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Samantha's bookshelf: currently-reading

The Winner's Curse
tagged: currently-reading
Gated
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Tuesday, March 20, 2012

A novel about the magic of storytelling?

Hm, yes please! Sign me up.

That would be for The Thirteenth Tale by Diane Setterfield. It is the overwhelming winner for April's book club read with an astounding 1 VOTE! Amazing.

And it was my vote, too.

I might have to rethink the premise of this blog seeing as how it's not really a book club and more like a "see what Sam's reading these days and what she has to say about all these books" blog. Which is fine, of course. I'm all for calling things what they are.

Speaking of which, I've been on a reading binge lately, what with plenty of time in my car to listen to audiobooks. So check out my goodreads profile on the right sidebar if you're interested in more book suggestions. I've recently read Clockwork Angel, Born to Run, Fire Study, and I'm in the middle of The Clockwork Prince and The Lightning Thief on audiobook.

The official April read is still The Thirteenth Tale  and I'll probably just make Unbroken the official May read. Just because I can.

Feel free to vote or suggest any other books, because I'd love, you know, some interaction.

Friday, March 16, 2012

wrapping up The Poison Study Series

Primary thoughts about the 2nd book, Magic Study: I resigned myself to the fact that it was no longer about a love story and more about a complex fantasy world where the main character, Yelena, has to learn to use her magic. I was okay with it, because it was still an interesting story.

Goodreads rating: 3/5 stars

Main thoughts about Fire Study: Totally disappointed that there was nothing too original in the 3rd book and that it in fact seemed to really drag. A lot. Especially through the middle. I skimmed over a lot of the pages and found  that in so doing, I really didn't miss much. So I would advise you to do the same.

Goodreads rating: 2/5 stars

Go to my Goodreads link on the right-hand sidebar if you want to check out Goodreads reviews by me and others.

Monday, March 12, 2012

Review of Poison Study by Maria Snyder

The library did not have an audiobook of Poison Study, so I had to go back to reading hardcopy. I was a little worried about having time to read, but it turns out it wasn't a problem.

I blazed through this book.

It was easy reading, but that's not to say it wasn't also intelligent.

An intriguing idea - the comparison of love to slow poison. Or is being in love only like slow poison until you confess it, share it, and find out it is returned; then is love the antidote?

Yelena, the main character, is likeable for a number of reasons. She's a bit gritty with some dark history and bleak sentiments - making her similar to what a real person might be like who undergoes what she does. I liked that about her.

She is believable as a jaded character but not in a whiny or cheesy or one-dimensional way. In fact, Yelena is actually quite... decisive. And...

Dynamic. That's the word.

I'm still deciding about the love story.

On the one hand, I loved that it started out subtle. You don't realize that you've already met the love interest until, well... you start looking for him. And then you start reading into small reactions a little bit more.

But then once the love story started to gain steam, I felt like a few things happened a little too fast.

*SPOILER ALERT BELOW*

Friday, March 2, 2012

Pi's name in the Life of Pi

Let's think about how genius it is - just for a second - that Yann Martel managed to give an Indian boy a French name that was metaphorical not just for the ocean of his Rite of Passage but also for the infinite cycle of narration in this novel.

A moment of silence, please.

Ah, there.

Piscine = a pool, a body of water.
Pi = a Greek symbol, a never-ending decimal beginning 3.14...
Pi, the character= the first layer of narration in this novel which leads to almost endless possibilities of what you can take from this story.

It's brilliant, really.

Wow! What a twist to the Life of Pi!

Okay, this post is going to have spoilers. That's the only way I get to ask you what you thought about the conclusion!

You may also get a better idea of why I was an English Major. Because I could easily write up a squeaky neat  analysis paper on this book. Nevertheless, you will get the informal layout of what I want to say!

(Click "read more" if you have finished Life of Pi.)

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