July 2009

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52 Books in 52 Weeks

Jul 01, 2009

On The Road To Find Out (21, 22/52)

LaBravaCat Chaser Still on an Elmore Leonard roll, preparing for his new novel, Road Dogs. After finishing Riding the Rap, it was on to LaBrava and Cat Chaser. (Road Dogs puts a character from LaBrava in the center of the Road Dogs story.) I didn't remember how LaBrava ended from reading it three years ago, so I got myself another copy cheaply through paperbackswap.com for a re-read. And Cat Chaser just because it was also available, and I really liked the audiobook when I listened to that a couple of years ago.

So I read LaBrava, paying special attention to Cundo Rey, because he's the guy who will reappear in Road Dogs - only he ends up dead at the end of LaBrava. Ooooooh. Kaaaaaay. Let's see how Leonard will resolve that in the subsequent story. He's a smart writer; I'm sure he'll make it worth my while.

Anyway, I had a good time with both of these, and feel well prepared for the Road Dogs now. Take me there!

Jun 17, 2009

A Long Long Way To Happy (20/52)

The Price of Salt Re-read this one for the third or fourth time: The Price of Salt by Patricia Highsmith, or as my old copy says, by Claire Morgan. Highsmith published this under a different name, because it's a love story between two women, and shockingly has a happy ending - keep in mind this was published in the early Fifties, 1952 if amazon.com is correct.

Jun 04, 2009

Almost Paradise (17, 18, 19/52)

Paradise Pronto Riding the Rap Elmore Leonard has a new novel out, Road Dogs. I've been reading other Leonards as preparation for it - one of the protagonists in Road Dogs first appears in Riding the Rap, and Riding the Rap is the sequel to Pronto, and the guy who had those two books listed on paperbackswap.com also had another Leonard called Mr. Paradise, so I ordered and breezed through that too. I'm in a Leonard mood. I could read ten more. And maybe I should - I'm behind on my reading. It's almost midpoint of the year, where I ought to clock in at 26 books. I am not sure I'll make that. Hrmpf.

May 28, 2009

The Dark Of My Moon (16/52)

Finding Moon I've read quite a few of Tony Hillerman novels, but I don't think I had read any that wasn't set in the Four Corners and the world of the Navajo Tribal Police. This one, Finding Moon, is set in 1975 South East Asia. Moon Mathias, a Colorado newspaper journalist, finds out that his brother Ricky, who ran a helicopter company in Cambodia, has died in a crash. Then his mother has a heart attack en route to Manila - turns out that Ricky had a baby daughter, and she was going to bring the child to the US. With her in the hospital, Moon travels to the Philippines, Vietnam, and Cambodia, just as the US are losing the war, and Pol Pot's Khmer Rouge are taking over Cambodia. It's not a murder mystery like most of Hillerman's other novels, but it's a very gripping story, and I kept thinking about it during the day, when I was away from the book. What would happen next? When did the Americans start evacuating? What date was the fall of Saigon? And of course they all thought the reports of the Khmer Rouge killings were exaggerated - it really was just too fantastical, a country killing off all their academics, city people and white collar workers. Great job, setting it all in context.

May 26, 2009

I Got Dreams, Dreams To Remember (15/52)

Dreams from my Father Barack Obama tells good stories, and asks good questions. in Dreams from my Father, he tells the story of his upbringing, his family, his roots in Kansas, Indonesia, Hawaii, and Kenya, of how his parents met and split up again, how he grew up in Indonesia with his mother and stepfather, and then in Hawaii with his maternal grandparents, and how he hardly knew his father. Really the quintessential pursuit of the American dream, when you think about it: his mother's parents moving away from Kansas to make a better life or themselves, his father doing the same, coming to Hawaii on his scholarship from Kenya, and Barack trying to figure out what it all means, where he fits, who he is, and what he is supposed to do with his life, and how to make it meaningful.

I keep thinking of the new Star Trek movie, where young Spock is told by his father, "You'll always be a child of two worlds. The question you face is: which part will you choose?" Made me want to shake my head and gnash my teeth. Such a terribly illogic way to frame this! Why would you have to choose just one, and discard the other? It's not an "either or" question! You can take the best of both, merge them, and make them into something new, whole, superior.

Obama seems to be pretty good at that.

May 16, 2009

Everything Means Less Than Zero (14/52)

Down in the Zero I forget where I came up with Andrew Vachss, or who recommended his books. His prose is very very clipped - extra noir, in a manner of speaking. I gather that Down in the Zero is one in a long-running series, maybe the sixth or eighth or tenth. I enjoyed the writing, and found the characters interesting, but didn't care much for the plot or all the spanking. Not bad, it's just not for me.

May 13, 2009

We're Livin' In The Future, None Of This Has Happened Yet (13/52)

The Man in the High Castle Philip K. Dick's Man in the High Castle presents an alternate history. I love those what-ifs! In this story, Germany and Japan have won World War II. The USA is broken up into three pieces - the East Coast is under German rule, the West Coast under Japanese rule, and the mountains and midwest are semi-independent. The majority of the story is set in San Francisco, which appealed to me very much. I think this is the first time I've read anything by Dick, and I really enjoyed his language. I liked the whole story - until I got to the end, which puzzled me. I still don't get it. Does that mean I didn't like it? No, not really, I did. Can I recommend it? I'm not sure. I guess you'll have to decide for yourselves.

Apr 30, 2009

Straight Into Darkness, Out Over The Line (12/52)

Chasing Darkness Awww, Elvis! I can't believe I'm through with you!

I finished "Chasing Darkness", the most recent entry in Robert Crais' Elvis Cole/Joe Pike series, and now I have to wait and find out what he'll publish next. Snivel.

Apr 22, 2009

Take My Breath Away (11/52)

Breathers People, you've got to check this one out! Breathers: A Zombie's Lament is the first published novel by Bay Area writer S. G. Browne. I know, I know - you are SO over zombies. But trust me on this one, this is different. For one, the zombies are the good guys in this story of Andy, who reanimated through no fault of his own after a fatal car accident.

Andy's new not-quite-life includes residing in the wine cellar of his parents' house, with his mom in complete denial and his father angry about the inconvenience his son is causing, Animal Control picking him up and depositing him in an SPCA kennel when he causes trouble, and a support group for the undead where he meets Rita and falls in love.

The back cover bills it as a romantic zombie comedy: a rom-zom-com. I like this label. I like this book. I like the Santa Cruz setting. I like that you can follow Andy's diary and be a part of the community at Undead Anonymous. And I like that FOX Searchlight has bought the film rights, with producers Mason Novick and Diablo Cody.

What are you waiting for? Go out and buy a copy already. Or if you're Bay Area local, meet the author at a signing in California in May or June, or at Comic-Con in July.

PS: Oh yeah. Hat tips to Shannon Page, Cliff Brooks, and the Commander in Chief who all mentioned "Breathers". All of us can't be wrong ... well - we could. But we aren't. So go on and read "Breathers" already.

Apr 16, 2009

That's My Blood Down There (10/52)

Bloodline Wait, am I really all caught up with Repairman Jack? Man oh man, what a cliffhanger to end Bloodline!

Oh. Alright. The wonderful web site Stop, You're Killing Me! lists thrillers by author, series, and characters (and locations, jobs of the characters, and a historical index - it's really a fantastic site!) and lets me know that there is one more published Repairman Jack novel following Bloodline. But it's only out in hardcover so far, and I usually wait for the paperback.

Anyway. Bloodline. This one left a few loose ends that bother me. What is up with the mysterious author who knows so much about the Repairman and his past? Why didn't we see more of Gina and Vicky? And what's going to become of the pregnant girl who is carrying the bloodline carrier, so much like Rosemary's Baby? In some respects, this seemed like half a novel.

And the showdown keeps approaching and approaching without ever getting there. I want it to be here already, just to get it over with. I feel in limbo.

I suppose this is a nice problem to have for a reader.

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