matt and i are living with our respective parents for a month while we get ready for our big move. i've been here for two weeks now, but sheer laziness, coupled with my parents' crappy computer have conspired to keep me from updating. now i'm not sure if i can remember all of the books i've read, but i'll try. i've been keeping it nice and light:
book 23
promise not to tell, jennifer mcmahon
rating:
in some ways, this reminded me of gillian flynn's sharp objects: woman goes back to her hometown and all sorts of weirdness from her childhood comes out. kate returns to a small town in vermont so that she can decide what to do with her ailing mother. the first night she's there, a pretty grisly murder of a young girl occurs, which is eerily similar to the murder of kate's secret best friend when she was a girl. i found it pretty compelling but i had to knock some 'bots off because there was wayyyyy too much supernatural, ghosty stuff. the mystery wasn't too complicated but the story itself was overall pretty satisfying.
book 24
the year of fog, michelle richmond
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my sister had this one at home, and she liked it so i thought i'd give it a shot. abby, a photographer in san francisco, babysits her fiance's daughter, emma, and basically loses her on the beach. over the next year or so, she becomes totally obsessed with the search for the little girl, even leaving the country to look for her. this started out really slowly for me, and finished up in a somewhat pat, cheesy way, though there were some things about the ending that i think richmond really did very well. i was interested in abby as a character, though i was relatively bored by everyone else, including her librarian neighbor who tries to teach her all about the history of memory, her fiance, and the little girl herself.
book 25
a model summer, paulina porizkova
rating:
okay, let me explain this. i saw paulina porizkova on the colbert report and found her to be pretty funny, so when my mom brought this book home from the library last week, i thought i'd give it a shot. i mean: sex, drugs, international modeling - what could go wrong? as it turns out, lots. not terrible, but very slow for a summer read.
book 26
innocent traitor: a novel of lady jane grey, alison weir
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i loooooove historical fiction when i'm on vacation, and the tudors have always fascinated me. this novel is about lady jane grey, great-niece of henry viii, who becomes queen for nine days and becomes embroiled in a great battle for the crown. interesting catholic/protestant stuff, and lots of nice historical detail. weir is a historian, and this is her first attempt at fiction. so the background and context were solid, but the dialogue and the inner monologue of jane didn't sit right with me. especially her obsession with beheadings, which seemed very over the top considering that we know from the beginning that's how she'll meet her earthly end. sorry to ruin it for you, but you can learn as much from wikipedia.
book 27
dead clever, scarlett thomas
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oh, i love scarlett thomas. even when her books are batshit crazy (i.e., the end of mr. y), her writing is really enjoyable. this is the first in a trilogy of mystery novels featuring heroine lily pascale. like the other scarlett thomas leading ladies i've come across, lily is smart, witty and neurotic, and holds a master's degree (just like THIS BLOG'S leading lady. hey, maybe that's why i like these books so much?). in this first installment, lily breaks up with her loser boyfriend and moves away from london to live with her mother and brother in devon, where she takes a position as a literature lecturer at a local university right after a student was brutally murdered. the mystery is convoluted, though i pretty much guessed who did it from the start. but that didn't keep me from really enjoying it. a perfect summer read for mystery lovers.
i've also finished books 28-31, but i'll save those reviews for another day. this is getting ridiculous.
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3 comments:
haha, we read so many of the same books!
definitely read the other two scarlett thomas mysteries if you haven't yet--they're fun too.
yeah it was pretty funny when i was catching up on reading your blog. "ooh, i read that! i read that, too!"
i just finished the second s.t. mystery and found it super fun, if a little on the predictable side. but who cares? have you read bright young things? i can't seem to get my hands on it.
no, though it looks like you can get used copies pretty cheaply from amazon.co.uk. its reviews have been pretty poor so i didn't want to break my streak of loving thomas.
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