. To bring the fallen warrior-magpie back from the dead, using Moirin’s healing gift as a child of the Maghuin Donn, Master Lo Feng gave up his life in exchange for Bao’s. And now Bao carries half of Moirin’s diadh-anam, the divine spark of her soul that every Maghuin Donn holds within, Bao’s fate inextricably tied to Moirin’s forever more. Confused and conflicted, Bao fights his his soul’s connection to Moirin’s – not because he does not love Moirin, but because he was deprived of the choice to live or die, and he needs to know that the connection that both he and Moirin feel for each other is more than just the burning of the diadh-anam they share. Understanding Bao’s need for space and time, Moirin let her stubborn peasant warrior leave her behind…but after months and the increasingly insistent call of her diadh-anam, she decides that she’s done waiting around and sets out to find her other half, whether he’s ready for her or not. Moirin’s journey takes her across Ch’in and beyond its great wall, to the Tatar tribes and even further, always using herdiadh-anam to guide her. After a long, cold winter, Moirin finally finds Bao, and their reunion is sweet, if ever so brief. In his search for his place in the Tatar world, Bao has found himself under the wing of the Great Khan – married off to the Khan’s youngest daughter. And the Great Khan will not give up his only son without a fight.
Through treachery and magic, the Great Khan secretly has Moirin taken away by Vralians – puritan-esque followers of Yeshua Ben Yosef, the One True God, and she is imprisoned in shackles that cut her off from her ability to use her Maghuin Donn magic, and from sensing Bao’s soul-spark – and vice versa. Separated once again, Moirin goes through the most painful, trying ordeal she has ever faced in her young life. From the drab gray of the Vralian cities to the mountains of Bhaktipur and Bhodistan, Moirin s placed on the path of her destiny, as a child of the Maghuin Donn and Naamah’s chosen.
As with all of Jacqueline Carey’s work, Naamah’s Curse is exquisite. Beautifully written and with plotting and worldbuilding on an epic scale, Naamah’s Curse is another winning addition to Carey’s prestigious body of fantasy work. In this second novel, Moirin’s travels take her beyond Alba and Terre D’Ange, beyond the realms of this alternate western Europe to the North East, with Vralia (the equivalent of Russia) and into Asia Major – Ch’in, the Tatar Territories, and the southern region of Bhaktipur & Bhodistan (modeled after China, Mongolia and India, respectively). Anyone that has read one of the prior books in either the Naamah or Kushiel series is familiar with Ms. Carey’s fantasy worldbuilding – taking our own very familiar world and history, but retelling and reinventing these locales with different gods, religions, politics, and societies. In this newest book, the already familiar story of Elua and his companions and Yeshua Ben Yusef are examined from a different perspective (that of the stringent Vralians – very different from the more libertine D’Angelines). In addition, new gods and pantheons are examined with the inclusion of the Tatars and Bhaktipur people (on a side note, I found it very interesting that while Ms. Carey changes the names for her D’Angeline/Judeo-hristian gods and faiths, she keeps the same names for the Bhodistan – that is Hindu – gods,i.e. Kali, Ganesha, Hanuman, etc). And, as expected, these new territories and cultures of people are varied and enthralling. One of the things I love the most about these books is the sweeping epic quality of them – I love how Moirin – like Phedre and Imriel before her – has a destiny that takes her far beyond her wildest imaginings…and even more impressive than that, I love that Moirin fears, resists, and is uncertain about her fate. As the saying goes, the gods use their chosen hard, and such is the case with Moirin here in Naamah’s Curse.
This second novel gives a more detailed look at Moirin and Bao as they grow as characters. Neither are what you’d call flawless – Bao certainly complicates matters with his hubris, and Moirin is all too aware of her own self-important destiny. And yet…both are characters that grow through their own subtle vanity, and have their hearts in the right place. Bao realizes and pays the consequences of his marriage (on that note, I loved that his poor, slighted wife is humanized and given a part in the story beyond the jealous lover role), while Moirin begins to see that her embrace of Naamah’s arts are not so freely embraced elsewhere. I also liked that though Moirin follows her grand destiny, she feels the strain of expectations and fears failure (read: Mary Sue, she ain’t). Although there is a sense of safety and predictability in that Moirin will always find a way out of whatever tough situation in which she is ensnared, there are high stakes and consequences for everything – and I like seeing that, especially in a middle book in a series. There are resolutions to plot threads, but other tantalizing bits left for the next book – Rafael de Mereliot, for example, comes to mind.
On a thematic level, all throughout Naamah’s Curse, there is this intriguing examination of what it means to be “god chosen” – being one of Naamah’s own, blessed with the gift of desire can also seem like a (titled) curse, and Moirin’s faith is tested harshly. And these are just the broad strokes of themes in the book – there’s also a question of caste systems, of warring faiths, of fanaticism, of coexisting gods and beliefs. Suffice to say, Naamah’s Curseis more than just a book filled with adventures, quests, and magic – it is also a thought-provoking look at the way worlds and cultures intersect.
As a fan of Jacqueline Carey’s, I found myself immersed in this beauitufl, intelligent novel. As a fan of fantasy literature, I devoured this marvel of world building and epic adventure. As a fan of literature and great stories in their entirety, I was swept away once again to a world that not only enchants, but confronts readers to think and comprehend. I lovedNaamah’s Curse from beginning to end, and I cannot wait for the final installment to this winsome trilogy.

Friday, June 29, 2012

Naamah's Kiss By Jacqueline Carey


Once there were great magicians born to the Maghuin Dhonn, the folk of the Brown Bear, the oldest tribe in Alba. But generations ago, the greatest of them all broke a sacred oath sworn in the name of all his people. Now, only small gifts remain to them. Through her lineage, Moirin possesses such gifts-the ability to summon the twilight and conceal herself, and the skill to coax plants to grow.Moirin has a secret, too. From childhood onward, she senses the presence of unfamiliar gods in her life: the bright lady and the man with a seedling cupped in his palm. Raised in the wilderness by her reclusive mother, it isn't until she comes of age that Moirin learns how illustrious, if mixed, her heritage is. The great-granddaughter of Alais the Wise, child of the Maghuin Donn, and a cousin of the Cruarch of Alba, Moirin learns her father was a D'Angeline priest dedicated to serving Naamah, goddess of desire.After Moirin undergoes the rites of adulthood, she finds divine acceptance...on the condition that she fulfill an unknown destiny that lies somewhere beyond the ocean. Or perhaps oceans. Beyond Terre d'Ange where she finds her father, in the far reaches of distant Ch'in, Moirin's skills are a true gift when facing the vengeful plans of an ambitious mage, a noble warrior princess desperate to save her father's throne, and the spirit of a celestial dragon.

Thursday, June 21, 2012

Deadlocked by Charlene Harris

Deadlocked (Sookie Stackhouse, #12)

I have been a huge fan of the Sookie Stackhouse series, even before they started with the show. As much as I love them, it has really pained me to see how far they have fallen these last two books. This one is much better than the last one, but not by much. Deadlocked starts with Claude and Dermot are still living in Sookie's house and the gate to Faiery is still closed to all those who are in the human world. Sookie is still with Eric but that is going no where now that he has been promised to the Queen of Oklahoma by his maker before his death. Sam is still dating Janna Lynn the crazy were enforcer who turns out to be much crazier than we all thought. Sookie goes to Eric's house because the King Felipe De Castro is in town and a were woman temps Eric to feed from her, then ends up dead on his front lawn. Too much of the book is spent on dealing with this incident, and sorta sent the book into this weird place. I really feel like there were too many plots that just didn't fit together.

Sookie also has a fairy treasure that was left to her by her grandmother that will grant any one wish that is given with love. Oh course Eric wants her to rid him of this engagement but in the end she uses it to save Sam which pisses off Eric and ultimately I assume will end the courtship. I normally loved Eric but I feel like it's time for that to end because it hasn't been going anywhere. Quinn comes back for a hot minute (via Phone) and let's her know that he is going to be a father, but his were-tiger girlfriend basically used him for a pure blood baby. She wants nothing to do with him now that she got it...poor Quinn all his baggage is now gone so maybe he and Sookie can finally get together...again. Turns out Sookie was right about Claude and he was plotting against her to get back home, her Great Grandfather saves them all and lets Dermot back into Faery. The Fairy part of the books is finally done, but I am truly hoping that Miss Harris takes her time with the last 2 novels of the series so that they can go back to being great, rather then just being done.

The Handmaid's Tale by Margaret Atwood

The Handmaid's Tale

Let me start off by saying that I was really excited to read this book, I had seen it on so many favorite list, that I was looking forward to a great read. Man, what a let down. The story is about a world that has been taken over by religion and woman are no longer valued for anything other than running the home and being child bearers in a time when the fertility rate is very low. The women are no longer allowed to read and they are separated by rank and dressed in certain colors so that everyone around them knows what they are...yes what not who. I found this book to be very confusing, and really rather boring. Offred (the Handmaid) is having flash backs of her old life while trying to cope with the new one. Once a month she had sex with the commander while his wife sits behind her and they pray for a baby...awkward!

I had a hard time finishing this book because it jumped around so much and the message was just so far out that I really didn't want to read anymore. I did in fact finish it with a huge sigh of relief that it was over. Not the greatest book I ever read, but certainly not the worst.

Wednesday, June 20, 2012

The Thirteenth Tale by Diane Setterfield



Margaret Lea is a biographer who works in her father's antique book shop gets a mysterious letter from a very famous author Vida Winter who is sick and wants to tell her story. Margaret is skeptical because what is best know of Vida Winter is that during interviews she always lies about her past and very little is known of her other than she is a fabulous writer. While she is deciding if she will infact travel to Ms. Winter's home in the country Margaret begins to read her father’s rare copy of Miss Winter’s Thirteen Tales of Change and Desperation. She is spellbound by the stories and confused when she realizes the book only contains twelve stories. Where is the thirteenth tale? Intrigued, Margaret agrees to meet Miss Winter and act as her biographer.


Once she is in the realm of Ms. Winter she begins not only to discover the truth of Vida but a very dark story that she never could have imagined. This book was so well written and had me guessing all the way to the end. 

Tuesday, June 19, 2012

Mocking Jay By Suzanne Collins


I actually finished this book a while back, but was so disappointed with the ending of the series that I have really held off writing this review. This book started right where Catching Fire left off, with Katnis being taken from the games and all drugged up in the recovery room. She has been badly hurt and all she can think of doing is get to Peeta and save him...even if it means taking his life herself. As you read on we come to find that the Capitol has Peeta and District 13 is where Katnis has been taken. She has learned that her home in District 12 has been leveled and all that she has ever known is gone. 

She becomes the reluctant stokes woman for the rebellion and finds out more than she ever knew about what has been happening all these years with the District that was supposed to be gone. All the while Peeta is on TV urging her to give up the fight, and stop all the madness. I won't go into too much detail, but lets just say I would rather not waste my time going into it. I was very very irritated how so much time was spent on things that just seemed to not be that important and at the very end just sorta threw it all together to tie it all up. Not very well done, I personally feel that it was a huge let down to what was once a great story. Huge let down.

Thursday, June 14, 2012

Catching Fire



The 2nd book in the Hunger Games series, I started reading this one the day that I finished the first, just could help myself. This one starts 6 months or so after Katnis and Peeta have won the Hunger Games and are back home in District 12. Nothing is as it was before the games except the fact that the district is better fed and in better spirits now that they have 2 champions. Gale is more distant, now that he is working in the mines with only one day off and Peeta is as well after the games, while Katnis is still trying to sort it all out and deal with all the issues that she has from surviving the games. On top of that the Victory tour is drawing near and she receives a visit from the President of the Capitol telling her that he isn't happy with her for the stunt with the berries and that during the tour she had better convince him that she and Peeta are in fact very in love. So starts the drama...

The victory tour starts and the two discover that much is going on in the other districts that they never knew. The defiance that they showed in the games has fueled the fire of the districts and has started a rebellion that the capitol is trying very hard to cover up. While on tour Peeta and Katnis try and put aside the hurt feeling that came out of the charade and support one another because something that they never expected is about to throw their whole world upside down.

This year's Hunger Games is the Quarter Quell in which they have decided instead of choosing tributes the usual way they will be having past champions compete in the games which of course means that Katnis being the only female winner from District 12 will indeed be returning to the arena. Peeta volunteers to take Haymitch's place so that he can protect Katnis in the arena. For their 2nd Hunger Games Katnis and Peeta are much better prepared and they meet the other players who are equally ready for this. The trials that they face are much crazier then the first time around and the competitors all have their own agenda planned. Without ruining the end, this book kept me on the edge of my seat and I was so surprised at the end, I had to read the last chapter again. If you loved the first book, this one is great as well. Big thumbs up from me :)

Tuesday, May 22, 2012

The Hunger Games By Suzanne Collins


So I have been a busy little reader these last few weeks and decided that since I held out in seeing the movie until I read the book best to review it as well. WOW! What a great story is all I have to say. It starts with 16 year old Katniss Everdeen and her friend Gale in the woods hunting on the day of the reaping which is where the capitol chooses at random the name of a boy and a girl that are between the ages of 12-18 for a fight to the death in the arena of the Hunger Games. Katniss' sister is chosen and Katniss volunteers to take her place for the tribute of district 12. The boy is named Peeta who unknowingly will change the very nature of the games. They then travel to the capitol and are put on display for the entire county to see as they prep for the fight of there life. As they go into the arena they form a bond that survives all sorts of bumps in the road, the story is wonderful and keeps you on the edge of your chair.

I loved every minute of this book and couldn't put it down. It only took me a day to read it, and I can't get over what a wonderful writer Suzanne is, to paint these vivid pictures of what all the characters are going through. One of my new favorite books :)

A Dance with Dragons


After reading A Feast For Crows I was really excited to get into this one. I had missed all my favorite characters Jon, Dany, and my favorite Tyrion. It picks up at the begining of where AFFC started only it's these guys stories so you have to sort of backtrack and remember that the stuff that happened at the end of the last book hasn't happened at the begining of this one. It's was like seeing my old friends that I missed so much. This story goes from a bit dull at the begging to EPIC by the end. I like how it goes right into what was happening from AFFC and tells the other characters stories. How Tyrion has escaped and is trying to get away from Westeros, who he encounters and how they might and do play into the story. We follow Dany through  being a good queen to her people and trying to find her way back to the kingdom that she rightfully deserves. Jon is still at the wall dealing with the aftermath of the wildling wars and trying to keep it all together while facing major challenges of his own that are coming from is old home and life. Reek is another character that has been to hell and back, that has a significant roll to play out in this story. Great to see that Cersi and Jamie have a quick cameo in this book to keep you going with what is happening to them, and one of my favorites Arya has a journey of her own that is changing the very person that she is. I loved this book and can't wait for the next one to come out and put more of the puzzle together. I must find out what has happend to Jon, Dany and all the rest of my beloved characters. Excellent read!

Friday, April 6, 2012

A Feast for Crows


I have to say that I have truly enjoyed the last 3 books of the series and was really looking forward to reading book four to see how my favorite characters come out from the last book. Sad for me and many other readers to discover that this book was not going to answer many of my burning questions. I personally was very disappointed to have to read so many chapters about Cersi and all her crazy that went along with it. The Sam chapters were OK, but during the entire time that i was reading this book, I found myself only really enjoying the Brianne and Jamie chapters...go figure. It took me much longer to read, and I have to say that I was pretty relieved when it was finally finished. Not to say that there weren't parts that I enjoyed, I personally just didn't think it was a good as the other 3.

I have already started reading A Dance with Dragons and hold high hope that it will be much more entertaining than this one. I still love the series and GRRM, I guess everything can't be totally awesome all the time.

Tuesday, March 6, 2012

A Storm of Swords by George R.R. Martin


Book 3 in the Fire and Ice series written by George R.R. Martin. What an awesomely epic book, literally could NOT put it down. This is one of my favorites in the series. The war is at a stand still to some degree all sides have taken huge losses and most are at the point of trying to find some peace while others are out for blood. I don't want to get into too much detail over this one, being that so much changes in this book it's really hard to give a brief summary. We meet a few new characters and loose some of our favorites to the the chaos of the war. The Starks suffer a devastating blow as does house Lannister, and the Tully's. It is an epic tale that will leave you wondering if that all truly just happened. I loved reading this and am already half way through book 4.

Wednesday, January 11, 2012

Clash of Kings By George R.R. Martin


Rather interesting finding out what has become of some of our favorite characters from Game of Thrones. It begins to explain how the 7 Kingdoms are now divided and everyone is claiming to be King of this part of the realm or that. Robb is still at River Run with his Tully Family, while Dany is trying to find a place for what is left of her people in the bleakness of the wastelands. Theon is still a jerk but is reminded how unimportant he is by returning to his fathers land in Pyke and getting a less than warm welcome. Arya is traveling the Kings road disguised as an orphan boy called Arry. Poor Sansa has learned that her love for Joffery means nothing to the Boy King who has revealed himself to be the cruel boy we always knew he was. She is still at Kings Landing along with Tyrion, Cersi, and Joffery. Nothing is going as planned for the "Queen Regent" Cersi who's brother/lover Jamie has been captured by the Starks and being held captive at River Run. She has had Joffery appoint Tywin Lannister (her father) Hand of the king and summoned him to court. He in turn is fighting a war and has sent Tyrion (The Imp) in his place, which has really upset the Queen. Tyrion is up to his usual ways which keeps the reader interested in finding out just what he really has in store for his family.

As the story continues it goes into the characters of King Roberts brothers (Stannis and Renly) who both believe that they are the true heirs due to the fact that Joffery is Jamie's bastard. Stannis has rather reluctantly joined forces with a high priestess of a new fire religion. She has some evil up her sleeve for the beloved and seemingly stronger backed brother Renly. Catelyn Stark is sent away by Robb who is now King of the North as a peace envoy to Renly.While back at Kings Landing Tyrion is single handily undermining they entire system that is in place. Lots of spy's and deceit going on between brother and sister. The battles begin and The Kings forces don't seem to be holding up due to the fact that the towns people are near staving. Rioting and treason are huge factors to the unpopularity of the monarchy. Jon Snow has ventured beyond the wall with 200 other brothers in black in search of his Uncle Benjen who most fear has been killed. So much more happens but I don't want to give away all the plots. This book kept me glued to it, I love how each character is on their own quest which we know at some point will all come together when the wildlings attack. Such an epic adventure, absolutely love it! Great read and I have already started on book 3...so excited to see what happens!

Friday, January 6, 2012

New Sookie Stack House book coming in May 2012

Deadlocked
SO EXCITED!!! I absolutely love the series by Charlene Harris...I will admit that I was disappointed by the last book she published, but as always hold out hope that this one will be better! Looking forward to reading it, might even revisit the series! YAY for 2012, a good year so far :)