I actually kind of liked the monster parts. I think the book would have benefited from her throwing everything else out and making the monster part a short story!
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."
That was irritating, but we were told fairly early that the father was someone in Templeton. What was really irritating was the whole scavenger hunt thing, which just made the mother look like a bitch. It would have been better if the book had another reason for her to scour Templeton's history and through that she stumbled on the answer. I really liked the parts about putting together Templeton's history.
eta: I think the monster could have been a whole different book. Just not the one she wrote.
What was really irritating was the whole scavenger hunt thing, which just made the mother look like a bitch.
It totally did! It made no sense except as a device to keep the daughter there.
The daughter wanted to stay and sort things out anyway. I think she would have leapt on the thinnest of reasons and would have jumped at any research project to distract herself. She could have found a clue in the house earlier. There could have been some piece of information needed or they'd lose the house.
It is a first novel. I'd give the author another chance, but better editing would have improved this one. I think the basic stuff was there.
Any stand-out historical non-fic
Rising Tide: The Great Mississippi Flood of 1927 and How It Changed America is very good.
And I'll repeat my rec for Three Cups of Tea
Any stand-out historical non-fic
The Ghost Map, by Steven Johnson, is very good. It's about a cholera epidemic in London during the 1800s, and how figuring out the source and transmission pretty much gave rise to modern epidemiology. It's also the story of the partnership of Reverend Henry Whitehead and Dr. John Snow, who worked together to figure things out.
The Ghost Map sounds intriguing. And I read Three Cups of Tea and quite liked it.
The woman who wrote Reading Lolita in Tehran has come out with a memoir I want to read. I really liked RLiT.
I have The Ghost Map on my wishlist! And when I was working in the bookstore, so many people were asking for Three Cups of Tea. We could barely keep it in. It looks really good.
That's funny -- Three Cups of Tea was just recommended to me, and when I said I hadn't heard of it, the recommender assured me that I would see it everywhere.
I've got Stephen Johnson's new book, The Invention of Air, on top of my To Be Read pile. He's going to be on Colbert tonight--should be pretty interesting!