Friday, November 8, 2024

The Friday 56 (250) & Book Beginnings: The Raven King by Maggie Stiefvater

The Friday 56 is a weekly meme hosted by Freda's Voice where every Friday you pick a book and turn to page 56 or 56%, and select a sentence or a few, as long as it's not a spoiler. **Note: Freda @ Freda's Voice is taking a break from The Friday 56; Anne @Head is Full of Books is hosting for now.**

Book Beginnings is a weekly meme hosted by Rose City Reader that asks you to share the first sentence (or so) of the book you're reading.


Synopsis from Goodreads...

All her life, Blue has been warned that she will cause her true love's death. She doesn't believe in true love and never thought this would be a problem, but as her life becomes caught up in the strange and sinister world of the Raven Boys, she's not so sure anymore.


Beginning: "Richard Gansey III had forgotten how many times he had been told he was destined for greatness."

56: "These days, they all had their hands thrust into the sky, hoping for comets."


Comments: I have finally finished reading the first four books of The Raven Cycle series. I liked this one as much as the other three. What are you reading this week?

Monday, November 4, 2024

Music Monday (304): Charli XCX, Caroline Polachek

Rules:

  • Music Monday is a weekly meme hosted by Lauren Stoolfire at Always Me that asks you to share one or two songs that you've recently enjoyed. For the rules, visit the page HERE 
Breana: I've been listening to the Charlie XCX's remix album, Brat and it's completely different but also still brat. One of my favorite songs is Everything is Romantic featuring Caroline Polachek.



What are you listening to this week?

Tuesday, October 29, 2024

Short Stories I Read In September

It’s October twenty-ninth. So it’s time to write about the short stories, miscellaneous posts, and podcast episodes I read or listened to in September.

The 6% Squeeze by Eddie Robson (Uncanny Magazine; Issue Sixty)

The 6% Squeeze by Eddie Robson was an uncanny and engrossing short story (no pun intended) with hints of absurd and horror, about a man—Miles—and the design of a product package, for a brand referred to as “Mr Zeb.” Seems pretty mundane right? Well, the story quickly took a turn, and the instructions for how to design the packaging read like a manual for a cult, as Miles discovers just who he’s doing freelance for. I liked this story. It had a great, eerie atmosphere, and the build-up toward the reveal and the end was tense.

The Music Must Always Play by Marissa Lingen (Clarkesworld Magazine; Issue 216 September 2024)

The next short story I checked out was Marissa Lingen’s The Music Must Always Play. This is the second story I've read from this author this year (the other one was And the Dreams That You Dare to Dream). This one was a first contact story set in Mankato, Minnesota, after an alien ship crash landed. The aliens were significant but also a small part of the story. They weren’t the focus, rather it was the aftermath of the crash, and a linguists, Maryam Mohamed’s, attempts to understand the clues they left behind. There was nothing dramatic, in terms of twists, due to how the emotional arc in this character sturdy was the point. I liked what Lingen did with Maryam. She was a complicated character, who was caught between her dedication to linguistics and the once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to study an alien language and her desire to be closer to her family during her father’s illness. All-in-all, The Music Must Always Play was a good one. 

From around the web…




Monday, October 28, 2024

Music Monday Halloween Edition (2024)

 

Rules:

  • Music Monday is a weekly meme hosted by Lauren Stoolfire at Always Me that asks you to share one or two songs that you've recently enjoyed. For the rules, visit the page HERE 


October 31st is right around the corner, so welcome to our annual Halloween Edition of Music Monday, where we're going to share more of the music we've been listening to this season!

Breana: Since this is the Halloween Edition, I have three songs. The first one is RIP by Qveen Herby. I couldn't end the month without mentioning this one, because it embodies the season.


My second pick is Vampire in the Corner by Magdalena Bay. It's from their latest album, Imaginal Disk.


And my third pick is another song from Qveen Herby. This one is called Frankenstein and it features Tech N9ne.


Andrea: This week I'm listening to Addams Groove by MC Hammer. Have a happy and safe Halloween!


Adri: This week my pick is a song I've been listening to for most of the year, but wanted to save for this edition specifically. And that song is Are You Afraid of the Dark by Scary Black. 



So that's it for our annual Halloween Edition. What are you listening to?

Friday, October 25, 2024

Sabriel by Garth Nix

Title: Sabriel
Series: The Old Kingdom #1
Author: Garth Nix
Source/Format: Purchased; Paperback
More Details: Fantasy
Publisher/Publication Date: Harper Collins; January 1, 1995

Goodreads

Synopsis from Goodreads...

Enter the Old Kingdom, a world of dark secrets and dangerous magic.

As a child, Sabriel was sent across the Wall to Ancelstierre to safety. Now eighteen years old, she receives a cryptic and desperate message from her father, the Abhorsen—the magical protector whose task it is to bind and send back to Death those who won’t stay Dead. Fiercely determined to help her father, who is perilously trapped in Death, and save him from the sinister Free Magic entity that has somehow ensnared him, Sabriel must prepare to enter Death herself—and find her destiny. To preserve life, the Abhorsen must enter death.


I haven’t picked up a Garth Nix book in many-many years—the last ones I read were The Keys to the Kingdom with Mister Monday and the following novels. However, one series that has persisted on my TBR list (for just as long) has been Nix’s The Old Kingdom. So in the interest of slimming down that TBR by another book, I picked up Sabriel, the first of that series.

Sabriel was a phenomenal novel, and had almost everything I love about fantasy. There was a good deal of traveling the main character, Sabriel, undertook during her adventure. However, each step of the way presented its own pitfalls, ensuring the story kept a sense of urgency. It was part cat-and-mouse game, part fetch quest, and there was no happy ending guaranteed in a story that dealt with so much death.

The magic had a cool system, essentially necromancy, which required literally stepping into death as well as a set of very particular bells. I loved this aspect of the story and the details that went into developing it. After all, each bell was imbued with a different power—and had varied consequences for ringing them—which only added another layer of detail to a magic system that was already working within a clear set of relatively unique rules.

There were two primary places where the story took place. There’s Ancelstierre, where Sabriel attended Wyverly College, which—although a fantasy country—could have been reality, albeit a historical time period. There were cars, electricity, and even weapons. The Old Kingdom, by contrast, was pure fantasy and entirely bleak; a place that was clearly on the losing side of a conflict. And it was into the horror left behind and the grueling battle against “those who won’t stay dead,” that Sabriel enters as a begrudging player, in the grand scheme of things. She didn’t want the job, more than that, however, she wanted to find her father, the Abhorsen. And her anxiety is part of what propels the story, at least early on, before she gained allies and came to understand the greater danger posed to everything and everyone. As a result, the story had intensity to it, and I enjoyed every second of it.

All in all, I adored this novel, and I’m looking forward to eventually continuing with this series.
 
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