Reviews and Comments

aesmael

aesmael@outside.ofa.dog

Joined 2 years ago

Librarian, occasional reader. Queer and prone to sorting things.

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TJ Klune: Somewhere Beyond the Sea (Paperback, 2024, Tor Publishing Group)

Somewhere Beyond the Sea is the hugely anticipated sequel to TJ Klune’s The House in …

Somewhere Beyond the Sea

No rating

Content warning Talking about disliking the ending

TJ Klune: In the Lives of Puppets (Paperback, 2024, Tor Books)

In a strange little home built into the branches of a grove of trees live …

Although it is clearly drawing inspiration from Pinocchio, I still maintain the correct elevator pitch is John Connor × T-800 post-apocalypse. A sweet story, if you're the kind of person who enjoys asexual gay romance.

Heather Fawcett: Emily Wilde's Compendium of Lost Tales (2025, Del Rey) No rating

Emily Wilde has spent her life studying faeries. A renowned dryadologist, she has documented hundreds …

Content warning Not in detail, but not avoided

finished reading Badlands (Nora Kelly, #5)

Badlands (Hardcover, 2025, Grand Central Publishing) No rating

The #1 New York Times bestselling authors Preston & Child return with a thrilling tale …

Last of the series so far, and what feels like the end of an arc with one of the two co-leads finishing her probationary period at the FBI.

A couple of volumes ago we had a mystery with a decidedly science fictional resolution (which has had no discernable ongoing effect on the narrative; to my surprise this series remains determinedly self-contained). This time we get a supernatural mystery, so it seems any kind of solution is valid here. At the beginning I was hoping we were getting a monster story and I don't think this really counts. Perhaps next time. Surely New Mexico must have some kind of forgotten hibernating reptile or nest of venomous pterosaurs up in the mountains that people might stumble onto.

My remarks from the prior volumes continue to hold. Clean, functional writing. Short chapters, lots of cliffhangers. The kind of book that flies …

finished reading Dead Mountain by Douglas Preston (Nora Kelly, #4)

Douglas Preston, Lincoln Child: Dead Mountain (Hardcover, 2023, Grand Central Publishing) No rating

In 2008, nine mountaineers failed to return from a winter backpacking trip in the New …

Toned down a bit from Diablo Mesa, but still when I take a step back and think about it, very dramatic and I want to say florid except that the writing style remains functional. Being a little more down to earth, the author's note at the end explaining this novel as having been adapted from a true story, for which their movie deal fell through, made sense to me.

I found the reference to their own work in the "underappreciated" Ice Limit IV: Wormstorm cute. Along with reference to a few classic science fiction authors that made clear to me that yes, these are indeed meant as pulpy science fiction thrillers, not constrained to the mundane.

Also appreciated that the Corrie Swanson/Homer Watts relationship thread was resolved into "yes" (and again hoping we don't see forced conflict between them in the future, but I don't expect it), as …

This book did not go how I was expecting it to go. I had told others that Preston & Child thrillers had a reputation for getting a bit extravagant in their development and resolutions, but apparently I hadn't really believed it.

Which made this one more entertaining for me, I think. I spent about ⅔ of Diablo Mesa expecting it to be much like the atomic mystery of The Scorpion's Tail, and wondering just how the clues uncovered would be explained as having given a misleading impression. But, no, it went way out there. More-so than if Old Bones had featured the cannibal cults and ghosts that I had initially been expecting.

Having been lulled into a false sense of security after the first two books in the series featured more ordinary treasure hunts and conspiracies, I am curious to see how the next couple will follow on …

Douglas Preston, Lincoln Child: The Scorpion's Tail (Paperback, 2021, Head of Zeus) No rating

Content warning vague tangential spoilers for the previous volume in the series, Old Bones

finished reading Old Bones by Douglas Preston (Nora Kelly, #1)

Douglas Preston, Lincoln Child: Old Bones (Hardcover, 2019, Grand Central Publishing) No rating

The #1 NYT bestselling authors Preston & Child bring the true story of the ill-fated …

My strategy of explaining this book to people by asking if they remember the 1997 movie "Relic" was perhaps doomed to failure. Especially since Old Bones is actually the beginning of a spin-off series featuring a couple of side characters from Preston & Child's main series, Dr Nora Kelly and Special Agent Corrie Swanson (who apparently didn't know they were both spun off of the same series until Pendergast made a cameo appearance at the end to solve a bonus mystery for them). Maybe someday I will go back and read his books too.

Anyway, Old Bones. I was looking for a fast-reading thriller that wasn't afraid to go high stakes and maybe include a touch of the supernatural or the monstrous. On that I was mostly satisfied, albeit the resolution seemed a little abrupt. Which is a complaint I've had a lot about mysteries, so I wonder if …

finished reading The Unquiet Grave by Dervla McTiernan (Cormac Reilly, #4)

A very quick read. This felt like a bridging volume, transitioning the series from the previous loose trilogy of Cormac solving mysteries in the face of police corruption, to whatever comes next. Which appears to be a supporting cast change and handling internal corruption and misconduct investigations among the garda. Of course, the focus on stopping bad cops serves to reinforce the notion that there are good ones, but you can't really get away from that in this genre.

As with the last few in the series I enjoyed the careful investigative work, but there didn't seem to be much of that before we came to a rapid and convenient conclusion.

Tim F. Flannery: Europe (Paperback, 2020, Grove Press) No rating

This one was slow going. Interesting though. Roughly the first half is a biogeographical history of Europe from dinosaurs on Hateg Island where the European landmass would later be, and the second half is a closer look at the last 400,000 years since hominids arrived in the area. It felt almost like reading two different yet closely related books. Fascinating and very much inspiring me to think about deep (but not too deep) time, especially the tens of thousands of years humans lived in Europe before they started building cities, and how closely in time we missed some of the most recently extinct species. Further back there were many species mentioned for which their closest modern relatives are as far afield as Australia, which surprised me.

If you are European, there is a chance you may feel othered by this book, although Flannery doesn't distance himself much from a …

Oliver Roeder: Seven Games (2022, Norton & Company, Incorporated, W. W.) No rating

I was expecting this book to be a history of each of the featured games. Their origins, development of their rules and strategies of play, notable figures, that sort of thing. Instead it was mainly a history of artificial intelligence research devoted to "solving" each game.

Not what I was looking for. Interesting, but not as interesting as it might have been.

I wish I had thought to comment on this when I actually thought to read it.

Delightful, and we did get an answer to the proposal, so not strung along too long on that question. Not quite as much of the other characters as I had been hoping for. I thought Emily Wilde was going to learn a lesson about accepting help from others and not trying to do it all herself, but that hasn't happened yet. I was close on the resolution of the big mystery of the novel, but not close enough.

Looking forward to reading the third volume next month (September). Having a segment narrated by Wendell seems to be a once-per-book thing, so we will see if that continues in book 3, and how many of the secondary cast are returning, and to what extent. I expected the third book to be the conclusion, …

Felt like I was learning a lot about the various ecologies of Earth, and it was startlingly refreshing to read a book that scarcely mentions a single human name throughout. There were one or two—for example Darwin—but few and far between.

I don't know how much I will retain long term, but it is inspiring while it lasts. I had a copy of The Trials of Life as a child; there is one more book in Attenborough's trilogy that Life on Earth belongs to, but I don't know if I have read that one yet.

Dervla McTiernan, Aoife McMahon: The Good Turn (AudiobookFormat, 2020, Bolinda Audio) No rating

I guess this completes a loose trilogy and wraps up the overarching mystery of why the station is such a hostile environment to Our Hero Cormac Reilly.

Can't say I'm a fan of the narrative doing a complete exoneration of our other viewpoint character having shot and killed a guy on essentially a gut feeling in the first few chapters. But isn't that what we expect from cop novels?

Dervla McTiernan, Aoife McMahon: The Good Turn (AudiobookFormat, 2020, Bolinda Audio) No rating

In audio, since I couldn't find a print copy easily.

I feel like these books are going steadily downhill from the first volume. Less and less of the careful interviewing and checking of records that I enjoyed, and more dramatic turns and twists. Still, I'm not far into this one yet. Maybe it will surprise me.