miko: Photo of me by the river (Default)
Apparently I fill out book reviews quarterly?

The Whisper of Legends by Barbara Fradkin: This is an Inspector Green novel, but it wasn't my favourite in the series. Instead of the usual Ottawa setting, this is a fish-out-of-water cop in the wilderness of BC book... not really what I want from this series. Green spends most of it sadly incompetent as a city-boy and without much of a mystery to solve until right near the end.

The Fall Guy by Barbara Fradkin: I must have stuck this one on my list thinking it was a normal novel in a different series by this author, but it's actually a "quick reads" short story. The main character is a somewhat bumbling carpenter who - as with most cozies - gets implicated in a death and has to figure out what happened so he doesn't get sued (rather than jailed, which would be the more standard one). It was meh, if it hadn't been so short I probably wouldn't have finished it. It did improve somewhat, but there just isn't enough book for it to feel like it had more than sketched caricatures rather than fleshed characters.

Magic Rises by Ilona Andrews: This is part of a long running series that I normally really enjoy... but it's now suffering from the fact that the characters are too powerful in their home positions and normal circumstances, so to get some tension, this one takes Kate and Curran to Europe to deal with packs there. Plus, Kate's past that she's generally been hiding from (but not distractingly so) in the other books comes to the forefront. Darker than the earlier books in the series, though still enjoyable enough. Turns out I'm just not that keen on the big climactic battles as series start to wrap up.

A Slip of the Keyboard by Terry Pratchett: Didn't finish this collection of short essays. It suffered from too much of the same - it's just a bunch of pretty similar bits that Pratchett wrote for various publications and conventions over the years. There were probably a few things you could glean, but it's certainly not something I could sit and read through... and honestly, it was only going to dull my enjoyment of his fiction knowing his thoughts on the writing process. Probably best that I stopped.

Unbound by Jim C. Hines: The latest in the libriomancer series was... okay. Isaac is without his powers in this one, and honestly not that interesting because of it. His ridiculous team up buddies were kinda fun, and the book moves along quickly enough, but I didn't love the bad guy dynamic and I find that when the character is working on a puzzle that's unsolvable by the reader to be a little unexciting.

Chew [3] by John Layman: I continue to enjoy this comic book series. FDA agent who can see the history of things he eats, and his competent girlfriend who can describe foods so strongly that people taste them? Ridiculous and amusing.

The Doomsday Equation by Matt Richtel: Here's an unusual one - I didn't like the main character, but it didn't detract from my enjoyment of this book! He's a jerk of a Silicon Valley techie who is super wrapped up in himself and his software that predicts conflict... which fails when he field tests it. When it predicts a nuclear war he doesn't know if the software is still broken or if something terrible is coming, cue odd techno-nerd thriller from there. Enjoyable because he was believable enough and didn't need to be sympathetic for the story to work.

Karen Memory by Elizabeth Bear: This book is set in a steampunk historical west coast (Seattle/Portland/etc) city and features a main character who is a prostitute and all her coworkers, fighting against the (inevitably corrupt) mayor. I liked it! It gets a bit overly magical at the end (the tech is not believable), but I liked the writing and the characters.

Johnny Hiro by Fred Chao: A comic book about a young guy making a living in a town that is home to ninja gangs, dinosaurs, etc. Completely absurd but played relatively straight, this was a fun one with an appropriate art style.

Kop by Warren Hammond: In a future colony world where the economy has collapsed, a corrupt cop works to keep his corrupt chief in power. The setting of this one is pretty interesting - the colony world is very poor, but still has periodic interaction with rich offworlders/earthers... so while most of it is pretty low tech, there's a wide range on occasion. The main character isn't a particularly smart or good person, but he grows on you. I'm planning to keep on with the series.

Magic Breaks by Ilona Andrews: I think this is the Kate Daniels book where half of it is about her husband's ex-wife trying to ruin their marriage? If so, I didn't enjoy that. There's rare glimpses of the intelligence I expect from Kate and Curran (they do talk about what his ex-wife is doing, rather than being pissed off at each other all the time per her machinations), but it was a tiring read. Oh, and big-bad continues to be big and bad as the main story line, I guess.

Man of La Mancha [CD]: Apropos of nothing, I like the music from Man of La Mancha although my knowledge of the play and Don Quixote is meager.

Wicked [CD]: However, with the exception of the song "popular", which is fun, I don't like the music from Wicked. So dense. So repetitive. Maybe I'd be more inclined to it if I saw the musical, but I'm guessing I've got enough bias at this point that it'd be hard to turn enjoy.

A Natural History of Dragons by Marie Brennan: This is a book that is... hm... pride and prejudice with dragons, I suppose. I liked it a lot! The book is written as a memoir from the now old Lady Trent, describing her early life and obsession with learning about dragons. I enjoyed her scientific approach (very field naturalist) and even enjoyed the regency styling of the historical period. I'll be getting out more in the series - looking forward to seeing how she evolves into her older self through the stories.

Planetary [2] by Warren Ellis: Planetary continues to be a kinda weird comic book about super powered individuals. I enjoy it while I'm reading it but haven't developed any meaningful connection to the characters. The artwork is pretty good.

The Best Laid Plans by Terry Fallis: I wasn't sure I'd enjoy this book much. It's about a last-ditch candidacy run by a party insider for a candidate that doesn't want to be elected to parliament at all... so of course, a huge scandal breaks on the incumbent and this guy gets elected instead. It was marketed as being a funny look inside Canadian politics, but it came across more as a lefty-fantasy about unseating Jim Flaherty with a down-to-earth left wing professor who would turn parliament on its head, for the assumed-better. That said, I enjoyed it well enough for what it was - the characters were quirky and the climax amusing.

Legacy by Jeanne C. Stein: Oh dear, this series fell on its face. Weird "sexy" scenes, stupid issues that would have been solved by better communication, introduction of more supernatural things kinda pointlessly... not good. Plus, nothing of her doing her bounty hunter job, which was what made this series interesting. I'll not continue with this one, there's much better urban fantasy to be had.

My Fair Lady [CD]: I like the music from My Fair Lady well enough. Not as much as our band conductor, though!

Unsympathetic Magic by Laura Resnick: The library didn't have the second book in the Esther Diamond series, so I've skipped ahead to the third. This one was our aspiring actress getting caught up in a voodoo plot... not as good as the first one, but generally still an amusing romp. Would have liked more of the knowledgeable wizard friend and for the book not to have had such a ridiculous cover. Although it did stop a guy from continuing to talk to me on the bus when he asked what I was reading and I flipped it over...

Deadout by Jonathan McGoran: This is the second book in a series of weird eco-thrillers, the first of which I didn't like until the twist turned out not to be as preachy as I'd feared. For this second one, I didn't have that weighing on me, so I just played along as the author unspooled a weird story set in Martha's Vineyard with genetically modified bees and colony collapse and all that fun stuff. The main character is still dumb as a bag of bricks, so things just sort of happen around him while he gets in fights with random people. This one was straightforward and predictable as far as the evildoers' plot goes, which was a tad disappointing since the other one actually surprised me. I think continuing with this character is a mistake, though, and the stories would probably have been better as standalones. Now it just seems like weird eco-crises follow him around.

Valour and Vanity by Mary Robinette Kowal: This is somewhere in the series that is regency-with-magic where people can fold light to make images. The main characters are now happily married and doing well for themselves, which of course means they need to be attacked by pirates and be without their resources for most of the book. If you didn't get the sarcasm in text form, I promise it was there in my head. Then, later, the book turns into a heist story abruptly. There are a few novel uses of the magic, but that's about all there is to recommend this one. Earlier in the series was more satisfying.
miko: Photo of me by the river (Default)
More getting-vague recollections of books I've read!

Lock In by John Scalzi: This standalone novel was not at all what I expected - the press I'd seen about it was focused on the hook: that the world had an epidemic disease that caused a percentage of people to be unable to control their bodies but still mentally there. In actual fact, the book is set long enough after that (the main character is one of the "locked in", but has a robot body to use) that it wasn't the focal point. Instead, it's a mystery novel with some interesting political fallout from the epidemic. I quite enjoyed it, and it's worth a shot even if Scalzi's more traditional sci fi never interested you.

Bones Never Lie by Kathy Reichs: Not my favourite novel in the series. Child murders from the past (was I supposed to remember this from a previous book?), by a serial killer, with the subplot being the break down of her romantic lead? Pretty much a downer. Didn't feel like there was a lot of forensics of interest either, the lead was more just swept along in a normal police investigation.

Raging Heat by Richard Castle: Another in the Castle tie-in series of novels. Fun, and despite a ridiculous opening (the body falling through the glass roof of a museum), a solid enough mystery. Still curious who the writer(s) are.

Traitor's Blade by Sebastien de Castell: Aw, I wanted to be able to recommend this one, I really did. I enjoyed most of it - the stories of three down-and-out traveling judges (well, basically) in olden times with amusingly modern language (not anachronistic, per se, but very current phrasing), swordfights, etc. But then the author deus ex'd (literally - suddenly direct intervention of gods/saints, what? and also figuratively - "all the things you were doing, I had planned from the start!") the whole damn thing in the end, and it was very disappointing.

The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-time Indian by Sherman Alexie: A young adult novel, including illustrations (the narrator likes to draw comics), about growing up on the res. It's a light read, halfheartedly amusing with some sad truths.

Enders by Lissa Price: Wasn't as keen on this one as on the first novel (Starters). Maybe I spent too long between them, but I didn't feel terribly connected to the character's woes, and the twist felt hollow and uninteresting to me because of it.

Small Favor by Jim Butcher: This was possibly the best Dresden Files book I remember reading. Nothing about it repulsed me, it was simply enjoyable to read.

Beautiful Lie the Dead by Barbara Fradkin: Another in the local mystery series. I liked it - the inspector's home life wasn't weird or angsty and the mystery was solid (if a bit cringe-worthy in conclusion).
miko: Photo of me by the river (Default)
This Thing of Darkness is the 7th in the Inspector Green mystery series.

The books continue to be well written mysteries, but this one felt... staged. The author really seems to want to tie in all her main characters in every book, and directly to the mystery, such that it's honestly getting a bit repetitive. Inspector Green is Jewish, so of course there's a connection to the Jewish community (the victim, who also reminds him of his ailing father, because that's another thing she likes to mention all the time)... his wife is a nurse at the mental hospital, so the suspect is a patient at said hospital...

I don't know. It didn't feel good. It felt like watching a TV show - where you can predict what's happening just based on "this person had a speaking role" or "they mentioned this unnecessarily". I don't normally feel too strongly about it, but it grated on this one.
miko: Photo of me by the river (Default)
Dream Chasers is the sixth book in the Inspector Green series. This book started out a bit weak, I thought, and then improved to the point where I'd say I quite enjoyed it.

The weak start seemed mostly because it opened prior to the crimes that would be the core of the investigation... and that half the viewpoint was from a civilian trying to investigate. It was a bit off putting in what is normally a straight police procedural, almost feeling like a awkward cozy until mid way through.

Also, I spent some time being a bit miffed about the bad description of Hog's Back Park. She describes the fence around the falls as being something that could be bypassed with a teenager's determination and ingenuity... when we all know that it can be defeated by a tiny effort of throwing your leg over it, or by walking a couple minutes to a spot where there is no fence. It just made the detective seem kind of stupid, especially with the cover more accurately illustrating the "fence" on the other side of the falls that is pretty much just a hand rail. Plus, a subsequent description of the park having hundreds of places a body could be hidden seemed exaggerated: there are so many people all over the park in the summer, and since they weren't including the larger parks on either side, the less-travelled areas are pretty minor.

Despite my harping on it, those were pretty minor issues in an otherwise good mystery novel. I enjoyed the hockey connection as well, and this was set just after the team's playoff run ended. Very much captured what I remember of the city that year. Also pleasantly, the main character's life, although not perfect, is also not falling apart in this. I've read a few too many police procedurals like that lately.
miko: Photo of me by the river (Default)
Honour Among Men is the fifth book in the Inspector Green series of mystery novels. These are police procedurals set in my hometown, by an author who lives in the area, which adds to my enjoyment of them.

This book is focused on UN peacekeeping history after the widowed-girlfriend of a reservist is found dead. I truthfully don't have a lot to say about it: I really enjoyed this one and don't want to spoil anything. The setting is familiar and accurate, the politics surrounding investigations that involve the military are interesting, and the characters are pleasantly human and react appropriately to the various events in the book.

I'd say what set this book up quite differently than other recent mysteries I've read is that the officers were continually getting more leads and more information - no incredible (in a bad way) deductive leaps required. It felt reasonable to me: not every case is going to be a Moriarty-level crime, and I found this to be a satisfying read.

I'm very much looking forward to continuing the series - looks like I've got four more in the queue before I catch up to the current release.

June 2015

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