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TBR, Spreadsheets and the Joy of Reading

You may recall that as part of my new reading goals for this year I wanted to reduce my TBR to 235. I also thought that under the general guiding principle of enjoying reading I would ditch the complicated tracking spreadsheet.

And I did… for a while. What can I say? I enjoy using it too much. Not only did I go back and start using it again (and update it with estimates for the reading I’d done whilst not using it) but I’ve expanded it to be more complex. I now have a sheet which tracks progress in terms of words. Thanks to a plugin to Calibre I now have word-counts on my ebooks and that means I can once I’ve finished a book work out my words/hour and words/minute. This ought to be more accurate at predicting how long I take to finish a book. In reality it’s not really because unlike pages/hour I can’t work out a rate for the current unfinished book (not without disecting the book and creating word-count totals for individual chapters – I thought about it but there are lengths even I won’t go to). However it does help me set expectations. When looking at a new read and seeing it’s only 75,000 words I know that’s on the short side. If looking at a 200,000 word tome I can at least tell myself that it’s about the same as Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire and less than Tigana which I made it through in 10 days last year.

As for TBR – that’s up to 263, so up 12 instead of down 16. Which is pretty bad when you consider that I’ve read 16 books so far this year. It basically means that I’ve interpreted “enjoy it” as meaning “it’s ok to buy new books if you really fancy it”.

And you know what I’m ok with that. I am enjoying the books I read. I am enjoying using the spreadsheet and I’m on track for a big year (famous last words).

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book reading reviews

We Are Here – Michael Marshall

I chose this book because well it was just coming out and I thought it would be nice to review something current for a change. Also it appeared to be a stand-alone and not part of a series like the Straw Men trilogy so it wouldn’t matter that I hadn’t read all his back catalog yet. That turned out to be not quite true (see below).

This is a hard book to review because it’d be so easy to spoil it and I don’t want to do that. I also don’t want to hide most of my review behind spoiler tags so…

We Are Here mostly centres around two couples. David and Dawn are a writer and his teacher wife who go into New York for the lunch that seals his first book deal. It’s a big day for them but on the way home David accidentally bumps into someone in the street. Someone who then follows him to the station and asks him to “Remember me”.

The other couple are John and Kristina. A waiter and bar-maid at an Italian restaurant who’ve been together about 6 months and are at the stage where they are about to either get more committed or possibly split up. Kristina’s new friend from her book club has seemingly acquired a stalker and asks John and Kris for help.

Both these stories concern encounters with people who live in a kind of parallel world. They are there in the background of our lives but often go unseen or unnoticed. But something is changing. They are coming out of the shadows…

I could talk more – vaguely and circuitously so as not to spoil – about the plot but I won’t. Let me talk instead about tone and themes. This is a book about regret, about loss of friendship and the way we forget people. It’s also about what it means to really live in a place and be part of someone’s life. In that sense it deals with some universal and weighty themes and does so well I think.

However it’s not a ponderous literary novel. It’s a thriller. It reminded me of Stephen King in places, which is a compliment. I enjoyed several of the characters. The author writes a middle-aged lady with nine cats who lives in a trailer – and he manages to make me really like her 🙂

It’s not perfect. I think it could have been shorter. Particularly in the middle section where dramatic irony is stretched to the breaking point. Also, I was going to complain that there was an un-fired Chekov’s Gun in the form of very significant events from one character’s past which are mentioned more or less in passing but never really dealt with. However it turns out that this character, and these events, are from a previous book. Also they are mentioned because they affect who this person sees and interprets events in this story, so the gun is fired – it just has a quieter bang than you might think.

Anyway it all comes together in the final part of the book and we get a dramatic action-y ending. It left me feeling I’d enjoyed the ride.

8/10 – a thriller with more than a touch of the mysterious about it.

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book reading reviews

Fool Moon – Jim Butcher

Fool Moon is the second in the Dresden Files series of books. It’s fair to say that I’ve seen enough I liked in book 1 to stay with this franchise for a while. There are now I think 14 books and I’ve heard they get a bit repetitive later on but we’ll see how far I get.

With the title it’s perhaps not surprising that this book concerns werewolves. A gruesome series of murders occur on and around the full moon and Harry Dresden is called on for his supernatural advice. Actually at the beginning of the book he knows almost nothing but we learn as he does. There are apparently five different types of creature that could go under the category of werewolf and in this book we meet most of them. The plot concerns which of the various types (if any) committed which of the various murders (are they all from the same perpetrator?) and of course why?

There’s also more in this book about Dresden’s on-going story. We find out a bit more about his past, we see him move on in one relationship whilst apparently getting a bit stuck in another. Also, even though this is only book 2, patterns are developing. Once again Harry gets beaten up a lot. So much so that we have at one point need of a supernatural explanation of how he can keep going at all – properly set up so it’s not pulled out of thin air. Once again Harry has to go it alone and despite his status as sometime consultant to the cops is suspected of the crimes he’s investigating. So some of this already feels like it’s giving us more of the same. However there are signs that this will change in future books. A character that I’d assumed was going to be one of the mainstays of the series got killed off. Also he makes a decision to be more open with his police friend Murphy – which is good because the whole “I can’t tell you what’s going on because of the Mystical-Law-Reason” might be plausible enough but it leads to a fake-feeling kind of dramatic tension – a bit like when a sitcom’s plot is based around a misunderstanding that would be resolved in two minutes if only characters would TALK TO EACH OTHER.

Oh and it also had a dream sequence. I’m not a fan of dream sequences. They’re generally an excuse to be self-indulgent with imagery or deliver up a character’s motivations without having to dramatize them. But there are worse examples of that than the one in this book.

Another pattern-y[*] aspect is that these books are looking very much like detective/police procedurals with fantasy/supernatural set dressing. The bad guys are likely supernatural beasties and in place of CSI tech we have spells and summonings but structurally they work the same way. The question is whether you enjoy the scenery. I think I do (I like the PC Grant books and the same could be said of them) but I also think it’s because Butcher executes that structure as competently as he does that they work. I suspect he could right ‘straight’ crime novels which were just as compelling.

He does write the action sequences well. There’s a scene in a police station which is gripping, frightening and exciting. He manages to make me interesting in a trope – werewolves – that I’m not generally drawn to.

So I did enjoy this. It was “pattern-y” at times but I still enjoy Dresden as a character and there appears to be development there too – both in terms of exploring his back-story and the way his personal ‘arc’ is unfolding.

8/10 – a police procedural with plenty of supernatural splatter.

[*] i.e. formulaic, but I didn’t want to use that word as it carries more of a pejorative overtone than I intend.

P.S. given the title can’t get this completely unrelated song out of my head.

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book reading reviews

So Much Blood – Simon Brett

This is the second Charles Paris story. I bought this together with the first a while back. As I said at the time I was drawn to these by the undeniable charisma of Bill Nighy in the radio adaptations.

It’s summer 1974 and Paris has taken his one-man show to Edinburgh Fringe Festival as a last minute replacement for part of an University Drama Society’s line-up. During rehearsal of one of the other plays an actor is fatally stabbed by what should have been a fake knife in a horrible accident. Or was it an accident.

I’m not sure what to say about this that I didn’t say about the last book. It definitely works as a ‘cozy’ mystery and Paris is a likeable protagonist/investigator. I felt at times that some of the other characters were only fleshed out enough to give them potential motives or a place in the plot. I also felt that the switch between Charles the actor and Charles the investigator was a bit blunt at times and you would have thought that more of his colleagues and associates would have said, “hang on why are you questioning me?” I guess that’s just a convention of the genre that once a character falls into that role we accept that they are able to quiz the other players to some extent. So an effective, if mechanical mystery structure.

The story certainly has enough twists to keep you guessing and enough of Charles, his wit and his love-life to amuse but I guess I did find it a little lacking. It is short though. At under 58,000 words even I read it in a day (~4 hours in fact). It did feel a little dated, the sexual politics more than anything, but not so much that I couldn’t relate.

With so much to read I don’t know if I’ll read any more Paris.

7/10 – a actor’s life that seems to be all about death.

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book reading reviews

Storm Front – Jim Butcher

Being a Buffy fan I’ve long been at least vaguely aware of the name of Harry Dresden. When the Dresden Files TV show was announced I think James Marsters name was mooted to pay him – probably mainly by Buffy fans to be fair though. For some reason I was never that keen to catch up on this franchise. Maybe for a time I wasn’t really into reading/watching supernatural stuff. I did read a lot of straight crime fiction for a while there. Anyway the idea came back around again, partly through seeing Jim Butcher on Geek and Sundry’s StoryBoard discussion stream. On an impulse the other day I started to read the first page using Amazon’s “Look Inside” feature and well… here we are.

Storm Front is the first of the Harry Dresden novels. Dresden is a modern day wizard in Chicago. He’s a wizard for hire and he essentially works as a P.I. One day he’s approached by a woman who wants him to investigate the disappearance of her husband. At the same time he’s helping the police with an investigation into a particularly brutal and baffling murder. Meanwhile his own actions are being monitored by the White Council, which is the (good) wizards ruling body and is not exactly Dresden’s biggest fan. With all this going on and possibly the emergence of a mysterious new, very powerful magic practitioner it’s all starting to look very busy, and dangerous for Harry.

I have to admit that despite the renewed interest I started off sceptical as to whether I would like this book. At first my preconceptions seemed to be borne out. Some of the supernatural jargon felt twee (‘Nevernever’ for the magical realm) and it felt like it was trying too hard to invoke the twin genres of hard-boiled detective noir and supernatural fantasy (I’m not sure whether the term Urban Fantasy had been coined yet when this book came out in 2000). But I have to admit the book won me over.

There were two reasons for that. First the story builds very well. It’s not slow paced to begin with but it definitely ramps up a few notches by the end. So it had the page-turning plot thing covered.

The second reason was Dresden himself. The character is likeable. He seems like the hard-bitten P.I. cliche on the surface (Marlowe as a Mage?) but the internal monologue you get helps you see past the wisecracks to someone much more complicated, with vulnerabilities and his own fears and issues, and a past. He also gets the crap kicked out of him in various magical and mundane ways and that tends to get you on a character’s side. Not just that you feel for him but that when he’s been beaten down and is apparently out of options he tends to react with a defiant resolution to fight back.

So yes I enjoyed this book and yes I will be reading more of his adventures.

8/10 – a tale of a supernatural P.I. (but not the one about the Vampire with a soul 😉 )

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Downbelow Station – C.J. Cherryh

Downbelow Station is Sword and Laser’s March book pick. I’d read Jan and Feb’s so I thought I’d continue. Plus it looked good.

Downbelow Station takes place in 2352/3 in a future history where space has been colonized but mostly through space stations. Downbelow Station,  orbiting the world of Pell, is one of the few attached to a life-supporting world. Most of the action centres around Pell/Downbelow (the terms are used interchangeably for both the station and the planet) but also takes place in space. The main players are the Earth Company – which is the company that initially began exploration and colonization and is involved in trade, the Company Fleet who are now acting somewhat independently of the Company itself, the Union Alliance – a break-away group of colonies at war with the Fleet (and to a lesser extent the Company) and then a motley group of merchanters who just want to trade and make money with whomever will deal with them. Oh and Pell station itself who is attempting to be independent but as the book begins, and the boundaries between Earth and Union space are being re-drawn, finds itself at the strategic centre of pretty much everyone’s plans.

I want to say I enjoyed this more than I did because it has some very good elements. If you enjoyed the kind of complex SciFi story, where different factions are presented with their pros and cons and there’s not necessarily clear lines between heroes and villains, something that deals with the gritty realities of space war and the mundane, as well as the macro level politics and economics of it – something a lot like say the rebooted Battlestar Galactica say, then there’s a good chance you’ll enjoy this. It has all those elements and Cherryh wields them well into a compelling story.

But. There had to be a but. There’s something about her writing style, her sentence construction, that threw me off. I can tell you because I measured it (yep the spreadsheet is back with a vengeance) that my reading speed halved from its normal level during the reading of this book. In fact I took a decision early on to “power through” and pretty much read it in a couple of days last weekend, partly because I was worried that if I put it down for any length of time I wouldn’t pick it up again.

Now not everyone will feel this way. Some will enjoy her prose no doubt, but I do know from the S&L Goodreads group that I’m far from the only one with this problem. Which is a shame because I think there’s a great story there but for me it was like wading through treacle to get to it.

One unrelated issue I had with this book was the portrayal of the book’s aliens, the Hisa or Downers. They are a race of primates, a little smaller than humans that are indigenous to Pell. They are less intelligent than humans, have a simpler culture and seem to be wholly subservient to them, happy to become lower status workers on both the planet and the station. Whilst they have their own culture and language we mostly hear them speak broken English (humans generally haven’t mastered Hisa speech), and even in scenes where only Hisa are present their language seems simple which is what makes me think we’re supposed to see them as less intelligent.

Whilst in one sense they are alien and it’s just as plausible that a race like the Hisa could exist as some super-intelligent cosmic overlords – the way they are presented, the way they interact with humans, their simple but profound spirituality, the way their personalities are largely interchangeable and they seem to have no conflicts amongst themselves (and I mean even conflicts of opinion pretty much), the way they are treated by humans stands as an easy indicator of moral virtue (the patronising ‘good’ humans v the ‘bad’ dismissive and exploitative ones) – all this added up to a portrayal that looked very like the Noble Savage – and that left me uncomfortable.

But that aside the story was good, if you can make it through the language.

6/10 – there’s a good story there if you can see it.

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book reading reviews

The Magicians’ Guild – Trudi Canavan

I read this book because Trudi was featured on one of the Sword and Laser’s video shows. She came across so well that I thought I’d like to read her work and so I did.

Sonea is a ‘dwell’ living in the slums of the city of Imardin. However one day, when the Magicians are assisting in their annual purge of the city she discovers she has a natural talent for magic. Of course Magicians don’t normally come from the slums, they come from the prosperous and higher class Houses. Those are the ones who have their children tested and sent to train at the Magicians’ Guild, not the dwells that everyone looks down on. Then there are those like the Thieves to whom a magic-user outside the control of the powerful Guild could be a useful thing. So from that small beginning Sonea finds herself at the centre of a search from those who are interested in her, or her latent powers. To complicate it all she witnesses something that may reveal a conspiracy going to the very top of Imardin society.

The first thing to say about The Magicians’ Guild is that it’s the first part of a trilogy. And as Canavan says in the S&L interview, it’s a trilogy that started out as a single book but grew too large. You can tell. It’s relatively slow-paced and things are just starting to get interesting when it finishes. Not that there isn’t stuff here that I enjoyed, definitely some characters I’d like to see more from, but I enjoyed it more in a way that made me want to read the next book.

7/10 – Part 1 of what looks like it’ll be a good story.

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Gates of Eden – Ethan Coen

Gates of Eden is a short story collection by Ethan Coen of the Coen Brothers movie-writing-directing fame. I bought it in around 2000 I think and as is much easier with books of short stories (and fairly easy for me with books of any kind) abandoned it after it didn’t seem to be quite what I thought it might be.

However my current practice is to have a short story collection on the go at the same time as reading whatever current novel I’ve got so that I’ve got an alternative if I’m not into the novel, but one which won’t involve having to keep up with two longer story-lines at once.

I’m not sure what I was expecting. I suppose I was hoping for something along the lines of the Coens’ better (or my favourite of their) films. In a way that’s what I got. Some of the stories were very dialogue heavy – there were several from first person POV and a few that were literally scripts – and the dialogue had that quirky interesting cadence to it. Also similar themes to some of the movies – people involved in the lower levels of the crime world, or just the odd corners of society. A couple were more a ‘slice of life’ from a Jewish-American perspective, which while interesting didn’t grab me because of the lack of a story per se.

So there was stuff to like here but I wasn’t overwhelmed. Mind you, if I saw the Big Lebowski today, for the first time, I’m not sure it would have as big an impact on me. What seemed quirky and fun when I was younger might seem a bit sadder now that I’m close to the Dude in age.

6/10 – mostly a curiosity or one for the Coens completist.

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Eleven – Mark Watson

I bought this book because it was deal of the day a little while ago, and because it sounded like I might like it. I wasn’t aware of who Mark Watson is (though I might have confused him with Mark Haddon of Curious Incident fame). Turns out he’s a stand-up comedian and I have seen him on TV. His one of those people who are not quite a household name but you’d recognise from being on Mock the Week or whatever. Anyway all this is just to say I’m glad in a way that I hadn’t known/remembered that and read this as “just” another book.

Eleven is the story of Xavier Ireland who is originally from Australia but living in London and working as a DJ on a call-in radio show in the early hours of the morning. Whilst on his show he’s happy to dispense “common sense” advice in his life outside work he takes a much less interventionist approach. He’s happy to let things lie and not get involved. Whether that’s in the lives of his neighbours or the course of his own career. Then one day he goes to a speed dating evening where he doesn’t find a date but does find a new cleaner.

I enjoyed this book a lot and to be honest I wasn’t sure I was going to. For one thing it’s written mostly in the present tense and I find that a little irritating. However once I was engrossed in Xavier’s story that slipped away and I soon forgot to notice. For another the book does a thing where we are shown a series of apparently unconnected characters and what they are doing at a particular moment in time – near the start of the book. Throughout the book we then keep revisiting these characters and start to see the connections. I thought I wasn’t going to enjoy this structure because I was mostly interested in Xavier. However this took up less time than I thought – there was still plenty of space for Xavier, including his backstory and why he left Australia. Also there were some funny and touching moments in the others’ stories.

This is a book about consequences. It’s about the unfathomable chains of events that can occur and not only how we can be connected in surprising ways, but how one can never really predict the outcome of our actions, and so ultimately how it’s not necessarily “safer” to not get involved than to be more proactive.

I liked this book because of the characters. Not only were the main characters well drawn they were sympathetic and likable. I also felt that the book was warm about all its characters, even the ones with less going for them. It felt humane and hopeful and I liked that. I had a slight problem with the very end which I can’t really talk about without spoiling. But let’s just say I choose to put a certain interpretation on the events at the end of the book because it’s the way I want it to be.

8/10 – a warm-hearted web of inter-connected stories.

TBR still at 256 – which I’m happy with.

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book reading reviews

Ice Diaries – Lexi Revellian

When I read Revellian’s Remix last year I enjoyed it well enough but it was enough outside my personal tastes that I didn’t think I’d be picking up another of her books. However when I came across Ice Diaries as one of the February picks for the UK Amazon Kindle group on Goodreads I was intrigued by the concept and so I decided to give it a go.

The year is 2018 and shortly after a pandemic has wiped out most of the population a shift in the climate, what looks like a mini ice age, occurs and within a few weeks the UK is under 20 metres of snow. A small group of survivors are living in what were once luxury penthouse apartments. The have to forage for supplies by raiding the buildings that are still accessible i.e. the tall ones, or ones they can get to through them. How long this lifestyle is sustainable if the climate doesn’t change back is a question they ponder and the main character, Tori, would like to head south for warmer climes. Into this a stranger arrives bringing questions and violence in his wake.

The main thing that Ice Diaries has going for it is scenery. The idea of an almost empty London which consists of only the tallest buildings is quite a cool one. Unfortunately the book itself doesn’t do much with this idea. As post-apocalyptic novels go this definitely falls on the “cosy” side. The group have dinner parties, a book club, musical and poetry recitals – and this is the less well organised of the two communities in the book! Also although there’s talk of frostbite and of course mention of the depth of the snow, you get more of a sense of people surviving in what would be a normal, but on the very cold side of normal, British winter. I’m no expert but surely the kind of change that could deliver such a radical change in the landscape would mean the kind of climate where keeping warm, keeping fed and generally keeping on guard against the elements would be a constant struggle. However it seemed like so long as they wrapped up they could mostly move about outside ok and once inside it was sort of assumed that they could dress how they liked.

Of course this kind of thing normally doesn’t bother me and I wouldn’t be thinking about it if the writing was better. It was easy to read but the dialogue seemed obvious and on the nose and the plot was often predictable. Whereas Remix had some plot twists and turns and the pace quickened, Ice Diaries felt very sedate. There were whole sections where the action conveniently paused so that the main characters could spend time together, or explore a new venue. Never mind that they were being pursued by someone who potentially wanted to harm them. It felt very odd.

I see that I noted in my review of Remix that “some of the characterisation was lifted from a chick-lit novel and placed in a crime story“. Here I felt the same way and because of the setting it jarred more. One of the male characters literally was a tall, dark brooding character with a mysterious past who was potentially dangerous, and he was contrasted with a safe, sensible type. When Tori broke off from musings about how to escape to somewhere more sustainable, or where to get the next load of firewood from, to compare these to potential mates, or talk about how she went weak at the knees at his touch – it felt very odd indeed.

All of which makes it sound like I disliked this book. I didn’t really. In its favour it’s a quick read. I just didn’t find much to enjoy about it.

5/10 – a romantic scifi thriller in a snowy future London.

Current TBR count is 256 which is up from 253. I blame book groups and Amazon’s deal of the day!