by David Sedaris
259 pgs
Calypso is the latest collection of essays by humorist David Sedaris. I would have thought that after nine books, in which he gives merciless insight into his own and his family members' lives, he'd be out of things to say by now. Thankfully, he isn't.
Sedaris has a wry, caustic sense of humor and it's firing on all cylinders as he describes his family life as well as his interactions with the general population. I can't help but feel a little bit of a kinship with him, which is why I think I enjoy his stories as much as I do. He's a gifted story teller who holds nothing back, and is willing to share things most of us would keep deeply hidden, if there's a chance others will find some humor in it.
★ ★ ★ ★ ☆
Thursday, February 14, 2019
Saturday, February 9, 2019
The Cutting Edge
by Jeffery Deaver
430 pgs (Lincoln Rhyme series #14)
In this most recent Lincoln Rhyme book, Rhyme and Sachs are up against a deranged killer obsessed with diamonds. His first victims are an engaged couple whom he follows into a jewelry store and brutally kills. He also tortures and kills the store owner. The police believe they were all simply victims of a violent robbery. But when the case is put before Lincoln, it's soon realized that something far deeper is going on.
The victims begin adding up, and as Lincoln and Sachs pursue him, they begin to learn the killer's profile. They surmise his obsession is with rough diamonds and he seems to be punishing people for "defiling" them by buying cut stones. The media dubs him "The Promiser," and people all over New York are on edge wondering who his next victim will be.
The Cutting Edge is a great example of why I'm still reading Jeffery Deaver's books. This is the 30th of his I've read now, and while some of them are better than others, I've enjoyed all of them. I know there will be twists in the plot, and I try to anticipate the surprises and misdirection I know are coming. But I'm rarely able to guess where they'll come from or how the book will end. This one was another very satisfying story.
★ ★ ★ ★ ☆
430 pgs (Lincoln Rhyme series #14)
In this most recent Lincoln Rhyme book, Rhyme and Sachs are up against a deranged killer obsessed with diamonds. His first victims are an engaged couple whom he follows into a jewelry store and brutally kills. He also tortures and kills the store owner. The police believe they were all simply victims of a violent robbery. But when the case is put before Lincoln, it's soon realized that something far deeper is going on.
The victims begin adding up, and as Lincoln and Sachs pursue him, they begin to learn the killer's profile. They surmise his obsession is with rough diamonds and he seems to be punishing people for "defiling" them by buying cut stones. The media dubs him "The Promiser," and people all over New York are on edge wondering who his next victim will be.
The Cutting Edge is a great example of why I'm still reading Jeffery Deaver's books. This is the 30th of his I've read now, and while some of them are better than others, I've enjoyed all of them. I know there will be twists in the plot, and I try to anticipate the surprises and misdirection I know are coming. But I'm rarely able to guess where they'll come from or how the book will end. This one was another very satisfying story.
★ ★ ★ ★ ☆
Tuesday, February 5, 2019
Iron Gold
by Pierce Brown
596 pgs (Red Rising series #4)
It's been ten years since the uprising and rebellion of the Red slaves on Mars against the Gold ruling caste. Darrow, the slave who led the revolution and took on the persona of the Reaper, has become a legend during those years, as he's continued to lead the new Solar Republic in battles against the Ash Lord in an effort to liberate the rest of the solar system. But there is a faction at work within the Republic, one that wants to undermine Darrow, the war he's fighting, and the millions of lives that have been lost in his quest to provide that freedom.
In this, the fourth book in his "Red Rising" series, Pierce Brown does something unexpected with the series. Instead of continuing to focus primarily on his main character and follow him as he continues to fight for those unable to fight for themselves, he instead shifts the focus to others in the series and removes Darrow from the pedestal he and others have put him on.
I've heard this series referred to as a "space opera," and that label is deserved. The story and the action are often over the top, and the characters tend to be more caricatures with extreme personalities than fully fleshed out characters with complex personalities. But in this case, I'm okay with that. The series is fun. And I think it's exactly what Pierce Brown wants it to be.
★ ★ ★ ★ ☆
596 pgs (Red Rising series #4)
It's been ten years since the uprising and rebellion of the Red slaves on Mars against the Gold ruling caste. Darrow, the slave who led the revolution and took on the persona of the Reaper, has become a legend during those years, as he's continued to lead the new Solar Republic in battles against the Ash Lord in an effort to liberate the rest of the solar system. But there is a faction at work within the Republic, one that wants to undermine Darrow, the war he's fighting, and the millions of lives that have been lost in his quest to provide that freedom.
In this, the fourth book in his "Red Rising" series, Pierce Brown does something unexpected with the series. Instead of continuing to focus primarily on his main character and follow him as he continues to fight for those unable to fight for themselves, he instead shifts the focus to others in the series and removes Darrow from the pedestal he and others have put him on.
I've heard this series referred to as a "space opera," and that label is deserved. The story and the action are often over the top, and the characters tend to be more caricatures with extreme personalities than fully fleshed out characters with complex personalities. But in this case, I'm okay with that. The series is fun. And I think it's exactly what Pierce Brown wants it to be.
★ ★ ★ ★ ☆
Tuesday, January 29, 2019
The Woman in the Window
by A. J. Finn
427 pgs
Last year, A. J. Finn (not his real name) made his presence on the literary scene known with the publication of his first book The Woman in the Window, a psychological thriller that shares a similar narrative style with books like Gone Girl and The Girl on the Train. Finn also probably owes a portion of his book royalties to the estate of Alfred Hitchcock, as he makes no effort to hide where he received the inspiration for his story.
Anna Fox is a child psychologist who has been confined to her townhouse in Harlem ever since the onset of a severe and near crippling case of agoraphobia. She spends much of her time chatting online with others who suffer with the same condition, and while she knows she shouldn't, she regularly mixes the drugs her doctor prescribed for her with alcohol.
It's in this condition that Anna witnesses--or believes she witnesses--a murder while spying on her neighbors through their window. She tries to report what she saw to the police, who investigate, but find no evidence of any crime. There doesn't even appear to be anyone missing. The woman she says she saw get stabbed doesn't seem to have ever existed.
The references to Rear Window are obvious and I found myself wanting to rewatch it while I read Finn's book, but eventually the story becomes completely Finn's. He does an admirable job of inserting a series of misdirections and keeping you guessing as to the reliability of Anna and what she believes she saw. Not all of Finn's twists come as surprises by the time they're revealed. I was pretty sure I'd figured out a couple of the big ones well before they were confirmed. But it was still a fun read and I'm excited to see what he writes next.
★ ★ ★ ☆ ☆
427 pgs
Last year, A. J. Finn (not his real name) made his presence on the literary scene known with the publication of his first book The Woman in the Window, a psychological thriller that shares a similar narrative style with books like Gone Girl and The Girl on the Train. Finn also probably owes a portion of his book royalties to the estate of Alfred Hitchcock, as he makes no effort to hide where he received the inspiration for his story.
Anna Fox is a child psychologist who has been confined to her townhouse in Harlem ever since the onset of a severe and near crippling case of agoraphobia. She spends much of her time chatting online with others who suffer with the same condition, and while she knows she shouldn't, she regularly mixes the drugs her doctor prescribed for her with alcohol.
It's in this condition that Anna witnesses--or believes she witnesses--a murder while spying on her neighbors through their window. She tries to report what she saw to the police, who investigate, but find no evidence of any crime. There doesn't even appear to be anyone missing. The woman she says she saw get stabbed doesn't seem to have ever existed.
The references to Rear Window are obvious and I found myself wanting to rewatch it while I read Finn's book, but eventually the story becomes completely Finn's. He does an admirable job of inserting a series of misdirections and keeping you guessing as to the reliability of Anna and what she believes she saw. Not all of Finn's twists come as surprises by the time they're revealed. I was pretty sure I'd figured out a couple of the big ones well before they were confirmed. But it was still a fun read and I'm excited to see what he writes next.
★ ★ ★ ☆ ☆
Saturday, January 19, 2019
House of Spies
by Daniel Silva
526 pgs (Gabriel Allon series #17)
House of Spies, the 17th book in Daniel Silva's "Gabriel Allon" series, picks up right where The Black Widow left off. Saladin, the ISIS terrorist who has so far managed to stay one step ahead of Gabriel and his team, has successfully attacked Washington D.C., and as this book begins, he successfully attacks London. Gabriel, and his counterparts at the CIA and MI6 have only a couple of clues to follow in their efforts to stop him before he's able to attack again.
Gabriel's investigation leads him to Morocco, to a drug kingpin and arms dealer named Jean-Luc Martel. Martel's girlfriend Olivia Watson runs an art gallery, which is used to launder Martel's money. It's Martel who provided Saladin with the weapons used in London and Gabriel must devise a plan to use him and Olivia to get to Saladin.
While House of Spies isn't the best book in the series, it's a fine entry. It's definitely not the book to start with if you're unfamiliar with the series, especially because it's a direct continuation of the last one. But as a fan of the series, I enjoyed it and look forward to reading the next one.
★ ★ ★ ☆ ☆
526 pgs (Gabriel Allon series #17)
House of Spies, the 17th book in Daniel Silva's "Gabriel Allon" series, picks up right where The Black Widow left off. Saladin, the ISIS terrorist who has so far managed to stay one step ahead of Gabriel and his team, has successfully attacked Washington D.C., and as this book begins, he successfully attacks London. Gabriel, and his counterparts at the CIA and MI6 have only a couple of clues to follow in their efforts to stop him before he's able to attack again.
Gabriel's investigation leads him to Morocco, to a drug kingpin and arms dealer named Jean-Luc Martel. Martel's girlfriend Olivia Watson runs an art gallery, which is used to launder Martel's money. It's Martel who provided Saladin with the weapons used in London and Gabriel must devise a plan to use him and Olivia to get to Saladin.
While House of Spies isn't the best book in the series, it's a fine entry. It's definitely not the book to start with if you're unfamiliar with the series, especially because it's a direct continuation of the last one. But as a fan of the series, I enjoyed it and look forward to reading the next one.
★ ★ ★ ☆ ☆
Monday, January 7, 2019
Purity
by Jonathan Franzen
563 pgs
Purity, the most recent novel by Jonathan Franzen, at its core, is the story of Purity Tyler and her search for her identity and place in the world. Purity goes by Pip and is a young college graduate living in Oakland, California. She lives rent free in a house shared by multiple roommates, including a married man she's obsessed with. She works for a telemarketing company, where she struggles to earn enough to make the payments on the $130,000 in student loans she's carrying.
Growing up, Pip was raised by her mother, Penelope, in a small remote cabin somewhere in the Santa Cruz Mountains. Her mother is an emotionally unstable woman, who hid Pip's existence from her father. Pip knows that Penelope is not her mother's real name, but her mother refuses to tell her who she used to be, and the identity of her father.
Andreas Wolf grew up in East Germany. He has led a privileged, but deviant life. He has some serious skeletons in his closet, including the killing of the father of a teenage girl he was in love with when he was 27. He's now the founder of an organization called The Sunshine Project, which is a competitor to WikiLeaks and is headquartered in Bolivia.
One evening, a woman named Annagret stops by the house Pip lives in to visit one of her roommates. Annagret is involved with The Sunshine Project and is so impressed with Pip that she encourages her to come to Bolivia to work for them. She informs Pip that Andreas Wolf could probably help her track down the identity of her father, so Pip agrees and takes the job.
The book moves around a lot from this point, as Franzen weaves together the lives of Pip, Andreas Wolf, and those of her parents. Things which at first seem coincidental, are quickly revealed not to be, and the crimes of Wolf's past have, and will continue to play a pivotal role in Pip's life.
Franzen is a great storyteller. This is only the second book by him that I've read, and while I didn't enjoy it as much as I did Freedom, I still consider it a pretty good book. Pip wasn't the most likeable character for me, but fortunately she exists the narrative for significant stretches of time throughout the book, and by the end, she'd redeemed herself enough to leave me satisfied with the book as a whole.
★ ★ ★ ☆ ☆
563 pgs
Purity, the most recent novel by Jonathan Franzen, at its core, is the story of Purity Tyler and her search for her identity and place in the world. Purity goes by Pip and is a young college graduate living in Oakland, California. She lives rent free in a house shared by multiple roommates, including a married man she's obsessed with. She works for a telemarketing company, where she struggles to earn enough to make the payments on the $130,000 in student loans she's carrying.
Growing up, Pip was raised by her mother, Penelope, in a small remote cabin somewhere in the Santa Cruz Mountains. Her mother is an emotionally unstable woman, who hid Pip's existence from her father. Pip knows that Penelope is not her mother's real name, but her mother refuses to tell her who she used to be, and the identity of her father.
Andreas Wolf grew up in East Germany. He has led a privileged, but deviant life. He has some serious skeletons in his closet, including the killing of the father of a teenage girl he was in love with when he was 27. He's now the founder of an organization called The Sunshine Project, which is a competitor to WikiLeaks and is headquartered in Bolivia.
One evening, a woman named Annagret stops by the house Pip lives in to visit one of her roommates. Annagret is involved with The Sunshine Project and is so impressed with Pip that she encourages her to come to Bolivia to work for them. She informs Pip that Andreas Wolf could probably help her track down the identity of her father, so Pip agrees and takes the job.
The book moves around a lot from this point, as Franzen weaves together the lives of Pip, Andreas Wolf, and those of her parents. Things which at first seem coincidental, are quickly revealed not to be, and the crimes of Wolf's past have, and will continue to play a pivotal role in Pip's life.
Franzen is a great storyteller. This is only the second book by him that I've read, and while I didn't enjoy it as much as I did Freedom, I still consider it a pretty good book. Pip wasn't the most likeable character for me, but fortunately she exists the narrative for significant stretches of time throughout the book, and by the end, she'd redeemed herself enough to leave me satisfied with the book as a whole.
★ ★ ★ ☆ ☆
Thursday, January 3, 2019
Artemis
by Andy Weir
265 pgs
Andy Weir hit a grand slam with his debut novel The Martian. After self-publishing it and offering it for 99¢ as an e-book, it became so popular that soon an audiobook version as created, production on a major film starring Matt Damon began, and finally a physical edition of the book was released, which was an immediate bestseller...in that order. That kind of success from a first-time novelist would justifiably make any writer envious. But with that level of success comes the not-so-envious problem of what to do next.
With Artemis, Weir doesn't stray very far from the formula that worked so well for him the first time. This time it's the Moon, instead of Mars that he uses for his location. And it's a 26-year-old woman named Jasmine (Jazz), who grew up in Artemis--the Moon's first and only city--who plays the role of protagonist.
Jazz and her father relocated to the Moon when she was only six. Her father, a master welder, provided a good life for the two of them helping to build and maintain Artemis. When she grew up, Jazz took a job as a porter, delivering goods and materials that would regularly arrive at Artemis from Earth, but she found a far more lucrative career arranging and smuggling contraband to its certain citizens. It was in that role that Jazz was introduced to the city's wealthiest and most corrupt businessman, Trond Ladvik.
Eventually Trond pitches a job to Jazz that is far riskier than anything she's ever been involved in. But with it comes a potential payday that would set her up for life. She agrees to the perform the job, but when things don't go as planned, the consequences end up endangering the lives of the 2,000+ inhabitants of Artemis.
There are a lot of things I liked about this book. The level of science Weir manages to pack into his story is impressive, and he does it in such a way that it adds depth to the story. Jazz, like Watney was in The Martian, is a protagonist easy to get behind and pull for, even though she's essentially a criminal. The story moves along at a good pace, and even though the action takes place at a sixth of Earth's gravity, it's still exciting.
Where Artemis falls a little short is in Weir's character development. For all intents and purposes, The Martian only had one character that Weir had to develop, so the job of doing so was far easier than it was this time around, where there are multiple key and side characters needing to be fleshed out. Weir is obviously a very smart and talented writer, and I'm confident that over time his character development will improve. I'm looking forward to many more books to come, and I'm excited to see where they all take place.
★ ★ ★ ★ ☆
265 pgs
Andy Weir hit a grand slam with his debut novel The Martian. After self-publishing it and offering it for 99¢ as an e-book, it became so popular that soon an audiobook version as created, production on a major film starring Matt Damon began, and finally a physical edition of the book was released, which was an immediate bestseller...in that order. That kind of success from a first-time novelist would justifiably make any writer envious. But with that level of success comes the not-so-envious problem of what to do next.
With Artemis, Weir doesn't stray very far from the formula that worked so well for him the first time. This time it's the Moon, instead of Mars that he uses for his location. And it's a 26-year-old woman named Jasmine (Jazz), who grew up in Artemis--the Moon's first and only city--who plays the role of protagonist.
Jazz and her father relocated to the Moon when she was only six. Her father, a master welder, provided a good life for the two of them helping to build and maintain Artemis. When she grew up, Jazz took a job as a porter, delivering goods and materials that would regularly arrive at Artemis from Earth, but she found a far more lucrative career arranging and smuggling contraband to its certain citizens. It was in that role that Jazz was introduced to the city's wealthiest and most corrupt businessman, Trond Ladvik.
Eventually Trond pitches a job to Jazz that is far riskier than anything she's ever been involved in. But with it comes a potential payday that would set her up for life. She agrees to the perform the job, but when things don't go as planned, the consequences end up endangering the lives of the 2,000+ inhabitants of Artemis.
There are a lot of things I liked about this book. The level of science Weir manages to pack into his story is impressive, and he does it in such a way that it adds depth to the story. Jazz, like Watney was in The Martian, is a protagonist easy to get behind and pull for, even though she's essentially a criminal. The story moves along at a good pace, and even though the action takes place at a sixth of Earth's gravity, it's still exciting.
Where Artemis falls a little short is in Weir's character development. For all intents and purposes, The Martian only had one character that Weir had to develop, so the job of doing so was far easier than it was this time around, where there are multiple key and side characters needing to be fleshed out. Weir is obviously a very smart and talented writer, and I'm confident that over time his character development will improve. I'm looking forward to many more books to come, and I'm excited to see where they all take place.
★ ★ ★ ★ ☆
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