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Good Books...

...you should read. And other important stuff.

FB Summary -- Various (10)

Last post 02-21-2010 4:12 PM by Jon. 0 replies.
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  • 02-21-2010 4:12 PM

    • Jon
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    • Joined on 07-11-2005
    • Posts 463

    FB Summary -- Various (10)

    _The Club Dumas_ by Pérez-Reverte. Very entertaining but it's been thirty years since I ripped through basic Dumas and some if it's kind of hazy. Seeing _The Ninth Gate_ (based on this book) is more recent, but probably just as hazy because it was plain bad...

    finished (okay, a while ago) _The Shadow of the North_ by, yep, Philip Pullman. Much more just a Victorian mystery story than the adventurish _Ruby in the Smoke_. I preferred the first book. I think now I'll let Pullman rest--I'm not feeling a need to read the final two Sally Lockhart books. On to Pérez-Reverte...or back to Patrick O'Brian.

    _The Ruby in the Smoke_ by Philip Pullman. Interestingly different from "His Dark Materials" series. I was reminded of loving the Moriarty couple of books that John Gardner back in the late 70s--seeing Victorian London at the non-drawing room level in an adventure setting. Or a less racist Dr Fu Manchu with plucky girl heroine...

    _The Astonishing Adventures of Fan Boy and Goth Girl_ by Barry Lyga. Trying to think of a book from last year to compare it to, but it's not coming in right now. (It was _As Simple As Snow_.)

    _Lyra's Oxford by Phillip Pullman. Seems to be a place holder while he decides what, if anything, he can do in the Dark Materials universe to top, well, killing off the upper ranks of Heaven...

    _The Amber Spyglass_ by Philip Pullman. Fun fact: while reading it a show came on PBS about the awakening of conciousness in humans. That is, the arrival of dust.

    _The Cow-Tail Switch_ by Harold Courlander and George Herzog. Reading it was a trip down memory lane--I recorded a bunch of these stories for bed-time tapes years ago for the kids. They still love their Anansi stories, though truth to tell, I think their greatest trickster love is reserved for Kantchil the mousedeer.

    _The Pirate Latitudes_ by Michael Crichton. Posthumous manuscript that includes just about everything possible in a pirate story and then some. I'm thinking he wrote it with an eye towards filming. Still, it made several fun hours. If the rest of 2010 is as much fun as the first book, that would be good.

    (as the last book of the year) _Loitering with Intent_ by Stuart Woods. Stone and Dino hang around Key West wisecracking and setting the world to rights.

    _Resolution_ by Robert B Parker, a western. Well, more like Spenser and Hawk in the old west, but western trappings. With the variety yesterday (fantasy, chick lit, science fiction, crime thriller) and this, I must admit I'm feeling a lot of genre confusion...

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