Feet of Clay by Sir Terry Pratchett is part of the "City Watch" series set on the very weird and very wonderful Discworld (it's the nineteenth Discworld novel). The City Watch of gloriously smelly Ankh-Morpork is led by Commander Samuel Vimes. The Watch is becoming increasingly diverse - with trolls, dwarves and werewolves now settling in amongst the ranks of the humans (well, some humans and some barely-humans that is). And it's also becoming increasingly busy ... the levels of crime seem to be rocketing ... or is it just that with more officers, more crime is being noticed? Lord Vetinari, the Patrician of the city is being poisoned but Vimes cannot work out how. Two old men are murdered, one an old priest and the other the curator of the Dwarf Bread Museum, but what could possibly be the link? And what is going on with the golems - the man-made clay figures, created to do all the jobs no-one else wanted to do? They firstly take a few hours off, and then start to commit suicide - although they aren't technically alive in the first place. Helping Vimes to solve the case is Captain Carrot, his werewolf girlfriend Angua who is getting increasingly hungry and twitchy as the full moon approaches and a new recruit, Cheery Littlebottom. Cheery is not only a dwarf, but a female dwarf keen to explore her femininity, which completely throws everyone around her, particularly other dwarves. As with pretty much all Pratchett novels, what is, on the surface, a light and fluffy piece of fantasy nonsense always has a deeper message. How important is class? What is the definition of being "alive"? Really big themes, all wrapped up with huge ribbons of comedy. I do like a book that can make me laugh out loud, and there were a few such moments in Feet of Clay. What often appear to be ridiculous flights of over-indulgent fancy all come together in the end and create an immensely satisfactory conclusion. Thanks Sir Pratchett for brightening up these long and dark nights of deepest winter.
My STAR rating: FOUR.
Length: 415 print pages.
Price I paid: £2.50.
Formats available: print; unabridged audio download; abridged audio download; audio CD; ebook.
It's year SIXTEEN of my reading challenge blog, and this year I'm continuing to focus on reading those books that people have gifted to me that have been saved "for a rainy day" ... well, the rainy days are here! No longer will they languish in the gathering dust, but instead, they'll be given the priority they deserve! Oh, and I'm really, REALLY going to try and read more in general after a few years of struggling to muster up more than 5-10 minutes at the end of a day. Wish me luck!
Tuesday, 30 December 2014
Wednesday, 24 December 2014
Live and Let Die - Bond is back!
Live and Let Die is the second official outing for James Bond, the world's most famous fictional spy created by Ian Fleming. Bond is put well and truly back in the saddle after a slow recovery from his near-fatal torture in the previous book, Casino Royale. Gold coins from an infamous pirate horde are turning up and they appear to be funding the nefarious activities of a gangster known as "Mr Big" - who has been trained by SMERSH, the Soviet Intelligence Agency and sworn enemy of 007. Mr Big oversees a huge network of minions who are terrified of him, believing him to be the incarnation of a Voodoo spirit. Bond is sent first to Harlem, where he teams up with his old CIA pal, Felix. No sooner do they start to sniff around when they are captured by Mr Big who warns them off in no uncertain terms and also introduces Bond to Solitaire, a beautiful woman with second sight. They head off to Florida, where things get messy and Solitaire and Bond become involved (no shock there!), and the final scenes are set in Jamaica. As you would expect with 007, there is violence, danger and plenty of action - punctuated with the details of food and drink, landscape (Jamaica is particularly well-described), clothing and guns. These descriptions and the language used in this book definitely place it in its time. This is a book that would not be written in the same way today. If you are not able to get past what might be seen as racist terminology, and the inevitable dodgy love scene, then you would be wise to skip this book altogether. This would be a shame, as the climax to the book is a real humdinger. The Bond books are short on length but full of excitement. I can thoroughly recommend the audio edition read by Rory Kinnear, which I raced through at a fine gallop due to a pre-Christmas car journey.
My STAR rating: THREE (due to the language which is uncomfortable for a 21st Century reader).
Length: 336 print pages.
Price I paid: £5.99.
Formats available: print; unabridged audio download; ebook.
My STAR rating: THREE (due to the language which is uncomfortable for a 21st Century reader).
Length: 336 print pages.
Price I paid: £5.99.
Formats available: print; unabridged audio download; ebook.
Monday, 22 December 2014
The Visitor - excellent page-turner from Lee Child
I think I might be getting addicted to Jack Reacher. The Visitor is the fourth book featuring the rough and tough ex-military policeman created by Lee Child that I have read this year, and I've already downloaded the next one onto my Kindle! Reacher has an inordinate capacity to get himself into "situations" from which he then has to use his guile and/or muscle to extricate himself from. Whilst the sensible side of your brain is telling him to just walk away, the bit of your brain that wants to be able to follow an exciting thriller tells him to charge straight in! Lee Child takes you straight into the action - when Jack is having a quiet dinner in a restaurant, he witnesses two heavyweights putting the squeeze on the owner in order to extract protection money out of him. When our hero intervenes in the alley beside the restaurant (where else?), it leads him to being taken into custody by the FBI and pretty much blackmailed into helping them out with a case involving the murder of two women who have one thing in common - they left the army after making allegations of sexual harassment, something of which Reacher had had to investigate in his time as an MP. The FBI had produced a profile of the killer - an army man, a ruthless loner and someone not afraid to take the law into their own hands ... in fact, someone just like Reacher! Backed into a corner, he reluctantly agrees to help. This takes him away from Jodie, the love of his life, and from the house he has inherited from her father. He is really happy, but also feels guilty to be so happy to be "back on the road". He realises how frustrated he had been to be tied down to one place and starts to reassess his life during the investigation. With bucket loads of action and lots of misdirection, this is a really good read. In some ways, the style is reminiscent of the James Bond books - with loving descriptions of weaponry, cars, food and of course, the delightful distraction of an attractive woman or two - Reacher is a cake and eat it kind of guy on that score! Most definitely in the "page-turner" category, this is a series I am really happy to have found ... can't believe it's taken me so long! Even better, I can borrow these as ebooks via my Kindle from my local library - so I can finish one book, and be downloading and reading the next one within 5 minutes ... for free! All of which makes it ridiculously easy to get my next fix of Reacher.
My STAR rating: FOUR.
Length: 512 print pages.
Price I paid: FREE, borrowed from library via Kindle.
Formats available: print; unabridged audio; ebook.
My STAR rating: FOUR.
Length: 512 print pages.
Price I paid: FREE, borrowed from library via Kindle.
Formats available: print; unabridged audio; ebook.
Wednesday, 17 December 2014
Walking Backwards to Christmas - a bit of reading during Advent
Okay, so this isn't exactly part of the sequels and series I've been focusing on this year, but Walking Backwards to Christmas by Stephen Cottrell is a book that was recommended to me as a tool that helps you to reflect on the real meaning of Christmas during the season of Advent. The author helps readers to take a fresh look at the well-known story of Christmas by focusing on different characters and giving voice to how they might have been thinking and feeling. So we hear the inner workings of people such as Casper (a king), David (a shepherd) and Joseph. This is an imaginative way of telling the story and gives life to what may seem like some of the "bit players" that get a passing mention in the scriptures. What were the shepherds thinking and feeling before the angel appeared, and how did that change? How close was Joseph to abandoning Mary when she told him she was pregnant? Each chapter focuses on a different person and puts flesh on their bones and helps the reader to really think about how they might react if they were the ones being thrust into this momentous event. This may be a work of fiction, and we will never know what Mary really thought at that exact moment in time, but this book brings the humanity of all of those people into focus and really does help you to think ... what if? I found this short book compelling and know that I will read it again next year.
My STAR rating: FOUR.
Length: 128 print pages.
Price I paid: £4.79.
Formats available: print; ebook.
My STAR rating: FOUR.
Length: 128 print pages.
Price I paid: £4.79.
Formats available: print; ebook.
Monday, 15 December 2014
Let It Bleed - gritty to the core
If you haven't yet come across John Rebus, then you really don't know what you are missing. Rebus is a dishevelled, grumpy police inspector based in Edinburgh, Scotland. He drinks too much and cares too much, which inevitably leads him into conflict with higher authorities, and many of his own colleagues. In Let It Bleed by Ian Rankin, you are straight into the action with a frantic car chase which ends in tragedy as two young suspects jump off a bridge before Rebus can get to them. But what has happened to the girl (the daughter of the Lord Provost) that the police thought they had kidnapped? When this is closely followed by what appears to be a totally unrelated, but spectacular suicide in front of a local councillor, Rebus is convinced that something deeper is afoot. And boy, is he right! He is told to drop the case, but of course, that is like a red rag to a bull and not even an enforced period of leave stops him from continuing to investigate. Full of politics, economics and everyday life, this book paints a grim picture of the seedy and shady deals that might go on in the upper echelons of Scottish politics. As with all of the Rebus books I've read so far, there is a depth to the narrative, not only in the back story of the main character - whose love life is never simple - but also within the twists and turns that eventually lead to the conclusion. Sometimes, I feel that there is often such a vast array of characters that you can get a little lost, but the author does tend to bring everything together towards the end. The books are often messy, just like life, and there isn't always a nice clean ending - which, I suspect, is also true of many complex criminal proceedings. Indeed, this book raises the spectre of the possibility that certain people may be above justice. This may not always be completely satisfying to the reader, but brings a certain reality to the books which is hard to knock. Rebus isn't someone I'd choose to be friends with, but is someone I don't mind spending time with, as long as that time is spent between the covers of a book!
My STAR rating: FOUR.
Length: 360 print pages.
Price I paid: free, borrowed from my husband.
Formats available: print; abridged audio CD; unabridged audio CD; unabridged audio download; ebook
My STAR rating: FOUR.
Length: 360 print pages.
Price I paid: free, borrowed from my husband.
Formats available: print; abridged audio CD; unabridged audio CD; unabridged audio download; ebook
Wednesday, 10 December 2014
Fool Moon - how much trouble can one wizard get into?
Fool Moon is the second outing for Harry Dresden, the only wizard in Chicago who advertises his profession in the phone book. You can hire his unique services for a fee - a bit like a private detective for the more unusual things that life can throw at you. He also gets occasional consultancy work via his friend, Lieutenant Karrin Murphy, who works in the Special Investigations Unit of the Chicago Police. Following a newspaper article claiming that Murphy is wasting public funds on a charlatan (that would be Harry), our wizard receives almost no work for months on end. Following a spate of brutal killings around the time of the full moon however, Murphy risks her livelihood and calls Harry in to help with the investigation - at which point, things start to get a bit visceral. The overall feel of these books is decidedly film-noir, but with a huge helping of the supernatural. And not the nice airy-fairy supernatural. It's grimy and messy and not everyone gets out alive. In fact, in Fool Moon, it's a bit of a gore fest at times with more than one rampaging werewolf on the loose (who knew there were different categories of werewolves ... educational, yet spine-tingling at the same time!) Harry is a great character - his world-weary sarcasm is set off to a tee by the great narration of James Marsters (I read the audio book). Harry is old-fashioned in many ways, and tries to protect the women around him - which tends to annoy the heck out of them, as they are all exceptionally strong characters. Not only that, but it also means he ends up getting beaten up, shot, bitten and generally pulverised throughout the book, with very little thanks! We've got mobsters, several kinds of werewolves, the odd demon, magic potions and a few spells thrown into what is, in effect, a crime-thriller ... albeit a very dark crime-thriller. If you can cope with the gnashing of very big teeth, this book will keep you entertained to the very end. There are plenty more books in the Dresden Files, by Jim Butcher, and I have to say, I am looking forward to them.
My STAR rating: FOUR.
Length: 368 print pages.
Price I paid: £5.84.
Formats available: print; unabridged audio download; unabridged audio CD; ebook.
My STAR rating: FOUR.
Length: 368 print pages.
Price I paid: £5.84.
Formats available: print; unabridged audio download; unabridged audio CD; ebook.
Tuesday, 2 December 2014
Tripwire - the unstoppable Jack Reacher
Lee Child (see picture) has done it again. He has created a thriller that is both simple and yet complex, and, as any thriller should be, hard to put down. Tripwire is the third outing for Jack Reacher, our ex-Military Policeman and now drifter. We find him digging out swimming pools in the Florida sunshine by day, and minding the door of a dodgy club at night. Always tall and strong, this work has now made him even more formidable. When a private detective comes looking for him on behalf of a woman he has never heard of, he feigns ignorance, but when the detective is murdered, he sets off to find out why. This takes him to New York and directly into conflict with Victor "Hook" Hobie - a villain who will take extreme measures to hide his 30-year-old secret. It also stirs up feelings from the past, when he is reunited with Jodie, the daughter of his ex-boss. Queue some hot and steamy loving! Jodie is a strong female character - yes, she is loved up, but she is also a force to reckon with in her own right ... smart, beautiful (of course) and brave. And she is not the only interesting female character, which is fantastic to see in what is usually a very macho genre. Lee Child fills the pages with action and snappy dialogue, though it may be argued that he does linger a little bit too long on the description of the vast array of weaponry and cars that pepper the story. Tripwire is a real page-turner and if you can stand the violence (Victor Hobie is NOT a nice man), it's a book that will keep you interested right to the last page. Reacher is a character that, despite his faults, you do want to spend more time with and I'm already seeking out the next instalment.

My STAR rating: FOUR.
Length: 544 print pages.
Price I paid: free, borrowed from library via Kindle.
Formats available: print; unabridged audio CD; ebook.
My STAR rating: FOUR.
Length: 544 print pages.
Price I paid: free, borrowed from library via Kindle.
Formats available: print; unabridged audio CD; ebook.
Subscribe to:
Comments (Atom)