Tag: books

  • Hi, my name is Anna and I’m a bookaholic

    Hi, my name is Anna and I’m a bookaholic

    I was quite amused to see this post by the agents at the Dystel & Goderich Literary Management site about compulsive book buying and reading. ‘Cause yeah, I do love me the books. As y’all know I’m on a book buying hiatus this month, and you’d just know that this is timed with the drop…

  • Book Log #46: Goblin War, by Jim C. Hines

    Book Log #46: Goblin War, by Jim C. Hines

    ‘s third Jig the Goblin book, Goblin War rounds out the trilogy quite nicely. In this final installment, we’ve got a strong callback to book one as Princess Genevieve, the sister of the princes who’d hunted the Rod of Creation, has been ordered by her father to recover that artifact herself. And if that wasn’t…

  • Book Log #45: Goblin Hero, by Jim C. Hines

    Book Log #45: Goblin Hero, by Jim C. Hines

    The second Jig the Goblin book by does what any good second book of a fantasy trilogy ought to do: it shows you what’s happened to your protagonist as a result of Book 1’s events, and upped the stakes this time around to get him in even more trouble. In this particular installment’s case, it…

  • Can any other Nook users with Macs repro this?

    Can any other Nook users with Macs repro this?

    Standing down from silent running for this, because I gotta admit, I’m intrigued by this problem. This is how you tell I’m a QA engineer, people: I’m intrigued by the problem to solve, rather than pissed off that a product I’ve purchased is not behaving as it should. 😉 Here’s the backstory. The other day,…

  • Book Log #44: Goblin Quest, by Jim C. Hines

    Book Log #44: Goblin Quest, by Jim C. Hines

    If you’re tired of the common tropes of the traditional fantasy genre, you can’t do much better than turning to Jim Hines’ books about Jig the Goblin. This has been hands down one of the more entertaining fantasy trilogies I’ve read in some time. Jig is the smallest, scrawniest, runtiest goblin in the entire goblin…

  • Book Log #43: Wild Thing, by Doranna Durgin

    Book Log #43: Wild Thing, by Doranna Durgin

    I wasn’t quite sure what to expect going into this novella, Doranna Durgin’s shortest installment in her Sentinels paranormal romance series. The description of the story makes it sound like it’s erotica, since the main character, Tayla Garrett, must be initiated by another Sentinel before she can gain full command of her abilities. And by…

  • Book Log #42: Wolf Hunt, by Doranna Durgin

    Book Log #42: Wolf Hunt, by Doranna Durgin

    Aw yeah, now we’re talkin’. Doranna Durgin’s Sentinels series, in Books 1 and 2, was only mildly entertaining me–but with Book 3, I jumped up to actively enjoying it. This time around, we have the story featuring one of the characters only passingly mentioned in the first two books, Nick Carter, who leads the Sentinels…

  • Book Log #41: Lion Heart, by Doranna Durgin

    Book Log #41: Lion Heart, by Doranna Durgin

    I liked Lion Heart, Doranna Durgin’s second paranormal romance featuring her Sentinels shapeshifters, a bit more than the first book–possibly just because I found the scenario that brought the lead characters together more fun this time around. Joe Ryan is a Sentinel in exile, believed to have been involved with the death of his former…

  • Book Log #40: Jaguar Night, by Doranna Durgin

    Book Log #40: Jaguar Night, by Doranna Durgin

    The first of her Sentinels series of paranormal romances, Jaguar Night is basically Doranna Durgin Does Shapeshifters. The worldbuilding is a bit thin for my tastes: you’ve got the Sentinels vs. the Atrum Core, who are two warring factions theoretically descended from a pair of half-brothers in ancient Britain, one a Druid and the other…

  • Book Log #39: A Feral Darkness, by Doranna Durgin

    Book Log #39: A Feral Darkness, by Doranna Durgin

    A Feral Darkness is hands down my favorite of Doranna Durgin’s books. There are a lot of elements to it that might file it into the paranormal romance or urban fantasy genres, though for my money, I would still call it a straightforward fantasy. Romance it’s got, to be sure, but quieter and sweeter than…