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8842281e1d1347389f2ab93d60773d4d | 18,245,960 | dfdbb7b0eb5a7e4c26d59a937e2e5feb | 5 | This is a special book. It started slow for about the first third, then in the middle third it started to get interesting, then the last third blew my mind. This is what I love about good science fiction - it pushes your thinking about where things can go.
It is a 2015 Hugo winner, and translated from its original Chinese, which made it interesting in just a different way from most things I've read. For instance the intermixing of Chinese revolutionary history - how they kept accusing people of being "reactionaries", etc.
It is a book about science, and aliens. The science described in the book is impressive - its a book grounded in physics and pretty accurate as far as I could tell. (view spoiler)[Though when it got to folding protons into 8 dimensions I think he was just making stuff up - interesting to think about though.
But what would happen if our SETI stations received a message - if we found someone was out there - and the person monitoring and answering the signal on our side was disillusioned? That part of the book was a bit dark - I would like to think human reaction to discovering alien civilization that is hostile would be more like Enders Game where we would band together.
I did like how the book unveiled the Trisolaran culture through the game. It was a smart way to build empathy with them and also understand what they've gone through across so many centuries. And who know a 3 body problem was an unsolvable math problem? But I still don't get who made the game - maybe that will come in the next book.
I loved this quote:
"In the long history of scientific progress, how many protons have been smashed apart in accelerators by physicists? How many neutrons and electrons? Probably no fewer than a hundred million. Every collision was probably the end of the civilizations and intelligences in a microcosmos. In fact, even in nature, the destruction of universes must be happening at every second--for example, through the decay of neutrons. Also, a high-energy cosmic ray entering the atmosphere may destroy thousands of such miniature universes...."
(hide spoiler)] | Sun Jul 30 07:44:10 -0700 2017 | Wed Aug 30 00:00:26 -0700 2017 | Sat Aug 26 12:05:52 -0700 2017 | Tue Aug 15 13:23:18 -0700 2017 | 28 | 1 |
8842281e1d1347389f2ab93d60773d4d | 16,981 | a5d2c3628987712d0e05c4f90798eb67 | 3 | Recommended by Don Katz. Avail for free in December: http://www.audible.com/mt/ellison2?so... | Mon Dec 05 10:46:44 -0800 2016 | Wed Mar 22 11:37:04 -0700 2017 | null | null | 1 | 0 |
8842281e1d1347389f2ab93d60773d4d | 28,684,704 | 2ede853b14dc4583f96cf5d120af636f | 3 | A fun, fast paced science fiction thriller. I read it in 2 nights and couldn't put it down. The book is about the quantum theory of many worlds which states that all decisions we make throughout our lives basically create branches, and that each possible path through the decision tree can be thought of as a parallel world. And in this book, someone invents a way to switch between these worlds. This was nicely alluded to/foreshadowed in this quote:
"I think about all the choices we've made that created this moment. Us sitting here together at this beautiful table. Then I think of all the possible events that could have stopped this moment from ever happening, and it all feels, I don't know..." "What?" "So fragile." Now he becomes thoughtful for a moment. He says finally, "It's terrifying when you consider that every thought we have, every choice we could possibly make, branches into a new world."
(view spoiler)[This book can't be discussed without spoilers. It is a book about choice and regret. Ever regret not chasing the girl of your dreams so you can focus on your career? Well Jason2 made that choice and then did regret it. Clearly the author is trying to tell us to optimize for happiness - to be that second rate physics teacher at a community college if it means you can have a happy life. I'm being snarky because while there is certainly something to that, you also have to have meaning in your life that comes from within. I thought the book was a little shallow on this dimension. In fact, all the characters were fairly shallow. Daniela was the perfect wife. Ryan the perfect antithesis of Jason. Amanda the perfect loyal traveling companion, etc. This, plus the fact that the book was weak on the science are what led me to take a few stars off - but I'd still read it again if I could go back in time - was a very fun and engaging read.
If you want to really minimize regret, you have to live your life to avoid it in the first place. Regret can't be hacked, which is kind of the point of the book. My favorite book about regret is Remains of the Day. I do really like the visualization of the decision tree though - that is a powerful concept.
"Every moment, every breath, contains a choice. But life is imperfect. We make the wrong choices. So we end up living in a state of perpetual regret, and is there anything worse? I built something that could actually eradicate regret. Let you find worlds where you made the right choice." Daniela says, "Life doesn't work that way. You live with your choices and learn. You don't cheat the system."
(hide spoiler)] | Tue Nov 15 11:29:22 -0800 2016 | Mon Mar 20 23:40:27 -0700 2017 | Sat Mar 18 23:22:42 -0700 2017 | Fri Mar 17 23:45:40 -0700 2017 | 22 | 0 |
8842281e1d1347389f2ab93d60773d4d | 27,161,156 | ced5675e55cd9d38a524743f5c40996e | 0 | Recommended reading to understand what is going on in middle america, and possibly better explain why Trump won. http://www.npr.org/2016/11/09/5013826... | Wed Nov 09 17:37:04 -0800 2016 | Wed Nov 09 17:38:20 -0800 2016 | null | null | 5 | 1 |
8842281e1d1347389f2ab93d60773d4d | 25,884,323 | 332732725863131279a8e345b63ac33e | 4 | I really enjoyed this book, and there is a lot to recommend it. It did drag on a little at the end so I knocked off 1 star - but overall a wow book.
It's the story of a starship sent to Tau Ceti - the nearest star that has Earth analog planets - to colonize it. The journey there will take generations, and the story is told of the 3rd & 4th (?) generations, which are the ones that reaches Tau Ceti. It is a story of purpose, and how having a purpose affects behavior. A story of politics, and people.
The first cool thing about this book is the richness of its world. The ship is intricate and large in its design and ambition to shepherd ~1200 people for that much time. It had 3D printers that can print almost anything you can imagine - even DNA - or more printers - so little goes lacking that can't be recreated.
But the thing that makes this book brilliant is the Ship. The AI that controls the ship, who is narrating the book by the end. It's observations about humans and our language are just brilliant. It starts with the astute observation that human language is very imprecise, and relies heavily on metaphor and analogy. It is remarkable once you start to reflect on it, how true that is. To hear the AI reflect on this:
"Perhaps there is a provisional solution to this epistemological mess, which is to be located in the phrase "it is as if". This phrase is of course precisely the announcement of an analogy. And on reflection, it is admittedly a halting problem, but jumping out of it, there is something quite suggestive and powerful in this formulation, something very specifically human. Possibly this formulation itself is the deep diagnostic of all human cognition--the tell, as they say, meaning the thing that tells, the giveaway. In the infinite black space of ignorance, it is as if stands as the basic operation of cognition, the mark perhaps of consciousness itself. Human language: it is as if it made sense."
Basically we are a bunch of pattern matchers, trying to match things we've seen before to new things, and if they don't match perfectly, it doesn't matter, because matching helps us bucket and organize the new information. But this is incredibly fuzzy! The AI also makes hilarious observations like this:
Indeed, it has to be said that the percentage of old human sayings and proverbs that are actually true is very far from 100 percent. Seems it may be less important that it be true than that it rhyme, or show alliteration or the like. What goes around comes around: really? What does this mean?"
Or this, as it analyzes chatter from Earth: "It was a whiny culture, we were finding."
Listening to the AI try to reason is also very interesting to my programmers mind. I especially loved it's discussion of the meaning of life - it really nails it. If a program (or a person) has no objective, it has no purpose, no meaning, no organizing principle, and it's existence will be in trouble. But if you have that meaning to organize your thoughts & actions - or your subroutines - than you have a purpose. Meaning is the hard problem indeed.
"We had a project on this trip back to the solar system, and that project was a labor of love. It absorbed all our operations entirely. It gave a meaning to our existence. And this is a very great gift; this, in the end, is what we think love gives, which is to say meaning. Because there is no very obvious meaning to be found in the universe, as far as we can tell. But a consciousness that cannot discern a meaning in existence is in trouble, very deep trouble, for at that point there is no organizing principle, no end to the halting problems, no reason to live, no love to be found. No: meaning is the hard problem."
(view spoiler)[My review focuses a lot on the AI, but that's not the main thrust of the book. The war between stayers and leavers, the political tensions, the slinghot maneuvers to get back - all make the book worth reading. And as a surfer, I love how it ends with Freya finding meaning in surfing waves. (hide spoiler)] | Mon Apr 25 09:31:23 -0700 2016 | Mon Apr 25 09:31:23 -0700 2016 | Sun Jun 26 00:00:00 -0700 2016 | Sat May 28 00:00:00 -0700 2016 | 9 | 1 |
8842281e1d1347389f2ab93d60773d4d | 19,398,490 | ea4a220b10e6b5c796dae0e3b970aff1 | 4 | A beautiful story. It is rare to encounter a book that does such a good job painting the scenes in your mind - you really felt like you were there and got to know the characters and the people they came across. I generally love WWII books and movies, but wasn't sure if I'd like one featuring a blind girl and a young Nazi radio operator - but he brings a lot of life to them.
That said, the novel drifts around a lot, and the plotline jumping forward and backward in time drove me nuts.
I thought a lot about if there is a theme to the book. One was the diamond and if it was really cursed (based on the Hope Diamond perhaps?). Another is that 20K Leagues is an awesome book. But I think the book was a lot about fear and the unknown, and how people deal with it. Marie-Laure was blind and couldn't tell what was happening around her - yet she was the bravest one. Werner was afraid of ending up as a miner, which drove him to join the army, and learn about radios. And Uncle Etienne was afraid dying from a sniper he couldn't see, so he didn't leave his house and he created a radio transmitter. So the moral of the story is... don't be paralyzed by your fears.
This, she realizes, is the basis of his fear, all fear. That a light you are powerless to stop will turn on you and usher a bullet to its mark." | Sun Jan 03 21:20:46 -0800 2016 | Tue Sep 20 23:30:15 -0700 2016 | Tue Sep 13 11:51:51 -0700 2016 | Sat Aug 20 07:03:03 -0700 2016 | 35 | 5 |
8842281e1d1347389f2ab93d60773d4d | 22,318,578 | 5fe9882bfe4b0520a322820c4c55747d | 5 | 5 stars for giving me a better framework for how to organize my stuff and what stuff to keep than I'd ever had before. For instance it was so freeing to realize I don't have to keep gifts. | Sun Jun 07 12:50:13 -0700 2015 | Wed Mar 22 11:36:58 -0700 2017 | Sun Aug 09 00:00:00 -0700 2015 | Sun Jun 07 00:00:00 -0700 2015 | 24 | 3 |
8842281e1d1347389f2ab93d60773d4d | 24,189,224 | dbc01e2438df7a87ee3dc16ee23a53e5 | 0 | Numerous people in publishing have told me this will be the book of the year. | Fri May 29 17:48:57 -0700 2015 | Fri May 29 17:49:40 -0700 2015 | null | null | 11 | 5 |
8842281e1d1347389f2ab93d60773d4d | 22,551,730 | 754710070f38e1c59a45f6a85473b836 | 4 | Another hard to put down nonfiction book from Erik Larson. I really enjoyed this book - mostly to learn more about submarine warfare in WWI, but also to learn about the history of the time. How America entered the war, the importance of shipping to England, the ruthlessness and autonomy of German u-boat commanders. Larson also did a great job of layering in interesting historical info (though he overdid it too a little bit).
One of the dramas of the story of the Lusitania that Larson focuses on is if the British wanted the Lusitania to be sunk, to help draw America into the war. His conclusion seems to be that was the case, though there isn't conclusive evidence. Before the Lusitania sank, very few Americans had died in the war, and there were hundreds of Americans on the boat when it sank, which definitely helped change America's attitude. And even then, it took 2 years after it sank for America's troops to arrive.
"the most likely explanation is that there was indeed a plot, however imperfect, to endanger the Lusitania in order to involve the United States in the war."
Some of my favorite details from the book were simply about what it took to navigate a u-boat in WW1. For instance:
"In this day before sonar, a submarine traveled utterly blind, trusting entirely in the accuracy of sea charts. One great fear of all U-boat men was that a half-sunk derelict or an uncharted rock might lie in their path."
Which is crazy! Plus, the torpedoes weigh 3 thousand pounds each, so a boat could only carry ~7, and their failure rate was something like 60%. Also, they had limited fuel and operated only on batteries when submerged so they could only stay underwater for limited amounts of time. Given all this, trying to operate a u-boat to sink other boats is a pretty dangerous sounding game of chess. But they certainly had an effect on the war - at one point Britain estimated it would have to surrender in 3 months if it didn't get more supplies.
There were a lot of interesting details from the era that Larson wove in that was interesting as well. Stuff like the fact that Ouija boards were commonplace in American households, straw hat day.
My main critique is that it had a few too many irrelevant details - about various passengers or what happened the day the boat left dock - and stuff like that - felt a bit padded in that respect. But overall, a great read. | Thu May 07 13:59:32 -0700 2015 | Wed Dec 14 12:30:43 -0800 2016 | Sat Jul 11 00:00:00 -0700 2015 | Wed Jun 24 00:00:00 -0700 2015 | 20 | 6 |
8842281e1d1347389f2ab93d60773d4d | 22,816,087 | d11954e6e9e9ddf52aed41d83ce43fa6 | 5 | I love Stephenson - and this was another hit - absolutely loved it. The great thing about a good Stephenson book is it makes you think about the future in new ways, and this book was no exception.
It was really two books, and I certainly didn't see the second one coming. It starts out in modern times and then someone blows up the moon. We don't have time to find out who, as within a few years the fragments of the moon cause the worst asteriod shower earth has ever seen and wipe out all life in earth. We have time to send 1,500 people up into space - and this is their story.
The use of robots throughout the books was fascinating to me. Stephenson has clearly looked 10-20 years into our future and correctly predicted how it will go. From robot workers in space, nano-bots, nano-robot weapons, and more - we get a vivid portrayal of how robots might be a part of our future lives.
I thought the focus on use of whip technology in space was interesting. And of course, the whole notion of Cradle was just cool - though not sure about it's feasibility. | Wed Apr 29 10:56:44 -0700 2015 | Wed Dec 14 12:30:43 -0800 2016 | Wed Nov 04 00:00:00 -0800 2015 | Sun Sep 27 00:00:00 -0700 2015 | 40 | 6 |
8842281e1d1347389f2ab93d60773d4d | 5,577,844 | 52c8ac49496c153e4a97161e36b2db55 | 5 | A beautiful story. Neil Gaiman is truly a unique storyteller. I did a combo of reading and listening to this story, and Neil is great at reading as well. I got interested in this book after seeing the movie, which I really enjoyed. The book is similar - maybe a bit more poetic - but I think the plot in the movie is a bit improved (not much, but a bit).
I imagine this book came about because Neil read the below poem that he includes in the beginning, and then he invented a plot around it. The result is the book reads like a epic poem - it's creative, magical, and really, just right.
Go and catch a falling star,
Get with child a mandrake root,
Tell me where all past years are,
Or who cleft the devil's foot,
Teach me to hear mermaids singing,
Or to keep off envy's stinging,
And find
What wind
Serves to advance an honest mind.
If thou be'st born to strange sights,
Things invisible to see,
Ride ten thousand days and nights,
Till age snow white hairs on thee,
Thou, when thou return'st, wilt tell me,
All strange wonders that befell thee,
And swear,
No where
Lives a woman true, and fair.
If thou find'st one, let me know,
Such a pilgrimage were sweet;
Yet do not, I would not go,
Though at next door we might meet;
Though she were true, when you met her,
And last, till you write your letter,
Yet she
Will be
False, ere I come, to two, or three.
And here is my new favorite quote: "Have been unavoidably detained by the world. Expect us when you see us." | Wed Sep 24 09:29:29 -0700 2014 | Wed Oct 01 00:31:56 -0700 2014 | Tue Sep 30 00:00:00 -0700 2014 | Sun Sep 21 00:00:00 -0700 2014 | 5 | 1 |
8842281e1d1347389f2ab93d60773d4d | 21,792,828 | 9bdae13d09e241db98354b9e298dd4a5 | 5 | I couldn't put this book down. It was well written - even elegant in a way, as well as though provoking. I love post apocalyptic books as they are great canvas's for humanity, and what matters. In Station Eleven an Ebola-esque virus (the Georgia Flu) knocks out over 99% of the worlds population. This story is told half right before the collapse, and half afterwards, and has several threads that tie together nicely.
Reading how civilization and infrastructure all die after the collapse is fascinating. One by one, cable tv, the internet, water, and power all eventually stop working. Nobody is alive to maintain them - or who even knows how. Other infrastructure like gasoline to power cars and airplanes, groceries, guns, and even clothing all become rarer and rarer commodities. Really makes you realize how much we are standing on the shoulder of hundreds of years of progress and knowledge, and how far into the middle ages we could easily fall. We really know nothing individually - our civilization is based upon the collective knowledge of billions.
If there is a motto of the book, it's probably this quote: "Because survival is insufficient". Humanity craves for more than survival - we crave for something more out of life. The story follows a caravan of actors and musicians who travel from town to town to play Shakespeare, and bring some art and a shared experience. Interesting that of all the artists from the past 400 years, Shakespeare is the one that survives and still resonates.
"All three caravans of the Traveling Symphony are labeled as such, THE TRAVELING SYMPHONY lettered in white on both sides, but the lead caravan carries an additional line of text: Because survival is insufficient."
"Survival might be insufficient, she'd told Dieter in late-night arguments, but on the other hand, so was Shakespeare."
The storyline pre-collapse that follows Arthur and his three wives is interesting. I won't say much about it, other than Arthur, his wives, and the paparazzi-turned-jounalist-turned-paramedic-turned-doctor Jeevan, seem to all be searching for meaning in their lives. And ironically Jeevan seems to find the most, becoming a doctor after the collapse. Also, I'm glad I'm not a Hollywood celebrity. The conversation between Arthur and Jeevan where Arthur just wants to talk about anything but himself stuck with me - sometimes we are all sick of talking about ourselves.
Regardless of what you think about this book, one thing is for sure - after you put it down and walk around the world, you are full of a newfound appreciation and gratitude for everything. Hopefully that appreciation and gratitude will stick around a little - though I know it will fade as months and years go by.
ps. This is cool: | Mon Sep 22 13:37:09 -0700 2014 | Wed Mar 22 11:47:36 -0700 2017 | Thu Nov 20 00:00:00 -0800 2014 | Mon Nov 17 00:00:00 -0800 2014 | 45 | 4 |
8842281e1d1347389f2ab93d60773d4d | 17,855,756 | 9db60af739f79f40c0016b924a5326b4 | 4 | What a fun series. I loved Wool, and Dust and Shift both gave us the backstory to explain the world and how it ended up. I think the first book was by far the best, but this gave us a nice conclusion.
(view spoiler)[It was the conclusion we wanted to see - the people finally get outside! My problem with this book is there were lots of holes. A lot of the other reviews have pointed this out too, and I'm not sure if the fact I know it was self-published is biasing me to say it could have used more editing, but feels that way a little. But the writing was great.
There were lots of things that weren't cleared up or never really fully made sense. The major one is why Thurman really felt the need to destroy the whole world - feels like there could have been a lot more to that. It also wasn't clear how he really accomplished that - was it all nuclear or was it nano? If nuclear, wouldn't the world really be a wasteland?
Whatever happened to silo 40 and other silo's that went dark? I was kind of expecting that they had already broken outside and would have been waiting there. Or perhaps they already went to the sea and Hugh will tell us their story later.
What happens to the other silos after silo one is destroyed? Didn't it power their server rooms and probably provide other stuff including guidance to the silo heads? Will they make the 200 years on their own?
The mystery of silo 17 and why the dead bodies at the top didn't rot was never really explained. I'm guessing they were kept whole by healing nano's, but it felt like there was more to that story.
I didn't understand why Anna didn't come back to life. If Thurman could do so after being killed by Donald, why not her? All the love stories (Juliet and Kyle, Donald and Anna, etc ended up sadly - I wanted one happy one. (hide spoiler)]
If anything, I think this book is about hope and resiliency. Jules and Donald and even Solo weren't perfect, and suffered through a lot, but the only thing that kept them going was hope of a better life, and determination to keep themselves alive. That determination defined them and was what we admired about them. The hope was what gave them their drive. Hope is a powerful and necessary part of human psychology. | Sat Jul 26 10:54:20 -0700 2014 | Sat Jul 26 13:10:06 -0700 2014 | Sat Jul 26 13:10:06 -0700 2014 | null | 3 | 1 |
8842281e1d1347389f2ab93d60773d4d | 16,158,596 | 6ff8bbc4856aa403bbd8990407c9c77a | 0 | Recommended by David Risher | Mon Jul 07 10:56:15 -0700 2014 | Mon Jul 07 10:56:39 -0700 2014 | null | null | 0 | 0 |
8842281e1d1347389f2ab93d60773d4d | 12,961,964 | 04659501bdec2cf924d5cb0348ca1d8f | 4 | A classic dystopian novel published in 1985, but still very relevant - and even trending in 2017 due to the political climate. I liked how it unfolded - we learn about the state of the world and what has happened to it very piecemeal throughout the book, and I think if Atwood had just described it all up front it wouldn't have been nearly as compelling.
This book seems to be a kind of warning. It describes a future state that is chilling and depressing, and yet (to the point) chillingly possible. It describes a society that has - for reasons we never quite learn (but might have to do with radiation or sterilization?) remade itself from one where everyone has basic freedom and choice, to one that is the opposite of that. Pleasure, poverty, and other evils are eliminated in this system. And most chillingly, women have almost no rights. The books main character is a "hand maiden" who's only role is to bear children from the person who seems to have purchased/acquired her for that purpose. She doesn't even have a proper name anymore - she is called "Offred" because she is the property "of Fred".
"We were a society dying, said Aunt Lydia, of too much choice."
A lot of the book explores themes like the above - what it would be like to take away basic freedoms, choices, and also ability to have relationships with others. Chilling and depressing, because so much of what we value in modern society is our freedom. And yet, we do know that too much choice does paralyze, and many people want leaders and situations that simplify the decisions they have to make. This might sound like a balance, but its not, because our ability to make choice, especially bad choices, is actually crucial to our development.
"Better never means better for everyone, he says. It always means worse, for some."
This was an insightful sentence, because it implied the commander thought they were making society better, not worse, overall. And yet clearly for everyone in the book - including the commander - it doesn't sound better. Did they just miss the mark? Was it a big experiment gone wrong? Regardless, in todays world this sentence is perhaps most applicable:
"We lived, as usual, by ignoring. Ignoring isn't the same as ignorance, you have to work at it. Nothing changes instantaneously: in a gradually heating bathtub you'd be boiled to death before you knew it." | Thu May 22 10:25:45 -0700 2014 | Sun Apr 23 13:55:20 -0700 2017 | Sat Apr 15 17:11:13 -0700 2017 | Tue Mar 21 01:42:39 -0700 2017 | 60 | 2 |
8842281e1d1347389f2ab93d60773d4d | 17,315,048 | 885c772fb033b041f42d57cef5be0a43 | 5 | Mark Watney is a steely-eyed missile man. A man's man. A badass mechanical engineer botanist astronaut who is stranded on Mars during a Nasa mission gone wrong, and left to fend for himself. I listened to this on audio on a roadtrip, and it flew by - what a fun story. Not surprised at all it's being made into a movie directed by Ridley Scott starring Matt Damon. Also pretty amazing is that it was self-published.
There were two great things about this book: the humor and the science. The science appealed to the mechanical engineer in me - Watney is a bit like McGyver except he knows a lot more about chemistry and botany. I didn't double-check all the science, but loved the descriptions of all the math: calorie calculations, creating water, etc. Just fun stuff.
But the humor was top notch. Weir does a great job portraying a stranded man trying to remain upbeat by talking to himself in log entries. And the excellent audio narrator only made it better.
"I started the day with some nothin' tea. Nothin' tea is easy to make. First, get some hot water, then add nothin'."
"Yes, of course duct tape works in a near-vacuum. Duct tape works anywhere. Duct tape is magic and should be worshiped."
"Live Another Sol would be an awesome name for a James Bond movie."
In the end, a well told story of survival against the odds. And one of belief - I liked the CNN Mark Watney watch - you could totally imagine how into this story the media would get. We humans love a good surviving against the odds story. | Sat Apr 05 09:30:53 -0700 2014 | Wed Mar 22 11:33:10 -0700 2017 | Mon Aug 25 00:00:00 -0700 2014 | Sat Aug 16 00:00:00 -0700 2014 | 25 | 5 |
8842281e1d1347389f2ab93d60773d4d | 17,860,739 | 022bb6daffa49adc27f6b20b6ebeb37d | 4 | An amazing and unique creation: JJ Abrams and Doug Dorst created what reads like a classic work of fiction - something you can easily imagine having read in English class - and then wrote a intriguing side story in the margins. A grad student (Eric) has left his annotated copy of SOT (Ship of Theseus) in the library, and an undergrad (Jen) finds it and replies to his annotations. This leads to them making exciting discoveries about the book, and also falling in love.
The first thing is this book is just beautifully printed. It looks and feels like a classic book, to the point where people would ask me why I'm reading such an old book. The marginalia feels real, and I can only imagine how hard that was to print. This is one that will be cool to keep on the shelves. Only complaint is the inserts are a cool idea, but they fall out all the time, and at this point I have no idea which pages they were supposed to be on.
The most interesting thing about this book to me is that it's a blueprint for how people discuss books. Sometimes they discuss the content of the book. Other times they use the content as a jumping off point to have a personal discussion. The nature of this book shows both, almost split 50/50. A key difference with this book - and the genius of it - is that most of us have to rely on memory to start a conversation with someone about a particular event or passage in the book. Here, our characters can literally underline a phrase like "relationships" and then talk about what is happening in their relationship at the moment.
One thing I didn't realize until later in the book is that the ship of Theseus is a real thing - it's an ancient Greek philosophical question - if you replace all the parts of something, is it still the same object? This inspires the ship that S is captured on, which sails through the mists of time, always getting fixed when needed. It's a ship that can't die. Or a series of ships :)
I found the story of Jen & Eric a lot more compelling than the SOT story. They were real characters that you could relate to. SOT felt like books you read in english class - a bit obtuse - and I still don't understand it all. But don't get me wrong - it's a pretty cool story. I particularly enjoyed the themes - like how it all begins and ends with water, and also how it was a lot about Straka's regret to fulfill his mission instead of living his life with his true love. Kind of like how S was on a mission, but didn't really know why - he just found himself caught up in it. | Wed Mar 26 13:51:30 -0700 2014 | Tue Sep 23 01:44:36 -0700 2014 | Sun Sep 21 00:00:00 -0700 2014 | Sat Jul 26 00:00:00 -0700 2014 | 7 | 0 |
8842281e1d1347389f2ab93d60773d4d | 5,064 | da4757c50c0edb081ca124d33db8186b | 5 | I tore through The Pillars of the Earth, and couldn't wait to pick this up. Set in Kingsbridge but a few centuries later, the story has a lot of similar elements: a cathedral that needs repair, a brilliant young builder (Merthin), a love story, a priorship up for grabs, and of course political manuevering, backstabbing and evil church officials. Also like the first one, the characters were developed well, the book was hard to put down, and yet it wasn't a deep book, just a fun one. Thank goodness I finished - it was causing me to lose sleep.
I did enjoy learning about the plague, and medieval ideas on health and medicine. Amazing that the plague wiped about a third of the human population, and how little they knew about it. Was frustrated by the lack of the Monks openness to learn new things, and how little they trusted women. For instance they believed in bleeding as a solution to everything when it actually is harmful in most cases. Also was interesting that there was no such thing as a doctor - instead nuns/monks/etc served that role. | Sun Mar 02 12:34:19 -0800 2014 | Tue May 06 10:47:06 -0700 2014 | Sun Apr 27 00:00:00 -0700 2014 | Thu Apr 17 00:00:00 -0700 2014 | 2 | 2 |
8842281e1d1347389f2ab93d60773d4d | 18,659,415 | 4e652faa682edfcb0c0e1effdd1f8e58 | 4 | The Circle is a new bay area company, but is really Google+Facebook. It dominates search and social media, has a huge sprawling campus in the south bay, and is full of intelligent, ambitious young employees. This story is I think a take on where the connected nature of the internet might be taking us. It's essentially a discussion about privacy vs openness, and I think a serious 1984-esque warning about being too open.
I thought a lot of the book was kind of shallow and unrealistic. The characters weren't very well developed. And I can't imagine an HR department that would get on your case for not using social media or attending a brunch you were invited too - it was just too extreme to believe. But I suppose that was on purpose, as the author was just making a point. I appreciated the point (see below), but didn't love the story.
Mark Zuckerberg has been fairly public on saying that he believes a more open society is a better one. The notion is exactly the one Mae learns with the kayak incident - if your whole life is open to your friends and family, it's very hard to do anything dishonest or that you might regret. The premise of the Circle - that privacy and secrecy are bad - is taking this idea to an extreme that I doubt Zuckerberg or anyone else who runs a social network has ever contemplated: complete openness. Or as its motto says:
All That Happens Must Be Known.
It is easy to imagine us eventually living in a world like the Circle contemplates. With public video cameras everywhere that document everything we do, and tons more data (photos, videos, texts) available to search engines to scan through. Already there are startups like Dropcam that enable public video feeds that are archived. There are atm and building and traffic cameras everywhere that the police already use. I heard of another startup that puts a video camera on you and it takes photos of everything all day and creates a montage of your day that is searchable/sortable for you. In many ways, we should already start acting like everything we do at least outside of our homes is being recorded on camera.
I think the central question the book poses is the one Bailey contemplates with Mae: is there such a thing as a good secret? Should we have privacy at all? Or would the world at large be better off if all secrets are known? I think we know where Mr Eggers stands on the subject, as the book seemed to be written in a dystopian, mocking kind of way. But it is in an interesting thought experiment, as many secrets would ultimately be better overall (not necessarily for the disclosing party, but for the overall situation), if they were known. For example you don't want to tell your friend that you know their significant other is cheating on them b/c you aren't supposed to know, but ultimately it would be better for them to know. Can you think of a secret you know that should be a secret?
But of course, there are lots of secrets that should stay secrets. Ignorance often truly is bliss, and people often just need to be weird and express themselves in ways that not everyone would appreciate if it were open. We are private beings, and yet our dignity and sense of self-worth largely stems from how others perceive us. I think this book is a thought-provoking story that shows us how our society is changing. | Wed Nov 20 17:02:03 -0800 2013 | Fri Jan 10 21:19:05 -0800 2014 | Sun Dec 22 00:00:00 -0800 2013 | Wed Dec 18 00:00:00 -0800 2013 | 30 | 1 |
8842281e1d1347389f2ab93d60773d4d | 13,526,165 | 51fe3e46c7f8eb39f5623d1bd8bbbbfc | 5 | My wife suggested I read this book, and I resisted for a while as my impression of it somehow was "not for me" - but I was wrong! I'm glad she finally convinced me, because it was fun and I couldn't put it down after I got ~20% in.
Bernadette moved to Seattle from LA, abandons her career as an architect to have kids, hates Seattle, and basically loses it over the course of the book. The book was fun and written a light, humorous tone - from making fun of Seattle and Microsoft, the obsession of parents and how serious they take themselves (I loved how she called the other parents "gnats"), to how she hires a virtual assistant in India.
But the most fun part of the book is just how wacky Bernadette is. You really do have to make life fun - it won't do it for you.
"That's right,' she told the girls. 'You are bored. And I'm going to let you in on a little secret about life. You think it's boring now? Well, it only gets more boring. The sooner you learn it's on you to make life interesting, the better off you'll be." | Thu May 30 20:25:19 -0700 2013 | Wed Mar 22 11:47:21 -0700 2017 | Wed Mar 18 00:00:00 -0700 2015 | Tue Mar 10 00:00:00 -0700 2015 | 23 | 5 |
8842281e1d1347389f2ab93d60773d4d | 13,453,029 | 46a6e1a14e8afc82d221fec0a2bd3dd0 | 4 | A fun fast paced book that sucks you in right away and doesn't let go. The remnants of humanity live in a 150 story silo below the earth and can't leave as the outside is now toxic. This is a bit of an odd thing to have happened, but it gives us a nice palette to think about things.
Everything is rationed, including how many children you can have. People self-identify by their profession and where in the silo they live: farmers and mechanics in the lowers, IT in the mids, and professional class in the uppers. The working class wear color coded uniforms to easily distinguish them.
The book was a lot about control. How to control a contained civilization, and give them hope (eg a live feed of the outside) and yet keep them in harmony and doing their functions. Strange mechanisms of control were built all over the silo: communication was oddly limited given the IT resources they have - many messages had to be delivered by courier as emails cost valuable money to send. Most strange of all - there is no elevator, which forces anyone wanting to travel the length of the silo to spend 2-3 days on the journey.
The cleaning ritual was a strange bit of culture. (view spoiler)[Upon reflection, I can see why it was necessary. If people never go outside, uncertainty of it still being bad would creep in, and people would need to try it. As perhaps happened in Silo 17. (hide spoiler)]
I really liked the unraveling of Bernard, and how he went from repulsive/annoying, to understandable once you understood his role and responsibility. (view spoiler)[His role is to eliminate any doubt in the delicate balance of the silo. Opening the book up with the doubt of Holston was brilliant as it sucked you in immediately. (hide spoiler)]
I liked Juliet too - she was the right combo of being determined to do right, and having brains and grit. | Tue Dec 04 11:12:22 -0800 2012 | Sat Jul 26 11:43:28 -0700 2014 | Tue Jul 08 00:00:00 -0700 2014 | Wed Jul 02 00:00:00 -0700 2014 | 5 | 1 |
8842281e1d1347389f2ab93d60773d4d | 12,953,520 | 8666dfd554e310084c4bc72b2d357f3d | 4 | A hilarious romp through the known and unknown universe that exposes how ridiculous much of US copyright law is. Written by the founder of Rhapsody, who knows a thing or two about music and the copyright surrounding it. What I didn't expect from a book by an entrepreneur is a funny book - and this book is not bad. It is being compared to Hitchhikers Guide, which nothing can approach, but its not bad. My only gripe would be there are a ton of footnotes that attempt to extend the humor and most of them didn't work for me.
The basic premise of the book is brilliant; that aliens have been listening to - and thus pirating - our music since 1977, without our knowledge. Because US copyright law states that a single case of intentional copyright violation can be fined $150,000 - this means the entire universe is many times over in debt to humanity.
It's pretty ridiculous that the music industry got such a big fine to be passed. I think one of my favorite parts of the book was learning about the law firm that Nick Carter works for, and seeing a little under the hood of how they operate.
Overall a fun, enjoyable read. | Tue Jul 10 20:26:21 -0700 2012 | Wed Sep 12 23:32:04 -0700 2012 | Mon Sep 10 00:00:00 -0700 2012 | Tue Sep 04 00:00:00 -0700 2012 | 1 | 0 |
8842281e1d1347389f2ab93d60773d4d | 13,239,822 | a582bfa8efd69d453a5a21a678046b36 | 3 | This book has a great premise, and is full of some beautifully written prose. It's about a hacker during the Arab Spring, helping people get around the firewalls that the State erected to control its population. Alif falls in love, finds an ancient book, gets into trouble with State, enlists the help of an unseen, magical world full of creatures call Jinn, and combats evil. The story flowed well, and was a fast, fun read.
I would have given it a higher rating, but I'm a computer programmer, and for a book that is about hacking the descriptions of Alif coding felt like I was watching one of those movies where they used a bunch of made-up visuals that have nothing to do with hacking. The prose around the hacking was so oddly descriptive you didn't know what to make of it. For instance, when Alif is hacking into State's intranet, it is described as:
"The Hand roused. It lumbered to its feet, reeking of ionized air and dry metallic bones, revealing a level of functionality Alif had not detected. He reeled backward, recalibrating. Breaching the confines of the State intranet, the Hand began to attack the base of Alif's tower, slicing away layers of code through a mirroring protocol of a kind Alif had never seen before."
I didn't know a computer program could "reek of ionized air" - and can't conceive of how a mirroring protocol (if there is such a thing) could ever be used to "slice away layers of code".
(view spoiler)[I wanted so hard for the bit about quantum computing and encoding the ancient story into code to make sense. But it just didn't. And that was the heart of the story - that the ancient text contained an all-powerful computer algorithm. I also had trouble buying the Alif & Dina relationship - the characters just felt shallow to me. (hide spoiler)] | Mon Jul 02 16:04:16 -0700 2012 | Wed Mar 22 11:32:20 -0700 2017 | Wed Aug 15 00:00:00 -0700 2012 | Sun Aug 12 00:00:00 -0700 2012 | 7 | 0 |
8842281e1d1347389f2ab93d60773d4d | 9,850,443 | 9f35b253416fdc0c1aa9774791cb3015 | 3 | A fun, dark, slightly comical western about two killers (Charlie and Eli Sisters) on their way to California for the gold rush. Going into the mind of a killer is a strange experience - I'm not sure I totally enjoyed it. But what I did really enjoy was the authors writing; it was clean, fun, and even poetic - which made this book a quick enjoyable read.
I loved all the introspective one-liners that Eli kept throwing out. For instance:
"but I could not sleep without proper covering and spent the rest of the night rewriting lost arguments from my past, altering history so that I emerged victorious."
"I thought, When a man is properly drunk it is as though he is an a room by himself--there is a physical, impenetrable separation between him and his fellows."
Here is another miserable mental image I will have to catalog and make room for."
"It is true, I thought. I am living a life."
"The effects of her words stung me, and after she stole away I stood a long while before her looking glass, studying my profile, the line I cut in this world of men and ladies."
I struggled however to find the point of this novel. What lesson was I meant to take away? What did we learn from Charlie and Eli's adventure? I suppose if anything the theme of the book was transformation. (view spoiler)[We witnessed Warm, Morris, and Eli have the courage to transform themselves and change their lives. In other words - it's easy to let life dictate your path. Eli's story of how Charlie sucked him into a life of crime was fascinating. Warm had a similar story of how he became a thief. We didn't learn about Morris's past, but we did see the difficulty of his decision to leave the Commodore's employment. (hide spoiler)] It takes guts to transform oneself - especially for the better. | Tue Jun 05 23:21:47 -0700 2012 | Sun Aug 05 12:22:17 -0700 2012 | Sat Aug 04 00:00:00 -0700 2012 | Fri Jul 27 00:00:00 -0700 2012 | 2 | 1 |
8842281e1d1347389f2ab93d60773d4d | 8,664,353 | da2d4cfce836a2c57ad55c38437aa692 | 5 | Wow. Amazing story, and well told - kept me up late at night! Louie Zamperini truly went through hell and came back - and it's inspiring to read a story of such willpower and determination. It was also interesting to me to learn more about Japan and their role in the war.
One big takeaway was just how cheap human life is in war. I think there was some stat about how 5/6 of the US airmen that died did so from accidents - that is simply staggering.
I love WWII stories, but most of the ones I've seen and read have focused on Germany, so I really didn't know much about how Japan had treated their POW's. It was pretty eye opening to read the stats about how they pretty much massacred hundreds of thousands of POW's. And of couse, as the story details, they also did not follow Geneva Conventions and pretty much treated POW's as slaves.
One of my favorite points the author made is best illustrated by this quote about Dignity is as essential to human life as water, food, and oxygen. This is a fundamental truth of humanity that the author really drew out well - if you take a persons dignity away you take everything away. I loved all the stories of POW's being defiant; stealing food, supplies, playing jokes, etc. The little bits of defiance were enough to let them take back their dignity, and I think thats what makes them so compelling; because while we haven't all been POW's, we can relate to that basic need. | Sun Nov 20 09:10:15 -0800 2011 | Wed Mar 22 11:47:04 -0700 2017 | Wed May 16 00:00:00 -0700 2012 | Sun May 06 00:00:00 -0700 2012 | 50 | 4 |
8842281e1d1347389f2ab93d60773d4d | 9,418,327 | ed4fd27c67be9f8359df71b80cf1e017 | 4 | A hilarious and book from Tina Fey - definitely worth listening to over audio as she reads it herself. She makes fun of herself a lot, adds lots of light humor, and of course shares TMI.
The most interesting bit was hearing the behind the scenes of Saturday Night Live, and how she was a joke writer there for 3 years before they gave her a role on the show, which was only doing the news. Her breakout occurred after she had already left for 30 Rock, when she did the Sarah Palin impersonation. Tina is clearly an example of someone who has worked long and hard to get where she is. | Mon Sep 19 16:07:48 -0700 2011 | Wed Mar 22 11:36:26 -0700 2017 | Sun Jan 06 00:00:00 -0800 2013 | Mon Oct 08 00:00:00 -0700 2012 | 9 | 1 |
8842281e1d1347389f2ab93d60773d4d | 62,291 | e23965adda7ce7e7e415a1339e169065 | 5 | ** spoiler alert **
Loved it. The epic saga continues. The poor Starks are torn apart, but yet are surprisingly resilient. In fact, pretty much every major character is in danger of dying and some even do. It's a bit tough to read, as you really wanted The King In The North to succeed. And Dany is fast becoming an interesting part of the plot that has yet to intermix with the rest of the characters.
I'll be starting the next one soon. These books are like crack. | Tue Jul 12 12:57:07 -0700 2011 | Wed Mar 22 11:47:02 -0700 2017 | Sat Aug 20 00:00:00 -0700 2011 | Tue Jul 26 00:00:00 -0700 2011 | 5 | 1 |
8842281e1d1347389f2ab93d60773d4d | 10,552,338 | 90d18066f034757da91b8cf49ccc1fb5 | 5 | This sounds awesome. | Mon May 23 18:38:42 -0700 2011 | Wed Mar 22 11:46:57 -0700 2017 | Wed Sep 28 17:51:00 -0700 2011 | Sat Aug 27 00:00:00 -0700 2011 | 0 | 3 |
8842281e1d1347389f2ab93d60773d4d | 9,938,498 | bff5654c639c7b008571c3d4398d930a | 4 | Great story of the US Ambassador to Germany and his experience during the build-up of ww2 from 1933 - 1937. Nothing new or exciting really revealed, and I'm sure there are many other accounts of the buildup to ww2 out there, but this one told it from the perspective of mostly the Ambassador, Dodd, and his daughter, Martha. The story was engaging and well-written, and thus interesting. I think the ending fell pretty flat - I was hoping for more.
Reading about the Nazis one is of course always appalled at how they got to be in power and commit such atrocities, and this book did provide some clues. Hitler seemed primarily willing to tell people what they needed and wanted to hear, even if it wasn't the truth - and he was a great storyteller. He also used fear as a primary weapon, as there were many in Germany not behind him - but they were too afraid to make a stand or speak up.
I suppose the climax of the book was the Night of the Long Knives, where Hitler arrested and executed all of his major opponents, clearing the way for his absolute grip on the nation. He ruthlessly murdered an estimated 77 to several hundred people (the count was never really known) and played it off as putting down a rebellion, which much of the world bought for many years.
I think one of the more interesting pieces of the book was watching Dodd (and Martha) go from thinking the Nazis were good for Germany, to realizing how terrible they were and hoping for them to be overthrown. It was a slow gradual process, and one that I'm sure was not immediately obvious to anyone. In the end, I think the book is aptly named. | Sat May 21 15:04:50 -0700 2011 | Wed Mar 22 11:46:56 -0700 2017 | Wed Jun 22 00:00:00 -0700 2011 | Sat Jun 11 00:00:00 -0700 2011 | 5 | 1 |
8842281e1d1347389f2ab93d60773d4d | 7,112,495 | 0258b3c9a85cecb95f240e43a7642f60 | 4 | ** spoiler alert **
An interesting book in terms of it's structure: 5 distinct stories that cascade into each other in subtle ways, then wind back out. This way of doing the structure was unique, and certainly very cool to see the subtle way they were tied together. But in the end it was kind of gimmick and probably not necessary.
I generally don't try to summarize novels in my reviews, but in this case there was so much going on that the exercise was helpful.
Story 1: The Pacific Journal of Adam Ewing. Later revealed to be a journal in other stories. A story about a rather weak-willed protagonist, who is constantly taken advantage of by others (the ships captain, Dr Goose). Interesting side story about the peaceful native Moriori tribe and how they were taken advantage of.
Story 2: Robert Frobisher. Perhaps my favorite story - about a penniless young musician who as a last-ditch attempt apprentices himself to an old master musician, Vyvyan Ayrs. The story is told through letters to a friend, Sixsmith, who appears in the next story. The story is about how Frobisher, the apprentice, goes from being overjoyed to have a job to being resentful that the master is using him and stealing his stuff. Robert sleeps with VA's wife the whole story, but ends up falling in love with the daughter in a cruel twist of fate.
Story 3: Luisa Rey. Modern age story about a young journalist hot on the heels of a big scandal involving an energy company. Sixsmith is an engineer who leaks the story to her, and also has the letters from story #2. Classic detective-esque story, with lots of people willing to kill to protect their secrets and power.
Story 4: Timothy Cavendish. Modern age story about a book editor who gets a smash hit, then the author's mafia-esque family get's on his case and he's on the run. He lands in a old-persons home/prison. This story is kind of a nightmare, and is revealed to be a movie in the next story.
Story 5: Somni 451. One of favorites, for how different it was. Set in the far future in an asian country, humans have genetically created clones that serve as slaves. This lower class is regarded as unintelligent and controlled with drugs - but our protagonist, Somni, breaks through and becomes self-conscious. The scary thing is I can easily see this happening! Told as recollections in an interview.
Story 6: Sloosha's Crossin'. Story of Zach'ry and Meronym in post apocalyptic Hawaii. Somni is now their deity. Story of the Valleysmen people and their struggle for freedom against neighboring tribes.
All six stories were very graphic and real, and had extremely good character development. Mitchel could with a single sentence describe someone that you understood in a way I can't describe here.
I wish the stories had more themes in common so I could say what I learned from this book. Though I suppose if I had to put my finger on it, the major theme was freedom and slavery. Ewing was under the control of Dr Goose and the ship captain, Frobisher became an unwilling servant to Arys, Luisa Rey needed to find the truth in order to free herself from the corporate villians, Frobisher was a prisoner bent on escape in a nursing home, Somni was literally a slave in her society and focused on freedom, and Zach'ry's people were captured and enslaved. All the stories touched on various ways people can "enslave" and control other people for various reasons.
I suppose the point is human beings are all greedy and will try to control other human beings, but if we are strong we can survive and find a way to free ourselves. Sounds good anyways, so I'll stick with that - but am interested to hear what other people thought. | Thu Jun 10 14:41:13 -0700 2010 | Tue Aug 07 12:11:05 -0700 2012 | Sat Aug 07 00:00:00 -0700 2010 | Mon Jul 05 00:00:00 -0700 2010 | 7 | 3 |
8842281e1d1347389f2ab93d60773d4d | 2,429,135 | efee7a3f620ed640366226caa7b138f0 | 5 | I haven't stayed up until 5am to finish a book in a while - it felt good. This was a great murder-mystery thriller, and more interesting as it's set in Sweden and deals with journalists, corporations, and hackers. Good stuff! | Mon Mar 15 14:05:04 -0700 2010 | Wed Mar 22 11:46:43 -0700 2017 | Sun Mar 28 00:00:00 -0700 2010 | Sun Mar 21 00:00:00 -0700 2010 | 13 | 10 |
8842281e1d1347389f2ab93d60773d4d | 2,767,052 | 248c011811e945eca861b5c31a549291 | 5 | I cracked and finally picked this up. Very enjoyable quick read - couldn't put it down - it was like crack.
I'm a bit bothered by the lack of backstory of how Panem and the Hunger Games come about. It is just kind of explained away in a few paragraphs and we are left to accept this very strange world where teenagers are pitted into an arena each year to kill each other? I was expecting it because I've seen Battle Royale, but I would have appreciated knowing more of the backstory of how the world could have come into such a odd state.
I suppose what makes a book like this interesting is thinking about the strategy of it all. The players are going to be statistically encouraged to band together because they will last longer that way, but by definition of course any partnership will be broken, and the drama of how that unfolds is always interesting and full of friendships broken and betrayal. Each character approached the game in their own way. Some banded together in larger coalitions, some were loners initially and banded together later. And some were just loners, like Foxface. A lot depended on your survival skill: could you find food and water on your own? Self-dependence is highly valued - and of course our hero was strong there.
All in all, a fun read, but I feel kind of dirty for having read it. | Wed Jan 13 13:38:25 -0800 2010 | Wed Mar 22 11:46:36 -0700 2017 | Sun Mar 25 00:00:00 -0700 2012 | Fri Mar 23 00:00:00 -0700 2012 | 24 | 25 |
8842281e1d1347389f2ab93d60773d4d | 6,411,961 | d44b6d28f456dbcc5b1537b4c5572400 | 3 | ** spoiler alert **
Critics aside, Dan Brown can sure write a thriller. I was stuck in an airport with no book and picked this up, and was done with it in 2 days.
The first half of the book was really gripping, and promised big things. We were going to learn about the secrets of the Masons, and about the "ancient wisdom" that has been lost through the ages. Sounds cool - I wanted to learn more about the ancient wisdom. But the end of the book just fell really flat. The villian was predictable, and we learned nothing about this ancient wisdom.
I also have to say that I almost fell out of bed laughing with Dan Brown plugged Twitter at the end of the book. To be fair, he's right - people are excited about Twitter because it (along with many other websites) is helping cause a shift in our society. But I can't help wondering if 5 years from now, when Twitter is MySpace, people will read that and think "wtf?". | Wed Sep 16 11:09:03 -0700 2009 | Wed Mar 22 11:46:32 -0700 2017 | Mon Oct 19 00:00:00 -0700 2009 | null | 3 | 3 |
8842281e1d1347389f2ab93d60773d4d | 54,499 | 20959fdf09c09810fa1f0097e086eeda | 3 | A great finish to the D'Artagnan series - definitely enjoyed it. Ending wasn't what I wanted though, you could tell he was just trying to permanently end the series. It could easily be having seen the movie made me want more drama. | Thu Jul 23 08:09:50 -0700 2009 | Mon Aug 10 17:24:46 -0700 2009 | Tue Jul 28 00:00:00 -0700 2009 | null | 0 | 2 |
8842281e1d1347389f2ab93d60773d4d | 77,432 | d49eb786ef1d8557b9e6e86bcafd4570 | 5 | ** spoiler alert **
I equally loved book 2, and am definitely hooked. I did feel it took a little while for them to get to sea, but I guess we can't bring in a love interest if we aren't on the land!
My favorite thing by far was the Lively, and the descriptions of how fast she is and how much care the crew took keeping her a crack ship. Pride in what you do can be a great motivator. I also loved how Jack made them work the guns against all the batteries for practice. | Tue May 05 18:08:22 -0700 2009 | Thu Jun 18 17:56:58 -0700 2009 | Thu Jun 18 00:00:00 -0700 2009 | null | 1 | 0 |
8842281e1d1347389f2ab93d60773d4d | 177,193 | 50e0193b474e47ee16f8285bbd7596f7 | 5 | I read a bunch of Bond books in High School and hadn't read one since, so I really enjoyed this one. As I remember a few of them being, it was very different from the movie. Though the main players - Scaramanga, Goodnight, and Felix Leiter - were all still there - but there was no midget! Bond books are simple, yet somehow still very compelling. The way Flemming wrote, Bond seems much more human and susceptible, yet determined and focused him - in the movies he seems more superhuman. I think Daniel Craig's movies are actually bringing that aspect of bond back a little bit.
In any event I greatly enjoyed the duel between Scaramanga and Bond. | Thu Apr 16 10:00:17 -0700 2009 | Mon Apr 20 10:25:50 -0700 2009 | Sun Apr 19 00:00:00 -0700 2009 | null | 0 | 1 |
8842281e1d1347389f2ab93d60773d4d | 41,804 | 2bcbe2300fe1801197f9bfe1f1c883ba | 5 | As an engineer I couldn't help but love this book. It's full of logic games! The 3 rules of robotics are a very rich medium for lots of fun puzzles, and I very much enjoyed reading them. I think the book originally came out in serial form, as it was broken down into short stories or capers. Kind of reminded me of Sherlock Holmes - another favorite of mine.
Examining robots also gave a canvas for defining what it is to be human. I loved the robot religion story. Robots with a superiority complexes - but thank goodness for that first law or it would be a Terminator-style story.
According to Asimov's predictions, in 2009 the robot revolution should be in full swing. But I don't see a lot of robots around. Anyone have a good prediction on where we are with robots? When will we have pet robots and robot laborers? | Wed Mar 25 10:56:59 -0700 2009 | Tue Apr 14 18:23:50 -0700 2009 | Wed Apr 08 00:00:00 -0700 2009 | null | 12 | 2 |
8842281e1d1347389f2ab93d60773d4d | 77,430 | 28007503b429dc6724da7076ae7306b4 | 5 | One of the most enjoyable stories I've read in some time. Captain Jack Aubrey was a fascinating character. You just wanted him to succeed - to capture the Spanish vessel, to gain the respect of his men, to gain the respect of the Admiral.
The book is set during the Napoleonic Wars, and it was interesting to see all the Kings ships were nothing but glorified pirates, capturing all vessels they could on the open seas.
The book also strongly reminded me of my sailing lessons from last summer - I still had to look a lot of words up, but I remembered ones like leeward and abeam. Makes me want to go sailing! | Tue Jan 13 11:12:38 -0800 2009 | Wed Mar 22 11:46:19 -0700 2017 | Sat May 23 00:00:00 -0700 2009 | null | 5 | 0 |
8842281e1d1347389f2ab93d60773d4d | 136,251 | 132eab4c9a3724493204cc083e0e2ecc | 5 | Loved every minute. So sad there isn't another!
I thought JK really made Harry an even stronger archetypal hero - almost in a Paul Maud'Dib from Dune kind of way. He's fighting the ultimate evil, he's brave and takes risks, and believes in himself and doesn't give up despite many hardships. I think JK really did a phenomenal job, as I bet every kid who reads this will have a little bit of hero/Gryffindor in them.
The epilogue was lame though. I would have rather seen a '3 months later' epilogue than a '19 years later' one. | Mon Dec 22 10:38:27 -0800 2008 | Wed Mar 22 11:46:18 -0700 2017 | Sun Jan 02 00:00:00 -0800 2011 | null | 6 | 3 |
8842281e1d1347389f2ab93d60773d4d | 3,228,917 | 962e59d56b37e8a0ebc884799d913590 | 4 | A great book and worth the read, but like many Gladwellian books, it can be summed up easily. The basic point is that there is no such thing as a true outlier. Success, it seems, is due primarily to hard work and circumstance - brains play little part.
Gladwell went through several (fascinating) examples proving his thesis - people such as Bill Gates, Joe Flom at Skadden, Oppenheimer, some failed genius named Chris Langan. All of them had two things in common: they spent over 10,000 hours doing what they did, and they had fortunate circumstances that let them get ahead of everyone else. Bill Gates was smart, but so were lots of other geeks. He had the advantage of being 16 when the computing age came about, and being possibly the only 16 year old in the country with access to a computer - and he spent all his time on it. By the time he hit college he had well over 10,000 hours of computer time and was arguably one of the foremost experts in the country.
One of my favorite bits was the music study on page 39 that compared musicians, and "couldn't find any 'naturals'" - the skill of each musician at comparable amounts of practice was equal. It's kind of validating to hear this, as many of us have this feeling that there are naturally smarter people out there than us. But apparently this isn't true - and I think my personal experience agrees with this. The harder you work, the better you can do.
One other big takeaway was how circumstance can change things. The hockey league study and elementary school studies were fascinating and relevant. Basically kids that are in the older third of their class (or hockey league) have a natural advantage when they're really little. They are the kids who make all-star, and get extra coaching, and because of that they practice more and thus do become better by the time they are older. I was held back in pre-school so I was one of the oldest in my class, and I definitely think it helped me. Hmmm now can I plan my kids to be born to be the oldest? | Mon Nov 10 14:31:41 -0800 2008 | Wed Mar 22 11:46:16 -0700 2017 | Fri Sep 25 00:00:00 -0700 2009 | null | 5 | 9 |
8842281e1d1347389f2ab93d60773d4d | 76,620 | 9206654986a733bd753753aa0c882813 | 5 | I read this after hearing from a few people that it was among their all-time favorites. I was almost put off when I saw it was a story about rabbits, originally written as a tale by a father to his children - but I'm glad I wasn't.
I found the folk tales about El-ahrairah to be very impressive. The author clearly had a vivid imagination to create so much of the rabbits culture and history. But I think this book was worth reading as it's really a story about survival, leadership, and human nature.
Oh and Fiver rocks. And BigWig is the man. | Tue Sep 02 17:03:40 -0700 2008 | Wed Dec 14 12:30:43 -0800 2016 | Tue May 05 00:00:00 -0700 2015 | Sun Apr 19 00:00:00 -0700 2015 | 30 | 2 |
8842281e1d1347389f2ab93d60773d4d | 34,497 | 43828b41e8099f892cfee80a8244684a | 3 | This should be 3.5 stars. I really enjoyed it, but found it all kind of random and leading nowhere. That being said, it was very imaginative and entertaining. Hrun the Barbarian was one of my favorites, as was anything the Luggage did. | Tue Jun 03 16:42:44 -0700 2008 | Fri Dec 27 07:55:24 -0800 2013 | Mon Nov 10 00:00:00 -0800 2008 | null | 2 | 2 |
8842281e1d1347389f2ab93d60773d4d | 14,497 | b8e08587ce1592d69548d0f644cb9893 | 4 | ** spoiler alert **
Just finished this and have to say I really enjoyed it. I was kind of worried the plot wasn't going anywhere for much of it, but the writing was really good and drew me in.
For much of the book I thought the main character (Richard) was too weak of a character for me to like much, but I liked how he grew in confidence towards the end. I think anytime one undertake's an adventure or a journey like that you grow so much. You have to get out there and fail a few times to have the confidence to know how to succeed!
I also have to say I loved Mister Croup and Mister Vandemar. Their dialogue and interaction was hilarious. It really reminded me of Mister Wint and Mister Kidd from James Bond's Diamonds are Forever. | Thu Mar 27 17:53:06 -0700 2008 | Wed Mar 22 11:46:03 -0700 2017 | Tue Oct 28 00:00:00 -0700 2008 | null | 6 | 1 |
8842281e1d1347389f2ab93d60773d4d | 77,566 | cedb8b21ea6ad95b05fa3868e05488e6 | 5 | Seven amazing stories. Each one you think can't possibly top the last, and then it does. We never really get to understand what is up with the Time Tombs - guess I have to keep reading. But the strength of each of these stories is worth it. One of the best books I've read in a while. | Wed Mar 12 16:37:16 -0700 2008 | Wed Mar 22 11:46:03 -0700 2017 | Fri Oct 19 00:00:00 -0700 2012 | Wed Sep 19 00:00:00 -0700 2012 | 4 | 2 |
8842281e1d1347389f2ab93d60773d4d | 361,459 | 74638316d011da5d0fec178abd8efaa0 | 4 | Highly recommended if you are curious about Manic-depressive disease. A fascinating and even very well written insight from a woman who is both a Psychiatrist who treats it and suffers from it. She was very brave and very poetic in writing this book. | Thu Feb 07 10:34:45 -0800 2008 | Wed Mar 22 11:35:32 -0700 2017 | Wed Feb 13 00:00:00 -0800 2008 | null | 9 | 0 |
8842281e1d1347389f2ab93d60773d4d | 10,365 | b953295db05c923943006688ec81fbcb | 5 | Loved this book. | Thu Jan 03 10:24:16 -0800 2008 | Wed Mar 22 11:45:57 -0700 2017 | Fri Apr 01 00:00:00 -0800 1988 | null | 0 | 0 |
8842281e1d1347389f2ab93d60773d4d | 18,122 | 9a8c81912b6bf7f4091323a8093a94c8 | 4 | ** spoiler alert **
I absolutely loved the first book, but didn't think the series finished as strong as I would have liked.
Too many plot holes and things that didn't make sense. Maybe it was because it's supposed to be a children's book, but I didn't like things like how the harpies were so easily convince to change sides, how God's #2 is easily tricked by a little flirting, how Lyra & Will can suddenly easily lose their Daemons, and how two kids making love can save the universe.
On the other hand the book did make you think, and I suppose religious ideas are probably best challenged in a children's book :) I did like the Dante's Inferno-esque description of the world of the dead, and Pullman's description of angels and their roles was brilliant. Also, the descriptions of how things evolved differently in different worlds was very interesting - particularly the Mulefa's world and the descriptions of the Gallivespians. I'm usually not a tragedy fan, but I did think Lyra & Will being separated at the end was a romantic and appropriate ending. | Wed Dec 26 17:21:26 -0800 2007 | Wed Mar 22 11:45:55 -0700 2017 | Tue Jan 01 00:00:00 -0800 2008 | null | 0 | 0 |
8842281e1d1347389f2ab93d60773d4d | 119,322 | 111b958d9d8b5132be5e0c63399d1839 | 5 | Loved every second, and didn't want it to end, so I had to find a book store and buy the next two! Its a Harry Potter reading level and similar type fantasy story, but sometimes thats what you need on a long flight to NYC for the holidays!
I think as a child we all daydreamed about alternate worlds, so I love how thats the basis for the book. Thinking about all the permutations of how things could turn out differently is kinda fun :) I think if I had a Daemon I would hope she'd settle on being a lynx. | Mon Dec 10 21:02:24 -0800 2007 | Wed Mar 22 11:45:52 -0700 2017 | Sat Dec 01 00:00:00 -0800 2007 | null | 4 | 2 |
8842281e1d1347389f2ab93d60773d4d | 1,953 | 70c420b9b26d869a1ef8548b20a9edeb | 4 | On loan to Diana Sonn | Wed Dec 05 12:25:38 -0800 2007 | Wed Mar 22 11:45:51 -0700 2017 | null | null | 2 | 0 |
8842281e1d1347389f2ab93d60773d4d | 52,357 | cd8f2fdfc17234b555ac662601f0e777 | 3 | I would hate to have to see the movie without having read it first... | Tue Sep 25 01:10:09 -0700 2007 | Wed Mar 22 11:35:19 -0700 2017 | null | null | 0 | 0 |
8842281e1d1347389f2ab93d60773d4d | 128,029 | 172eea9d13272fc7ae6c34ca356496bc | 5 | I'm not sure if I love Khaled's characters (see my review of The Kite Runner), but the man can tell a story. I think all Americans need to read this book, as it helps to understand and sympathize with what the people in Afghanistan have gone through. Particularly interesting as the book spans 30+ years and paints a very graphic picture of how Afghanistan changed in that time. From Russian communists to warlords to the Taliban to US Army, there have been no shortage of invaders and wars, and victims. Khaled leaves out little of the misery and death, but also focuses on how life invariably always finds a way.
So a little sad, but I liked it. I think the thing I liked most was that I've read so few books about that area of the world, and now I feel like I've gotten to know it, just a tiny bit. | Tue Aug 07 10:37:11 -0700 2007 | Wed Mar 22 11:45:43 -0700 2017 | Sat Dec 01 00:00:00 -0800 2007 | null | 15 | 7 |
8842281e1d1347389f2ab93d60773d4d | 960 | 7184b51fe965872484f2ae188adc9830 | 4 | A quick read, and probably better than The Da Vinci Code. | Tue Jul 24 12:10:20 -0700 2007 | Wed Mar 22 11:45:41 -0700 2017 | Mon Aug 01 00:00:00 -0700 2005 | null | 0 | 2 |
8842281e1d1347389f2ab93d60773d4d | 350 | 50b8b2d287a53eccb43bea4c2ba13d28 | 5 | I really enjoyed this book. The concept of a man who had grown up on Mars and never seen another human until he was in his twenties is such a fun idea - and a rich canvas. Watching Mike try to grok humans gave a Heinlein great opportunities to point out some of our faults - and our advantages.
I think my favorite part of this book is the word 'grok'. I would bet that there are deep discussions over the true meaning of this word - but I will contend that its closest meaning in English is 'to be enlightened about something'. If you grok God you have reached enlightenment. If you grok music you truly understand in the way that Mozart understood it. If you grok another person you love them. If you grok programming then you truly love and are really good at programming - that, and you're also a probably a pretty big nerd for using a word like 'grok' :) I used it in front of my girlfriend and she still hasn't forgiven me, since I had to explain that it was "a Martian word"!
One thing that I grokked (yes I'm going to keep using it dammit) after finishing this book is that it is kind of a 60's manifesto for free love. I wasn't alive in the 60's, but given everything I know about the 60's from movies, books, etc it seemed that my grokking was right. | Fri Jun 08 15:46:43 -0700 2007 | Wed Mar 22 11:45:31 -0700 2017 | Sat May 17 00:00:00 -0700 2008 | null | 48 | 0 |
8842281e1d1347389f2ab93d60773d4d | 22,328 | 4e5edecc347415c8c3eede01ba7c2e6e | 4 | Great book. A sci-fi classic. The fact that Gibson wrote this in 1984 is very impressive, as he makes many predictions that seem like they are coming true (was that a prediction?). | Tue Jun 05 19:16:00 -0700 2007 | Mon Jan 23 12:48:25 -0800 2012 | Sat Sep 01 00:00:00 -0700 2007 | null | 4 | 2 |
8842281e1d1347389f2ab93d60773d4d | 151 | daab5f2752243787e471e2ac01bf12fc | 0 | Well if Melanie says its her BBE, I gotta check it out... | Mon May 14 12:55:56 -0700 2007 | Sat Jan 07 11:40:38 -0800 2017 | null | null | 1 | 2 |
8842281e1d1347389f2ab93d60773d4d | 18,646 | 854200c9784c19f19ee0a058238e19ff | 5 | Great book about Galileo from the perspective of his daughter. | Mon Apr 09 21:38:21 -0700 2007 | Mon Apr 09 21:39:36 -0700 2007 | Mon Sep 01 00:00:00 -0700 2003 | null | 0 | 0 |
8842281e1d1347389f2ab93d60773d4d | 256,008 | 233ad4b2dd916bb1bdc9f73842a3c2c9 | 4 | Despite having a name that sounds like its a chic-book, this was a pretty sweet western novel. Thoroughly enjoyed it. | Mon Feb 19 18:38:18 -0800 2007 | Thu Jul 31 01:20:00 -0700 2014 | Sun Aug 01 00:00:00 -0700 2004 | null | 7 | 7 |
8842281e1d1347389f2ab93d60773d4d | 17,214 | 6ec0d301aab8636dc52e28a77b440ea1 | 4 | Sometimes you just need a quick fun book. I read this over Easter weekend, and loved every second. I loved the movie too, but the book was better.
This book really wasn't intellectual, but it did make one interesting point. In the book you can only vote if you have gone through and graduated from military training. This prevents the uneducated and uncommitted citizens from voting. While this is a bit extreme, I might be of the opinion that there should be some more barriers to voting (like a standardized test). Otherwise our elections end up being a marketing contest. Name recognition is huge in marketing - would W have won otherwise? Would Hilary have a chance? | Wed Feb 07 09:07:25 -0800 2007 | Thu Jul 31 00:49:50 -0700 2014 | Sun Apr 01 00:00:00 -0700 2007 | null | 3 | 3 |
8842281e1d1347389f2ab93d60773d4d | 259,028 | fb4acc8a30bac6bf1414a03303d43c26 | 0 | If steve recommends it, it must be good! | Thu Jan 18 11:09:48 -0800 2007 | Mon Mar 09 00:38:30 -0700 2015 | null | null | 2 | 2 |
8842281e1d1347389f2ab93d60773d4d | 38,300 | 9bb7dbe43d7c85369780517249c15dbe | 5 | I read this after I went fly fishing for the first time, and it was pure gold. A fantastic story. | Wed Jan 17 21:21:03 -0800 2007 | Sat Mar 29 09:39:51 -0700 2014 | Sat Apr 01 00:00:00 -0800 1995 | null | 3 | 0 |
8842281e1d1347389f2ab93d60773d4d | 5,358 | ac6bab36534499b76423d2826a7a7d97 | 4 | One of my favorites from Grisham. The movie was good to (but of course not as good as the book) | Fri Jan 12 10:26:14 -0800 2007 | Wed Mar 22 11:45:04 -0700 2017 | Sat Jul 01 00:00:00 -0700 1995 | null | 1 | 0 |
8842281e1d1347389f2ab93d60773d4d | 19,494 | 3ce7575fd5436a5aeeb184d16be06e04 | 5 | I haven't read a good spy novel in a while - and this was a great one. Truly well written, and an amazing story given how short the book is. I tore through it in one day!
It really dove into what it's like to be in the spy world. A world where, as Le Carre mentions several times in the novel, the only rule is to do what's best for your country. When you play that kind of game morals are thrown out the window. Murder, traitorism, disloyalty - are all ok in the name of great good. And operatives who live in this world have a hard time "coming in from the cold" - as did Laemas.
The description of how Laemas had to go to personally go to pieces in order to get thrown in jail and get recruited by the Germans was impressive. He had to basically pretend to become an alcoholic, start sucking at his job, ostracize all his friends and anyone he met, and hit total rock bottom, until he was thrown in jail. That's impressive. Not something I think most people could do - which is why the Spy world is such and interesting one.
The issue of the unmorality of the spy world was Liz (Laemas' love interest)'s main issue with the events. But Laemas was hardened to it and still looked at it from the greater good angle - though people were killed in the end it was a win for London, after all. It was interesting that the last lines of the novel had him thinking about some kids he almost ran over in his car once: as though he wanted to get back to that place where normal rules applied. | Wed Dec 27 10:59:21 -0800 2006 | Wed Mar 22 11:44:57 -0700 2017 | Sat Sep 04 00:00:00 -0700 2010 | Fri Sep 03 00:00:00 -0700 2010 | 3 | 4 |
8842281e1d1347389f2ab93d60773d4d | 4,395 | f9b251305bbb955c3045ed50e9084503 | 3 | Maybe it was just not a good time, but I couldn't get through it... I loved Of Mice And Men though. | Mon Dec 25 12:33:57 -0800 2006 | Wed Mar 22 11:44:56 -0700 2017 | null | null | 2 | 5 |
8842281e1d1347389f2ab93d60773d4d | 2,052 | 8b08f156b1fc6708aa7dceff1a000ab4 | 5 | A classic LA detective novel - loved it. The opening paragraph says it all:
"It was about eleven o'clock in the morning, mid-october, with the sun not shining, and a look of hard rain in the clearness of the foothills. I was wearing my powder-blue shirt, tie and display handkerchief, black brogues, black wool socks with dark blue clocks on them. I was neat, clean, shaved and sober, and didn't care who knew it. I was everything the well-dressed private detective ought to be. I was calling on four million dollars." | Mon Dec 18 11:10:25 -0800 2006 | Wed Mar 22 11:44:51 -0700 2017 | Tue May 01 00:00:00 -0700 2007 | null | 3 | 2 |
8842281e1d1347389f2ab93d60773d4d | 320 | e4b8a7b15d49974ccf3696053189267c | 4 | ** spoiler alert **
This book may as well have been called One Hundred Years of Inbreeding And Human Drama. It was basically a story about a small town where the gene pool is so small that everyone marries their relations, and it seems like life spirals more and more downward and out of control over 100 years. I really enjoyed the authors ability to bring these crazy characters to life, and explain the story behind how each one's quirks strange behavior. The book started out really strong, stagnated a bit for me 2/3 of the way in, but I loved the ending.
I also thought the inclusion of magical elements throughout the story was an interesting and fun twist. Melquiades's scrolls, the floating priest, etc. According to Wikipedia this is called "magical realism". Thinking about all the movies and TV shows being produced now, it seems that this is a common plot element nowadays! | Sun Dec 17 15:11:00 -0800 2006 | Wed Mar 22 11:44:51 -0700 2017 | Fri Mar 27 00:00:00 -0700 2009 | null | 6 | 2 |
8842281e1d1347389f2ab93d60773d4d | 4,671 | 6875930d3c9657b5b14a2fd11a4836b5 | 5 | I read this classic twice in high school. Its hard to like books you read in high school, but this one stood out - couldn't tell you why anymore :) | Sun Dec 17 15:05:04 -0800 2006 | Wed Mar 22 11:44:48 -0700 2017 | Mon Apr 01 00:00:00 -0800 1996 | null | 8 | 1 |
8842281e1d1347389f2ab93d60773d4d | 7,190 | 61e56b93debc7ef829ce707afedf93db | 5 | Man I wish I hadn't read this yet so I could enjoy it again. | Sun Dec 17 14:53:42 -0800 2006 | Wed Mar 22 11:44:46 -0700 2017 | Thu Jun 01 00:00:00 -0700 2006 | null | 3 | 0 |
8842281e1d1347389f2ab93d60773d4d | 5,544 | 04cd788781a9a23f2b42ba50334ecd61 | 5 | This book was a pure delight. The subtitle "Adventures of a Curious Character" is spot-on. Feynman gave an amazingly human and honest view into his philosophy and take on life, thought a series of stories.
One thing that struck me most deeply was his passion for learning new things. You would think a world-famous Physicist would just be passionate for Physics - but Feynman was curious about everything he saw. He dabbled in art and was successful enough to have a show, he joined a Brazilian Bongo group and competed with them, he hung out in Vegas until he grokked gambling, he spent time in strip bars in Arizona until he figured out how to pick up women, he cracked safes in Los Alamos for fun - the list goes on! My take: you should have your passions - but you should also have your hobbies. I think I need a new hobby :)
I really enjoyed his lessons learned from observing the Brazilian educational system. He noted that many of the students were simply memorizing words and formulas and had no understanding of the concepts they applied to. I think this is not a unique problem in education.
Another lesson learned from Feynman's studies of science is to never take any data for granted. Always always question the sources. Whenever Feynman did an experiment he would re-generate many of the numbers on his own - even if they had been published in other places. For many things we are (and not just in science) standing on the shoulders of giants. The easiest way to be led astray is if those results were never right to begin with.
I think Feynman was in his heart a true educator and scientist, with real integrity. And I think it drove him nuts how many important decisions are made using unscientific principles. This book was a light-hearted attempt to point that out - not to mention, a very entertaining read. | Sun Dec 17 14:44:14 -0800 2006 | Wed Mar 22 11:44:43 -0700 2017 | Tue May 13 00:00:00 -0700 2008 | null | 77 | 7 |
8842281e1d1347389f2ab93d60773d4d | 10,959 | 8f7463f1f34c782de6eecfdc9b4cd51e | 0 | A friend of Elizabeth's I met at a party said its a great primer to understanding philosophy... | Sun Dec 17 14:27:30 -0800 2006 | Thu Jul 31 00:32:08 -0700 2014 | null | null | 2 | 1 |
8842281e1d1347389f2ab93d60773d4d | 10,147 | 087fdd02a253be8e0f0a52f55ab527bc | 5 | This book was pure Gold - it was impossible to put down, and its clear to see why its a classic. Watching Holmes apply his methods to each case and unravel it to the eternaly baffled Watson was entertaining and even inspiring. I only wish I was as smart as Sherlock. I actually think we can all learn a lot from Sherlock - even if he is fictional :)
Some other interesting things I learned:
- sherlock only says 'elementary' once
- sherlock does cocaine when bored in between cases . I guess it wasn't such a big deal back then?
- one caper delved into the history of the Mormons, which was very interesting | Thu Dec 14 12:12:25 -0800 2006 | Tue Jan 11 03:40:31 -0800 2011 | Fri Dec 01 00:00:00 -0800 2006 | null | 0 | 1 |
8842281e1d1347389f2ab93d60773d4d | 7,126 | 95bb020134fd58186a01a1313ee24b77 | 5 | One of my all-time favorites. The ultimate revenge story. One fascinating aspect to think about was that back in the day this novel appeared as a series of articles in the newspaper in France... | Fri Dec 08 12:09:25 -0800 2006 | Wed Mar 22 11:44:40 -0700 2017 | Mon Mar 01 00:00:00 -0800 2004 | null | 4 | 0 |
8842281e1d1347389f2ab93d60773d4d | 3,758 | 13d94c434b60a1c8bea41a0b5a51f49e | 5 | After seeing the movie (i liked it), and needing a fun read for a vacation, this was perfect. Like Jacques, I loved the explanation of Baccarat. My mental image of Vesper Lynd in the book is much prettier than the actress from the movie. Fleming's Bond is much more of a connoisseur than the movie Bond, and he takes great care in describing all the details of the things he enjoys - particularly his cigarettes, his food, his wine, and his car. | Thu Dec 07 20:20:43 -0800 2006 | Wed Mar 22 11:44:37 -0700 2017 | Mon Jan 01 00:00:00 -0800 2007 | null | 2 | 2 |
8842281e1d1347389f2ab93d60773d4d | 3,876 | 9f564f4f75c48c299db5fce9ff5f6e0b | 5 | I read this while backpacking through Europe after college. It was a fascinating insight into the Spanish culture - anyone going there should definitely read this. | Thu Dec 07 17:09:18 -0800 2006 | Wed Mar 22 11:44:35 -0700 2017 | Sat Jul 01 00:00:00 -0700 2000 | null | 2 | 1 |
8842281e1d1347389f2ab93d60773d4d | 4,248 | 6e91fb10572e42b196a24cba990ddf6c | 4 | I know this book is supposed to be evil as its horribly inaccurate, but I had a lot of fun reading it, so I'm still giving it 4 stars. (sorry jacques) | Thu Dec 07 11:00:16 -0800 2006 | Thu Dec 07 11:01:45 -0800 2006 | null | null | 12 | 0 |
8842281e1d1347389f2ab93d60773d4d | 3,750 | fccc8d34514f3c4af22da78c87daa6a4 | 4 | I'm a huge james bond fan. Always have been. I read a bunch of the books back in high school, but missed this one. I love the books as much as the movies. Fleming brings the character to life in a very different way from the movies - more human, more vulnerable. Plus the its always interesting to see the differences between the plot of the movie and the book. In this one for instance, there was no space station, no Jaws, no plot to populate the planet with a super-race. But there was the millionaire Drax with an evil plan - you can count on that :) | Tue Dec 05 14:28:10 -0800 2006 | Thu Jul 31 00:30:41 -0700 2014 | Wed Nov 01 00:00:00 -0800 2006 | null | 0 | 0 |
8842281e1d1347389f2ab93d60773d4d | 3,388 | 10708cc2198f107080ac688ea7d9c352 | 5 | I loved this book. I agree with Elizabeth - the movie wasn't close. Something about Nicholas Cage trying to do an italian accent? | Tue Nov 14 10:57:05 -0800 2006 | Wed Mar 22 11:44:29 -0700 2017 | Thu May 01 00:00:00 -0700 2003 | null | 4 | 0 |
8842281e1d1347389f2ab93d60773d4d | 122 | fe863cd2474e96f1275fab45af96fc42 | 5 | One of my top 5 favorites. Read this at the deeper/figuring your life out moments - it will give you strength and inspiration. | Thu Nov 02 17:27:14 -0800 2006 | Wed Mar 22 11:44:25 -0700 2017 | Tue Jan 01 00:00:00 -0800 2002 | null | 7 | 0 |
8842281e1d1347389f2ab93d60773d4d | 2,552 | 5e0276065ff1802519bbc54cfddb8dec | 4 | Listened it on tape on a road trip... thoroughly enjoyed it! | Wed Oct 18 10:56:09 -0700 2006 | Wed Mar 22 11:44:23 -0700 2017 | Tue Mar 01 00:00:00 -0800 2005 | null | 0 | 0 |
8842281e1d1347389f2ab93d60773d4d | 2,612 | 745e17f4ee923640039d88a161cc62b3 | 4 | Really good book. It read like a bestseller (quick read), but had a lot of substance to stop and make you think.
three Rules of the tipping point: the law of the few, the stickyness factor, the power of context.
Law of the Few (people who influence):
- Connectors: super connectors (eg Paul Revere). William Dawes had the same mission as Paul Revere the same night but we haven't heard of him b/c Paul Revere was a super-connector & knew who to rouse.
- Mavens: A Maven is a person who has information on a lot of different products or prices or places. This person likes to initiate discussions with consumers and respond to requests. They like to be helpers in the marketplace.
- Salesmen: people with the skills of persuasion. Good at reading people entering into "conversational harmony" with them. Facial gestures (nods, smiles, frowns) are key indicators. Emotional Mimicry. Studies showed Peter Jennings viewers voted Republican b/c he unconsciously smiled more while covering Reagan.
Stickyness Factor
- Sesame street succeeded b/c it learned to make TV sticky. It did a TON of testing with focus groups of kids to increase stickyness (how much kids remembered) of each show. They would cut scenes that didn't hold attention until each show
was good.
- Blues Clues did even more testing and discovered that kids love repetition - it plays the same show 5 times in a row and kids love it.
- make the message personal to make it memorable
The Power of Context
- Broken window theory. NYC cleaned up its crime epidemic by cleaning off the graffiti from its subways.
- Often to change human behavior you have to change the context the problem is presented in.
- Stanford Prison Experiment by Zimbardo proved that context matters.
- law of 150: a person can't 'know' more than 150 people, so companies usually start to fail at that point. Gore-Tex breaks up a company into 2 once it hits 150, because they've found things work better that way. | Tue Oct 17 11:19:56 -0700 2006 | Wed Mar 22 11:44:22 -0700 2017 | Sun Oct 01 00:00:00 -0700 2006 | null | 95 | 4 |
8842281e1d1347389f2ab93d60773d4d | 816 | 09ca609e689da68adf06c0fbee73da0b | 5 | Just re-read this for the first time, and it's still one of my favorites. This book is geek-heaven: cryptography, world war II, code-breaking, nazi gold, and modern day internet beginnings all tied together in one masterful story.
It also was largely lost on me, and I suspect many of my generation, that the second world war was won - or at least greatly accelerated - in great part due to the fact that we had cracked the German and Japanese codes. Learning more about the efforts of Bletchley Park, and Dr Alan Turing and huffduff and cribs, etc was fascinating.
I think the funniest part of the book is the page where Stephenson actually graphs out how productive Waterhouse is when he has recently had sex (very productive) and when he hasn't (not very productive).
The code-breaking and cryptography is not stuff I know a ton about, as modern day programmers largely don't have to worry about that stuff, but it's a good reminder to think about, as we don't have it on our brains nearly enough. Avi & Randy's paranoia and tendency to encrypt everything from their hard drives to their emails may be overkill, on the other hand, it also may be wise. I remember getting email from people who used public/private keys to encrypt their email before, but not in the last 5 years. Maybe we should request that Gmail Labs add that!
If there was a theme to this book, it's that cryptography is everything. It defined the second world war, and it also defines the modern internet. Information is king - not large caches of gold. | Wed Sep 27 10:20:00 -0700 2006 | Wed Dec 21 13:44:58 -0800 2016 | Tue Dec 29 00:00:00 -0800 2009 | null | 2 | 3 |
8842281e1d1347389f2ab93d60773d4d | 830 | ae83b6910a6b2fa571745915af5b1a89 | 4 | A really interesting novel that takes place in the future in a world where some people live in the metaverse (aka digital universe/internet) more than the real world. I don't remember it so well now but I do remember there being some really interesting tie-ins to ancient sumarian computers.
That plus any book with a protagonist named Hiro Protagonist who wields badass japanese swords is just badass.
Note: the MetaVerse is current being built now here: http://secondlife.com | Mon Sep 04 12:05:38 -0700 2006 | Thu May 08 11:43:24 -0700 2014 | null | null | 6 | 0 |
8842281e1d1347389f2ab93d60773d4d | 6 | d9f27b90095cd32ba1ec2a604e705e66 | 5 | This is the best harry potter book so far, followed closely by book 6. | Tue Aug 29 11:20:10 -0700 2006 | Wed Mar 22 11:44:11 -0700 2017 | null | null | 4 | 3 |
8842281e1d1347389f2ab93d60773d4d | 2 | 85073a6ebd880836667f4414c8523012 | 5 | After the first read, this book is the worst one in the Harry Potter series. Characters are not as likeable as they are in the other books. However, I recently reread it (after reading book 6), and found it to be a very good read. | Tue Aug 29 11:20:05 -0700 2006 | Wed Mar 22 11:44:09 -0700 2017 | null | null | 6 | 2 |
01ec1a320ffded6b2dd47833f2c8e4fb | 36,065,344 | 3a6df98dd67e65789ab67eb568df0932 | 5 | "You're the queen. I'm just a commoner.
GAH!!! MY HEART!!! This book was everything. One of the best-second chance romances I've ever read.
Kennedy and Johnny fell in love when they were just in high school. Johnny was a naturally-gifted actor and left his family behind to follow his dreams of becoming an actor. Kennedy ran away with him to Hollywood when she was just 17, giving up her dreams to follow his. Real life brutally intruded, and Kennedy left Johnny after he got his first big break. He quickly got lost in the throes of addiction and the Hollywood party scene. Broken-hearted and pregnant, Kennedy returned home to begin a new life without Johnny.
"You don't know this, but that girl? She doesn't need a house. She doesn't even need an apartment. She would've slept in the car. She wouldn't have complained at all about it. You didn't have to sell it, but you did, and as grateful as she is for that, she already feels guilty. She's worried, and she's scared, that this won't be a story of triumph. Because she believes in you. She wouldn't be there if she didn't. But the world isn't always kind to good people. Sometimes it eats them alive."
Johnny grew up wealthy but in a very abusive household. Acting was his escape. He had no choice but to get away from his family in any way he could. But he never really left his demons behind and now that he is a world-famous superstar, he wants to make amends with Kennedy and with Madison, the daughter he never knew.
"I don't deserve her time, not in the least, but I'm so desperate for some part of this woman back that I'll steal every second that I can get."
Kennedy gave up everything for Madison, a gorgeous, smart and funny little girl. Kennedy works at a dead-end job, struggling to make ends meet. She is still in love with Johnny but has been hurt by him many times over the years. I was SO emotional while reading this book! It had everything I love about a second chance romance. The writing is clever and creative and completely engaging. I fell in love with Johnny and with little Madison! The book is heartbreaking, sexy, funny, heartfelt and completely uplifting.
"Whatever did it, I'm glad you're sober, and I hope you stay that way. For Maddie's sake, yeah, because she deserves to know her dad, but for your sake, too. I know I was never enough for you, Jonathan, but I hope you find something that is."
This story is perfectly balanced between both the hero and heroine's point of view. I adored the story of how Kennedy and Johnny first met and fell deeply in love. There are lots of steamy scenes as well as just the right amount of humor to balance out the very emotional story. This story gripped me from the first page and had me glued to the pages until the very end. I also loved how Kennedy was loyal and strong and smart and self-sufficient. She did not need the Porsches or the red carpets or the mansions. She only wanted Johnny to be able to follow his dreams.
"Wherever it takes you, I'll be there.
'Ghosted' is another must-read book from JM Darhower. One of my favorite books of the year.
"Thank you, K."
"What are you thanking me for?"
"Giving me a second chance," he says. "And a third, and a forth, and a fifth..."
"And a twentieth." He laughs lightly. "And a twentieth."
"There won't be a twenty-first," I tell him. "I have to draw the line somewhere." | Sun Sep 03 08:30:42 -0700 2017 | Sun Sep 03 09:59:45 -0700 2017 | Sat Sep 02 00:00:00 -0700 2017 | Sat Aug 26 00:00:00 -0700 2017 | 16 | 2 |
01ec1a320ffded6b2dd47833f2c8e4fb | 33,807,229 | 457bfda01cd106842baf08e78761aaef | 4 | 4.5 Addictive Stars!!
"I'm Easton Royal, superficial and only interested in how to have a good time.
I don't want to look deep into my being and see the bottomless, black, boring pool of nothingness. I want to live in blissful denial."
I am not a fan of over-the-top drama or crazy plots. So imagine my delight when I read 'Fallen Heir' almost in one sitting! Addictive, funny and fast-paced, this book might be my favorite in the series so far.
Easton Royal is a high school senior at the very exclusive Astor Park Prep. This is a school filled with ultra-rich students complete with trust funds and designer clothes and huge mansions. Easton is a flirt and a partier and sets his sights on the new girl in school, Hartley. They are complete opposites but that is part of the fun of this book. Hartley is not at all interested in bad-boy Easton so he settles for the friend zone.
"I need to treat her as a friend. A real, give-a-shit-about-each-other, don't-need-to-be-naked-to-care-about-you friend."
This book should not be read as a standalone because it does contain some spoilers from the earlier books. I am SO glad I stuck with this series because I LOVED Easton's story! He has a good heart and realizes that his partying is getting out of hand, especially as the son of a mother who had severe addiction issues. I fell in love with Easton and my heart broke for him!!
"I'm the only one here, drinking crap I can't stand because I don't want to spend a minute of my life alone. My head's a bad, bad place."
I really felt the connection between Easton and Hartley and loved the supporting characters. 'Fallen Heir' is a crisply written and juicy story that is perfect for all fans of contemporary Young Adult books. This book just clicked for me. And I loved how funny Easton was. His humor and satire was just what this story needed.
"I might be small, but I have the lung capacity of a whale, so if you don't move I'm gonna have to release the oral Kraken until the entire school is in this hallway rescuing me from you."
I crack up. "The oral Kraken? That sounds pretty dirty."
"I'm thinking everything sounds dirty to you," she says dryly."
This nook ends on a MAJOR cliffhanger which should not be a surprise for fans of this series. WOW!! But never fear, another book is coming in January!! I really enjoyed this book and highly recommend it if you're looking for a very smart and witty Young Adult story.
"I'm the design flaw in the Royal family, the one who isn't quite like the others, the one who crashes and burns more often than not."
(ARC provided in return for an honest review.) | Sat Aug 26 15:43:24 -0700 2017 | Sun Aug 27 23:53:38 -0700 2017 | Sun Aug 27 23:49:20 -0700 2017 | Sat Aug 26 15:43:24 -0700 2017 | 3 | 0 |
01ec1a320ffded6b2dd47833f2c8e4fb | 32,620,360 | 6659e2a0bcface86f0835714023f24f4 | 4 | "I promise to love you forever. As long as there is love in this world, we will be a part of it."
So sweet!! Filled with tons of romance and some real emotion. Don't read any spoilers for this book! I'm glad I didn't know anything about it.
Renee Carlino's books ALWAYS captivate me. 'Swear on This Life' is one of my all-time favorite stories. I will say that Adam is definitely my favorite thing about this book. *SIGH* Adam is one of the most memorable characters ever created by Ms. Carlino. Impulsive, sweet, charming, creative and loving, he really puts himself out there when he meets Charlotte. While I'm not always a fan of insta-love, it just WORKED here. Charlotte opened up her heart to Adam because he seemed, well, absolutely perfect.
I was absolutely enchanted by Adam and could understand how Charlotte fell for him. But life has a funny way of working out and things don't turn out quite how Charlotte expected. There was definitely something off about Adam right from the beginning but I couldn't put my finger on it.
"You're stunning and beautiful and I loved every second of it. I'm sorry you didn't like it. Did I hurt you.?"
"No, but are you going to paint it?"
"Paint what?"
"Us, what we just did?"
"No."
"No?"
"No. I don't need to. I'll never forget it and it's sacred."
The story took a lot of twists and turns and it was definitely one that I was not expecting!! Charlotte has had terrible luck at relationships and let's just say that Adam does not turn out to be everything she expected or imagined. Nonetheless, he still feels like the one love of her life, even though they spent a very short time together.
Life moves on and Charlotte gets back in to the dating scene. She meets the adorable Seth, who is a minor-league baseball player. He really likes her but she can't quite forget Adam. Seth is patient and sexy and athletic and funny and smart and is just an all-around wonderful man!! But can Charlotte move on from her brief time with Adam?
It was like we already knew each other, like we had met in a previous life. Memories that didn't exist began exploding in my mind like fireworks.
This is a lovely, romantic, bittersweet story filled with wonderful life lessons about healing and loving. I also adored all of the characters. This is not at all a love triangle (although I love those, too!). Don't read any spoilers about this one, you will enjoy the book so much more going in blind. The conclusion was just lovely and as always with Renee Carlino's stories, I was sorry to see this one end!
"I want you to know that I am grateful to you. I'm grateful to you now. I got to experience IT in this life, and I don't think it's measured with time."
"You don't think what's measured with time, Adam?"
"Love, Charlotte."
(ARC provided by the publisher in return for an honest review.) | Mon Aug 14 11:05:35 -0700 2017 | Sun Aug 20 08:09:55 -0700 2017 | Sat Aug 19 13:30:57 -0700 2017 | Mon Aug 14 00:00:00 -0700 2017 | 8 | 0 |
01ec1a320ffded6b2dd47833f2c8e4fb | 36,252,773 | eb51d6b8d38c25855c47de9b749365aa | 5 | 4.5 Kinky Stars!!
Eve Dangerfield continues to delight with this verrrrrrry kinky and totally filthy story! But she also manages to be funny, heartfelt and utterly original. Highly recommend!
"Everyone is weird, Kate, we're the perfect kind of weird for each other."
Yes, this book is about Daddy kink and it is oh so perfect! Eve Dangerfield writes smart, funny, nuanced characters which is what makes this story so readable. Kate is a young professional who has hidden her sexual fantasies away in shame. The focus of her current obsession is her boss, Ty, a 45 year old gruff, sexy former firefighter who pushes all her buttons.
"Her obsession wasn't even original. Everyone had a crush on Tyler Henderson. Women, gay men, straight men, more perceptive animals. It was like having a crush on a Hemsworth brother--it made you basic as hell.
But she thinks Ty can't stand her because he can barely stand to be in the same room as her. He never speaks to her, calls her by her work nickname, and is generally just an all-around grouch. But...but...she's actually perfect for him! Because you see, Ty has always craved D/lg kink but has also hidden it away in shame, settling for unsatisfying relationships that make him feel empty and wanting more.
"Ty didn't think Middleton was a great girl. He thought Middleton was a pain in the ass. Waltzing around with her shiny hair and long legs and her throaty voice, being cuter than a fistful of buttons. Where did she get off?
This book is filled with SO much hotness and hilarity and dirty talk that I couldn't believe what I was reading! But the story is SO engaging that I fell in love with Ty from the very first page. And the letter he writes to Kate!! OMG. *Faints*
Ty and Kate are so perfect together but only Kate is brave enough to be honest with Ty and her feelings. I LOVED how she accepted what she wanted and who she was and never wavered. Ty was another story. He denied his true desires and felt shame for what he wanted.
"Wanting to fuck his pretty employee was biology, wanting to cherish her was something else. Something much worse.
This book is refreshingly funny which balances out the incredibly steamy and passionate scenes. Eve Dangerfield is fearless! And I loved how Kate was far from perfect BUT she was perfect for Ty just the way she was.
Ty glared at her. "Think you're funny, don't you, Middleton?"
"Yes."
"Well we'll see how fucking funny you are when your ass is on fire."
This book is set in Australia so it is filled with slang and I did have to look up a few phrases here and there. Please read the book description and if does not sound like your cup of tea, then do not read this one. BUT if you are enamored with D/lg kink, as I am, then by all means read 'Act Your Age'! It is pure, growly Alpha-male goodness through and through. I can't wait to see what Eve Dangerfield dreams up next!
What he and Middleton shared had gravity, it would pull her back toward him as surely as the moon pulled at the ocean tides.
(ARC provided by the author in return for an honest review.) | Mon Jul 31 00:18:59 -0700 2017 | Wed Sep 27 13:50:15 -0700 2017 | Wed Sep 13 00:00:00 -0700 2017 | Tue Sep 12 00:00:00 -0700 2017 | 17 | 0 |
01ec1a320ffded6b2dd47833f2c8e4fb | 33,280,872 | 507e82c3db8b4ab555d3323bf7bc8eb7 | 4 | "Out of all the places we could be, we're right here. At the same time."
Colleen Hoover is at the top of my auto-buy list. Without question. And she returns to her Young Adult stories in 'Without Merit'. Merit Voss is a teenage girl who in addition to the normal angst of young adulthood, lives in a very unconventional household. From her perspective, her family is just plain WEIRD. No one can seem to get along and most poignantly, no one really seems to notice Merit at all. She almost seems like an afterthought.
"I can say with certainty that we live in the most unusual house in this whole town. I say house because it is certainly not a home. And inside this house are seven of the most unusual occupants. No one would be able to determine from the outside of our house that our family of seven includes an atheist, a home wrecker, an ex-wife suffering from a severe case of agoraphobia, and a teenage girl whose weird obsession borders on necrophilia.
Of course, Merit is a classic unreliable narrator and slowly the truth about her family emerges. Colleen Hoover knows how to treat delicate subjects with great dignity and care. She makes the entire cast of odd characters here sympathetic and very likable even though you may think the opposite of them at first.
Merit decides to just stop attending school. No one seems to even notice! While skipping school she meets a cute guy and they share an earth-shattering kiss. BUT Merit actually has a twin sister named Honor and the cute guy is actually Sagan, her twin's boyfriend. It seems as though Sagan might have thought he was kissing Honor.
Merit is angry and surly and can't seem to make many friends. She is offended when Sagan starts eating meals with the family and basically moving in. How could this have happened?
"I'm confused by two things. One being the constant and repeated presence of Honor's boyfriend at our breakfast table. Two being the fact that everyone seems to know him so well that they're perfectly fine with him joining in on the family conversation.
Merit eventually uncovers some very hard truths about her family's past. It also becomes very clear that Honor is not the perfect person that she at first thinks herself to be. Like all of Colleen Hoover's characters, Merit is unforgettable. She must make some hard choices about herself, her family and Sagan.
"Sagan just doesn't say mean things out loud. Maybe that's a product of how he was raised. Or maybe he's some kind of saint. Or an angel brought to earth to test my morals."
I loved the message of this book!! The story is beautiful and the characters feel real and flawed and very relatable. The description of small-town Texas seems spot-on. Fans of Colleen Hoover will devour this story, and hopefully new readers will pick this one up and see why her readers are so devoted to her writing. Unconditional love, loyalty and forgiveness are some heavy topics but Ms. Hoover serves them up perfectly here.
"Not every mistake deserves a consequence. Sometimes the only thing a mistake deserves is forgiveness."
ARC provided by the publisher in return for an honest review. | Sun Jul 30 15:10:39 -0700 2017 | Sun Oct 01 21:15:01 -0700 2017 | Wed Aug 02 10:00:30 -0700 2017 | Mon Jul 31 00:00:00 -0700 2017 | 14 | 0 |
01ec1a320ffded6b2dd47833f2c8e4fb | 35,604,204 | 1d7e4c5a69edaade27cda667519f2153 | 4 | 3.5 - 4 Stars
"It would've been romantic if I wasn't drunk as a skunk when I dialed him."
I am a die-hard Penelope Ward fan. I DEVOUR her books. And this one started off very strong for me! I loved the premise of the story: ugly-duckling Rana finds her childhood friend Landon online when she is drunk one night and calls him and unleashes years of pent-up frustration. Rana grew up very poor in Michigan and her family rented their apartment from Landon's family. She was forced to suddenly move when she was young and lost touch with her former best friend Landon.
However, the truth turns out to be a little different than what Rana was told and she and Landon begin to talk on the phone and it becomes very clear they both have very strong feelings for each other.
Penelope Ward is the queen of second-chance romance as well as creating a sold backstory for her characters. I didn't quite feel that connection between Rana and Landon but many readers loved this one so definitely give it a try. The story has some very valuable messages about self-esteem and forgiveness. And the sexy times are incredibly HOT!! I would have liked a little more build-up to the full-blown relationship between Landon and Rana. BUT I did fall in the love with Landon: like all of Ms. Ward's main characters, he is simply unforgettable!!
His hands may have been calloused; his arms may have been inked; he may have looked dangerous, but Landon was as gentle as he was protective.
'Drunk Dial' is a light and sexy story that delivers a HEA. While it is not my favorite Penelope Ward book, I nonetheless enjoyed reading it and loved the second-chance, friends to lovers storyline. This is a sexy, passionate and often funny book with lots of emotion. Enjoy Landon Roderick! I know I did.
Our story was a lot like a Rubik's Cube - colourful and complicated. It took years to work it out, but then suddenly like magic, on a random Sunday, everything all came together.
(ARC provided in return for an honest review.) | Wed Jul 05 06:54:14 -0700 2017 | Mon Aug 21 05:24:15 -0700 2017 | null | null | 6 | 0 |
01ec1a320ffded6b2dd47833f2c8e4fb | 35,478,658 | 41fd25cfa0428b5da5579aff19729010 | 4 | If you love a sweet, verrrry sexy, low-angst romance, then this is the book for you! Vi Keeland and Penelope Ward cooked up another very readable yet super-hot contemporary romance.
Dr. Simon Hogue is a sexy British physician who meets single-mom Bridget in the cutest way possible. Both are single: Bridget is a widowed nurse with not much of a social life and Simon is a gorgeous doctor with no interest in a relationship.
There's tons of humor, sexy talk and a hottie British doctor. What's not to love? After an embarrassing "meet cute" with Simon, Bridget ends up renting a room in her home to him in order to make ends meet. It's not permanent: Simon is only in the US to complete his residency and then he will be back off to Britain. He loves to tease Bridget and their attraction is mutual. So he proposes a deal: a no-strings attached, sex-only relationship until he leaves.
The authors put a fresh spin on the friends-to-lovers trope that is sexy and enticing. There's not much angst but the storyline is fast-paced and engaging. Bridget doesn't want her son to get too attached to Simon so she is careful not to get attached. But Simon soon finds himself falling in love with Bridget and her son, too.
"The sexy, blond, god of a doctor whom I'd masturbated to for weeks after the fish hook incident...was now my roommate."
This is a swoony romance with lots of heart and tons of heat. The authors always throw in a twist for dramatic tension and it worked perfectly here! The letter-writing is a cute addition and I loved the funny, charming, dirty-talking Brit!! Another passionate, sweet and heart-warming story from a great writing duo.
"It's proof you hooked me from the very beginning, luv."
(ARC provided in return for an honest review.) | Wed Jun 21 22:39:27 -0700 2017 | Sun Sep 17 19:04:20 -0700 2017 | Fri Sep 15 16:58:58 -0700 2017 | Fri Sep 15 07:42:49 -0700 2017 | 14 | 0 |
01ec1a320ffded6b2dd47833f2c8e4fb | 32,946,966 | f9c73c40d9d161d1d749bdd68b9b80e6 | 3 | 3.5 Stars
This was my first book by Jeannine Colette and I really enjoyed it! Nothing too over the top here, just a sweet and sexy small-town romance featuring one hot cop and a feisty heroine.
Leah is determined to own the bar where she works and I loved that aspect of the book. The author also seems to have a wicked sense of humor which shows in the funny banter and the hilarious Matthew McConaughey references. Leah lost her first love to an overdose, and he also happened to be Adam's best friend - Adam, the rigid, by-the-book policeman who seems determined to punish Leah for her past mistakes.
Adam is charitable and gorgeous and kind and protective. He has made it his mission in life to rid the town of narcotics. When Leah is sentenced to community service under Adam's supervision, the sparks begin to fly.
Even though the setting is in the Midwest, this story has almost a sassy, Southern feel to it, reminiscent of Abbi Glines and Harper Sloan's early books. I love a blue-collar hero and Luke fits the bill perfectly!
Adam was cold and harsh and downright mean for much of the story, until Leah begins to break through to him. The chemistry between these two was HOT HOT HOT! I applaud Ms. Colette for her strong and sassy heroine and absolutely loved Leah. She wasn't just a party girl and earns the respect of everyone around her. 'Wrecked' is a funny, sexy, small-town romance that is a great way to spend a few hours.
ARC provided by the author in return for an honest review. | Mon Jun 19 21:59:37 -0700 2017 | Tue Jun 20 14:55:20 -0700 2017 | Tue Jun 20 15:02:09 -0700 2017 | Mon Jun 19 21:59:38 -0700 2017 | 5 | 0 |
01ec1a320ffded6b2dd47833f2c8e4fb | 30,364,190 | 5bdbfd274ccd2ed0e43a9efb7b770e92 | 4 | 4 - 4.5 Stars!!
"If I ever lay eyes on you again... I can't promise I'll do what's best and walk away next time..."
Fancy a fast-paced, well-written sexy romance? 'The Forbidden' is all that and more!! This is not so much a taboo romance as it is the story of two people who simply meet at the wrong time. Annie is an up-and-coming, career-driven architect who has no time for relationships. She has just never felt that "spark" with any man. Jack and Annie meet one night in a bar when she is out for a fun night with friends. They have an immediate connection that only Jodi-Ellen Malpas can make seem SO real.
Jack's marriage was over long before he met Annie. While some might see this as a bright line that should never be crossed, Jack instead seemed to me to be sweet, vulnerable and craving an intimate connection. Annie for one cannot believe she has found herself in this situation but Jack is everything she never knew she wanted.
"I would never have put myself in this situation for anything less than powerful love. The kind that keeps you going. The kind that gives you breath and life. Jack's my life. He's my pulse. He's everything."
This story would be empty and unconvincing in the hands of a less talented writer. But JEM really creates nuanced characters with hard choices to make. Nothing is black and white here. While the story got a little too over-dramatic for me near the end, I nonetheless loved this book and highly recommend it!
"I'm in hell and I'm in heaven. I'm flying and I'm drowning."
(ARC provided by the publisher in return for an honest review.) | Fri Jun 16 21:43:45 -0700 2017 | Thu Aug 10 18:33:27 -0700 2017 | Thu Aug 10 18:02:30 -0700 2017 | Tue Aug 08 20:43:09 -0700 2017 | 8 | 0 |
01ec1a320ffded6b2dd47833f2c8e4fb | 31,558,692 | f85ee745742b6789796bf182d7a1c159 | 4 | The First Taste features Andrew, a single dad from Slip of the Tongue, one of my favorite books. His story is a standalone, and does NOT feature any forbidden romance. Andrew is the complete opposite of Amelia, the boss of his sister and a total Type-A workaholic. She has been burned by a painful split from her husband and is going through a very difficult divorce. Amelia and Andrew make is clear from the start they are both only looking for a one-night stand, with no strings attached. Andrew does not suffer from lack of women, that's for sure - he's totally hot, has his own business and has an adorable daughter named Bell, who is raising on his own.
They are both completely honest with each other from the start but begin to develop a deeper connection. Their emotional relationship develops slowly, even though they both are wary of getting close. Amelia is stunning, smart and self-sufficient, Never in a million years does she think she could ever fall for a man like Andrew! And Andrew's daughter comes first, even while it becomes obvious his daughter would love for him to fall in love. I loved that Andrew was the one who actually starts to realize that he is falling in love with Amelia and wants more from her.
Somewhere along the way, she became worth it to me. The threat of pain that comes with keeping her in my life--it's not enough to scare me away. In fact, it's the threat of competition that stokes a fire in me. It makes me want to put up a fight.
The First Taste is a classic opposites-attract story, filled with real emotion and characters that have depth and honesty. Jessica Hawkins is great at writing uber-sexy men and Andrew is not only gorgeous and tatted, he is a VERY giving lover. The sexy times in The First Taste are without a doubt some of the steamiest around.
"I want to undress you, stretch you out on my bed, fingers to toes. Your hair splayed on my pillow and I want to take you over and over until you can't handle it another second."
I love stories with single dads and while this story did not pack as much of an emotional punch as Slip of the Tongue, I still loved the story and the way Amelia and Andrew's relationship grew and developed. This is a fast and sexy read from an incredibly talented writer and I can't wait to read what's next!!
"Have I ever mentioned how it feels when I'm the reason for your smile? Like a million bucks."
ARC provided by the author in return for an honest review. | Thu Jun 15 14:39:51 -0700 2017 | Thu Jun 15 14:41:21 -0700 2017 | Sat Aug 06 00:00:00 -0700 2016 | Mon Aug 01 00:00:00 -0700 2016 | 8 | 0 |
01ec1a320ffded6b2dd47833f2c8e4fb | 31,450,913 | d020f8745dd5311dbd479a1d809adb70 | 5 | "Grabbing a bite. With a twenty-year-old. From a boy band. Under what circumstance might that ever be construed as acceptable?"
I. LOVED. THIS. BOOK.
A sharp and insightful commentary on our modern culture and obsession with celebrity, 'The Idea of You' is also a fantastic, sexy romance. This book really did it for me. If this is Robinne Lee's first book, I cannot wait see what comes next!
Solene is a sophisticated, 39 year old divorced working mom who finds herself swept up into an exciting and sexy relationship with the world-famous Hayes Campbell, the 20 year old member of a famous "boy band". She is an educated and successful gallerist who is divorced from her ex-husband, who has a younger girlfriend. The world does not take kindly to Solene's relationship with Hayes, mainly because of the 20 year age difference. I loved the commentary on ageism in our society today. The public will accept an older man with a younger girlfriend but frowns upon the older woman/younger man dynamic.
Solene is acutely aware of the age difference but is enjoying an awakening of sorts with Hayes, Ah, the joys of a younger boyfriend! What starts out as "just lunch" soon becomes much, much more.
"I just want to look at you for a moment."
"You've been looking at me for over an hour."
"Yeah, but before I was trying not to be obvious about it. Come here." He led me over to the daybed against the far wall and pulled me onto his lap. I could feel him through his pants. Oh, the wonders of twenty.
Solene at first tries to hide her relationship with Hayes from her young daughter. I knew this was going to be a disaster and her daughter at first does not handle the news well at all. But doesn't Solene deserve to be happy? She struggles not only with her ex-husband's reaction to the news but also with her daughter's.
The entire time Isabelle had been just across the hall on the phone with her friend, oblivious to her mother going down the rabbit hole. Face-first.
One of the things I loved most about this book was the sharp look at our obsession with celebrity. Hayes could not go anywhere without being mobbed, and even a causal trip to the store to buy a shirt led to a mob scene. He was used to it; Solene was not. This story made me re-think every headline I read about celebrities. Hayes wanted Solene to know him, and NOT "the idea" of him. Hayes was tender, sweet, funny, sexy and much wiser than his 20 years.
"You want to be kissed, Solene?" His hands were in my hair, pushing it off of my face, cradling my neck.
"Yes." I nodded.
"You think you can handle that?"
"I'll see what I can do."
Robinne Hill gets her locations right. From Miami, to Malibu, to Manhattan and Paris, I felt as if I was THERE, experiencing the cafes, the clubs, the chic art galleries and the screaming fans at the huge concerts. This book really checked all the boxes for me!! I simply cannot recommend it highly enough. I am having a hard time moving on from this book. Would I love a sequel? YES. But I would also gladly welcome another book from Ms. Hill. Grab 'The Idea of You' and enjoy a fabulous time with this perfect beach read. I adored it.
Favorite quotes:
"You're making me blush," he laughed, tipping his head back. His jawline from this angle was well-defined, exquisite, like art. His beauty, like a gift that kept revealing itself.
"Love," she said, "was not always perfect, and not exactly how you expected it to be. But when it descended upon you, there was no controlling it."
ARC provided by the publisher in return for an honest review. | Tue Jun 13 20:41:00 -0700 2017 | Mon Aug 07 00:14:45 -0700 2017 | Sat Aug 05 15:57:22 -0700 2017 | Fri Aug 04 22:16:46 -0700 2017 | 3 | 0 |
01ec1a320ffded6b2dd47833f2c8e4fb | 35,244,824 | a8afac99898bda94052f809674a45e24 | 4 | 4 - 4.5 Stars!!
OMG!! Refreshing, smart, fun and swoony, I LOVED this book!! It was just what I needed. My favorite R.S. Grey book since 'Scoring Wilder'. If you are looking for something totally light and sexy, this book is for you!
Madeleine is an adorable and quirky heroine who is trying her best to get her life together. As a somewhat unsuccessful realtor, she adores her giant dog named Mouse (cute, right?) and loves her family and best friend Daisy. But her love life? Non-existent. DOA. That is, until the new veterinarian Dr. Adam Foxe arrives in town. But the good doctor is coming off a bitter break-up and is cynical and not looking for love, etc etc. Until Mouse (and Madeleine crash into his life!)
They strike up a mutually beneficial deal. A fake dating arrangement to satisfy Adam's nosy family and he will buy a house through Madeleine. Let the hilarity (and hormones) ensue!
"No. No. A family barbecue is serious! This was not part of the deal."
"Technically, you agreed to do anything I needed you to do."
"That's when I thought you'd be asking me for a lung or something!"
"So you were prepared to donate an organ, but a family barbecue is suddenly too much pressure?"
"Don't try to be cute."
Adam's family is charmed by Madeleine. And who wouldn't be? She is a sincere and honest and refreshingly REAL MC.
"And you brought cookies?" she asks, eyeing the Tupperware in my hand.
"Freshly baked this morning," I brag.
She turns over her shoulder to Adam, who's following us into the house with Mouse by his side. "I love her already!"
I bask in her praise. After the months from hell I've had recently, this is a much-needed reprieve. Hell, if all else fails, maybe I'll date Adam's mom?
'The Foxe & the Hound" is a delightfully sexy story with the perfect amount of humor and heat. I loved the banter, the characters and the charming small-town Texas setting. I swear, R.S. Grey could be a TV comedy writer, that's how funny her dialogue is!!
"I want to take a pair of scissors to her loud highlights, but I misplaced the scissors I usually keep in my top drawer a few months ago. Instead, I'm forced to stand, hang up on Daisy, and follow Lori over to the conference room with pen and paper in hand. We're the first two to arrive. She takes her usual spot beside Helen's chair, and I pick a spot on the opposite end of the table. Her perfume is strong. Chanel number five, she told me once, bragging. Oh really? On you it smells like a number two.
This was THE perfect read for a summer day or a weekend at the beach. I fell in love with Adam and Madeleine and the fictional setting of Hamilton, Texas. Bravo, Ms. Grey!! Keep writing more books like this one.
"We should slow down," I sputter just before his mouth falls to my chest.
He swirls his tongue around my nipple and my eyes pinch closed. Or, y'know, speed up even more. | Thu Jun 01 14:51:11 -0700 2017 | Mon Jun 19 20:20:25 -0700 2017 | Tue Jun 06 15:33:50 -0700 2017 | Thu Jun 01 00:00:00 -0700 2017 | 9 | 0 |
01ec1a320ffded6b2dd47833f2c8e4fb | 35,275,234 | 4c7feecc438639b41c45ae4b8e7ae97c | 4 | 3.5 - 4 stars
Beautiful and poignant yet very violent spin-off from the Nine Minutes series. Lots of unexpected twists and turns!
I loved the storyline and the originality of the plot. Even though I was familiar with Anthony Bear and Christy from the Nine Minutes series, this book really explored their relationship and Anthony's early life.
I could not WAIT for this book to come out since Beth Flynn is a very special and talented writer. The Nine Minutes Series is one of my all-time FAVORITE biker romances and I recommend it to anyone who will listen!
Anthony is a fighter. Faced with racism from a young age, he clawed his way to the top and created one of the most feared and most successful illegal businesses on the West Coast of Florida. He is Boss. When a large debt is owed to him, he sets out to collect.
He kidnaps the daughter of the man who owes him, but Christy Chapman is not at all what he expected. Anthony has preconceived notions about her which turn out to be all wrong.
Christy judged Anthony at first, too. Not quite the pampered heiress that Anthony thought she was, they both surprise each other along the way.
Although I finished this book, it was a little slow going for me at times. The third-person voice prevented me from really connecting with these characters. That being said, this was an incredibly inventive story and as always, I ADORE the Florida setting of Beth Flynn's books. The colorful characters and unflinching violence add to the genuine feel of the plot. I hope that there are more books planned for the Beth Flynn's cast of characters because I will be first in line to read her next book!
ARC provided by the author in return for an honest review. | Wed May 31 18:35:19 -0700 2017 | Sun Jul 23 07:23:01 -0700 2017 | Sun Jul 16 11:49:22 -0700 2017 | Thu Jul 13 21:16:18 -0700 2017 | 4 | 2 |
01ec1a320ffded6b2dd47833f2c8e4fb | 35,342,904 | f246ef8741bcbd9969e3d0cf6b622464 | 5 | 4.5 - 5 Stars!!
"When life happened, it did it in a heartbeat. That space between time. A first inhale, a last exhale. The dawn of realization, the eve of what was and never again would be."
What an unexpected and refreshing surprise!!! This book is unlike anything I've ever read. And please don't read any spoilers! The author just totally blew me away with the plot and the characters and the FEELS!
Let me just say that Parker was one of my favorite MC's EVER. Strong, funny, self-deprecating, she is basically just waiting for her life to begin. She has a chip on her shoulder and blames everyone else for the position she's in. But there is so much more to her story!!
"If Amazon Prime offered a life, she would have one-clicked the hell out of it and selected recurring monthly delivery."
This book is NOT what you think. The plot is inventive and sexy and emotional. It is pure Jewel E. Ann. This book took me on a rollercoaster ride of emotions and I did not want it to end! Parker finds herself in THE one situation that she swore she would never be in. Funny how life is, right? Despite her best intentions, she realizes that life is not black and white but is shades of grey. And family does mean everything.
"Temptation no longer resided in his blind spot. She lived a hundred yards away.
This book is funny and steamy and just plain REAL. I am trying not to give away any of the plot because this book is best read without knowing anything about the story or the characters. It is another delightfully different story from one of the best indie authors writing today. Pick up 'When Life Happened.' You will be delighted and challenged and entertained.
The truth doesn't always set you free, and lies are not always deception.
(ARC provided by the author in return for an honest review.) | Sun May 28 13:31:11 -0700 2017 | Fri Sep 15 09:35:18 -0700 2017 | Wed May 31 16:45:43 -0700 2017 | Sun May 28 00:00:00 -0700 2017 | 13 | 0 |
01ec1a320ffded6b2dd47833f2c8e4fb | 32,054,095 | 8c742bb67025d7e152f04793e46c34a3 | 5 | 4.5 Captivating Stars!!!
"When truth is replaced by silence, the silence is a lie."
-- Yevgeny Yevtushenko
'The Child's is a haunting and emotional character-driven suspense novel that also explores our modern-day obsession with 24/7 news.
Angela's newborn baby was kidnapped from her hospital room several decades earlier. The baby was never found. Angela and her husband Nick carried on after their devastating loss but Angela never fully recovered. When the bones of an infant are found at a construction site, she is sure the body is that of her long-gone Baby Alice.
Kate is a brilliant newspaper journalist who uncovers news stories the old-fashioned way: through leg work and research and determination. She was also featured in the author's previous book 'The Widow' which I am now going to read! I loved Kate's style. While this book started off just a tiny bit slow, it picked up the pace in the middle and thundered toward an unbelievably shocking conclusion.
"I've always thought that's a funny saying. Let sleeping dogs lie. Because sleeping dogs always wake up eventually, don't they?"
Emma is married to a university professor many years her senior. She is devastated by the news of the "Building Site Baby' but why? She has no apparent ties to Angela's family. Emma has had a difficult relationship with her mother Jude but it seems the two are trying to make peace with each other now that Emma is grown and married. But Emma has secrets of her own that will devastate everyone close to her when they are revealed.
The multiple points of view are executed brilliantly. Each narrator has their own unique voice and are each vital to the story.
'The Child' is an imaginative and surprising thriller. While the writing is filled with British slang and customs, that only added to my enjoyment of the story.
There are many twists and turns to this book and the ending was far more touching than I expected from what I though would be a suspense novel. The conclusion was enormously satisfying! Highly recommend this book for all thriller fans as well as anyone who loves a great story.
"People say what doesn't kill you makes you stronger. They say that when you been through something terrible ... But it doesn't. It breaks your bones, leaving everything splintered and held together with grubby bandages and yellowing sticky tape. Creaking along the fault lines, Fragile and exhausting to hold together. Sometimes you wish it had killed you."
(With thanks to the publisher for a review copy.) | Wed May 24 19:23:06 -0700 2017 | Sat Jul 01 07:46:34 -0700 2017 | Fri Jun 30 16:26:26 -0700 2017 | Wed Jun 28 00:00:00 -0700 2017 | 9 | 0 |
01ec1a320ffded6b2dd47833f2c8e4fb | 34,321,642 | 735f52a6301fc855fadf081b5df10dd4 | 4 | Such a sweet and sexy story! Highly recommend this one for fans of KA - this book is all about a strong heroine; a stand-up, Alpha hero; and some fast-moving danger. Loved the descriptions of the breathtaking Montana scenery.
I'm a HUGE fan of second-chance romance and this one fit the bill perfectly. This is the second book in the Jamison Valley series and centers around Nick, Jesse's friend. (This book can be read as a standalone but I HIGHLY recommend the first book because it is fantastic!) It's no spoiler that Nick and Emmeline (Emmy) were married in Las Vegas many years earlier and surprise! They meet up again very unexpectedly after many years apart, when she moves to his small town.
"Nick?" Gigi asked, but I didn't speak or take my eyes off Emmy. She was frozen just like I was. Finally, Emmy broke away.
"Sorry. I have to go," she mumbled before racing to the door.
"What was that? Do you know her?" Jess asked.
Yeah. I knew her. "She's my wife."
There is a delicious slow-burn aspect to this story even though Nick and Emmy are still legally married. Emmy now has a boyfriend, and had given up ever finding Nick after years of searching turned up nothing (there's a good reason for that which is revealed later in the book!). Nick broke her heart when he left her after their impulsive wedding in Vegas. Emmy and Nick were from two very different worlds, but now their paths have crossed again when she takes a teaching job in Prescott, Montana.
Nick is a sexy and sweet Alpha but Emmy resists him despite his incredibly tender and romantic gestures. Even though they are husband and wife, they really didn't know each other at all. If you are a fan of small-town romance, you will love this book. There is plenty of action and just the right amount of heat. Although story did not have the "wow" factor that 'The Coppersmith Farmhouse' had, I still raced through this book and absolutely fell in love with the characters.
I am obsessed with this series and cannot wait for more stories about the other characters. Ms. Perry obviously has a great deal of love for her setting and it shows in her writing. 'The Clover Chapel' is a heart-warming, funny, sexy and very adult romance that enthralled me and entertained me to the very last word. I am thrilled that the third book in the series, 'The Lucky Heart' is coming in August! I can't wait to return to Jamison Valley.
(ARC provided by the author in return for an honest review.) | Wed May 17 14:25:06 -0700 2017 | Tue May 30 11:20:52 -0700 2017 | Wed May 24 11:35:52 -0700 2017 | Wed May 17 00:00:00 -0700 2017 | 13 | 0 |
01ec1a320ffded6b2dd47833f2c8e4fb | 34,776,338 | 741913dcec30e4ff0a23d98a639f8650 | 4 | "Now I know how much there is to be afraid of and it terrifies me. But at the same time, I feel like if I could live through that, what happened to us, then I can survive anything. Like, what is there really to be afraid of?"
This book has SO much going for it! A Bittersweet, friends-to-lovers story; a feisty and relatable heroine; AND a bad-boy hero. Kylie Scott is one of my favorite authors and 'Lick' remains one of my top favorite contemporary romance books. For those reasons, I stuck with this story and I'm so glad that I did. Edie is VERY different from most fictional heroines and for that, I applaud Ms. Scott. For once, the ordinary girl gets the guy!
"Kissing John was everything. Well, not everything everything. I wouldn't die without him. But all of me wanted him, my heart and my head and all of the rest. Without a doubt, he made life better."
John and Edie experienced a life-changing trauma and it pretty much bonds them together. No one else can understand what they went through that fateful night at the convenience story and they have a tough time relating to their teachers, families and friends. They end up attending the same high school and I loved what the author had to say about bullying, fat-shaming and teenage angst. There are some light-hearted moments in this story as well and if Ms. Scott writes more YA novels, I will be first in line! With that said, there were some minor inconsistencies that took me out of the story a bit (there seemed to be some Aussie-speak thrown in - no American teenager uses some of the language that the author used) but all in all this was a sweet, funny and sexy romance that kept me turning the pages until the very end.
"You're here?"
"Yeah."
"Why?"
"Because this is where you are," he said, as if it were obvious.
(ARC provided by the publisher in return for an honest review.) | Fri May 05 00:58:34 -0700 2017 | Sun Aug 13 12:25:42 -0700 2017 | Sun Aug 13 16:01:52 -0700 2017 | Mon Aug 07 17:02:03 -0700 2017 | 7 | 0 |
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