Tuesday, September 30, 2014

Reading Challenge Update: September 2014

Here is where I stand with the challenges I have joined after the month of September (only challenges that I read books for this month are featured here):

E-Book (24/25)
20. Plow the Bones by Douglas F. Warwick
21. The Matchmakers by Ruth J. Hartman
22. The Red Sheet by Mia Kerick
23. The Ghosts of Southwark by O. M. Grey
24. The Serpent Bearer by Frank Say

Audio Book (16/25)
15. Enchanted by Alethea Kontis
16. Ancillary Justice by Ann Leckie

Graphic Novel (9/12)
9. The Graveyard Book Vol. 1 by Neil Gaiman & P. Craig Russell

100 Books in a Year (82/100)
71. The Boy Who Could See Demons by Carolyn Jess-Cooke
72. Please Ignore Vera Dietz by A. S. King
73. Enchanted by Alethea Kontis
74. Plow the Bones by Douglas F. Warwick
75. The Matchmakers by Ruth J. Hartman
76. The Red Sheet by Mia Kerick
77. Ancillary Justice by Ann Leckie
78. The Small Hand and Dolly by Susan Hill
79. The Graveyard Book Vol. 1 by Neil Gaiman & P. Craig Russell
80. The Ghosts of Southwark by O. M. Grey
81. The Serpent Bearer by Frank Say
82. The 100 by Kass Morgan

Historical Fiction (10/15)
10. The Matchmakers by Ruth J. Hartman

Dystopia (4/5)
4. The 100 by Kass Morgan

British Books (12/12) - COMPLETED
10. The Matchmakers by Ruth J. Hartman
11. The Small Hand and Dolly by Susan Hill
12. The Graveyard Book Vol. 1 by Neil Gaiman & P. Craig Russell

Free Reads (30/30) - COMPLETED
30. The Boy Who Could See Demons by Carolyn Jess-Cooke

Author Alphabet (19/26)
19. Plow the Bones by Douglas F. Warwick

Elsewhere Online: September 2014

As you know from my Stacking the Shelves posts, I review for another website (bookloons.com). As I cannot post my reviews there and here, but I would still like to count the books I read for the challenges, I am going to have a post like this at the end of the every month listing the books I reviewed and what challenges the went towards.

Title: The Small Hand and Dolly
Author: Susan Hill
Challenges: British Books, 100 Books in a Year

Title: The Graveyard Book 1
Author: Neil Gaiman & P. Craig Russell
Challenges: Graphic Novels, British Books, 100 Books in a Year

Title: The Ghosts of Southwark
Author: O. M. Grey
Challenges: E-Book, 100 Books in a Year

Title: The Serpent Bearer
Author: Frank Say
Challenges: E-Book, 100 Books in a Year

Title: The 100
Author: Kass Morgan
Challenges: Dystopia, 100 Books in a Year

Monday, September 29, 2014

Ancillary Justice

Title: Ancillary Justice
Author: Ann Leckie
Publisher: Recorded Books
ISBN: n/a
Why Read?: Book Club
Challenges: Audio Books, 100 Books in a Year

Thoughts: I chose the audio book of this because space sci-fi is one of my least favorite genres, and I since I had to read and finish this, I knew I would if I listened while driving to and from work.  Well, I listened to it, but this is definitely the worst audio book I have listened to so far.  The narration had very odd pauses, phrasing, and inflections that at times hurt to listen to.  Leckie's story is interesting enough for the genre, and I did really get into it in parts, but the performance left too much to be desired.

Rating: 2 stars

Saturday, September 27, 2014

Stacking the Shelves

For review (on Bookloons):
Being Audrey Hepburn by Mitchell Kriegman

First Reads from Goodreads:
Each Time She Wakes by Katy Tackes

LibraryThing Early Review:
Becoming Zodiak by Craig Jones

Wednesday, September 24, 2014

The Red Sheet

The Red Sheet
by Mia Kerick
published by Harmony Ink
May 2014
ISBN 978-1-62798-717-2
Why read? Review
Challenges: Ebook, 100 Books in a Year

With The Red Sheet, Mia Kerick has succeeded in writing a contemporary YA novel where the protagonist is gay, but it is not about that.  The Red Sheet is about bullying and the other woes of high school life.

Bryan Dennison is your stereotypical high school jock.  He is in the popular clique, he cares more about his reputation than his grades, he parties on the weekend, and he is not below going along with his buddies when they push around those they deem uncool.  But all of that changes one day when he wakes up one Monday morning with no memory of the weekend and a burning desire to tie a red sheet around his neck and save everyone.  While the total personality transformation is not unwelcomed, it is a little disconcerting to him, especially when he discovers that the weekend involved doing something bad to the new kids at school, Scott Beckett.  Not only does Bryan not remember what happened over the weekend, he does not remember Scott at all.  Once he figures out that he hurt Scott, though, he is determined to make everything right.  He quickly learns, though, that it takes more than a cape to be a hero.

Bryan – at least the new Bryan – is the type of character that you wished more of existed in real life.  He is fun, sweet, is not afraid of who he is and wants to repent for who he was.  Scott, on the other hand, is unfortunately like a lot of kids in real life.  He may be witty, a good student, and a potential great friend, but he is an outcast for whatever reason his school’s social hierarchy deems him so.  Kerick does a wonderful job of making both of these characters relatable and ones the reader will want to root for.

The Red Sheet may have a slightly quirky premise, but Mia Kerick has written a very real story.  She presents real issues that teens face with a style that makes the pages fly by, and that is what makes The Red Sheet a great read.

Rating: 4/5

Tuesday, September 23, 2014

The Matchmakers

The Matchmakers
by Ruth J. Hartman
published by esKape
2014
ISBN 9781940695167
Why read? Review
Challenges: Ebook, Historical Fiction, British Books, 100 Books in a Year

Ruth J. Hartman is an expert at writing Regency romances and cat-lover romances, so it is no surprise that when she combines the two, it is delightful.  The Matchmakers is an adorable novella about an eccentric, scheming elderly aunt who is determined to see her nephew married off and uses cats as a way for him to meet his match.  It is not a terribly deep story, but the characters are fun and rather well-rounded for such a short work.  The Matchmakers is cute and definitely worth an read to liven up a dull afternoon.


Rating 4/5

Saturday, September 20, 2014

Plow the Bones

Title: Plow the Bones
Author: Douglas Warwick
Publisher: Apex
ISBN: 978-1-937009-15-1
Why Read?: Early Review
Challenges: E-Book, Author Alphabet, 100 Books in a Year

Thoughts: This was a rather bizzaro collection, although it was not classified as that exactly.  The two standout stories, at least for my taste, were "Funeral Song for a Ventriloquist" and "Across the Dead Station Dessert, Television Girl".  The rest were just too weird or disturbing or disgusting for me.

Rating: 2 stars

Stacking the Shelves: 9/14-9/20

Bought on Birchbox (clicking will take you through my referral link):
Big Little Lies by Liane Moriarty

Saturday, September 13, 2014

Stacking the Shelves: 9/7-9/13

For possible review (on Bookloons):
Unmade by Sarah Rees Brennan
Lark Rising by Sandra Waugh
The Bodies We Wear by Jeyn Roberts
All the Bright Places by Jennifer Niven

First Reads from Goodreads:
The Language of Silence by Peggy Webb

Bought on Amazon:
Nothing Real  Vol. 3 by Claire Needell

Wednesday, September 10, 2014

Enchanted

Title: Enchanted
Author: Alethea Kontis
Publisher: Ember
ISBN: 978-0-375-86564-0
Why Read?: For Fun
Challenges: 100 Books in a Year

Thoughts: I have read a lot of books based on fairy tales, and a good handful that tries to combine fairy tales, but none have completely hit the mark as well as Kontis.  Enchanted is a fun and adorable read for any fairy tale lover, young or old.

Rating: 5 stars

Tuesday, September 9, 2014

Please Ignore Vera Dietz

Title: Please Ignore Vera Dietz
Author: A. S. King
Publisher: Ember
ISBN: 978-0-375-86564-0
Why Read?: For Fun
Challenges: 100 Books in a Year

Thoughts:  If you are a fan of edgy YA - like The Perks of Being a Wallflower - then this is the book for you.  King writes very realistically and is not afraid to show life like it really is.

Rating: 4 stars

Saturday, September 6, 2014

Stacking the Shelves: 8/17-9/6

I missed the last few Saturdays due to out of town trips, so this is rather long.

For possible review (on Bookloons):
The 100 by Kass Morgan
Day 21 by Kass Morgan
Sammy Keyes and the Kiss Goodbye by Wendelin Van Draanen

Won:
The Shy Girls Social Club Handbook for Dealing with Bullies & Other Meanies by Kailin Gow
Saving You Saving Me by Kailin Gow
Never Say Never by Kailin Gow

First Reads from Goodreads:
Rogerson's Books of Numbers by Barnaby Rogerson
Feast of Fates by Christian A. Brown
The Pen Name by David Jacob Knight
Manson by Jeff Gunn
At the Edge of the Lighthouse by Gabriel J. M.

LibraryThing Early Review:
The Night Itself by Zoe Marriott
Billy Purgatory: I Am the Devil Bird by Jesse James Freeman

Received in Book Riot Quarterly:
What We See When We Read by Peter Mendelsund
The Salinger Contract by Adam Langer
Maps and Legends by Michael Chabon

Requested from Paperback Swap:
XO by Jeffery Deaver

Bought on Humble Bundle:
American Gods by Neil Gaiman
Angel's Ink by Jocelynn Drake
Busting Vegas by Ben Mezrich
By the Blood of Heroes by Joseph Nassise
Dead Witch Walking by Kim Harrison
Map of Bones by James Rollins
The Curse of Chalion by Lois McMaster Bujold
The Wasteland Saga by Nick Cole
The Witch of Portobello by Paulo Coelho
Twinmaker by Sean Williams
Sandman Slim by Richard Kadrey
The Dead Run by Adam Mansbach
The Taken by Vicki Pettersson

Bought on Amazon:
The Darkness and the Deep by Aline Templeton
Lying Dead by Aline Templeton
Lamb to the Slaughter by Aline Templeton
Dead in the Water by Aline Templeton
Blood Rose by Margie Orford
Daddy's Girl by Margie Orford
The Stolen by Bishop O'Connell
Once Upon a Rhyme by Jack Heckel
The God Hunter by Tim Lees
Ten by Gretchen McNeil