Thursday, March 29, 2012
Theme Thursday - Ending
Theme Thursdays is a fun weekly event that will be open from one Thursday to the next. Hosted by Reading Between Pages.
Anyone can participate in it.
The rules are simple:
•A theme will be posted each week (on Thursday’s)
•Select a conversation/snippet/sentence from the current book you are reading
•Mention the author and the title of the book along with your post
•It is important that the theme is conveyed in the sentence (you don’t necessarily need to have the word) Ex: If the theme is KISS; your sentence can have “They kissed so gently” or “Their lips touched each other” or “The smooch was so passionate”
This week’s theme is – ENDING - Last sentence from the last page of the book
Like the man’s legacy, it is certainly broad, manifestly massive, and, for all practical purposes, invisible to terrestrial eyes.
- Circumference by Nicholas Nicastro
The man in this case is Eratosthenes. Something was named after him apparently. Something apropos. I’m not sure what yet. But it seems I’ll find out when I finish the book I guess.
Sunday, March 25, 2012
Skellig Book vs. Movie
Skellig by David Almond
Skellig: The Owl Man with Tim Roth
Michael moves into a new home with his parents and newborn sister. He finds a man in the run down garage that is not quite a man. And he and his friend Mina befriend this incredible being and all their lives are changed forever.
The book is a deceptively simple story about a boy who is both jealous of and worried about his baby sister who has been sick since the day she was born. There is a subtle magic and fantasy to the story that adds a nice twist to the traditional coming of age tale of a boy in a new home, with a new sister and all the other changes in his life. And it also shows what friendship and love can do in people’s lives.
The movie is more dramatic. It seems that everything is done bigger. Starting with small things like how rude Skellig was to begin with to a big dramatic flying scene. Everyone’s reactions are bigger. There’s more yelling between the characters. The magic is more obvious. All these things can be expected to try to make the movie more entertaining but it takes some of the simplicity that I liked in the book away.
Mina is a bit of a stuck up brat in both the book and movie but she seems less likeable in the movie.
One of Michael’s friends is also rather unlikeable. He made fun of Michael a bit in the book too. But at least in the book you could see why they were friends to begin with but it was hard to see it in the movie.
The stories are very similar and most of the changes can be forgiven for the sake of trying to make a dramatic movie but I like the way the book is a smaller, softer, subtler story where the power of it kind of sneaks up on you and surprises you.
Skellig: The Owl Man with Tim Roth
Michael moves into a new home with his parents and newborn sister. He finds a man in the run down garage that is not quite a man. And he and his friend Mina befriend this incredible being and all their lives are changed forever.
The book is a deceptively simple story about a boy who is both jealous of and worried about his baby sister who has been sick since the day she was born. There is a subtle magic and fantasy to the story that adds a nice twist to the traditional coming of age tale of a boy in a new home, with a new sister and all the other changes in his life. And it also shows what friendship and love can do in people’s lives.
The movie is more dramatic. It seems that everything is done bigger. Starting with small things like how rude Skellig was to begin with to a big dramatic flying scene. Everyone’s reactions are bigger. There’s more yelling between the characters. The magic is more obvious. All these things can be expected to try to make the movie more entertaining but it takes some of the simplicity that I liked in the book away.
Mina is a bit of a stuck up brat in both the book and movie but she seems less likeable in the movie.
One of Michael’s friends is also rather unlikeable. He made fun of Michael a bit in the book too. But at least in the book you could see why they were friends to begin with but it was hard to see it in the movie.
The stories are very similar and most of the changes can be forgiven for the sake of trying to make a dramatic movie but I like the way the book is a smaller, softer, subtler story where the power of it kind of sneaks up on you and surprises you.
Saturday, March 24, 2012
Wasp Review
Wasp by Eric Frank Russell
(from the back of the book)
The war had been going on for nearly a year and the Sirian
Empire had a huge advantage in personnel and equipment. Earth needed an edge. Which was where James Mowry came in.
If a small insect buzzing around in a car could so distract
the driver as to cause that vehicle to crash, think what havoc one properly
trained operative could wreak on an unsuspecting enemy.
Intensively trained, his appearance surgically altered,
James Mowry is landed on Jaimec, the ninety-fourth planet of the Sirian
Empire. His mission is simple: sap
morale, cause mayhem, tie up resources, wage a one-man war on a planet of
eighty million. In short, be a wasp.
It is a science fiction book but that shouldn’t scare away
any non-science fiction fans. It happens
on another planet and there is space travel but the science fiction elements
are not a big influence on the plot.
Change it from another planet to another country and it becomes an
espionage story instead. There is a dark
humor to the story as you watch this one lone human running around an alien
planet causing all sorts of trouble for the government and making them believe
that there is a whole organization involved and not just one man. There is suspense and a few thrills as Mowry
runs for his life on a hostile planet amid the chaos he has created. So if you are not a science fiction fan but
like espionage stories with a lighter feel to them you should give this a
try. If you are a science fiction fan
you should not be put off by the fact that it isn’t very science fictiony. You won’t get warp drives, first contacts or
time travel but it is still a good, fast story.
Wednesday, March 21, 2012
WWW Wednesdays (March 21st)
To play along just answer the following three (3) questions...
*What are you currently reading?
*What did you recently finish reading?
*What do you think you’ll read next?
Leave a link to your post (or the answers themselves if you do not have a blog) in the comments of Should Be Reading.
What are you currently reading?
Castle in the Air by Donald Westlake
I love Westlake’s comedy crime novels.
What did you recently finish reading?
Remote Control by Jack Heath
The second book in a young adult series. I like them. They are fun and quick to read.
What do you think you’ll read next?
I think I’ll start Circumference by Nicholas Nicastro. I bought it a while ago and just never got around to reading it. I think it’s time.
Tuesday, March 20, 2012
Win The Taker
Bea's Book Nook is giving away a copy of The Taker by Alma Katsu.
You will have to read the excerpt to find the answer to a question to enter.
Open until March 25th to the US only.
You will have to read the excerpt to find the answer to a question to enter.
Open until March 25th to the US only.
Saturday, March 17, 2012
Was Superman a Spy Review
Brian Cronin has collected some of the comic book stories,
legends, rumors, and myths that he has been exploring for years on his blog and
collected them all into one book.
I was thinking of this book as a list of comic book rumors
and the truth about them. That is not
exactly the format that this book takes.
It reads more like a history of the major comic book companies and how
various characters and plot points came about.
So most of the time I didn’t know what the myth was he was responding
to. And I do think that Cronin uses exclamation
points (!!!!) more often than the facts warrant. Nothing is quite that exciting. But that doesn’t mean that the information was
not interesting. I’ve never looked into
it much before myself so most of the information here was new to me. Not only do you learn why they came up with kryptonite
and why Batgirl was introduced, and many other tidbits but you also learn about
the crazy comic book politics. The
fighting and the way stories were changed around to fit with movies or TV shows
and such and the battles over the rights to use certain names and terms. (Hulk
Hogan had a run-in with Marvel about his name.) Knowing all the weirdness that went on behind
the comic books does not make them less fun to read. In fact I think it might make them more fun. You, of course, have to be a comic book fan
to care about any of the information in this book but if you are I think you
will find something here for you.
Monday, March 12, 2012
Check Out the Happiness Blog Tour
Go check out the Happiness Blog Tour. Bryan Cohen is giving away paperback and audio book copies of his book The Post-College Guide to Happiness. And a Kindle Fire. Plus everyone who enters will get a free digital review copy.
The blog tour will visit 61 blogs in 61 days. It started on March 1st and will go until April 30th.
The winners will be chosen after the blog tour is over.
The blog tour will visit 61 blogs in 61 days. It started on March 1st and will go until April 30th.
The winners will be chosen after the blog tour is over.
Saturday, March 10, 2012
Storm Front Review
Storm Front by Jim Butcher
(from the back of the book)
Harry Dresden is the best at what he does. Well, technically, he’s the only at what he
does. So when the Chicago P.D. has a
case that transcends mortal creativity or capability, they come to him for
answers. For the “everyday” world is
actually full of strange and magical things – and most of them don’t play well
with humans. That’s where Harry comes
in. Takes a wizard to catch a – well,
whatever.
There’s just one problem.
Business, to put it mildly, stinks.
So when the police bring him in to consult on a grisly double murder
committed with black magic, Harry’s seeing dollar signs. But where there’s black magic, there’s a
black mage behind it. And now that mage knows
Harry’s name. And that’s when things
start to get…interesting.
Magic. It can get a
guy killed.
This is the first book in the Dresden Files series. So there is some set up here as Butcher
introduces his characters and explains the world they live in. But the story never drags. It is a fast read with a lot of interesting
characters. There is action and suspense
and some mystery. It is fun to get to know Dresden and start to understand his
relationship with the ‘magic’ world and the everyday ordinary one. He is a witty guy who has a self-deprecating
type of humor and is truly interested in helping people and doing the right
things, so he is an easy guy to like. He
is slightly bitter about some things in his past without becoming obnoxious
about it. Which I think is hard to do in
a character. You get some glimpses at
Dresden’s history and also some hints about information that you will learn in
future books. And you are left wanting
to read future books to learn more about Dresden and all of his friends (and
some people who aren’t all that friendly) and to watch him get into trouble and
then get himself back out of it again. It
will keep you interested and entertained right to the very end.
Thursday, March 8, 2012
Theme Thursday - Birth Date
Theme Thursdays is a fun weekly event that will be open from one Thursday to the next. Hosted by Reading Between Pages.
Anyone can participate in it.
The rules are simple:
•A theme will be posted each week (on Thursday’s)
•Select a conversation/snippet/sentence from the current book you are reading
•Mention the author and the title of the book along with your post
•It is important that the theme is conveyed in the sentence (you don’t necessarily need to have the word) Ex: If the theme is KISS; your sentence can have “They kissed so gently” or “Their lips touched each other” or “The smooch was so passionate”
This week’s theme is – BIRTHDATE - First snippet from the page that is your birthdate (So, I was born on the 22nd, so I would use page 22.)
Most “retired” Mrs. Malaprops were released into the BookWorld, where they turned ferrule, but just recently rehoming charities were taking note of their plight.
-- One of Our Thursdays is Missing by Jasper Fforde (page 22)
Wednesday, March 7, 2012
WWW Wednesdays (March 7th)
To play along just answer the following three (3) questions...
*What are you currently reading?
*What did you recently finish reading?
*What do you think you’ll read next?
Leave a link to your post (or the answers themselves if you do not have a blog) in the comments of Should be Reading.
What are you currently reading?
One of Our Thursdays is Missing by Jasper Fforde
This had a slow start but it’s picking up a little so I still have hope.
The Knight in History by Frances Gies
This looks like it is going to have a lot of information and most of it interesting but it might be rather dense and not as readable as I had hoped.
What did you recently finish reading?
Wasp by Eric Frank Russell
One man is sent to an alien planet to see how much havoc he can wreak to help the war effort.
What do you think you’ll read next?
I have no idea. I just got a review copy of The Age of Miracles by Karen Thompson Walker. So maybe that. Then again, maybe not.
The Gods of Gotham Review
(from the book jacket)
It is 1845…Timothy Wilde tends bar near the Exchange,
fantasizing about the day he will have enough money to win the girl of his
dreams. But when his dreams incinerate
in a fire that devastates downtown Manhattan, he finds himself disfigured,
unemployed, and homeless. His older
brother gets him a job in the newly minted NYPD, but Timothy is highly
skeptical of this new “police force.”
And he is less than thrilled that his new beat is the notoriously
down-and-out Sixth Ward of the city – at the edge of Five Points, the world’s
most notorious slum.
One night while making his rounds, Timothy runs into,
literally, a little slip of a girl – a girl not more than ten years old,
dashing through the dark in her nightshirt…covered head to toe in blood.
Timothy knows he should take the girl to the House of
Refuge, yet he can’t bring himself to abandon her. Instead he takes her to his house, where she
spins wild stories, claiming that dozens of bodies are buried in the forest
north of Twenty-third Street. Timothy
isn’t sure whether to believe her or not, but as the truth unfolds, the
reluctant copper star finds himself engaged in a battle for justice that nearly
costs him his brother, his romantic obsession, and his own life.
This is a dark story.
But it happens in what was a dark time.
And through Faye’s writing you feel like you really, at least start to,
understand what it was like to live at that time. The setting is very realistically brought to
life. I like the use of flash
(dictionary provided) which is a street language that not everyone
understood. It was interesting to learn
some of the words and it added something to the realism of the dialogue. There are a host of interesting characters
that are complex and well thought out. And
with all the different political and personal motives and goals going on you
are kept guessing as to how the mystery is going to resolve. The history of the time is interesting to
read about and I like the way Timothy turns from a copper star walking a beat
into a detective solving crimes by the end of the book. As I’ve mentioned it is a bit of a dark story
but without belittling the bleakness of the times or the hardships of the
people Faye manages to put some hope in the story too so it does not leave the
reader depressed. The ending does leave
the possibility that we will be hearing about Timothy Wilde in the future. Which I will be looking forward to.
Saturday, March 3, 2012
His Girl Friday Review
With Cary Grant and Rosalind Russell
A newspaper reporter tries to win back his co-worker ex-wife
before she remarries all while both are trying to get a story about an escaped
prisoner and his plight.
I think this is supposed to be a romantic comedy but
unfortunately there didn’t seem to be much of either. There didn’t seem to be any warm feelings
between Grant and Russell and they weren’t a couple you were rooting for. You do feel sorry for Bellamy’s character,
Russell’s fiancé, because he got involved with either of these rather
unlikeable characters. The slow nature
of Bellamy’s character emphasizes the difference between what Russell is
leaving behind and what she has in front of her but what I liked best about it
was that it provided a break from the frantic pace and high volume of the rest
of the movie. There were a couple of
funny lines but I think most of the comedy is supposed to come from the scenes
where everyone is talking at once. And
instead of being funny it just becomes annoying as you can’t tell what anyone
is saying and everyone just gets louder until my head started to hurt. In my opinion this is not one of the better
Cary Grant movies.
Friday, March 2, 2012
Friday 56 (March 1st)
Rules:
*Grab a book, any book.
*Turn to page 56.
*Find any sentence that grabs you.
*Post it.
*Link it to Freda's Voice.
*Add your (url) post to Linky on Freda’s post
*Grab a book, any book.
*Turn to page 56.
*Find any sentence that grabs you.
*Post it.
*Link it to Freda's Voice.
*Add your (url) post to Linky on Freda’s post
This week the book is The Gods of Gotham by Lyndsay
Faye. It is rather a dark story about
the time when the NY police force was just getting formed.
Truthfully, my stoicism was all bluff – the thought of
seeing myself turned my stomach. It was
a coward’s avoidance, not a resigned and phlegmatic survivor’s.
Thursday, March 1, 2012
Theme Thursdays - Name
Theme Thursdays is a fun weekly event that will be open from one Thursday to the next. Hosted by Reading Between Pages.
Anyone can participate in it.
The rules are simple:
•A theme will be posted each week (on Thursday’s)
•Select a conversation/snippet/sentence from the current book you are reading
•Mention the author and the title of the book along with your post
•It is important that the theme is conveyed in the sentence (you don’t necessarily need to have the word) Ex: If the theme is KISS; your sentence can have “They kissed so gently” or “Their lips touched each other” or “The smooch was so passionate”
This week’s theme is – Name: The first name you come across while reading
It doesn’t make for the most interesting reading or even make much sense all by itself but here goes.
Ultimately, Quesada managed to get them to allow Milgrom to continue to work at Marvel on a freelance basis, although his staff position was taken away.
- Was Superman a Spy? by Brian Cronin
Milgrom was inking comic books and slipped an insult into one of the panels. They were going to fire him completely but I guess Quesada stepped in.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)