I swear, if books were candy, I'd have been sprawled on my chair last night at 2 am, with chocolate smeared all over my face.
After a looong dry spell, I spent the last of my birthday money on Naomi Novik's fourth book in the Temeraire series. I also stumbled upon one of my favorite Romance author's books at the used bookstore for seventy five cents--and it was one I hadn't read before!
So after finishing the romance, a good Jo Beverly tale, I sank into the Novik book.
Is there anything more satisfying than a long anticipated sequel that lives up to expectations? Conversely, is there anything more maddening than a sequel that peters out, or worse yet, has a slapped on ending that resolves nothing...
I don't know that Novik's books are my ultimate reading experience. Oh, but they are well crafted, detailed and thorough. I enjoy the alternate history aspect of it, too. I can't think of who wrote the books where the island of Nantucket is zapped back in time, and they adapt their technology to the available resources. I don't thinks it's Turtledove, Flint maybe? No web access here, so I don't know. Great stuff, though. I used to love the Leo Frankowski Conrad books. The series lasted one or two books longer than it should have, but what fun...
I am often intimidated by the commentors over at SQT's site, because they are hard core sci-fi/fantasy readers who offer deep insightful comments on the books they've read. I AM the Homer Simpson of Sci-Fi. I was happiest at B. Dalton, where my simple mall customers wanted basic books. There was none of that snobbery associated with B&N, where customers demanded LITERATURE. The B. Dalton customers loved good books, too, they were just more enthusiastic and straightforward. I always cheerfully introduced myself to newbies at B&N as the queen of cheap, mass-market fiction. If you had a question about classics, I was not your girl. But if your customer could only remember that it was a spy novel with an apple on the cover and their dad wanted something like it, I could show you things similar to Len Deighton.
I don't do deep and meaningful. I can think of nothing worse than being trapped in a room with nothing to read but Oprah's book club books. How.Freaking.Depressing. There's plenty of awful stories in the newspaper if I need the horror of what people are capable of doing to each other. Give me light escapist fiction.
Last night was wonderful. I am dragging this morning, but it was oh, so worth it to close the cover on a book worth my time.
But now there's the wait for the fifth.
sigh...
1 comment:
Hello, you have a nice blog here, mind 2 exchange link?
Post a Comment