Review: The Heir by Kiera Cass

Featured imageThis contains a few spoilers, mostly on how the original The Selection Trilogy ended.

The Selection introduced us to America Singer, Prince Maxon and the country of Illea and how the heir of the Illean throne picks a bride.  In a Bachelor style reality show.  In the original trilogy,  America battles 34 other girls for the affection of Prince Maxon, all while having feelings for boyfriend back home, Aspen.  In background of all this the country of Illea is in a crisis.  The people are separated into castes that leave no room for upward mobility.  There are threats from within and without as unrest hits a critical mass.  How is anyone supposed to fall in love under this conditions?

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Review: Fledgling by Octavia E. Butler

A woman wakes up burned, shot, and with broken bones in a cave. She can’t remember who she is. She can’t remember how she got there. She can only remember the pain and some instinctual things like a need to eat. Slowly, she’s able to find food and put some things together. She finds the remains of a burned village. She hunts some deer. She wanders down a road and meets Wright and slowly starts to put the pieces together of who and what she is when she bites Wright and drinks his blood. She is part of a vampire race but she is special. She has been genetically engineered with a little human DNA so that she can be alert during the day and she has much more tolerance to the sun. She’s also dark-skinned, something that isn’t true about her people. Without knowing who she is or what happened to her (and the others? are the others like her?) she has to figure out what happened to her home. While trying to figure out what happened to her to make her have amnesia she meets her father who tells her that her name is Shori and explains why she is so special. Shori and her father begin the investigation into what happened to her and her family. Clearly there was a fire, but what caused it? Shori is put on the the path to solving the mystery of her destroyed community and bringing the perpetrators to justice.

This was a thrilling vampire novel, certainly the best one I’ve read since Sunshine by Robin McKinley. Since the main character has amnesia, we discover things about her species and her world as she does. You start to wonder pretty early on if what has happened to her is garden variety people hunting vampires, or garden variety people being racists asshats or something worse. When she is shocked and horrified by the behavior of humans and other vampires, we are, too. There is so much to say about this book but I don’t want to spoil anything (and I really want to do it justice if I’m going to analyze the themes of the book) so I won’t go into details. I will however say that this book could be a model for all of paranormal romance (even though it wasn’t a romance). I was so pleased with how it dealt with issues of consent that are so often missing from novels about vampires.

This book was so enjoyable and so wonderful and I can’t gush about it enough. Seriously. You should go read it. Now. You should read it now.

Fledgling

Review: Scarlett Undercover by Jennifer Latham

Featured imageThere has big push lately to bring more diversity in Kids and Young Adult literature and if you read through the comments on Goodreads I can see why it’s so important to have characters who are like them.  The girls are so excited to have a heroine that share their religion and ethnicity. It was something that I obviously took for granted as a kid but it’s a positive movement.  It has been fun to read about different cultures and traditions that I’m not familiar with but also how little we truly are the same.  The one thing that makes Kids and Young Adult literature so universal is it’s about self-discovery and navigating the world.  Themes that no matter where you are from, religion, race, gender or sexual orientation can identify with and that’s why it’s important that everyone is represented in literature, so we can see that we are not alone and we are all not that different.

Anyway, now on to the review.  Scarlett Undercover is really enjoyable.  Scarlett is smart, clever, sarcastic (I think you should all know by now that a sarcasm is something I hold dear) and brave.  After graduating high school early, she spends her time as a Private eye.  Mostly solving small cases, like is my boyfriend cheating type of things, when she is hired by 9 year-old Gemma Archer to investigate why her brother is acting strange.  Little did Scarlett know that his case would lead her to answers about her own father’s death as well.  Scarlett is a Muslim, though she is not devout as her sister Reem is, her religion does play a part in figuring out the mystery.  I liked how Islam is presented here.  Not once was Scarlett or any of other Muslim characters were called terrorist or any other derogatory slur.  They are treated just like any other character is treated.  As she gets more involve in her investigation, she soon finds that not only is the brother involved in some strange cult that includes Jinn’s (Genies) and magic but also holds the secret of her family and her as well.

The mystery itself plays out by the book, with little pieces if information at a time.  Scarlett goes through the whole detective handbook but her best leads comes from the people she knows.  In fact, if I was Scarlett I would have been annoyed that my friends and family knew more about her case and her life then she does.  She handles it quite well.  She actually handles everything well.  She’s smart and quickly fits the puzzle together.  She’s brave as she goes to great lengths to protect those who need it, like Gemma.   She doesn’t back down, even though the smart money would be.  She has spunk. I like that. In sort of a role reversal, Decker, Scarlett’s friend plays the part of the one dimensional love interest.  We don’t know much about him except he’s known Scarlett his whole life, he’s Jewish and he’s good looking.  So often the male characters are given far more interesting back stories even if they aren’t the main character so it’s kinda fun to see that Decker is reserved the role the female love interest gets.  He’s there for Scarlett when she’s needs him to be.  Gives her a sounding board and also supplies useful information that gets her going on her investigation but other then that he has no real personality outside of Scarlett.  I’m not saying it’s a good thing to have one dimensional characters of any gender but it’s nice for once it’s the guy and not the girl.

My only real complaint is I felt the ending was a bit rushed.  The book is pretty short and went by pretty fast but I felt the end came and went to quickly that I was like, that’s it.  I feel like more time could have been used to explore about the Children of Iblis and the mythology behind them. Other then that I really enjoyed it.  So if you are looking for a fun mystery with a smart, sarcastic detective then you should check out Scarlett Undercover when it comes in in May.

Review: Crown of Midnight by Sarah J. Maas

Featured imageI just realized after my last post that I never posted my review for this book.  My bad.  As with my other reviews of mid-series books, there will be spoilers from the previous, so if you haven’t read Throne of Glass then don’t read after the cut. ‘m totally serious about those spoilers! I bolded (is that even a word?)  the text and everything.  I’m not going to hold anything back so you have been fully warned.  Unless of course, you don’t mind the ending of Throne of Glass being spoiled for you or the happenings and goings on of Crown of Midnight then by all means, read away.

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Quick Review: The Emerald Atlas by John Stephens

Featured imageSo this is a cute book.  Perfect for kids who have just finished Harry Potter or Lemony Snicket and are looking for something new.  It has many of the same kid fantasy novels. Three siblings who are move from orphange to orphange until they land in Cambridge Falls. There they travel back and forth in time thanks to a mysterious book. Soon they meet an evil Countess, a badly dress Wizard, a Giant and Dwarves.  Kate is the older sister, who carries more responsibility then one at 14 should. Michael is a dwarf obsessed nerd of a brother and Emma is a tough as nails baby sister, who doesn’t take anyone’s crap.  They of course find out that they are more then what they seem because that’s how these types of books go and end up going on wild adventure that will either save the world or end it because isn’t that how all adventures work?  It’s fun and cute and at times quite humorous but also pretty predictable.  I good start to a series that I think will be pretty entertaining but the next book will have to wait as I have a few books on my nook and iPad that demand attention.

Reviews: A Hattrick of Novellas

After I finished reading A Dance of Dragons, I decided I needed something quick.  So I read three novellas.  It has become a trend for YA authors with successful series to write short stories or novellas to supplement the series.  Most of them are inconsequential.  They may add a little hint of what’s going to happen in the series or they are just fluff. They can write a few stories.  Publish them first as an e-book and then later can republish them all as a collection.  Obviously both the author and publishers can get a little bit more out of a trilogy (not to mention, a little more cash) and keep readers interested between books.

Authors use them to either bridge the gap between the end of one book to the beginning of another.  Sort of a “What I did over the Summer” essay, one does on the first day of school.  Other times, authors write a pivotal scene but from another characters perspective.  Usually, it’s from the love interest’s perspective but not always.  Other times, these novellas give authors a chance to play in the world they’ve created without really messing up the story they are writing.  They can do this by writing a story about a supporting character that takes place outside the current story line.  Sometimes, the stories are prequels.  Giving readers a chance to see the hero or heroine before the series began or give a glimpse of life was before.   Whatever the reason for writing the novellas, they are usually fun to read.

Featured imageThe novellas I read came from very different series. The first is The Queen from the Selection series by Kiera Cass. This is actually the third novella from this series and the first that is a prequel, taking place long before the action of the first book, The Selection. First, if you are not familiar with this series. It’s been dubbed as the Bachelor version of the Hunger Games.  I think that’s not a very good description because the only thing they have in common is that they both take place in a dystopian society and both plots revolve around a sort of Reality TV show premise.  In The Selection, America Singer is one of 35 girls picked to compete in the Selection, and win the heart of Prince Maxon.  It’s all taped and televised and other things happen too.  The Queen is about the Queen Amberly, Prince Maxon’s mother’s own Selection, that she obviously won since she is now the Queen.  It doesn’t add too much to series but it does gives more of a look at King Clarkson, who is sort of the villain in the series.  Why he is who he is and also a little sadness for Queen Amberly.  She is a good person who truly loves him and he likes her because he knows she will do whatever he says and is easy to manipulate.  Not exactly a romance.

Featured imageThe second is Burnt Sugar, a prequel novella of Firebug by Lish Mcbride. You may remember that Firebug was one of my favorite books from last year This short story is about Ava, Lock and Ezra on a job for the Coterie to collect money from a witch who has stopped paying her “protection” payments.  Of course, the job goes awry as they run into some unexpected complications.  As is, the witch lives in a Gingerbread house, eats kids just like in Hansel and Gretel and they get captured.  I love their team dynamic.  Lock the responsible leader, Ezra the fox doing what foxes do and Ava, who sort of just likes to wing it.  It has the same sense of humor as the book but just a small dose.  Just enough for me to pine even more for the next book.

Featured imageAnd finally Carnival of Lies is a novella from the Untamed City series by Melissa Marr.  The first book, Carnival of Souls (now published as Carnival of Secrets) was published in 2013 and sadly there is no plans at the moment to publish a sequel. I’m not sure if it’s one of those things that the first book didn’t do as well as they’ve hoped so the cancelled the rest of the series or if Melissa Marr is too busy writing other series.  She just published another Teen book called Made for You, which was only ok. She is also co-authoring a kids series about Norse Mythology.  Whatever the reason, we must be content with Carnival of Lies. A little background: a class of Diamons runs the City.  They have killed almost all the witches and those who survived have escaped to the human realm. The city holds a carnival where one can pay for murder or death.  Once a generation, a competition that is held.  The winners are raised to the ruling class.  The Losers are dead. In Carnival of Lies, we follow Aya as she decides to compete and her betrothed Belwas, who enters to try to save her.  Honestly, there doesn’t seem to be much of reason for this story.  We know why she entered the competition because it was revealed in Carnival of Secrets.  She was born a witch and her Diamon parents who were bewitched to believe they are her real parents.  If she were to marry Belwas and have children, as she would have too, then she would be revealed for what she is and put to death but if she wins and becomes part of the ruling class, she could live without ever having to marry and have children.  Since there is sequel on the horizon, I was really hoping for something more.  This really didn’t do much for me.

All three were a nice break from the multitudes of characters, subplots and pages of Game of Thrones and revisit some old characters and series that I really do enjoy.  Now back to my regular schedule of novels.

Books that Rocked My Face off, Part two

Kate has already posted her list. We have some of the same books in common but unlike my sister, I don’t have any qualms about reading only fiction and mostly teen fiction.  There are a few non-fiction novels I do want to read.  I’m quite interested in the Secret History of Wonder Woman. I’ll get to it eventually.  Anyway, this is about what I read this year so let’s get on with it.  I omitted a few books from contention because I read them as ARCs and they have not been released yet.  That will have to be a post for another day.

1.Blue Lily Lily Blue by Maggie Stiefvater.

I love her. I might have mentioned that before but I really do love Maggie’s writing style.  Blue Lily Lily Blue is the third book of her The Raven Cycle.  The search for the Welsh King, Glendower, is back with more earnest as Blue’s Mom, Maura has gone missing. Blue, Gansey, Ronan, Adam and Noah all have grown up so much in the last three books and yet, if we know anything about Maggie, they have so much to learn before the series ends in the next book.

2.The Heroes of Olympus: The Blood of Olympus by Rick Riordan

I’m going to miss Percy, Annabeth, Nico, Leo, Hazel, Frank and Reina.  I’ll even miss Jason and Piper too.  They both did grow on me.  I thought it was a fitting ending for a great series. As a team, the Heroes came together, defeated the Giants and brought the Greeks and Romans together.  They all got a happy ending and there was a little bit of opening for some to return in Rick’s next series.

3. Landline by Rainbow Rowell

This was such a satisfying book. Georgie McCool is a TV screenwriter on a crappy show but she and her writing partner finally have a chance to get their own show going.  The problem is they have to write six episodes over Christmas, meaning Georgie has to stay in LA, while her family goes to Omaha.  Georgie’s marriage is already on thin ice; can it survive this?  While spending the night in her old room at her Mom’s house, she plugs in her old landline phone and magically calls her husband Neal in the past.  It soulds fantastical but it is based in the real world.  Rainbow has such a way of creating characters that you can’t help but fall in love with and want to be friends with.

4. The Young Elites by Marie Lu

In a revision of history, after the blood fever in the middle ages, the children who survived are left with scars.  Some were left with mysterious powers. They call themselves the Young Elite. Adelina is one of them. The blood fever left her disfigured with a scar over her left eye.  She has been shunned and abused by her father and when her powers surfaced, she’s a danger to herself and everyone else.  Marie creates a world with so much atmosphere that it was easy to get lost in it. Adelina, is filled with anger about how she is treated; you feel that it’s valid.  There are so many other layers of intrigue and one shocking ending, that the next book can not come too soon.

5. Cress by Marissa Meyer

I really do love the Lunar Chronicles.  A retelling of fairy tales with an alien twist.  I think they are really clever and the characters are so likable.  Cress is a take on Rapunzel.  She is a lunar and is hidden away in a satelite so she can spy on Earth for Queen Levana.  She is rescued from her prison but of course things don’t go as planned. She and Throne crash land in the desert.  Cinder seeks the doctors help for wolf, who is injured and Scarlet is captured by the Lunars.  Oh, and they only have a few days to stop Prince Kai from marrying Queen Levana.  I’m kind of mad that I have to wait until October or November for Winter, the final book but I’m sure it will be worth the wait.

6. Ruin and Rising by Leigh Bardugo

In the final book of the Grisha Trilogy, the Darkling has taken over Ravka and only Alina, the Sun Summoner can stop him.  I feel in the past, I have been too hard on Alina, especially how she treated Mal in the last book.  It really started to get me to think how far more critical we are on female characters then we are of male.  Alina, is a  young girl who discovers she has a frightening power that can save them or destroy them.  It is a lot to take in.  She needed someone to understand and for a while, the Darkling was really the only one who could or so she thought.  It is a fitting ending to a dark series.  I felt like all the stories were wrapped up right and they all found some kind of peace.

7. Unmade by Sarah Rees Brennan

Part Gothic Novel, part Nancy Drew.  Not your usual combination but it worked for the whole trilogy.  It was funny, scary and heartbreaking without missing a beat.  It was also one of the rare YA novels that not all of the main characters get a happy ending. I sometimes feel that authors feel they have to keep them alive or they will upset their readers but lets be honest.  That’s not realistic.  How many near death experiences can one character live through?  Kami is smart, resourceful and brave and really someone I would love to be friends with.  I’m going to miss this series but I am happy with how it ended.

8. Dreams of Gods and Monsters by Laini Taylor

Yet another conclusion to a fantastic Trilogy.  Excluding the last half of the first book, this series grabbed me and never let me go.  It was heartwarming and heartbreaking.  The sacrifices that had to be made were real gut punchers but necessary. In the end Karou and Akiva achieved what they set out to do and a surprising relationship for Liraz was perfect.

9. Firebug by Lish McBride

Firebug doesn’t have the clever names as Lish’s other books but has the sense of humor and urgency.  Set in the same world as Hold Me Closer, Necromancer and Necromancing the Stone (see what I mean about those titles) but in Maine and not Seattle.  Ava is a firebug, a rare gift. She is forced to work for the Coterie, a magical mafia.  When she refuses to kill a family friend, she and her team, Locke, a dryad, and Ezra, a werefox, go on the run.  It really is funny.  Lish has such a great sense of humor that comes out in such surprising ways.  I can’t wait for the next one.

10. Raging Starr by Moira Young

Apparently 2014 was the year to end trilogies.  This is the last book in the Dust Lands series.  A dystopian series that goes beyond what the Hunger Games did.  Miss Young has no problems killing off characters or being seduced.  Saba has found her brother and reunited with Jack and is now ready to take down DeMalo.  The problem is that Saba does not disagree entirely with what DeMalo is trying to do.  Maybe not with how he is going about it and it puts her in direct conflict with both Jack and her brother, Lugh.  I really had no idea where this series was going to take me and it was quite a ride.

Books I loved so much, that I read the whole series:

A Song of Ice and Fire aka A Game of Thrones by George R.R. Martin

Ok so I technically haven’t finished all the books that are out.  I just started A Dance of Dragons.  Also, I did take a 8-month hiatus to watch the series and then read other things but I do love this series.  It’s so rich and challenging.  So many characters and places and plots.  How does he keep them all straight?

Obsidian, Onyx, Opal, Origin and Opposition. The Lux Series by Jennifer L. Armentrout

Daemon is a jerk and I love him for it.  He is also loyal and will do anything for his family and the ones he loves.  So the jerk with a heart of gold.  Obsidian got me hooked and well, I immediately bought the other books.  Were they the best books I’ve read this year.  No but damn, they were entertaining.

Legend, Prodigy and Champions by Marie Lu

I’ve been wanting to read these for a while and finally gave in and I’m glad. June and Day are perfectly matched heroes,  The ending was bittersweet but it did leave us with some hope.

Anna and the French Kiss, Lola and the Boy Next Door and Isla and the Happily Ever After by Stephanie Perkins

Sometimes you just need a couple of good romances.  It’s really not a series but three companion novels that happen to have overlapping characters.  Anna is a new girl in an American high school in Paris, who falls for the charming St. Clair. Lola is a girl who knows exactly what she wants, except when it comes to Cricket, who lives next door and Isla has been in love with Josh, all for years of school but was to shy to do anything about it until a chance meeting over the summer. Isla is my favorite with Anna close second. Lola is ok but I just didn’t relate to her as much as the other two.  If you are looking for a sweet story with a lot of heart, you couldn’t do much better then these three.

Etiquette and Espoinage, Curtsies and Conspiraces, and Waistcoasts and Weaponry.  The Finishing Series by Gail Carriger

Sophronia is a handful for her mother. Always getting into trouble so when she is accepted into a prestigious finishing school, she’s sent packing.  However, this is no ordinary finishing school.  Not only do they teach the finer points of being a lady, they also teach the best ways to hide weapons in your skirts and what is the best poison to use.  All for Queen and Country, of course.  This steampunk look at Victorian Englad is full of humor that I did literally laugh out loud.

Books that Rocked My Face off in 2014

This year I had intended to intersperse non-fiction with my fiction. It was one of my New Year’s resolutions. And, I started out strong. Seven of the first twelve books posted on my goodreads challenge for the year were non-fiction (and one of them was even relevant to my day job!) But, the end of the year saw a lot of binging my way through series many people have suggested many, many times. In 2014, I finished reading the available books in the A Song of Ice and Fire series. I read twelve (!) of the Stephanie Plum books. I read all five of Jennifer Armentrout’s Lux books (these I read on my phone). My goodreads goal was to finish forty books this year. I over shot that and read fifty-two. Realizing that, I thought this would be a hard list to make. A lot of good…well, reads, were devoured this year. But, upon looking at the list ten books immediately jumped out at me. Here they are:

1. Wild by Cheryl Strayed

This book was moving in all the right ways. I cried repeatedly while reading it. Strayed tells the story of how her life fell apart when her mother died and slowly fell back together while she planned and executed a trek along the Pacific Crest Trail. She survives not being appropriately prepared, a monster backpack, shoes that are too small, snow, and deserts. The solitude and physical hardship gives her a chance to deal with the real difficulty: having never gotten over the heartbreak of losing her mother and her best friend. I haven’t seen the movie yet but I cannot wait.

2. Cleopatra by Stacy Schiff

I enjoyed this book immensely because it turns out that Cleopatra is an interesting lady. Prior to reading this book, my first thoughts of Cleopatra ran towards the stereotypical. She was beautiful. She survived by attaching herself to powerful men. She was a Ptolemaic girl in an Egyptian world. So, I learned a lot about her reading this book. It would seem that she was an efficient Queen who had the respect and love of our people. It was a pleasure to find that this historical figure often portrayed as a temptress and a whore but who was instead a strong leader who got shit done.

3. A History of the World in Six Glasses

I listened to, rather than read, this book while on a road trip. The text is a social history of humanity traced through its most favored beverages. Detailing the making of beer, wine, coffee, tea, spirits and coca-cola (with an epilogue about water), the author tells the stories of rising and falling empires, changing economies and social movements that make up the history of the world (women weren’t allowed in the first coffee houses making ladies’ tea rooms a popular alternative! And, Twinings, yes the Twinings you find at the supermarket, had a hand in that!). The recording from audible was great with a good narrator. After I finished, I looked for some of the modern brewers that were suggested in the epilogue. (Who wouldn’t want to try beer made from an Ancient recipe? I’ve not yet gotten my hands on a bottle, but when I do I will let you know!)

4. Jonathan Strange and Mr. Norrell by Susanna Clarke

Jonathan Strange and Mr. Norrell tells an alternate history of England contemporary with Napoleonic France in which there is magic in the world. Mr. Norrell is England’s last practicing magician and Jonathan Strange is his student. Where Mr. Norrell is as uptight as you’d expect an English magician Jonathan Strange is into trying new things and pushing the boundaries of magic. This was a fun, if enormous novel, with often hilarious footnotes (“promiscuous celery”. I don’t remember what it means, but I do know I found it funny/important enough to comment on it on goodreads). The tale follows Norrell, Strange, Norrell’s wife, a servant named Stephen, a Fairy King, the wife of an Upperclass Englishman, and a Magic historian from Yorkshire who chronicles the life of Mr.Norrell. The ending was curious but good and I was so happy to have finally read this book that I’ve owned since it came out! (That being said: I listened to this one, too, which means I have an unread read book on my shelf.)

5. The Bone Season by Samantha Shannon

Oh my god this book. Sigh, the Warden. And, Nic. And, Jackson. And, PAIGE OH MY GOD PAIGE! I cannot wait for the Mime Order to come out! I am so jealous of Beth who has already read it!

This was another book I listened to.

6. A Storm of Swords by George R. R. Martin

It was tough to pick a favorite of these books since I read all five available this year. I know from looking on goodreads that lots of people thought the story in books 4 and 5 suffered, but since I binge-read them they came as a really cathartic pay-off for having gotten through the first three books. But, there was a lot of catharsis in this book as well. I got way too attached to characters in the first book so by the time I got to this book I had learned my lesson. Looking back on it, my favorite thing about these books is the Small Folk. Hang in there, Small Folk, with your clever naming of weddings!

7. Four to Score by Janet Evanovich

All of your favorites are back. Stephanie’s crazy grandma, Stephanie herself. Ranger and Joe Morelli. Joe’s grandma. And, this book introduces us to Sally Sweet. I laughed my way through this book and then immediately started reading the next one. Stephanie Plum is ridiculous and for that I love her.

8. Origin by Jennifer Armentrout

All hell breaks lose because two teenagers fell in love. And, unlike classics like Romeo and Juliet, I’m pretty sure this is just meant to be fluffy, fun mayhem and not a satire. Which is good, because I tore through it like fluffy, fun mayhem.

9. Vampire Academy by Richelle Mead

This was on a list of books to read before the movie came out around this time last year. Well, I read it and then I looked for the movie and it was gone. Already out of the theater. Total Sadface. But, Rose Hathaway is such a badass and if they did a crap job bringing her to the silver screen then I’m glad I missed the movie. Also, I started reading this about the same time I started watching Sleepy Hollow, so Dmitri in my mind looks exactly like Ichabod Crane. I’m totally okay with this.

10. Zealot by Reza Aslan

I always have time to read books by fellow Iowa Alumni. This is another history/biography in the same vein of Cleopatra. Aslan keeps you interested with his writing style and puts the historical Jesus in a context that, frankly, just made me like him even more cool. (I realize that “him” at the end of the last sentence is ambiguous. I did that intentionally because the book made me like both Jesus and Aslan more.) Jesus would have been a man in an occupied Kingdom yearning to be free. It’s hard to not sympathize with that. And, then how this man who fought for freedom went from freedom fighter to global religious figure is also interesting to consider. I thought this was an interesting and thought provoking book and I’m happy I read it.

Books I started but never finished

1. The Friday Night Knitting Club by Kate Jacobs

Guh. I didn’t care about the characters. I found much of the set up and background for the yarn shop to be unrealistic (what kind of sweaters was she making on contract to pay her bills in New York City?!?!). Couldn’t even be bothered to get to the main drama, that’s how early I put this one down. As a knitter, I’m always incredibly disappointed when knitting is the only thing interesting in a novel. People with a hobby might be a built-in audience but if you can’t be bothered to develop interesting characters or intriguing story lines then don’t bother.

2. The Waves by Virginia Woolf

This is a beautiful stream-of-consciousness novella that follows a group of friends from the school yard through their lives and I expect I’ll one day get back to it. But, I started reading it while I was traveling for work and it was too much for the end of the day reading I was using it for. Instead, I ended up reading the Armentrout books on my phone, so I’m grateful for that.

3. The Bat by Jo Nesbo

Good, and I’ll probably try to finish it one day. But, Harry Hole isn’t Kurt Wallander. I kind of love Kurt Wallander.

4. Vegan before Six by Mark Bittman

This is where I’m at with health books: I’m kind of done with them. I like this concept, reducing the amount of animal products you eat by eating plant-based for most of the day. And, if you’re anything like me (who cooks like, three or four times a weeks and eats toast and oatmeal and leftovers for the rest of your meals) this basically means either all vegan all the time or that it’s not a workable solution. I was thinking in the New Year I might give it a try (as a more or less all-vegan-all-the-time solution with occasional meat sometimes). We’ll see.

5. The Fault in our Stars by John Green

I just don’t like John Green, what can I say? Not his writing, mind you, him. I just don’t like him. I enjoyed what I read of this novel but I’d put it down and end up thinking about the author and I’d just get mad at myself for putting money in his pocket. I know I’m probably the only one who doesn’t like him, but there you have it. I might try it again, but with the world full of good books written by authors I like, I probably won’t.