I finished I The Girl on the Train. It was a little disappointing after all the build-up, I thought.
Literary Buffistas 3: Don't Parse the Blurb, Dear.
There's more to life than watching Buffy the Vampire Slayer! No. Really, there is! Honestly! Here's a place for Buffistas to come and discuss what it is they're reading, their favorite authors and poets. "Geez. Crack a book sometime."
I love the Temeraire series, though IMHO the middle few books aren't as good as the first two or three or the last two. But Napoleonic Wars + dragons is sufficiently my thing that when I heard about the first book, my response was, "What, someone wrote a book JUST FOR ME?!"
I'm also a big fan of the Temeraire books, though I agree there are a couple in the middle that drag a bit. But I love the characters, human and dragon, and the details of how the dragons fit into that world, and I get a vicarious thrill out of all the places they travel.
Kate & Susan speak for me on the Temeraire books. I really loved the 1st, the 3rd & 4th, and quite liked the most recent one. I think the next one is either the last, or the second-to-last.
One of the things I liked about Uprooted is it shows more of Novik's range in a lot of ways. It's not much like Temeraire: it's 1st person POV, set in a somewhat fairy-tale setting, much less military, and more concerned with women and women's relationships than anything else I've read by her.
Agreed on the Temeraire series and this new one. Just finished Uprooted and enjoyed the heck out of it.
I loved the first of the Temeraire books, liked the second, didn't finish the third.
I did, however, finish and really enjoy The Goblin Emperor. I'd really like to read a sequel, if there's going to be one ... and, if not, she should write one. For me.
I just saw that Tanith Lee had died. And I saw a new edition of The Birthgrave just yesterday.
If someone has never read any Tanith Lee, what is the best book to start with?
If someone has never read any Tanith Lee, what is the best book to start with?
Probably Red As Blood, her collection of fairy tale retellings.
While the Blood Opera trilogy (Dark Dance, Personal Darkness, Darkness I) are my favorites, I know that gothic literature, creepy and twisted family dynamics, and a subtle thread of vampires aren't to everyone's taste. I don't UNDERSTAND that mind set, but I know it exists.
While the Blood Opera trilogy (Dark Dance, Personal Darkness, Darkness I) are my favorites, I know that gothic literature, creepy and twisted family dynamics, and a subtle thread of vampires aren't to everyone's taste. I don't UNDERSTAND that mind set, but I know it exists.
I don't see any problem with this description, but the books appear to be out of print. So, I'll start with Red as Blood.