willowsnn3
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- Mar 1, 2009
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Continuing on the "I thought I owned all of Stephen King's work, but I definitely did not", we come to book number...
43. Nightmares in the Sky text by Stephen King, photographs by f-stop Fitzgerald
This is an interesting collection of gargoyles and grotesques with an introductory essay by Stephen King which explains his perspective on gargoyles and how he came to write the text for the book. This is a beautiful coffee table book with striking photos, and the essay is typical King - fantastic and engaging non-fiction prose. Worth a read, and I will keep it for the photos (oh, yes, and also for the King).
44. The Haunting of Hill House by Shirley Jackson
King talks about this book in detail in Danse Macabre and in Secret Windows but I realized I had never read it. So, off to the library I went. It is a well-written gothic ghost story set in the late 1950s (and written then as well). A short tale (of less than 200 pages), it isn't scary so much as suspenseful. I enjoyed it, but it was mild in comparison to a lot of King's work. I could see how it shaped his perspective on horror and I am glad I read it.
45. Chasing the Boogeyman by Richard Chizmar
Wow, this was an amazing book. Chizmar is the editor of the horror magazine and publishing house "Cemetery Dance", and a collaborator with King on the Gwendy's series. This novel, though, is independent of all of that. This is a true-crime novel (and reads as such) which is really a work of fiction. Chizmar writes a memoir (which is all true) and then adds a fabrication about a serial-killer in his neighborhood when he was just out of college. The "true-crime" is accompanied by photos and very realistic interviews with characters in the book, and it reads very authentically. The talent and imagination is wonderful, and I highly recommend this. Not so much a horror novel (although there are a few small references to supernatural myths and Halloween things), this is a perfect book for any fan of true-crime or suspense novels or memoirs of growing up in the 1980s.
My last year's goal was 50, but I managed only 41, so this year I'll try one more time to do it.Please feel free to join us in 2022!
Just set a goal (or not) & do a quick review so our fellow readers can decide if they want to read it.
No rules, you can update as often as you like. Some do after each book, some monthly & some whenever we remember, lol.
I will try to update our counts as often as possible.
Check post #2 for updates.
Agreed about Wish You Were Here!19/45 - Wish You Were Here by Jodi Picoult (real book) - I normally like Picoult, but did not enjoy this one; although the twist totally caught me by surprise!
20/45 - The Hidden by Melanie Golding (eBook) - interesting premise centering on "selkie" lore (never heard of this before), a mystery, a dead body, an abandoned child, and of course, a selkie! It certainly held my attention throughout, but I'm actually not remembering a lot of the story now. I just checked Goodreads - I gave it 3 stars so yeah, just average (at least in my opinion).
21/45 - Three Sisters by Heather Morris (eBook) - the third in the trilogy. I loved Tattooist of Auschwitz and Cilka's Journey (even more), but this one didn't resonate as much with me and I'm not sure why. So many people say this is the best of the three, but I found there were times I ended up speed reading through parts just so I could finish (ok, now I feel like a horrible person for even saying that).
Overall, some "meh" reading over the past couple of weeks.![]()
I read my latest, Lady Cop makes Trouble because of what you wrote. Once again I am happy for suggestions found in this thread! I’m from North Jersey and I enjoy history so I’m happy to be learning about life in the early 19 hundreds!#22/90: Miss Kopp Investigates (Kopp Sisters # 7) by Amy Stewart (3/5) (mystery/historical fiction)
The Kopp sisters are all back in Jersey to help support their recently widowed sister-in-law. Fleurette begins working for one of Constance’s former colleagues, but the work would not be considered respectable by the rest of the family. The suspicious behavior of one of the clients leads to a much bigger crime.
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A quick three more:
46. Student Financial Success: A Surprising Path to Fix the College Completion Crisis by Amy Glynn, Carlo Solerno, and Chris Chumley
This is a deep dive into college financial aid (the world in which I work) and how we can change our approach and systems to help students through college. It's an interesting premise, student-focused and innovative, with a plan to reduce financial friction by cutting through complexity, unlocking every dollar, and charting personal paths for each student. Oh, and yes, I'm quoted in the book. That's cool.
47. Life Among the Savages by Shirley Jackson
This wonderfully funny and wickedly sarcastic memoir / novel is written by the author of The Haunting of Hill House (see my review of that one above). In addition to horror/suspense, Jackson penned hysterically funny portrayals of her domestic life (which was - with lots of children, and lots of pets - anything but tranquil) for "women's" magazines in the 1950s. This memoir ties these stories together into a complete narrative and is a fantastic insight into married / parental life in the 50s while also showing off Jackson's great humor and wonderful writing. As a child of the 70s (born in the VERY late 60s), but with siblings born in the 50s, this was fun to read and imagine how my parents' life would have been like / unlike what was on the page.
48. Mr. Penumbra's 24-Hour Bookstore: A Novel by Robin Sloan
Another fantastic recommendation from this group (thanks @Colleen27 and @tiggrbaby!). I loved this novel and read through it quickly (one day). Can't believe I missed it when it came out in 2012. A treatise on reading, the digitization of everything, immortality, and fonts (trust me), this one is worth a read for anyone who loves reading (and we all do, right?). The plotting was great, and the questions raised were profound. What a fun and memorable suggestion!