phoenix64: RayK to Fraser: you didn't have to tie me up (ds you didn't have to tie me up)
See, this is why I was hesitant to start doing this. My books finished in February come to a grand total of 1.

A Morbid Taste for Bones by Ellis Peters
I've never read any of the Cadfael books before, and I've only watched one or two of the TV adaptations (the only one I remember for sure is "Virgin in the Ice"). I'd sort of thought about picking these up for a long time now and I've been reading classic mysteries again recently and [personal profile] j_quadrifrons has been a bad influence. Overall I enjoyed it quite a bit. Cadfael is almost a little too good to be true, a man who enjoyed the adventurous life he had when he was younger with few regrets but equally enjoys the (theoretically) more peaceful monastic life he's come to in his later years. But literary comfort food is not necessarily a bad thing and I look forward to more of Cadfael. (I've already brought the next book home from the library but I am not allowed to read it until I finish at least one of the books in front of it!) I like the characters that Peters creates and I enjoy the cultural/social history we get along with the political history, though I'm enjoying that as well, especially since this is a period I'm not that familiar with already. The mystery plot itself and Cadfael as detective were less engaging but the little I know of the series leads me to think this will improve.

I did read bits of a few other books but nothing close to finishing; I even had to return one to the library because I'd renewed it the maximum number of times, meaning I'd had it for nine weeks. Sheesh. I'm attempting to blame some of this on the fact that I really need to get new glasses because eye strain is becoming an issue. Hush, I'm allowed to tell myself whatever lies rationalizations I want to.
phoenix64: parker holding an orange and smiling (Default)
When I quit smoking a few years ago my reading dropped dramatically due to habit association issues. It got a bit of a bump when my TV died but it's still nothing what it was before. Still, I thought it might be nice to post what I've been reading, so this is a new thing for me this year. Even though it will show you what a COMPLETE DORK I am.

Palace of the Plague Lord by C.L. Werner
Short summary: a northern barbarian seeking revenge for his tribe that was wiped out is chosen by a god for a quest with the promise of a reward that is almost too good to be true. A Warhammer tie-in novel. Short review: meh.
the rambling bits )

Baltimore: or The Steadfast Tin Soldier and the Vampire by Mike Mignola and Christopher Golden
Short summary: an encounter on a battlefield in WWI instigates a vampiric plague and the soldier who was there gathers three friends who have had their own encounters with evil to help him fight. Short review: Well done, boys!
the rambling bits )

Batman: Arkham Reborn by David Hine and Jeremy Haun [graphic novel]
Short summary: Arkham has been destroyed and a descendant of Amadeus Arkham rebuilds it from plans Amadeus left behind. Short review: it brings the crazy and is for the most part a solid Arkham tale.
the rambling bits )

Batman: Arkham Asylum: Madness by Sam Keith [graphic novel]
Short summary: a day-in-the-life of the asylum, much of it through the eyes of a nurse working a shift that's waaaay too long. Short review: Enjoyable interpretations of our cast of crazies, especially the Joker; allows a nice creepy atmosphere to build but the payoff is a bit lacking.
the rambling bits )

B.P.R.D Volume 4: The Dead & B.P.R.D. Volume 5: The Black Flame by Mike Mignola and John Arcudi and Guy Davis [graphic novels]
Short summary: it's Mignola - awesome Liz is awesome, we find that Roger is better off not wearing pants and though everyone in a Mignola book has a haunted house for a psyche this time around it's Abe who does the guided tour. Short review: I feel Arcudi and Davis were good choices to work with Mignola. I loved Liz here; I'm still on the fence about Daimo. I wish these collections weren't so small, but I'm glad I could check them out from the library. And that's as rambly as I'm going to get with these.
phoenix64: parker holding an orange and smiling (Harry reading)
Good grief, I really love Tim Powers sometimes. Romantic poets, Greek mythology, Hebrew mythology and quantum physics in the same paragraph. And he does it all with a straight face and he gets away with it.

LOVE.

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