Showing posts with label 2010. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 2010. Show all posts

Thursday, January 06, 2011

Reading Report: The Thirty-Nine Steps

Written by John Buchan
First published 1915, by William Blackwood & Sons

Description from GoodReads:
Richard Hannay has just returned to England after years in South Africa and is thoroughly bored with his life in London. But then a murder is committed in his flat, just days after a chance encounter with an American who had told him about an assassination plot which could have dire international consequences. An obvious suspect for the police and an easy target for the killers, Hannay goes on the run in his native Scotland where he will need all his courage and ingenuity to stay one step ahead of his pursuers.
That's a very abbreviated synopsis of the story. But rather than try to describe the plot in more detail, I'll just suggest you take a look at the very nicely done Wikipedia article on the novel (here). It even has a little rundown of all the various film and radio versions that have been done over the years (most of them very different from the original book).

The Thirty-Nine Steps has been on my must-read list for decades now, and I have the 2010 Decades Reading Challenge (and the free e-book offer from Amazon) to thank for finally moving me beyond the "someday" promise. Overall, I enjoyed it very much - even though the "ripping yarn" type of adventure novel isn't usually something I take to. Buchan was a talented writer and he keeps the action moving right along at a pleasant pace. He maintains a good balance of dialogue and descriptive passages, and includes touches of humor here and there. All in all, this was a good, fast read and an entertaining, if somewhat far-fetched tale.

Reading Report: Juliet

Written by Anne Fortier
Random House/Ballantine Books, 2010; 447 pages

Julie Jacobs, the heroine of Anne Fortier's novel Juliet, has spent most of her twenty-five years living in the shadow of her more vivacious twin sister Janice. Janice seems to do everything right, win all the friends and appropriate all the goodies for herself while the unkempt and less talented Julie drags behind. But Julie's life gets a lot more interesting after the girls' Aunt Rose dies. Rose has raised the twins after the deaths of their parents and they've always thought of her as more of a mother than an aunt. But when Rose's will is made public, it turns out that she's left everything to Janice; the only legacy Julie receives is an airplane ticket to Italy where the girls' parents met and married - and died when Julie and Janice were toddlers - and a key to a safety-deposit box that is supposed to lead to an old family treasure.

And with that, she's off to Italy on a convoluted and dangerous adventure involving her ancestor, Giulietta, whose real-life love for a young man named Romeo was supposedly the basis for the tale told by Shakespeare and other authors down through the ages. Julie (today's Giulietta, of course) meets the descendants of the families of the two lovers, and tries to track down the treasure while at the same time avoiding the curse that's supposedly still at work on the families. Naturally, she falls for the modern-day version of Romeo - his descendant Alessandro, who works for the Italian police. And she's stalked by a mysterious and seemingly malevolent leather-clad motorcyclist who shadows her every move.

I really wanted to love this book. I think the idea is a good one, and there were parts that were very well done. The scholarship was impressive (although in her Author's Note, Fortier gives her mother credit for the research), and the setting in Siena was nicely drawn. Unfortunately, the story just didn't live up to its promise. Julie is such a sad case, wallowing in jealousy and self-pity for most of the novel, that I frequently just wanted to shake her and tell her to shape up and get a life. Move. On.

Also, this is one of those books that include a lot of shifting back and forth between time periods. And, as usual, just as I would get interested in the modern-day part of the story, I'd turn a page and find myself back in the 14th Century. Actually, I think Fortier's imagining of the "real" Romeo and Juliet is a very engaging tale, and would have made a decent novel all on its own without the silliness of the modern-day adventure-romance thrown in. But that would have meant losing the "evil" twin, Janice, who was really one of the bright spots in the book.

As I said, I didn't love the book. But I didn't hate it, either. Overall, it's not a bad read if you can stick it out to the end (at over 400 pages, it takes a bit of commitment to make it through). Fortier is definitely a talented writer, but Juliet is probably not her best work.

[Note: I received the advance reading copy of this novel free of charge from the publisher. No other form of compensation was offered or accepted, and no one attempted to influence my opinion of the book.]

Friday, December 31, 2010

Challenge Wrap-Up: RYOB (Read Your Own Books) 2010

This was the second time I've participated in MizB's RYOB (Read Your Own Books) Challenge. I planned to read twenty of my own books, and actually read thirty. So I'd say it was mostly a success. My only problem was that many of the books I read were ARCs, which means I didn't really clear as many books off my long-term TBR stack as I'd hoped. Still, it was a fun challenge, and kept me reading - which is the main reason I sign up for all these challenges anyway.

Here's my list of books read (in roughly the order I read them), with links to reviews:
  1. Venom. Joan Brady
  2. People of the Book. Geraldine Brooks
  3. Mrs. Malory and Any Man's Death. Hazel Holt
  4. The Brontes Went to Woolworths. Rachel Ferguson
  5. Heresy. S.J. Parris
  6. A Stitch in Time. Monica Ferris
  7. The Swimming Pool. Holly LeCraw
  8. An American Type. Henry Roth
  9. A River in the Sky. Elizabeth Peters
  10. Live To Tell. Lisa Gardner
  11. The Map of True Places. Brunonia Barry
  12. Innocent. Scott Turow
  13. The Forgotten Garden. Kate Morton
  14. The Spider Bites. Medora Sale
  15. The Good Psychologist. Noam Shpancer
  16. Damaged. Alex Kava
  17. The Egypt Game. Zilpha Keatley Snyder
  18. Think of a Number. John Verdon
  19. All Is Forgotten, Nothing Is Lost. Lan Samantha Chang
  20. The Convent. Panos Karnezis
  21. The House Next Door. Anne Rivers Siddons
  22. Animal Farm. George Orwell
  23. After Claude. Iris Owens
  24. We Have Always Lived in the Castle. Shirley Jackson
  25. The Vanishing of Katharina Linden. Helen Grant
  26. The Distant Hours. Kate Morton
  27. Juliet. Anne Fortier
  28. The Weird Sisters. Eleanor Brown
  29. The Thirty-Nine Steps. John Buchan
  30. Operation Terror. Murray Leinster

Challenge Wrap-Up: New Authors Challenge 2010

The New Authors Challenge is definitely one of my favorite challenges. In fact, I've already signed up for the 2011 edition. Hosted by Jackie of Literary Escapism, it's a really great way to introduce yourself to authors you've never read before, and even genres you've never explored.

When I signed up I said I'd commit to reading fifteen new authors, but I had a feeling I'd do a lot better than that. And I was right: I actually read thirty-three books by authors I'd never read before. As usual, I didn't do quite as well with the reviewing as I did with the reading. Hope to do better with that next year. But for now, here's my list of books read, with links to existing reviews:

The Anthologist. Nicholson Baker
The Raphael Affair. Iain Pears
Venom. Joan Brady
Quattrocento. James McKean
People of the Book. Geraldine Brooks
The Brontes Went to Woolworths. Rachel Ferguson
Heresy. S.J. Parris
Before the Throne. Naguib Mahfouz
The Swimming Pool. Holly LeCraw
An American Type. Henry Roth
A River in the Sky. Elizabeth Peters
Live To Tell. Lisa Gardner
Tinkers. Paul Harding
The Last Child. John Hart
The Hypnotist. M.J. Rose
The Forgotten Garden. Kate Morton
The Spider Bites. Medora Sale
The Three Weissmanns of Westport. Cathleen Schine
The Good Psychologist. Noam Shpancer
Damaged. Alex Kava
The Egypt Game. Zilpha Keatley Snyder
The Sweetness at the Bottom of the Pie. Alan Bradley
Think of a Number. John Verdon
All Is Forgotten, Nothing Is Lost. Lan Samantha Chang
The Convent. Panos Karnezis
The Inheritance. Simon Tolkien
The House Next Door. Anne Rivers Siddons
Book of Shadows. Alexandra Sokoloff
After Claude. Iris Owens
The Vanishing of Katharina Linden. Helen Grant
Juliet. Anne Fortier
The Weird Sisters. Eleanor Brown
The Thirty-Nine Steps. John Buchan

Thursday, December 30, 2010

Challenge Wrap-Up: Fall Into Reading 2010


The 2010 edition of the Fall Into Reading Challenge, hosted by Katrina at Callapidder Days, ended with the season, on December 20th. Once again, I read a dozen books during the challenge. Also once again, most of the books I read weren't on my list of possible reads when I started the challenge. But that's OK – I had fun, discovered a few new authors, revisited several old favorites, and polished off a number of books that had been on my TBR list for decades.

So I'm declaring this another challenge successfully completed. The one thing I haven't been too successful at is writing reviews of the books I read. Sorry about that. I still intend to post a few more of those in the next few days, and I'll add links as I do it.

Here's my list of books read, with links to the reviews that do exist:
  1. Cards on the Table. Agatha Christie
  2. The House Next Door. Anne Rivers Siddons
  3. Book of Shadows. Alexandra Sokoloff
  4. Animal Farm. George Orwell
  5. The Dark Half. Stephen King
  6. After Claude. Iris Owens
  7. The Vanishing of Katharina Linden. Helen Grant
  8. We Have Always Lived in the Castle. Shirley Jackson
  9. The Distant Hours. Kate Morton
  10. Juliet. Anne Fortier
  11. The Weird Sisters. Eleanor Brown
  12. The Thirty-Nine Steps. John Buchan
It would be really hard to choose a favorite from among those titles. I believe I was most pleasantly surprised by Book of Shadows by Alexandra Sokoloff – a new discovery for me. And I especially enjoyed Cards on the Table, as it featured my favorite Agatha Christie character, Ariadne Oliver. But I enjoyed all the other books too – not one of them was really awful!

Challenge Wrap-Up: Decades Challenge 2010


The Decades 2010 Challenge was hosted by Michelle at 1morechapter. I think this is a terrific idea for a reading challenge, and even though I didn't manage to read books from all ten decades of the 20th Century, I had a lot of fun with it. Here's my list of books read, with links to reviews, if any:
  1. 1900-1909:
  2. 1910-1919: The Thirty-Nine Steps. John Buchan
  3. 1920-1929:
  4. 1930-1939: The Brontes Went to Woolworths. Rachel Ferguson
  5. 1940-1949: Animal Farm. George Orwell
  6. 1950-1959:
  7. 1960-1969: The Egypt Game. Zilpha Keatley Snyder
  8. 1970-1979: The House Next Door. Anne Rivers Siddons
  9. 1980-1989: Contact. Carl Sagan
  10. 1990-1999: The Raphael Affair. Iain Pears

Challenge Wrap-Up: Art History Reading Challenge


The Art History Reading Challenge was hosted by Carrie at nomadreader (thanks, Carrie!). I'm really surprised I didn't do better with this, since it was one of my favorites of all the challenges I signed up for in 2010. I ended up only reading four of the six books I committed to. Even so, I'm going to consider this challenge a success because it nudged me into (finally) reading Nick Bantock's wonderful Griffin and Sabine books.

Here are the books I read, with links to reviews:

The Griffin and Sabine Trilogy. Nick Bantock
The Raphael Affair
. Iain Pears
Quattrocento
. James McKean
The Hypnotist
. M.J. Rose

Challenge Wrap-Up: A to Z Challenge 2010

First, I want to say thanks to Becky of Becky's Book Review Blog, for hosting the A to Z Challenge. It was great fun, and I'm thinking very seriously about signing up for next year.

I read twenty-one of twenty-six books (A-Z by title). Not a great record, but better than I expected to do. Here's the list (with links to reviews if any):

A: (The) Anthologist. Nicholson Baker
B: (The) Brontes Went to Woolworths. Rachel Ferguson
C: Contact. Carl Sagan
D: Damaged. Alex Kava
E: (The) Egypt Game. Zilpha Keatley Snyder
F: (The) Forgotten Garden. Kate Morton
G: (The) Good Psychologist. Noel Shpancer
H: (The) House Next Door. Anne Rivers Siddons
I: Innocent. Scott Turow
J: Juliet. Anne Fortier
K:
L: Live To Tell. Lisa Gardner
M: (The) Map of True Places. Brunonia Barry
N: Noah's Compass. Anne Tyler
O: Operation Terror. Murray Leinster
P: People of the Book. Geraldine Brooks
Q: Quattrocento. James McKean
R: (The) Raphael Affair. Iain Pears
S: (The) Swimming Pool. Holly LeCraw
T: Tinkers. Paul Harding
U:
V: Venom. Joan Brady
W: We Have Always Lived in the Castle. Shirley Jackson
X:
Y:
Z:

Saturday, December 25, 2010

42 Challenge 2010: The Wrap-Up

The 2010 edition of the 42 (Sci-Fi) Challenge, hosted by Becky of Becky's Book Reviews, ended back on December 3. This is a fun challenge and even though I didn't do quite as well with this one as I did with the 2009 challenge, I still think it's one of my favorites. This is my list of sci-fi "experiences" for the year. Didn't read as much as I should have - I did a lot more viewing than reading. Still, I'm going to consider it a success, and I want to say a big thank you to Becky for hosting again. Now I just have to decide if I want to try it a third time in 2011.

Here's the list. I didn't do many reviews, but where reviews do exist, I've added a link.
  1. Avatar (2009; film)
  2. The Beast from 20,000 Fathoms (1953; film)
  3. Contact. Carl Sagan (1985; novel; 432 pages)
  4. Deja Vu (2006; film)
  5. Doctor Who (David Tennant): "Planet of the Ood" (2008; TV series)
  6. Doctor Who (David Tennant): "Partners in Crime" (2008; TV series)
  7. Eureka: "Founder's Day" (2010; TV series)
  8. Eureka: "A New World" (2010; TV series)
  9. Eureka: "All the Rage" (2010; TV series)
  10. Eureka: "Crossing Over" (2010; TV series)
  11. Eureka: "Momstrosity" (2010; TV series)
  12. Eureka: "Stoned" (2010; TV series)
  13. Eureka: "The Ex-Files" (2010; TV series)
  14. Eureka: "I'll Be Seeing You" (2010; TV series)
  15. Eureka: "O Little Town" (2010; TV series)
  16. Five Million Miles to Earth (1967; film)
  17. Forbidden Planet (1956; film)
  18. The Forgotten (2004; film)
  19. Operation Terror (1962; novel)
  20. Panic in Year Zero! (1962; film)
  21. Star Trek (2009; film)
  22. Star Trek: Generations (1994; film)
  23. Star Trek: The Next Generation: "Family" (1990; TV series)
  24. Star Trek: The Next Generation: "Future Imperfect" (1990; TV series)
  25. Star Trek: The Next Generation: "Reunion" (1990; TV series)
  26. Star Trek: The Next Generation: "I Borg" (1992; TV series)
  27. Star Trek: The Next Generation: "The Inner Light" (1992; TV series)
  28. Star Trek: The Next Generation: "Relics" (1992; TV series)
  29. Star Trek: The Next Generation: "Homeward" (1993; TV series)
  30. Star Trek: The Next Generation: "Sub Rosa" (1993-94; TV series)
  31. Star Trek: The Next Generation: "Emergence" (1994; TV series)
  32. Star Trek: The Next Generation: "Eye of the Beholder" (1994; TV series)
  33. Star Trek: The Next Generation: "First Born" (1994; TV series)
  34. Star Trek: The Next Generation: "Genesis" (1994; TV series)
  35. Star Trek: The Next Generation: "Journey's End" (1994; TV series)
  36. Space Cowboys (2000; film)
  37. The Island of Dr. Moreau. H.G. Wells (1895; novel; 245 pages)
  38. X the Unknown (1956; film)
  39. These Are the Damned (1962; film)