Sunday, 25 September 2011

Week 40: A story of everyday trolls ... book 43!

Switched (Trylle Trilogy, Book 1) by Amanda Hocking stars Wendy, a troubled teenager (when aren't they), who never seems to be able to settle in one place. Mind you, it's not surprising when we find out that her Dad walked out before she could really remember him, and her Mum tried to kill her on her sixth birthday - screaming that she was not her child, but a changeling. Not the most auspicious of starts a girl could have. Her two constants are her protective older brother Matt, and her fabulous Aunt, who raised her in a loving environment. One day, a new boy appears at her school - and he keeps staring at her. Should she be flattered, or creeped out? At the school dance, she starts to feel something for this boy, but when he appears at her house in the middle of the night and starts to tell her that she is not human and was swapped for one as a baby and now needs to come away with him back to her own kind ... she is, well, as you would imagine, weirded out! And so begins a surprisingly enjoyable trip into troll- (or trylle-) dom, where Wendy starts to find out who she is and is amazed to find out how important she is to her kind! This is a mixture of all sorts of genres - coming-of-age, fantasy, thriller, teen-romance - to name but a few. There was a good pace to the book and I did start to root for Wendy as she struggled to come to terms with who she is, but can't help being drawn back home to the people she loves and is loved by. Whilst this book is no doubt aimed at a much younger audience than myself (my teens were a very, very long time ago), I can still remember the angst of being awkward and not knowing what your place was going to be in the world, and whether I would find true love ... ah, the memories! This is the first of a trilogy and I hope to dip back in and find out where it goes - as long as the price is right. I read this as an Ebook - and even though there were a few errors (words missing for instance) it didn't detract from the book.

Amanda Hocking should be a bit of an inspiration to budding authors everywhere and a Kindle hero - she has self-published her books on the Kindle at very low prices (not anymore!), but built up a quick following and is now a multi-millionaire. A film of Switched is planned too!

My star rating: THREE and a HALF

The stats bit ...
Length: 306 print pages (not available until 2012)
Price I paid: £0.49 (but notice that it's now £4.79 on the Kindle store)
Other formats available in: paperback in 2012

Saturday, 17 September 2011

Week 39: Good as Dead - Book 42

Phew, at last, a real bowl-along thriller that didn't require a huge amount of thought, but after the last few books, I really needed it! Good as Dead, by Mark Billingham which I read in print, features DI Tom Thorne - a London police officer with a chequered personal history (would we expect anything else!), but who usually "gets his man". When police officer Helen Weeks pops into her local newsagents on the way to work, she is stunned to find herself face to face with a gunman - and is taken hostage. The hostage-taker is desperate to find out what really happened to his son, who died in a youth prison the year before. His demand ... DI Thorne must investigate the death and uncover the truth. The pressure is on - can Thorne get to the bottom of this tragic case before the father completely loses control? And will he even be able to handle what might become a very uncomfortable truth? If you like a crime thriller - then you can't go far wrong with the DI Thorne books. Mark Billingham seems to have finely tuned his writing and is turning out one great book after another - books that you want to keep reading and are disappointed when they come to an end. Highly recommended.

My star rating: FOUR STARS.

The stats bit:
Length: 394 print pages.
Price I paid: £0.00 (borrowed from a friend)
Other formats available in: Unabridged audio download; Ebook (Kindle).

Monday, 12 September 2011

Week 38: An unusual philosphical epic ... in Oz!

I have just finished my 41st book -  A Fraction of the Whole, by Steve Toltz, which I read as an audiobook. It is an epic - telling the life story of Martin Dean ... the most hated man in Australia, who is the brother of Terry Dean ... the most loved man in Australia. How did two brothers become the polar opposite on the popularity stakes? Well, as the book unfolds, we find out in graphic detail about the Dean family, from before the brothers were born to their deaths. Told from two perspectives - Jasper, the much put upon and regularly bewildered and disgusted son of Martin, and from Martin himself. The use of two excellent narrators to voice each of these two works fabulously. Full of philosophical musings (and the odd rant), with Jung, Frome and others all in the mix - we journey through a lifetime of lows and disappointments, with the odd highpoint thrown in to prevent you from complete despair. Despite the often desperate (and usually self-inflicted) situations Martin finds himself in - there are an amazing number of laughs and chuckles smattered throughout. It is a long, long book - and there are some tricky sections to plough through, but it is definitely worth the effort. Not for the faint-hearted (language, violence and general seediness are to be found!), this is a book that will stay with me, despite having a central character that you just want to slap. It's a book about life - luckily, someone else's life - but the core themes of relationships - siblings, fathers and sons, mothers and sons, wives and girlfriends - are thing any of us can related to. I'll miss the Dean family - and I never though I would say that.

My star rating: FOUR

The stats bit:
Length: 720 print pages (around 26 hours in audio)
Price I paid: £7.99 (via my monthly download from Audible)
Other formats available in: Print; EBook; Audio CD.

Tuesday, 6 September 2011

Week 37 ...and a bit!: Little Women is book 40

After what has seemed a VERY long time, I have finished reading my fortieth book of 2011 - Little Women, by Louisa May Alcott, which I read as an Ebook. Written in 1868, this coming-of-age novel takes its inspiration from the author's own life and family. The "little women" are the four sisters of the March family - Jo (tomboy and writer), Beth (quiet, gentle and musical), Meg (the home-maker) and Amy (youngest, artistic and most lady-like of the bunch).

We follow the sisters as they grow up in the shadow of the Civil War, with their father away from home, and their mother trying to keep them happy, healthy and trying to teach them the practical skills they'll need for their future lives. There is a deeply moralistic heart to the book - how we should try and live with each other in the world which some might find offputting. However, there is fun to be had and scrapes to extricate themselves from as the four are no angels and there is the familiar bickering like all sisters do. As they grow up we see them move away from their childish concerns to more adult ones - will any of them marry, will they be able to move out of poverty, how will they cope with illness? After what I felt was a very slow start, I did eventually get sucked into this family and start to care about what happened to each of the characters. You do need to persist with it though and I recommend that if you are thinking of reading this book, then you give yourself good chunks of time to do so, rather than snatching 10 minutes here and there. I'm glad I have got through this classic, but it is very of its time, which I suppose is an education in itself. Not for the thrill seeker, but a good book for those who like character-based stories. There are further books which follow on from Little Women, and whilst I did enjoy following the trials and tribulations of the March family, I'm not sure it was quite enough to continue with it.




My star rating: THREE.

The stats bit ...
Length: 530 print pages.
Price I paid: Free on the Kindle.
Other formats available in: print; audiobook on CD; audiobook as a download.