12 Comments
Jan 23, 2021Liked by Kim Werker

I have been having trouble concentrating enough to sit and read a book, or so it has seemed, anyway. So I have been listening to audiobooks for the most part. I LOVE audiobooks, as it turns out. For me, it is exactly like having my grandfather read stories to us when I was little: He used to do all the voices, and add sound effects and whatnot. Being read to (with voices!) is such a treat for me.

Anyway, I finally started the Dresden Files, by Jim Butcher, a series which was recommended to me eons ago. The narrator is James Marsters, which is a hoot because he played Spike on Buffy the Vampire Slayer—and Jim Butcher makes many references to BthVS, and I think even made one about Spike once (have to double check). Hilarious, I bet JM loved it!

I made it to book #8 before I realized there were more and more references to things which had happened in the first three books...much of which I had skipped because the writing was so uneven. (By end of book 3 and definitely by book 4, author has gotten his writing act together; this is also when the narrator really gets into reading it in as entertaining a way as possible. It is now one of my fave series.

Sooo, I went back to book #1, Storm Front, and I decided to read the first three again so I could better understand what everyone’s talking about, but in actual book form rather than audiobook. I have both the physical book as well as the kindle edition (I switch back and forth depending on where I am), and I am really enjoying the physical book in my hands. REALLY. 😊

I have some books which are more “serious” in nature on my list, but let’s see how I manage the wizard world first. 🧙🏻‍♂️

Interesting tidbit in case anyone cares: The cover for each book portrays the Wizard Dresden in various dramatic poses, complete with staff and a great almost-cowboy hat pulled low over his face. Except: There is no hat in any of the books. Dresden uses a staff, yup, but no hat. The hat came from the cover designer, who thought it made Dresden look more moody-cool. The publisher apparently agreed, as did the author. (Tiny useless Factoid for your day.)

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Started Empire of Wild by Cherie Dimaline (a Metis writer), enjoying it so far, when I can find the ability to focus on something for longer than the duration of a tiktok video. *sigh*

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Jan 15, 2021Liked by Kim Werker

If you haven’t tried Marie Bennett’s books, they are gems. All are historical fiction based on real people. Women who made often uncredited contributions

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Jan 30, 2021Liked by Kim Werker

I'm sorry Mexican Gothic didn't grab you, as it was by far my favorite read last year. I remember taking a long time to come around to Noemi, so I totally understand putting it down because you didn't care about the characters. I understand why people have compared it to Rebecca but its similarities to Rebecca seem to me to be more about them both being gothics than about anything specific about those two books.

I have a TON of books on the go right now, but am most focused on finishing The Historian, which has taken me almost two months to read. It's a multilayered story about scholars investigating whether Dracula is real. I have enjoyed it but it can be dense so I have to put it down sometimes.

I'm planning to continue my dark academia streak next with M. L. Rio's If We Were Villains and Monica Awad's Bunny.

I've also got a couple of romance e-books going from the library - the first Bridgerton book, The Duke and I, even though the show left me feeling kind of icky & frustrated, and the first in Alyssa Cole's Reluctant Royals series, A Princess in Theory. I love that one of Cole's protagonists is a Black woman public health grad student.

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Jan 23, 2021Liked by Kim Werker

I hated Mexican Gothic! Which was disappointing. I wanted to love it. All the people who compare it to my beloved Rebecca are WRONG. I am currently reading The Once and Future Witches by Alix Harrow. It's lovely so far. A few days ago I finished a rather obscure book, The House in Norham Gardens by Penelope Lively. It was published in, I think, 1974, and was classified then as children's, but I think I'd call it YA now. If you don't know PL, she is British, and the book is out of print, my library didn't have it and I had to buy a copy from Alibris. Anyway, I HIGHLY recommend it. It's a rather quiet kind of gothic mystery/fantasy. Surprisingly progressive. I am already looking forward to reading it again.

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Jan 15, 2021Liked by Kim Werker

I've been reading Ruth Downie's books, which are mysteries set in Roman-era Britain. I'm a sucker for both mysteries and historical fiction. I'm also dying for Becky Chambers's next book to come out. During the fall I finally got around to reading The Long Way to a Small, Angry Planet and loved it, then pretty much tore through everything else she's written over a period of a few weeks, then wished I'd made them last longer. (Her new one will be out in April, I think.)

For non-fiction, I'm currently listening to a Great Courses thing on the history of the English language. And waiting for Four Lost Cities: A Secret History of the Urban Age by Annalee Newitz to come out - it looks really good and will be out in a couple of weeks.

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