http://www.tor.com/blogs/2012/12/picturing-the-hobbit#more
Fantastic (pun intended) artwork celebrating Tolkien’s The Hobbit.
Posted from WordPress for Android via my Samsung smartphone. Please excuse any misspellings. Ciao, Jon
Sunsets, Stars, West, Wind
http://www.tor.com/blogs/2012/12/picturing-the-hobbit#more
Fantastic (pun intended) artwork celebrating Tolkien’s The Hobbit.
Posted from WordPress for Android via my Samsung smartphone. Please excuse any misspellings. Ciao, Jon
http://io9.com/10-key-terms-that-will-help-you-appreciate-fantasy-lite-1463800561
Brush up on your fantasy sub genres with this article from io9. Which one is your favorite? Which one will you try next?
Posted from WordPress for Android via my Samsung smartphone. Please excuse any misspellings. Ciao, Jon
The Knife of Dreams by Robert Jordan
Read by Kate Reading and Michael Kramer
Listended/Read in February 2013
Loial and Mat tied the knot (but not with each other). Perrin and Faile end their two book separation. Nine months can’t come soon enough for Elayne (or me). Egwene and Eliada under the same roof but not speaking to each other. Nynaeve returned Lan to Malkier along the Borderland Scenic Byway. Someone please give Rand a hand!
Continue reading “Audiobook Review: The Knife of Dreams by Jordan (3 Stars)”
The Crossroads of Twilight by Robert Jordan
Read by Kate Reading and Michael Kramer
Read in January 2013
I listened to the audiobook edition. Apparently unabridged doesn’t include the Glossary. It’s a good thing I own the hardcover for reference and for the maps.
Crossroads of Twilight is one of my least favorite books of the Wheel of Time series because of the turgid plot. The train wreck that started ten books ago finally comes to a crashing halt, right before it teeters and ultimately falls off the cliff for the long slow-motion plummet to the end, four books later.
Using male and female readers helped especially with the switching viewpoints.
Continue reading “Audiobook Review: Crossroads of Twilight by Jordan (3 Stars)”
Among Thieves by Douglas Hulick
Read in March 2013
Probably closer to a 3.5 (mostly because I didn’t completely connect with the characters) but I’ll balance that with a 4.5 for excellent sword fight scenes and nearly non-stop action and intrigue. Reminded me of watching the series 24 sort of mashed up with the mini-series Pillars of the Earth through the lens of underworld organized crime and a dash of dark magic. Hard to put down and stayed up late to finish. Continue reading “Book Review: Among Thieves by Hulick (4 Stars)”
Read from February 25 to 28, 2013
This type of urban fantasy could easily grow on me. Absolutely no zombies and only one token cameo vampire. I didn’t mind the pack of werewolves.
All the rest of the ‘paranormals’ hailed from Celtic mythology. Oberon the Irish wolfhound got the best lines, often at the expense of our hero, the Iron Druid.
A fun fast read.
Continue reading “Book Review: Hounded by Hearne (3.5 Stars)”
The Legend of Sleepy Hollow by Washington Irving
Read in December 2008
Washington Irving painted beautifully detailed scenes of rural New England. He also had a healthy sense of humor and wit. This story read like it was being narrated by the fireside in a tavern or pub on a blustery autumn evening.
I read the edition available from Project Gutenberg (click on the book cover at left for more information).
Reflections in light of the new Fox series “Sleepy Hollow” …
Continue reading “eBook Review: The Legend of Sleepy Hollow by Irving (3 Stars)”
Those Who Hunt the Night by Barbara Hambly
Read in October 2009
Vampires without the romance. Very refreshing. Well drawn historical setting in late 19th or early 20th century London and Paris.
James Asher, a professor of philology at Oxford, and his wife Lydia, also a doctor, but of medicine, are reluctantly coerced into investigating the case of a serial vampire killer. Don Simon Ysidro, a Spanish vampire old enough to remember (and barely survive) the great London fire of 1666, forces James into his service by threatening Lydia’s life.
Rather than risking his wife’s precarious safety and sending her into hiding, he recruits her help in tracking down both the vampire killer, and the vampire victims haunts and hidey-holes. Lydia pursues the research through probate courts, registrar of deed office, newspaper articles and other public records and resist’s the siren call of the medical pathology mystery of vampirism while James accompanies Ysidro to interrogate London’s undead citizens.
Continue reading “Book Review: Those Who Hunt the Night by Hambly (3.5 Stars)”
Most of these I’ve read, and I agree with Scalzi’s endorsements. The few I haven’t read will soon be on my wishlist.
http://www.buzzfeed.com/donnad/passages-from-lord-of-the-rings-beautifully-recreated-in?s=mobile
Perfect way to start off my day. Gorgeous art inspired by scenes from Tolkien’s Middle Earth.