tardis reads in 2024

Dit is een voortzetting van het onderwerp tardis' 2023 reading record.

DiscussieThe Green Dragon

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tardis reads in 2024

1tardis
jan 1, 2:36 pm

Happy New Year! I look forward to lots of great reading, and wish the same for everyone here in the Green Dragon and across LibraryThing. I hope to receive many book bullets from you all and also to deliver a few :)

Mount TBR currently stands at 87, not counting whatever's on the e-reader, library books in hand, and my library hold list. This is up about 20 from previous year. I blame library book sales.

2catzteach
jan 1, 3:19 pm

Happy New Year!

3reconditereader
jan 1, 4:52 pm

Happy New Year / Thread!

I become more and more convinced that you are my reader-twin. We have almost the same amount on TBR!!

4clamairy
jan 1, 4:57 pm

Happy New Year & Happy New Thread!
(I will be donning Kevlar before reading your posts.)

5Narilka
jan 1, 5:36 pm

Happy New Year!

6Marissa_Doyle
jan 1, 6:26 pm

Happy New (Reading) Year!

7MrsLee
jan 1, 6:58 pm

Happy New Year! May the TBR books all be so delightful that you read them with ease and enjoyment and may you find as many more the same.

8tardis
Bewerkt: jan 2, 1:04 am

1. Kraken Bake by Karen Dudley. Back to Ancient Athens. Chef Pelops can't cook kraken - it always turns out to be inedible - but there's a Bronze Chef competition coming up and everyone knows that's going to be the secret ingredient that all the contestants will have to use. Meanwhile, his arch-rival, Chef Mithaecus, has no such problems, and the visiting hero, Perseus, is "helping" Pelops. Tons of fun. Also, one of the other chefs is called Mediokrates. Snerk.

9Sakerfalcon
jan 2, 9:27 am

Happy New Year and Happy Reading to you! I know I will find lots of good recommendations in your thread!

10Marissa_Doyle
jan 2, 1:19 pm

>8 tardis: I have that somewhere on my Nook. I think I'll have to dig it up and read it this year.

11tardis
jan 2, 2:21 pm

>10 Marissa_Doyle: It's #2 in a series - I recommend reading #1 (Food for the Gods) first, if you haven't already.

2. Highland Fling by Katie Fforde. Jenny goes north to evaluate a failing business for a client she's never met and gets involved with the family who own the mill, a hot guy, and the business. Cheerful, romance, fluff, quick read.

12tardis
jan 3, 7:40 pm

3. Best Foot Forward by Celia Lake. Lord Carillon needs to get an old friend, an alchemist, out of Germany in the mid-1930s, and needs the help of Alexander Landry to do it. Quite good.

13tardis
jan 3, 11:50 pm

4. The Fellowship of the Ring by J.R.R. Tolkien. Audiobook, but not read by Andy Serkis. Decent reader, though. I've got The Two Towers audiobook on hold at the library, but it'll be a few months before it gets to me.

5. The Withered Boy by Marshall Ryan Maresca. A short chapbook in the Maradaine-verse. An outcast boy finds his destiny. Good.

14tardis
jan 5, 11:45 pm

6. The Sunlit Man by Brandon Sanderson. Nomad is on the run and ends up on a planet where the sun is so strong it boils the land and burns everything. There are factions: a dictator and rebels, and he picks sides. Pretty good.

7. Heart Stings
8. Spider and Frost
both by Jennifer Estep, in the world of her assassin, Gin Blanco. Both novellas, both take place at roughly the same time. In Ashland, Lorelei is lusting after a possibly evil vampire, while a nasty and really persisitent mob boss tries to force her to sell her business. Meanwhile, Gin, Owen, Brie and Finn are on vacation, and get separated. Gin ends up on a train with Gwen, a student from the Mythos Academy, who is escorting a bunch of stolen artifacts back to where they belong. Gin and Gwen have to fight off the reapers trying to steal the artifacts again. Both stories feature the usual high body counts of the series, but they're decent fun.

15tardis
jan 7, 12:40 am

9. From a Far and Lovely Country by Alexander McCall Smith. No. 1 Ladies' Detective Agency. Mma Ramotswe and Mma Makutsi take on a shady singles club and an American woman who wants to find her adopted grandfather's family, among other things. The usual gentle story.

16Alexandra_book_life
jan 7, 3:26 am

>15 tardis: Nice! I've read quite a few books in this series, up to book 5, I think. I enjoyed them very much.

17clamairy
jan 7, 7:57 am

>15 tardis: & >16 Alexandra_book_life: I was enjoying this series but stopped after 6 of them, and I'm not sure why. Perhaps I should try the audiobooks.

18tardis
jan 7, 5:34 pm

>16 Alexandra_book_life: >17 clamairy: I have mixed feelings about the #1 Ladies' Detective Agency. I enjoy them while I'm reading them but they don't stick with me and I don't buy them. They're all very similar.

10. Dragonsong by Anne McCaffrey. Audiobook. I listened to some of the earlier Dragon books but I haven't counted them because they were severely abridged. Anyway, audio isn't ideal for these as I can't slide lightly over the annoying parts - the gender roles are so ridiculously ironclad, even as McCaffrey breaks them with some of her characters as Pernese society is rebuilt. I still enjoyed it, but maybe I'm ready to let my print copies of McCaffrey's works out to find other readers. Maybe for nostalgia I'll keep the first three and the Harper Hall books but my recollection of the rest is that they got a bit repetetive, revisiting the same time period from different viewpoints. And I could really use some empty shelf space in the "M" section :)

19clamairy
Bewerkt: jan 7, 6:15 pm

>18 tardis: That might be one of the reasons why I stopped. I had been buying them for my mom, and reading them when she was done. Then we would talk about them. Looks like I read my last one the year after she passed.

20MrsLee
jan 7, 7:21 pm

>19 clamairy: I had the same experience with those books. They are pleasant, but after the first 6 or 8 I don't feel inclined to jump back in. I also bought them for mom when she was still able to read her Kindle. I think I have several in my account that I haven't read.

21libraryperilous
jan 7, 10:24 pm

>8 tardis: This sounds fun!

Happy reading in 2024!

22Jim53
jan 7, 11:21 pm

>18 tardis: I've read most of the Pern books, but the only one I've kept is Dragonsinger. I'm not even sure why, other than her vindication over many doubters and issues.

23tardis
jan 8, 12:23 am

>21 libraryperilous: Thanks :)
>22 Jim53: Yeah, that's satisfying. I haven't made a decision yet - I think I'll revisit a few more of the series. Or at least skim through them. But they're definitely on the edge of being passed on.

11. The Three Dahlias by Katy Watson. A 2023 book bullet from several directions but took until now for the library to deliver it to me. Three actresses who have played (or in one case will be playing) the same gutsy female amateur detective are invited to a fan conference, and when murder happens they investigate. This was very enjoyable. I liked all three of the actresses, and the supporting characters were fun, too.

24tardis
jan 10, 5:26 pm

12. A Curse of Krakens by Kevin Hearne. Conclusion to his Seven Kennings series. The six kennings take the war to the enemy. Enjoyed it, but unlikely to re-read.

25Marissa_Doyle
jan 10, 5:29 pm

>20 MrsLee: Me too (three? four?) Enjoyable in the moment, but not much to sink one's teeth into. I like my fluff with bones.

26tardis
jan 10, 7:19 pm

13. Demon Daughter by Lois McMaster Bujold. Penric and Desdemona novella. Pen, Des, and Nikys are dispatched to a coastal village where a suspected demon-infected child has washed up. This was so good. I love this series.

27tardis
jan 12, 5:57 pm

14. The Bullet That Missed by Richard Osman. Back with the Thursday Murder Club as they investigate the ten-years-cold murder of a journalist. Always a good time. Must put a hold on the next book in the series!

28tardis
Bewerkt: jan 14, 1:28 am

15. A Man With One Of Those Faces by C.K. McDonnell. Took the library a long time to deliver this one, but worth the wait. Paul is one of those people who looks like a lot of other people, and he uses his "gift" to visit people in care homes, pretending to be whatever relative isn't actually visiting them and keeping them company, in return for volunteer credit. When an old geezer mistakes him for the son of an old friend and then tries to stab him, things get strange fast. In short order he's on the run with a nurse who has read too many crime novels. Murder attempts, bombs, and the inimitable Detective Sergeant Bunny McGarry. Great stuff.

29pgmcc
Bewerkt: jan 15, 5:23 am

>28 tardis:
If this is your first Dublin Trilogy read, then you are in for a great time.

30tardis
jan 15, 12:03 am

16. A Lady's Guide to Scandal by Sophie Irwin. Eliza, Lady Somerset, is in mourning for her husband, although she doesn't actually miss him at all. When his will is read, she's left some properties (much to the chagrin of the rest of the family), but there's a morals clause. If she embarrasses the family, she loses all. Removing to Bath with her cousin, Margaret, she starts to spread her wings. Scandal isn't actually that easy to avoid. Regency romance, slightly unbelievable, but still enjoyable.

31tardis
jan 16, 8:35 pm

17. Steeped in Malice by Vicki Delany. Lily buys an antique children's tea set in a basket at an antique sale, and suddenly there are people trying to buy it back from her. Murder ensues. Good cozy mystery fluff.

32tardis
jan 22, 12:36 am

18. Firefly : Coup de Grâce by Una McCormack. Mal and the crew of Serenity head to a planet called Abel to help a young woman track down her father's murderer. Naturally, the situation is far more complicated than it seems on the surface. Pretty good.

33tardis
jan 22, 3:02 pm

19. Know Your Station by Sarah Gailey, illustrated by Liana Kangas. Graphic novel.

20. Station Six by S. J. Klapecki. Novella.

Interesting sort of symmetry between these two. Both set on space stations, both featuring lower-order workers serving a wealthy elite. The main theme of both is worker revolt. Station Six is the most dystopic, where the workers are indentured and not paid sufficiently to every get out of an economic gravity well. Know Your Station seems cleaner on the surface, but begins with a gruesome murder, and becomes more so throughout. I thought both were interesting, but will not be revisiting them.

34tardis
jan 23, 6:18 pm

21. Salvage Right by Sharon Lee and Steve Miller. Latest in the Liaden series and wraps up a bunch of loose ends related to Tinsori Light. Jen Sin and Lorith are the Light Keepers, now that the evil AI is dead, and the station is opening up and being repaired. But there's something not right, of course. Enjoyed it very much. One of these days I want to do a full Liaden Universe re-read.

35tardis
jan 28, 4:50 pm

22. Dragonsinger
23. Dragondrums
24. The White Dragon

All by Anne McCaffrey. Dragonsinger and Dragondrums were audiobooks. The narrator was a bit too emotive. The White Dragon was print. I've been revisiting Pern as I recently decided that I could let most of my collection of McCaffrey's books go, keeping only the first trilogy and the Harper Hall trilogy, and Moreta because my copy is autographed. There are definitely annoying things about the series - the inbaked cultural sexism, gender roles, stereotypes, etc. I've come to believe that some of this is McCaffrey's own biases. For example, she refers to younger adult females as "girls" annoyingly often. There are also attractive things - who doesn't want a dragon or a firelizard for a friend? And the villains always get what's coming to them. Anyway, I still like these, but if I ever want to read the other books in the series, I will get them from the library.

36Alexandra_book_life
jan 28, 5:05 pm

>35 tardis: I read Dragonflight a couple of years ago (a book club read and my first Pern book). I liked quite a few things. Dragons! Lessa was awesome! But I bounced off the writing, the sexism, and the gender roles. I am still on the fence about reading other Pern books :)

37tardis
feb 2, 11:39 pm

25. Random in Death by J. D. Robb. A teenage girl dies at a concert, and Eve Dallas and team are on the case. Very much as usual for the series, but i enjoyed it.

38tardis
feb 7, 12:38 pm

26. A Fire Born of Exile by Aliette de Bodard. Revenge, love, redemption. I continue to read this series and it continues to baffle me. Good stories, good characters, but the worldbuilding is just so weird. The mix of real and virtual people and things. Being able to eat/taste virtual food. Virtual people being able to pick stuff up. Just odd.

39libraryperilous
feb 7, 1:25 pm

>26 tardis: I loved The Tea Master and the Detective, but the universe became extra confusing in subsequent stories. I'm looking forward to Navigational Entanglements later this year. It sounds more like a classic space opera, and I don't think it's set in the Xuya universe.

40Alexandra_book_life
Bewerkt: feb 7, 4:57 pm

>38 tardis: I've read several Xuya universe stories, and enjoyed all of them. (I haven't read this one.) The Tea Master and the Detective is my favourite, I think.

41tardis
Bewerkt: feb 8, 6:24 pm

>39 libraryperilous: >40 Alexandra_book_life: I also loved The Tea Master and the Detective and I have liked the other Xuya stories I've read. The universe just doesn't make a lot of sense, though.

27. The Paris Assignment by Rhys Bowen. Madeleine and her young son go back to England when her French husband joins the Resistance during World War 2. After she loses her son, Madeleine goes back to France as a spy for the British, hoping for revenge. Had a decently satisfying (if improbable) conclusion.

42tardis
feb 9, 12:22 am

28. The Sign of Four Spirits by Vicki Delany. Sherlock Holmes Bookshop owner Gemma Doyle gets sucked into a new mystery after a murder at a seance. Cozy mystery fluff, but it occupied a few hours pleasantly enough.

43tardis
feb 11, 2:13 pm

29. Deal with the Devil
30. The Devil You Know
31. Dance with the Devil

All by Kit Rocha. Audiobooks. Re-read. I think I prefer to read this series in print. The reader wasn't terrible, but had pronunciation problems (sluiced was slue-iced instead of sloosed) for example and the sex scenes and the romantic couples mooning and admiring each other's muscles got a bit old. Easier to skim over in print :) That said, I still like the people rebuilding in a post-apocalypse: collecting libraries, rebuilding medical infrastruction, growing food and stuff. The fight scenes were okay, too. Good characters.

44clamairy
feb 11, 3:35 pm

>43 tardis: Ha! I tend to do the skimming thing, too. Not just sex scenes, but prolonged fighting scenes. Ugh... And you're right. It is so much harder to skim with an audiobook. I think Audible only gives you the option of going 30 seconds ahead or 30 seconds back. I think 15 seconds would be better.

45tardis
feb 11, 8:12 pm

>44 clamairy: I use Libby for audiobooks, because I borrow them from the library, and it does have 15 second advance and reverse. My podcast app has 30 second skip forward but only 15 seconds skip backwards.

32. The Last Devil to Die by Richard Osman. The Thursday Murder Club members step in when an old friend of Elizabeth's husband Stephen is murdered. Missing heroin, drug smugglers, more murders. Plus a sideline in romance fraud and antiquities. Very enjoyable, as always, although what happens to Stephen made me a bit teary. It felt right, though.

46clamairy
feb 11, 10:01 pm

>45 tardis: I use Libby sometimes, too. (Especially for shorter books.) It's a huge improvement over the old OverDrive app.

47tardis
feb 16, 4:15 pm

33. The Two Towers
34. The Return of the King
Both by J. R. R. Tolkien, audiobooks read by Andy Serkis. Pretty good. Serkis is a bit gravelly and shouty sometimes.

48tardis
feb 17, 1:16 am

35. Babel or The Necessity of Violence : an arcane history of the Oxford Translators' Revolution by R. F. Kuang. Robin Swift, plucked from the Cantonese slums as a child and taken to England by an Oxford professor, is raised to become a translator, one of those who use words to enchant silver bars to do work. Oxford seems wonderful, when he gets there. He makes friends for the first time, and the learning is exciting, but there's a black heart to the system. Very good, and highly recommended, although I don't feel I'll ever want to read it again.

49Alexandra_book_life
feb 17, 4:43 am

>48 tardis: I've been tiptoeing around this book since forever, people are saying such different things about it. Why wouldn't you want to read it again? ;)

50tardis
feb 17, 1:29 pm

>49 Alexandra_book_life: Hm. Trying not to be too spoilery, but the systemic racism, sexism, and colonialism was hard. The core of the book is a debate about the efficacy of violence to force change. Then there was the ending. It wasn't a bad ending - in fact, it was probably the best ending for the story, but it was kind of mixed. Also, high body count.

51Alexandra_book_life
feb 17, 2:59 pm

>50 tardis: I see! It was a good explanation, thank you. I'll probably continue to tiptoe for a while longer.

52tardis
feb 18, 12:13 am

36. Death by Irish Whiskey by Catie Murphy. Another fun Dublin Driver mystery. Megan is at a whiskey festival with friends when one of the attendees dies suddenly. Of course the "murder driver" can't help nosing about, even though her girlfriend is very unhappy about it. Great characters, plot isn't too silly, and they lampshade Megan's murder magnet status.

53pgmcc
feb 18, 4:24 am

>52 tardis:
I have not tried any books from this series but your post encourages me to have a go. I believe I have a couple on my Kindle.

54clamairy
feb 19, 10:01 am

>48 tardis: I borrowed this one from overdrive a while ago, and I returned it after having only read about 10% of it. You mentioned sexism, racism and colonialism, but you forgot about the child abuse. That's what made me drop it. I was fascinated by the story, but it was just not the right time for me to keep going. But I'm glad you liked it.

55tardis
feb 19, 11:31 pm

37. That Self-Same Metal by Brittany N. Williams. 16-year-old Joan Sands is a child of the Orisha, Ogun, and gifted by him with the ability to work metal. As sword mistress of Shakespeare's Kings Men company at the Globe Theatre, she uses her gift to maintain the stage swords and teaches sword-fighting to the actors. When the pact that keeps the Fae under control is broken, Joan must use her skills to fight them. Lots of racism in this time period. Pretty sure there will be a sequel, which I shall read. I enjoyed it.

56tardis
feb 24, 12:50 am

38. Emily Wilde's Map of the Otherlands by Heather Fawcett. Emily, Wendell, and friends travel to the Austrian Alps to try to find a door to Wendell's former realm. Fun.

57Alexandra_book_life
feb 24, 2:58 am

>56 tardis: I've been keeping an eye of this series ;) It's nice that you are having fun with it. Recommendable?

58tardis
Bewerkt: feb 27, 4:05 pm

>57 Alexandra_book_life: Oh, yes. I can't say I really LOVE it but it's enjoyable.

39. Sir Hereward and Mister Fitz by Garth Nix. A collection of stories, all but one previously published elsewhere, about Sir Hereward, dauntless godslayer, and Mister Fitz, puppet, sorcerer, and friend. Quick reads, all, and quite fun.

59tardis
mrt 2, 5:52 pm

40. Finder
41. Driving the Deep
42. The Scavenger Door

All by Suzanne Palmer. All in audiobook (previously read the print). The adventures of space repo man Fergus Ferguson. In the first book, Fergus goes to a space habitat group to retrieve a stolen space ship. In the second, he is on Earth, trying to sort out some old family business, when he gets a distress call from the Shipyard, out by Pluto, and rushes off to save his friends. In the third, while sorting his Earth business, he finds a cool bit of space junk that turns out to be part of a larger and deadly thing, and he has to retrieve all the pieces and save the solar system. All good fun, and the audio reader is good.

60Alexandra_book_life
mrt 3, 10:35 am

>59 tardis: Sounds really nice! I like Suzanne Palmer's Bot 9 stories. I've been thinking I should read more by her.

61tardis
mrt 6, 12:54 am

43. The Last Uncharted Sky by Curtis Craddock. The discovery of a legendary craton prompts the dispatch of an expedition to recover its treasure. Lead by Isabelle des Zephyrs, the expedition battles pirates, weather, and politics. A fitting conclusion to an interesting series.

62Sakerfalcon
mrt 6, 4:52 am

>61 tardis: I need to read this one! I loved the first two books.

63reconditereader
mrt 6, 1:10 pm

I loved the first two books but the third one frustrated me with people not using their words.

64tardis
mrt 6, 11:16 pm

44. The Lantern's Dance by Laurie R. King. Holmes and Russell are stopping to visit Holmes' son, Damian Adler, and his family in France. However, when they arrive the family is gone. Holmes goes to find Damian, while Russell, who has an injured ankle, stays a the house. To alleviate her boredom and keep her mind off worrying about Holmes, Russell translates a diary that she found in some boxes. Old family secrets, revenge, jewels. One of the better of the recent Holmes/Russell books.

65tardis
mrt 8, 2:13 pm

45. A Memory Called Empire by Arkady Martine. Re-read because audio version. Still a great book. A diplomat with a faulty version of her predecessor's memory is sent to the centre of an empire to get assistance for her small polity against a greater threat.

66Alexandra_book_life
mrt 8, 3:52 pm

>65 tardis: It's one of the best sci-fi books in recent years. Imo, of course.

67Marissa_Doyle
mrt 8, 4:32 pm

>64 tardis: Agreed--Lantern Dance is better than most of the more recent stories.

68tardis
mrt 10, 4:59 pm

46. The Butcher of the Forest by Premee Mohamed. A gripping novella about a woman who must go into the deep forest to save two lost children. Failure means the death of her friends and family. Success will also come with a cost. Very good, but bleak.

69Karlstar
mrt 10, 7:03 pm

>65 tardis: I keep meaning to put this one on my TBR pile, thanks for the reminder.

70tardis
mrt 11, 12:53 am

47. What Feasts at Night by T. Kingfisher. Another of Kingfisher's horror novellas, in which Alex Easton, former soldier, returns to the family hunting lodge and discovers there's something sucking the life out of people. Enjoyed it.

71tardis
mrt 11, 6:00 pm

City workers, including public library staff, are due to go on strike on Thursday, so all the library branches will be closed until the strike is settled. This is NOT a problem - not only do I support the union and the strikers, but I have 5 library books that won't need to be returned until the strike is over, 86 books on my TBR pile, and some Early Reviewer ebooks that desperately need to be reviewed.

72tardis
mrt 12, 1:13 am

48. Consort of Fire by Kit Rocha. A princess becomes the consort of a Dragon in this spicy (even... moist...) epic fantasy about gods and monsters. It's good, but there's a LOT of sex. First in a series.

73tardis
mrt 13, 3:03 am

49. Contrarian by L. E. Modesitt Jr. A novel in the Grand Illusion series. Civil unrest, attacks by revolutionary groups, politics, corporate corruption. Dekkard and Avraal are navigating the tricksy waters of the Council while trying not to die. These novels are odd. I like them, but they're a curiously slow build, and although there are moments of peril, oddly un-climactic. Still, I always enjoy them.

74tardis
mrt 17, 11:24 am

50. Summon the Keeper
51. The Second Summoning
52. Long Hot Summoning
All by Tanya Huff. Re-reads in audiobook format. Claire, a keeper, accompanied by talking cat, Austin, is summoned to a B&B in Kingston, Ontario, to solve a supernatural problem. Meets Dean, a Newfie with a cleaning fetish. Second book is more supernatural hijinks, including Claire and Dean finally getting together properly with unfortunate results. 3rd starts with Claire's younger sister being called to a mall in Kingston to solve yet another problem. Claire and the cats help, while Dean stays back at the B&B to keep an eye on things. Nobody's safe. Fun stuff.
.
53. Fer-De-Lance by Rex Stout. Audiobook reread. The first Nero Wolfe book and one of my favourites. Wolfe and Archie solve the mystery of a murdered golfer.

75MrsLee
mrt 17, 3:37 pm

>74 tardis: I don't know if you saw my post in the Nero Wolfe group, but if you get a chance, be sure to watch the Italian Nero Wolfe series. It was well done. Enough so that at times I forgot they weren't where they were supposed to be or that they weren't speaking English.

76tardis
mrt 17, 4:28 pm

>75 MrsLee: I'll look out for it :)

54. The Dragons of Deepwood Fen by Bradley P. Beaulieu. The colonizers have a plan, the indigenous rebels have a plan, the religious hierarchy has a plan, and they're all trying to play each other, with doublecrosses planned and the world at stake. Pretty good entry to a new series. Could have used some proofreading - misplaced apostrophes and wrong words (e.g. heal instead of heel) annoyed me.

77Karlstar
mrt 18, 4:32 pm

>76 tardis: How would you compare that with his Song of Shattered Sands series, if you've read them?

78tardis
mrt 18, 5:31 pm

>77 Karlstar: Haven't read them.

79tardis
mrt 22, 12:06 pm

These Burning Stars by Bethany Jacobs was a DNF for me. Got about 40 pages in, wasn't hooked, and didn't like the characters. I may try it again some time, but for now it wasn't working for me.

55. The Mayors of New York by S.J. Rozan. This was much more what I was wanting. Bill Smith and Lydia Chin are hired to find the missing son of the Mayor of New York. On the way, they meet several lesser mayors of various communities within the city. It was excellent.

80catzteach
mrt 23, 11:27 am

>76 tardis: I always wonder how a book gets published with mistakes, especially now with so many programs to catch them. The mistakes annoy the heck outa me!

81clamairy
mrt 23, 11:32 am

>76 tardis: & >80 catzteach: Same. A lot of new fiction just doesn't get proofread properly, and when publishers use OCR technology on an older book to turn it into an e-book a lot of mistakes slip through the cracks. :o(

82tardis
mrt 23, 1:03 pm

56. Aftermarket Afterlife by Seanan McGuire. The latest in the Incryptid series focuses on Mary Dunlavy, the ghost babysitter of the Price-Healy clan. She's longer a crossroads ghost, but she's still The Babysitter, and her charges are at risk due to Covenant attacks. Dealing with unimaginable losses, the clan must take the offensive. Very good. Bonus novella at the end, just to rip my heart out more, well worth it.

83tardis
mrt 23, 11:22 pm

57. Ralestone Luck by Andre Norton. Three impoverished siblings return to their old family home near New Orleans to find the missing artifact that's the "luck" of the family. Of course there's a rival heir and dastardly doings. Très gothic. Not bad, but very dated.

84clamairy
Bewerkt: mrt 24, 4:59 pm

>82 tardis: She is a very prolific author. And talented! The only one in this series I've read was one of the Ghost Roads books. I didn't realize just how many she had written. And she has written and recorded music to go with some of them, too.

85catzteach
mrt 25, 6:51 pm

>82 tardis: I’ve only read the first of the Incryptid series. I really liked it, I have just gotten distracted by other books. I need to re-enter the series onto my TBR list.

86tardis
mrt 26, 1:29 am

58. A Grave Robbery by Deanna Raybourn. Stoker and Speedwell are given a waxwork "sleeping beauty" to restore, but it turns out to be rather more than wax. The usual outlandish hi-jinks. I am always surprised that this series isn't considered fantasy, because it surely is, except for the lack of magic.

59. Meryl McMaster : nikihci-âniskotâpân = Bloodline by Meryl McMaster. I went to the Art Gallery of Alberta on the weekend and saw some photographs by this artist and was entranced. She makes props to create scenes that are just begging to have stories told about them. I came home and ordered this book, which arrived very promptly. She is primarily exploring her indigenous heritage (Red Pheasant Cree Nation), using her own body as part of the work. The picture that grabbed me first was her in a small boat, rowing, blindfolded, and with a large raven in the prow holding a lantern in its beak. I highly recommend googling her and checking out her website.

87reconditereader
mrt 26, 2:41 am

The Speedwell novels are absolutely in the same slot as fantasy in my brain. I like them at least partly *because* they are ridiculous.

88tardis
mrt 29, 11:26 pm

60. Old as the Hills
61. Upon a Summer's Day
Both by Celia Lake. In her Land Mysteries series, set during WW2. Albion (the magical part of the United Kingdom) is doing it's bit for the war effort. Gabe and wife Rathna have separate but equally important missions. In the second book, Gabe must challenge for a spot on the Council.

62. The Tainted Cup by Robert Jackson Bennett. When an imperial officer dies of a plant sprouting out of his body, investigator Ana Dolabra and her new assistant, Dinios Kol, must solve the mystery. They do, but that's only the beginning. With undertones of Wolfe and Goodwin, this twisty fantasy/mystery blends politics, revenge, and corruption in a very entertaining way. Highly recommended!

89Alexandra_book_life
mrt 30, 2:33 am

>88 tardis: The Tainted Cup is in my book queue! I am looking forward to reading it :)

90reconditereader
mrt 30, 2:36 pm

I loved The Tainted Cup. Can't wait for a sequel.

91tardis
apr 1, 1:01 am

63. Relight My Fire by C.K. McDonnell. Back with the staff of The Stranger Times. When a young man splats on the ground in front of Stella as she walks home from university, it's just the beginning. Twisty, weird, darkly amusing. Ghouls, has-been pop stars, mad scientists, etc. Excellent fun.

92clamairy
apr 1, 8:56 am

>91 tardis: This series is just awesome.

93pgmcc
apr 1, 9:36 am

>91 tardis:
I am glad you are enjoying The Stranger Times stories.

94Sakerfalcon
apr 2, 7:21 am

I'm really looking forward to The tainted cup!

95Marissa_Doyle
apr 2, 2:25 pm

>91 tardis: Another fan of The Stranger Times books--can't wait to see where it goes next.

96tardis
apr 3, 12:48 am

95 Me either :)

64. In Sunshine or in Shadow by Rhys Bowen and Clare Broyles. A typhoid epidemic has chased Molly Sullivan and her children out of New York to her mother-in-law's home in Westchester. Leaving the kids with m-in-l for a few days, she goes up to the Catskills to visit her friends Sid and Gus, who are staying at an all-female artist's colony and visiting Sid's family who live nearby. Arranged marriages, Jewish resorts, murder. Pretty good.

97tardis
apr 4, 10:12 pm

65. Three Kinds of Lucky by Kim Harrison. Petra Grady is a sweeper, collecting small bits of leftover magic before they can attract larger dangers. When she's forced to take a job on a research project run by an old flame, she is drawn into a tangle of history, magic, and rebellion. Pretty good.

66. A Starlet's Secret to a Sensational Afterlife by Kendall Kulper. Henrietta "Henny" Newhouse goes from Chicago to LA to become a star. When she helps another actress escape unwanted male attention, she's on the path up. Declan Collins is an indestructable stuntman who is in Hollywood to look for his mother, who disappeared when he was a child. Murder, ghosts, unethical studio executives, etc. Told in alternating first-person chapters by Declan and Henny. I liked it.

98tardis
apr 6, 1:58 pm

67. The Good, The Bad and the History by Jodi Taylor. I'm late reading this one, which arrived months ago, but I've had (still have!) a bit of a backlog. Well worth the wait. Max, still embedded at Insight to get the goods on them and also (with Markham) part of the dodgey artifact retrieval team, bounces around in time like a yoyo, which is apparently not that good for her. I had a bit of a panic towards the end of Chapter 39, but the last word relieved me. I adore St. Mary's and all who work for her. Quite partial to the Time Police, too, although not sure about the team from the British Museum..

992wonderY
apr 6, 3:03 pm

>98 tardis: Oh my gosh!! Fourteen installments? I’ve read two and had to take notes on characters and plot lines. I’ve got a lot of catching up.

100sqdancer
apr 6, 3:57 pm

>99 2wonderY:

And don't forget the spin-off series The Time Police ; I think #5 comes out in June.

Not to mention the short stories. :-)

101tardis
apr 6, 7:40 pm

>99 2wonderY: >100 sqdancer: Some day I'll do a complete re-read of all the St. Mary's books and stories. They do make me laugh, but also sometimes my eyes leak a bit.

68. Lore of the Wilds by Analeigh Sbrana. An enchanted library, a fae lord with a cunning plan to get in, and a human woman who actually does it. I liked this, but the romancy bits were slightly annoying, the chosen one slightly hard to believe, and the cliffhanger ending ticked me off. I'll read book two if I notice when my library acquires it.

102tardis
apr 8, 11:14 pm

69. Stings and Stones by Jennifer Estep. An elemental assassin short story collection. Some prequels, some sequels, some just illuminating parts of the story within one of the books. Quick read.

70. A Desolation Called Peace by Arkady Martine. Audiobook, re-read. Mahit and Three Seagrass go to the edge of Teixcalaanli space to translate an untranslatable alien communication and, perhaps, stop a war. Back in the city, Eight Antidote, heir to the Emperor Nineteen Adze, is finding his way through politics and the city. Very good, still.

103Alexandra_book_life
apr 9, 1:46 am

>102 tardis: I really like Arkady Martine's writing! I hope there will be more novels.

104tardis
apr 10, 12:22 am

>103 Alexandra_book_life: Me, too!

71. The Siege of Burning Grass by Premee Mohamed. How far will a pacifist go to stop a war? This was brilliant. Too real in a fantasy sort of way - and engrossing. And for all the darkness, the end is not entirely without hope. Highly recommended for people with tolerance for war, dystopia, and blood.

105clamairy
Bewerkt: apr 10, 8:38 am

>104 tardis: Oh! I might have taken a bullet. I do like his writing style. I loved The Annual Migration of Clouds. (Which I'm sure was a BB from you a couple of years ago. I just looked and my library does not have this as an ebook. And I am already on the waiting list for when/if they acquire one.)

106tardis
apr 10, 12:30 pm

>105 clamairy: HER writing style :) and FYI, there's a sequel to The Annual Migration of Clouds coming this year. She lives here in Edmonton, is the writer-in-residence at Edmonton Public Library this year, and I follow her on Bluesky @premeemohamed.com. Also, her cat, Fiasco, has his own account @fiascothecat.bsky.social. It's always so gratifying to be able to recommend a local author.

107clamairy
apr 10, 4:55 pm

>106 tardis: LOL My mistake. I never looked up the author info. How cool that is for you that she's local!

108tardis
apr 12, 12:28 am

72. Under the Smokestrewn Sky by A. Deborah Baker (aka Seanan McGuire). Avery and Zib reach the end of the Impossible Road in the Up-And-Under series. Very much of a piece with the previous volumes. Choices and sacrifices must be made. I liked it, but it's not a series that I'll revisit.

109hfglen
apr 12, 10:35 am

>106 tardis: >107 clamairy: How even cooler that Fiasco has a blog as well!

110tardis
apr 13, 10:43 pm

73. A Stroke of the Pen : The Lost Stories by Terry Pratchett. Twenty short stories from very early in Sir Terry's career, written pseudonymously for various newspapers. Many thanks to the dedicated fans who tracked them all down because they're charming, and often quite funny. Loved them.

111tardis
Bewerkt: apr 14, 5:33 pm

74. Mislaid In Parts Half-Known by Seanan McGuire. Antsy is at Eleanor West's School, not exactly fitting in, but well enough. When threatened, though, she has to find a door so she and some other students can escape, and they end up back in the Store. Choices, decisions. Very good, as always.

112tardis
apr 15, 5:46 pm

75. The Raven Thief by Gigi Pandian. Points added for ethnically diverse cast, points removed for recipes at the end. Professional stage magician Tempest Raj now works for her family's secret room building company. When a recent client's ex-husband hits the table (dead) during a seance and Tempest's grandfather is the prime suspect, she begins investigating. Not terrible, but doesn't inspire me to read on in the series.

113tardis
Bewerkt: apr 16, 11:09 pm

76. The Assassins of Consequence by Marshall Ryan Maresca. Reread, as I just acquired the paperback. Veranix Calvert is a fourth year student, the college has instituted military training for mages, and, as the vigilante Thorn, Veranix is still aiming to take down drug lord Willem Fenmere. When a plan goes wrong, everyone and everything Veranix cares about is at risk. Non-stop action. Very good.

114Sakerfalcon
apr 17, 7:45 am

>113 tardis: Where would you recommend starting with Maresca's books? There look to be several interlinked series.

115tardis
Bewerkt: apr 17, 10:40 am

>114 Sakerfalcon: Go with the Maradaine Chronological Order or the Maradaine Publication Order series, both starting with Thorn of Dentonhill. I set up those series, and I'm probably going to revise them, because Maresca put a recommended reading order in the back of the paperback of Assassins. The subseries end up so overlapping and entangled towards the end that it makes more sense to ignore them.

116Sakerfalcon
apr 17, 10:52 am

Thank you! I have ended up with a random copy of Shield of the people, it looks like it will take some time to get that far into the series!

117tardis
apr 21, 7:24 pm

77. Toll of Honor by David Weber. A sort of interstitial novel, taking place during the events of Field of Dishonor (and possibly some others) and although Honor is in it, it's more about the other characters and the toll of war on the people who fight it. It was typical Weber - long infodumps and technobabble, interspersed with decent characters and action. For people who like the earlier Honor Harrington books.

118tardis
apr 23, 10:58 pm

78. The Conductors by Nicole Glover. Audiobook with excellent reader. Hetty and Benjy Rhodes were conductors on the Underground Railroad. Now settled in Philadelphia, they are still helping people and solving mysteries. Very good.

79. The Undertakers by Nicole Glover. Another mystery (or several linked mysteries) for Hetty and Benjy, now living in their own house and trying to get their funeral home business going. Also very good.

119tardis
apr 26, 12:38 am

80. Cargo of Eagles by Margery Allingham. A later Albert Campion mystery, set in the 1960s. A demon, missing treasure and pirates. Good stuff.

120tardis
apr 27, 8:05 pm

81. A Longer Fall
82. The Russian Cage
83. The Serpent in Heaven
84. All the Dead Shall Weep
All by Charlaine Harris. Gunny Rose series. Audiobooks. Re-reads. Set in the 1930s in an America that has broken apart. Lizbeth Rose is a "Gunny," who shoots things (and people) for a living. Not randomly, but bodyguarding or escorting expensive objects. I like this series.

85. The Grief of Stones by Katherine Addison. Audiobook, re-read. Thera Celehar, Witness for the Dead, takes on an apprentice and a series of new mysteries. Love it. Sad that I have to wait almost a year for the conclusion to this series.

121clamairy
apr 27, 8:53 pm

>120 tardis: Oh, the next Addison book will be the last one? I would be happy if she just kept writing these forever.

122tardis
apr 27, 11:28 pm

>121 clamairy: Well, the conclusion to the Cemeteries of Amalo sub-series with Celehar. I do hope she'll do more in this universe, though.

123Alexandra_book_life
apr 28, 3:21 am

>120 tardis: I loved The Grief of Stones too (and the rest of the books set in that universe, naturally). Yes, I am waiting for the next book...

124tardis
apr 28, 8:06 pm

86. Have Yourself A Deadly Little Christmas by Vicki Delany. Cozy mystery, set in December, about an amateur production of A Christmas Carol and murder. Reading a Christmas book in late April is weird. Not bad for a cozy. I like the characters.

125tardis
Gisteren, 6:58 pm

87. Cold Days by Jim Butcher. Audiobook, re-read. Harry is back from the dead and he has an assignment from Mab that he's not too sure about. Meanwhile, the Fomor are trying to invade and there's a threat to Harry's island. Good, as always.