Books

… 1994 Video Predicts iPad | davidrothman.net. (Hat tip, Dave Lull.)
… 1994 Video Predicts iPad | davidrothman.net. (Hat tip, Dave Lull.)
38 minutes ago
No One Else to Kill is book 5 of the Jim West Mysteries. Since this was my first Jim West book, I expected to feel as though I was missing something. I am pleased to say that I was not, and this is definitely a stand-alone book. Jim Wes...
No One Else to Kill is book 5 of the Jim West Mysteries. Since this was my first Jim West book, I expected to feel as though I was missing something. I am pleased to say that I was not, and this is definitely a stand-alone book. Jim West travels to a remote hunting lodge in New Mexico with the intent of meeting up with an old friend to do some therapeutic hiking. The friend is a no-show, but before he can head for home a murder occurs at the lodge. Not yet twenty four hours later, another murder occurs. While Jim could have been one of the suspects, the police recognize his problem solving talents and enlist his help in solving the crime. Although he wants no part of it, he agrees to be their man on the inside and keep his eyes on everyone.Jim is a likable character, not really wanting to get involved, but realizing his unique talents and opportunity to be among the suspects. We are introduced to a variety of characters and suspects at the lodge. Things get out of control and brought back to an exciting conclusion. It is an interesting story with a variety of possible suspects.No One Else to Kill won First Runner-Up in the Commercial Fiction category for the 2013 Eric Hoffer Award.
38 minutes ago
… Calls for Chinua Achebe Nobel prize 'obscene', says Wole Soyinka | Books | guardian.co.uk. (Hat tip, Rus Bowden.)
… Calls for Chinua Achebe Nobel prize 'obscene', says Wole Soyinka | Books | guardian.co.uk. (Hat tip, Rus Bowden.)
40 minutes ago
...from the NYT
...from the NYT
41 minutes ago
The Demon Lover by Juliet Dark Ballantine Books, 2011 Romance (Paranormal); 448 pgs I loved this book. My husband's been giving me a hard time for liking it at all, but it was so good! Juliet Dark (also known by the name Ca...
The Demon Lover by Juliet Dark Ballantine Books, 2011 Romance (Paranormal); 448 pgs I loved this book. My husband's been giving me a hard time for liking it at all, but it was so good! Juliet Dark (also known by the name Carol Goodman) is a master of description, weaving a tale that pulled me in and has me craving more. I was reminded of how I felt when I read Karen Marie Moning's Darkfever, although the books are very different. From the Publisher: Since accepting a teaching position at remote Fairwick College in upstate New York, Callie McFay has experienced the same disturbingly erotic dream every night: A mist enters her bedroom, then takes the shape of a virile, seductive stranger who proceeds to ravish her in the most toe-curling, wholly satisfying ways possible. Perhaps these dreams are the result of her having written the bestselling book The Sex Lives of Demon Lovers. Callie’s lifelong passion is the intersection of lurid fairy tales and Gothic literature—which is why she’s found herself at Fairwick’s renowned folklore department, living in a once-stately Victorian house that, at first sight, seemed to call her name. But Callie soon realizes that her dreams are alarmingly real. She has a demon lover—an incubus—and he will seduce her, pleasure her, and eventually suck the very life from her. Then Callie makes another startling discovery: Her incubus is not the only mythical creature in Fairwick. As the tenured witches of the college and the resident fairies in the surrounding woods prepare to cast out the demon, Callie must accomplish something infinitely more difficult—banishing this supernatural lover from her heart. I actually picked up this book to read only because I liked the sound of the second book in the series. I admit to being a bit turned off by the description of this book, afraid it would be more sex than story. And while there was a lot of sex, there was also quite a good story. When Callie first visits Fairwick, she has no real interest in taking the job there. She and her boyfriend had long ago agreed to settle in New York City once they finished school. But Callie is drawn to the town, particularly an old Victorian house once owned by a famous author. She buys the home and accepts the position even despite all her reasons not to. As Callie will soon discover, both she and the town of Fairwick are more than they at first appear. I loved the setting of the novel. From the old Victorian house and the woods behind with all its secrets to the university and its eclectic staff to the small town itself, with its charm and unique townsfolk. This is a place I would love to explore further, getting to know the people and taking in the beauty and heart of my surroundings. Callie is the typical heroine, strong and intelligent. Her students are important to her, and it shows in her teaching and in her interactions with her students. Callie is practical, but a romantic at heart. She doesn't want to believe the man who comes to her in her dreams is real, can't imagine he could be, but as the evidence mounts, she struggles with what to do. Callie's emotions are at war with what she knows is right. It's an age old dilemma, but one many of us can relate to on some level. The incubus haunting Callie isn't the only trouble she faces in The Demon Lover. There's also the curse on one of her student's family and a mysterious illness going around. There is also her grandmother, a formidable woman with her own agenda. The book has a distinct Gothic feel to it, which makes it all the more appealing. It is beautiful and intense. And I loved every word. I hated to leave the world Juliet Dark created and am anxious to jump into the second book of the Fairwick Chronicles, Water Witch. Rating: (Very Good +) To learn more about Carol Goodman/Juliet Dark and her books, please visit the author's website. Source:
about 1 hour ago
Number 6! Last week I decided to take part in the Classics Club Spin. The rules were simple – list twenty books from your Classics Club list, number them 1 to 20, and the number announced today (Monday) represents the book you hav...
Number 6! Last week I decided to take part in the Classics Club Spin. The rules were simple – list twenty books from your Classics Club list, number them 1 to 20, and the number announced today (Monday) represents the book you have to read during May and June. The book at #6 on my list is: Cold Comfort Farm by Stella Gibbons There were other books on my list that I was looking forward to more, but I’m quite happy with this one, I think. I haven’t read anything by Stella Gibbons yet and have been wanting to for years! Have you read it? Did you enjoy it? If you participated too, I hope the Spin has selected a great book for you.
about 1 hour ago
Lindsay King-Miller — she of Ask A Queer Chick — pays tribute to an old friend who died before her twenty-sixth birthday. Related posts: Avoiding “Chick-Lit” Chick authors who avoid the “chick-lit” st...
Lindsay King-Miller — she of Ask A Queer Chick — pays tribute to an old friend who died before her twenty-sixth birthday. Related posts: Avoiding “Chick-Lit” Chick authors who avoid the “chick-lit” stigma.... Dinner With Henry Miller Name a famous person, living or dead, you’d like to... The End of the Poe Vigil It’s been nearly three years since an unknown man last...
about 1 hour ago
Something else I've been meaning to say.Writing a book and selling a book are two completely different things.That's all there is to it.God bless those who can do both, but being able to do one doesn't mean you can do the other.I've been...
Something else I've been meaning to say.Writing a book and selling a book are two completely different things.That's all there is to it.God bless those who can do both, but being able to do one doesn't mean you can do the other.I've been struggling with the dichotomy for two years now. Trying to find a way around it. Looking for loopholes.There aren't any. They are two different processes. Period.I'm interested in doing the one, but not only not interested in doing the other but actively repelled by the process.When I used to work for other people, I was always the guy who did the work without fanfare and got no credit. Which is why I'm self-employed. My work speaks for itself. It almost doesn't matter how good my writing is. I'd like to believe that a quality book would be rewarded, but there is too much evidence out there that that is a rare and lucky occurrence.There are just as many examples, if not more, of inferior books garnering tons of attention.But the truth is, I don't know how good my books are. The point I'm trying to make is, it doesn't matter. They are as good or bad as they are.Which has nothing to do with with the process of selling them. Obviously, it helps if you've written something really good. But you still have to engage in the process of selling, and that is a different skill.Good writer/bad promoter.Bad writer/good promoter.Bad writer/bad promoter.Good writer/good promoter.Any and all these possibilities exist, but in every case they are separate events.
about 2 hours ago
A weekly alert for followers of crime, mystery, and thriller fiction. The Black Country, by Alex Grecian (Putnam): I was fond enough of Midwestern novelist Alex Grecian’s premiere Murder Squad tale, The Yard, that I chose it as one ...
A weekly alert for followers of crime, mystery, and thriller fiction. The Black Country, by Alex Grecian (Putnam): I was fond enough of Midwestern novelist Alex Grecian’s premiere Murder Squad tale, The Yard, that I chose it as one of the top crime novels of 2012. Naturally, my expectations of its sequel were high. Although The Black Country lacks some of the attractions of its predecessor, it still secures Grecian standing as somebody whose work is well worth following. This sophomore outing for Inspector Walter Day of Scotland Yard’s Murder Squad opens in the spring of 1890. Day and his rather eccentric associate, Sergeant Nevil Hammersmith, have been dispatched to the beleaguered coal-mining village of Blackhampton, in the British Midlands, from which three members of the Price family have gone missing. Concerns about their fate have only been heightened by a child’s recent discovery--in a tree’s upper branches, of all places--of an eyeball. As if these factors didn’t make the case weird enough, a seeming plague has struck the town, the foundations of houses and other buildings there have been undermined by aged mine shafts, and a gruesomely disfigured stranger appears to be lurking in the vicinity. Being a superstitious lot, Blackhampton residents take these turns with some equanimity; but Day and Hammersmith want answers and aren’t willing to leave villagers with any secrets unexcavated. As the village is slowly swallowed by the earth, Hammersmith is struck down by the advancing plague and a long-festering vengeance threatens to trim Blackhampton’s population still further. The Yard made excellent use of its London backdrop and the displeasure Victorian-era Londonders exhibited toward Scotland Yard, which had failed to protect them from Jack the Ripper, the city’s deadly scourge of 1888. The rural setting of The Black Country proves less captivatng (and reminds me overmuch of Charles Todd’s better-known Inspector Ian Rutledge novels). And though Day’s colleague, progressive pathologist Dr. Bernard Kingsley, eventually rolls into Blackhampton to aid in sorting out the mysteries at hand (together with his dim but endearing assistant, Henry Mayhew), the absence of other Scotland Yarders and the police-procedural atmosphere they helped impart to The Yard is keenly felt in these pages. I hope that by their third adventure, Grecian’s gang of colorful historical crime-solvers will have found their way back among the belching smokestacks and ribald underworld corners of the British capital. * * * New in stores as well is Reed Farrel Coleman’s Onion Street (Tyrus), which winds back the clock for series protagonist Moe Prager. We see him here in 1967, when he was still a college student, feeling lost in his own life and struggling to figure out who beat his girlfriend and left her to die in Brooklyn. ... Meanwhile, the celebrated Charles McCarry offers us The Shanghai Factor (The Mysterious Press), about an American spy in Shanghai, whose recent, heated affair with a young woman may leave him vulnerable as he tries to discern the secrets of China’s seemingly impregnable new intelligence agency.
about 2 hours ago
… George Orwell's critique of internet English | Books | guardian.co.uk. (Hat tip, Dave Lull.) … any struggle against the abuse and impoverishment of English online (notably, in blogs and emails). Would that be all blogs and e...
… George Orwell's critique of internet English | Books | guardian.co.uk. (Hat tip, Dave Lull.) … any struggle against the abuse and impoverishment of English online (notably, in blogs and emails). Would that be all blogs and emails? I know of some pretty well-written blogs, and Joseph Epstein and Frederic Raphael just published a collection of their emails. As always , there is good writing and bad.
about 2 hours ago