Search ficusfan's booksRandom books from FicusFan's libraryThe Killing Moon: A Novel by Chuck Hogan White Nights: A Thriller (Shetland Island Quartet) by Ann Cleeves Personal Demon (Women of the Otherworld, Book 8) by Kelley Armstrong The Forsaken (A Vampire Huntress Legend) by L. A. Banks Judgement of the Pharoah: Crime and Punishment in Ancient Egypt by Joyce Tyldesley The Sins of Scripture: Exposing the Bible's Texts of Hate to Reveal the God of Love by John Shelby Spong A Legacy of Daemons by Camille Bacon-Smith Members with FicusFan's booksMember connectionsFriends: abes26, AlexandraRobbins, AlexAustin, Allizabeth, Archren, bluesalamanders, bookmonk8888, booksalemanager, bookstolistento, bradley_sands, BradonK, callmejacx, debbaker, Esta1923, FiveBooks, hjjugovic, imaginaryFicus, JeremyCShipp, klaidlaw, LisaShapter, lisaunger, MJC1946, montymike, morganrice, NatalieD, NicolasBazan123, Onara, PitcherBooks, readhead, sagespot, Smethers, snowbirdbook1, Storeetllr, theoldman, Xenosophy Interesting library: AlanPoulter, AllieW, amanaceerdh, angrystarlyt, Archren, ariom, Autodafe, babsji, BannedBooksLibrary, Belletrista, BooksCatsEtc, brive, cameling, Captjackrandall, CarlosMcRey, Catgwinn, Christy., clong, Darrol, EarlyReviewers, ejj1955, Eleal, EM_Egan, EmScape, EricCGibson, espertus, Halo25, hasprintwillread, Hest88, imaginaryFicus, jayde1599, jdthloue, Kat32, Kirconnell, klaidlaw, LA12Hernandez, Larou, laudanum, Liriel47, LouBriccant, ludmillalotaria, Mailand, MayaBielicki, missmaddie, MostDisturbingBooks, msf59, nightshadebooks, orbitbooks, PICADOR, PitcherBooks, Quaisior, readhead, richardderus, rolandperkins, ronincats, rosalita, roulette.russe, sandrewswann, SFSite, smallbeerpress, solarisbooks, stephmo, Storeetllr, tatorg, TheBooknerd, theoldman, TinazReading, twilightlost, Uyukio, Virginia0908, VivalaErin, voracious_bibliovore Contacts: imaginaryFicus
Wishlist: imaginaryFicus
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Member: FicusFanCollectionsYour library (6,757), Currently reading (2), Still Reading (7), To read (2,136), Read (140), Read 2012 (1), Read 2011 (55), Read 2009 (149), Read 2008 (97), Read 2010 (150), Book Groups (335), Book Group - Fiction (138), Reading Unknown (9), Untagged Books (3,296), Stinkers (145), Reference (61), Duplicates (43), Quit (25), All collections (6,757) Reviews363 reviews Tagsfiction (3,009), TBR (2,135), SFF (1,494), mystery (721), historical (687), March 24 (539), read (537), modern day (527), non-fiction (435), fantasy (428) — see all tags Cloudstag cloud, author cloud, tag mirror Recommendations4 recommendations Groups100 Books in 2009 Challenge, 100 Books in 2010 Challenge, 100 Books in 2011, Alexander the Great, All Things Discworldian - The Guild of Pratchett Fans, All Things New England, Ancient Egypt, Ancient History, Anglophiles, Archaeology —show all groups Favorite authorsWilhelmina Baird, Nancy Baker, Robert T. Bakker, Don Bassingthwaite, Elizabeth Bear, Brendan Behan, Anne Bishop, Gillian Bradshaw, Christine Brennan, Bob Brier, Poppy Z. Brite, Tedy Bruschi, Lois McMaster Bujold, John Burdett, Jim Butcher, Octavia E. Butler, Richard Lee Byers, L. Sprague de Camp, Orson Scott Card, Jeanne Cavelos, Ann Chamberlin, Suzy McKee Charnas, C. J. Cherryh, James Clavell, Barbara Cleverly, Nancy A. Collins, Storm Constantine, Julie E. Czerneda, Kara Dalkey, James F. David, MaryJanice Davidson, Lindsey Davis, Samuel R. Delany, J. M. Dillard, Allen Drury, Gerald Durrell, P. N. Elrod, Janet Evanovich, Nancy Farmer, Mick Farren, David Feintuch, Jasper Fforde, Lynn Flewelling, Michael Flynn, Leslie Forbes, Mark Del Franco, Valerie J. Freireich, C. S. Friedman, Stephen Fry, Brad Geagley, Pauline Gedge, Roberta Gellis, Mary Gentle, Carolyn Ives Gilman, Phyllis Gotlieb, Robert Graves, Simon R. Green, Jim Grimsley, Jon Courtenay Grimwood, Tate Hallaway, Barbara Hambly, Laurell K. Hamilton, Kim Harrison, Mo Hayder, Gillian Rubinstein, Robert A. Heinlein, Frank Herbert, Georgette Heyer, Joey W. Hill, Cecelia Holland, Tanya Huff, Walter H. Hunt, Charlie Huston, Marie Jakober, Tove Jansson, Gary Jennings, Gwyneth Jones, J.V. Jones, Dara Joy, M. M. Kaye, Guy Gavriel Kay, Frances Parkinson Keyes, Elizabeth Knox, Sally Kohonoski, Ellen Kushner, Donna Leon, Simon Levack, Morgan Llywelyn, Karin Lowachee, Eric Van Lustbader, Elizabeth A. Lynn, George R. R. Martin, John Masters, Susan R. Matthews, Colleen McCullough, Mil Millington, Elizabeth Moon, Christopher Moore, Richard K. Morgan, Janet Morris, Haruki Murakami, Linda Nagata, Sharan Newman, Audrey Niffenegger, Larry Niven, Albert Noyer, I.J. Parker, Severna Park, Eliot Pattison, Sharon Kay Penman, Marge Piercy, Ricardo Pinto, Sylvia Plath, Terry Pratchett, John Preston, Ian Rankin, Kathy Reichs, Mary Renault, Lane Robins, Madeleine E. Robins, Laura Joh Rowland, Kristine Kathryn Rusch, Mary Doria Russell, Sean Russell, Geoff Ryman, Marella Sands, Steven Saylor, David Sedaris, Anya Seton, Susan Shwartz, Dan Simmons, Wm. Mark Simmons, Susan Sizemore, Joan Slonczewski, E.E. 'Doc' Smith, Martin Cruz Smith, Wen Spencer, Nancy Springer, John Steinbeck, Jennifer Stevenson, Sean Stewart, Kyle Stone, S. Andrew Swann, S. C. Sykes, Amy Tan, Cecilia Tan, Judith Tarr, Karen E. Taylor, Sheri S. Tepper, Jeffrey Thomas, Will Thomas, Carol Thurston, Sue Townsend, Karen Traviss, Peter Watts, Liz Williams (Shared favorites) Favorite bookstoresBarnes & Noble Booksellers - Nashua, Borders - Nashua, Mori Books - Just Read Books, New England Mobile Book Fair, Pandemonium Books and Games, Toadstool Bookshop - Milford Other favoritesReadercon 21, Boskone 47 @ Westin Waterfront Boston, Hotel, Arisia 2011 Favorite publishersAngry Robot, Orbit Books About meAvid Reader. Favorite reads are historical fiction, sf/f, mystery, world fiction, history, science, memoirs. About my libraryI joined LibraryThing in July '06. Since then I have been adding only the new books I buy, and the older books that I read. I have over 5,000 books cataloged on an Access Data Base, and having to put tags on them all is a daunting task. I may do it at some point.
Homepagehttp://ficusfan.livejournal.com/ Also onLiveJournal, sffworld.com, Twitter, WikiThing (LT) Membership LocationNashua, N.H. Emailficusfan Account typepublic, lifetime URLs
http://www.librarything.com/profile/FicusFan (profile) Member sinceJul 23, 2006 Currently readingThe Devil of Great Island: Witchcraft and Conflict in Early New England by Emerson W. Baker Most recent activity |







House Stark is the most influential and notable power in the North. From their stronghold at Winterfell, the Starks guard the old ways against the dishonourable and fractious houses of the Seven Kingdoms. Their devotion to honour and the old gods wins them few friends in the court of King’s Landing and beyond, but this very same dedication to tradition commands respect from the lords of the North. Those Northmen who bend the knee to Eddard Stark have been hard won with respect, devotion, and justice. His sons show signs that they too will be well-respected and beloved leaders in the North upon ascending to the lordship of this enduring and storied house.






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posted by BradonK at 1:15 pm (EST) on Oct 29, 2011
posted by DaynaRT at 1:12 pm (EST) on Sep 21, 2011
posted by tjsjohanna at 11:20 am (EST) on Mar 3, 2011
Best,
Alex
posted by AlexAustin at 6:27 pm (EST) on Oct 28, 2010
Tim
posted by timspalding at 12:13 pm (EST) on Oct 7, 2010
Books overflowing everywhere also looks very nice, though (in my opinion).
posted by joririchardson at 5:10 am (EST) on Oct 4, 2010
Happy reading!
posted by joririchardson at 6:43 am (EST) on Oct 1, 2010
posted by bookventures at 10:52 am (EST) on Aug 8, 2010
posted by bookventures at 7:23 am (EST) on Aug 7, 2010
posted by bookventures at 12:24 pm (EST) on Aug 3, 2010
Berly
posted by Berly at 10:57 pm (EST) on Apr 14, 2010
posted by Ape at 7:35 am (EST) on Mar 8, 2010
posted by Ape at 6:44 am (EST) on Mar 7, 2010
I know what you mean about enjoying it and being horrified too. I've read a ton about the time period but this contained details I hadn't heard of before, and I certainly had no idea of the starvation the people went through in this particular area.
How much of it do you think was true to the facts? I know the grandfather said he could make stuff up, but even imagination isn't always that brutal.
Amy
posted by BlackSheepDances at 5:30 pm (EST) on Feb 7, 2010
take care,
Amy
posted by BlackSheepDances at 8:48 pm (EST) on Jan 14, 2010
posted by sf_addict at 12:52 pm (EST) on Jan 11, 2010
posted by sf_addict at 7:27 am (EST) on Jan 11, 2010
I see we share 3 books -- i have a bit of paglia in the chapter on the aesthetic cat and another chapter on the cat as a true or false animal. And, did you know liza has a new novel out?
posted by keigu at 9:18 pm (EST) on Jan 9, 2010
I see you are reading Book 1 of the Lensman series. I cut my scifi teeth on that series when I was still in grade school. Most people feel it has not survived the test of time, but I still remember it fondly. It led me to Azimov and Bradbury, so it can't be all bad. I haven't seen a mention of it in years. I look forward to reading your review of it.
posted by klaidlaw at 1:52 pm (EST) on Jan 5, 2010
I have one of Kjell Eriksson's books, though I don't know its English title (if there is one). But I don't read much fiction. Looking at our shared titles, I find Douglas Adams, genetics and cryptography.
The lack of geographic accuracy is my primary excuse for not investing more time in the locations of libraries and other venues right now, and I'm hesitant to add biographical data until authors with identical names can be disambiguated (Kjell Eriksson is already two authors on LT).
posted by sm5por at 12:23 pm (EST) on Dec 19, 2009
Thanks.
Jim
posted by justjim at 2:18 am (EST) on Dec 16, 2009
Mark
posted by msf59 at 12:41 pm (EST) on Dec 13, 2009
Many happy days ahead, and I expect I'll see more of you now that I'm back at the Thing.
Hugs
RMD
posted by richardderus at 12:28 am (EST) on Dec 11, 2009
posted by Ape at 8:43 pm (EST) on Sep 29, 2009
posted by Ape at 6:57 am (EST) on Sep 28, 2009
I am sure I will enjoy it immensely.
Good night Ficus
belva
posted by rainpebble at 12:16 am (EST) on Sep 22, 2009
Loved your HOT REVIEW on "The House at Riverton". My copy just arrived today and I can't wait to cut my teeth on it. Excellent job girl.
Congratulations,
belva
posted by rainpebble at 8:31 pm (EST) on Sep 21, 2009
I read this when it first came out. I live in Montgomery County, Maryland and I believe that Suri does as well, so perhaps the local book store was pushing a local author. Through all of the serious stuff in the book, I loved Suri's sense of humor. I am sure you will remember the Russian Salad samosa calamity. The book has an author email, and so I sent Suri an email and asked the correct way to make a Russian Salad samosa. He asked me to wait for the publication of "The Death of Vishnu Cookbook".
posted by tobagotim at 11:37 pm (EST) on Sep 12, 2009
posted by bluesalamanders at 6:08 pm (EST) on Sep 10, 2009
There are no plans currently to re-issue 7faS, though it may be collected into an omnibus at some point.
Thank you for asking.
--Bear
posted by matociquala at 3:38 pm (EST) on Sep 10, 2009
I can certainly understand time constraints, other obligations, the books just not grabbing you and even the desire not to participate. Whatever the reason it is all good. We will carry on and I will see you on the threads my dear.
Hope you are reading something really wonderful and also having a great day.
hugs,
belva
posted by rainpebble at 1:21 pm (EST) on Sep 10, 2009
Mark and I have been discussing the possibility of another group read in November and want your input. We have narrowed it down to two books at this point. "The People of the Book" by Geraldine Brooks and "The Thirteenth Tale" by Diane Setterfield. So chat it up with friends or us and let us know if you are up for it and what you think. Probably the same plan as with "Pillars of the Earth" which seemed to work out perfectly for almost all of us.
Think it over and give one of us a shout.
hugs and looking forward to hearing from you,
belva
posted by rainpebble at 10:14 pm (EST) on Sep 8, 2009
xoxo
RMD
posted by richardderus at 11:38 pm (EST) on Sep 3, 2009
"Friendship with oneself is all important, because without
it one cannot be friends with anyone else in the world."
~ Eleanor Roosevelt
"A friend is someone who sings your heart's song
back to you when you have forgotten the words."
~ David Coppola, Ph.D.
posted by theoldman at 7:26 am (EST) on Aug 30, 2009
posted by Berly at 4:17 pm (EST) on Aug 22, 2009
Cheers!
RMD
posted by richardderus at 4:11 pm (EST) on Aug 16, 2009
I recommend "The Samurai's Garden" by Gail Tsukiyama. It is set in Japan during the Sino-Japanese war, and tells the story of a Chinese boy living in a small village in Japan at the family summer home while recuperating from an illness. I found it quite enjoyable. Unfortunately the used copy I bought was missing some pages at the end so I'm not sure how it turns out. It isn't at our library--argh.
posted by klaidlaw at 10:21 pm (EST) on Aug 12, 2009
posted by klaidlaw at 5:52 pm (EST) on Aug 12, 2009
you may need a page two soon :)
posted by mckait at 2:52 pm (EST) on Aug 11, 2009
I do think though that ignoring is better. S/he is vile.
posted by mckait at 2:40 pm (EST) on Aug 11, 2009
posted by coppers at 11:26 pm (EST) on Aug 8, 2009
posted by Esta1923 at 4:42 pm (EST) on Aug 6, 2009
posted by Esta1923 at 7:25 pm (EST) on Aug 4, 2009
Mark
posted by msf59 at 8:02 pm (EST) on Jul 24, 2009
posted by Esta1923 at 7:31 pm (EST) on Jul 24, 2009
posted by Esta1923 at 7:23 pm (EST) on Jul 24, 2009
Academic titles are insane. Any decent university needs to have all three volumes, so I suppose the think is: why not screw people over the price?
Tim
posted by timspalding at 3:28 pm (EST) on May 20, 2009
posted by SunnyLea at 10:37 am (EST) on May 12, 2009
~ Porchy
posted by porchsitter55 at 10:30 pm (EST) on Apr 21, 2009
Thanks
posted by LA12Hernandez at 6:43 pm (EST) on Apr 14, 2009
Again Thank You.
posted by LA12Hernandez at 10:33 pm (EST) on Apr 13, 2009
posted by Storeetllr at 12:02 am (EST) on Apr 10, 2009
posted by PaperbackPirate at 10:33 pm (EST) on Apr 1, 2009
posted by Storeetllr at 1:58 pm (EST) on Mar 15, 2009
posted by turkeybaby1123 at 5:48 pm (EST) on Feb 24, 2009
At your convenience, doesn't have to be tonight.
Thanks,
karenmarie
posted by karenmarie at 12:43 pm (EST) on Jan 29, 2009
I cannot for the life of me find that little card that came in The Perfect Scent with the person's name who was requesting feedback - I have finished the book, written and posted my review here on LT, and want to send an e-mail to them.
If you still have the little card, would tell me the person's name and e-mail address?
Thanks,
karenmarie
posted by karenmarie at 11:15 am (EST) on Jan 29, 2009
Had to add you to my interesting libraries list based on your comment about liking historical mysteries (in some thread or another) and then the number of favorite authors on your list that are also on mine--we obviously share a number of reading preferences! But you have so many more books than I do (drool!).
Cheers,
Elizabeth
posted by ejj1955 at 10:58 am (EST) on Jan 3, 2009
posted by cameling at 2:02 pm (EST) on Nov 26, 2008
posted by missmaddie at 7:28 pm (EST) on Nov 21, 2008
I know what you mean about it being a daunting task though, I haven't finished cataloging all mine yet either, buy hey it's raining outside, so maybe this would be a good time to work on it.
Happy reading
el
posted by catmistressel at 1:57 pm (EST) on Nov 8, 2008
Thanks.
posted by mumoftheanimals at 4:32 pm (EST) on Nov 2, 2008
posted by montymike at 1:32 pm (EST) on Oct 20, 2008
Yep, it's monty here from sffworld.
Thanks for your help. :)
posted by montymike at 4:36 pm (EST) on Oct 19, 2008
of the 35 books we have In Common (according to LT- i am upgrading my account as i type..) those are my Favorites (how do you know Jim Knipfel's work? i have a story, if you are interested)
look..we are both on What Are You Reading Now?...so not exactly Strangers//
what do you say? wanna be Friends?
Read On...Power
JUDE
posted by jdthloue at 5:11 pm (EST) on Oct 17, 2008
I was going to pick the first book and then involve the members in picking additional books, but unless we only have 4 members (oh I hope not!) then I think the way it will work is voting off of a short-list of possibilities for the next month. I had to provide a list of possible picks for budgeting reasons.
*sigh* I wonder if I can talk them into every other month instead? No one here will agree to every month. Some people will join just because joining these sorts of things looks good on our annual evaluations, and a book club is fairly painless compared to some of the on-your-own-time things they try to get you involved in. So I can't count on all of the members being big readers.
But I'm determined that there will be actual reading and discussing going on! I also have a feeling it's going to end up being exclusively women, which can be, um, interesting. Ah, the things I do for the love of books!
;)
Heidi
posted by hjjugovic at 7:07 pm (EST) on Oct 3, 2008
This is a new book club. I work for an engineering company, and they're always doing initiatives to retain women; one is a company sponsored professional association called WINS, which both women and men can join but is focused on women professionals in our company. They get funded by our company for retention initiatives, and one is this book club. It seems that the company will be buying the books for us - which is one of my lures for trying to get people to join. Free books! Yay! I'm trying to get them to pay for some food too.
At first, it seemed like there was some list of professional books we were supposed to be reading, but then the WINS leader who contacted me suggested "light fiction, like Eat, Pray, Love" and asked for a list of potential books from me. We'll only meet quarterly, and I'll send out an email announcing that quarter's book asking for who plans to read the book. I get a total count, give it to WINS, they order the books, and I distribute them to everyone to read.
I'm thinking about making one book a Read The Book/Watch The Movie event. My first meeting will be in January.
Since I only get to pick 4 books for each year, I really want to make them books people will like, as well as books that are good to discuss, since I know they are not always the same thing. I hope I can get enough people to join to keep this going. Partly cause I want the free books too, lol!
Heidi
posted by hjjugovic at 6:22 pm (EST) on Oct 3, 2008
posted by hjjugovic at 4:01 pm (EST) on Oct 3, 2008
Cheers
rmd
posted by richardderus at 12:25 pm (EST) on Oct 3, 2008
posted by deebee1 at 7:11 am (EST) on Oct 3, 2008
Cheers
RMD
posted by richardderus at 5:55 pm (EST) on Oct 2, 2008
If and when you have time, I'd appreciate a line!
Cheers
RMD
posted by richardderus at 1:41 pm (EST) on Oct 2, 2008
posted by msf59 at 8:36 am (EST) on Oct 2, 2008
posted by deebee1 at 5:34 am (EST) on Oct 2, 2008
posted by msf59 at 8:34 pm (EST) on Oct 1, 2008
As to the evidence for non-participants' non-participation, some few have commented unfavorably on the non-book chatter (thinking particularly of the onee who posted an irritable little snark when I mentioned I was sick of green beans or something one time) and following the "one-in-ten" rule (one complainer speaks for 10 silent ones), the proportion seems likely to be greater than zero.
Whatever. I won't be making non-book comments there, and will call every non-book comment made while citing teelgee's authority when I do so. If teelgee doesn't like that, too effing bad.
RMD
posted by richardderus at 12:02 pm (EST) on Sep 30, 2008
posted by PhoenixTerran at 12:31 pm (EST) on Sep 28, 2008
Cheers!
clong
posted by clong at 6:26 pm (EST) on Sep 19, 2008
posted by richardderus at 5:19 pm (EST) on Sep 2, 2008
posted by hjjugovic at 5:02 pm (EST) on Aug 29, 2008
Allie
posted by AllieW at 11:17 am (EST) on Aug 29, 2008
Just wondering....
Richard
posted by richardderus at 3:50 pm (EST) on Aug 28, 2008
I've only just bought it, so I haven't read it yet. However, the blurb on the back reads as follows:
"Music, murder ... and Madeline
William has a lot on his mind. Firstly there's The Alaska Factory, the band he plays in. They're no good and they make his songs sound about as groovy as an unpressed record. In fact, they're so bad he's seriously thinking of leaving to join a group called The Unfortunates.
Secondly, there's Madeline, his high-maintenance girlfriend whose idea of a night of passion is an Andrew Lloyd Webber musical followed by a doorstep peck on the cheek. Maybe they're not soulmates after all?
Lastly, there's the bizarre murder he's just witnessed. The guiding force behind The Unfortunates lies bludgeoned to death at his feet and, unfortunately for William, there aren't too many other suspects standing by..."
Don't know if that helps!!!
Allie
posted by AllieW at 3:54 am (EST) on Aug 28, 2008
posted by koalamom at 10:46 pm (EST) on Aug 27, 2008
I suppose I could just redo it if it disappears before the date. It's frustrating! I don't know how many people are actually interested, but if someone became interested they wouldn't find it. Ah well, I'll keep trying.
posted by koalamom at 4:24 pm (EST) on Aug 27, 2008
Now if I could only get them to stop calling things Past Events when they are not happening for 6 weeks.
For that I discovered that all I have to do is "edit" the event and hit save without actually doing anything.
posted by koalamom at 6:32 pm (EST) on Aug 26, 2008
Cheers again
RMD
posted by richardderus at 8:07 pm (EST) on Aug 2, 2008
Speaking of which, did you ever read Wilbur Smith's The River God? I could chck your library, of course, but I am whipped at the end of a long day in the sun running a yard sale. It was a favorite of mine back ten years or so ago.
Cheers again, and thanks for the very helpful hyperlink,
RMD
posted by richardderus at 7:47 pm (EST) on Aug 2, 2008
posted by cmtusa at 6:50 pm (EST) on Aug 1, 2008
The ms is only 60,000 words and it reads very quickly, similar to S.E. Hinton, if you have read her work. The book DOES involve religion, and Hailey DOES hope for redemption at times, but she never really receives it (in case you're wondering, this is definitely not an Oprah-style book where the narrator finds religion at the end). For this reason (as well as the fact that Hailey often finds religious people to be somewhat hypocritical) the primary reaction from religious people has been that the book is a bit anti-religious, though I disagree:) Does that help?
posted by cmtusa at 6:32 pm (EST) on Aug 1, 2008
Cheers
RMD
posted by richardderus at 4:12 pm (EST) on Aug 1, 2008
My name is Chris Tusa, and I'm a writer from New Orleans/Baton Rouge (I actually teach in the English Department at LSU). Anyway, I noticed your profile, and I was wondering if you'd be willing to read a novel I just completed. The manuscript is currently being circulated among some of the larger NY publishers, and my agent wants to get opinions from a few readers. Let me know if you'd be willing to read the manuscript and give us your opinions. Of course, if you're too busy, I'll understand. Just thought I'd ask:) I’ve included a summary below that we plan to include on the book jacket:
Dirty Little Angels
Set in New Orleans, Dirty Little Angels is the story of sixteen year old Hailey Trosclair. When the Trosclair family suffers a string of financial hardships and a miscarriage, Hailey finds herself looking to God to save her family. When her prayers go unanswered, Hailey puts her faith in Moses Watkins, a failed preacher and ex-con. Fascinated by Moses’ lopsided view of religion, Hailey, and her brother Cyrus, begin spending time down at an abandoned bank that Moses plans to convert into a drive-through church. Gradually, though, Moses’ twisted religious beliefs become increasingly more violent, and Hailey and Cyrus soon find themselves trapped in a world of danger and fear from which there may be no escape.
Thanks so much,
Chris Tusa
mail@christophertusa.com
posted by cmtusa at 9:02 pm (EST) on Jul 31, 2008
posted by glenglass at 9:40 pm (EST) on Jul 27, 2008
Jacqueline
posted by callmejacx at 5:46 pm (EST) on Jul 27, 2008
Quite the library! Wonderful stuff in here, and I've already added a few titles to the wishlist. *sigh*
Cheers
Richard
posted by richardderus at 11:46 am (EST) on Jul 20, 2008
Thanks for leaving the comment. I haven't yet finished reading _Tolteca_ and was very excited about it when it came out, but thus far all my attempts at reading it...well, it's just not clicking for me. I've tried picking it up to read it about 3 times now and each time I put it down in favor of something else. I think the writing style just isn't working for me in general; it feel very heavy on setting at the expense of character. I haven't quite given up on it yet, since there's so little fiction out there with this setting and myth background, but I would probably recommend either waiting until it goes to paperback or seeing about buying a good cheap copy on Amazon.
posted by TLMorganfield at 5:51 pm (EST) on Jul 12, 2008
btw, Readercon is in danger of selling out (apparently). If you don't already have a membership I think you can still get one online until midnight tonight (though not sure). Otherwise, if Saturday is the day you are coming you may want to come early to get in line. Best, Lois
posted by avaland at 2:58 pm (EST) on Jul 1, 2008
Ellen
posted by espertus at 2:43 am (EST) on May 25, 2008
If this request is an imposition, please disregard it. In any case, thanks for sharing your libraries and reviews.
Ellen
posted by espertus at 1:29 pm (EST) on May 24, 2008
posted by fabtk at 1:39 am (EST) on May 8, 2008
posted by readhead at 1:21 am (EST) on Jan 3, 2008
posted by lisaunger at 1:46 pm (EST) on Nov 16, 2007
posted by reading_fox at 2:01 pm (EST) on Oct 6, 2007
I, personally find Jim Butcher's writing very bland. As far as bad jokes go, Kim Harrison's Attack of the Killer Tomatoes joke is one of the baddest I have seen for a while. The Dresden thing does go on about black magic and the good stuff, at length, too. Harrison very anti-demon specist too. :)
Those books of course, are romance tending novels, so always going to be less action. The point of view identification for the whole paranormal romance thing is for girls that want some hot bad boy shagging, in a lot of them, as well as kicking a bit of arse. A way to get the romance readers to buy some fantasy novels, as well as joining the whole urban fantasy thing from the 80s and giving something different to elves and dragons and dark lords.
Depends what you mean by old time horror. Van Helsing in Dracula is, of course, ghost busting. Certainly more horror than romance novel though.
Graham Masterton, Peter Straub, et. al. and that sort of thing I see as different to where a heroic figure sets out to do something about a situation, or protect people. Although there is obviously some overlap here and there.
Pretty dismissive to say horror as a concept is past it, I don't think that will ever be the case, at least given the past couple of hundred years and more evidence. The written fiction part is, of course, nowhere near as popular as it was 20 years ago or so, and I certainly haven't read much since then, of the black books with skulls on the cover variety. If horror was over, the whole supernatural/paranormal thing wouldn't be around to the same degree.
If you tell me nurse fiction is over, I am more inclined to believe you. :) Although again there are still hospital tv shows.
posted by bluetyson at 3:47 am (EST) on Apr 15, 2007
posted by bluetyson at 12:33 am (EST) on Apr 15, 2007
Quite a few of the Ghost Busters are human. Not all of 'em. Depends how many you have read I guess. Quite a few have superhuman abilities or outlandish skills of some sort of another, of course, even if it just being really, really good with a gun, like in Steakley's Vampires.
That's an example of kill the monsters, too, no getting along there. Like Sabat, Silver John, Vampire Hunter D, Necroscope, or whatever.
As opposed to the Dresden files type milieu, with group politics as you say.
posted by bluetyson at 12:32 am (EST) on Apr 15, 2007
thanks,
bt
posted by bluetyson at 2:02 am (EST) on Apr 12, 2007
http://superprose.blogspot.com/search/label/ghost%20busters
etc.
Sorry if that was confusing. :)
Thanks very much for the rundown!
posted by bluetyson at 1:59 am (EST) on Apr 12, 2007
Thanks,
bt
posted by bluetyson at 11:03 am (EST) on Apr 11, 2007
posted by ashmodai at 5:31 pm (EST) on Jan 1, 2007
posted by avaland at 2:52 pm (EST) on Oct 16, 2006