Books in a state of being read
Nov. 6th, 2010 03:17 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
Crummy day at work yestday, between having an Aspie moment, then getting chewed out by one manager for it -- I'll worry about the damn holidays when we get to them; having an Aspie moment when its less manic does not presuppose that I'll have one later on. I never know when to expect them, and since That Time of the Month is imminent, I'm more likely to have a bad spell than when it It Isn't. At least the other front end manager was a lot more empathetic and got on her case for getting on mine.
But enough of that: I currently have a nice little pile of books I'm reading or have read recently, including:
*"Perdido Street Station" by China Mieville. Just the dedication alone and Neil Gaiman's endorsement sold me on it. Anyone who drew their inspiration from and dedicated their book in memory of Mervyn Peake has a lot going for them. And the Peakean influence shows: the city of Crobuzon could easily exist in the same 'verse as a certain ginormous castle. I would die happy if someone wrote a crossover between the two.
*"The Physick Booke of Deliverance Dane" by Katherine Howe. In some ways, it's rather like "The Historian" only with the Salem Witch Hysteria, but the writing is nowhere as good. I probably shouldn't compare apples to oranges, but while the descriptions are vivid and the history is interesting... the characters seem a bit thin. The fact that the various archivists and professors seem uniformly to have it in for the heroine reeks a little of Sue-age. At least said heroine is somewhat conservative and reticent helps redeem it, since if she was plucky and rebellious, I'd be sending her to a certain Mansion to be reformed...
*"Black Butler" aka Kuroshitsuji by Yana Toboso. I picked this gothic-Victorian manga as a way to tide myself over till the next volume of Yami no Matsuei gets translated and released in the States (a little bird tells me it may be released in February of next year). It's a lot of fun, reminds me quite a bit of Hellsing, only with some mild shounen-ai overtones, and with a dash of YnM -- Sebastian could be Tsuzuki's more competent twin brother, when he isn't reminding me of a kinder, gentler Alucard.
And our roof is being repaired! I got awakened at seven this morning by what sounded like giant woodpeckers hammering on the roof, so I moved to the couch to catch a few extra Z's... only to wake up a few hours later to find the daylight in the room had a blue tinge due to the blue tarps which the roofers had laid down on the lawn and draped from the roof to catch the busted shingles they were pulling up. Besides getting the roof reshingled, we're also getting rid of the very unnecessary hatch that was in the middle of the roof, which did little more than leak when we had a heavy spell of rain.
But enough of that: I currently have a nice little pile of books I'm reading or have read recently, including:
*"Perdido Street Station" by China Mieville. Just the dedication alone and Neil Gaiman's endorsement sold me on it. Anyone who drew their inspiration from and dedicated their book in memory of Mervyn Peake has a lot going for them. And the Peakean influence shows: the city of Crobuzon could easily exist in the same 'verse as a certain ginormous castle. I would die happy if someone wrote a crossover between the two.
*"The Physick Booke of Deliverance Dane" by Katherine Howe. In some ways, it's rather like "The Historian" only with the Salem Witch Hysteria, but the writing is nowhere as good. I probably shouldn't compare apples to oranges, but while the descriptions are vivid and the history is interesting... the characters seem a bit thin. The fact that the various archivists and professors seem uniformly to have it in for the heroine reeks a little of Sue-age. At least said heroine is somewhat conservative and reticent helps redeem it, since if she was plucky and rebellious, I'd be sending her to a certain Mansion to be reformed...
*"Black Butler" aka Kuroshitsuji by Yana Toboso. I picked this gothic-Victorian manga as a way to tide myself over till the next volume of Yami no Matsuei gets translated and released in the States (a little bird tells me it may be released in February of next year). It's a lot of fun, reminds me quite a bit of Hellsing, only with some mild shounen-ai overtones, and with a dash of YnM -- Sebastian could be Tsuzuki's more competent twin brother, when he isn't reminding me of a kinder, gentler Alucard.
And our roof is being repaired! I got awakened at seven this morning by what sounded like giant woodpeckers hammering on the roof, so I moved to the couch to catch a few extra Z's... only to wake up a few hours later to find the daylight in the room had a blue tinge due to the blue tarps which the roofers had laid down on the lawn and draped from the roof to catch the busted shingles they were pulling up. Besides getting the roof reshingled, we're also getting rid of the very unnecessary hatch that was in the middle of the roof, which did little more than leak when we had a heavy spell of rain.