Update Post #2 to Candid Cover’s TBR Wipeout Challenge!

Summer 2018 TBR Wipeout ChallengeSo today is the day I’m supposed to give another update to The Summer TBR Wipeout Challenge, hosted by The Candid Cover.  The last couple of weeks have been pretty busy, so I only got four more books read.  That’s okay though, because I did get some writing done, and I did get one of the books on my TBR shelf read.  Yay!

So over the last two weeks since my last update, I read these books:

  • Summer Days and Summer Nights – Various authors
  • 1,000 Years, 1,000 People – several authors
  • Red Queen – Victoria Aveyard
  • Harbor Me – Jaqueline Woodson

Only Red Queen was on my TBR plans to read at the beginning of this challenge.  I signed up to check this one out of the library in May, and finally got the chance to read it last week.

I reviewed two of the books last week, plan on publishing the review for Harbor Me tomorrow, and plan on reviewing Red Queen on September 20th (I generally review a new release book early in the week and an older book later in the week, so the older books are backed up a bit).

For the next two weeks, I’m 2nd on the waiting list for Ever the Brave and Crown of Midnight, so I may end up getting to read those.  I have an ARC for My Mother, Barack Obama, and the Last Stand of the Angry White Man that I plan on reviewing next Monday, and I’m working on reading George Whitefield: Evangelist for God and Empire; I hope to review that two Monday’s from now.  I also was chosen for Give the Dark My Love by Penguin’s First to Read program, so I’ll probably read that soon as well.

See you in two weeks!  I can’t believe this challenge is almost over!

1,000 Years, 1,000 People, and 18 Years Late

1,000 Years, 1,000 People Cover1,000 Years, 1,000 People is a book that ranks the 1,000 most influential people of the last millennium.  I just finished reading the book this week; you might be thinking “aren’t we 18 years into the new millennium?”  Well, we are, but I finally got around to reading this book.

This isn’t a book that you really sit down and read all in one sitting, like a lot of the books that I’ve reviewed here.  Even though I bought this book years ago, it was misplaced until just recently.  I decided to start reading it earlier this year.  I typically would only read about ten entries a day.

This book ranks the people who had the most lasting influence over the last millennium.  Since it’s hard to judge people’s lasting influence if they’re still alive, there are some people that were really influential in the 1900s that didn’t make the book (still, 136 people did).  There are people represented in this book from every century, although 417 people that lived in the 1800s made the list, so it’s still fairly skewed towards people that lived more recently.

Even though 1,000 Years, 1,000 People does represent worldwide influence, the book is still fairly heavily skewed towards the United States (267 of the people in the book lived there).  Then again, the US has been the most influential country in the world since about World War II.  This book was published in 1998, which was right after the Cold War had seemingly ended and was before 9/11.  It was a time when the United States seemed to have an unprecedented influence over the world.

Each entry has the person’s name, the years they lived, a short caption about them, and an approximately 150 word blurb about what they’ve done.  The only exception is Fernão Lopes, who was ranked 780.  Instead of a caption saying why he was important, there is a footnote notation after his name.  The footnote reads “1. father of the footnote”.  Each entry is fairly witty like this, as well as being informative.

With 1,000 people on the list, there’s bound to be some people that you don’t recognize.  The highest ranked people are bound to be people that you recognize: Johannes Gutenberg, Martin Luther, William Shakespeare, etc.  At the bottom of the list, there were a lot of people that I had never heard of, like Bernard Cornfield and Joseph Bramah.  Even at the bottom of the list, almost everybody did something that you’ll be familiar with, like inventing the stethoscope or disposable diapers.

All sorts of people are represented in this book.  There are artists, inventors, politicians, and even some sports heroes.  It seemed to be a nice balance.

1,000 Years, 1,000 People is a book that you can read and learn something interesting from.  If you’re interested in learning about a wide variety of historical figures, but don’t want to read a ton of biographies or peruse dry entries in Wikipedia, you might find this book worth reading.

Wonderful Legend News!

Legend coverIf you read this book for nearly any length of time at all, then you’ll discover that I love Legend, and Marie Lu’s books in general.  I’ve probably mentioned at least one of her books every week that I’ve been active on this blog.  Well, today I heard some WONDERFUL Legend news while I was on my break at work.  There is still a chance that there will be a Legend movie!

I’m certainly not an expert on how all this works, but from what I understand, a movie studio initially buys the rights to a movie for a certain period of time.  At that point, they can either make the movie… or not.  CBS Films originally bought the rights to the Legend movie, but nothing ever came from it.  BCDF Pictures now has the rights to the movie.  So evidently, there is still enough interest for this to potentially happen.

I so hope this happens.  This is a wonderful book and a movie would allow more people to hear about it.  I had never heard of Divergent until I saw the movie trailer… and the book is so much better than the movie.  The Legend fanfiction category over at AO3 is getting a little lonely.

That leads me to the other Legendy part of my day.  It really was a great day for me.  I participated in Camp NaNoWriMo this year, with a goal of 20,000 words.  I also decided to do a fun little (okay, little is a little bit of a misnomer) challenge over at the Archive of Our Own Writers Group over on Facebook.  They had a little game called “fandom roulette” where they would roll a specific type of story for me to write.  I was challenged to write a gen fusion fic in my current fandom.

Gen fics are those that don’t have a love relationship, fusion fics are those where characters are written into another fandom as if they’ve always been there.  So for my challenge (and Camp NaNoWriMo) I wrote a story where Day and June are born in the Divergent world and they both end up joining Dauntless.  On Tuesday night, I won Camp NaNoWriMo with this story, My New Best Friend.

I published chapter 1 on Wednesday morning.  Within 24 hours, I had 50 hits.  I have absolutely no idea where all those hits came from.  As a comparison, my most successful Legend fanfic, Like Normal People, only has gotten 757 hits in 2 1/2 years.  The story with my most hits ever is Selfless, which is in the Divergent fandom, and it has a grand total of 2357 hits, but that story is almost 3 1/2 years old.

So today was a wonderful day, with both the movie news and my fanfic doing so well.  It made my day at work seem to fly by, I was so happy.  Hopefully, if you like Legend as well, the exciting movie news will actually result in some sort of movie!

Don’t Let Summer Days and Summer Nights Pass You By!

Summer Days and Summer Nights CoverLast week’s Top Ten Tuesday topic was on short stories, and I was drawn by Summer Days and Summer Nights.  It was recommended by more than one reader.  Fortunately, they had a copy at the library that I just happened to be going to that evening.  So I picked up the book and decided to read all of the wonderful stories inside.

One of the things that I found interesting about this book is that it had books by authors that I was already familiar with, like Veronica Roth and Cassandra Clare.  The book also has several stories written by authors that I had heard about, but hadn’t had the chance to read before.

I was originally planning on reviewing Throne of Glass today, but since we’re in the middle of summer now and the season is flying by, I postponed that review until September.  Maybe by that time the library will have some of the other books in that series available for me to read.

Summer Days and Summer Nights has a wide variety of genres of stories to choose from, written by authors that tend to write in a variety of different styles.  Some you might like more than others.

In addition to different genres, there are different kinds of relationships represented here.  Some end up happy, some sad; some stories involve same-sex couples, others involve people of color.  Representation seems to be a big deal today in the bookish world; while you can’t represent everybody in twelve stories, it’s not a completely white, straight collection of stories.

Here are some of my favorites:

  • “Inertia” by Veronica Roth:  I don’t think there’s anything that she’s written that I didn’t like, including this short story (okay, I didn’t like chapter 50 of Allegiant, but I try to pretend that never happened).  I was crying at the top of page 202 (I read the 2016 hardback edition).  I actually had to stop reading for a minute to just cry.  It was just so lovely.  And sad.

     

    “It was a good story, right?” he said.  “Our story, I mean.”
    “The best.”

    I’m tearing up just reading and writing those lines.  Oh, and there were a few more pages after this one.  The ending was wonderful too.

  • “A Thousand Ways This Could Go Wrong” by Jennifer E. Smith:  This was a lovely story about a girl who had a crush on a boy with Asperger’s all year at school, and then finally runs into him during the summer and plays basketball with him.  Will things change when she finds out that he has Asperger’s?  You’ll just have to read this story.  It’s really sweet.
  • “The Map of Tiny Perfect Things” by Lev Grossman:  This is another sweet story.  In this story, our POV character is reliving the same day, August 4th, over and over again, like in Groundhog Day.  At the end of the story, we find out why he had been living the same day over and over and over again, and it’s just perfect.

Summer Days and Summer Nights was a wonderful collection of stories, written by a lot of authors that you are probably familiar with.  I hope you get the chance to check this one out before summer slips away.  I enjoyed these stories so much that I already hope to review its companion book, My True Love Gave to Me, on December 6th.

Books with Sensory Reading Memories

Today’s Top Ten Tuesday theme (hosted by That Artsy Reader Girl) is Books with Sensory Reading Memories.  I don’t know about anybody else, but I tend to forget where I am most of the time that I’m reading.  There are a few books that I can tell you where I was when I was reading them.  So here they go:

Divergent coverDivergent:  I was working at a hotel when I read Divergent.  I would read it at lunch.  After I got through the first 50 pages or so, I was hooked.  I was answering the phones that day, so between phone calls I would do paperwork or whatever on the computer and muse about Four and Tris.  When I got home that evening, I finished Divergent, then started on Insurgent.  I had the next day off work, so I spent the next day reading the rest of Insurgent and Allegiant… then went to bed crying at 4 AM after finishing Allegiant.  I got into fanfiction the day after that, because I just could not accept the ending.

Divergente: This is the Spanish translation of Divergent, but it has different memories for me.  This was the very first book that I read in Spanish (I’ve since read 11 books in Spanish, not including rereads).  I was still working at the hotel, and I would read it at lunch, highlighting all of the words that I didn’t know (on my 11th book, I highlighted a lot fewer words).  When I read in Spanish (this also happens to me with German, and a little bit with Russian) I get into “Spanish mode”.  I start processing the words in Spanish without translation.

While I was in the lunch room reading Divergente, one of the lunchroom workers started wiping off my table.  Without thinking, I said “gracias.”  Not the most elegant use of Spanish, I would say, but my mind was so into the Spanish-language book that I automatically responded in Spanish.  The worker was hispanic, at least.  Not that that would have mattered, since everybody knows what that means.

Dragons of Autumn Twilight coverDragons of Autumn Twilight: This is the first book that my boyfriend ever gave to me.  We had just met a few months before that, and I took it to my parent’s house over Christmas vacation when I was in college.  I remember sitting in my old bed reading this book.  I stayed up late, because I couldn’t put it down.  The weather was cold outside, but I turned up the heater in my old room and it was warm inside.  I’ve read a ton of books from this series, and it all started with this one.  And I kept the boy that gave me the book too.  😉  We got married two years later.  Our kids are named after characters from these books.

Legend coverLegend: This book marks a transition in my life.  I took this book on my second trip to Colorado Springs.  My first trip here was a whirlwind trip to see if we might like it here, on my second trip, my husband had already taken a job here, and I was taking the kids so we could find a place to live.  I finished the book on this house-hunting trip, so I spent a lot of time in the hotel reading this (I couldn’t put it down).  When I got home I had to track down the other two books.  If you read this blog for very long then you’ll discover that I love this series.

One of the notable things that happened on this trip was my boy left Kitty at the ticketing counter.  The stuffed animal that he had been carrying everywhere with him since he was two years old.  We were going through security when I realized it was missing.  We had to leave the security line and track it down.  Fortunately, we made the plane on time, but just barely.

Legend (Spanish) coverLegend in Spanish also brings back memories.  I was visiting my family in 2015 for Christmas vacation, and I left my physical copies of Legend at home, yet I really wanted to read this book (I bought a copy of the set for my niece for Christmas because she liked Divergent, and so I guess that’s where that came from).  So I downloaded the book in Spanish, because I didn’t see the point in buying a book that I already had.  I read it on December 31st.

I’ve never read a book in Spanish this quickly.  It was cold outside, and we were driving through the snow to visit my brother-in-law, but it was so snowy that we had to turn around, because the car wasn’t going to be able to make it.  We had to visit them a few days later.

Little House on the Prairie CoverLittle House on the Prairie: I read these books a very long time ago, but I still remember reading it.  Well, I’ve reread these multiple times.  I remember sitting in front of my window at my parent’s house as a kid, reading it on a cold or rainy day.  Sometimes I would read this in bed in my old bedroom with the pink walls.  I had this blue boxed set with all the books in it.  They were such good books.

I also read this to my daughter, so I have memories of sitting with her on the couch with these books.  We spent a lot of time reading these books together when she was little.  I remember reading The Long Winter with her, thinking how hard it must have been.  It felt different than when I read it as a kid.

My Side of the Mountain CoverMy Side of the Mountain: This was a book that my husband read to us as a family.  We would sit on our black couch at our old house (a few years before we moved to Colorado Springs) and he would read it to me and our kids.  It’s a pretty good book.

I remember thinking about how strange it would be to run off into the mountains and just live there, by yourself, fending for yourself like that.  I guess there are other books in this series, but we never got around to reading them together.  Maybe I should reread this series some day and review it on my blog.

Arguing With Idiots: This book has slightly different memories attached to it.  I remember reading it when my daughter was at soccer practice.  My boy was about two, and I remember after my daughter was done with soccer practice, I put the book away and we were going to my car.  My boy ran out into the street as we were going to get into the car.  No bueno.  He was fine, but not running out into the street is a lesson that everybody needs to learn.

It might have actually been one of Glenn Beck’s other books (he has several like this), but I distinctly remember reading one of these books while my daughter was at soccer practice and later watching my little boy wander out in the street on our way home.

Island of the Blue Dolphins CoverIsland of the Blue Dolphins: This is another book that my dh read to me and the kids while we were sitting around our black couch when we used to live in Arizona.  The first part of the story is so tragic… the main character had a little brother and something happened to him.  My boy was still really little at the time, and I just remember thinking about what if something like that had happened to him.  I couldn’t help but cry about that little boy, especially since this was based on a true story.  I later learned that this lady had trouble learning to communicate once she was rescued, so I’m not sure if that part was true or not.

Flame in the Mist CoverFlame in the Mist: This book I have more recent memories with, because I read it this year.  It didn’t take me very long to read, because I couldn’t put it down unless I was forced to, but I remember reading it at work, looking at my clock, and having to go back to work, leaving it right at the part where Marika was in the hot springs with Ōkami, and he didn’t know that she was a girl yet.  I had to leave it right there, and I kept thinking about the book while I was helping people at the self-checkout.

So if you’re ever wondering what Walmart workers are thinking about while they’re helping you… they could be thinking about the most wonderful book that they’re in the middle of.  Or they could be writing their next short story or novel.  At least that’s what I do when it’s not very busy.  When it gets busy I have to concentrate on customers, but there’s a lot of time when it’s very rote, and I just think of books (either the ones I’m reading or the ones I’m writing).

So there’s ten books that I have memories associated with outside of the actual book itself.  What books do you have memories associated with?

The House of One Thousand Eyes is an Important Book

The House of One Thousand Eyes coverI was recently given the opportunity to read The House of One Thousand Eyes by Michelle Barker, in exchange for an honest review.  This is an important book to read, especially if you are unfamiliar with the days when the Soviet Union and East Germany existed.

The House of One Thousand Eyes is set in East Germany in the year 1983.  Back in those days, there were informants in East Germany everywhere.  You never knew who you could trust.  The German secret police, or Stasi, could scoop you up and take you to prison, or make you disappear completely.  As an aside, I recently was watching a video on security and privacy where they mentioned that the Stasi would sometimes go into a person’s house and move things around just to mess with them and make them think they were crazy.  This was a place where real repression happened.

Our protagonist, Lena, spent some time in a mental hospital prior to the beginning of the book.  Her uncle, Erich, is a well-known writer.  One day, he just disappears.  Throughout the book, Lena tries to find out what happened to him.  We follow her investigation as she works as a cleaning lady at Stasi headquarters.  As we read the book, we find out what she found.

The book was enjoyable, but it wasn’t my favorite.  I’m sure that there are people that will like this book more than I did, but I probably will not reread this book.  This book is a book that is important more than anything else.  I can’t think of any other fiction written during this time period, but I believe that it is more important than ever for people to know what happened there.

What I Liked About the Book

The book was well-written, and the characters were interesting.  From what I know about East Germany at the time, I think that the things that happened (people disappearing, people ordering things and not getting them for eons, etc.) were realistically portrayed.  I liked the use of German, and especially German slang used in the country at the time.  The book had some suspenseful parts where I found myself trying to read as fast as possible because I wanted to find out what happened.

What I Didn’t Like About the Book

I think that I’m the only person that I’ve seen review this book so far that didn’t think that it was the greatest thing since sliced bread.  While I did like it, I didn’t think it was as über-wonderful as some people did.  The main character, Lena, didn’t exactly make the smartest decisions.  I find it difficult to believe that someone growing up in East Germany would be as dense as she was when it came to asking questions about her uncle after he disappeared.  As she was investigating what happened to her uncle, she seemed to be a little more foolhearty than most people in her situation would be.  When she has to make an important decision about her future towards the end of the book, I find it difficult to believe that she makes the decision that she did.

Trigger Warnings

While this book is being marketed as a YA book, I don’t believe that this book is really appropriate for younger YA readers.  Lena is sexually assaulted on multiple occasions, by the same person; the attacks get worse throughout the book.  I didn’t particularly like this part of the book, although I do realize that it is probably a realistic portrayal of the way things could have happened.

Overall…

The House of One Thousand Eyes is a book that you should consider reading, especially if you are unfamiliar with the time before the Berlin Wall fell down.  We are in a time period where our privacy is becoming less and less and the power of the state is increasing.  It’s good to read books like this in order to understand what could happen if a country became this powerful and overbearing.  While it wasn’t the best book I’ve read this month so far, it was good for me to have read it.

Another book about East Germany that you may be interested in is Deep Undercover by Jack Barsky.  That book is nonfiction and deals with an East German spy that went to America, but it’s also a good book to read as he continually had to deal with his handlers back in the Communist world.  That book was one of my favorites from last year.

This book will be released on September 11th, but it is available for pre-order now.

Use of Force Was Not My Favorite

I recently read Brad Thor’s Use of Force, which is a good book, but was not one of my favorites.  The Kindle version of the book was $1.99, which was a good deal.  I’m not sure if I would have wanted to pay the normal full price for this book, but it did provide a few good hours of entertainment.

The book deals with terrorism, ISIS, and the recent refugee crisis, which makes the story interesting.  I enjoyed the main storyline of Use of Force, where the main character, Scot Harvath, was trying to track down the bad guys.  This part of the story was paced well, and was enjoying.  I also liked how the story took place partly during Burning Man, which made the book even more timely.

I normally enjoy Brad Thor’s books, but this one was not my favorite.  There were several chapters devoted to a battle that Harvath and his team fought against some of the terrorists, which some people might find interesting, but it didn’t really capture my interest.  There was another subplot where a good-guy-turned-bad-guy tried to go after some of Scot Harvath’s coworkers; it didn’t particularly grab my attention.  There was another subplot regarding a medical condition with one of the regular characters; it wasn’t resolved in this book, but if you read the entire series, it might add interest to the series.

Use of Force is an interesting book; however, if I was only going to read one Brad Thor book, it wouldn’t be my first choice.  I tend to enjoy his books, but there are other books that he’s done that I have liked more.

Favorite Fanfiction Stories (Top Ten Tuesday)

Today’s Top Ten Tuesday Topic (sponsored by That Artsy Reader Girl) is “Favorite Novellas/Short Stories”.  I don’t really read that many professionally published short stories or novellas; if I didn’t stray from the topic, it would basically be “novellas and short stories I have read”.  It wouldn’t even have ten stories on it.  Most of the novellas and short stories that I have read are fanfiction, so I will be writing about my favorite fanfiction stories today instead.

I typically only read fanfiction in a few fandoms, mostly books written by Veronica Roth and Marie Lu, but here are the ones that I like a lot, in no particular order.

Young Elites coverYoung Elites Fandom:

  • The White Rose by Idestroyedtheworldoops – at 84,873 words, this is not a novella, but it’s the only Young Elites fanfic that I read and liked.  It is an interesting take on the story: what if Adelina met Magiano as she escaped from prison and never became part of the Dagger society?  It diverges from canon in a couple of other ways (Violetta is gay and never gets with Sergio) but I liked it overall.  I’m currently working on a Young Elites fanfic that will probably be around the same size, but it’s a completely different concept.

Legend coverLegend fandom:

  • Detention Legend by readandwrite – this is a cute little AU where Day and June meet in detention at high school.  The writing isn’t perfect, but it’s probably the best one in this fandom that I’ve read up on Archive of Our Own (AO3, which is where I mostly read, and exclusively publish, fanfics).  Other than the ones I’ve written, but I’m not one to judge my own fics (because if I didn’t like it, I wouldn’t write it).

Divergent coverDivergent fandom:

  • Divergent FourTris One-Shots & Short Stories by FourTrisHEA – these are several short Divergent stories.  I particularly like the Camping & Roughing it chapters, where Four is a professor with a crush on Tris… and who does he just happen to run into on a camping trip with his friends?
  • The Third Pedrad by bornafluffychild – the story says that it’s not finished, but it is.  This is also not a novella (123,204 words).  It is a story where Tris grows up in Dauntless as the adopted daughter of Hana Pedrad, so she’s basically Zeke and Uriah’s sister.  She meets Four (of course) and when they start to like each other, that brings up some complications, since Zeke is very protective of his sister.
  • Becoming Determinant – Tobias’ Story by Windchimed – the first book in the Determinant series.  This one follows the events of Divergent from Tobias’ perspective.  It may have been part of my inspiration for Saving Adelinetta, a Young Elites fanfic that I’m writing from Magiano’s perspective (still a work in progress).  Becoming Determinant is 132,807 words.
  • Determinant: One Choice Will Change Everything by Windchimed – this is basically an alternative to Allegiant.  If you hated the ending (darn you chapter 50!) then this is a much better one.  Novel length, 165,005 words.
  • Prior Rings by Windchimed – I haven’t read this one in a while, but I remember enjoying it.  You should probably read her Determinant story before this one.  This is also not a novella (150,125 words).
  • Online Friends (Divergent) by FourTrisHEA – this is a cute little novella where Four and Tris meet in a Game of Thrones chat room.  It was my inspiration for another work in progress I have, Gamers.  But you should read this one if you like Divergent fanfiction.
  • An Unexpected Christmas Eve by springberry – this is a short story where Four and Tris get stuck in a cabin together on Christmas Eve.  Springberry is also the author of the slow burn story Discoveries, which is currently unfinished.
  • Shopping List by Windchimed – this is a cute short story where Four and Tris meet in a grocery store.

I’m sure that I could list more good fanfics in the Divergent fandom, but these were the ones that I had bookmarked or stood out in my memory.  There are also a couple of good Legend fanfics that I found on fanfiction.net (I think) but I can’t remember which ones, and I’ve found that, even though there’s more stories over there, there’s also a lot more junk, which is why I read on AO3 for the most part.

Postscript:  Even though I chose to write about fanfiction this week, I have to mention that I actually did read a short story last week, and it was A.  MAZ.  ING.  I bought the paperback version of Warcross, which has Life After Legend in it.  It is worth the $.50 a page that I paid for it (I already have Warcross in hardback, so I pretty much bought the paperback only for those 21 pages).  If you love the Legend trilogy and haven’t read it, it’s totally worth buying.

Echoes Worth Reading Reading Reading

I recently had the opportunity to read Echoes, by Alice Reeds, in exchange for an honest review.  I enjoyed it quite a bit.  It is different than a lot of books out there, but that doesn’t make it any less readable.

Our main characters, Fiona and Miles, are going on an internship in Berlin.  They never have liked each other, and Fiona, at least, is not very excited at the prospect of working with him.  That’s where everything goes awry.  They find themselves stranded on a desert island with each other.  Alone.  Or do they?

The story goes back and forth between two timelines.  In one, Fiona and Miles are stranded on the deserted island.  In the other, the two are running for their lives in Berlin.  While I was reading it, I started to ask myself, how do these two timelines intersect?  After reading this book, I actually still don’t know.  The answer is still mysterious.

Over the course of the story (in both timelines) Fiona and Miles start to actually *gasp* like each other.  As they get to know each other, they discover that they’re both not quite what the other person expected.  I found that Miles was the more reasonable person here, although I can see where Fiona was coming from.  I won’t go over the details of why they originally developed an animosity towards each other in the first place, as that is explained in the book.

The world that Fiona and Miles are visiting is well set up.  During the Berlin scenes, I can tell that Ms. Reeds has actually been to Berlin, or at least went through the city virtually using google street view.  I have recently been working on a story where the characters are going through locations that I am familiar with, and the details that Ms. Reeds gives in her Berlin scenes are just as knowledgeable as the ones that I am writing about places that I am familiar with.

There is also some German in this book.  I happen to speak German, so I really like that aspect of the story, but if you don’t speak German, the surrounding context explains what it means.  Fiona doesn’t speak German either.  There is also one line of Russian in this story (I also speak some Russian).  Again, Fiona doesn’t speak Russian, and the story explains what it means.

Despite this being a really strange story, I liked it a lot.  I couldn’t put it down.  The book went with me everywhere, all day long, and only put it down when I had to do those pesky life things.  I read the first chapter before I went to bed one night, and finished it the next evening.

The ending makes me think that there should be another story in this series, although it doesn’t look like there is one planned, at least according to Goodreads.  It ends in something of  cliffhanger.  If it does end in a small cliffhanger, then it seems fairly appropriate for this book.  As you read Echoes, you discover that almost nothing is as it appears (except for, probably, Fiona and Miles).

If you enjoy interesting books with puzzles to solve, you will probably like Echoes.  It would be nice if there ends up being a sequel, as the book is well set up for one, but if there is not, it fits into the style of the rest of the book.

CandidCover TBR Wipeout Challenge – Update #1

Summer 2018 TBR Wipeout ChallengeIt’s time for the first update to the Summer TBR Wipeout, hosted by The Candid Cover!  I wasn’t sure how well I would do, since I had to start work again, but I ended up reading six books.  I read 16 books last month when I wasn’t working, so not so bad (In my June update, I said I had read 15 books, but I forgot that I did a reread of Warcross, because I keep track of my rereads in a different place).

So these are the books that I finished:

  • Origin – Dan Brown
  • Ever the Hunted – Erin Summerill
  • Caraval – Stephanie Garber
  • Throne of Glass – Sarah J. Maas
  • The House of One Thousand Eyes – Michelle Barker
  • Batman: Nightwalker – Marie Lu

They were all good, although I only gave Origin and The House of One Thousand Eyes three stars on Goodreads: Origin just didn’t seem to be full of puzzles like the previous Dan Brown book I read, The Lost Symbol, did, and just wasn’t my cup of tea.  I think The House of One Thousand Eyes is an important book, because there is very little fiction that I’m aware of that’s written about East Germany during the time of the Stasi, even though there were a few issues with the book that caused me not to rave about it as much as some of the other readers on Goodreads have.  The reviews for both of these books will be out later this summer.

I’m already on the waiting list to read Ever the Brave and the sequels to Throne of Glass at the library;  Kingdom of Ash isn’t available (yet) at my library to put on hold, but since I’m still 44th on the waiting list for Tower of Dawn, I don’t want to be the first to get my hands on it anyway… I prefer to read the books in order.

I don’t really have an interest in superheroes, but I couldn’t really say that Marie Lu could write about anything and make it good if I wasn’t willing to test that theory out.  Batman: Nightwalker was certainly not my favorite Marie Lu book, but it was good, and I can still say that I’ve liked everything that she has published.  My daughter does like superheroes though, and when she saw me reading the book, her eyes lit up.  She’s been really depressed lately and nothing has made her eyes light up recently.  I’ll be loaning the book to her this evening.

So that’s my first update to Candid Cover’s Summer TBR Wipeout!  Will I ever completely wipe out my TBR?  Yeah, right.  Not unless people stop writing books (and that’s never going to happen).  But I did read some of those books that I see people always talking about and finished reading all of the published Marie Lu books.  So I’m pretty happy with the reading that I did do.