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What We've Been Reading
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What have you been reading this December?
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Andrea
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Dec 01, 2024 01:46PM

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Swiftly taking advantage of an ebook special offer and in keeping with the season, I am now going to be reading 'The Eight Reindeer of the Apocalypse,' by Tom Holt. I know next to nothing about Tom Holt, beyond the fact that I rather enjoyed the recent TV adaptation of his book 'The Portable Door' and that 'everybody' (the universal arbiter of good taste) says that 'he's very good and a bit like Douglas Adams.'
We shall see... :-)

I've been meaning to read that for ages.
I did Kingdom of Dance and started The Dark Prophecy; re-reading A Wrinkle in Time.

What 'everybody' means by that is that Tom Holt writes funny SF, more than that he is stylistically like Douglas Adams 😝



Finished reading Mordred, Bastard Son...which turned out to be a lot better than I expected, I really love the Druidic setting...of course now I'll never know how it ends since the remaining two books in the trilogy will likely never be written. Which just reinforces my "don't buy a series unless its already finished" thing I'm starting to get into. Which is terrible too because how can an author finish a series if he isn't getting any sales from the first few books? Ah well. There's a million valid reasons to not continue a series, not sure what the case was for this one.
Back to seeing if I can fit a few more Kris Longknife books in with Kris Longknife's Successor: Grand Admiral Santiago on Alwa Station by Mike Shepherd
Also made my near to last visit to the library before the snow melts next year and nabbed:
Orcs et Gobelins T26: Grimoire
La Bataille des cités-états
Frank Herbert's Dune: The Graphic Novel, Book 3: The Prophet


This is Blake Crouch's debut novel from 2011, re-released in 2024.
In this thriller, a good portion of the American population has gone insane, and these crazed people are out to murder everyone else. A family of four 'normal' people goes on the run.
Exciting adventure story. 3.5 stars
My review: https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...

Starting on The Veiled Throne by Ken Liu which clocks in at an impressed 980+ pages, but not quite the 1k I need for the BINGO, that will be the next book in quartet. But to get to that one, need to get through this one first.



This is Blake Crouch's debut novel from 2011, re-released in 2024.
In this thriller, a good portion of the American po..."
I have a few Blake Crouch novels in my TBR list. I haven't read any of his stuff, but I did enjoy the Wayward Pines TV series, based on his trilogy.

https://www.goodreads.com/topic/show/...

I've now just started The Ghost King What is there to say so early on but...ddrrraagooonn zommmbbiiiiee!!! 😝

For a complete change of genre, and because I like Ms Bujold's writing, I shall now start The Curse of Chalion

That finally freed up my eReader so I could start An Empyreal Retinue by Josiah Bancroft. I debated who badly I wanted to read these short stories but decided since the books were from the library, at least I could invest in and keep these stories. Plus, I'm a completionist and this will finish the Books of Babel series.





I finished Pellucidar, which I didn't think was as good as the first novel in the series. Bit it's still ERB, so it's certainly not bad.




Unbelievable: https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...


A gathering of a dysfunctional family and friends experience drama and supernatural entities at a country mansion.
Fun debut for a trilogy. 3.5 stars
My review: https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...


Unbelievable: https://www.goodreads.com/review/show..."
I like this author too. 😊

Though it was 980+ pages it wasn't quite enough for my Bingo slot. But before I do tackle my 1k+ tome, I've got another Bingo slot to fill with The Book of Three by Lloyd Alexander. This will be my New to You Author and I'm really enjoying it already, being based on Celtic lore.

Now to tackle that 1k page book before I run out of time. Starting on Speaking Bones by Ken Liu
Also going to squeak in one more Kris Longknife entry, Boot Recruit by Mike Shepherd since its a short story. This will be the first year I fail to finish the "epic" series I picked to read that year. But with about 5 more novels to go, it ain't gonna happen in slightly over a week before end of year.



Your finished reading list looks very much like my to-read list. Not the specific books but the series :) And I have none of them planned for next year but really do want to get to them some day!

I'm looking forward to the Black Company book, too.

Anyway, having sent the smug little reindeer back to the North Pole earlier than expected and not wanting to start anything new this year, I am now rereading an old favourite.
I was gifted a book for Christmas back in... 1986? (I think) called 'The Christmas Reader' a miscellany of Christmas related 'stuff' (the proper technical terminology : -) ). short stories, poetry, excerpts from famous Xmas big hitters etc. I have gone back to it on and off ever since at this time of year.
Since I am struggling a bit to feel 'Christmassy' I thought it might do the trick. should it fail, I do have a couple of bottles of St Peter's Christmas Ale and a bottle of Famous Grouse Scotch that will likely help. :-)


Anyway, I'll get there. I unexpectedly received a small Marks and Spencer gift voucher (they are a posh supermarket over here) and traded it in for some high end mince pies. Add some Christmas music and a scotch and I'll be as Chrismassy as Santa. :-)
Hmmm you probably don't have mince pies over there do you? Big Christmas tradition here. They are small individual short crust pastry tarts/pies filled with a sort of dark brown jam(jelly) that has sultanas, raisins, orange peel, bits of glace cherry in it, as well as a little brandy and spices like cinnamon and nutmeg.

And I have seen a lot of what's going on in your neck of the woods. News avoidance can be a form of self-preservation at times. I don't watch American news very much anymore because it's all one big ol' pile of propaganda, no matter which channel is on. Plus it's depressing. If one is striving for Christmas spirit, it won't be found in the news!





My grandmother once told me the origin of the name. She said they used to sit the pies on the windowsill to cool, but had to shoo the flies away :)

I found this for the shoofly pie, which maybe makes a bit more sense, because people used to cool all pies on their windowsills and all would require fly shoo-ing so why would only this one get the name. Shoo fly pie sounds similar to the Canadian "Sugar Pie".
"According to historian William Woys Weaver, the molasses had been named after an iconic circus animal (Shoofly the Boxing Mule), who had been named after a popular song written during the Civil War (“Shoo Fly, Don't Bother Me”). The hearty pie-cake fusion remains popular in Pennsylvania's Amish country."
Books mentioned in this topic
An Empyreal Retinue (other topics)Eternal Life (other topics)
The Black Cauldron (other topics)
Leviathan (other topics)
Tombland (other topics)
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Authors mentioned in this topic
Lloyd Alexander (other topics)Dara Horn (other topics)
Sarah A. Hoyt (other topics)
Sarah A. Hoyt (other topics)
Iain M. Banks (other topics)
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