SciFI: Mother of Storms, by John Barnes

A loaner from Anne, who’s been borrowing all my books!!! 😉 Hee hee just teasing. It came with the recommendation that it’s one of her all-time faves so I was excited to delve in.

Totally wicked modern sci fi basically detailing a (slightly into the future but mostly “our”) world falling into catastrophe set off by one tiny thing. It’s so freaking BECAUSE IT SO COULD HAPPEN. I mean really the entire time you’re reading it, you think “this is ENTIRELY plausible and it is FREAKING ME OUT!” Lots of characters in different storylines with loose connections; like the Robert Jordan books in that if you don’t like certain characters, you just hang in there because the ones you like will have another chapter shortly…

Really entertaining. Really scarily plausible.

YA/Fantasy: The Sweep Series (Books 1 – 15), by Cate Tiernan

Since I’ve already read the Twilight set (yup, this one also) and the Stackhouse books, it seemed I should read these also.

1: Book of Shadows
2: The Coven
3: Blood Witch
4: Dark Magick
5: Awakening
6: Spellbound
7: The Calling
8: Changeling
9: Strife
10: Seeker
11: Origins
12: Eclipse
13: Reckoning
14: Full Circle
15: Night’s Child

This series is focused on wicca, with no vampires!, so there are good witches and bad witches and it’s primarily about a teenager girl named Morgan who discovered she’s a blood witch and then becomes entangled in the magical world through successive boyfriends.
These were certainly entertaining and I really enjoyed the first 10 or so / I didn’t like some of the later ones as much, particularly the one from Hunter’s point of view…

But they had some of those same problems that a “YA series rushed out” tends to have. Too repetitious / too much explaining or “reminding” the reader of things that the reader JUST read like 20 pages ago, or in the previous book. Do YA editors think kids can’t remember things? Because if they explained about being each other’s mùirn beatha dàn (soul mate) one more fucking time, I was going to scream. [I enjoyed reading them anyway, but some of those things were really glaring, especially when you are reading so many of them one after the other.]

If you like reading about magic, and you like having that “all caught up in your emotions” teenage feeling again, then you will probably enjoy these! And if you are sick of vampires – they are vampire-free!! 🙂

In Concert: Purple Apple

Teenagers, just starting out. But dang you can really see [hear] some potential there. Some sassy well-done originals. Some great covers. (They killed on Joan Jett.) I’m excited to see where they go from here.

The lead singer is my friend’s niece. The dude who mixes their stuff is my other friend’s brother. Obviously I would probably not have heard of them otherwise. But I brought people to the show who didn’t have those connections and they saw the potential as well!

In Concert: Joseph Arthur

Of course if you’ve listened to his albums, you know this dude is multi-talented, can swing from style to style, can sing in various ranges, etc., etc…but hearing him live STILL blew my mind.

He made every song sound fresh and new, but not in that “I must sing this so it sounds nothing like it does on the album” way that some groups seem so intent on live. More in a “this song is a platform for me to show you a new creation” way.

All by himself up on stage but he filled the room with sound like he was a 10-piece band. So awesome.

Fiction: A Pair of Blue Eyes, by Thomas Hardy

Our September challenge book.

Dad really enjoyed it, I really did not.

It’s an earlier Hardy (almost 20 years before Tess of the d’Urbervilles and more than that before Jude the Obscure) but its immaturities writing-wise really didn’t bother me. And Dad’s right, there is some really beautiful descriptive writing in it. (Some of the descriptions of the cliffs and the countryside would really take me away for a moment and I’d think “oh that sentence was lovely.”)

But I found the characters, especially Elfride, and the plot and the ridiculous romantic contretemps — all of which could have been avoided just by somebody opening up their mouth and being honest once in a while — So. Fucking. ANNOYING! I mean, yes, I know, it’s a thing of its time, and society was a very different animal and women had such a struggle to even be allowed to have opinions… YES I KNOW all that. That doesn’t make me enjoy it any more or want to be more patient with it. I really never found anyone in the novel interesting enough or attractive enough to be more than irritated by their behavior and the events.

Dad on the other hand could find more sympathy for it.

In his own words: I ended up liking it a lot–i think Hardy has the gift of life, always makes the characters live (for me, anyway). Did you notice he stopped being so maddeningly allusive as he got closer to the end–he started to trust his own tale and didn’t need to refer to Hamlet, etc. And the way his poor people a) get stuck with carrying these torches of love beyond all reason and b) ALWAYS running into the wrong person or the wrong room or being seen in the wrong company. Poor Elfride!!!! Leaving that note for that ghastly woman!! What a schmuck Knight was. Also like Hardy’s scenery, the way the places and landscapes become characters. Great cliff scene, no? And, for a Victorian, lots of erotic buzz.

Fiction: The English American, by Alison Larkin

I’d have to put this one in the “chick lit” category; there were some times it seemed about to rise above that…but it never wholly did. Story of a Brit who finds out her birth mother was American… Lots of interesting family / adoption stuff.

But also really annoying “things that Brits say about us that I have never experienced once in my almost 42 years of life as an American” stereotypes or psuedo witticisms. So every time I was enjoying reading it there would suddenly be something that just ticked me off. For example, I’ve never once made tea by heating water in a microwave for 30 seconds and then using the same tea bag for three mugs. In fact, no one has ever made me tea that way either. I’m sure you see what I mean: ANNOYING. Makes you want to go around your apartment shouting out random insults at the British.

There were things I liked about it. But I thought there were things that could have been done better.

SciFi/Fantasy: The Travelers, by John Twelve Hawks

A really interesting mix of old traditions and modern technology. Very unexpected. Travelers (those who can move between realms) and Harlequins (those who protect them) and Pathfinders (their teachers) and the society that’s out to destroy them all. And Ninja moves and surveillance and swords and motorcycles and skyscrapers and primitive utopian farms in the middle of nowhere. Really intriguing. Just couldn’t put it down.

And at the very bottom of the last page it says “Book One of the Fourth Realm”…so I guess there’s going to be a sequel! Yippee!

Four Flicks at the Chicago Film Festival.

Ah, the CIFF. One of my very favorite things about living here. So easily accessible. The previous year I saw 15 flicks there. (I KNOW! NUTS!) The year before, six. This year, I was busy with school and skeered to spend much money so I only saw four. And three out of the four were FANTASTIC. So I was extra happy I made good choices!!!

SPY(IES) [ESPION(S)]
Super! Sexy! Sleek! The main dude looked like a French Patrick Dempsey. Loved this movie. Believed in the frustrations and the attractions. Very nicely done.

Love and Savagery
The one of the four that I didn’t think was great. It was beautifully filmed (in Ireland, where it’s set, I presume) but the storyline and most of the acting were really below par. Particularly compared to the others.

Girls on the Wall
A documentary about girls in an IL juvenile facility who put on a musical/play for their families / guardians / etc. based on their own stories. So good. Really intimate look at their lives. There are so many places one’s life can go wrong. So many times the wrong choice can turn into a terrible mistake. And then there are the ones who fight and fight and eventually rise above that. Really powerful.

Fish Tank
Kinda hard to watch. Super yicky subject. Super fantastic (FANTASTIC) acting. I think this one is now being released wider (saw a review of it in EW) and I highly recommend seeing it. I mean, the subject matter is tough. But the acting is so good. And there’s a lot to like here. It really tied me up emotionally. And the main dude, Michael Fassbender, was also fantastic in “Hunger” that I saw last year (and he also plays the Scottish soldier in “Inglorious Basterds”). Dude has fantastic RANGE.