recent reading #7
Feb. 27th, 2010 04:34 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
This takes me back to the end of October and covers books I read while I was writing two of my own. One was a kids' book, hence the old favourites listed here, the other intended to be, um, more thrilling than introspective, hence the thrillers. I am what I eat, at least where books are concerned (were it literally true, I'd currently be made of chocolate, wine and vegetables) so I try to read only things that make me write both on-topic and better. The classics were mostly read on planes.
- Pride and Prejudice by Jane Austen, annotated by David M Shapard (finally!)
- The Winner by David Baldacci (contained sex scenes that literally made me laugh out loud)
- The Black Russian by Lenny Bartulin (the finest crime writer in Australia, hands down)
- Pilot Light by “Williams Ashbless” (Tim Powers and James P. Blaylock) (huh?)
- Servant of the Underworld by Aliette do Bodard (wonderful)
- The Haunted Hotel by Wilkie Collins (deliciously OTT)
- The Dark is Rising, The Grey King, and Silver on the Tree by Susan Cooper (they age not)
- Rain Fall by Barry Eisler (how could a Japanese hit man not be fun?)
- The Owl Service by Alan Garner (I’d forgotten how creepy this is)
- The Gigantic Robot by Tim Gauld (great title, great art, and surprising depth for so few words)
- Even by Andrew Grant (not a patch on his awesome brother, alas)
- The Bus Driver Who Wanted to be God by Etgar Keret (strange and surprising)
- Masonic Myth: Unlocking the truth about the symbols, the secret rites, and the history of Freemasonry by Jay Kinney (everything I ever wanted to know, and then some)
- The Breach by Patrick Lee (“spicy death sauce” indeed--recommended!)
- Valnir’s Bane by Nathan Long (fun, fast, violent--exactly the right thing at exactly the right time)
- Professor Stewart’s Hoard of Mathematical Treasures by Ian Stewart (I’m glad he didn’d keep them to himself)
- Leviathan by Scott Westerfeld (very, very kewl)
- The Picture of Dorian Gray by Oscar Wilde (hilarious, except for the boring bits)
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Date: 2010-02-28 12:59 am (UTC)A note about Drood: it is a deliberately uneven, very slow-paced novel. There are really, really boring sections that will have you questioning, "Why is this even in here?" Roll with it. It's all worth it in the end!
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Date: 2010-02-28 02:12 am (UTC)I'm very impatient when it comes to boring bits in books but I will persist if you tell me too. Will go order it now...
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Date: 2010-02-28 02:30 am (UTC)The thing about Drood is that the "slower" bits contain details that, at the time, seem pointless--but, at the end, everything comes together quite nicely.