52. Invasion (pb), by Jon S. Lewis
51. Callahan's Legacy (ua), by Spider Robinson
Earlier in 2013:
50. Severe Clear (ua), Stuart Woods
49. The Third Kingdom (ua), by Terry Goodkind
48. Gotham Central: In the Line of Duty HC (gn), by Ed Brubaker, Greg Rucka, and Michael Lark
47. Mockingjay (ua), by Suzanne Collins
46. The Shambling Guide to New York City (pb), by Mur Lafferty
45. The Hound of the Baskervilles (ua), by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle
44. Guild of the Cowry Catchers: Book 4 (ua), by Abigail Hilton
43. The Big Cat Nap (ua), by Rita Mae Brown and Sneaky Pie Brown
42. Free (ua), by Chris Anderson
41. Iron Man: Legacy of Doom (gn), by David Michelinie,
40. The She-Hulk Diaries (pb), by Marta Acosta
39. Elizabeth the First Wife (Nook), by Lian Dolan
38. The Maze (nook), by Jason Brannon
37. The President's Vampire (ua), by Christopher Farnsworth
36. The Pope Who Quit (pb), by Jon M Sweeney
35. Memoirs of Sherlock Homes (ua), by Arthur Conan Doyle
34. More or Less (ua), by Jeff Shinaberger
33. Blood & Wine: Readings for Lent and Easter (pb), by various
32. The Children of Hurin (ua), by J.R.R. Tolkien
31. Atlantyx, (pb), by Chase Dalton
30. Callahan's Secret (ua), by Spider Robinson
29. Take Four (ua), by Karen Kingsbury
28. Skull-Kickers, Treasure Trove volume 1, by Jim Zub and various artists
27. The Dalek Generation (pb), by Nicholas Briggs
26. The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes (ua), by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle
25. The Areas of My Expertise (pb), by John Hodgman
24. The Skin Map (ua), by Stephen Lawhead
23. Catching Fire (ua), by Suzanne Collins
22. Quitter (ua) , by Jon Acuff.
21. The Bone Bed (ua), by Patricia Cornwell.
20. Stop Asking Jesus Into Your Heart (hc), by J.D. Greear
19. Left Behind: The Kids #28 (pb), by Jerry B. Jenkins, Tim LaHaye, & Chris Fabry
18. Left Behind: The Kids #27 (pb), by Jerry B. Jenkins, Tim LaHaye, & Chris Fabry
17. Left Behind: The Kids #26 (pb), by Jerry B. Jenkins, Tim LaHaye, & Chris Fabry
16. Time Travelers Strictly Cash (aa), by Spider Robinson
15. The Devil's Company (ua), by David Liss
14. Deadly Straits (ua), by R.E. McDermott
13. Doctor Who: Paradise Towers (ua), by Stephen Wyatt
12. DC Universe Secret Origins (gn), by various writers and artists
11. The Gods of Mars (ua), by Edgar Rice Burroughs
10. Craving Grace (hc), by Lisa Velthouse
9. The Sign of Four (ua), by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle
8. DC Dead (ua), by Stuart Woods
7. A Study in Scarlet (ua), by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle
6. The Hunger Games (ua), by Suzanne Collins
5. Take Three (ua), by Karen Kingsbury
4. Mary Through The Centuries (hc), by Jaroslav Pelikan
3. Roil (ua), by Trent Jamieson
2. The Devil You Know (ua), by Mike Carey
1. Ender's Shadow Ultimate Collection (gn), by Mike Carey
Thursday, October 31, 2013
Tuesday, October 29, 2013
Teaser Tuesday
Teaser Tuesdays is a weekly bookish meme, hosted by MizB of Should Be Reading. Anyone can
play along!
Just do the following:
BE CAREFUL NOT TO INCLUDE SPOILERS! (make sure that what you share doesn’t give too much away! You don’t want to ruin the book for others!)
From page 16 & 17 of the paperback version of I Shouldn't Be Telling You This, by Kate White. "So how do you make certain you're not thinking all wrong about your destiny? You need to always challenge your thinking, especially anything you're especially adamant about."
play along!
Just do the following:
Grab your current read.
Open to a random page.
Share two (2) “teaser” sentences from somewhere on that page.
BE CAREFUL NOT TO INCLUDE SPOILERS! (make sure that what you share doesn’t give too much away! You don’t want to ruin the book for others!)
From page 16 & 17 of the paperback version of I Shouldn't Be Telling You This, by Kate White. "So how do you make certain you're not thinking all wrong about your destiny? You need to always challenge your thinking, especially anything you're especially adamant about."
Thursday, October 24, 2013
Walking Dead, 61-72
The Walking Dead, issues 61-72, by Robert Kirkman & Charlie Adlard.
The crew is heading to Washington, but it turns out not for
the reason we think. Eugene is not the high-powered scientist he had earlier
portrayed himself as. The plot point about changes in zombie behavior that
intrigued me in the prior batch of episodes is dropped here, but I do hope it
gets picked up at a later point.
The surviviors run across a group of hunters, who are also cannibals,
and they kidnap Dale. Between having a leg severed and being bitten by a roamer, he
dies and Andrea is totally wrecked. They take refuge for a few issues in a
church, and we find a nuanced but not sympathetic character in Father Gabriel
Jones. There is one memorable conversation about faith before and after the
zombie apocalypse.
They make it to a safe community, and things look good. Maybe things look too
good? Douglas, The leader of the group
is not a self-styled politician a la The Governor, but an actual former elected
official, a House member from Ohio. So far we have not seen any of the
craziness in Douglas or this community, and I assume that Robert Kirkman is not
going to give us a carbon copy of Woodbury. But I have learned from priorissues of the Walking Dead is that as soon as things look like they are going
well, they will turn very wrong.
Along the way, Carl kills a child (again), because that
child had killed another child. Rick is still a bit out of his mind, talking on
the phone in issue 61, and his paranoia is definitely showing in issues 71
& 72. I am predicting that Rick and the group self-sabotages their own good
thing, but only time will tell.
Source: public library.
Monday, October 21, 2013
Adapting Holmes: Baker Street, issues 6-10
Baker Street: Children of the Night,
consisting of issues 6-10, written and drawn by Guy Davis. Caliber Press, 1991-1992
Sharon Ford is a former police officer, working unofficially as a consulting detective. She and her girlfriend Sam Neville advertised for a housekeeper, and newly-arrived American med-school student Susan Pendergrass took the job in exchange for rent.
Sue was immediately thrust into the British punk scene, where Sharon (a.k.a. Harlequin) was a major force. As I mentioned when I reviewed the first 5-issue arc, this series takes place in a neo-Victorian, paleo-steampunk of the British punk scene, in a world where Victorian fashion and ethics still maintain.
Sharon Ford is a former police officer, working unofficially as a consulting detective. She and her girlfriend Sam Neville advertised for a housekeeper, and newly-arrived American med-school student Susan Pendergrass took the job in exchange for rent.
Sue was immediately thrust into the British punk scene, where Sharon (a.k.a. Harlequin) was a major force. As I mentioned when I reviewed the first 5-issue arc, this series takes place in a neo-Victorian, paleo-steampunk of the British punk scene, in a world where Victorian fashion and ethics still maintain.
This is the obligitory "Jack the Ripper" arc, totally envisioned by Davis, without participation from co-creator Gary Reed. The punk scene has been torn apart by the horrific murders committed on their turf. The police are only mildly interested in the crimes, as along as they stay among the punk scene.
But Sharon just has to investigate, and everything changes. We have met the killer, and the revelation of the Ripper's identity in issue 8 is a shock, although the clues were seeded in prior issues. And it has ramifications in the issues that follow.
This series was nominated for a 1989 Harvey Award for "Best new series," and rightly so. And twenty years later, the is no sense in which the story is "dated," expect for the fact that is black-and-white.
I was surprised to see the $2.50 cover price, which was very high for the time. Standard full-length issues of DC & Marvel books were selling for
only $1.00 An issue of Fantastic Four (#358) sold
during this time for $2.50, but it was a triple-sized issue. To be fair ro Baker Street, these issues averaged an above-standard 30 pages of story.But Sharon just has to investigate, and everything changes. We have met the killer, and the revelation of the Ripper's identity in issue 8 is a shock, although the clues were seeded in prior issues. And it has ramifications in the issues that follow.
This series was nominated for a 1989 Harvey Award for "Best new series," and rightly so. And twenty years later, the is no sense in which the story is "dated," expect for the fact that is black-and-white.
Source: My own collection. I am almost certain that I bought these as they came
out, and I would guess it was from Dave’s
Comics, in Richmond, Virginia.
Friday, October 18, 2013
Book #52. Invasion
High school student Colt McAllister’s life radically changes when his parents are killed by a drunk driver. He finds information about a major story his journalist mother was working on, an expose on the mind control program run by the mega-large Trident Industries. An informant tells Colt that his parents were actually murdered, and then Colt becomes a target, as well.
In a world where aliens have appeared, and the gateways between worlds are protected by a secretive government agency called CHAOS, anything is possible.
Colt moves in with his grandfather in Arizona, far away from the San Diego beaches he loves. Finding new friends and allies, and some startling secrets about his grandfather's past actions as a CHAOS agent in World War II, Colt finds himself in a position to save the world.
There are two positive distinctives about this novel. The relationsips between Colt and his buddy Oz, their friend Danielle, and the cute girl that Colt likes (Lily) are all well-drawn. Lewis does a good job giving them all beleivable dialogue and motivations, which are critical in a novel with an out-of-this-world premise and over-the-top action.
Lewis also brings in a pulp-era feel, which is fun. The CHAOS agency was created in the early 1940s, and many of the flashbacks (some of the current adventures) involves jet packs and similarly old-fashioned technology.
This particular volume has an ending, but clearly leads into the next volume, which I have put on my to-read list.
Tuesday, October 15, 2013
Teaser Tuesday
Teaser Tuesdays is a weekly bookish meme, hosted by MizB of Should Be Reading. Anyone can
play along!
Just do the following:
BE CAREFUL NOT TO INCLUDE SPOILERS! (make sure that what you share doesn’t give too much away! You don’t want to ruin the book for others!)
From Chapter 6 of Inferno, by Dan Bown: "Langdon felt firm hands lifting him onw, urging him from his delierium, helping him out of the taxi. The pavement felt cold beneath his bare feet."
I know I am a few months late to getting around to this one, but ... what can I say?
play along!
Just do the following:
Grab your current read.
Open to a random page.
Share two (2) “teaser” sentences from somewhere on that page.
BE CAREFUL NOT TO INCLUDE SPOILERS! (make sure that what you share doesn’t give too much away! You don’t want to ruin the book for others!)
From Chapter 6 of Inferno, by Dan Bown: "Langdon felt firm hands lifting him onw, urging him from his delierium, helping him out of the taxi. The pavement felt cold beneath his bare feet."
I know I am a few months late to getting around to this one, but ... what can I say?
Sunday, October 13, 2013
Book #51. Callahan's Legacy
reCallahan's Legacy, by Spider Robinson.
I have read the prior volumes in Robinson's Callahan series. This series started out as a collection of short stories, and as each volume has passed, each book more closely resembles a trasitinal novel that the one before. From an authorial perspective, this is an accomplishment worth noting.
This book had a familiar feel to it from some of the prior books i the series. The crew at the bar has to save the world from its coming destruction through the power of loving friendship. And the near-telepathic connection that arises from the power of loving friendship. And they tell stories along the way to keep each other calm, each usually ending in horrible puns.
Oh. And a baby is born.
There is a nice and pleasant aspect to the familiarity here, characters and settings that are warm and welcoming. But I would prefer the plots to not be som familiar, and for the science fiction aspects to be more prominent that they sometimes are.
I have read the prior volumes in Robinson's Callahan series. This series started out as a collection of short stories, and as each volume has passed, each book more closely resembles a trasitinal novel that the one before. From an authorial perspective, this is an accomplishment worth noting.
This book had a familiar feel to it from some of the prior books i the series. The crew at the bar has to save the world from its coming destruction through the power of loving friendship. And the near-telepathic connection that arises from the power of loving friendship. And they tell stories along the way to keep each other calm, each usually ending in horrible puns.
Oh. And a baby is born.
There is a nice and pleasant aspect to the familiarity here, characters and settings that are warm and welcoming. But I would prefer the plots to not be som familiar, and for the science fiction aspects to be more prominent that they sometimes are.
Friday, October 11, 2013
Between Audiobooks (3)
I have written before of my habit of listening to a few episodes of PodCastle or Escape Pod in between audiobooks -- short story palate cleansers between novels. I am still waaaay behind (9 months?) on these podcasts), so I listened to a bunch of Escape Pods last week, in between Severe Clear and Callahan's Legacy. I listened to these episodes:
373: Chandra's Game, by Samantha Henderson. The sad life of an asteroid farmer.
374: Oubliette, by J Kelley Anderson. Trying to kill an alien that just won't die.
375. Marley & Cratchit, by David Steffen. The REAL story behind what we know from the Dickens classic.
376. Shutdown, by Corry L. Lee . To be a soldier or a ballerina -- that is the question.
373: Chandra's Game, by Samantha Henderson. The sad life of an asteroid farmer.
374: Oubliette, by J Kelley Anderson. Trying to kill an alien that just won't die.
375. Marley & Cratchit, by David Steffen. The REAL story behind what we know from the Dickens classic.
376. Shutdown, by Corry L. Lee . To be a soldier or a ballerina -- that is the question.
377. Real Artists, by Ken Liu. Digital movie-making of the most extreme sort.
Tuesday, October 8, 2013
Teaser Tuesday
Teaser Tuesdays is a weekly bookish meme, hosted by MizB of Should Be Reading. Anyone can
play along!
Just do the following:
BE CAREFUL NOT TO INCLUDE SPOILERS! (make sure that what you share doesn’t give too much away! You don’t want to ruin the book for others!)
From Chapter 1 of Callahan's Legacy, by Spider Robinson: "There are very few things a very pregnant woman will wake up for, but peeing is definitely one of them. Getting Zoe to a sitting position on the side of the bed was probably less difficult that portaging a piano in rough country. The smell of coffee may have helped."
play along!
Just do the following:
Grab your current read.
Open to a random page.
Share two (2) “teaser” sentences from somewhere on that page.
BE CAREFUL NOT TO INCLUDE SPOILERS! (make sure that what you share doesn’t give too much away! You don’t want to ruin the book for others!)
From Chapter 1 of Callahan's Legacy, by Spider Robinson: "There are very few things a very pregnant woman will wake up for, but peeing is definitely one of them. Getting Zoe to a sitting position on the side of the bed was probably less difficult that portaging a piano in rough country. The smell of coffee may have helped."
Saturday, October 5, 2013
Podcasting updates!
We have interviewed some fascinating authors the last few weeks for the Book Guys -- Thomas Deja (The Shadow Legion: New Roads to Hell) and Bobbie Oliver (The Tao of Comedy). These interviews have not quite been released on the Internets just yet, but trust me, they'll be awesome! In the latest episode that he have released (# 91), we got the band back together and talked about books, book news, and the largest gathering ever of Daleks in one place.
I am being interviewed soon for a comic book related podcast, and will certainly post a link when that episode is recorded, edited, and posted.
I am being interviewed soon for a comic book related podcast, and will certainly post a link when that episode is recorded, edited, and posted.
Wednesday, October 2, 2013
The New 52, One Year Later
Two years ago, in September, DC Comics launched comic books in its "New 52" initiative, starting all 52 of their monthly books with new #1 issues. I took this opportunity to pick up some of these books, and review many of them on this site.
Now that two years have passed, I am going to stop using the label "New 52" on my reviews of these comics; they will be treated the way other comic book reviews are treated. The titles I expect to keep reading (and potentially keep reviewing) are: All-Star Western, Aquaman, Wonder Woman, and World's Finest.
But I did want to list here all of the New 52 titles I've read (over 100 issues total), and link to those that I have reviewed on the site:
Action Comics 1-8
All-Star Western 1-3 & 4-6
Animal Man 1-6
Aquaman 1-6
Blackhawks 1-8
Catwoman 1-6
Demon Knighs 1-7 & 8-12, 0
Frankenstein: Agent of SHADE 1-7
Fury of Firestorm 1-6
Green Arrow 1-6
I, Vampire 1-6 and 7-12
Justice League Dark 1-6 & 7-8
Resurrection Man 1-7
Supergirl 1-7
Wonder Woman 1-6 & 7-12
World's Finest 0-5
Now that two years have passed, I am going to stop using the label "New 52" on my reviews of these comics; they will be treated the way other comic book reviews are treated. The titles I expect to keep reading (and potentially keep reviewing) are: All-Star Western, Aquaman, Wonder Woman, and World's Finest.
But I did want to list here all of the New 52 titles I've read (over 100 issues total), and link to those that I have reviewed on the site:
Action Comics 1-8
All-Star Western 1-3 & 4-6
Animal Man 1-6
Aquaman 1-6
Blackhawks 1-8
Catwoman 1-6
Demon Knighs 1-7 & 8-12, 0
Frankenstein: Agent of SHADE 1-7
Fury of Firestorm 1-6
Green Arrow 1-6
I, Vampire 1-6 and 7-12
Justice League Dark 1-6 & 7-8
Resurrection Man 1-7
Supergirl 1-7
Wonder Woman 1-6 & 7-12
World's Finest 0-5
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