Reading Challenge Goal: 26 Books
May Update: (The titles are linked for jacket synopses and reviews)
#10
Green: The Beginning and the End - Ted Dekker
Christian allegory is Ted Dekker's thing. This series was pretty good. It's sort of a post-apocalyptic Narnia. This last book was my least favorite. I feel like he wanted to explain the other three books and so the characters spent the first three hundred pages just talking through everything that happened and was happening. The action picked up in the last 100 pages but then it came to a conclusion that seemed a little rushed. If you accept the "alternate" ending then this is the first book in the series and I think I like that a little better.
#11
Ender's Game - Orson Scott Card
I'm not a big fan of science fiction. The kind of science fiction that I like is more than a space fantasy, it asks the existential questions. Ender's Game does that and it's impeccably well written. The pacing was perfect. Pretty good for a kid's book!
#12
Déjà Dead - Kathy Reichs
High resolution, the level of the detail the author uses is pretty amazing, also sometimes little tedious. It is the inspiration for the TV series "Bones" and if you enjoy a police procedural then you will probably like this. The author is a real forensic anthropologist who splits her time between Charlotte, NC and Quebec and that also describes the lead character exactly. The prose isn't brilliant (in fact, her metaphors are sometimes laughably silly) but the way she describes the forensic part of the investigation is fascinating. It's a good story with plenty of suspense.
#13
Slaughterhouse-Five - Kurt Vonnegut
The lead character is "unstuck" in time and moves back and forth through the different events of his life, including the bombing of Dresden in WWII and a period of time as an exhibit in an alien zoo. These are just flashbacks except that the character is present in them instead of remembering them. In the reading, there's not much difference. Each vignette in time is a parable on the human condition. It was sometimes clever in it's humor, it was interesting to consider time from the Tralfamadorian perspective but mostly the book was bleak and pessimistic.
#14
Hold Tight - Harlan Coben
This book made me realize how overwritten a lot of other books are. Coben writes in an easy, natural style. The cop dialog was a little campy but overall it was a great story, well told. I saw a lot of myself in many of the characters. The ending was probably a little too tidy but I liked it anyway. Highly recommended for parents of high schoolers.
Five books this month! Can you tell that all of my favorite television shows have ended their seasons? Next up is
Neverwhere by Neil Gaiman. I went to a book club meeting this week where we discussed
American Gods and that was enough to make me want to return to this author again.