9
Nov
2010
28
Sep
2010
2
Aug
2010
29
Jul
2010
29
Jun
2010
The Sandman: A Game of You by Neil Gaiman
Barbie and Ken, from The Doll’s House, have split up, and now Barbie is living in another house full of weird folks.
21
Jun
2010
19
Mar
2010
The Lightning Thief by Rick Riordan
A quick trip to Ye Olde Wikipedia will inform you that Rick Riordan first began writing the Percy Jackson series back in 1994, ergo you can can then deduce (induce?) that the Percy Jackson series is not derivative of Harry Potter.
16
Mar
2010
Fables Vol 1: Legends in Exile by Bill Willingham
I’d been looking forward to beginning the Fables series for some time, and I gotta say, I wasn’t disappointed!
18
Nov
2009
15
Nov
2009
Wow. This volume of The Sandman is so full of awesomeness. It has got to me my favorite of the series so far.
The last thing Eliza wants is to hear from the man that kidnapped her for a week when she was a teenager. But that’s exactly what happens when Walter sees her picture in a magazine (because, you know, he’d know her anywhere) and decides to contact her from death row.
I…actually liked this book. I had invited my Inner Teenaged Self up from the basement where she’s usually kept and we read it together. She liked it, too. So, here is is Inner Teenaged Self (you can picture her has having purple spikey hair, fishnet tights, and doc Martins, and that will be a pretty accurate description of me my Sophomore year of high school).
I really enjoyed Ellen Horan’s debut novel, 31 Bond Street. Centering on a murder in 1850’s New York City, it is more about a lawyer, dedicated to defending the accused, than the who dunnit you might expect.
The basic differences between our world and the alternative history are as follows: The Crimean War has been going on for over 150 years, Wales is an independent republic, Shakespeare is hotly debated by everyone (and appreciated in various capacities), riots break out over art, and some people have a natural gift for time travel.
Will somebody please tell me what the Hell this is supposed to be on the cover of this book? I get that it’s supposed to be gold leaf and lapis or whatever, but what is it a picture of?
It’s possible that Jane Austen’s wit is at its height in Northanger Abbey. Those biting little sentences that describe characters, and their quips to one another ring throughout the walls of bath and the great house Northanger Abbey. 