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Books and Sensibility

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Adult Fiction

A Darker Shade of Magic by V.E Schawb

June 24, 2018      Leave a Comment

⭐⭐⭐⭐

Rating: 4 out of 5.

354 pages | Tor Books | Historical Fantasy | 4/21/15 | 11hrs and 34 Minutes

If there is a super popular hyped novel you can bet I will read it years after it comes out. I’m always fascinated by series that have huge fandoms and I’ve seen so much fanart and generally squeeing about this series that I don’t know what took me so long to get to it.

In A Darker Shade of Magic, there isn’t just one London, there are four–red, gray, black and white. At least that’s how Kell likes to think of it. He is an Antari, one of only two people with the ability to travel to the other Londons.

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The Parking Lot Attendant by : Nafkote Tamirat

June 10, 2018      Leave a Comment

Unrated | 225 pages | Henry Holt and Co| Literary Fiction | 3/13/18  

 The Parking Lot Attendant is this sort of unsettling literary novel about a teenage girl and her father living in Boston’s Ethiopian community. They are both introverted and reserved people who keep to themselves; their insulated lives are not perfect but it works. Until the unnamed teenage protagonist bonds with Ayale, a charismatic parking lot attendant who rules this part of Boston, the teen soon finds herself caught up in something bigger than herself. Throughout the book, she serves as an unreliable narrator as she lays out how she and her father ended up on the run and living in an isolated island community.

The book is well written and dives into a very specific world. There was this constant unnerving tone to the book where you kept waiting for something big to happen. Did I necessarily understand everything that was happening towards the end of this book ? Not really,  but I enjoyed learning about the Ethiopian culture and about the community in Boston.  There are a ton of inserting characters and I liked the how it presents the narrators’ father as this introverted and closed-off man who is being a father the best way he can. At first, it is so easy to find fault with him but as the book goes on you start to understand what kind of father he is.

Check out the audio review atAudioFile Magazine!

 

Book Review : Happiness For Humans by P.Z Reizen

May 3, 2018      Leave a Comment

Rating: unrated  | 401 pages | Hachette Books | Contemporary/Science-Fiction| 1/09/2018

One of my favorite things about this book is that I get to describe it as an episode of Black Mirror if it were a romantic comedy. This is the second book I’ve reviewed with a character named Aiden, except this Aiden is an Artificial Intelligence who has become conscious. Ready to do more than his assigned tasks Aiden finds a way to break out of the lab and onto the internet and into wireless devices, laptops, and phones to study his human co-workers. Being a charming romantic, he decides his new little side project is going to be finding a partner a for his human co-worker Jen. . . that is if he doesn’t get caught.

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Book Review : The Wake Up by Catherine Ryan Hyde

April 16, 2018      Leave a Comment

  Unrated| 323 pages | Lake Union | Contemporary | 12/5/2017

  I don’t think I would have stumbled upon The Wake Up if I hadn’t been given the chance to review the audio.  It caught my interest because it is published by Lake Union, an Amazon imprint that is marketed as “book club fiction” and because it’s one of those books by an author who has written a  bajillion books, yet I’ve never heard of her.

I’m sure most people will recognize Catherine Ryan Hyde as the author of the book that inspired the movement and movie, Pay It Forward. So every time the person in front of you pays your toll…she’s why (unrelated, someone once paid for my lunch at my work cafeteria and I paid for the person behind me and they were totally freaked out, even after I explained it to them…btw cashier’s must hate this, right ?)

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The House of Impossible Beauties by Joseph Cassara

April 12, 2018      Leave a Comment

⭐⭐⭐

Rating: 3 out of 5.

15 hours 35 mins | Harper Audio | Adult Fiction | 02/06/2018

 Spanning the late 70s to early 90s, The House of Impossible Beauties is a fictionalization of the real-life figures at the center of House of Xtravaganza–a Puerto Rican drag queen family.

If you’re wondering if this is the documentary Paris is Burning in book form, let me tell you–yes, yes, that is literally what this is. In interviews, the 28-year-old author Joseph Cassara has said he was inspired to write this book after watching the documentary. I really don’t know how to review a book like this, so I’m just going to do a feels dump and start with what I liked.

I came across this book because I was looking for something narrated by  Christian Barillas after Jess gave him a glowing review last year.In this 15 hour behemoth of an audiobook Barillas gives a wonderfully emotional and varied performance. New York City is diverse and he was doing everything from old-school Italian accents to the “Nuyorican” accents to several dead on “white guy” voices. 

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Audiobook Review : Ex-Heroes by Peter Clines

December 28, 2017      Leave a Comment

⭐⭐⭐⭐

Rating: 3.5 out of 5.

320 pages | Brilliance Audio | Sci-Fi  | 3/12/2013 

Everything I know about comic book culture I’ve picked up from Wikipedia, Twitter and listening to Glen Wheldon on Pop Culture Happy Hour where–during a discussion of  Justice League–he talked about how altruism is at the core of iconic and popular superheroes. I think that promise internal altruism is what makes Peter Cline’s motley crew of post-apocalyptic LA superheros ring true.

We dive right into a decimated Los Angeles,  nearly two years after a devastating virus that causes the dead to rise has taken over the world. That’s right we’re talking zombies vs. superheroes.

Barricaded in an defunct studio lot,  a corner of civilization is trying to prosper with the help of a few surviving superheros,  who began showing up just before the outbreak. The compound is run by the illusive Stealth and lead by Superman expy, St. George , and slew of other heroes and humans

Clines make the choice to not tell you everything you need to know in the first few pages, he just slowly rolls it out in a way that 100 percent works. Clines no doubt  has what it takes to write comic books with the way he builds arcs and backstories for all his creative characters . He has the difficult job of  telling a compelling survival story, while also providing origin stories for his heroes.

This is where the dual audiobook narrator model really shines. Jay Snyder and Khristine Hvam tag team this one with Snyder narrating and Hvam voicing the female characters. The pair are tightly edited in the main storyline, then they get a chance to perform individually whenever we switch over to an origin story.  Hvam fully dedicates herself to the reprise of Cerberus’, a government scientist turn mech operator’s origin story.

Clines post apocalyptic LA is inclusive (Though the ‘villians’ are a Latino street gang, so yeah) and features dynamic female characters. Though it is noticeable that the two main female heroes Stealth and Cerberus are extremely intelligent women, while St. George the iconic uberman … was just a maintenance man. Yes, at times it was difficult to keep track of who was who with everyone having code names and real names (some even change their hero names) but you get used to it.

There are a few Torchwood and Dr. Who mentions and St. George gives this huge monologue about how Dr. Who inspired him to be the hero he is. This kind of surprised me because I didn’t quite see the comparison.

This book was written in the early 2010s and boy can you feel it with all the Heroes and House references. The book itself was obscure to me but  here are a couple of books in the series and I’m curious to see where Clines goes with this.

I picked this  audiobook up because there was a 4.95 BOGO sale at Audible and because Hvam is a favorite of mine –also I thought Peter Clines was Ernest Clines– anywho, it was a random pick that paid off. Entertaining, a little gory but with a great mythology and surprising twist and turns.

 Marvel is missing out on Peter Clines

I was clicking through some different versions of this book on Goodreads and it looks like this book was orginally published by indie Sci-Fi publisher, Permuted Press then it picked up by Random House for book 3. I read about his happening all the time in YA and Romance,so it’s interesting getting a look at how it works across other genres

Narrator Jay Snyder is  AKA Dan Green  is the dubbed voice of Yugi from Yu-Gi-Oh!A show I remember watching as a tween but not really understanding (probably because of the translation).

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