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What We've Been Reading
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What have you been Reading this October?
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Andrea
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Oct 01, 2021 08:54AM

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Audible:

==========================================
Authors:
P. Djèlà Clark, Saad Hossain, Dan Jolley, Amie Kaufman, Cassandra Khaw, Dean Koontz, Jay Kristoff, Arkady Martine, Thomas Olde Heuvelt, Anthony Ryan, Lisa Unger, John Wiswell
Narrators:
Josh Hurley




Now, though my library decided to go nuts and save all the books I had put on reserve weeks and months ago and have them available to me all in the same week, I'm going to put those aside for at least one October themed book on my TBR list, my Steampunk BINGO slot - Whitechapel Gods by S.M. Peters

Anyway, that frees me up my online reading to start on the Simon & Shuster free October books and I decided to start with Winterwood by Shea Ernshaw since I had enjoyed her Wicked Deep last year.




/review/show...
I'm going to start Vanishing Fleece: Adventures in American Wool by Clara Parkes later today. We used to have a flock of sheep & I occasionally buy a fleece which I wash, spin, dye, & then knit or crochet into simple scarfs, hats, & such, so I'm somewhat familiar with the process.


That is a fun book. I've led discussions for it in several groups over the years & have over 20 pages of notes. A chapter a day allows plenty of time for reflection & research. Zelazny hid a lot in the story.




Next on my list is a kind of vampire/angel creature in The Darkangel by Meredith Ann Pierce. I've been fascinated by the cover of my copy, finally a good moment to read it to see if the inside lives up the the outside....in fact, the book is on a GR list about the cover artist...now I want to read more of those books just because the covers are so intriguing.






As I haven't decided yet if I'll finish Pierce's trilogy right away or pick up something else first, I'll give myself a little time by reading A Study in Emerald by Neil Gaiman. I've been rereading Lovecraft and I remembered I saw this Gaiman graphic novel in the library some time back and that it does a Cthulhu mythos / Sherlock Holmes crossover.
Aside - apparently my browser's spell check knows the word Cthulhu but not the word mythos.
Update - in the afternoon I finished Magic Dark and Strange, which was a good read, I didn't adore it, but it was enjoyable enough. The magic system was poorly explained though, like what was the reasoning that a watchmaker would use time magic but a girl in a print shop can raise the dead? Or maybe anyone could use any magic if they learned how? No idea.
I've still got plenty of time to read another free book from rivetedlit.com in the next couple weeks so I'll read Secret Admirer by R.L. Stine. I was never into Stine's stuff, I wasn't quite the target age group (though Goosebumps was huge at my sister's school) and horror is not something I generally read. But I'll give a free book a go. At 160 pages it's also very short.

I'd better get started on my anthology BINGO slot since it's a BIG book and only a couple weeks left of the month Demons: Encounters with the Devil and His Minions, Fallen Angels, and the Possessed edited by John Skipp
*cough* I still have 10 books I was hoping to read in October...I'll consider achieving that rather unlikely...

/review/show...


Now there is one last book that's free this month that I had my eye on...but it's 700 pages long, not sure I can manage that in 1.5 weeks. Then I realized it's an omnibus of 3 Night World books. I should be able to manage a ~200 page book in what time is left of October. I'll see what it's like, and then use the library for the rest at some later date if I feel like it. So here goes Secret Vampire by L.J. Smith
In fact Smith's Vampire Diaries was my first foray into vampire literature after Dracula, which at the time I had only read because my cousin had this text based DOS computer game and we kept dying at the end, figured if we read Dracula together we'd get some insight how to survive the game (nope).
To bad the TV series forced Smith to write more books and basically messed up the whole storyline, I haven't bother with the million more books that came out after. It killed it for me when the Renaissance Italian vampires had to be converted into Colonial American ones to make it palatable for American audiences *gag*. Italian vampires are so much sexier... ;) Well ok, Jonathan Barrett, Gentleman Vampire was pretty good too, but at least he was American Colonialist to start with, not a rewrite!
At least the original books remain untouched and dear to my heart as my first clandestine purchase...didn't want people to know I liked "vampire" books, that was for goths and other "weird" people after all, haha! (I now freely admit to being weird). I also kept my reading of Dragonlance secret, after all that was for "boys" *smirks* Ah high school days...

I had watched (and enjoyed) the first season of the TV show when I discovered a copy of the book in among the books I own but had never read. I was surprised at how different they were.





The Anomaly by Hervé Le Tellier
A complex and rewarding read: /review/show...

The Anomaly by Hervé Le Tellier
A complex and rewarding read: /review/show..."
Your link doesn't work Jannelies.


I have started The Parliament of Blood.


I've also read

I'm now reading


Now I've been working my way through Lovecraft's works, I'm not done yet, about halfway through At the Mountains of Madness with at least one other story to come after it but I'm running out of October so I'm starting on Summoned by Anne M. Pillsworth. I've actually read this one before too, in fact I won it through Å·±¦ÓéÀÖ, but it took years before I FINALLY found a copy of the second book on OpenLibrary. The third book looks like a lost cause though, must have been some dispute between publisher and author since it seems like the book may even have been written, just not published (I can pre-order it on Amazon.ca but I'll have to wait till October 2029), and with the other two being extraordinarily hard to find there must be a reason why it never got wrapped up. And it's weird because Pillsworth was also working for the Tor blog doing a Lovecraft re-read series of posts, so one would think they got along well enough.





I finished a book from Karel Čapek, and started reading the deadly education by Naomi Novik. I also started reading the house in the cerulean sea and fimfárum by Jan Werich.

But since that is through OpenLibrary and requires a computer, I'm also starting a dead-tree book for when I won't want to be staring at a screen. Now I've been reading an Anne Rice book every October for many years now as I worked through her Vampire Chronicles, then started on her other stuff. She conveniently had an angel one I haven't read yet to match my reading theme for the year - Angel Time

It's a very interesting read and I highly recommend it."
Been wanting to see the anime for like forever, it's got a kitsune in it :) But we had Inu Yasha on TV here instead (which is also good)
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