December 1st 2008

This Year I Will…


When I told One Spirit book club to go ahead and send this one to me, I’m not sure what I thought it was all about.  As it turns out, it’s a nice little motivational book about building new habits.

Most of this is either common sense or I’ve heard it said in slightly different ways by therapists, friends who seem to have their lives put together, other authors, or the multitude of personal growth and development teachers I’ve encountered over the years.  That doesn’t make it a bad thing!  Sometimes you have to hear a thing a thousand times for you can say, “Oh!  I get it!”

The time of year for resolutions is swiftly approaching, and this would be a nice book to pick up if you just can’t stick to your resolutions.

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November 25th 2008

Death in Paradise


This is the first book I’ve read by Robert Parker.  It was a recommendation from Booksfree based on some of the other books I’ve rented from them.

I’m not sure exactly why, but I’m utterly delighted with Parker’s style of writing.  The dialog seems more real than many of the authors I’ve read lately.  Someone ought to tell other authors what Parker has discovered… real people don’t always talk in complete sentences.  No, seriously… they don’t.

In this book, we have a murder mystery.  I seem to read a lot of those.  There’s a dead girl… who is she?  Who killed her?  There are interesting interpersonal relationships… Jesse, our hero, still dates his ex-wife.  He dates other women, too.  He drinks too much, he plays softball, and he seems like a basically good guy.

In the end, the killer confesses after only a small amount of police intimidation.

I’ll be adding more of Parker’s books to my Booksfree queue.

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November 22nd 2008

Replay


My buddy Stan the Baseball Man recommended this book, and I must congratulate him on an excellent recommendation.  It’s a little bit science fiction, a little bit philosophy and a whole lot of fun.

What would you do if, after you died, you came back to live out a portion of your life all over again.  What if you did it again and again and again… except that every time you came back, you were a little bit older?  You know all of the history that happened your first time around, and you know exactly when you’re going to die.

What would you do?  What choices would you make the second or third or eighth time around?

That’s the idea behind Ken Grimwood’s novel.  It asks the age-old human question, “Why are we here?” in an entirely novel way.  And it certainly made me stop and think… if I could answer the question about choices I’d make the second and fourth and sixth times around, what’s stopping me from making those choices right here, right now?

I highly recommend this book!  Thanks, Stan!

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November 4th 2008

The Closers


Yet another Harry Bosch novel from Michael Connelly.  This one is set many years after the one I read last week.  Harry spent three years in retirement, and learned that he has a six-year-old daughter.  Yeah, I’m going to have to go back and find out what that’s all about.

Harry is back on the job, this time working in the Open-Unsolved division of LAPD.  He and his partner get a DNA hit on one of the open cases on his first day back.  And wouldn’t you know it… there’s high jingo involved!  There were cover-ups, and Harry’s old nemisis Deputy Chief Irving is somehow involved.

Even though the case has been open for 17 years, the detective work is top-notch.  It’s a fast-paced story, with enough twists and turns to keep you wondering just what happened back in 1988.

I think it’s fair to say I’m a fan of Michael Connelly and Harry Bosch.

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November 1st 2008

The Concrete Blonde


I’ve read a number of Connelly’s books over the years, so I’m somewhat acquainted with Harry Bosch, the LAPD detective who stars in most of his books.  One of the things I like about Connelly is that he’s good at twisty plots, and tossing in little surprises here and there.  Here’s what the cover blurb has to say about this book:

They called him the Dollmaker — the serial killer who stalked Los Angeles and left a grisly calling card on the faces of his female victims.  With a single faultless shot, Detective Harry Bosch thought he had ended the city’s nightmare.

But then the dead man’s widow sues Harry and the LAPD for killing the wrong man — an accusation that rings terrifyingly true when a new victim is discovered with the Dollmaker’s macabre signature.

Now, for the second time, Harry must hunt down a death-dealer who is very much alive, before he strikes again.  It’s a blood-tracked quest that will take Harry from the hard edges of the LA night to the last place he ever wanted to go — the darkness of his own heart.

Well, it’s a little over the top, but the bottom line is that this new “Dollmaker” isn’t the guy Harry killed and is just following in the footsteps of the Dollmaker.  There are a few wrong guesses made by Harry (and me) about who the new killer is.  And darned if it doesn’t all make sense when everything is finally revealed at the end!

This book gets a thumbs up from me.

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October 29th 2008

Collage Sourcebook


This isn’t a book you sit down and read in an evening. Oh sure, you could read all the words at one sitting… but it’s the amazing artwork that keeps drawing you back.

I’ve had this book for about a year now, and it’s never once made it to a shelf. It moves from place to place (the coffee table in the living room, the side table in my reading room, under my chair in my computer room, my backpack, or most frequenly my lap), never staying in any one spot for more than a few days.

I don’t get tired of looking at the fantastic work presented by a plethora of collage artists, and it’s certainly given me inspiration for some of my own work. In fact, I think there’s an idea starting to bubble up for all those spare CDs I have stuffed in boxes downstairs. Check my art blog to see what comes of it all.

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October 26th 2008

Bad Blood


This is a new author for me, although she’s been writing for a while apparently.

First the good points… I love the supernatural stuff.  Having a werewolf (ok, technically, she’s a shadow wolf, but I’m not going to go into the differences) in the Special Forces is pretty cool.  There’s plenty of intrigue.  The story is well-written.  The characters are engaging and don’t have that “cardboard” feel to them.

Now the bad point… what the heck is up with all the pornographic sex in novels these days?  It seems like nearly every fiction book I pick up these days has sex, sex, sex in it.  The more supernatural elements in the story, the more explicit sex it needs.  One or two in a story… fine.  But that many in every chapter??  Give me a break.

Dear writers… yes, sex sells.  But good writing, well-crafted characters and a taunt plot line is actually more of a selling point for me.  If I wanted pornography, I’d be going out on the Internet to find it.  I really don’t need to have it sneak up on me in the grocery store.  So stop it.

Having said that, I probably will go back and read other books by L. A. Banks… because she does craft a very good tale.

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October 23rd 2008

Armageddon in Retrospect


I’ve read nearly everything Vonnegut has written, and haven’t come across a bad read yet.  Normally, when one of the many book clubs wants to send me a book, I decline (which makes me wonder why I still maintain membership in them, but that’s another discussion).  But when the Quality Paperback Book Club let me know about this gem, I told them, “Oh yeah!  Bring it on!”

Here’s what they have to say about this fabulous little book:

True to form until the very end, Kurt Vonnegut concluded the last speech he ever wrote with the following no-nonsense declaration:

“And I thank you for your attention, and I am out of here.”

Fortunately, our own farewell to the late literary legend need not be nearly so abrupt. Vonnegut returns from beyond the grave (well, sorta) in Armageddon in Retrospect, his first and only posthumous collection of unpublished writings. Featuring an introduction by his son and fellow author Mark Vonnegut and tackling topics ranging from war to peace to the proper term for a shih tzu/poodle hybrid (we’ll leave that one a surprise, thanks), it’s a powerful, and powerfully funny, reminder of why we loved him so much in the first place.

This wide-ranging collection spans Vonnegut’s career from that final speech to the letter he wrote to his family after being freed from the Nazis during World War II, from harrowing meditations on the horrors of war to hilarious stories about its survivors. POW, painter, protester, parent, peacemaker: every side of this complex, brilliant thinker and writer—and the human comedy he so astutely chronicled—is on glorious display.

Now.  YOU go read it.  Because, seriously… it’s darn good.

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October 20th 2008

Murder in Little Egypt


I must admit to being a fan of true crime stories.  It doesn’t really matter who writes them, because they’re almost always the same.  (That said, I do have a fondness for Ann Rule’s books… the criminals she writes about are somehow more interesting.)

Darcy O’Brien writes about a doctor from southern Illinois, who was convicted of murdering one son and suspected of murdering another.

The unimaginable crime of filicide takes on the cast of tragic inevitability in this haunting true tale of violence, greed, revenge, and death. Fusing the narrative power of an award-winning novelist and the detailed research of an experienced investigator, Darcy O’Brien unfolds the story of Dr. John Dale Cavaness, the southern Illinois physician and surgeon who in December 1984 was charged with the murder of his son Sean. Outraged by the arrest of the skilled medical practitioner who selflessly attended to their needs, the people of Little Egypt rose to his defense.

In the trial, however, a radically different, disquieting portrait of Dr. Cavaness would emerge. For throughout the three decades that he enjoyed the admiration and respect of his community, Cavaness was privately terrorizing his family, abusing his employees, and making disastrous financial investments as well as brawling and womanizing.

What was not revealed in the trial, however, was that seven years earlier, in a homicide that had never been solved, the body of Cavaness’s firstborn son, Mark, had been found shot dead in the woods of Little Egypt.

In addition to a compelling chronicle that uncovers the truth behind two ghastly crimes and lays bare the Jekyll–Hyde psyche of their perpetrator, Murder in Little Egypt brings into stark midwestern light the hidden, gothic underside of an America bred on violence and bathed in blood.

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October 17th 2008

Sunstorm


This is the second of Clarke and Baxter’s Time Odyssey series.

At the end of the previous installment, Lieutenant Bisea has been returned from Mir to her own time and place.  She figures only peripherally in this installment.

Mostly, this book is about the sun-storm that is going to pretty much fry the solar system.  All manner of interesting and semi-interesting characters — politicians, scientists, military types, lunatics — come together to create a shield that will keep the sunstorm from frying Earth.  Bisea is there only to warn people that it was the Firstborn aliens who caused the sunstorm in the first place.

While it’s an interesting story, it’s much more about the science part of science fiction… development of individual characters doesn’t go much past a thinly fleshed-out stereotype.  In fact, several of the characters are simply cardboard cutouts propped up to serve a particular function.

If you enjoyed geeking out to the hard science part of the scifi genre, this is the book for you.  But if you want to know a bit more about the characters running around saving the world, you might want to skip this one.  I’m not sorry I read it, but I’m not likely to read the third book in this series.

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