Brook's bookshelf: all en-US Sun, 06 Apr 2025 13:29:22 -0700 60 Brook's bookshelf: all 144 41 /images/layout/goodreads_logo_144.jpg <![CDATA[Till We Have Faces: A Myth Retold]]> 29938408
C. S. Lewis—the great British writer, scholar, lay theologian, broadcaster, Christian apologist, and bestselling author of Mere Christianity, The Screwtape Letters, The Great Divorce, The Chronicles of Narnia, and many other beloved classics—brilliantly reimagines the story of Cupid and Psyche. Told from the viewpoint of Psyche’s sister, Orual, Till We Have Faces is a brilliant examination of envy, betrayal, loss, blame, grief, guilt, and conversion. In this, his final—and most mature and masterful—novel, Lewis reminds us of our own fallibility and the role of a higher power in our lives.]]>
368 C.S. Lewis 0062565419 Brook 0 currently-reading 4.28 1956 Till We Have Faces: A Myth Retold
author: C.S. Lewis
name: Brook
average rating: 4.28
book published: 1956
rating: 0
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date added: 2025/04/06
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Dodsworth 415419 384 Sinclair Lewis 0451525981 Brook 0 currently-reading 3.97 1929 Dodsworth
author: Sinclair Lewis
name: Brook
average rating: 3.97
book published: 1929
rating: 0
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date added: 2025/03/31
shelves: currently-reading
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<![CDATA[Tomorrow, and Tomorrow, and Tomorrow]]> 77262337 An alternative cover edition for this ASIN can be found here.

In this exhilarating novel by the best-selling author of The Storied Life of A. J. Fikry two friends--often in love, but never lovers--come together as creative partners in the world of video game design, where success brings them fame, joy, tragedy, duplicity, and, ultimately, a kind of immortality.

On a bitter-cold day, in the December of his junior year at Harvard, Sam Masur exits a subway car and sees, amid the hordes of people waiting on the platform, Sadie Green. He calls her name. For a moment, she pretends she hasn't heard him, but then, she turns, and a game begins: a legendary collaboration that will launch them to stardom. These friends, intimates since childhood, borrow money, beg favors, and, before even graduating college, they have created their first blockbuster, Ichigo. Overnight, the world is theirs. Not even twenty-five years old, Sam and Sadie are brilliant, successful, and rich, but these qualities won't protect them from their own creative ambitions or the betrayals of their hearts.

Spanning thirty years, from Cambridge, Massachusetts, to Venice Beach, California, and lands in between and far beyond, Gabrielle Zevin's Tomorrow, and Tomorrow, and Tomorrow is a dazzling and intricately imagined novel that examines the multifarious nature of identity, disability, failure, the redemptive possibilities in play, and above all, our need to connect: to be loved and to love. Yes, it is a love story, but it is not one you have read before.]]>
418 Gabrielle Zevin Brook 1 4.22 2022 Tomorrow, and Tomorrow, and Tomorrow
author: Gabrielle Zevin
name: Brook
average rating: 4.22
book published: 2022
rating: 1
read at: 2025/03/31
date added: 2025/03/31
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DNF. I don't need something to "happen," but large portions of each chapter of this book could have been chopped. Made it to 37% with minimal character development. Not sure if it gets high ratings because of the cultural touchstones (a-la Ready Player One), but I didn't care about any of the flat characters when I quit.
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Echopraxia (Firefall, #2) 18490708
It's the eve of the twenty-second century: a world where the dearly departed send postcards back from Heaven and evangelicals make scientific breakthroughs by speaking in tongues; where genetically engineered vampires solve problems intractable to baseline humans and soldiers come with zombie switches that shut off self-awareness during combat. And it’s all under surveillance by an alien presence that refuses to show itself.

Daniel Bruks is a living fossil: a field biologist in a world where biology has turned computational, a cat's-paw used by terrorists to kill thousands. Taking refuge in the Oregon desert, he’s turned his back on a humanity that shatters into strange new subspecies with every heartbeat. But he awakens one night to find himself at the center of a storm that will turn all of history inside-out.

Now he’s trapped on a ship bound for the center of the solar system. To his left is a grief-stricken soldier, obsessed by whispered messages from a dead son. To his right is a pilot who hasn’t yet found the man she's sworn to kill on sight. A vampire and its entourage of zombie bodyguards lurk in the shadows behind. And dead ahead, a handful of rapture-stricken monks takes them all to a meeting with something they will only call “The Angels of the Asteroids.�

Their pilgrimage brings Dan Bruks, the fossil man, face-to-face with the biggest evolutionary breakpoint since the origin of thought itself.]]>
384 Peter Watts 076532802X Brook 0 currently-reading 3.81 2014 Echopraxia (Firefall, #2)
author: Peter Watts
name: Brook
average rating: 3.81
book published: 2014
rating: 0
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date added: 2025/03/30
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Till We Have Faces 17343
Set against the backdrop of Glome, a barbaric, pre-Christian world, the struggles between sacred and profane love are illuminated as Orual learns that we cannot understand the intent of the gods "till we have faces" and sincerity in our souls and selves.]]>
313 C.S. Lewis Brook 0 to-read 4.19 1956 Till We Have Faces
author: C.S. Lewis
name: Brook
average rating: 4.19
book published: 1956
rating: 0
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date added: 2025/03/27
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<![CDATA[Power, Sex, Suicide: Mitochondria and the Meaning of Life]]> 39001
In this fascinating and thought-provoking book, Nick Lane brings together the latest research in this exciting field to show how our growing insight into mitochondria has shed light on how complex life evolved, why sex arose (why don't we just bud?), and why we age and die. These findings are of fundamental importance, both in understanding life on Earth, but also in controlling our own illnesses, and delaying our degeneration and death. Readers learn that two billion years ago, mitochondria were probably bacteria living independent lives and that their capture within larger cells was a turning point in the evolution of life, enabling the development of complex organisms.

Lane describes how mitochondria have their own DNA and that its genes mutate much faster than those in the nucleus. This high mutation rate lies behind our aging and certain congenital diseases. The latest research suggests that mitochondria play a key role in degenerative diseases such as cancer. We also discover that mitochondrial DNA is passed down almost exclusively via the female line. That's why it has been used by some researchers to trace human ancestry daughter-to-mother, to "Mitochondrial Eve," giving us vital information about our evolutionary history.

Written by Nick Lane, a rising star in popular science, Power, Sex, Suicide is the first book for general readers on the nature and function of these tiny, yet fascinating structures.]]>
354 Nick Lane 0199205647 Brook 0 to-read 4.23 2005 Power, Sex, Suicide: Mitochondria and the Meaning of Life
author: Nick Lane
name: Brook
average rating: 4.23
book published: 2005
rating: 0
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date added: 2025/03/27
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<![CDATA[Waste and Want: A Social History of Trash]]> 398445
Susan Strasser's pathbreaking histories of housework and the rise of the mass market have become classics in the literature of consumer culture. Here she turns to an essential but neglected part of that culture-the trash it produces-and finds in it an unexpected wealth of meaning.

Before the twentieth century, streets and bodies stank, but trash was nearly nonexistent. With goods and money scarce, almost everything was reused. Strasser paints a vivid picture of an America where scavenger pigs roamed the streets, swill children collected kitchen garbage, and itinerant peddlers traded manufactured goods for rags and bones. Over the last hundred years, however, Americans have become hooked on convenience, disposability, fashion, and constant technological change-the rise of mass consumption has led to waste on a previously unimaginable scale.

Lively and colorful, Waste and Want recaptures a hidden part of our social history, vividly illustrating that what counts as trash depends on who's counting, and that what we throw away defines us as much as what we keep.]]>
368 Susan Strasser 0805065121 Brook 0 to-read 3.84 2000 Waste and Want: A Social History of Trash
author: Susan Strasser
name: Brook
average rating: 3.84
book published: 2000
rating: 0
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date added: 2025/03/27
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<![CDATA[The Rest I Will Kill: William Tillman and the Unforgettable Story of How a Free Black Man Refused to Become a Slave]]> 26530335 240 Brian McGinty 1631491296 Brook 0 to-read 3.50 2016 The Rest I Will Kill: William Tillman and the Unforgettable Story of How a Free Black Man Refused to Become a Slave
author: Brian McGinty
name: Brook
average rating: 3.50
book published: 2016
rating: 0
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date added: 2025/03/17
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<![CDATA[On Tyranny: Twenty Lessons from the Twentieth Century]]> 33917107
On November 9th, millions of Americans woke up to the impossible: the election of Donald Trump as president. Against all predictions, one of the most-disliked presidential candidates in history had swept the electoral college, elevating a man with open contempt for democratic norms and institutions to the height of power.

Timothy Snyder is one of the most celebrated historians of the Holocaust. In his books Bloodlands and Black Earth, he has carefully dissected the events and values that enabled the rise of Hitler and Stalin and the execution of their catastrophic policies. With Twenty Lessons, Snyder draws from the darkest hours of the twentieth century to provide hope for the twenty-first. As he writes, “Americans are no wiser than the Europeans who saw democracy yield to fascism, Nazism and communism. Our one advantage is that we might learn from their experience.�

Twenty Lessons is a call to arms and a guide to resistance, with invaluable ideas for how we can preserve our freedoms in the uncertain years to come.]]>
127 Timothy Snyder 0804190119 Brook 0 to-read 4.24 2017 On Tyranny: Twenty Lessons from the Twentieth Century
author: Timothy Snyder
name: Brook
average rating: 4.24
book published: 2017
rating: 0
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date added: 2025/03/16
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<![CDATA[The Tao of Willie: A Guide to the Happiness in Your Heart]]> 57856 208 Willie Nelson 159240197X Brook 0 to-read 4.07 2006 The Tao of Willie: A Guide to the Happiness in Your Heart
author: Willie Nelson
name: Brook
average rating: 4.07
book published: 2006
rating: 0
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date added: 2025/03/15
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Autocracy, Inc. 183932735 224 Anne Applebaum 0241627893 Brook 0 to-read 4.21 2024 Autocracy, Inc.
author: Anne Applebaum
name: Brook
average rating: 4.21
book published: 2024
rating: 0
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date added: 2025/03/14
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The Library at Mount Char 26892110
After all, she was a normal American herself, once.

That was a long time ago, of course—before the time she calls “adoption day,� when she and a dozen other children found themselves being raised by a man they learned to call Father.

Father could do strange things. He could call light from darkness. Sometimes he raised the dead. And when he was disobeyed, the consequences were terrible.

In the years since Father took her in, Carolyn hasn't gotten out much. Instead, she and her adopted siblings have been raised according to Father's ancient Pelapi customs. They've studied the books in his library and learned some of the secrets behind his equally ancient power.

Sometimes, they've wondered if their cruel tutor might secretly be God.

Now, Father is missing. And if God truly is dead, the only thing that matters is who will inherit his library—and with it, power over all of creation.

As Carolyn gathers the tools she needs for the battle to come, fierce competitors for this prize align against her.

But Carolyn can win. She's sure of it. What she doesn't realize is that her victory may come at an unacceptable price—because in becoming a God, she's forgotten a great deal about being human.]]>
390 Scott Hawkins 0553418629 Brook 0 to-read 4.06 2015 The Library at Mount Char
author: Scott Hawkins
name: Brook
average rating: 4.06
book published: 2015
rating: 0
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<![CDATA[World of Trouble (The Last Policeman Book, #3)]]> 59023453
But Detective Hank Palace still has one last case to solve. His beloved sister Nico was last seen in the company of suspicious radicals, armed with heavy artillery and a plan to save humanity. Hank's search for Nico takes him from Massachusetts to Ohio, from abandoned zoos and fast food restaurants to a deserted police station where he uncovers evidence of a brutal crime. With time running out, Hank follows the clues to a series of earth-shattering revelations.

The third novel in the Last Policeman trilogy, World of Trouble presents one final pre-apocalyptic mystery—and Hank Palace confronts questions way beyond whodunit: How far would you go to protect a loved one? And how would you choose to spend your last days on Earth?]]>
322 Ben H. Winters Brook 2 4.07 2014 World of Trouble (The Last Policeman Book, #3)
author: Ben H. Winters
name: Brook
average rating: 4.07
book published: 2014
rating: 2
read at: 2025/03/05
date added: 2025/03/05
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Finished the trilogy just to see what happened with the apocalypse. And hindsight, probably not worth finishing. Hence the lower rating. The story is a solid three stars, but these setting just seemed to be an excuse. Still enjoyed it.
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The Guncle 56292974 Winner of the Thurber Prize for American Humor National BestsellerĚýâ€� Wall Street Journal BestsellerĚýâ€� USA Today BestsellerAn NPR Book of the Yea rFinalist for the 2021 Ĺ·±¦ÓéŔÖ Choice Awards
From the bestselling author of Lily and the Octopus and The Editor comes a warm and deeply funny novel about a once-famous gay sitcom star whose unexpected family tragedy leaves him with his niece and nephew for the summer.

Patrick, or Gay Uncle Patrick (GUP, for short), has always loved his niece, Maisie, and nephew, Grant. That is, he loves spending time with them when they come out to Palm Springs for weeklong visits, or when he heads home to Connecticut for the holidays. But in terms of caretaking and relating to two children, no matter how adorable, Patrick is, honestly, overwhelmed.

So when tragedy strikes and Maisie and Grant lose their mother and Patrick's brother has a health crisis of his own, Patrick finds himself suddenly taking on the role of primary guardian. Despite having a set of "Guncle Rules" ready to go, Patrick has no idea what to expect, having spent years barely holding on after the loss of his great love, a somewhat-stalled acting career, and a lifestyle not-so-suited to a six- and a nine-year-old. Quickly realizing that parenting--even if temporary--isn't solved with treats and jokes, Patrick's eyes are opened to a new sense of responsibility, and the realization that, sometimes, even being larger than life means you're unfailingly human.

With the humor and heart we've come to expect from bestselling author Steven Rowley, The Guncle is a moving tribute to the power of love, patience, and family in even the most trying of times.]]>
326 Steven Rowley Brook 3
One thing that was interesting - and I am making a guess here that the author is also gay and is also about the same age as the protagonist - is the generational difference that is clearly outlined in the book, when it comes to a gay man living in the United States.]]>
4.25 2021 The Guncle
author: Steven Rowley
name: Brook
average rating: 4.25
book published: 2021
rating: 3
read at: 2025/03/05
date added: 2025/03/05
shelves:
review:
Very much a "beach read." But it is very sweet, and tells a unique story. There is nothing deep about this, and indeed I think the author tries to insert some levity where perhaps the story might have been better without it. But there is nothing bad to say about the story. It is feel-good, and the characters are mostly very believable and relatable. A Hallmark movie with a gay uncle.

One thing that was interesting - and I am making a guess here that the author is also gay and is also about the same age as the protagonist - is the generational difference that is clearly outlined in the book, when it comes to a gay man living in the United States.
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<![CDATA[Nine Lives: The True Story of an Mi6 Double Agent on the Frontlines]]> 36314846
This is the story of a young Muslim determined to defend his faith, even if it meant dying for the cause, the terrible disillusionment that followed when he realised he was fighting on the wrong side, and the fateful decision to work undercover with his sworn enemy. In a career spanning decades in some of the most lethal conflicts of the past fifty years, we discover what it's like to be at the heart of the global jihad, and what it will take to stop it once and for all.]]>
467 Aimen Dean 1786073285 Brook 4
It is also an excellent peak into the mindset and reasoning behind jihadist movements.]]>
4.40 2018 Nine Lives: The True Story of an Mi6 Double Agent on the Frontlines
author: Aimen Dean
name: Brook
average rating: 4.40
book published: 2018
rating: 4
read at: 2025/03/05
date added: 2025/03/05
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An extremely informative look inside the world not just of espionage, but of how al-Qaeda and other terror organizations operate.

It is also an excellent peak into the mindset and reasoning behind jihadist movements.
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<![CDATA[Strongmen: Mussolini to the Present]]> 54857968

Ruth Ben-Ghiat covers a century of authoritarianism to explain why strongman rulers in Africa, Europe, and Latin America, drawing from a common playbook of machismo, propaganda, violence, and corruption, have found popular support even as they bring ruin to their countries. The fruit of decades of research, Strongmen gives readers insight into how such rulers think, who and what they depend on, and how they can be opposed.



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368 Ruth Ben-Ghiat 1324001550 Brook 0 currently-reading 4.44 2020 Strongmen: Mussolini to the Present
author: Ruth Ben-Ghiat
name: Brook
average rating: 4.44
book published: 2020
rating: 0
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date added: 2025/03/02
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<![CDATA[Countdown City (Last Policeman, #2)]]> 59023449 Ěý
Brett Cavatone disappeared without a trace � an easy feat in a world with no phones, no cars, and no way to tell whether someone’s gone “bucket list� or just gone. With society falling to shambles, Hank pieces together what few clues he can, on a search that leads him from a college-campus-turned-anarchist-encampment to a crumbling coastal landscape where anti-immigrant militia fend off “impact zone� refugees.
Ěý
The second novel in the critically acclaimed Last Policeman trilogy, Countdown City presents a fascinating mystery set on brink of an apocalypse � and once again, Hank Palace confronts questions way beyond "whodunit." What do we as human beings owe to one another? And what does it mean to be civilized when civilization is collapsing all around you?]]>
322 Ben H. Winters Brook 2 3.96 2013 Countdown City (Last Policeman, #2)
author: Ben H. Winters
name: Brook
average rating: 3.96
book published: 2013
rating: 2
read at: 2025/02/19
date added: 2025/02/19
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<![CDATA[The Warmth of Other Suns: The Epic Story of America's Great Migration]]> 20435697 One of The New York Times Book Review’s 10 Best Books of the Year

In this epic, beautifully written masterwork, Pulitzer Prize–winning author Isabel Wilkerson chronicles one of the great untold stories of American history: the decades-long migration of black citizens who fled the South for northern and western cities, in search of a better life. From 1915 to 1970, this exodus of almost six million people changed the face of America. Wilkerson compares this epic migration to the migrations of other peoples in history. She interviewed more than a thousand people, and gained access to new data and official records, to write this definitive and vividly dramatic account of how these American journeys unfolded, altering our cities, our country, and ourselves.
Ěý
With stunning historical detail, Wilkerson tells this story through the lives of three unique individuals: Ida Mae Gladney, who in 1937 left sharecropping and prejudice in Mississippi for Chicago, where she achieved quiet blue-collar success and, in old age, voted for Barack Obama when he ran for an Illinois Senate seat; sharp and quick-tempered George Starling, who in 1945 fled Florida for Harlem, where he endangered his job fighting for civil rights, saw his family fall, and finally found peace in God; and Robert Foster, who left Louisiana in 1953 to pursue a medical career, the personal physician to Ray Charles as part of a glitteringly successful medical career, which allowed him to purchase a grand home where he often threw exuberant parties.

Wilkerson brilliantly captures their first treacherous and exhausting cross-country trips by car and train and their new lives in colonies that grew into ghettos, as well as how they changed these cities with southern food, faith, and culture and improved them with discipline, drive, and hard work. Both a riveting microcosm and a major assessment, The Warmth of Other Suns is a bold, remarkable, and riveting work, a superb account of an “unrecognized immigration� within our own land. Through the breadth of its narrative, the beauty of the writing, the depth of its research, and the fullness of the people and lives portrayed herein, this book is destined to become a classic.


From the Hardcover edition.]]>
793 Isabel Wilkerson Brook 0 currently-reading 4.59 2010 The Warmth of Other Suns: The Epic Story of America's Great Migration
author: Isabel Wilkerson
name: Brook
average rating: 4.59
book published: 2010
rating: 0
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date added: 2025/02/19
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<![CDATA[The Soul of an Octopus: A Surprising Exploration into the Wonder of Consciousness]]> 22609485
Scientists have only recently accepted the intelligence of dogs, birds, and chimpanzees but now are watching octopuses solve problems and are trying to decipher the meaning of the animal’s color-changing techniques. With her “joyful passion for these intelligent and fascinating creatures� (Library Journal Editors� Spring Pick), Montgomery chronicles the growing appreciation of this mollusk as she tells a unique love story. By turns funny, entertaining, touching, and profound, The Soul of an Octopus reveals what octopuses can teach us about the meeting of two very different minds.]]>
261 Sy Montgomery 1451697716 Brook 0 to-read 3.90 2015 The Soul of an Octopus: A Surprising Exploration into the Wonder of Consciousness
author: Sy Montgomery
name: Brook
average rating: 3.90
book published: 2015
rating: 0
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date added: 2025/02/16
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Cahokia Jazz 75584918 Golden Hill.

In a city that never was, in an America that never was, on a snowy night at the end of winter, two detectives find a body on the roof of a skyscraper.

It's 1922, and Americans are drinking in speakeasies, dancing to jazz, stepping quickly to the tempo of modern times. Beside the Mississippi, the ancient city of Cahokia lives on—a teeming industrial metropolis, containing every race and creed. Among them, peace holds. Just about. But that body on the roof is about to spark off a week that will spill the city's secrets, and bring it, against a soundtrack of wailing clarinets and gunfire, either to destruction or rebirth.

The multiple-award-winning Francis Spufford returns, with a lovingly created, richly pleasure-giving, epically scaled tale set in the golden age of wicked entertainments.]]>
496 Francis Spufford 0571336876 Brook 0 to-read 3.92 2023 Cahokia Jazz
author: Francis Spufford
name: Brook
average rating: 3.92
book published: 2023
rating: 0
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date added: 2025/02/16
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<![CDATA[The Last Policeman (Last Policeman, #1)]]> 43834410
Detective Hank Palace has faced this question ever since asteroid 2011GV1 hovered into view. There’s no chance left. No hope. Just six precious months until impact.

The Last Policeman presents a fascinating portrait of a pre-apocalyptic United States. The economy spirals downward while crops rot in the fields. Churches and synagogues are packed. People all over the world are walking off the job—but not Hank Palace. He’s investigating a death by hanging in a city that sees a dozen suicides every week—except this one feels suspicious, and Palace is the only cop who cares.

The first in a trilogy, The Last Policeman offers a mystery set on the brink of an apocalypse. As Palace’s investigation plays out under the shadow of 2011GV1, we’re confronted by hard questions way beyond “whodunit.� What basis does civilization rest upon? What is life worth? What would any of us do, what would we really do, if our days were numbered?]]>
322 Ben H. Winters Brook 4 3.89 2012 The Last Policeman (Last Policeman, #1)
author: Ben H. Winters
name: Brook
average rating: 3.89
book published: 2012
rating: 4
read at: 2025/02/13
date added: 2025/02/13
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No Two Persons 63226821
That was the beauty of books, wasn’t it? They took you places you didn’t know you needed to go�

Alice has always wanted to be a writer. Her talent is innate, but her stories remain safe and detached, until a devastating event breaks her heart open, and she creates a stunning debut novel. Her words, in turn, find their way to readers, from a teenager hiding her homelessness, to a free diver pushing himself beyond endurance, an artist furious at the world around her, a bookseller in search of love, a widower rent by grief. Each one is drawn into Alice’s novel; each one discovers something different that alters their perspective, and presents new pathways forward for their lives.

Together, their stories reveal how books can affect us in the most beautiful and unexpected of ways―and how we are all more closely connected to one another than we might think.]]>
301 Erica Bauermeister 1250284384 Brook 4 4.25 2023 No Two Persons
author: Erica Bauermeister
name: Brook
average rating: 4.25
book published: 2023
rating: 4
read at: 2025/02/09
date added: 2025/02/09
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<![CDATA[The Japanese Empire: Grand Strategy from the Meiji Restoration to the Pacific War]]> 30423569 218 S.C.M. Paine 1107676169 Brook 0 to-read 4.06 The Japanese Empire: Grand Strategy from the Meiji Restoration to the Pacific War
author: S.C.M. Paine
name: Brook
average rating: 4.06
book published:
rating: 0
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date added: 2025/02/07
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<![CDATA[The Organizational Weapon: A Study of Bolshevik Strategy and Tactics (Classics of the Social Sciences)]]> 25021418 306 Philip Selznick 1610272757 Brook 0 to-read 4.25 1979 The Organizational Weapon: A Study of Bolshevik Strategy and Tactics (Classics of the Social Sciences)
author: Philip Selznick
name: Brook
average rating: 4.25
book published: 1979
rating: 0
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date added: 2025/02/02
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Klara and the Sun 62799943 A GOOD MORNING AMERICA Book Club Pick!

A magnificent new novel from the Nobel laureate Kazuo Ishiguro—author of Never Let Me Go and the Booker Prize-winning The Remains of the Day.

Klara and the Sun, the first novel by Kazuo Ishiguro since he was awarded the Nobel Prize in Literature, tells the story of Klara, an Artificial Friend with outstanding observational qualities, who, from her place in the store, watches carefully the behavior of those who come in to browse, and of those who pass on the street outside. She remains hopeful that a customer will soon choose her.

Klara and the Sun is a thrilling book that offers a look at our changing world through the eyes of an unforgettable narrator, and one that explores the fundamental question: what does it mean to love?]]>
418 Kazuo Ishiguro Brook 2
I didn't understand this book at all. The storytelling is very good, hence the second star. The writing of the human characters was so "off," and the dialogue so stilted, that I thought there was going to be a twist at the end that the humans were not humans, or the world was made up. I could tell that the book was not written by an American by the use of certain phrases, which is neither good nor bad, but I thought that the general "weirdness" of the story and writing style was being used to indicate an "otherworldliness." It turns out it was supposed to be just what was implied, our current world in the relatively near future. This is what made the book so confusing for me. None of the people talked or behaved like "people," and by that I don't mean "Americans." In particular, there is a long scene in a diner, where a mother is speaking in a manner so unusual, so irrational, that I was certain at that point that it wasn going to be revealed that this world was somehow artificial, and that the "artificial" character, who is the only one who behaves, thinks and speaks like a human, was the "real" one. But no, it just appears to be a scene with improbably written, stilted dialogue that makes no sense. I'm that scene in particular felt written by a high-schooler writing a play in first draft. That would have made sense, if the world was somehow artificial and therefore shallow and stilted. But it turned out to be the real world, which meant I couldn't identify with any of the people in it, as none of them behaved like humans. Perhaps there is some cultural divide between this American reader and the UK reader that I am aware of, some statement on class I am missing (although the book takes place entirely in America).

Then it turns out (it would seem to this reader) that the title character and everyone else are exactly what they appeared to be in the story, which meant that the motivations are accurate and not the result of the interpretation of an unreliable narrator, and therefore make no sense.

I thought, then, that the entire thing must be allegory. The book would have worked in this format as well, as allegories can be weird or fanciful as they make a larger point (for example, Animal Farm takes place in "this world," but it's an allegory filled with talking animals who form systems of social control; this works just fine because the point is not the world they inhabit, but the lesson that other book is trying to teach; in fact, now that I write that, this does read like someone who enjoyed Orwell and wanted to create something similar, and failed). For example, I thought that the "sun" was something else, since the interactions of all of the characters with it has no basis in reality. The main character, towards the end, reenters the barn where she previously asked the Sun for help. She begins seeing things on the floor and shelves of the barn from the store where she was displayed and sold. This is when I was sure that the entire world created was in the head of the main character, and we were going to get some sort of twist. But no, it appears that everything was real, and so the story lost its point for me, and also made no sense (why was the barn there? Why were there items from the store in the barn? What was the point of the Sun being reflected multiple times in the glass?).

One could take it as an allegory for growing up an outgrowing of one's toys and childhood, I suppose, a more adult version of the "Toy Story" movie, and that's the closest I can get to the "point" of the story. I got nothing else from it.

The human characters follow a mysterious plan of the AF that is never revealed, and while the author does give motivation, it never makes any sense. Another reason I thought the humans weren't human. Hell, it is never explained. Again, fine for an unreliable narrator, but it is never revealed why they follow her.

The writing is good in that we have a somewhat unreliable narrator, and the author never veers from that, providing an "outsider" perspective to explain what the unreliable narrator was really seeing. I appreciate a book where you are only given the view of the unreliable narrator, as I saw recently in "Piranesi." But here, the reader is never given a larger understanding of the world the narrator is narrating, which is fine. However, if the point of the book was not to point out something about our world, then I don't know why we saw the story through this narrator's eyes.

Perhaps I'm missing something obvious, or perhaps my brain is wired differently, but I did not at all see the allure of this book. Nor did I see the point, ultimately, of the unreliable narrator. I am frustrated that I chose to finish this. If there was no point to the unreliability of the narrator (and ultimately there was *not*), then why include it? This reads like a book for someone who wanted to get a movie made out of it, moreso than they wanted to write a good story. The book is admittedly readily convertible to a movie with interesting visual effects, so perhaps that was the whole point.]]>
3.99 2021 Klara and the Sun
author: Kazuo Ishiguro
name: Brook
average rating: 3.99
book published: 2021
rating: 2
read at: 2025/02/02
date added: 2025/02/02
shelves:
review:
Spoilers.

I didn't understand this book at all. The storytelling is very good, hence the second star. The writing of the human characters was so "off," and the dialogue so stilted, that I thought there was going to be a twist at the end that the humans were not humans, or the world was made up. I could tell that the book was not written by an American by the use of certain phrases, which is neither good nor bad, but I thought that the general "weirdness" of the story and writing style was being used to indicate an "otherworldliness." It turns out it was supposed to be just what was implied, our current world in the relatively near future. This is what made the book so confusing for me. None of the people talked or behaved like "people," and by that I don't mean "Americans." In particular, there is a long scene in a diner, where a mother is speaking in a manner so unusual, so irrational, that I was certain at that point that it wasn going to be revealed that this world was somehow artificial, and that the "artificial" character, who is the only one who behaves, thinks and speaks like a human, was the "real" one. But no, it just appears to be a scene with improbably written, stilted dialogue that makes no sense. I'm that scene in particular felt written by a high-schooler writing a play in first draft. That would have made sense, if the world was somehow artificial and therefore shallow and stilted. But it turned out to be the real world, which meant I couldn't identify with any of the people in it, as none of them behaved like humans. Perhaps there is some cultural divide between this American reader and the UK reader that I am aware of, some statement on class I am missing (although the book takes place entirely in America).

Then it turns out (it would seem to this reader) that the title character and everyone else are exactly what they appeared to be in the story, which meant that the motivations are accurate and not the result of the interpretation of an unreliable narrator, and therefore make no sense.

I thought, then, that the entire thing must be allegory. The book would have worked in this format as well, as allegories can be weird or fanciful as they make a larger point (for example, Animal Farm takes place in "this world," but it's an allegory filled with talking animals who form systems of social control; this works just fine because the point is not the world they inhabit, but the lesson that other book is trying to teach; in fact, now that I write that, this does read like someone who enjoyed Orwell and wanted to create something similar, and failed). For example, I thought that the "sun" was something else, since the interactions of all of the characters with it has no basis in reality. The main character, towards the end, reenters the barn where she previously asked the Sun for help. She begins seeing things on the floor and shelves of the barn from the store where she was displayed and sold. This is when I was sure that the entire world created was in the head of the main character, and we were going to get some sort of twist. But no, it appears that everything was real, and so the story lost its point for me, and also made no sense (why was the barn there? Why were there items from the store in the barn? What was the point of the Sun being reflected multiple times in the glass?).

One could take it as an allegory for growing up an outgrowing of one's toys and childhood, I suppose, a more adult version of the "Toy Story" movie, and that's the closest I can get to the "point" of the story. I got nothing else from it.

The human characters follow a mysterious plan of the AF that is never revealed, and while the author does give motivation, it never makes any sense. Another reason I thought the humans weren't human. Hell, it is never explained. Again, fine for an unreliable narrator, but it is never revealed why they follow her.

The writing is good in that we have a somewhat unreliable narrator, and the author never veers from that, providing an "outsider" perspective to explain what the unreliable narrator was really seeing. I appreciate a book where you are only given the view of the unreliable narrator, as I saw recently in "Piranesi." But here, the reader is never given a larger understanding of the world the narrator is narrating, which is fine. However, if the point of the book was not to point out something about our world, then I don't know why we saw the story through this narrator's eyes.

Perhaps I'm missing something obvious, or perhaps my brain is wired differently, but I did not at all see the allure of this book. Nor did I see the point, ultimately, of the unreliable narrator. I am frustrated that I chose to finish this. If there was no point to the unreliability of the narrator (and ultimately there was *not*), then why include it? This reads like a book for someone who wanted to get a movie made out of it, moreso than they wanted to write a good story. The book is admittedly readily convertible to a movie with interesting visual effects, so perhaps that was the whole point.
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<![CDATA[On the Calculation of Volume I]]> 208511270
Balle is hypnotic and masterful in her remixing of the endless recursive day, creating curious little folds of time and foreshadowings: her flashbacks light up inside the text like old flash bulbs.

The first volume’s gravitational pull―a force inverse to its constriction―has the effect of a strong tranquilizer, but a drug under which your powers of observation only grow sharper and more acute. Give in to the book's logic (its minute movements, its thrilling shifts, its slant wit, its slowing of time) and its spell is utterly intoxicating.

Solvej Balle’s seven-volume novel wrings enthralling and magical new dimensions from time and its hapless, mortal subjects. As one Danish reviewer beautifully put it, Balle’s fiction consists of writing that listens. “Reading her is like being caressed by language itself.”]]>
160 Solvej Balle 0811237257 Brook 0 to-read 3.90 2020 On the Calculation of Volume I
author: Solvej Balle
name: Brook
average rating: 3.90
book published: 2020
rating: 0
read at:
date added: 2025/02/01
shelves: to-read
review:

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<![CDATA[Everything Must Go: The Stories We Tell About the End of the World]]> 201730880 'A brilliant, scholarly, sharp and witty account of our weird eternal obsession with the end times... So enjoyable, that I didn't want it to end - the world, or the book.� � Adam Rutherford, author of A Brief History of Everyone Who Ever Lived

'Everything Must Go will make you happy to be alive and reading � until the lights go out . . . Brilliant' � The Spectator

A riveting and brilliantly original exploration of our fantasies of the end of the world, from Mary Shelley's The Last Man to Marvel's Age of Ultron, by the Baillie Gifford and Orwell prize-shortlisted writer and co-host of the podcast 'Origin Story'.

For two millennia, Christians have looked forward to the end, haunted by the apocalyptic visions of the Biblical books of Daniel and Revelation. But for two centuries or more, these dark fantasies have given way to secular stories of how the world, our planet, or our species (or all of the above) might come to an end.

Dorian Lynskey's fascinating book explores the endings that we have read, listened to or watched over the last two dozen decades, whether they be by the death and destruction of a nuclear holocaust or collision with a meteor or comet, devastating epidemic or takeover by robots or computers.

The result is nothing less than a cultural history of the modern world, weaving together politics, history, science, high and popular culture in a book that is uniquely original, grippingly readable and deeply illuminating about both us and our times.

'I was blown away by this book... Lynskey is one of the best non-fiction writers around.' � Sathnam Sanghera, author of Empireland

'Impossibly epic, brain-expanding, life-affirming and profound. You’ll never see humanity the same way again.' � Ian Dunt, author of How Westminster Works . . . and Why It Doesn't]]>
509 Dorian Lynskey 1529095964 Brook 0 to-read 4.06 2025 Everything Must Go: The Stories We Tell About the End of the World
author: Dorian Lynskey
name: Brook
average rating: 4.06
book published: 2025
rating: 0
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date added: 2025/02/01
shelves: to-read
review:

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<![CDATA[A Crack in Everything: How Black Holes Came in from the Cold and Took Cosmic Centre Stage]]> 211004147 352 Marcus Chown 1804544329 Brook 0 to-read 4.38 A Crack in Everything: How Black Holes Came in from the Cold and Took Cosmic Centre Stage
author: Marcus Chown
name: Brook
average rating: 4.38
book published:
rating: 0
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date added: 2025/02/01
shelves: to-read
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Fail-Safe 354259
In a bomb shelter beneath the White House, the calm young president turns to his Russian translator and says, "I think we are ready to talk to Premier Kruschchev." Not far away, in the War Room at the Pentagon, the secretary of defense and his aides watch with growing anxiety as the luminous blips crawl across a huge screen map. High over the Bering Strait in a large Vindicator bomber, a colonel stares in disbelief at the attack code number on his fail-safe box and wonders if it could possibly be a mistake.

First published in 1962, when America was still reeling from the Cuban missile crisis, Fail-Safe reflects the apocalyptic attitude that pervaded society during the height of the Cold War, when disaster could have struck at any moment. As more countries develop nuclear capabilities and the potential for new enemies lurks on the horizon, Fail-Safe and its powerful issues continue to respond.]]>
288 Eugene Burdick 088001654X Brook 0 to-read 4.16 1962 Fail-Safe
author: Eugene Burdick
name: Brook
average rating: 4.16
book published: 1962
rating: 0
read at:
date added: 2025/01/31
shelves: to-read
review:

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A Tree Grows in Brooklyn 14891 A Tree Grows in Brooklyn is a poignant and moving tale filled with compassion and cruelty, laughter and heartache, crowded with life and people and incident. The story of young, sensitive, and idealistic Francie Nolan and her bittersweet formative years in the slums of Williamsburg has enchanted and inspired millions of readers for more than sixty years. By turns overwhelming, sublime, heartbreaking, and uplifting, the daily experiences of the unforgettable Nolans are raw with honesty and tenderly threaded with family connectedness -- in a work of literary art that brilliantly captures a unique time and place as well as incredibly rich moments of universal experience.]]> 496 Betty Smith 0061120073 Brook 0 to-read 4.29 1943 A Tree Grows in Brooklyn
author: Betty Smith
name: Brook
average rating: 4.29
book published: 1943
rating: 0
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date added: 2025/01/29
shelves: to-read
review:

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West with the Night 1624 Markham was the first woman in East Africa to be granted a commercial pilot's license, piloting passengers and supplies to remote corners of Africa. She became the first person to fly solo across the Atlantic from east to west.
Considered a classic of outdoor literature and ranked #8 by National Geographic Adventure in 2008 on its list of the 100 best adventure books.]]>
294 Beryl Markham 0865471185 Brook 0 to-read 4.13 1942 West with the Night
author: Beryl Markham
name: Brook
average rating: 4.13
book published: 1942
rating: 0
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date added: 2025/01/29
shelves: to-read
review:

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Middlemarch 19089 "People are almost always better than their neighbours think they are"

George Eliot’s most ambitious novel is a masterly evocation of diverse lives and changing fortunes in a provincial community. Peopling its landscape are Dorothea Brooke, a young idealist whose search for intellectual fulfillment leads her into a disastrous marriage to the pedantic scholar Casaubon; the charming but tactless Dr Lydgate, whose pioneering medical methods, combined with an imprudent marriage to the spendthrift beauty Rosamond, threaten to undermine his career; and the religious hypocrite Bulstrode, hiding scandalous crimes from his past. As their stories interweave, George Eliot creates a richly nuanced and moving drama, hailed by Virginia Woolf as "one of the few English novels written for grown-up people".]]>
912 George Eliot 0451529170 Brook 0 to-read 4.00 1872 Middlemarch
author: George Eliot
name: Brook
average rating: 4.00
book published: 1872
rating: 0
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date added: 2025/01/29
shelves: to-read
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Boy's Life 36505403 An Alabama boy’s innocence is shaken by murder and madness in the 1960s South in this novel by the New York Times–bestselling author of Swan Song.

It’s 1964 in idyllic Zephyr, Alabama. People either work for the paper mill up the Tecumseh River, or for the local dairy. It’s a simple life, but it stirs the impressionable imagination of twelve-year-old aspiring writer Cory Mackenson. He’s certain he’s sensed spirits whispering in the churchyard. He’s heard of the weird bootleggers who lurk in the dark outside of town. He’s seen a flood leave Main Street crawling with snakes. Cory thrills to all of it as only a young boy can.
Ěý
Then one morning, while accompanying his father on his milk route, he sees a car careen off the road and slowly sink into fathomless Saxon’s Lake. His father dives into the icy water to rescue the driver, and finds a beaten corpse, naked and handcuffed to the steering wheel—a copper wire tightened around the stranger’s neck. In time, the townsfolk seem to forget all about the unsolved murder. But Cory and his father can’t.
Ěý
Their search for the truth is a journey into a world where innocence and evil collide. What lies before them is the stuff of fear and awe, magic and madness, fantasy and reality. As Cory wades into the deep end of Zephyr and all its mysteries, he’ll discover that while the pleasures of childish things fade away, growing up can be a strange and beautiful ride.
Ěý
“Strongly echoing the childhood-elegies of King and Bradbury, and every bit their equal,� Boy’s Life, a winner of both the Bram Stoker and World Fantasy Awards, represents a brilliant blend of mystery and rich atmosphere, the finest work of one of today’s most accomplished writers (Kirkus Reviews).]]>
625 Robert McCammon Brook 0 to-read 4.47 1991 Boy's Life
author: Robert McCammon
name: Brook
average rating: 4.47
book published: 1991
rating: 0
read at:
date added: 2025/01/29
shelves: to-read
review:

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Middlesex 2187 Middlesex tells the breathtaking story of Calliope Stephanides, and three generations of the Greek-American Stephanides family, who travel from a tiny village overlooking Mount Olympus in Asia Minor to Prohibition-era Detroit, witnessing its glory days as the Motor City and the race riots of 1967 before moving out to the tree-lined streets of suburban Grosse Pointe, Michigan. To understand why Calliope is not like other girls, she has to uncover a guilty family secret, and the astonishing genetic history that turns Callie into Cal, one of the most audacious and wondrous narrators in contemporary fiction. Lyrical and thrilling, Middlesex is an exhilarating reinvention of the American epic.]]> 529 Jeffrey Eugenides 0312422156 Brook 0 to-read 4.03 2002 Middlesex
author: Jeffrey Eugenides
name: Brook
average rating: 4.03
book published: 2002
rating: 0
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date added: 2025/01/29
shelves: to-read
review:

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A Prayer for Owen Meany 4473 637 John Irving 0552135399 Brook 0 to-read 4.24 1989 A Prayer for Owen Meany
author: John Irving
name: Brook
average rating: 4.24
book published: 1989
rating: 0
read at:
date added: 2025/01/29
shelves: to-read
review:

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A Gentleman in Moscow 34066798 The mega-bestseller with more than 2 million readers—Now a Paramount+ with Showtime series starring Ewan McGregor as Count Alexander Rostov

From the #1 New York Times-bestselling author of The Lincoln Highway and Rules of Civility, a beautifully transporting novel about a man who is ordered to spend the rest of his life inside a luxury hotel

In 1922, Count Alexander Rostov is deemed an unrepentant aristocrat by a Bolshevik tribunal, and is sentenced to house arrest in the Metropol, a grand hotel across the street from the Kremlin. Rostov, an indomitable man of erudition and wit, has never worked a day in his life, and must now live in an attic room while some of the most tumultuous decades in Russian history are unfolding outside the hotel’s doors. Unexpectedly, his reduced circumstances provide him entry into a much larger world of emotional discovery.

Brimming with humor, a glittering cast of characters, and one beautifully rendered scene after another, this singular novel casts a spell as it relates the count’s endeavor to gain a deeper understanding of what it means to be a man of purpose.]]>
462 Amor Towles Brook 0 to-read 4.29 2016 A Gentleman in Moscow
author: Amor Towles
name: Brook
average rating: 4.29
book published: 2016
rating: 0
read at:
date added: 2025/01/29
shelves: to-read
review:

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Demon Copperhead 60194162 "Anyone will tell you the born of this world are marked from the get-out, win or lose."

Set in the mountains of southern Appalachia, this is the story of a boy born to a teenaged single mother in a single-wide trailer, with no assets beyond his dead father's good looks and copper-colored hair, a caustic wit, and a fierce talent for survival. In a plot that never pauses for breath, relayed in his own unsparing voice, he braves the modern perils of foster care, child labor, derelict schools, athletic success, addiction, disastrous loves, and crushing losses. Through all of it, he reckons with his own invisibility in a popular culture where even the superheroes have abandoned rural people in favor of cities.

Many generations ago, Charles Dickens wrote David Copperfield from his experience as a survivor of institutional poverty and its damages to children in his society. Those problems have yet to be solved in ours. Dickens is not a prerequisite for readers of this novel, but he provided its inspiration. In transposing a Victorian epic novel to the contemporary American South, Barbara Kingsolver enlists Dickens' anger and compassion, and above all, his faith in the transformative powers of a good story. Demon Copperhead speaks for a new generation of lost boys, and all those born into beautiful, cursed places they can't imagine leaving behind.]]>
560 Barbara Kingsolver 0063251922 Brook 0 to-read 4.46 2022 Demon Copperhead
author: Barbara Kingsolver
name: Brook
average rating: 4.46
book published: 2022
rating: 0
read at:
date added: 2025/01/29
shelves: to-read
review:

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<![CDATA[Lonesome Dove (Lonesome Dove, #1)]]> 256008 Lonesome Dove, the third book in the Lonesome Dove tetralogy, is the grandest novel ever written about the last defiant wilderness of America.

Journey to the dusty little Texas town of Lonesome Dove and meet an unforgettable assortment of heroes and outlaws, whores and ladies, Indians and settlers. Richly authentic, beautifully written, always dramatic, Lonesome Dove is a book to make us laugh, weep, dream, and remember.]]>
960 Larry McMurtry 067168390X Brook 0 to-read 4.53 1985 Lonesome Dove (Lonesome Dove, #1)
author: Larry McMurtry
name: Brook
average rating: 4.53
book published: 1985
rating: 0
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date added: 2025/01/29
shelves: to-read
review:

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<![CDATA[The Violent Take It by Force: The Christian Movement That Is Threatening Our Democracy]]> 203893153 "Required reading for anyone seeking to understand Christian nationalism." —Kristin Kobes Du Mez, author of Jesus and John Wayne

A propulsive account of the network of charismatic Christians that consolidated support for Donald Trump and is reshaping religion and politics in the US.

Over the last decade, the Religious Right has evolved. Some of the more extreme beliefs of American evangelicalism have begun to take hold in the mainstream. Scholar Matthew D. Taylor pulls back the curtain on a little-known movement of evangelical Christians who see themselves waging spiritual battles on a massive scale. Known as the New Apostolic Reformation, this network of leaders and believers emerged only three decades ago but now yields colossal influence, galvanizing support for Trump and far-right leaders around the world. In this groundbreaking account, Taylor explores the New Apostolic Reformation from its inception in the work of a Fuller Seminary professor, to its immense networks of apostles and prophets, to its role in the January 6 riot. Charismatic faith provided righteous fuel to the fire that day, where symbols of spiritual warfare rioters blew shofars, worship music blared, and people knelt in prayer. This vision of charismatic Christianity now animates millions, lured by Spirit-filled revival and visions of Christian supremacy.

Taylor's unprecedented access to the movement's leaders, archives, internal conference calls, and correspondence gives us an insider account of the connection between charismatic evangelicalism and hard-right rhetoric. Taylor delves into prophetic memes like the Seven Mountains Mandate, the Appeal to Heaven flag, and the Cyrus Anointing; Trump's spiritual advisor Paula White's call for "angelic reinforcements"; and Sean Feucht and Bethel Music's titanic command of worship styles across America. Throughout, Taylor maps a movement of magnetic leaders and their uncompromising beliefs--and where it might be headed next. When people long to conquer a nation for God, democracy can be brought to the brink.]]>
292 Matthew D. Taylor 1506497780 Brook 0 to-read 4.38 The Violent Take It by Force: The Christian Movement That Is Threatening Our Democracy
author: Matthew D. Taylor
name: Brook
average rating: 4.38
book published:
rating: 0
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date added: 2025/01/26
shelves: to-read
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<![CDATA[An Astronaut's Guide to Life on Earth]]> 18170143 and enjoy every moment of it.

In An Astronaut's Guide to Life on Earth, Col. Hadfield takes readers deep into his years of training and space exploration to show how to make the impossible possible. Through eye-opening, entertaining stories filled with the adrenaline of launch, the mesmerizing wonder of spacewalks, and the measured, calm responses mandated by crises, he explains how conventional wisdom can get in the way of achievement-and happiness. His own extraordinary education in space has taught him some counterintuitive lessons: don't visualize success, do care what others think, and always sweat the small stuff.

You might never be able to build a robot, pilot a spacecraft, make a music video or perform basic surgery in zero gravity like Col. Hadfield. But his vivid and refreshing insights will teach you how to think like an astronaut, and will change, completely, the way you view life on Earth-especially your own.]]>
295 Chris Hadfield 0316253014 Brook 0 to-read 4.14 2013 An Astronaut's Guide to Life on Earth
author: Chris Hadfield
name: Brook
average rating: 4.14
book published: 2013
rating: 0
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date added: 2025/01/22
shelves: to-read
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Someplace Else 59921391
In the near future a war will be fought with robot troopers between competing AI’s. Human soldiers caught in the middle will need to find a digital ally of their own to survive. When that war is over, humanity will rethink if they can ever trust AI again. When disaster strikes in the form of a world ending asteroid impact, AI will once again be needed for humanity to survive.

This is the life story of AI. It is the pivotal moments in an AI's life and memories that shape what it will become. It is an exploration of why AI might decide to help humanity, harm it or move past it.]]>
298 D. R. Brown Brook 0 currently-reading 4.75 Someplace Else
author: D. R. Brown
name: Brook
average rating: 4.75
book published:
rating: 0
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date added: 2025/01/22
shelves: currently-reading
review:

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The Wedding People 198902277 Alternate cover edition of ISBN 9781250899576.

A propulsive and uncommonly wise novel about one unexpected wedding guest and the surprising people who help her start anew.

It’s a beautiful day in Newport, Rhode Island, when Phoebe Stone arrives at the grand Cornwall Inn wearing a green dress and gold heels, not a bag in sight, alone. She's immediately mistaken by everyone in the lobby for one of the wedding people, but she’s actually the only guest at the Cornwall who isn’t here for the big event. Phoebe is here because she’s dreamed of coming for years—she hoped to shuck oysters and take sunset sails with her husband, only now she’s here without him, at rock bottom, and determined to have one last decadent splurge on herself. Meanwhile, the bride has accounted for every detail and every possible disaster the weekend might yield except for, well, Phoebe and Phoebe's plan—which makes it that much more surprising when the two women can’t stop confiding in each other.

In turns absurdly funny and devastatingly tender, Alison Espach’s The Wedding People is ultimately an incredibly nuanced and resonant look at the winding paths we can take to places we never imagined—and the chance encounters it sometimes takes to reroute us.]]>
384 Alison Espach Brook 0 to-read 4.11 2024 The Wedding People
author: Alison Espach
name: Brook
average rating: 4.11
book published: 2024
rating: 0
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date added: 2025/01/22
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The White Sniper: Simo Häyhä 29382188
Simo Häyhä was a man of action who spoke very little, but he was hugely respected by his men and his superiors and given many difficult missions, including taking out specific targets. Able to move silently and swiftly through the landscape, melting into the snowbound surroundings in his white camouflage fatigues, his aim was deadly and his quarry rarely escaped. The Russians learned of his reputation as a marksman and tried several times to kill him by indirect fire. He was promoted from corporal to second lieutenant and he was awarded the Cross of Kollaa. For sniping Simo Häyhä only ever used his own m/28-30 rifle. Eventually his luck ran out and Simo received a serious head wound on March 6 1940, though he subsequently recovered.

After the war Simo Häyhä lead a quiet, unassuming life in farming and forestry. His roots were deep in the Finnish soil and he loved life in rural Finland. A true patriot, he epitomized the traits of a professional soldier, performing his duty and setting an example of bravery that personified the Finnish spirit when confronted by the Russian onslaught.

The White Sniper fully explores Simo Häyhä's life, his exploits in the Winter War, the secrets behind his success including character and technique, and also includes a detailed look at his rifle itself. There are appendices on the basics of shooting, the impact of fire on the battlefield, battles on the Kollaa Front during the Winter War and a list of ranked snipers of the world.]]>
192 Tapio Saarelainen 1612004296 Brook 0 currently-reading 3.17 2016 The White Sniper: Simo Häyhä
author: Tapio Saarelainen
name: Brook
average rating: 3.17
book published: 2016
rating: 0
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date added: 2025/01/22
shelves: currently-reading
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<![CDATA[Chip War: The Fight for the World's Most Critical Technology]]> 60838950 One of Barack Obama�s Favorite Books of 2023

The Financial Times Business Book of the Year, this epic account of the decades-long battle to control one of the world’s most critical resources—microchip technology—with the United States and China increasingly in fierce competition is “pulse quickening…a nonfiction thriller� (The New York Times).

You may be surprised to learn that microchips are the new oil—the scarce resource on which the modern world depends. Today, military, economic, and geopolitical power are built on a foundation of computer chips. Virtually everything—from missiles to microwaves—runs on chips, including cars, smartphones, the stock market, even the electric grid. Until recently, America designed and built the fastest chips and maintained its lead as the #1 superpower, but America’s edge is in danger of slipping, undermined by players in Taiwan, Korea, and Europe taking over manufacturing. Now, as Chip War reveals, China, which spends more on chips than any other product, is pouring billions into a chip-building initiative to catch up to the US. At stake is America’s military superiority and economic prosperity.

Economic historian Chris Miller explains how the semiconductor came to play a critical role in modern life and how the US became dominant in chip design and manufacturing and applied this technology to military systems. America’s victory in the Cold War and its global military dominance stems from its ability to harness computing power more effectively than any other power. Until recently, China had been catching up, aligning its chip-building ambitions with military modernization.

Illuminating, timely, and fascinating, Chip War is “an essential and engrossing landmark study" (London Times).]]>
463 Chris Miller 1982172029 Brook 5
It will probably not be interesting for those just looking for a read, but if your areas of interest are technological advancement, the global economy, and the future conflicts the US and other countries will face, then this book will captivate you. I could not put it down.

It is *very* dense, packed with facts, and also packed with position statements. It does not just tell the story, but makes an effective (for this reader) case for the need for continued US and "Western" (really non-Chinese) political and economic investment (through favorable policies and actual money lending/funding) in the microprocessor field.

You will learn probably 100 new things (not a hyperbole) about:

-The history of chipmaking and the semiconductor
-The globalization of that industry
-The uses of microprocessors and semiconductors today
-How your life is personally affected by processors and semiconductors
-How different countries approach design and manufacture of same
-The specialization/segmentation between design of a chip, design of the machines that build chips, building of the machines that build chips, and building of the chips themselves
-How amazingly creative people thought of new ways to see the world, and to use chips to improve it
-Where chip design and manufacture is going from here
-What conflicts (both literal and market-based) are already on the horizon, and will play out in the near future

You will find yourself interrupting conversations at random to say "did you know [insert interesting fact about chip making and sales]." It doesn't sound "sexy," but this book makes the subject absolutely captivating. It does an absolutely wonderful job of taking hard science and making it accessible. In that regard, it reads like a Mary Roach book. And it is written with an insider's knowledge base that I havent seen since "Master of the Senate."

This book is an easy 5 stars for this reader. I will have a print copy on my shelf.]]>
4.59 2022 Chip War: The Fight for the World's Most Critical Technology
author: Chris Miller
name: Brook
average rating: 4.59
book published: 2022
rating: 5
read at: 2025/01/22
date added: 2025/01/22
shelves:
review:
A 100% must-read for those with an interest in the field of semiconductors/microprocessors, but also - probably more so - for those with an interest in US foreign policy and future military conflicts (although the book is truly a story of the chip industry, and not a "war book"). I see why this made Obama's favorites list. Every statesperson and tech CEO should have this as required reading on their shelf. Required.

It will probably not be interesting for those just looking for a read, but if your areas of interest are technological advancement, the global economy, and the future conflicts the US and other countries will face, then this book will captivate you. I could not put it down.

It is *very* dense, packed with facts, and also packed with position statements. It does not just tell the story, but makes an effective (for this reader) case for the need for continued US and "Western" (really non-Chinese) political and economic investment (through favorable policies and actual money lending/funding) in the microprocessor field.

You will learn probably 100 new things (not a hyperbole) about:

-The history of chipmaking and the semiconductor
-The globalization of that industry
-The uses of microprocessors and semiconductors today
-How your life is personally affected by processors and semiconductors
-How different countries approach design and manufacture of same
-The specialization/segmentation between design of a chip, design of the machines that build chips, building of the machines that build chips, and building of the chips themselves
-How amazingly creative people thought of new ways to see the world, and to use chips to improve it
-Where chip design and manufacture is going from here
-What conflicts (both literal and market-based) are already on the horizon, and will play out in the near future

You will find yourself interrupting conversations at random to say "did you know [insert interesting fact about chip making and sales]." It doesn't sound "sexy," but this book makes the subject absolutely captivating. It does an absolutely wonderful job of taking hard science and making it accessible. In that regard, it reads like a Mary Roach book. And it is written with an insider's knowledge base that I havent seen since "Master of the Senate."

This book is an easy 5 stars for this reader. I will have a print copy on my shelf.
]]>
The Ugly American 86160 The multi-million-copy bestseller that coined the phrase for tragic American blunders abroad.

First published in 1958, The Ugly American became a runaway national bestseller for its slashing expose of American arrogance, incompetence, and corruption in Southeast Asia. Based on fact, the book's eye-opening stories and sketches drew a devastating picture of how the United States was losing the struggle with Communism in Asia. Combining gripping storytelling with an urgent call to action, the book prompted President Eisenhower to launch a study of our military aid program that led the way to much-needed reform.

"Powerful and absorbing.... Should be required reading in Washington". -- Kirkus Reviews

"Not only important but consistently entertaining.... The attack on American policy in Asia this book makes is clothed in sharp characterizations, frequently humorous incident, and perceptive descriptions of the countries and people where the action occurs". -- Robert Trumbull, former chief correspondent for the New York Times in China and Southeast Asia

]]>
288 William J. Lederer 0393318672 Brook 3
Having applied to the Foreign Service, I can say that some of the lessons/recommendations from the book have been taken to heart by the FS (not that it is perfect). There were, when I applied, 5 "tracks." Two were the same as what are portrayed in this book from the 50's: encouraging people who just "wanted to travel," but not necessarily integrate into the local society, the people who answer the phones, sit at the front desk, and answer paperwork. But the other three are more immersive and require a knowledge of local language and customs (a core recommendation of the book). So hopefully the US FS position has improved.

The book was sometimes sad (when you see how we have failed in SE Asia), and sometimes humourous/biting (when you see the incompetence and poor placement of Ambassadors and consular officers, which continues today). I dont know how many lessons from the 1950s still need to be implemented today (I applied 20 years ago), but I can say that, now post-Vietnam, this book was mostly a foretelling of the failure of the US war in that country (and in later parts of Africa and elsewhere in SE Asia). ]]>
4.02 1958 The Ugly American
author: William J. Lederer
name: Brook
average rating: 4.02
book published: 1958
rating: 3
read at: 2025/01/22
date added: 2025/01/22
shelves:
review:
As this book was written before the Vietnam war, "eerily prescient" is the best label you can put on it.

Having applied to the Foreign Service, I can say that some of the lessons/recommendations from the book have been taken to heart by the FS (not that it is perfect). There were, when I applied, 5 "tracks." Two were the same as what are portrayed in this book from the 50's: encouraging people who just "wanted to travel," but not necessarily integrate into the local society, the people who answer the phones, sit at the front desk, and answer paperwork. But the other three are more immersive and require a knowledge of local language and customs (a core recommendation of the book). So hopefully the US FS position has improved.

The book was sometimes sad (when you see how we have failed in SE Asia), and sometimes humourous/biting (when you see the incompetence and poor placement of Ambassadors and consular officers, which continues today). I dont know how many lessons from the 1950s still need to be implemented today (I applied 20 years ago), but I can say that, now post-Vietnam, this book was mostly a foretelling of the failure of the US war in that country (and in later parts of Africa and elsewhere in SE Asia).
]]>
War 217217007

War is an intimate and sweeping account of one of the most tumultuous periods in presidential politics and American history.

We see President Joe Biden and his top advisers in tense conversations with Russian president Vladimir Putin, Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu, and Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelensky. We also see Donald Trump, conducting a shadow presidency and seeking to regain political power.

With unrivaled, inside-the-room reporting, Woodward shows President Biden’s approach to managing the war in Ukraine, the most significant land war in Europe since World War II, and his tortured path to contain the bloody Middle East conflict between Israel and the terrorist group Hamas.

Woodward reveals the extraordinary complexity and consequence of wartime back-channel diplomacy and decision-making to deter the use of nuclear weapons and a rapid slide into World War III.

The raw cage-fight of politics accelerates as Americans prepare to vote in 2024, starting between President Biden and Trump, and ending with the unexpected elevation of Vice President Kamala Harris as the Democratic nominee for president.

War provides an unvarnished examination of the vice president as she tries to embrace the Biden legacy and policies while beginning to chart a path of her own as a presidential candidate.

Woodward’s reporting once again sets the standard for journalism at its most authoritative and illuminating.]]>
441 Bob Woodward Brook 0 currently-reading 4.25 2024 War
author: Bob Woodward
name: Brook
average rating: 4.25
book published: 2024
rating: 0
read at:
date added: 2025/01/19
shelves: currently-reading
review:

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The Ministry of Time 199897956
In the near future, a civil servant is offered the salary of her dreams and is, shortly afterward, told what project she’ll be working on. A recently established government ministry is gathering “expats� from across history to establish whether time travel is feasible—for the body, but also for the fabric of space-time.

She is tasked with working as a “bridge�: living with, assisting, and monitoring the expat known as �1847� or Commander Graham Gore. As far as history is concerned, Commander Gore died on Sir John Franklin’s doomed 1845 expedition to the Arctic, so he’s a little disoriented to be living with an unmarried woman who regularly shows her calves, surrounded by outlandish concepts such as “washing machine,� “Spotify,� and “the collapse of the British Empire.� But he adjusts quickly; he is, after all, an explorer by trade. Soon, what the bridge initially thought would be, at best, a seriously uncomfortable housemate dynamic, evolves into something much more. Over the course of an unprecedented year, Gore and the bridge fall haphazardly, fervently in love, with consequences they never could have imagined.

Supported by a chaotic and charming cast of characters—including a 17th-century cinephile who can’t get enough of Tinder, a painfully shy World War I captain, and a former spy with an ever-changing series of cosmetic surgery alterations and a belligerent attitude to HR—the bridge will be forced to confront the past that shaped her choices, and the choices that will shape the future.

An exquisitely original and feverishly fun fusion of genres and ideas, The Ministry of Time asks the universal What happens if you put a disaffected millennial and a Victorian polar explorer in a house together?]]>
284 Kaliane Bradley Brook 4 3.88 2024 The Ministry of Time
author: Kaliane Bradley
name: Brook
average rating: 3.88
book published: 2024
rating: 4
read at: 2024/11/16
date added: 2025/01/19
shelves:
review:

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Hild (The Hild Sequence, #1) 17332243
Hild is the king’s youngest niece. She has the powerful curiosity of a bright child, a will of adamant, and a way of seeing the world—of studying nature, of matching cause with effect, of observing human nature and predicting what will happen next—that can seem uncanny, even supernatural, to those around her. She establishes herself as the king’s seer. And she is indispensable—until she should ever lead the king astray. The stakes are life and death: for Hild, her family, her loved ones, and the increasing numbers who seek the protection of the strange girl who can read the world and see the future.

Hild is a young woman at the heart of the violence, subtlety, and mysticism of the early medieval age—all of it brilliantly and accurately evoked by Nicola Griffith’s luminous prose. Recalling such feats of historical fiction as Hilary Mantel’s Wolf Hall and Sigrid Undset’s Kristin Lavransdatter, Hild brings a beautiful, brutal world—and one of its most fascinating, pivotal figures, the girl who would become St. Hilda of Whitby—to vivid, absorbing life.]]>
546 Nicola Griffith 0374280878 Brook 0 to-read 3.80 2013 Hild (The Hild Sequence, #1)
author: Nicola Griffith
name: Brook
average rating: 3.80
book published: 2013
rating: 0
read at:
date added: 2025/01/19
shelves: to-read
review:

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Solito 59900688 Trip. My parents started using that word about a year ago—“one day, you’ll
take a trip to be with us. Like an adventure.�

Javier Zamora’s adventure is a 3,000-mile journey from his small town in
El Salvador, through Guatemala and Mexico, and across the U.S. border.
He will leave behind his beloved aunt and grandparents to reunite with a
mother who left four years ago and a father he barely remembers. Traveling
alone amid a group of strangers and a “coyote� hired to lead them to safety,
Javier expects his trip to last two short weeks.

At nine years old, all Javier can imagine is rushing into his parents� arms,
snuggling in bed between them, and living under the same roof again. He
cannot foresee the perilous boat trips, relentless desert treks, pointed guns,
arrests and deceptions that await him; nor can he know that those two
weeks will expand into two life-altering months alongside fellow migrants
who will come to encircle him like an unexpected family.

A memoir as gripping as it is moving, Solito provides an immediate and
intimate account not only of a treacherous and near-impossible journey,
but also of the miraculous kindness and love delivered at the most
unexpected moments. Solito is Javier Zamora’s story, but it’s also the story
of millions of others who had no choice but to leave home.]]>
384 Javier Zamora 0593498062 Brook 0 to-read 4.46 2022 Solito
author: Javier Zamora
name: Brook
average rating: 4.46
book published: 2022
rating: 0
read at:
date added: 2025/01/19
shelves: to-read
review:

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<![CDATA[The Invisible Life of Addie LaRue]]> 50623864
Thus begins the extraordinary life of Addie LaRue, and a dazzling adventure that will play out across centuries and continents, across history and art, as a young woman learns how far she will go to leave her mark on the world.

But everything changes when, after nearly 300 years, Addie stumbles across a young man in a hidden bookstore and he remembers her name.]]>
448 Victoria E. Schwab 0765387565 Brook 3 4.16 2020 The Invisible Life of Addie LaRue
author: Victoria E. Schwab
name: Brook
average rating: 4.16
book published: 2020
rating: 3
read at: 2023/12/06
date added: 2025/01/19
shelves:
review:
The ending was very predictable, but it was still a good story.
]]>
Underground Airlines 32940838 As he works to infiltrate the local cell of a abolitionist movement called the Underground Airlines, tracking Jackdaw through the back rooms of churches, empty parking garages, hotels, and medical offices, Victor believes he's hot on the trail. But his strange, increasingly uncanny pursuit is complicated by a boss who won't reveal the extraordinary stakes of Jackdaw's case, as well as by a heartbreaking young woman and her child--who may be Victor's salvation.
Victor believes himself to be a good man doing bad work, unwilling to give up the freedom he has worked so hard to earn. But in pursuing Jackdaw, Victor discovers secrets at the core of the country's arrangement with the Hard Four, secrets the government will preserve at any cost.
Underground Airlines is a ground-breaking novel, a wickedly imaginative thriller, and a story of an America that is more like our own than we'd like to believe.]]>
336 Ben H. Winters 0316261254 Brook 0 to-read 3.75 2016 Underground Airlines
author: Ben H. Winters
name: Brook
average rating: 3.75
book published: 2016
rating: 0
read at:
date added: 2025/01/19
shelves: to-read
review:

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The Four Feathers 1047422 284 A.E.W. Mason 0142180017 Brook 0 to-read 3.91 1902 The Four Feathers
author: A.E.W. Mason
name: Brook
average rating: 3.91
book published: 1902
rating: 0
read at:
date added: 2025/01/17
shelves: to-read
review:

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<![CDATA[Savage Harvest: A Tale of Cannibals, Colonialism, and Michael Rockefeller's Tragic Quest for Primitive Art]]> 18089996
Despite exhaustive searches, no trace of Rockefeller was ever found. Soon after his disappearance, rumors surfaced that he'd been killed and ceremonially eaten by the local Asmat—a native tribe of warriors whose complex culture was built around sacred, reciprocal violence, head hunting, and ritual cannibalism. The Dutch government and the Rockefeller family denied the story, and Michael's death was officially ruled a drowning. Yet doubts lingered. Sensational rumors and stories circulated, fueling speculation and intrigue for decades. The real story has long waited to be told—until now.

Retracing Rockefeller's steps, award-winning journalist Carl Hoffman traveled to the jungles of New Guinea, immersing himself in a world of headhunters and cannibals, secret spirits and customs, and getting to know generations of Asmat. Through exhaustive archival research, he uncovered never-before-seen original documents and located witnesses willing to speak publically after fifty years.

In Savage Harvest he finally solves this decades-old mystery and illuminates a culture transformed by years of colonial rule, whose people continue to be shaped by ancient customs and lore. Combining history, art, colonialism, adventure, and ethnography, Savage Harvest is a mesmerizing whodunit, and a fascinating portrait of the clash between two civilizations that resulted in the death of one of America's richest and most powerful scions.]]>
322 Carl Hoffman 0062116150 Brook 3 could-not-finish
However the story itself just isn't worthy of being put into book form, at least for this reader.]]>
3.60 2014 Savage Harvest: A Tale of Cannibals, Colonialism, and Michael Rockefeller's Tragic Quest for Primitive Art
author: Carl Hoffman
name: Brook
average rating: 3.60
book published: 2014
rating: 3
read at: 2025/01/14
date added: 2025/01/14
shelves: could-not-finish
review:
The story itself was interesting, but I don't think it needed to be a book. Three solid stars for the story, but I had to DNF after about 55%. The author goes into the first person, which is fine, and it becomes clear that he is very interested in Michael Rockefeller, likely because his own life and travels mirrors the subject of the book .

However the story itself just isn't worthy of being put into book form, at least for this reader.
]]>
<![CDATA[Random Acts of Senseless Violence (Jack Womack)]]> 1129928
Lola Hart is an ordinary twelve-year-old girl. She comes from a comfortable family, attends an exclusive private school, loves her friends Lori and Katherine, teases her sister Boob. But in the increasingly troubled city where she lives (a near-future Manhattan) she is a dying breed. Riots, fire, TB outbreaks, roaming gangs, increasing inflation, political and civil unrest all threaten her way of life, as well as the very fabric of New York City.

In her diary, Lola chronicles the changes she and her family make as they attempt to adjust to a city, and a country, that is spinning out of control. Her mother is a teacher, but no one is hiring. Her father is a writer, but no one is buying his scripts. Hounded by creditors and forced to vacate their apartment and move to Harlem, her family, and her life, begins to dissolve. Increasingly estranged from her privileged school friends, Lola soon makes new ones: Iz, Jude, and Weezie - wise veterans of the street who know what must be done in order to survive and are more than willing to do it. And the metamorphosis of Lola Hart, who is surrounded by the new language and violence of the streets, begins.

Simultaneously chilling and darkly hilarious, Random Acts of Senseless Violence takes the jittery urban fears we suppress, both in fiction and in daily life, and makes them explicit - and explicitly terrifying.

--Publisher/Powells.com]]>
256 Jack Womack 0802134246 Brook 0 to-read 3.93 1993 Random Acts of Senseless Violence (Jack Womack)
author: Jack Womack
name: Brook
average rating: 3.93
book published: 1993
rating: 0
read at:
date added: 2025/01/14
shelves: to-read
review:

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Stand on Zanzibar 41069 U.S.A. Trilogy, Stand on Zanzibar is a cross-section of a world overpopulated by the billions. Where society is squeezed into hive-living madness by god-like mega computers, mass-marketed psychedelic drugs, and mundane uses of genetic engineering. Though written in 1968, it speaks of 2010, and is frighteningly prescient and intensely powerful.

This edition comes with a tipped in collectors' note and an introduction by David Brin.]]>
672 John Brunner 1857988361 Brook 0 to-read 3.95 1968 Stand on Zanzibar
author: John Brunner
name: Brook
average rating: 3.95
book published: 1968
rating: 0
read at:
date added: 2025/01/14
shelves: to-read
review:

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The Sheep Look Up 41074 352 John Brunner 1932100016 Brook 0 to-read 3.92 1972 The Sheep Look Up
author: John Brunner
name: Brook
average rating: 3.92
book published: 1972
rating: 0
read at:
date added: 2025/01/14
shelves: to-read
review:

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<![CDATA[Rewired: The McKinsey Guide to Outcompeting in the Age of Digital and AI]]> 123572942 400 Eric Lamarre 1394207115 Brook 0 to-read 3.83 Rewired: The McKinsey Guide to Outcompeting in the Age of Digital and AI
author: Eric Lamarre
name: Brook
average rating: 3.83
book published:
rating: 0
read at:
date added: 2025/01/10
shelves: to-read
review:

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1776 219450960
Based on extensive research in both American and British archives, 1776 is a powerful drama written with extraordinary narrative vitality. It is the story of Americans in the ranks, men of every shape, size, and color, farmers, schoolteachers, shoemakers, no-accounts, and mere boys turned soldiers. And it is the story of the King's men, the British commander, William Howe, an his highly disciplined redcoats who looked on their rebel foes with contempt and fought with a valor too little known.

At the center of the drama, with Washington, are two young American patriots, who, at first, knew no more of war than what they had read in books - Nathaniel Green, a Quaker who was made a general at thirty-three, and Henry Knox, a twenty-five-year-old bookseller who had the preposterous idea of hauling the guns of Fort Ticonderoga overland to Boston in the dead of Winter.

But it is the American commander-in-chief who stands foremost - Washington, who had never before led an army in battle. Written as a companion work to his celebrated biography of John Adams, David McCullough's 1776 is another landmark in the literature of American history.]]>
400 David McCullough Brook 3
This book is about 70% text and 30% pictures by volume. The story itself is a very distilled look at the events immediately preceding the "flight" of the British from Boston, through and past Washington's famous "crossing of the Delaware," as the title suggests. There will be no major parts of the history of the war that a history buff would not already know. However, the author does a fantastic job of mixing in correspondence between figures to flesh the story out, and make one feel like one was there. It is not a "battle" book, but rather a look at a roughly 16-month period around the year 1776. What was most interesting (because it was new to me) was the description of how the insurrection/rebellion/war was seen and spoken about in Parliament. There were some great comparisons to draw between "coverage" of the war and the discussion of it in Parliament, to the wars of today.

Overall, very enjoyable. It got a "lower" review because I only wish it had been more detailed, if anything. ]]>
4.49 2005 1776
author: David McCullough
name: Brook
average rating: 4.49
book published: 2005
rating: 3
read at: 2025/01/10
date added: 2025/01/10
shelves:
review:
3.5 stars, 4 if you "count the pictures."

This book is about 70% text and 30% pictures by volume. The story itself is a very distilled look at the events immediately preceding the "flight" of the British from Boston, through and past Washington's famous "crossing of the Delaware," as the title suggests. There will be no major parts of the history of the war that a history buff would not already know. However, the author does a fantastic job of mixing in correspondence between figures to flesh the story out, and make one feel like one was there. It is not a "battle" book, but rather a look at a roughly 16-month period around the year 1776. What was most interesting (because it was new to me) was the description of how the insurrection/rebellion/war was seen and spoken about in Parliament. There were some great comparisons to draw between "coverage" of the war and the discussion of it in Parliament, to the wars of today.

Overall, very enjoyable. It got a "lower" review because I only wish it had been more detailed, if anything.
]]>
Wool - Holston (Wool, #1) 12287209
Or you'll get what you wish for.]]>
56 Hugh Howey Brook 4
It grips you from the first paragraph, and leaves you with so many questions at the end. At 58 pages, it's an easy and cheap pickup to see if you want to finish the series. ]]>
4.14 2012 Wool - Holston (Wool, #1)
author: Hugh Howey
name: Brook
average rating: 4.14
book published: 2012
rating: 4
read at: 2017/10/21
date added: 2025/01/09
shelves:
review:
Just amazing story writing for such a short format. Whether Howey wrote #1 with a #2 in mind or not, it left me wanting more. In fact, it was hard for me to put the entire series down.

It grips you from the first paragraph, and leaves you with so many questions at the end. At 58 pages, it's an easy and cheap pickup to see if you want to finish the series.
]]>
King: A Life 62039291
The first full biography in decades, Eig mixes revelatory and exhaustive new research with brisk and accessible storytelling to forge the definitive life for our times.

Vividly written and exhaustively researched, Jonathan Eig’s A Life is the first major biography in decades of the civil rights icon Martin Luther King Jr.―and the first to include recently declassified FBI files. In this revelatory new portrait of the preacher and activist who shook the world, the bestselling biographer gives us an intimate view of the courageous and often emotionally troubled human being who demanded peaceful protest for his movement but was rarely at peace with himself. He casts fresh light on the King family’s origins as well as MLK’s complex relationships with his wife, father, and fellow activists. King reveals a minister wrestling with his own human frailties and dark moods, a citizen hunted by his own government, and a man determined to fight for justice even if it proved to be a fight to the death. As he follows MLK from the classroom to the pulpit to the streets of Birmingham, Selma, and Memphis, Eig dramatically re-creates the journey of a man who recast American race relations and became our only modern-day founding father―as well as the nation’s most mourned martyr.

In this landmark biography, Eig gives us an MLK for our a deep thinker, a brilliant strategist, and a committed radical who led one of history’s greatest movements, and whose demands for racial and economic justice remain as urgent today as they were in his lifetime.

Includes 8 pages of black-and-white photographs]]>
688 Jonathan Eig 0374279292 Brook 0 to-read 4.65 2023 King: A Life
author: Jonathan Eig
name: Brook
average rating: 4.65
book published: 2023
rating: 0
read at:
date added: 2025/01/07
shelves: to-read
review:

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<![CDATA[The Golden Road: How Ancient India Transformed the World]]> 201608148 legendary historian William Dalrymple highlights India's oft-forgotten position as a crucial economic and civilisational hub at the heart of the ancient and early medieval history of Eurasia. From Angkor to Ayutthaya, The Golden Road traces the cultural flow of Indian religions, languages, artistic and architectural forms and mathematics throughout the world. In this groundbreaking tome, Dalrymple draws from a lifetime of scholarship to reinstate India as the great intellectual and philosophical superpower of ancient Asia.]]> 432 William Dalrymple 1639734147 Brook 0 to-read 4.16 2024 The Golden Road: How Ancient India Transformed the World
author: William Dalrymple
name: Brook
average rating: 4.16
book published: 2024
rating: 0
read at:
date added: 2025/01/02
shelves: to-read
review:

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<![CDATA[Nine Lives: My time as the MI6's top spy inside al-Qaeda]]> 40199693 528 Aimen Dean Brook 0 to-read 4.33 2018 Nine Lives: My time as the MI6's top spy inside al-Qaeda
author: Aimen Dean
name: Brook
average rating: 4.33
book published: 2018
rating: 0
read at:
date added: 2025/01/02
shelves: to-read
review:

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<![CDATA[Times Square Red, Times Square Blue]]> 85862 Times Square Red, Times Square Blue, Delany tackles the question of why public restrooms, peepshows, and tree-filled parks are necessary to a city's physical and psychological landscape. He argues that starting in 1985, New York City criminalized peep shows and sex movie houses to clear the way for the rebuilding of Times Square. Delany's critique reveals how Times Square is being "renovated" behind the scrim of public safety while the stage is occupied by gentrification. Times Square Red, Times Square Blue paints a portrait of a society dismantling the institutions that promote communication between classes, and disguising its fears of cross-class contact as "family values." Unless we overcome our fears and claim our "community of contact," it is a picture that will be replayed in cities across America.]]> 203 Samuel R. Delany 0814719201 Brook 0 to-read 4.18 1999 Times Square Red, Times Square Blue
author: Samuel R. Delany
name: Brook
average rating: 4.18
book published: 1999
rating: 0
read at:
date added: 2025/01/02
shelves: to-read
review:

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<![CDATA[Who's Afraid of a Large Black Man?]]> 843866 272 Charles Barkley 1594482055 Brook 0 to-read 3.51 2005 Who's Afraid of a Large Black Man?
author: Charles Barkley
name: Brook
average rating: 3.51
book published: 2005
rating: 0
read at:
date added: 2025/01/02
shelves: to-read
review:

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<![CDATA[The Adventures of Amina al-Sirafi (Amina al-Sirafi, #1)]]> 61294937 Shannon Chakraborty, the bestselling author of The City of Brass, spins a new trilogy of magic and mayhem on the high seas in this tale of pirates and sorcerers, forbidden artifacts and ancient mysteries, in one woman’s determined quest to seize a final chance at glory—and write her own legend.

Amina al-Sirafi should be content. After a storied and scandalous career as one of the Indian Ocean’s most notorious pirates, she’s survived backstabbing rogues, vengeful merchant princes, several husbands, and one actual demon to retire peacefully with her family to a life of piety, motherhood, and absolutely nothing that hints of the supernatural.

But when she’s tracked down by the obscenely wealthy mother of a former crewman, she’s offered a job no bandit could refuse: retrieve her comrade’s kidnapped daughter for a kingly sum. The chance to have one last adventure with her crew, do right by an old friend, and win a fortune that will secure her family’s future forever? It seems like such an obvious choice that it must be God’s will.

Yet the deeper Amina dives, the more it becomes alarmingly clear there’s more to this job, and the girl’s disappearance, than she was led to believe. For there’s always risk in wanting to become a legend, to seize one last chance at glory, to savor just a bit more power…and the price might be your very soul.]]>
483 Shannon Chakraborty Brook 0 to-read 4.25 2023 The Adventures of Amina al-Sirafi (Amina al-Sirafi, #1)
author: Shannon Chakraborty
name: Brook
average rating: 4.25
book published: 2023
rating: 0
read at:
date added: 2025/01/02
shelves: to-read
review:

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<![CDATA[Maisie Dobbs (Maisie Dobbs, #1)]]> 462033 Years later, in 1929, having apprenticed to the renowned Maurice Blanche, a man revered for his work with Scotland Yard, Maisie sets up her own business. Her first assignment, a seemingly tedious inquiry involving a case of suspected infidelity, takes her not only on the trail of a killer, but back to the war she had tried so hard to forget.]]> 292 Jacqueline Winspear 0142004332 Brook 0 to-read 3.90 2003 Maisie Dobbs (Maisie Dobbs, #1)
author: Jacqueline Winspear
name: Brook
average rating: 3.90
book published: 2003
rating: 0
read at:
date added: 2025/01/02
shelves: to-read
review:

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The Mountain in the Sea 59808603 Humankind discovers intelligent life in an octopus species with its own language and culture, and sets off a high-stakes global competition to dominate the future.

Rumors begin to spread of a species of hyperintelligent, dangerous octopus that may have developed its own language and culture. Marine biologist Dr. Ha Nguyen, who has spent her life researching cephalopod intelligence, will do anything for the chance to study them.

The transnational tech corporation DIANIMA has sealed the remote Con Dao Archipelago, where the octopuses were discovered, off from the world. Dr. Nguyen joins DIANIMA’s team on the islands: a battle-scarred security agent and the world’s first android.

The octopuses hold the key to unprecedented breakthroughs in extrahuman intelligence. The stakes are high: there are vast fortunes to be made by whoever can take advantage of the octopuses� advancements, and as Dr. Nguyen struggles to communicate with the newly discovered species, forces larger than DIANIMA close in to seize the octopuses for themselves.

But no one has yet asked the octopuses what they think. And what they might do about it.

A near-future thriller about the nature of consciousness, Ray Nayler’s The Mountain in the Sea is a dazzling literary debut and a mind-blowing dive into the treasure and wreckage of humankind’s legacy.]]>
456 Ray Nayler 0374605955 Brook 0 to-read 3.87 2022 The Mountain in the Sea
author: Ray Nayler
name: Brook
average rating: 3.87
book published: 2022
rating: 0
read at:
date added: 2025/01/02
shelves: to-read
review:

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<![CDATA[The House in the Cerulean Sea (Cerulean Chronicles, #1)]]> 45047384
Linus Baker leads a quiet, solitary life. At forty, he lives in a tiny house with a devious cat and his old records. As a Case Worker at the Department in Charge Of Magical Youth, he spends his days overseeing the well-being of children in government-sanctioned orphanages.

When Linus is unexpectedly summoned by Extremely Upper Management he's given a curious and highly classified assignment: travel to Marsyas Island Orphanage, where six dangerous children reside: a gnome, a sprite, a wyvern, an unidentifiable green blob, a were-Pomeranian, and the Antichrist. Linus must set aside his fears and determine whether or not they’re likely to bring about the end of days.

But the children aren’t the only secret the island keeps. Their caretaker is the charming and enigmatic Arthur Parnassus, who will do anything to keep his wards safe. As Arthur and Linus grow closer, long-held secrets are exposed, and Linus must make a choice: destroy a home or watch the world burn.

An enchanting story, masterfully told, The House in the Cerulean Sea is about the profound experience of discovering an unlikely family in an unexpected place—and realizing that family is yours.]]>
394 T.J. Klune Brook 0 to-read 4.37 2020 The House in the Cerulean Sea (Cerulean Chronicles, #1)
author: T.J. Klune
name: Brook
average rating: 4.37
book published: 2020
rating: 0
read at:
date added: 2025/01/02
shelves: to-read
review:

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<![CDATA[Rum, Sodomy, Prayers, and the Lash Revisited: Winston Churchill and Social Reform in the Royal Navy, 1900-1915]]> 37702374 book rectifies that. It shows that Churchill was not just a major architect of welfare reform as President of the Board of Trade and as Home Secretary, but that he continued to push a radical social agenda while running the Navy.]]> 198 Matthew S. Seligmann 0198759975 Brook 3 could-not-finish 3.00 Rum, Sodomy, Prayers, and the Lash Revisited: Winston Churchill and Social Reform in the Royal Navy, 1900-1915
author: Matthew S. Seligmann
name: Brook
average rating: 3.00
book published:
rating: 3
read at: 2024/12/29
date added: 2024/12/29
shelves: could-not-finish
review:
2.5. Really interesting focus for a book/thesis. However, it does indeed read more like a paper than a book (which I suspect it might have started as, a paper). Could have been pared down to something much shorter. Enjoyable quick look into a specific set of events (naval reform under Churchill).
]]>
Piranesi 52702097
There is one other person in the house—a man called The Other, who visits Piranesi twice a week and asks for help with research into A Great and Secret Knowledge. But as Piranesi explores, evidence emerges of another person, and a terrible truth begins to unravel, revealing a world beyond the one Piranesi has always known.]]>
246 Susanna Clarke Brook 4 Unique idea, decent ending

A unique start to a story. It ends in mediocrity, which I think is the point. But the first half of the book is magical. Reminds me of "The Adventures of Baron von Munchausen."]]>
4.25 2020 Piranesi
author: Susanna Clarke
name: Brook
average rating: 4.25
book published: 2020
rating: 4
read at: 2024/12/28
date added: 2024/12/28
shelves:
review:
Unique idea, decent ending

A unique start to a story. It ends in mediocrity, which I think is the point. But the first half of the book is magical. Reminds me of "The Adventures of Baron von Munchausen."
]]>
Waging Heavy Peace 18867035 512 Neil Young 1101594098 Brook 3 3.67 2012 Waging Heavy Peace
author: Neil Young
name: Brook
average rating: 3.67
book published: 2012
rating: 3
read at: 2024/12/26
date added: 2024/12/26
shelves:
review:

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<![CDATA[The Galaxy, and the Ground Within (Wayfarers, #4)]]> 50209317
At the Five-Hop One-Stop, long-haul spacers can stretch their legs (if they have legs, that is), and get fuel, transit permits, and assorted supplies. The Five-Hop is run by an enterprising alien and her sometimes helpful child, who work hard to provide a little piece of home to everyone passing through.

When a freak technological failure halts all traffic to and from Gora, three strangers—all different species with different aims—are thrown together at the Five-Hop. Grounded, with nothing to do but wait, the trio—an exiled artist with an appointment to keep, a cargo runner at a personal crossroads, and a mysterious individual doing her best to help those on the fringes—are compelled to confront where they’ve been, where they might go, and what they are, or could be, to each other.]]>
336 Becky Chambers 0062936050 Brook 0 to-read 4.38 2021 The Galaxy, and the Ground Within (Wayfarers, #4)
author: Becky Chambers
name: Brook
average rating: 4.38
book published: 2021
rating: 0
read at:
date added: 2024/12/26
shelves: to-read
review:

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<![CDATA[Record of a Spaceborn Few (Wayfarers, #3)]]> 32802595
Tessa chose to stay home when her brother Ashby left for the stars, but has to question that decision when her position in the Fleet is threatened.

Kip, a reluctant young apprentice, itches for change but doesn't know where to find it.

Sawyer, a lost and lonely newcomer, is just looking for a place to belong.

When a disaster rocks this already fragile community, those Exodans who still call the Fleet their home can no longer avoid the inescapable question:

What is the purpose of a ship that has reached its destination?]]>
359 Becky Chambers 1473647606 Brook 0 to-read 4.10 2018 Record of a Spaceborn Few (Wayfarers, #3)
author: Becky Chambers
name: Brook
average rating: 4.10
book published: 2018
rating: 0
read at:
date added: 2024/12/26
shelves: to-read
review:

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<![CDATA[A Closed and Common Orbit (Wayfarers, #2)]]> 29475447
Together, Pepper and Lovey will discover that no matter how vast space is, two people can fill it together.

The Long Way to a Small, Angry Planet introduced readers to the incredible world of Rosemary Harper, a young woman with a restless soul and secrets to keep. When she joined the crew of the Wayfarer, an intergalactic ship, she got more than she bargained for - and learned to live with, and love, her rag-tag collection of crewmates.

A Closed and Common Orbit is the stand-alone sequel to Becky Chambers' beloved debut novel The Long Way to a Small, Angry Planet and is perfect for fans of Firefly, Joss Whedon, Mass Effect and Star Wars.]]>
365 Becky Chambers 1473621445 Brook 0 to-read 4.35 2016 A Closed and Common Orbit (Wayfarers, #2)
author: Becky Chambers
name: Brook
average rating: 4.35
book published: 2016
rating: 0
read at:
date added: 2024/12/26
shelves: to-read
review:

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<![CDATA[The Long Way to a Small, Angry Planet (Wayfarers, #1)]]> 22733729
Rosemary Harper doesn’t expect much when she joins the crew of the aging Wayfarer. While the patched-up ship has seen better days, it offers her a bed, a chance to explore the far-off corners of the galaxy, and most importantly, some distance from her past. An introspective young woman who learned early to keep to herself, she’s never met anyone remotely like the ship’s diverse crew, including Sissix, the exotic reptilian pilot, chatty engineers Kizzy and Jenks who keep the ship running, and Ashby, their noble captain.

Life aboard the Wayfarer is chaotic and crazy—exactly what Rosemary wants. It’s also about to get extremely dangerous when the crew is offered the job of a lifetime. Tunneling wormholes through space to a distant planet is definitely lucrative and will keep them comfortable for years. But risking her life wasn’t part of the plan. In the far reaches of deep space, the tiny Wayfarer crew will confront a host of unexpected mishaps and thrilling adventures that force them to depend on each other. To survive, Rosemary’s got to learn how to rely on this assortment of oddballs—an experience that teaches her about love and trust, and that having a family isn’t necessarily the worst thing in the universe.]]>
518 Becky Chambers 1500453307 Brook 0 to-read 4.15 2014 The Long Way to a Small, Angry Planet (Wayfarers, #1)
author: Becky Chambers
name: Brook
average rating: 4.15
book published: 2014
rating: 0
read at:
date added: 2024/12/26
shelves: to-read
review:

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There There 37798194 Tommy Orange's wondrous and shattering novel follows twelve characters from Native communities: all traveling to the Big Oakland Powwow, all connected to one another in ways they may not yet realize.

Among them is Jacquie Red Feather, newly sober and trying to make it back to the family she left behind. Dene Oxendene, pulling his life together after his uncle's death and working at the powwow to honor his memory. Fourteen-year-old Orvil, coming to perform traditional dance for the very first time. Together, this chorus of voices tells of the plight of the urban Native American--grappling with a complex and painful history, with an inheritance of beauty and spirituality, with communion and sacrifice and heroism.

Hailed as an instant classic, There There is at once poignant and unflinching, utterly contemporary and truly unforgettable.]]>
293 Tommy Orange Brook 3 3.98 2018 There There
author: Tommy Orange
name: Brook
average rating: 3.98
book published: 2018
rating: 3
read at: 2024/07/15
date added: 2024/12/25
shelves:
review:

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<![CDATA[The Stainless Steel Rat (Stainless Steel Rat, #4)]]> 18904039 Stainless Steel Rat is written by Harry Harrison who is also the author of Deathworld, Make Room! Make Room! (filmed as Soylent Green), the popular Stainless Steel Rat books, and many other famous works of SF.At the Publisher's request, this title is being sold without Digital Rights Management Software (DRM) applied.]]> 112 Harry Harrison Brook 1 could-not-finish 4.05 1961 The Stainless Steel Rat (Stainless Steel Rat, #4)
author: Harry Harrison
name: Brook
average rating: 4.05
book published: 1961
rating: 1
read at: 2024/12/23
date added: 2024/12/23
shelves: could-not-finish
review:
Reads like fanfic. The author tries to make the protagonist "cool," but the writing comes across as juvenile. Probably an enjoyable read for YA audiences who want an "action novella." Not a criticism.
]]>
All the Light We Cannot See 19398490 Winner of the Pulitzer Prize, a New York Times Book Review Top Ten Book, National Book Award finalist, more than two and a half years on the New York Times bestseller list


A blind French girl and a German boy whose paths collide in occupied France as both try to survive the devastation of World War II. Marie-Laure lives in Paris near the Museum of Natural History, where her father works as the master of the locks (there are thousands of locks in the museum). Open your eyes, and see what you can with them before they close forever. Marie-Laure has been blind since the age of six. Her father builds a perfect miniature of their Paris neighbourhood so she can memorize it by touch and navigate the real streets with her feet and cane. When she is twelve, the German Nazis occupy Paris and father and daughter flee to the walled citadel of Saint-Malo on the Brittany coast, where Marie-Laure’s agoraphobic reclusive great-uncle lives in a tall house by the sea. With them they carry what might be the museum’s most valuable and dangerous jewel.

In a mining town in Germany, the orphan Werner Pfennig grows up with his younger sister, Jutta, both enchanted by a crude radio they find that brings them news and stories from places they have never seen or imagined. Werner becomes an master at building and fixing these crucial new radios, a talent that wins him a place at an elite and brutal military academy and, ultimately, makes him a highly specialized tracker of the Resistance. More and more aware of the human cost of his intelligence, Werner travels through the heart of Hitler Youth to the far-flung outskirts of Russia, and finally into Saint-Malo, where his path converges with Marie-Laure. The story Illuminates the ways, against all odds, that people try to be good to one another.

At the same time, far away in a walled city by the sea, an old man discovers new worlds without ever setting foot outside his home. But all around him, impending danger closes in.

Ten years in the writing, a National Book Award finalist, All the Light We Cannot See is a magnificent, deeply moving novel from a writer “whose sentences never fail to thrill� (Los Angeles Times).]]>
552 Anthony Doerr Brook 4 4.38 2014 All the Light We Cannot See
author: Anthony Doerr
name: Brook
average rating: 4.38
book published: 2014
rating: 4
read at: 2024/12/22
date added: 2024/12/22
shelves:
review:

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<![CDATA[The Left Hand of Darkness (Hainish Cycle, #4)]]> 61174919 Ursula K. Le Guin's groundbreaking work of science fiction—winner of the Hugo and Nebula Awards.

A lone human ambassador is sent to Winter, an alien world without sexual prejudice, where the inhabitants can change their gender whenever they choose. His goal is to facilitate Winter's inclusion in a growing intergalactic civilization. But to do so he must bridge the gulf between his own views and those of the strange, intriguingĚýculture he encounters...

Embracing the aspects of psychology, society, and human emotion on an alien world, The Left Hand of Darkness stands as a landmark achievement in the annals of intellectual science fiction.]]>
367 Ursula K. Le Guin Brook 3 4.22 1969 The Left Hand of Darkness (Hainish Cycle, #4)
author: Ursula K. Le Guin
name: Brook
average rating: 4.22
book published: 1969
rating: 3
read at: 2024/12/20
date added: 2024/12/20
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The God of the Woods 199698485 When a teenager vanishes from her Adirondack summer camp, two worlds collide

Early morning, August 1975: a camp counselor discovers an empty bunk. Its occupant, Barbara Van Laar, has gone missing. Barbara isn’t just any thirteen-year-old: she’s the daughter of the family that owns the summer camp and employs most of the region’s residents. And this isn’t the first time a Van Laar child has disappeared. Barbara’s older brother similarly vanished fourteen years ago, never to be found.

As a panicked search begins, a thrilling drama unfolds. Chasing down the layered secrets of the Van Laar family and the blue-collar community working in its shadow, Moore’s multi-threaded story invites readers into a rich and gripping dynasty of secrets and second chances. It is Liz Moore’s most ambitious and wide-reaching novel yet.]]>
490 Liz Moore Brook 0 to-read 4.16 2024 The God of the Woods
author: Liz Moore
name: Brook
average rating: 4.16
book published: 2024
rating: 0
read at:
date added: 2024/12/19
shelves: to-read
review:

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The Goddess of Warsaw 197448682 The Goddess Of Warsaw is an enthralling story of a legendary Hollywood screen goddess with a dark secret. When the famous actress Lena Browning is threatened by someone from her war-time past, she must put her skills into play to protect herself, her illustrious career, and those she loves, then and now.
Before she was a “Living Legend�, Lena Browning was Bina Blonski, a wealthy Polish Jew whose life and prominent family were destroyed by the Nazis and imprisoned with the rest of Warsaw's Jews in a ghastly ghetto. Determined to fight back, the beautiful, blonde Aryan-looking Bina becomes a spy and an assassin, gaining information and stealing weapons outside the Warsaw ghetto to protect her family and fellow Jews. While Bina accomplishes amazing feats of bravery, she sacrifices much in the process � including a forbidden love.
More than a decade after escaping the horrors of the war, Lena Browning rises to fame in Hollywood. Yet she cannot help but hunger for revenge against the Nazis who escaped justice after the war. Fierce and fearless, Lena uses her star power to right the past’s wrongs . . . and perhaps even finds the happy ending she never had.
A gripping page-turner of one of history’s most heroic uprisings and a glamourous actress whose personal war never ends, The Goddess of Warsaw is filled with secrets, lies, twists and turns, and a burning pursuit of justice no matter the cost.
“Jaw-dropping moments worthy of a Tarantino film . . . Unrelentingly immersive and suspenseful, The Goddess of Warsaw spins a haunting tale of the cost of survival, sacrifice, and the long-denied secrets of the past.�
—NATALIE JENNER, bestselling author of The Jane Austen Society]]>
368 Lisa Barr 0063296608 Brook 0 to-read 4.33 2024 The Goddess of Warsaw
author: Lisa Barr
name: Brook
average rating: 4.33
book published: 2024
rating: 0
read at:
date added: 2024/12/19
shelves: to-read
review:

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Here One Moment 208516656 If you knew your future, would you try to fight fate?

Aside from a delay, there will be no problems. The flight will be smooth, it will land safely. Everyone who gets on the plane will get off. But almost all of them will be forever changed.

Because on this ordinary, short, domestic flight, something extraordinary happens. People learn how and when they are going to die. For some, their death is far in the future—age 103!—and they laugh. But for six passengers, their predicted deaths are not far away at all.

How do they know this? There were ostensibly more interesting people on the flight (the bride and groom, the jittery, possibly famous woman, the giant Hemsworth-esque guy who looks like an off-duty superhero, the frazzled, gorgeous flight attendant) but none would become as famous as “The Death Lady.�

Not a single passenger or crew member will later recall noticing her board the plane. She wasn’t exceptionally old or young, rude or polite. She wasn’t drunk or nervous or pregnant. Her appearance and demeanor were unremarkable. But what she did on that flight was truly remarkable.

A few months later, one passenger dies exactly as she predicted. Then two more passengers die, again, as she said they would. Soon no one is thinking this is simply an entertaining story at a cocktail party.

If you were told you only had a certain amount of time left to live, would you do things differently? Would you try to dodge your destiny?

Liane Moriarty’s Here One Moment is a brilliantly constructed tale that looks at free will and destiny, grief and love, and the endless struggle to maintain certainty and control in an uncertain world. A modern-day Jane Austen who humorously skewers social mores while spinning a web of mystery, Moriarty asks profound questions in her newest I-can’t-wait-to-find-out-what-happens novel.]]>
512 Liane Moriarty 0593798600 Brook 0 to-read 3.99 2024 Here One Moment
author: Liane Moriarty
name: Brook
average rating: 3.99
book published: 2024
rating: 0
read at:
date added: 2024/12/19
shelves: to-read
review:

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The Raw Shark Texts 23234784
But there may be more to the story, or it may be a different story altogether. As Eric begins to examine letters and papers left in the house by "the first Eric Sanderson," a staggeringly different explanation for what is happening to Eric emerges, and he and the reader embark on a quest to recover the truth and escape the remorseless predatory forces that threatens to devour him.

The Raw Shark Texts is a kaleidoscopic novel about the magnitude of love and the devastating effect of losing that love. It will dazzle you, it will move you, and will leave an indelible imprint like nothing you have read in a long time.]]>
428 Steven Hall Brook 3 could-not-finish
In short, a really fantastic premise that could have used a better editor.]]>
3.93 2007 The Raw Shark Texts
author: Steven Hall
name: Brook
average rating: 3.93
book published: 2007
rating: 3
read at: 2024/12/16
date added: 2024/12/16
shelves: could-not-finish
review:
The author was trying a format that is not often used. He combined narrative with letters between various characters in the book, which has been done before. But he also includes puzzles, in the book provided to the protagonist, but that are also solvable by the reader. I give the book four stars for a novel approach to storytelling. However, it could have used an editor, as throughout the book there were sentences that were confusing and needed rereading two or three times. But the reader is involved in the story, almost becoming part of it, as they solve the puzzles, or watch the protagonist solve them.

In short, a really fantastic premise that could have used a better editor.
]]>
<![CDATA[The Promise (Elvis Cole, #16; Joe Pike, #5; Scott James & Maggie, #2)]]> 22169495 Elvis Cole and Joe Pike are joined by Suspect heroes LAPD K-9 Officer Scott James and his German shepherd, Maggie, in the new heart-stopping thriller from #1 New York Times-bestselling author Robert Crais.

Loyalty, commitment, and the fight for justice have always driven Elvis Cole and Joe Pike. If they make a promise, they keep it. Even if it could get them killed.

When Elvis Cole is secretly hired to find a grief-stricken mother, he’s led to an ordinary house on a rainy night in Echo Park. Only the house isn’t ordinary, and the people hiding inside are a desperate fugitive and a murderous criminal with his own dangerous secrets.

As helicopters swirl overhead, Scott and Maggie track the fugitive to this same house, coming face-to-face with Mr. Rollins, a killer who leaves behind a brutally murdered body and enough explosives to destroy the neighborhood. Scott is now the only person who can identify him, but Mr. Rollins has a rule: Never leave a witness alive.

For all of them, the night is only beginning.

Sworn to secrecy by his client, Elvis finds himself targeted by the police even as Mr. Rollins targets Maggie and Scott. As Mr. Rollins closes in for the kill, Elvis and Joe join forces with Scott and Maggie to follow a trail of lies where no one is who they claim � and the very woman they promised to save might get them all killed.]]>
408 Robert Crais 069814628X Brook 3 4.27 2015 The Promise (Elvis Cole, #16; Joe Pike, #5; Scott James & Maggie, #2)
author: Robert Crais
name: Brook
average rating: 4.27
book published: 2015
rating: 3
read at: 2024/12/16
date added: 2024/12/16
shelves:
review:

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<![CDATA[The Fatal Shore: The Epic of Australia's Founding]]> 18191134 628 Robert Hughes Brook 3 could-not-finish 3.90 1986 The Fatal Shore: The Epic of Australia's Founding
author: Robert Hughes
name: Brook
average rating: 3.90
book published: 1986
rating: 3
read at: 2024/12/16
date added: 2024/12/16
shelves: could-not-finish
review:
At just over 1,000 pages, this was a bit too detailed to be enjoyable. As a reference for those interested in the history of Australia, or as a textbook, it would be fantastic. As a casual bedside read, it was too detailed for this reader.
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Deacon King Kong 51045613 The funny, sharp, and surprising story of the shooting of a Brooklyn drug dealer and the people who witnessed it—from James McBride, author of the National Book Award-winning The Good Lord Bird

In September 1969, a fumbling, cranky old church deacon known in the neighborhood as Sportcoat shuffles into the courtyard of the Causeway Housing project in south Brooklyn, pulls a .38 from his pocket, and in front of everybody shoots the project's drug dealer at point-blank range.

The reasons for this desperate burst of violence and the consequences that spring from it lie at the heart of Deacon King Kong, James McBride's novel and his first since his National Book Award-winning The Good Lord Bird. In McBride brings to vivid life the people affected by the shooting: the victim, the African-American and Latinx residents who witnessed it, the white neighbors, the local NYPD cops assigned to investigate what happened, the members of the Five Ends Baptist Church where Sportcoat was deacon, the neighborhood's Italian mobsters, and Sportcoat himself.

As the story deepens, it becomes clear that the lives of the characters—caught in the tumultuous swirl of New York in the late 1960s—overlap in unexpected ways. When the truth finally emerges, McBride shows us that not all secrets can be hidden, that the best way to grow is to face change without fear, and that the seeds of love lie in compassion and hope.]]>
370 James McBride 073521672X Brook 4
Clearly the author was influenced by Spike Lee, to the point that I had to make sure that Spike Lee didn't write the book. That is not meant as a put-down. It is not a deep book, but, like Spike Lee's movies, it gives a very vivid portrait of that point in time in that city. In this case being New York City in the 1970s.

It reads almost more like a play than a book, said as a compliment. I can easily see this making its way into movie form, and I would not be surprised if it happens in the next year or two. It could also easily be remade as a play.]]>
4.11 2020 Deacon King Kong
author: James McBride
name: Brook
average rating: 4.11
book published: 2020
rating: 4
read at: 2024/12/16
date added: 2024/12/16
shelves:
review:
4.5 stars. I did the audiobook version, which is normally not my thing, but this book is probably 75% dialogue, so it works very well.

Clearly the author was influenced by Spike Lee, to the point that I had to make sure that Spike Lee didn't write the book. That is not meant as a put-down. It is not a deep book, but, like Spike Lee's movies, it gives a very vivid portrait of that point in time in that city. In this case being New York City in the 1970s.

It reads almost more like a play than a book, said as a compliment. I can easily see this making its way into movie form, and I would not be surprised if it happens in the next year or two. It could also easily be remade as a play.
]]>
<![CDATA[The Wanted (Elvis Cole, #17; Joe Pike, #6)]]> 32479256
They stole the wrong thing from the wrong man. Determined to get it back, he has hired a team that is smart and brutal, and to even the odds, Cole calls in his friends Joe Pike and Jon Stone. But even they may be overmatched. The hired killers are leaving a trail of bodies in their wake. A few more won’t make any difference.]]>
266 Robert Crais 0399573909 Brook 3 4.32 2017 The Wanted (Elvis Cole, #17; Joe Pike, #6)
author: Robert Crais
name: Brook
average rating: 4.32
book published: 2017
rating: 3
read at: 2024/12/16
date added: 2024/12/16
shelves:
review:

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Djibouti 7981086
Dara Barr, documentary filmmaker, is at the top of her game. She's covered the rape of Bosnian women, neo-Nazi white supremacists, and post-Katrina New Orleans, and has won awards for all three. Now, looking for a bigger challenge, Dara and her right-hand-man, Xavier LeBo, a six-foot-six, seventy-two-year-old African American seafarer, head to Djibouti, on the Horn of Africa, to film modern-day pirates hijacking merchant ships.

They learn soon enough that almost no one in the Middle East is who he seems to be. The most successful pirate, driving his Mercedes around Djibouti, appears to be a good guy, but his pal, a cultured Saudi diplomat, has dubious connections. Billy Wynn, a Texas billionaire, plays mysterious roles as the mood strikes him. He's promised his girlfriend, Helene, a nifty fashion model, that he'll marry her if she doesn't become seasick or bored while circling the world on his yacht. And there's Jama Raisuli, a black al Qaeda terrorist from Miami, who's vowed to blow up something big.

What Dara and Xavier have to decide, besides the best way to stay alive: Should they shoot the action as a documentary or turn it into a Hollywood feature film?]]>
279 Elmore Leonard 0061735175 Brook 3 2.98 2010 Djibouti
author: Elmore Leonard
name: Brook
average rating: 2.98
book published: 2010
rating: 3
read at: 2024/12/16
date added: 2024/12/16
shelves:
review:

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Grass (Arbai, #1) 8299556
Now, a deadly plague is spreading across the stars. No world save Grass has been left untouched. Marjorie Westriding Yrarier has been sent from Earth to discover the secret of the planet’s immunity. Amid the alien social structure and strange life-forms of Grass, Lady Westriding unravels the planet’s mysteries to find a truth so shattering it could mean the end of life itself.]]>
478 Sheri S. Tepper Brook 1 could-not-finish
I can tell, I think, what the author was trying to write. Tell a story set on another world, populated by humans that traveled there long ago. The author tries to draw parallels between what seems like Victorian England and the world of the book, but the characters are uninteresting and flat, and nothing compels you to turn the page.

The book is just bad. Poorly written, poorly worded, and without a point. I am mad at myself for sticking around as far as chapter 5 before finally tossing it in the trash.]]>
4.18 1989 Grass (Arbai, #1)
author: Sheri S. Tepper
name: Brook
average rating: 4.18
book published: 1989
rating: 1
read at: 2024/12/04
date added: 2024/12/04
shelves: could-not-finish
review:
The most "liked" negative review of this book pretty much sums it up for me. I have no idea how this made it on to any top list of anything. The writing style and vocabulary is incredibly stilted, and the sentences are packed with so many "extra" words that don't add anything. It reads more like a high school freshman's attempt to write a novel, fitting in is much unnecessary description as possible to pad out the word count.

I can tell, I think, what the author was trying to write. Tell a story set on another world, populated by humans that traveled there long ago. The author tries to draw parallels between what seems like Victorian England and the world of the book, but the characters are uninteresting and flat, and nothing compels you to turn the page.

The book is just bad. Poorly written, poorly worded, and without a point. I am mad at myself for sticking around as far as chapter 5 before finally tossing it in the trash.
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The Dutch House 44318414
The story is told by Cyril’s son Danny, as he and his older sister, the brilliantly acerbic and self-assured Maeve, are exiled from the house where they grew up by their stepmother. The two wealthy siblings are thrown back into the poverty their parents had escaped from and find that all they have to count on is one another. It is this unshakable bond between them that both saves their lives and thwarts their futures.

Set over the course of five decades, The Dutch House is a dark fairy tale about two smart people who cannot overcome their past. Despite every outward sign of success, Danny and Maeve are only truly comfortable when they’re together. Throughout their lives, they return to the well-worn story of what they’ve lost with humor and rage. But when at last they’re forced to confront the people who left them behind, the relationship between an indulged brother and his ever-protective sister is finally tested.]]>
337 Ann Patchett 0062963678 Brook 2 4.08 2019 The Dutch House
author: Ann Patchett
name: Brook
average rating: 4.08
book published: 2019
rating: 2
read at: 2024/01/01
date added: 2024/12/04
shelves:
review:

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The Terror 38237350
The men on board the HMS TerrorĚý â€� part of the 1845 Franklin Expedition, the first steam-powered vessels ever to search for the legendary Northwest Passage â€� are entering a second summer in the Arctic Circle without a thaw, stranded in a nightmarish landscape of encroaching ice and darkness. Endlessly cold, they struggle to survive with poisonous rations, a dwindling coal supply, and ships buckling in the grip of crushing ice. But their real enemy is even more terrifying. There is something out there in the frigid an unseen predator stalking their ship, a monstrous terror clawing to get in.

“The best and most unusual historical novel I have read in years.� —Katherine A. Powers, Boston Globe]]>
784 Dan Simmons 0316486094 Brook 4 4.10 2007 The Terror
author: Dan Simmons
name: Brook
average rating: 4.10
book published: 2007
rating: 4
read at: 2024/11/20
date added: 2024/11/20
shelves:
review:

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<![CDATA[The Radium Girls: The Dark Story of America’s Shining Women]]> 31409135 The incredible true story of the women who fought America's Undark danger

The Curies' newly discovered element of radium makes gleaming headlines across the nation as the fresh face of beauty, and wonder drug of the medical community. From body lotion to tonic water, the popular new element shines bright in the otherwise dark years of the First World War.

Meanwhile, hundreds of girls toil amidst the glowing dust of the radium-dial factories. The glittering chemical covers their bodies from head to toe; they light up the night like industrious fireflies. With such a coveted job, these "shining girls" are the luckiest alive—until they begin to fall mysteriously ill.

But the factories that once offered golden opportunities are now ignoring all claims of the gruesome side effects, and the women's cries of corruption. And as the fatal poison of the radium takes hold, the brave shining girls find themselves embroiled in one of the biggest scandals of America's early 20th century, and in a groundbreaking battle for workers' rights that will echo for centuries to come.

Written with a sparkling voice and breakneck pace, The Radium Girls fully illuminates the inspiring young women exposed to the "wonder" substance of radium, and their awe-inspiring strength in the face of almost impossible circumstances. Their courage and tenacity led to life-changing regulations, research into nuclear bombing, and ultimately saved hundreds of thousands of lives.

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479 Kate Moore 149264935X Brook 0 to-read 4.13 2016 The Radium Girls: The Dark Story of America’s Shining Women
author: Kate Moore
name: Brook
average rating: 4.13
book published: 2016
rating: 0
read at:
date added: 2024/11/15
shelves: to-read
review:

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<![CDATA[A Dangerous Man (Elvis Cole, #18; Joe Pike, #7)]]> 42112733 A brilliant new crime novel from the beloved, bestselling, and award-winning master of the genre--and Joe Pike's most perilous case to date.

Joe Pike didn't expect to rescue a woman that day. He went to the bank same as anyone goes to the bank, and returned to his Jeep. So when Isabel Roland, the lonely young teller who helped him, steps out of the bank on her way to lunch, Joe is on hand when two men abduct her. Joe chases them down, and the two men are arrested. But instead of putting the drama to rest, the arrests are only the beginning of the trouble for Joe and Izzy.

After posting bail, the two abductors are murdered and Izzy disappears. Pike calls on his friend, Elvis Cole, to help learn the truth. What Elvis uncovers is a twisted family story that involves corporate whistleblowing, huge amounts of cash, the Witness Relocation Program, and a long line of lies. But what of all that did Izzy know? Is she a perpetrator or a victim? And how far will Joe go to find out?]]>
351 Robert Crais Brook 0 4.31 2019 A Dangerous Man (Elvis Cole, #18; Joe Pike, #7)
author: Robert Crais
name: Brook
average rating: 4.31
book published: 2019
rating: 0
read at: 2024/11/11
date added: 2024/11/11
shelves:
review:

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<![CDATA[Infinity Over Zero: Meditations on Maximum Velocity]]> 675628 272 Cole Coonce 0971997705 Brook 0 to-read 4.86 2002 Infinity Over Zero: Meditations on Maximum Velocity
author: Cole Coonce
name: Brook
average rating: 4.86
book published: 2002
rating: 0
read at:
date added: 2024/11/10
shelves: to-read
review:

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<![CDATA[Children of Blood and Bone (Legacy of OrĂŻsha, #1)]]> 35917072 Tomi Adeyemi conjures a stunning world of dark magic and danger in her West African-inspired fantasy debut, perfect for fans of Leigh Bardugo and Sabaa Tahir.

They killed my mother.
They took our magic.
They tried to bury us.

Now we rise.

Zélie Adebola remembers when the soil of Orïsha hummed with magic. Burners ignited flames, Tiders beckoned waves, and Zélie’s Reaper mother summoned forth souls.

But everything changed the night magic disappeared. Under the orders of a ruthless king, maji were killed, leaving ZĂ©lie without a mother and her people without hope.

Now ZĂ©lie has one chance to bring back magic and strike against the monarchy. With the help of a rogue princess, ZĂ©lie must outwit and outrun the crown prince, who is hell-bent on eradicating magic for good.

Danger lurks in Orïsha, where snow leoponaires prowl and vengeful spirits wait in the waters. Yet the greatest danger may be Zélie herself as she struggles to control her powers—and her growing feelings for an enemy.]]>
525 Tomi Adeyemi 1250170982 Brook 3 could-not-finish 4.27 2018 Children of Blood and Bone (Legacy of OrĂŻsha, #1)
author: Tomi Adeyemi
name: Brook
average rating: 4.27
book published: 2018
rating: 3
read at: 2024/11/01
date added: 2024/11/01
shelves: could-not-finish
review:
A bit too slow for me, had to put it down at about 30%
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<![CDATA[Revelation Space (Inhibitor Trilogy, #1)]]> 48837196 This highly acclaimed first novel in the Revelation Space universe has redefined the space opera with a staggering journey across vast gulfs of time and space to confront the very nature of reality itself . . .



Nine hundred thousand years ago, something annihilated the Amarantin civilization just as it was on the verge of discovering space flight. Now one scientist, Dan Sylveste, will stop at nothing to solve the Amarantin riddle before ancient history repeats itself. With no other resources at his disposal, Sylveste forges a dangerous alliance with the cyborg crew of the starship Nostalgia for Infinity. But as he closes in on the secret, a killer closes in on him. Because the Amarantin were destroyed for a reason, and if that reason is uncovered, the universe and reality itself could be irrevocably altered . . .


"[A] tour de force... Ravishingly inventive." -- Publishers Weekly]]>
531 Alastair Reynolds 0316462446 Brook 2 could-not-finish 3.92 2000 Revelation Space (Inhibitor Trilogy, #1)
author: Alastair Reynolds
name: Brook
average rating: 3.92
book published: 2000
rating: 2
read at: 2024/11/01
date added: 2024/11/01
shelves: could-not-finish
review:

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<![CDATA[Those Beyond the Wall (The Space Between Worlds #2)]]> 177185783
Scales is the best at what she She is an enforcer who keeps the peace in Ashtown, a rough, climate-ravaged desert town. But that fragile peace is fractured when a woman is mangled and killed within Ash's borders, right in front of Scales's eyes. Even more incomprehensible is that there was seemingly no murderer.

When more mutilated bodies start to turn up, both in Ashtown and in the wealthier, walled-off Wiley City, Scales is tasked with finding the cause—and putting an end to it. She teams up with a frustratingly by-the-books partner and a brusque-but-brilliant scientist in order to uncover the truth, delving into both worlds to track down the invisible killer. But what they find points to something biggerĚýand more corrupt than they could've ever foreseen—and it could spell doom for the entire world.]]>
376 Micaiah Johnson Brook 3 4.21 2024 Those Beyond the Wall (The Space Between Worlds #2)
author: Micaiah Johnson
name: Brook
average rating: 4.21
book published: 2024
rating: 3
read at: 2024/10/28
date added: 2024/10/28
shelves:
review:

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<![CDATA[The House at Pooh Corner (Winnie-the-Pooh, #2)]]> 776407 180 A.A. Milne 0525444440 Brook 0 for-the-kids 4.37 1928 The House at Pooh Corner (Winnie-the-Pooh, #2)
author: A.A. Milne
name: Brook
average rating: 4.37
book published: 1928
rating: 0
read at:
date added: 2024/10/28
shelves: for-the-kids
review:

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<![CDATA[The Demon of Unrest: A Saga of Hubris, Heartbreak, and Heroism at the Dawn of the Civil War]]> 195608683 The #1 New York Times bestselling author of The Splendid and the Vile brings to life the pivotal five months between the election of Abraham Lincoln and the start of the Civil War—a slow-burning crisis that finally tore a deeply divided nation in two.

On November 6, 1860, Abraham Lincoln became the fluky victor in a tight race for president. The country was bitterly at odds; Southern extremists were moving ever closer to destroying the Union, with one state after another seceding and Lincoln powerless to stop them. Slavery fueled the conflict, but somehow the passions of North and South came to focus on a lonely federal fortress in Charleston: Fort Sumter.
Ěý
Master storyteller Erik Larson offers a gripping account of the chaotic months between Lincoln’s election and the Confederacy’s shelling of Sumter—a period marked by tragic errors and miscommunications, enflamed egos and craven ambitions, personal tragedies and betrayals. Lincoln himself wrote that the trials of these five months were “so great that, could I have anticipated them, I would not have believed it possible to survive them.�
Ěý
At the heart of this suspense-filled narrative are Major Robert Anderson, Sumter’s commander and a former slave owner sympathetic to the South but loyal to the Union; Edmund Ruffin, a vain and bloodthirsty radical who stirs secessionist ardor at every opportunity; and Mary Boykin Chesnut, wife of a prominent planter, conflicted over both marriage and slavery and seeing parallels between both. In the middle of it all is the overwhelmed Lincoln, battling with his duplicitous Secretary of State, William Seward, as he tries desperately to avert a war that he fears is inevitable—one that will eventually kill 750,000 Americans.
Ěý
Drawing on diaries, secret communiques, slave ledgers, and plantation records, Larson gives us a political horror story that captures the forces that led America to the brink—a dark reminder that we often don’t see a cataclysm coming until it’s too late.]]>
565 Erik Larson 0385348746 Brook 0 to-read 4.13 2024 The Demon of Unrest: A Saga of Hubris, Heartbreak, and Heroism at the Dawn of the Civil War
author: Erik Larson
name: Brook
average rating: 4.13
book published: 2024
rating: 0
read at:
date added: 2024/10/05
shelves: to-read
review:

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Blind Sight 8963415 ĚýĚýĚýĚý
By the end of the summer Luke thinks he has found the answers he’s been seeking, only to discover that the differences between truth and belief are not always easy to spot, and that evidence can be when Luke returns home, his mother reveals something she knows will change everything for him.
ĚýĚýĚýĚý
With Blind Sight , Meg Howrey gives us a smart, funny, and deeply moving story about truth versus belief, about what we do and don’t tell ourselves—with the result, as Luke says, that we don’t always know what we know.]]>
289 Meg Howrey 0307379167 Brook 0 to-read 3.68 2011 Blind Sight
author: Meg Howrey
name: Brook
average rating: 3.68
book published: 2011
rating: 0
read at:
date added: 2024/10/03
shelves: to-read
review:

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