Tag: 2010 book log

  • Book Log #77: Naked Heat, by Richard Castle

    Book Log #77: Naked Heat, by Richard Castle

    I’m still greatly, greatly amused that the Richard Castle books even exist–it remains an excellent marketing ploy for an enjoyable TV show. That said, I didn’t quite enjoy Naked Heat, the second of the Nikki Heat series, as much as the first one. Most of this I attribute to the overall style of the writing…

  • Book Log #76: The Year of the Flood, by Margaret Atwood

    Book Log #76: The Year of the Flood, by Margaret Atwood

    It wasn’t until I actually started reading Margaret Atwood’s The Year of the Flood that I found out it was in fact a sequel to Oryx and Crake, which I am told is actually a better book. This I didn’t find a hardship, because I did actually like The Year of the Flood. And thankfully,…

  • Book Log #75: Scoundrel, by Zoe Archer

    Book Log #75: Scoundrel, by Zoe Archer

    Scoundrel, Book 2 of Zoe Archer’s Blades of the Rose series, came across my radar with a bang thanks to the Smart Bitches Trashy Books ladies and their current montly book club. As I mentioned in my review of Book 1, Warrior, I was very happy to see a cover with a hero who’s not…

  • Book Log #74: Warrior, by Zoe Archer

    Book Log #74: Warrior, by Zoe Archer

    I came into Zoe Archer’s Blades of the Rose series courtesy of the fine ladies at Smart Bitches Trashy Books, when they chose the second book of the series as a book club read. Pretty much right out of the gate I wanted these books, and I’m not ashamed to admit that a big part…

  • Book Log #73: Lord of the Silent, by Elizabeth Peters

    Book Log #73: Lord of the Silent, by Elizabeth Peters

    After the mighty awesomeness that was He Shall Thunder in the Sky, any book Elizabeth Peters might write would have its work cut out for it. Thunder is so clear a culmination of the Ramses/Nefret love story that in many ways it serves as an admirable stopping point for the series. It would be somewhat…

  • Book Log #72: He Shall Thunder in the Sky, by Elizabeth Peters

    Book Log #72: He Shall Thunder in the Sky, by Elizabeth Peters

    Now we are TALKING. He Shall Thunder in the Sky is perhaps my absolute favorite of the entire Amelia Peabody series–and as I’ve indicated in my reviews of several of the earlier books, it’s got some very strong contenders for my affections. It won’t have nearly as much meaning if you don’t read the series…

  • Book Log #71: The Falcon at the Portal, by Elizabeth Peters

    Book Log #71: The Falcon at the Portal, by Elizabeth Peters

    The first time I read through The Falcon at the Portal, book #11 of the Amelia Peabodies, I pretty much wanted to smack Nefret upside the head for what she pulls partway through the book. I am sorry to say that my impression on my recent re-read of her actions in this story have not…

  • Book Log #70: A River in the Sky, by Elizabeth Peters

    Book Log #70: A River in the Sky, by Elizabeth Peters

    The most recent of the long-running Amelia Peabody series, A River in the Sky, is also unfortunately thus far the weakest for me in the series to date. Like Guardian of the Horizon, it’s one of the “lost journals” of the Emerson saga, going back and filling in gaps of time between previously written books.…

  • Book Log #69: Guardian of the Horizon, by Elizabeth Peters

    Book Log #69: Guardian of the Horizon, by Elizabeth Peters

    By publishing order, Guardian of the Horizon is book #16 of the Amelia Peabody series. Chronologically, however, it is book #11, falling in time not too long after The Ape Who Guards the Balance. It’s one of two (as of the writing of this review) books that fill in the gap of time between Balance…

  • Book Log #68: The Ape Who Guards the Balance, by Elizabeth Peters

    Book Log #68: The Ape Who Guards the Balance, by Elizabeth Peters

    The tenth Amelia Peabody novel, The Ape Who Guards the Balance, opens with one of my very favorite scenes in the entire series: Amelia barging out to participate in a suffragette rally in London, ready, willing, and even eager to get herself arrested for the cause of women’s rights. Never mind how she winds up…