Category: Reading Books

Day 7: Written in the Tombstone

Day 7: Written in the Tombstone

An epitaph, a legend, an elegy, commemorative words, an inscription, famous last words…hmmm…the possibilities… This was a stretch for me. Oh, not in that I haven’t read some really great last lines in some of the books I’ve read. But it’s not a detail I’ve tracked. Nor is it something that’s easy to go hunting for. Not without staying real. So, for the most part, the “last lines” are from what I’ve read in the past week. #1 – …a woman who values truth over treasure. A somewhat obscure explanation by [?] about his mother’s character. From Yasmine Galenorn’s Courting Darkness. #2 – Maybe it is simply that my world has grown much, much larger. I loved this expression [by which character] in David Weber and Jane Lindskold’s Fireseason. #3 – …someone had to make the hard decisions, had to do the dirty work, had to be the bad guy… It’s close enough [14 pages from the end] for me that I consider this the last words in this particular book. And they’re true. Someone does have to make decisions that are unpopular. The key is that those choices are made in the best interests of people as a whole […]

Posted October 30, 2012 by Kathy Davie in Challenges, Reading Books / 0 Comments

Day 6: Tricked or Treated

Day 6: Tricked or Treated

Day 6: Tricked or Treated Five books that surprised, shocked, stupefied, amazed, staggered, or simply caught me off guard. #1 – Treated : David Weber’s Honor Harrington This is a buy for me. I don’t care what David Weber writes. I’ll buy it. Honor Harrington in particular. When I come home with one of his books, everything else gets set to one side. It’s that combination of a strong female character who lives with honor and humor, the science fiction, politics, shafting the bad guy(!), battle tactics, action…and then there’s Nimitz whom I adore. #2 – Treated : Patricia McKillip The most incredibly lyrical, poetic writing you will ever read. I don’t always understand everything she writes, but it doesn’t matter because her words and the way in which she uses them is so amazingly beautiful, lifting you out of any humdrum-ness you may be suffering. McKillip writes primarily fantasy with a strong touch of the fairy tale. Truly an original. #3 – Tricked : E.L. James’ Fifty Shades Trilogy This was truly shocking. I cannot believe that James managed to top booksales charts with the crap she wrote. Although, I do have to admit that she pulled me in […]

Posted October 29, 2012 by Kathy Davie in Challenges, Reading Books / 0 Comments