Whatcha Readin' Oct 2010 Edition

That’s rather disappointing. I always liked flipping back to the end notes when I was at the passage a specific end note dealt with. It enhanced the story remarkably. That may just be too disruptive in an audio book though, dunno.

I’m closing in on the end of Dan Brown’s The Lost Symbol. But I was at the library yesterday, and based on your sterling recommendation I looked for Aztec. They had it! Just in hardcover, but I checked it out. There was another novel by same author, Gary Jennings, called The Journeyer. About Marco Polo. Do you know if that one’s any good also?

I finished Bryson’s At Home last week on my business trip. Check the relevant thread for more info, I thought it was enjoyable but unfocused and not his best.

My boss - who doesn’t read as much as I do - had been gushing over Diary of a Wimpy Kid enough that he actually bought the phsyical book (a rarity for him), then lent it to me unsolicited (double secret plus rarity).

I read it in about 1.5 hours. Definitely fun and cute. I smiled most of the time. There’s some good light humor in there.

Here’s the crazy part that told me he really loved the book - he was talking about going to the bookstore and reading the sequels, one at a time, half an hour at a time. I asked him, “So, you really loved the first one? And you don’t want to support the author?”

He actually bought the second book on this guilt trip. This is incredible. He’s legendarily cheap, for him to “buy” a book means he is completely hooked. :smiley:

Just starting on a YA novel, Ostrich Boys by Keith Gray. It’s about three teenage boys who steal a friend’s cremains and take them on a trip.

I liked that one a lot. I just wonder how much it appeals to actual Y’s.

bup, I actually decided to read it when I saw it on your Goodreads list checks wow! Back in March! I guess that’s how long it took me to get it from the library, renew it, renew it again, and now it’s at the top of my TBR pile because the library seriously wants me to give it back. I’m always trying to stay half a step ahead of the Library Policeman.

Finished The Spirit Thief a very fun book. I haven’t enjoyed a first book in a series this much since The Name Of The Wind and although I can’t say why, it kind of reminded me of that. Eli Monpress is the greatest thief in the world - and also a wizard. For reasons unknown (but revealed in the next book) he is *actively *trying to increase his bounty. He travels with a swordsman and a demonseed. The book starts when the steal a king.

Wizards in his world can speak to spirits - and everything, including rocks, doors, chairs, etc. has a spirit.

The magic was original, the plot was fresh and I have already pre-ordered the next two.

Finished The Last Light Of The Sun buy Guy Gavriel Kay. I did not enjoy it as much as the last one I reviewed by him. Indeed, I started it, stopped and picked it up again. Almost put it down for good half way through, but it finally caught me at just past half way.

Set in an alternate earth, in the time of Vikings. Kay always weaves a complex tale and does well to invoke strong emotions when I read him. I had said last time that I had forgotten what a joy it is to read a complex book - and this one reminded me what a chore it can be too, if you aren’t caught up in it.

I will read Kay again, but I think I will limit him to once a year.

Just got Surface Detail by Banks.

I’ll be in my bunk, reading.

I’m reading Oath by Michael Jecks, its the latest in a series that is about a medievil knight who solves murder mysteries.

Although it was originally totally a murder mystery series it has lately become more of a historical story with a murder thrown in.

The books are meticulously researched and extremely authentic and set in the time of the civil war between Isabella and Edward the second…

I.M.O. Jecks started to drift off track in the previous couple of books when one of the central characters became increasingly vulnerable and helpless to the machinations of the bad guy.
It may be true to life but makes depressing reading.

Jecks is now back on track and this book is an excellent(and mystifying) read .
Totally recommend it and can’t wait to finish it.

Finished Demon Hunts by C. E. Murphy, 5th in her Walker Papers series. I enjoy the series and this was a good solid addition to it. Walker keeps growing in her powers and as a character. I will continue to read the series.

As an aside, I can’t remember reading book 4, but when I read the synopsis, it seems like I did. This is very troubling. Maybe I read it during one of my recoveries.

Finished Scott Turow’s Ultimate Punishment and really enjoyed it. Anyone interested in the death penalty should read it.

Just started Jonathan Lethem’s Gun, with Occasional Music for my book club. It’s described as “Philip K. Dick meets Raymond Chandler,” and kinda reads that way so far. I also picked up Christopher Farnsworth’s Blood Oath at the library. It’s about a vampire bound by Creole voodoo magic in 1867 (in a ceremony involving the bullet which killed Lincoln, no less) to serve and protect the President, and the new smartass handler he’s just been assigned by the White House in the present day. Surprisingly good stuff.

Hope you love Aztec as much as I do! It’s the only Jennings book I’ve read. I see the Amazon reviews for The Journeyer are pretty good (http://www.amazon.com/Journeyer-Gary-Jennings/dp/0765323494/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1287690094&sr=1-1). He wrote another book about life in a traveling circus in the early 1900s, and another about a swordsman in the Middle Ages, IIRC, but I know nothing about them.

There are some Aztec sequels, BTW, which you should steer clear of.

Thanks for the comments and advice. (Are the Aztec sequels by Jennings too, or some copycat?) I should finish Dan Brown’s The Lost Symbol this weekend and will then start Aztec. (Maybe actually having visited Aztec pyramids wil help my enjoyment? :D) If it’s anywhere near as good as you and everyone else says, I’m sure I’ll check out The Journeyer, too. It looks like these are the only two books by Gary Jennings that our library carries.

Cheese touch!

My used bookstore had a couple of the sequels, but they didn’t have *Aztec * itself so I ordered it. I’ll probably read it next month - first I have to finish my re-read of Connie Willis’s *Blackout *and then read All Clear, and then I have the shiny new Vorkosigan book to read.

Finished already. It was a good quick read. My only complaint is that I wish it had gone on a chapter or two further.

Currently I am very happy with Mucho Mojo, by Joe R. Lansdale. I think I’ll try to get three or four more Hap & Leonards before I go travelling in a couple of weeks.

Jennings wrote Aztec Autumn and Aztec Blood, I see, but Aztec Rage was written by two other guys using his notes. I’ve read none of these sequels but have not heard good things.

FAIL:* Meeting Evil* by Thomas Berger ~ lasted a few pages but it didn’t grab me.

Read:

The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo by Stieg Larsson ~ After this & Let Me In I am convinced that the Swedes just don’t like cats.
*Prisoner of the Iron Tower: Book Two of The Tears of Artamon *by Sarah Ash
*The Food of a Younger Land *by Mark Kurlansky
Gone With the Wind by Margaret Mitchell ~ I can’t believe I’ve gone this long without reading this.
Arctic Mirrors: Russia and the Small Peoples of the North by Yuri Slezkine ~ dry but had its moments.
The Lady Tree by Christie Dickason ~ ok historial fiction about trying to make a fortune tulip dealing in Holland.
Setting the Desert on Fire: T. E. Lawrence and Britain’s Secret War in Arabia, 1916-1918 by James Barr
The Monuments Men: Allied Heroes, Nazi Thieves and the Greatest Treasure Hunt in History by Robert Edsel ~ I picked this up after watching Rape of Europa and it was just amazing, sad, and infuriating.

Working on:

Sense & Sensibility
Descartes Bones
The Knight

Hm, intriguing. I’ve read a fair amount of history of that time, which is fascinating – there’s a whole theory in economics about it, called the greatest fool theory. {grumble grumble, library doesn’t have this; no one has it at half.com… grumble grumble grumble … $4!!! for shipping from Amazon … grumble grumble… ordered}

Speaking of historical fiction, just finished a novel I liked quite a bit: Remarkable Creatures by Tracy Chevalier (yes, she of Girl with a Pearl Earring fame). It’s about two women in early 19th century England, one a genteel spinster, the other a younger woman of the working class, both of whom become experts at searching for and finding fossils in the cliffs of Lyme Regis, England. They find (and are) “remarkable creatures” – they’re finding the remains of dinosaurs in the later pre-Darwinian period when it’s not at all clear how such beasts fit into the scheme of God’s perfect creation. Hard to evoke such a different world/worldview, and Chevalier is not completely successful – the exposition gets a wee bit clunky at times, and her treatment of some of the secondary characters is rather two-dimensional – but overall fascinating. Oh, and based on two real women – apparently there are other books about the working-class woman, who was an utter genius at finding fossils – I’d like to read more about her.

Before that, You Lost Me There by Rosecrans Baldwin. First novel that got a lot of buzz – I didn’t care for it. Middle-aged male academic, expert in Alzheimers, dealing with his memories of his marriage when he finds some notes written by his late wife, plus his relationships with other women (men, not so much). The title character was utterly unsympathetic to me – I’ve had enough emotionally constipated intellectuals in my own life, thankyouverymuch.

Finished The Lost Symbol, by Dan Brown. There’s a lot of hate for Dan Brown, but the wife and I have always liked him. No doubt people’s ill feelings makes him cry all the way to the bank. However, this has got to my least favorite Dan Brown book. The wife agrees (she read it first). We’ve read all of his stuff. Since he pretty much uses variations of the exact same twist in all of his books, it’s becoming ridiculously easy to guess the big surprise; I saw it coming almost from the start. And the last 40 or 50 pages are all preachy, which I seriously dislike. Still, it was a fun read (until the last 40 or 50 pages), and I’d recommend it if you’re a Brown fan, in which case you’ve probably already read it.

Next up, as mentioned earlier, will be Gary Jennings’ Aztec. Will start it no later than Monday.

Oh, and:

Oh, and how the hell did the CIA get a copy of that video? That was never explained.