Star Trek / Green Lantern: The Spectrum War is a graphic novel which is exactly what the title says, an improbable crossover between the rebooted Star Trek and the Green Lantern universe. Go ahead and snicker. It was fun.
In a future/alternate GL timeline, Nekron, the creator of the Black Rings, somehow manages to kill most of the members of the various Lanterns Corps. Ganthet pulls off a trick to use his death's energy to send the various rings into another universe, specifically the one populated by our rebooted Enterprise crew. The Enterprise crew find his body about the same time Hal Jordan finds them (the green ring was curiously missing from Ganthet's collection). The rings get activated and three Enterprise crew members get chosen while the yellow, red, and orange rings fly off to find appropriate Star Trek universe counterparts.
The yellow ring chooses one of my favorite Klingons, General Chang, who is sadly underused in this book. The red and orange rings choose some random characters they created for this book. Don't bother getting invested in them. Grumpy McCoy gets indigo (I love his reaction to the ring picking him.), while Uhura becomes a Star Sapphire, of course. *sigh* My favorite choice is Chekhov. He gets chosen by the blue ring. "I can do zat!" He does embody hope.
Anyway, Nekron pops up again and the new Lanterns have to join up with the old Lanterns that actually managed to survive and get pulled from their universe to ours. Yes, I consider Trek to be my universe. I can hope, can't I? Each of the Corps has at least one that survived. They each find their counterparts and things go from there. Oh, did I mention that Nekron has found the perfect place to rouse an army? It's the asteroid cluster formerly known as Vulcan.
This was only a six part series, so it wasn't really long or in depth. It was fun, though. Kirk and Jordan are too much alike to actually get along well at first, but when faced with impending doom our heroes manage to rub along well enough. Kirk figures out the way to beat Nekron, in an interesting twist. Don't take this book seriously. It's fluff and wish fulfillment, just like the Star Trek / Doctor Who crossover.
Showing posts with label reading challenge. Show all posts
Showing posts with label reading challenge. Show all posts
Friday, April 01, 2016
Different Seasons by Stephen King
This is really just a review of Rita Hayworth and Shawshank Redemption. I put Stephen King on my list of authors to read for my 2016 challenge, but knew I'd have to read a non-horror story. Sorry, but King does his job too well and what he doesn't, my over-active imagination happily fills in for him when I'm trying to go to bed. Not happening. Since The Shawshank Redemption is one of my favorite movies, I figured I'd pick that one up. Of course it had to be in an anthology.
Anyway, to those who don't know (living under a rock, are we?) the basic premise of the novella and movie is that an innocent man, Andy Dufresne, is sent to prison for murdering his wife. The novella encompasses his entire term in prison as observed by a fellow inmate named Red. Andy is a smart man, he was a banker on the outside, who uses his brains to make a bad situation just a little bit more tolerable. And he has a plan.
I really liked it. King didn't flinch from the awful stuff that happens in prisons, but he didn't overuse it either. For a short read, you got invested in both Andy and Red and couldn't help but hope for both of them.
As for the three other stories in the book, I started reading An Apt Pupil after I finished Shawshank but had to stop. The characters made me feel dirty from the get-go, which is apparently King's intention for them. Hehehe. I did get far enough in to get the reference to Andy Dufresne and had a bit of a chuckle at it, but I just couldn't read further.
The Body is the story Stand By Me, another old favorite movie, is based upon. I started it, but haven't finished it. I probably will before I give the book away, but it's not a priority.
The last story is The Breathing Method, which is tagged as a horror on the dust jacket, so I may not read that one.
Anyway, to those who don't know (living under a rock, are we?) the basic premise of the novella and movie is that an innocent man, Andy Dufresne, is sent to prison for murdering his wife. The novella encompasses his entire term in prison as observed by a fellow inmate named Red. Andy is a smart man, he was a banker on the outside, who uses his brains to make a bad situation just a little bit more tolerable. And he has a plan.
I really liked it. King didn't flinch from the awful stuff that happens in prisons, but he didn't overuse it either. For a short read, you got invested in both Andy and Red and couldn't help but hope for both of them.
As for the three other stories in the book, I started reading An Apt Pupil after I finished Shawshank but had to stop. The characters made me feel dirty from the get-go, which is apparently King's intention for them. Hehehe. I did get far enough in to get the reference to Andy Dufresne and had a bit of a chuckle at it, but I just couldn't read further.
The Body is the story Stand By Me, another old favorite movie, is based upon. I started it, but haven't finished it. I probably will before I give the book away, but it's not a priority.
The last story is The Breathing Method, which is tagged as a horror on the dust jacket, so I may not read that one.
Meg Brown: The Short Man by Joshua Cejka
The Short Man (Meg Brown Mysteries #1), by Joshua Cejka, was a quick read, as it's a short story. It was fun, Meg is of the uber-observant school of detectives and is sent with her partner to solve the mystery of a murdered parking enforcement officer. There was a good amount of humor packed into this little gem as well as enough back story filtered in to make us interested in the character. I'll be picking up the others in this series.
Alpha Bear by Bianca d'Arc
I'm really liking this series. In Alpha Bear d'Arc is introducing what sounds like a really cool Big Bad, while still making the immediate Baddie dangerous locally. This time, John, the Alpha of the community of Grizzly Cove, is up for the mating chopping block. Of course, the job of the author is to throw obstacles at this and decides to pair him up with a strega, or hereditary witch of Italian origin, Ursula. Apparently shifters and witches don't tend to make the best of couples.
Well, Ursula and her sister have been hiding their magic so they don't get bounced out of the nearly-all shifter community. The sister outs them by accident and things start moving pretty quickly after that. It is a quick read and has some fun bits. I really hope Ursula's grandmother makes a visit to Grizzly Cove at some point. She sounds like a real trip.
Wednesday, March 09, 2016
Please Don't Tell My Parents I Blew Up the Moon by Richard Roberts
I definitely like this series. I read the second, Please Don't Tell My Parents I Blew Up the Moon, by Richard Roberts, right after I posted the review for the first. I stayed up pretty late reading it, so I shouldn't have woken up as early as I did.
This book finds Penny and her friends, The Inscrutable Machine (an awesome name for a villain team) end up going to Jupiter and its moons to figure out the source of a signal picked up by one of the villains they meet in the first book. There they meet an interesting cast of characters. Somehow, a group of humans ended up being brought out to colonize some of the moons of Jupiter. The new humans in the story are joined by a group of Automoton, who control the humans' lives, and also by a species of alien that takes over the humans by infecting them like parasites. Penny still wants to become a hero, rather than a villain, but it seems everything she does works in such a way that she still appears to be a villain.
As I said, I really am getting a kick out of this series. The main character the friends interact with in this book is a nicely flawed, fellow mad scientist. Remmy has two brothers with differing ideas of how to save the other Jovian colonists from the robots and the parasites. They're both older brothers who think of Remmy as a pesky younger sibling. Remmy has a story arc I hope Roberts revisits in later books.
This book finds Penny and her friends, The Inscrutable Machine (an awesome name for a villain team) end up going to Jupiter and its moons to figure out the source of a signal picked up by one of the villains they meet in the first book. There they meet an interesting cast of characters. Somehow, a group of humans ended up being brought out to colonize some of the moons of Jupiter. The new humans in the story are joined by a group of Automoton, who control the humans' lives, and also by a species of alien that takes over the humans by infecting them like parasites. Penny still wants to become a hero, rather than a villain, but it seems everything she does works in such a way that she still appears to be a villain.
As I said, I really am getting a kick out of this series. The main character the friends interact with in this book is a nicely flawed, fellow mad scientist. Remmy has two brothers with differing ideas of how to save the other Jovian colonists from the robots and the parasites. They're both older brothers who think of Remmy as a pesky younger sibling. Remmy has a story arc I hope Roberts revisits in later books.
Tuesday, March 08, 2016
Please Don't Tell My Parents I'm A Supervillain by Richard Roberts
I ended up reading Please Don't Tell My Parents I'm a Supervillain by Richard Roberts because I got the third one in the series as a free read for review from Netgalley and the third refers to enough things that happen in this one and the second that I want to read them first. I really liked it. I'm going to be buying this series in paper.
Penny is the daughter of two superheroes. She has always hoped she'll get her own powers. Well, she does. Slight hiccup being that her powers seem to lend themselves better to being a supervillain than a hero. This first book finds her and her two best friends sort of falling into the villain thing by accident. Basically, one of her friends loses his temper and pulls a "Hulk-Smash" which is actually a trap by a superhero's sidekick. To get him out of trouble, she has to fight the sidekick and gets branded a villain. Things go south from there.
The characters are nicely fleshed out, including the parents, amazingly enough. Most parents in YA novels are there for decoration and the occasional grounding. Penny truly loves her parents and doesn't pull the "oh woe is me, my parents don't understand me" bullshit. It's nice seeing a YA family that actually has that love all around.
The descriptions of the inventions she makes and the world she lives in are a lot of fun. There are enough superhero tropes being used well and in a fresh manner and enough to remind you that these are, indeed, kids learning how to run in an adult world that it makes the book very interesting. For example, when meeting the strongest supervillain alive, even if he's retired, Claire wants his autograph. This is a world that celebrates the superhero genre and enjoys its place in it.
Penny is the daughter of two superheroes. She has always hoped she'll get her own powers. Well, she does. Slight hiccup being that her powers seem to lend themselves better to being a supervillain than a hero. This first book finds her and her two best friends sort of falling into the villain thing by accident. Basically, one of her friends loses his temper and pulls a "Hulk-Smash" which is actually a trap by a superhero's sidekick. To get him out of trouble, she has to fight the sidekick and gets branded a villain. Things go south from there.
The characters are nicely fleshed out, including the parents, amazingly enough. Most parents in YA novels are there for decoration and the occasional grounding. Penny truly loves her parents and doesn't pull the "oh woe is me, my parents don't understand me" bullshit. It's nice seeing a YA family that actually has that love all around.
The descriptions of the inventions she makes and the world she lives in are a lot of fun. There are enough superhero tropes being used well and in a fresh manner and enough to remind you that these are, indeed, kids learning how to run in an adult world that it makes the book very interesting. For example, when meeting the strongest supervillain alive, even if he's retired, Claire wants his autograph. This is a world that celebrates the superhero genre and enjoys its place in it.
Saturday, March 05, 2016
Return of the Grr by Alannah Blacke
This was a shape-shifter romance anthology by Alannah Blacke. Four stories pleased me. The others ran the gamut from meh to ugh.
Pride is a story about a lion shifter who goes to Africa to get away from his stresses for a while, finding love while he does.
Alpha Black is about a bear shifter called upon to protect a non-shifter from an old girlfriend of his.
Mine to Bear is another bear shifter story. This one features a character from an earlier story falling in love with a woman who had been kidnapped and held as a sex slave by a den of werewolves.
The last story I liked was a leopard shifter story contained in the three stories: Look Before You Leopard, Better Late Than Leopard, and A Leopard is Forever.
Honestly, I really didn't like the others that much. Actually, I really disliked the MMCs in Bear In Mind and Bear Down. They were quite despicable. Maybe if the stories had been longer, they could have been redeemable. As it was, there wasn't enough story for the character development needed for them to become lovable characters.
Pride is a story about a lion shifter who goes to Africa to get away from his stresses for a while, finding love while he does.
Alpha Black is about a bear shifter called upon to protect a non-shifter from an old girlfriend of his.
Mine to Bear is another bear shifter story. This one features a character from an earlier story falling in love with a woman who had been kidnapped and held as a sex slave by a den of werewolves.
The last story I liked was a leopard shifter story contained in the three stories: Look Before You Leopard, Better Late Than Leopard, and A Leopard is Forever.
Honestly, I really didn't like the others that much. Actually, I really disliked the MMCs in Bear In Mind and Bear Down. They were quite despicable. Maybe if the stories had been longer, they could have been redeemable. As it was, there wasn't enough story for the character development needed for them to become lovable characters.
Hannah Mary Tabbs and the Disembodied Torso by Kali Nicole Gross
This was an interesting book by Kali Nicole Gross, a professor at the University of Texas at Austin. It seemed like it would be a juicy, gory depiction of a gruesome murder, but it really ended up being a dissection of race and politics at the turn of the century in Philadelphia. The author brings up interesting points about our assumptions of black womanhood and how those assumptions have been shaped by slavery, and Emancipation. Those attitudes still remain if you really think about it. That's not to say the author touched on this, instead, her focus was on Tabbs and her ability to manipulate the system and society she found herself in.
The only thing I didn't like was that the book wasn't able to follow Tabbs and Wilson further in their lives, both before and after the trial, but that is due to the limitations of the historical records available. That limitation actually seems to prove the author's thesis, that Tabbs' place in history rests in her interactions with the white press and legal authorities, not her own agency. We are also so used to the paper trails and random information that we leave behind in our daily lives that it seems almost impossible that we wouldn't know more about someone accused of murders nowadays. In a way this makes the book even more intriguing for that fact that there are so many unknowns remaining. We are, frankly, spoiled when it comes to biographies and histories in that the subjects tend to be those with a wealth of information and resources behind them. I'm glad there are authors who try to find obscure history topics and breathe new life into them.
Wednesday, February 24, 2016
Runaway Vampire by Lynsay Sands
Yay! She's back on track. The last Argeneau book was a disappointment, but this one, Runaway Vampire, I liked. She really focused on the heroine in this story. Dante didn't get as much to work with, but at least the fmc, Mary, felt real. She's a 62 year old widow faced with a hunk who she runs over with her RV. Said hunk is being chased by kidnappers and needs her help getting away.
As I said, Dante doesn't really get fleshed out, but Mary does and I like the fact that she has a history and has a healthy attitude toward relationships and that they aren't all hearts and flowers. The exposition to explain the Immortals to the newbie doesn't feel forced. The ending leads into what should be Tomasso's book but it wraps up Mary and Dante's story nicely. The book is also filled with Sands' trademark humor. Just wait until you get to the condom scene.
I was quite disappointed in what happens to Mary between pages 338 and 341, but I guess it was necessary. Not telling what it is. All in all, a very good outing in the series.
Traces of History by Patrick Wolfe
Traces of History by Patrick Wolfe tackles racism and colonialism by comparing Jews, Native Americans, Indigenous Australians, and the descendants of African slaves. This book is pretty darned amazing and engaging. Wolfe posits that the experiences of the two indigenous groups were quite a bit different from the experiences of the Jews and Blacks, even if they all experienced discrimination and racism. He makes his case well. He even brings up the differing experiences of the two major areas in the Americas that Blacks have faced incredible discrimination: the United States, and Brazil. Again, my highest praise for a history book, I'll be looking further into this.
I had read of some of the history he went into about the Australian Aboriginal struggles, and knew a lot of them mirrored things the Native Americans experienced, such as the kids being taken from their families so they could have the Native taught out of them. It boggles the mind that this was still happening up until the 1960s, though.
One thing he mentions in a footnote has my inner genealogist going "Hmm". On page 115 he states that there were only 400,000 Africans brought to the United States, but by 1860 there were over 4,000,000 slaves. Even with enforced breeding by slave owners, not every one could have given birth or sired children, so I have to wonder how closely related the Black population is to each other. How many distant cousins are out there that don't even know it? Obviously, that wasn't the point of the book.
Just Another Southern Town by Joan Quigley
I've read about the sit-ins and boycotts of the civil rights movement, but never heard about the case or the person at the heart of this book, Just Another Southern Town. Mary Church Terrell was a woman born the same year of the Emancipation Proclamation and lived long enough to help make civil rights history when she was 90 years old.
The book talks about her and the others, including the Supreme Court justices who made that history in a way that brings them to life in the story leading up to the Supreme Court case, District of Columbia v. John R. Thompson Co. Inc. None of them are perfect and Ms. Quigley doesn't present them as saints or sinners. The book tells the history of the Thompson case in an engaging manner that throws a lot of facts at you, but in such a way that it doesn't overwhelm or bore.
As I said, I had never heard of the case before and had assumed that desegregation of lunch counters was pretty much an all or nothing thing that had begun with Greensboro in 1960. I love finding out that I was wrong. My highest recommendation for any history book if that it has me more interested in a topic I didn't realize I need to know more about and want to investigate more. This book certainly has done that.
As I said, I had never heard of the case before and had assumed that desegregation of lunch counters was pretty much an all or nothing thing that had begun with Greensboro in 1960. I love finding out that I was wrong. My highest recommendation for any history book if that it has me more interested in a topic I didn't realize I need to know more about and want to investigate more. This book certainly has done that.
Stars In Your Eyes by Lynn Kurland
Stars In Your Eyes is the newest Lynn Kurland time-travel romance. These are an automatic buy for me. This one didn't change my mind but, for some reason, it wasn't quite as satisfying as some of the others. Not sure why. Actually, I think I do know why. Even with all of the odd goings-on around Artane that Phillip as been studiously ignoring, he adjusted too quickly to his very brief period in modern times. I like when the hero does things like pull his sword on the microwave and such. Phillip just adjusted without any real culture shock.
Basically, it was good until they came back to the modern times. Phillip adjusting quickly and one other thing kind of threw it off the rails. Don't get me wrong, I liked the book, but it just didn't please me as much as some of the others.
Lydia's Enchanted Toffee by Neale Osborne
Lydia's Enchanted Toffee by Neale Osborne is an interesting book. The writing style took a bit to get used to. It is definitely written with kids in mind. The author uses a lot of onomatopoeia to help flesh out the world. It's written from the perspective of a nine year old girl, after all. The world itself is appropriately named Candi-land. As I read the book I kept imagining the whole thing as a game of Candyland gone amuck.
The book is an adventure set upon by a group of nine year old girls through multiple countries to retrieve special ingredients for a magic potion to overthrow a despotic ruler poised to take over all of their lands. Each girl has a special ability they can access through eating a special candy. Lydia is the one we enter the book through so she is the best fleshed out of the girls. Each of the others does get fleshed out more as the story progresses, though.
The action is just scary enough and life-threatening enough that it will thrill younger readers. I got worried a few times myself. All in all, it was a pretty good book that left me with a definite hankering for sweets after I finished it.
Wednesday, February 10, 2016
Crochet Stories: Grimms' Fairy Tales and The Nutcracker
Dover is putting out a series of amigurumi pattern books that are absolutely adorable. I've been able to review Grimms' Fairy Tales and The Nutcracker thanks to NetGalley. I honestly can't decide which is my favorite of the two. I'll be quite happy to make dolls from both.
The Grimm book by Vanessa Putt includes presents each story before giving a couple of patterns for your amusement. The designer of the Grimm book favors a chain method of starting amis and describes how to do it, but if you're like me, you can just omit the chain and start with a magic ring on the first round. I really need to make the hedgehogs, and the witch from Hansel and Gretel. She also gives designs for Jack's beanstalk, and Rapuzel's tower. I thought those were pretty cool. They can be used for an infinite number of stories by kids (and adult kids), especially since she gives a basic doll pattern that you can modify as you need.
The Nutcracker book by Lindsay Smith also presents the story as it goes and then gives you the characters. This designer starts with a magic ring, but if you're a fan of the chain start, you can always replace it with that. This book has a couple of pages at the end that discuss special techniques and she uses more elaborate hairstyles than the Grimm book. She walks you through each of them. If I had to pick a favorite ami it would be between Godpapa Drosselmeier and the Mouse King. There are also a couple of smaller patterns that can be used as tree ornaments if you so desire.
The Grimm book by Vanessa Putt includes presents each story before giving a couple of patterns for your amusement. The designer of the Grimm book favors a chain method of starting amis and describes how to do it, but if you're like me, you can just omit the chain and start with a magic ring on the first round. I really need to make the hedgehogs, and the witch from Hansel and Gretel. She also gives designs for Jack's beanstalk, and Rapuzel's tower. I thought those were pretty cool. They can be used for an infinite number of stories by kids (and adult kids), especially since she gives a basic doll pattern that you can modify as you need.
The Nutcracker book by Lindsay Smith also presents the story as it goes and then gives you the characters. This designer starts with a magic ring, but if you're a fan of the chain start, you can always replace it with that. This book has a couple of pages at the end that discuss special techniques and she uses more elaborate hairstyles than the Grimm book. She walks you through each of them. If I had to pick a favorite ami it would be between Godpapa Drosselmeier and the Mouse King. There are also a couple of smaller patterns that can be used as tree ornaments if you so desire.
Saturday, February 06, 2016
Brotherhood in Death by JD Robb
Okay, so the In Death books are instant buys for me, and in hardback no less. This one, Brotherhood in Death, by JD Robb (a pseudonym for Nora Roberts) didn't disappoint. It was another where you kind of figured out the whodunit part early on and the trick was finding the proof. I don't mind those. I know some people do.
The basic set-up is that Dennis Mira, the husband of the profiler Eve works with, is attacked while trying to meet up with his cousin about selling a house left to them by their grandfather. The cousin disappears and, since Eve is a homicide cop, is later found dead. Eve has to figure out who killed him and why. Simple enough set-up. The whole thing ends up not so simple or black and white in the end.
There is family drama and growth between Eve and Roarke, which did feel a teeny bit shoehorned, but it did work out in the end. We got to see more of Dennis Mira, whom most of us fans are just a little bit in love with. Seriously, forget Roarke, I'd take Dennis any day. Oh, and Trueheart gets a nice scene between him and Eve.
Overall, this book was pretty good. My only quibble was with the drama between Eve and Roarke feeling a tad unnecessary.
Sunday, January 24, 2016
The Ultimate Reading Challenge
I finally uploaded my Ultimate Reading Challenge. I tabbed it as a page in the bar above. I have saved it as a pdf file, so if someone wants me to email it, leave me a comment on this post or the page.
There should be something there for just about everyone.
Cheers.
There should be something there for just about everyone.
Cheers.
Saturday, January 23, 2016
The Dragon Round by Stephen S. Power
I'm conflicted about this book. I received a free copy of The Dragon Round, by Stephen S. Power, via Netgalley for a fair review. I'm a sucker for dragons, even though I'm not a big fan of revenge plots and I knew from the start the plot line revolved around a captain seeking revenge on the crew that had mutinied against, and marooned, him and another character. These two end up on a not-so-deserted island, complete with over-sized crabs, and a baby dragon, which they decide to train to help them get off the island and get justice for their abandonment.
I'm conflicted because I don't think the characters grew as much as they could have, but they had so much potential. The book also jumped around from character to character too quickly, with too many of them being thrown at me all at once. There is a list of characters in the front of the book for a reason.
This being said, the story was interesting, and the politics of the world were also interesting. The author definitely knows his stuff when it comes to sailing. There were a few minor characters that interested me more than the mmc. The mfc definitely interested me more, and I would have liked to have seen more of her character.
So, I'm going to give this a cautious "I liked it", but not enough to pick up the sequel when it comes out. I hope the author can figure out how to create a sweeping world in his next book without short-shifting the characters he writes, maybe if he concentrates more on just a few and leaves the others and their activities to exposition, that would be better. I'm also sure some people will love this book, and I hope they do, because I can see the potential.
Hmm. I just went to the author's site to get his link address and he even mentions exactly what I was thinking as I was reading the book: "The Count of Monte Cristo with dragons".
I'm conflicted because I don't think the characters grew as much as they could have, but they had so much potential. The book also jumped around from character to character too quickly, with too many of them being thrown at me all at once. There is a list of characters in the front of the book for a reason.
This being said, the story was interesting, and the politics of the world were also interesting. The author definitely knows his stuff when it comes to sailing. There were a few minor characters that interested me more than the mmc. The mfc definitely interested me more, and I would have liked to have seen more of her character.
So, I'm going to give this a cautious "I liked it", but not enough to pick up the sequel when it comes out. I hope the author can figure out how to create a sweeping world in his next book without short-shifting the characters he writes, maybe if he concentrates more on just a few and leaves the others and their activities to exposition, that would be better. I'm also sure some people will love this book, and I hope they do, because I can see the potential.
Hmm. I just went to the author's site to get his link address and he even mentions exactly what I was thinking as I was reading the book: "The Count of Monte Cristo with dragons".
Friday, January 22, 2016
Grizzly Cove series, Bianca D'Arc
Bianca D'Arc is one of my go-to authors. She writes Paranormal Romances that tend to the erotica side. Her Dragon Knights series is on my automatic buy list. This review is actually for three separate books/novellas that I read the other day. They are the first three in her new series, Grizzly Cove, which is about a relatively newly established town that is a haven for bear shifters. This series is set in her larger world, but stands on its own. The first three books deal with a trio of fully human sisters who move to Grizzly Cove and are unaware, at first, that they have opened up a bakery in a town full of people who turn into various species of bears.
All About the Bear (Grizzly Cove #1) deals with the oldest sister, Nell, and the town sheriff's romance. It's short and sweet. Brody has been wanting to pursue her for a while, but unless she knows about the bears, he can't. Thanks to a drunken Australian Koala Bear shifter, he gets his chance. It was a cute story. The only thing I didn't like was that there wasn't as much character development as I would have liked. There was the soulmate thing, which she actually does well. The whole story was very encapsulated with not much more to the plot or any major stumbling blocks to their romance. I did like it, though.
Mating Dance (grizzly Cove #2) deals with the middle sister, Ashley, and her romance with the town lawyer, Tom. We have a bit more drama in her story than the first in the form of a reminder of her past. Again, it's short and sweet, and I did like it. I had the same issue I had with the first, though; I would have liked more character development.
Night Shift (Grizzly Cove #3) is the strongest of the three novellas. Tina is the youngest Baker sister and her romance with Zak, the deputy. There is character development and real relationship development rather than instant love. Yay! There is also more to the plot than their relationship. It introduces some conflict that is going to be dealt with in the next book, which is a full novel. Their relationship felt more organic than those of the other two couples.
All About the Bear (Grizzly Cove #1) deals with the oldest sister, Nell, and the town sheriff's romance. It's short and sweet. Brody has been wanting to pursue her for a while, but unless she knows about the bears, he can't. Thanks to a drunken Australian Koala Bear shifter, he gets his chance. It was a cute story. The only thing I didn't like was that there wasn't as much character development as I would have liked. There was the soulmate thing, which she actually does well. The whole story was very encapsulated with not much more to the plot or any major stumbling blocks to their romance. I did like it, though.
Mating Dance (grizzly Cove #2) deals with the middle sister, Ashley, and her romance with the town lawyer, Tom. We have a bit more drama in her story than the first in the form of a reminder of her past. Again, it's short and sweet, and I did like it. I had the same issue I had with the first, though; I would have liked more character development.
Night Shift (Grizzly Cove #3) is the strongest of the three novellas. Tina is the youngest Baker sister and her romance with Zak, the deputy. There is character development and real relationship development rather than instant love. Yay! There is also more to the plot than their relationship. It introduces some conflict that is going to be dealt with in the next book, which is a full novel. Their relationship felt more organic than those of the other two couples.
Dragon Tales by Eileen Mueller
This was a collection of short stories by an author from New Zealand, Eileen Mueller. She writes YA fantasy, and these stories are collected from other publications in the volume, Dragon Tales. I'll write my impressions out of order.
My favorite story is actually one of the shortest, Dad's Wisdom, which was adapted for children from an adult anthology. It is hilarious. I love stories with twists and this one had a doozy.
Golden Days is one of the longest stories and my next favorite. It is completely opposite Dad's Wisdom and something of a weeper, but beautifully written. It deals with childhood illnesses so it's a bit heavier than the other stories.
Math Dragon was the first story, and it was fun. I really wish I had net up with a math dragon when I was in algebra class, even though I got into enough trouble on my own.
Wingspan and Fluffy's Dragon are related stories and really cute, about two young dragons trying to figure out their futures.
I wonder if I would have reacted with the same equanimity as the main character in Suds and Scales to meeting a dragon the way he did. I don't think I would have, even though I still would have loved meeting one.
Rumbled has two brothers wanting the same dragon. Which one gets it? I know which one I'm rooting for.
It's not a long read, only 70 pages, but it's a fun read, and probably one that would be a fun family read. The only story I'd say you might want to keep in mind the age of the audience is Golden Days. As I said, that story is a bit heavy, but still written with young enough language that kids should be able to handle it.
Oh, and for record-keeping sake, I was going to stick this in the Seven Continent spot of my reading challenge, but upon researching which continent New Zealand actually belongs to, I found that there seems to be some controversy about that. I could include it in Australia, but it seems that New Zealand is tectonically not actually on any continent. Apparently many of the Pacific Ocean islands don't belong to either Asia or Australia. So, I'm thinking I need to add a continent, Oceania, and that's where I'm plugging this book.
My favorite story is actually one of the shortest, Dad's Wisdom, which was adapted for children from an adult anthology. It is hilarious. I love stories with twists and this one had a doozy.
Golden Days is one of the longest stories and my next favorite. It is completely opposite Dad's Wisdom and something of a weeper, but beautifully written. It deals with childhood illnesses so it's a bit heavier than the other stories.
Math Dragon was the first story, and it was fun. I really wish I had net up with a math dragon when I was in algebra class, even though I got into enough trouble on my own.
Wingspan and Fluffy's Dragon are related stories and really cute, about two young dragons trying to figure out their futures.
I wonder if I would have reacted with the same equanimity as the main character in Suds and Scales to meeting a dragon the way he did. I don't think I would have, even though I still would have loved meeting one.
Rumbled has two brothers wanting the same dragon. Which one gets it? I know which one I'm rooting for.
It's not a long read, only 70 pages, but it's a fun read, and probably one that would be a fun family read. The only story I'd say you might want to keep in mind the age of the audience is Golden Days. As I said, that story is a bit heavy, but still written with young enough language that kids should be able to handle it.
Oh, and for record-keeping sake, I was going to stick this in the Seven Continent spot of my reading challenge, but upon researching which continent New Zealand actually belongs to, I found that there seems to be some controversy about that. I could include it in Australia, but it seems that New Zealand is tectonically not actually on any continent. Apparently many of the Pacific Ocean islands don't belong to either Asia or Australia. So, I'm thinking I need to add a continent, Oceania, and that's where I'm plugging this book.
Severus' Dreams by Paganaidd
This is a different one. Last night while I was feeling like crap I read the completed fanfic, Severus' Dreams, by Paganaidd. I've read the whole series and it's one of my favorites. The series starts with Dudley's Memories, continues with Snape's Memories, and concludes with Severus' Dreams. If you want to read the stories, I'd read them in just that order.
The gist of the series is that Dudley has become a social worker and deals with abused children. When he comes across a child with obvious magic, he ends up calling on Harry to help a young boy named Tim. By the events in Severus' Dreams, Tim has been adopted by the Potters and is in his first year at Hogwarts. (Completely non-canon, which is usually a deal-breaker for me, but it's done so well, I love it.) In the last story, which is what I'll talk about right now, the story opens at Christmas 1997. The Golden Trio is on the run from Death Eaters and Snape is the Headmaster at Hogwarts. All of the teachers are shunning him and he's feeling quite depressed and lonely. Madam Pomfrey sees this (she has reasons for thinking there's more going on than just Snape being a Death Eater) and gives him a gift that sends him forward in time as a sort-of spirit in Tim's body. Obviously, there's more going on and Snape has to find his way back to his time.
The author deals with issues such as child and sexual abuse, traumatic brain injury, and psychological disorders in the series, so it's fittingly tagged as an "angst" story (another deal-breaker, but, again, she did it extremely well). This is not a fluffy story. It is a damned good story, especially when you take the whole series into account. Obviously, I don't want to give too much away, but she also doesn't bludgeon the reader to death with those issues. As Alka-Seltzer made famous, "Try it, you'll like it!"
Paganaidd has a wordpress page where she's writing original fiction. I haven't read the novel yet, but it sounds interesting.
The gist of the series is that Dudley has become a social worker and deals with abused children. When he comes across a child with obvious magic, he ends up calling on Harry to help a young boy named Tim. By the events in Severus' Dreams, Tim has been adopted by the Potters and is in his first year at Hogwarts. (Completely non-canon, which is usually a deal-breaker for me, but it's done so well, I love it.) In the last story, which is what I'll talk about right now, the story opens at Christmas 1997. The Golden Trio is on the run from Death Eaters and Snape is the Headmaster at Hogwarts. All of the teachers are shunning him and he's feeling quite depressed and lonely. Madam Pomfrey sees this (she has reasons for thinking there's more going on than just Snape being a Death Eater) and gives him a gift that sends him forward in time as a sort-of spirit in Tim's body. Obviously, there's more going on and Snape has to find his way back to his time.
The author deals with issues such as child and sexual abuse, traumatic brain injury, and psychological disorders in the series, so it's fittingly tagged as an "angst" story (another deal-breaker, but, again, she did it extremely well). This is not a fluffy story. It is a damned good story, especially when you take the whole series into account. Obviously, I don't want to give too much away, but she also doesn't bludgeon the reader to death with those issues. As Alka-Seltzer made famous, "Try it, you'll like it!"
Paganaidd has a wordpress page where she's writing original fiction. I haven't read the novel yet, but it sounds interesting.
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