Sweetness: The Enigmatic Life Of Walter Payton by Jeff Pearlman , a well-written biography of the late, great and flawed Walter Payton and also The Rise Of The Iron Moon by Stephen Hunt, a steampunk novel that I really enjoyed.
Still reading Augustine’s Confessions; just finished re-reading Lindsey Davis’ The Course of Honour, an historical fiction/biography of Caenis, who was the freedwoman mistress of the Roman emperor Vespasian. There was much made about how even as emperor, they could never marry. Thoroughly enjoyed it, though I’m a sucker for well-written historical fiction.
I’m a little more than a quarter of the way through The Way of Shadows by Brent Weeks. It’s the first in the Night Angel trilogy. So far it’s not bad. Lots of action and dialogue keep things moving at a nice pace even if the writing isn’t going to win any awards.
I’m reading Neil Gaiman’s Stardust to my nine-year-old. We’ve just started, so I’m not sure he’s all that into it, but I’m hoping he’ll enjoy it. We’ve had to stop several times to define words he was unfamiliar with, which is both a good thing and very distracting.
I’m still slogging my way through the Game of Thrones books, I’m about 1/2 through Dance with Dragons. I am enjoying this A LOT, but in some ways I’m glad to be seeing the light at the end of the tunnel (at least in terms of books that are published) because I am starting to feel a bit held hostage by the series.
I also managed to read The Lock Artist by Steve Hamilton, which I originally heard of when someone posted about it in one of these threads. It’s about a teenager with a skill for cracking safes and picking locks, who of course get mixed up with the wrong people. It was a nice, quick read, and despite a few quibbles with the plot, I enjoyed the overall voice of the protagonist.
I’ve finished A Storm of Swords and am reading Jeffery Deaver’s James Bond reboot Carte Blanche. I’ve also finished an 1860 History of the United States, which is very interesting. I’ve also finished the last sanctioned Nero Wolfe novel, The Missing Chapter by Robert Golsborough. I’ve been looking for it for years. Appropriately enough, the victim is an author who “continued” the detective novel series of a long-running series ny a noted, deceased author.
I’ve also completed The Gentle Art of Making Enemies by the artist James Abbot MacNeill Whistler, who was best known (probably for all the wrong reasons) for his Composition in Grey and Black Number 1, better known as Whistler’s Mother. Sentimental the man was not – he had a snark streak a mile wide, and would have fit in well on the SDMB. He took on Oscar Wilde in bare-knuckles insulting, and seems to have come out ahead (of course, he edited the book, too, so I shouldn’t be surprised) This is another of those books I’ve looked for a long time, and finally got my mitts on. My main complaint is that this book desperately needs footnotes for those of us not up on the personal lives and infighting among the artistes of the 19th century.
I also read the provocatively-titled Peepshows: A Visual History by Richard Balzer. The book isn’t about NYC 42nd street sex shows, but about the much tamer subject of 18th-19th century optical devices that served as public entertainment before we had kinoscopes and movie theaters.
The first one in the series didn’t catch me straight off. I tried it two or three times before I was able to get into it. I found it very slow - but still not too untypical of their writing style; so I decided I’d give the second a go, and in the end, liked it better than the first - well enough to order the third.
I think he was pissed that Gustave Courbet ‘stole’ his woman and then, to add huge insult to injury, exposed her genitalia to the world! (<== link NSFW)
Just finished The Eagle and the Shield by Richard S. Patterson and Richardson Dougall, a rather dry but, for me at least, generally interesting look at the design, adoption, evolution and use of the Great Seal of the United States over the years.
Still reading I, Robot by Isaac Asimov with my son. Just finished “Little Lost Robot,” one of the best short stories in the collection.
Whistler also prominently appears in Eiffel’s Tower by Jill Jonnes, an interesting look at the building of the tower and the staging of the 1889 Exposition Universelle. He was a talented artist but a prima donna and a huge pain in the ass.
After having to give up “How Evan Broke His Head and Other Secrets” when only a few pages into it, I finally pried it out of my mother’s hands and got back to it. Lovely. Truly a lovely story. There’s a lot circling around about how people mis-perceive each other by only knowing part of the story. It’s just so human.
That was me. It won the Edgar Award for Best Mystery last year or year before. I don’t know who would consider it a mystery, but I liked it.
I’m reading The Call by Yannick Murphy, a quasiepistolary (I think I just made up that word) novel about a farm veterinarian whose son has had an accident and is in a coma. It’s in the form of the vet’s daily call sheets, where he records his calls, what treatment he gives, results, etc. It’s interesting now and I want to find out what happens to the son, so I hope I don’t get fed up with this format.
I liked this one too…a little disjointed, and some parts are much more interesting than others, but the subject matter is fun and he’s a fine writer. (My favorite line: Daniel, the GPS, becomes something of a member of the family, and Jennings’s son sighs while they visit a museum with an exhibit on GPS technology, “It’s too bad that Daniel isn’t here. He would have LOVED this.”)
Read Laura Lippman’s novel The Most dangerous Thing, set as usual in Baltimore, this one a stand-alone that moves back and forth between the present and the late seventies/early eighties. An excellent sense of time and place and what makes people tick. The plot doesn’t quite add up in some ways and the modern stuff is less interesting than the stuff when the characters were kids; still, a lot to recommend it.
About to try the newest Nevada Barr book; used to like her books a lot, but I have to say I thought the last two (both set primarily in New Orleans) were pretty awful. Am hoping this one will be better. If not…
Oh, and one other I really enjoyed: The Borrower by an author named Rebecca Makkai. A young children’s librarian becomes just a bit too involved in the life of one of her ten-year-old “customers.” Funny, and poignant, and a lot of great references/homages to children’s literature (some obvious, some much less so), and the ten-year-old himself is just great. I enjoyed it quite a bit.
I liked that one too. I like all of Laura Lippman’s standalone books. Unfortunately, I’ve already read them all, so all that’s left is the Tess Monaghan series, which just isn’t as good. Well, I’m only on the third one, but the character is also in some of her other books, and I just don’t find her very interesting. I don’t understand why she gets a whole long series when there are so many better characters.
Finished Angelmaker, the new one from Nick Harkaway, who wrote The Gone-Away World. I liked it a lot. No ninja mimes but lots of other good stuff, and lots of action.
Harkaway digresses a lot, but I like his digressions.
statij, I got an ARC through Amazon Vine. It’ll be published in March, but I think it might already be available in the UK and maybe Canada.
Just zipped through Mad Men: The Illustrated World, a brightly-illustrated, tongue-in-cheek retro guide to the early Sixties by Dyna Moe (yes, really). If you like the show, I bet you’ll like this.
Finished The Risen Empire by Scott Westerfeld yesterday. Good SF but it’s the first book of a two volume series and it does not function as a stand alone novel. Fortunately, I’ve also got the second book.