Books Read in 2008
Books Read in 2001 | Books Read in 2002 | Books Read in 2003 | Books Read in 2004 | Books Read in 2005 | Books Read in 2006 | Books Read in 2007
2007 was not a good year for me in books. I rarely had the energy or the desire to read. I listened to a lot of audiobooks but didn't keep track. I don't want a repeat of last year for this year so I've been making myself get back into the habit of reading.
Silence - Thomas Perry
A favorite author of mine. A thriller that was all right but not great. I still love all the details of how to "disappear" and keep people from finding you.
Life Sentences - Alice Blanchard
Another gripping book by Alice Blanchard. The main character is human. I didn't like her at all to start with because of what I perceived as being "weak" in spirit but you know, everyone can be weak and that doesn't mean they are ALWAYS weak. I think that more thought was put into the character of her sister but the sister is bipolar/schizophrenic and maybe because of that, I felt I knew her better through the book. Daisy seemed a little underdimensional in comparison to her sister. It was a solid book. Not the best but definitely worth reading.
Into The Forest - Jean Hegland
What happens if you live in a remote area, are two teenagers and your parent's both die and the world is not what it is supposed to be? Read it to find out. Great book.
Mister B. Gone - Clive Barker
A demon tells his story. Very clever and I liked the ultimate piece of the plot. Short, fast read.
Blind Fall - Christopher Rice
This is probably one of the most frustrating and all over the place bad books I've ever made myself read. It's very gripping but by the time you're really into the story, it falls back on such cliched stuff that it was hard to feel finishing was a wonderful thing. Very choppy too. Ugh. I'd give something else of his a try but if this is his style, then it definitely doesn't work for me.
Fidelity - Thomas Perry
The Forgotten Man - Robert Crais
Not bad. Not great. A quick read.
The Darkest Evening of the Year - Dean Koontz
Not half bad. I enjoyed this much more than some of his books from about 6 years ago. If you haven't been paying attention, this book should really bring to your realization how much he loved his dog Trixie and just Golden Retrievers in general.
Brother Odd - Dean Koontz
Another good story with this very likable character.
Ice Trap - Kitty Sewell
A nice slow buildup to what's really going on. Interesting, different than most of what I'd read before (plot wise), so, pretty good. This was the author's first novel and was short-listed for the Crime Writers's Association's New Blood Award and the Wales Book fo the Year 2006. It also won the BBC Wales Readers' Prize. Pretty fancy debut!
Bones To Ashes - Kathy Reichs
This book, I had no idea it was what the show BONES was based on before I picked it up, was pretty good. Difficult with all the Canadian addresses and stuff that I don't normally run across in the books I read but the characters were great and it was an awesome story with stuff ending up being not quite what I was expecting.
Undiscovered Country - Lin Enger
Great story idea but left me with a bit of the blues. There was a lot of character development but at the end, I wasn't satisified with exactly what happened. Pretty decent book though. The family dynamics are insane. Lots of reality behind it. Too much sometimes.
Jinn - Matthew B.J. Delaney
WOW! Fast, horrific, fantastic book. A quote used at the beginning of the book says it all (without giving any spoilers!): I didn't tell half of what I saw, because no one would have believed me. - Marco Polo
The characters were great, the twists were wonderful, how it all tied in together was spectacular. LOVED it.
Bloodfever - Karen Marie Moning
I haven't read a book of this type in a long, long time. I knew that it was not the first book of a series but decided to go ahead and read it anyway. The character building is great though and now I have to wait until this fall for the next book to come out!!! Fay, faeries, demons, vampires, Ireland, all in this story.
Crime Zero - Michael Cordy
I read this thing in one day. GREAT story, characters and plot. Genetic engineering sci-fi stuff.
Queen of the Dragons - Shana Abe
It's been quite awhile since I've been able to find a good Fantasy book about dragons that was actually readable. My only regret is that I was unable to read the first two in the series but I enjoyed the characters so much in this book that I still plan on going back and reading book 1 and book 2. Light, fast, fun read. Just in time for summer!!
The Elementals - Morgan Llywelyn
What's a summer without some apocolyptic type of fiction? I LOVE the premise of this book. I read it in one day. LOVED the work. If you love Sci-Fi/Apocolyptic stuff, definitely pick this up. How did they describe it....ecological fantasy. It's great.
Heavy Weather - Bruce Sterling
I'd have to agree with the majority of the reviews: EXCELLENT idea but failed to really bring it to a satisfying reality and the ending really sucked. I was very disappointed in this book.
The Judas Strain - James Rollins
James Rollins delivers ANOTHER very excellent read. I love that his books have so many facts in them and he really writes the story well to accomodate the facts and the current theories of scientists. Excellent read. Very satisfying. He has several books out but my favorite still remains Amazonia. Now THAT is a freakin' awesome book. The book jacket at the back reads that he's an avid scuba diver and caver. Very cool author.
The Last Oracle - James Rollins
This ties in were the previous book, The Judas Strain, had left off. Very fun. Loving the character development. Great story, history, interesting. Hurry up and write MORE, FASTER!
Historical Fiction
I first read Boudica about 4 years ago. I have been avidly awaiting the next two books in the series. I was delighted to find that there were actually going to be four.
It was the most wonderful, vivid, heartbreakingly awesome saga I've ever read. LOVED it.
Boudica: Dreaming the Eagle (read a few years ago)
Boudica: Dreaming The Bull
Boudica: Dreaming The Hound
Boudica: Dreaming The Serpent Spear - the finale that took my breath away and broke my heart all over again. Manda Scott is an incredible author. LOVED THEM. I am especially glad that I was able to read the last 3 so close together. It makes a huge difference.
Snowstruck: In the Grip of Avalanches - Jill Fredston
I'm not a snow person even though I grew up in upper Northwestern Pennsylvania. We had mountains but not the kind of mountains that produced avalanches so this was a completely new subject for me to learn about. And Jill Fredston nailed this perfectly. She tells us the science behind avalanches but she also introduces the human factor into it. Natural disasters that happen all the time and yet people that live directly in the paths, even some of them don't seem to recognize the dangers. It was a mix of science, personal memoirs and narratives on the history of avalanches. Highly recommended.
House to House: An Epic Memoir of War - SSG David Bellavia with John R. Bruning
I am vehemently opposed to our continued presence in Iraq and have been for 6 years now. George Bush is doing nothing but creating a huge mess, continuing to put our men and women's lives in danger just because of his own agenda at this point.
But I am not against the men and women who go and give their lives for a cause they believe in. I support them completely. This is the first book I've read regarding the war in Iraq and it made me weep. SSG Bellavia writes from the heart and gut and there are no questions in my mind of just how much they are sacrificing every day, in ways that I will never understand.
This is a first hand account of a short period of time and the fight at Fallujah that occured on November 10, 2004 and it is gut wrenching and majestic and explains what compels these men and women to be over there. It's not just an order from their government. It's a cause they believe in enough to die for and so many have died. If you read anything about first hand experiences for the soldiers over there, I ask you to put this one at the very top of your list. It deserves to be read and you will find yourself never wondering why they do what they do. Hooah to SSG Bellavia and his team and all the other soldiers over there.
Here If You Need Me - Kate Braestrup
I'm not sure why I picked this book up but I did. It is Kate Braestrup's memoir about losing her husband who was a State Trooper for Maine, becoming the Chaplain for Maine's Game Wardens and raising her 4 children in the aftermath of losing her husband, becoming a chaplain and her experiences. Very well written but I lacked the complete connection that I expected to find, that I can usually find with most memoirs.
The Fighting 69th - Sean Michael Flynn
This book sort of ties in with the House to House memoir. It's told from the point of view of the 69th National Guard Unit out of New York. They were one of the first on the scene at 9/11 and they were eventually dispatched to the fight in Iraq. It covers roughly the same time frame that the unit SSG David Bellavia covers in his book. So, it was nice to get a bigger picture of what was happening during that time in different military outfits.
On Call In Hell: A Doctor's Iraq War Story - Cdr. Richard Jadick and Thomas Hayden
This was a pretty decent book for a memoir that tries to reach out to people not familiar or in the military to try and show a small part of what it was like to be a battle surgeon in Iraq. The writer seemed very self-conscious of himself though at times and seemed like he held back on his emotions a lot. I think just based on the title that I was going to encounter some pretty heavy emotional issues and while he did convey things in a realistic way, it's like he was too removed to be able to truly communicate every thing he felt in a way that I could identify with. Overall, a solid memoir of this man and his story.
eat pray love - Elizabeth Gilbert
Sometimes in your life you pick up the exact book you need to make a difference in your life at precisely the right moment. That's what this book is to me. Incredible, lovely, perfect. I think maybe it's because I can identify so closely with what the author went through. I envy her travels and life and it makes me wish I had the means to take a year off to center my own self.
Down the Nile : alone in a fisherman's skiff - Rosemary Mahoney
I had higher hopes for this book. I guess I expected more of a growth of the person but if that happened, it was not communicated at the end. Decent enough book though.
Kabul Beauty School: An American Woman Goes Behind the Veil - Deborah Rodriguez and Kristin Ohlson
A wonderful book that every woman who has had a dream to do something BIG but had to get past abusive relationships to make that happen. Also full of information on what life is really like for Afghani women.
Sand in My Bra and Other Misadventures: Funny Women Write from the Road (Travelers' Tales) - Jennifer L. Leo and Jessica Maxwell
Short stories, mostly centered around travel anecdotes. The best one in it was written by Ellen Degeneres.
Heros Among Us - Edited and with an Introduction by Major Chuck Larson
Read it. Just read it.
Warrior King - Lt. Col. [Ret.] Nathan Sassaman w/Joe Layden
Something very different than the other books I've been reading about what has been going on over in Iraq. What a sad and eye-opening read. It just proves that what I've thought for several years now, is in fact, true. If I had ever joined the military, I don't think I would have been a career type - the politics and the ass kissing you have to do is just ridiculous. What the Army did to this guy was just completely out of bounds. The media, for the most part, sucks as well. As usual. This man is the kind of leader that should be placed in ALL KEY positions throughout the DoD, Homeland Security, and any military institution. As Kevin says (former Sgt. in the Army), "He's the kind of leader I'd follow to hell and back." Indeed.
Lady Q
The Rise and Fall of a Latin Queen by Reymundo Sanchez (Author), Sonia Rodriguez (Author)
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