As we get into the new year Jess and I like to take some time and review what we’ve been up to on the blog this year.
…
We're an Open Book
As we get into the new year Jess and I like to take some time and review what we’ve been up to on the blog this year.
…
Did you know NPR’s This American Life turned 20 this year ? I’ve been binge listening to the podcast and since I blog about books I decided to pair nine episodes of TAL with with some amazing YA books because sometimes life is stranger than fiction.
…
Robert Langdon is back. This time the symbologist (although most of this book really just needed a Art Historian and Italian Lit professor) wakes up in a hospital in Florence, Italy with no memory of how he got there or why a shadowy organization is after him. As Langdon dashes across Italy with a beautiful blonde Girl Friday doctor, Sienna Brooks, he starts to put the pieces of his memory together. Langdon and Sienna are racing against time to save the world against a plot inspired by Dante Alighieri himself. This installment features all the twist and turns you expect in a Dan Brown novel with the addition of what I think Dan Brown considers strong female characters. I didn’t see the ending coming and Brown mixes just the right amount of facts and fiction to create a page flipping novel. A great addition to the Langdon series, this coming from someone who has read every Brown novel. We’ll just pretend The Lost Symbol never happened. Jess – ★★★
Song of Achilles is the story of Achilles from The Illiad told through the perspective of his lover, the exiled prince Patroclus. Let me stop you right there. Yes. Yes, this book is basically The Illiad fanfiction, but it’s the good kind. Although I suspect if Patrolcus was a female character in a YA book he’d be called a Mary Sue and bad role model. His character begins and ends with how awesomesauce Achilles is.
Miller’s writing is so vivid and engrossing, it works perfectly with Frazer Douglas’s audiobook narration. This book works great on audio because some of these names can be tough. Douglas’ does read a little slow and it felt like the ending of this book was dragging. I think it’s best to go in knowing as little as possible about the actual story because it follows the Greek myth so closely.
I do want to point out that there is a fair amount rape and misogyny in this book, but Miller handles female characters well. The few speaking women in this book could have easily been lamps with wombs, but Douglas brings them to life. Kat – ★★★★
SIDE NOTE:
Also, Miller does the *wink* *wink* *nudge* *nudge* thing to keep it kind of meta. Odysseus tells a central character (who you have probably never heard of) “Who knows, I could be more famous than you one day. Welp, back to Ithaca I go now.” (Okay, that may not be paraphrased.)
Earlier this week Maggie Stiefvater shared the cover of The Raven King…and that the release date of the book has been pushed back again to April 2016, so it looks like I’ll be waiting even longer for this one.
This is another series I’ve been following since its release and I can’t wait to see how it ends. Also, the dress on this cover is insane !
.
Books and Sensibility turned 4 this month ! How did this happen ? This has been a marathon year for us. I started a romance site, we took on BEA 2015 and were profiled on a local news website.
Jess and I started the blog in Fall 2011 when Jess wanted to write tongue and cheek recaps of The Mortal Instruments Series. We never got around to it because once we discovered the awesome YA blogging community we made a natural transition to book blogging. I was looking at the blog on the Wayback Machine and noticed that we’ve gone through quite a few looks along the way….