Skip to main content

Posts

Showing posts from October, 2017

Wrapping up the What's in a Name reading challenge

I always have fun doing the What's in a Name reading challenge, and this year was no exception. I signed up for it on July 28 , and it took me just under two weeks to read and review the first five books - and 2 1/2 months to find, read and review the sixth and last book.  I posted my first review on August 1, the day after I finished it, and the last one I posted on October 22, two days after I finished it. The books and categories were, in order of reviewing:  A building. Howl's Moving Castle by Diana Wynne Jones. An alliterative title. Dr. Mütter's Marvels by Cristin O'Keefe Aptowicz. A compass direction. West With the Night by Beryl Markham. An item or items of cutlery. A Knife at the Opera by Susannah Stacey. The letter X in the title. Alexandria by Nich Bantock.  A number in numbers in the title. 1968 by Mark Kurlansky.  The genres were not as varied as they have sometimes been, with two fantasies, two biographies, a history book and a my...

Just finished my 100th book of the year!

...which is hardly news, except in the last couple of years, around this time of the year, I was somewhere in the mid-to-high 200s. Cutting back on my reading has resulted in more enjoyment of the books I read and I also remember them better. I am also listening to more audio books, and have finished 20 so far.

What's in a Name challenge review #6: 1968 by Mark Kurlansky

What's in a Name challenge category : A number in figures in the title   Author : Mark Kurlansky. Full title : 1968: The Year that Rocked the World Genre : History Published : 2004 One would think that finding a book with a number in the title would be easy in a book collection as large as mine, but it wasn't. I only found two among my 700+ TBR stack and ended up reading this one because my second-hand copy of Ray Bradbury's Fahrenheit 451 was so musty that I started sneezing after reading a couple of pages.   The year 1968 was a pivotal, tumultuous year in history, full of student riots, protests, massacres, the assassinations of public figures, the Vietnam war and the Soviet invasion of Czechoslovakia, with the Cold War as a backdrop for the whole thing. Kurlansky has drawn all of this together into a solid, interesting book. Unlike two previous books of his that I have read, Cod and Salt , it does not begin to feel rushed towards the end, and thi...

Friday links, 20. October 2017

Friday links is where I post links to blogs and websites I want to remember without cluttering up my browser bookmarks, along with interesting articles, reviews and lists I want to bring to the notice of others, and other stuff I find on the web. I took an unplanned break from blogging because I got roped into doing some teaching and preparing for that stuff is time-consuming. I have been steadily reading and listening to audiobooks all this time, and currently have one review in the making and a couple of other posts I am preparing. During the blogging break, I found all sorts of interesting goodies to post in Friday Links, most of them relating to language, books, literature and reading. Most of the ones below are not brand new, but no less interesting for that.  Today's links: The secret language you speak without realising it . A look at some of the tech words added to the online edition of the Merriam-Webster dictionary earlier in the year. Since I'm at it...

Review: The Devil's Detective by Simon Kurt Unsworth

Genre : Crime noir and horror crossover. Originally published : 2015. Have you read this book? Do you agree or disagree with my review of it? It was the title of this book that first caught my attention. Then I spotted the cover art, which was enough to make me pick it up and read the blurb, which in turn was enough to make me buy the book. Thomas Fool is the senior of Hell's three Information Men, a small group of detectives whose job mostly seems to be to be aware of - but not investigate - every atrocity committed in Hell, mostly by demons against humans. Every now and then they do receive a case their overseers, a group of demons called The Bureaucracy, want them to pay more attention to. A mutilated body is found that has had its soul completely removed - there usually remain some vestiges of it after death - and this is deemed worthy of investigation. Soon the bodies are piling up, bearing signs of ever more frenzied attacks, and Fool has to divide his ti...