Another selection of recent short reads

IMG_0139Edie Investigates by Nick Harkaway

This short story features Edie Banister, elderly lady with a past full of derring-do and at present involved in investigating (unofficially of course) a rather unusual murder. This is either a teaser for or an outtake from Angelmaker, the novel in which Edie features heavily. As such it’s very enjoyable and it was lovely to meet Edie again, but I would recommend you get your hands on the novel which I read a year or so ago and thought was absolutely wonderful.

IMG_0183_2The Face at the Window by Louise Welsh

A collection of three short ghostly stories originally written for BBC radio (and broadcast on Radio 4 I believe). I enjoyed them (I do like a ghostly tale) and found them atmospheric but wonder if they wouldn’t have been even better read aloud on a grey chill winter afternoon. Louise Welsh is becoming one of my favourite authors and it was good to read some of her shorter fiction.

Book-Blog-Walkers-2014I’m using this post to keep track of my walking during December as part of the Book Blog Walkers thingy. My final tally for November can be found here (big dip at the end of the month as I was ill and housebound for several days)

Week 1 (Dec 1)

  • 2.9 km
  • 46 minutes

A really bad week; was stuck at home, head down and working, and miserable grey weather didn’t exactly encourage me to go out. Will do better……

Week 2 (Dec 8)

  • 20.6 km
  • 5:01 hours

From a completely dreadful week to a bit of a record. Go figure!

Week 3 (Dec 15)

  • 15.8 km
  • 4:18 hours

Week 4 (Dec 22)

  • 6.4 km
  • 1:29 hours

It was Christmas week and i was mostly curled up on the sofa!

The MartianWhat’s it all about?

The Martian is Mark Watney, biologist, engineer and astronaut who finds himself stranded on the Red Planet after a huge sandstorm jeopardises the mission and his crewmates evacuate believing that he died in a freak accident. How is he going to survive until the next planned landing in four years time, especially as no-one knows he is alive?

Why did I want to read it?

I love all kinds of sci-fi but have a particular fondness for techie stories with lots of science and explanations and problem-solving. The only thing missing from this one was a Big Dumb Object but at least there was enough Survival Against the Odds to keep me gripped. Oh and the reviews had been very favourable and when people whose opinions you trust suggest you read something then it would be rude to refuse. And I love love love books about Mars.

What did I think of it?

A couple of chapters in I really thought I was going to be so irritated by Mark that I wasn’t going to be able to continue. He was just so annoying – and it really wasn’t about the technical detail which as I’ve said above is something I enjoy, it’s that it was all first-person and he was so relentlessly cheerful and positive and upbeat and, well, blokey, it began to get on my nerves. I know the conceit is that he is leaving a record for future expeditions in case he doesn’t make it and so the tone is deliberate but ooh, I wanted to hit him.

However, fear not. It got better. Much, much better.

Things started to improve for me when they started to go wrong for Mark and the cracks in his positive attitude began to show. Then Andy Weir made a very wise tactical decision in order to deal with the inherent problem in first person narratives and had the people on Earth find out he was still alive and start to work to bring him back. Apart from adding a second layer of tension to the story it also meant we weren’t constantly in Mark’s head and I began to like him a lot more. I also liked the way the dilemma on whether to tell the rest of his crew was handled and resolved; they’re stuck on a spaceship heading home, how will they feel when they find out they’ve abandoned their friend and colleague?

It’s basically a huge boy’s own adventure, Robinson Crusoe in Space. Without Man Friday, and being American and, you know, in space (obviously).

In the end I enjoyed it; an uplifting story of human ingenuity with quite a few “isn’t science cool” moments. And it will no doubt make a good film.

So great fun, but *whispers* for my money the best man stranded in space story I read this year was The Explorer.

You could do worse than read them both.

2015sfexp275Ooh, I thought I was being SO clever, posting my reading plans for the month earlier today and totally forgetting that Carl’s Sci-fi Experience now starts in December and runs until my birthday (31st January in case you’re interested and that has got to be the earliest hint I’ve ever given!)

So hasty thinking has taken place and I’m going to (try to) read the following as a minimum for the experience that isn’t a challenge (and they also comply with the TBR DDD as they are already all on the stacks chez Bride):

  • The Left Hand of Darkness by Ursula K le Guin – because she was interviewed in the first episode of the excellent BBC series Tomorrow’s Worlds and I am ashamed, ashamed I say, to admit that if I have ever read any of her work I have long, long forgotten it…..
  • Flowers for Algernon by Daniel Keyes – because it is a classic and my great friend Silvery Dude was reduced to a blubbering wreck reading it (I may possibly be using poetic licence there)….
  • The Starry Rift edited by Jonathan Strahan – because I love short stories and I sought this out after the amazing experience of hearing Neil Gaiman read his entry in the collection Orange at an event earlier in the year which I seem not to have written about at all….
  • A Fire Upon the Deep by Vernor Vinge – because it’s one of the Book God’s favourites and he has been trying to get me to read it since we started living together 20 years ago and I think it’s about time…

Exciting! I also have the urge to watch 2010 again (I love that movie and will punch anyone who disagrees, OK?)

out-sickSo this has been a very strange reading week. I had an overnight business trip at the beginning of the week which is often good for reading and I was well prepared, dragging my copy of the Book That Shall Not Be Named (which I’m still struggling to engage with fully) figuring that an evening on my own in the hotel and a 2 hours plus train journey back to London would make me read it. Of course, I also had the Kindle app on my phone and was distracted by zombies so how wrong was I?

Then I got hit with the dreaded lurgy and was basically off work for the rest of the week (and only really starting to feel well today if I’m honest). Day One I had a headache of such enormous proportions (amongst other symptoms I’m too delicate to elaborate on here) that I couldn’t read.

DISASTER.

However the remaining days of illness and convalescence were easier and being housebound and sofa-ridden I managed to read three whole novels and finish a book of short stores.

Clouds. Silver linings. It’s a cliche for a reason.

And now we’re nearly in December and despite the failure that was my WWI reading plan for this month I’m going to tempt fate and pull together a book list for the run up to Christmas. I’m sure I’ll add to this as I remember other titles but my starters are:

I’ve already had my most successful reading year for ages so I’m fairly relaxed about all of this. Do you have any special reading plans for December?

Jtbr-dare-2014ames at James Reads Books is once again hosting the TBR Double Dog Dare and I’m signing up for it, which means that between 1 January and 1 April 2015 I can only read books that I already own and want to read. As he says:

Forget about keeping up with ARC’s, reading the latest nominees for whatever award they’re giving away this month. Never mind the best seller lists or the tiresome memoir your book club has forced on you.

So in practical terms that means Christmas presents are in, but birthday presents are out. Until April anyway. May still take part in some challenges but only if I want to and only using books I already have.

And if I do nothing else I will finally read Blonde by Joyce Carol Oates. I’ve only had it since the last century after all….

www_wednesdays4W… W… W… Wednesdays poses the following questions:

  • What are you currently reading?
  • What did you recently finish reading?
  • What do you think you’ll read next?

What am I currently reading?

Still really enjoying Trevor Royle’s book on Scotland in WWI, savouring it one chapter at a time. I am also close to the end of  Shoggoths in Bloom by Elizabeth Bear.

The Jonathan Strange Update

Stalled; still on page 122 but not even an overnight stay in Manchester with nothing to do and a long train journey home last night didn’t encourage me to pick it up and read 😦

What did I recently finish reading?

I finished Station Eleven (a cracker) and Zone One (zombies, Manhattan, horror) (both on Kindle) and zipped through.

What do I think I’ll read next?

Probably going to abandon any thoughts of continuing with my not terribly successful WWI reading list plan and will pick up either Lock In by John Scalzi or James Smythe’s The Testimony.

www_wednesdays4W… W… W… Wednesdays poses the following questions:

  • What are you currently reading?
  • What did you recently finish reading?
  • What do you think you’ll read next?

What am I currently reading?

Still really enjoying Trevor Royle’s book on Scotland in WWI, savouring it one chapter at a time. I am also reading Shoggoths in Bloom by Elizabeth Bear and on Kindle The Martian by Andy Weir.

The Jonathan Strange Update

Still persevering; I am on page 122 but *whispers* haven’t picked it up in a couple of days. And it’s over 1000 pages long 😦

What did I recently finish reading?

I finished Foxglove Summer and Lovecraft Unbound and The Laws of Murder so feeling a little bit pleased with myself 🙂

What do I think I’ll read next?

No change from last week – will try to resist the temptation of the new Stephen King novel (but it’s looking mighty attractive) and pick up my WWI reading list, and I think there might be more short stories of a Cthulhu nature on the horizon.

19561902What year are we in? The Laws of Murder is set in 1876.

What is Lenox’s case?

One of Lenox’s friends has been shot in Regent’s Park and the murder may be tied to an aristocratic ne’er-do-well that Lenox has been after for many years. In helping Scotland Yard work the case (after a short period of some estrangement) it becomes clear that matters are not what they seem. At all.

What did I learn about that I didn’t know before?

Quite a bit about mourning dress and Victorian funerals and the business of booking fixed berths on ships to allow cargo to be transported abroad (regardless of what that cargo might be). No questions asked. ‘Nuff said.

What’s happening in Lenox’s personal life?

Lenox has given up his seat in Parliament and has set up a professional detective agency with Dallington and two other colleagues (identified at the end of the last book but not mentioned here by name because *spoilers*) and it’s all taking a while to settle down. Dallington may be in love but is it reciprocated? All the McConnell and Lenox domestic arrangements are happy and harmonious. We see a bit of the background to the lives of Scotland Yard policemen and not all of it is edifying.

Did I enjoy it?

I did enjoy it very much. Like the previous books in the series it is an easy and likeable read, comfortable in a good way as you revisit characters you’ve watched develop over time. Seeing rich people behave badly is always a pleasure (and why I have always preferred Dallas to Eastenders) and the crime(s) and the purpose behind them were ingenious and well thought through. And nice to see that the new detective agency has its premises in Chancery Lane where my old employer used to be based.

However, I shall never look at convents again in quite the same way.

t8714Lovecraft Unbound is one of the books I flagged up in my series of Spring Cleaning posts earlier in the year (back in April I think) where I tackled the huge started but not finished pile; and was one of the titles I thought I would definitely go back to; I finally got round to picking it up again this weekend.

What’s it all about and why did I want to read it?

[…] twenty-two of today’s most respected writers of the fantastic present their visions of HP Lovecraft’s world and creations.

What did I think of it?

Like all anthologies it was patchy but the good ones were very good indeed. Some of the Lovecraftian-ness was tenuous but there were enough set in Antarctic wastes and Tibetan planes as well as ancient horrors in modern life to make it worthwhile.

Highlights for me:

  • Cold Water Survival by Holly Phillips (one of the icy ones)
  • In the Black Mill by Michael Chabon (though I spotted early on what the “secret” was but I’m not sure he was trying to hide it that hard)
  • Commencement by Joyce Carol Oates (because, well, it’s JCO, one of my heroes)
  • Mongoose by Sarah Monette and Elizabeth Bear – probably my favourite

There is a companion volume called Lovecraft’s Monsters which has mysteriously found its way onto my Kindle app and I’m sure I’ll dip into that shortly because *whispers* Neil Gaiman’s in it, if for no other reason 🙂

Update: and in tagging this post for publication I realise that I had already written about the first five stories as part of RIP VI back in 2011, which you can read here if you so desire!

Bride of the Book God

Follow brideofthebook on Twitter

Scottish, in my fifties, love books but not always able to find the time to read them as much as I would like. I’m based in London and happily married to the Book God.

I also blog at Bride of the Screen God (all about movies and TV) and The Dowager Bride, if you are interested in ramblings about stuff of little consequence

If you would like to get in touch you can contact me at brideofthebookgod (at) btinternet (dot) com.

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