Sunday, October 10, 2021

Glistens by Chess Desalls

Rating: WARTY!

This is three strikes and out for this author. This story is about fairies, and kudos that the author has the guts to call them fairies instead of pussy-footing around it with with mealy-mouthed alternate titles, but the problem with this sort of a story is a mistake that far too many authors, including this one, make: that were supposedly in the comany of these magical and fantastical creatures, yet they're depicted not as otherworldy, but exactly like humans! They have the same hopes, dreams and ambitions as we do. They go to school. They have a class project. It was so pathetic and the project this one fairy gets - protecting a fellow fairy - was so predictably pathetic that it failed for me. I can't commend this as a worthy read. The best I can say about it is that it was short, so I didn't fell like I'd wasted as much time with this as I might have otherwise.

Lantern by Chess Desalls

Rating: WARTY!

This really was a non-story - very short, about a girl who wanders stupidly in the woods around her home, gets lost, and encoutners a lantern which is lit by some sort of a tiny person inside the lantern. It was boring and went nowhere. And it's suppsoed ot be itnroductory to a series? Yawn. Shrot as it was, I barely had the interest to follow this to the end, I sure as hell am not going to read a whole series on this tedious topic. Since when is a sixteen year old obsessed with scoring candy on Halloween? Scoring a boyfriend I could see. Scoring drugs or booze, maybe, but candy? Honestly?

Bed and Breakfast and Murder by Patti Larsen

Rating: WARTY!

This is one of those murder mysteries that's so pathetic I don't give it the time of day, but once in a while I like to punish myself by trying to read a sample of one of those genres I so despise, if only to make sure my take on them really is as bad as it seems, and this one served only to confirm that. It is well known that standards are laughably low for this genre, but even by those rock-bottom criteria, this one was a fail with juvenile humor, OCD fart jokes, and one-dimensional characters, the main one of which was consistently obnoxious.

The story is your typical unimaginative clone of every other such story: Fiona Fleming inherits a B&B and just for good measure, is also is fleeing New York City precisely because she's a failure. It's the usual garbage: she loses her boyfriend and her job and flies the coop like the worthless little chickenshit she is, yet somehow she stupidly imagines that she can make a go of a business venture despite being a disaster on two inevitably shapely, manly-man-attracting legs. Yawn.

Why female authors so delight in depicting worthless women is a source of unending wonder to me. Does it somehow make them feel better about their own lives? I don't know. I can't think of any valid reason for so many female authors to take such delight in ruthlessly killing off the dreams of so many weak female characters. That's the only real murder mystery here. There's certainly nothing new, original, or inventive to be had from this genre: it's just another unqualified female meddling in police business that she has no business interfering with.

It's first person voice, so it sucks for that alone, and it's just stupid: idiotically written and going nowhere fast. I couldn't stand to read more than a few pages of this piece of trash without gagging at how bad and unrealistic it truly was. So no: I am not wrong about this particular genre, because every time I give it a chance, it turns out to be exactly as I feared it would be.

Symbiont Seeking Symbiont by Jennifer Foehner Wells

Rating: WARTY!

Allus Jenson is part of a pirate crew in a spacecraft that is forced to land on a barren planet for repairs. While this is in progress, Jensen, like a moron, wanders off and encounters a species of sentient bacterium which effectively gang-rapes her in the sense that this group of them take over her body without her permission. That's it. That's the entire story! Barf. I'm not sure how much the author actually undertsands about bacteria, and this was not a worthy read.

No Good Deed by MP McDonald

Rating: WORTHY!

This was a rare worthy read. The story has been done before, but this take on it was an unusual one in my experience. In 2001, Mark Taylor is in possession of an old still frame 35mm camera, and he discovers that it creates some images which he never pointed the camera at, and those pictures when developed, show acts of violence, death, and terrorism. That same night, he dreams of those images. This gets him into trouble, because on the morning of September 11th that year, he calls in a desperate plea to try and prevent tragedy and finds himself abducted to solitary confinement, interrogation and torture as an enemy non-combatant.

I hope our security services are better and smarter than the ones depicted here, because I had some issues with that, but eventually Mark is freed through lack of evidence, and is left to try and pick up the peices of his destroyed life. The crux comes when he starts using his camera again and finds that it has taken more pictures of yet another terrorist attack to come. The question is, does he dare report this one?

There was only one glaring writing issue that I picked up on, and I see this frequently: "The paramedic wrapped a blood pressure cuff around his uninjured bicep" No! Unless the paramedic - who sure as hell should know better - actually incised into the man's upper arm, selected one of the two bicep attachments that link the biceps muscle to the humerus, and wrapped the cuff around that, then he wrapped the cuff around the guys biceps! It's never used singularly except in an anatomical context. The biceps is the msucle that bulges when you flex your arm. The bicep is one of the two ligaments that attaches the biceps to the bone. Every writer should know this, but increasingly, I'm seeing many of them fail, thinking, I dunno, maybe thinkign biceps is the pural that applies to both upper arm muscles, so if you're talking about only one of them, it must be bicep? I dunno. I do know writing standards are falling, for sure.

That minor quibble aside, and in general terms, I liked how this was written, although there were parts I skimmed because it seemed that a particular motif, especially the interrogation, went on way too long. There were other bits I found uninteresting, but I liked the ending and overall I enjoyed the story, so I commend this as a worthy read. That said I am not into series and this is part of a series which I do not intend to pursue.

Saturday, October 9, 2021

The Infinite Sea by Jeffrey A Carver

Rating: WARTY!

"As they sink to the bottom of an alien ocean, John and his company are rescued by mer-creatures called the Neri. But with threats closing in from above and below the surface, can the crew help the seafolk survive?" Of course Kirkclueless Reviews loved this, but - and correct me if I'm wrong - wasn't this pretty much the plot of the movie "The Abyss"?! Yawn.

Watch Me by Stacey Kennedy/Watch Her by Edwin Hill

Rating: WARTY!

So...do you watch me, or do you watch her? I dunno! She's probably more interesting than I am, let's face it. In "Watch Me" by Stacey Kennedy, we learn that "At the exclusive sex club Phoenix, members can only watch what happens on stage, not touch. But club owner Rhys Harrington will break his own rules to have innocent Zoey Parker for himself..."  Yeah, because she has no say in the matter. If he wants her, she has to be his - like she's a sex doll, not a person. her inncoence jsut makes her a sweeter posssession, right?  This story is disgusting and the author should be ashamed of herself for aiding and abetting the turning of women into male possessions.

OR Watch Her by Edwin Hill

Like I said, she's likely to be more interesting no matter what she's doing, since I just sit around writing and drawing all day, but I'll sure watch anything except this since it's a novel that the Kirkus clan claims is "masterly." Really? Did that word get there by accident?

Elfin by Quinn Loftis

Rating: WARTY!

"Cassie thinks she's just an ordinary girl - until Trik, a dark elf assassin, enters her world and claims her heart. But can Cassie look beyond the darkness in his past?" Why would she? The guy is a murderer! And Trik? Really? This is screaming that it's yet another dumb-ass, full of shitty situations and crappy writing YA novel. And what's this about claiming her heart? Is she being parted out for sale? Don't miss it; avoid it like a Trump Rally.

Grass by Sheri S Tepper

Rating: WARTY!

The idiot blurb has it that, "As a pestilence ravages the galaxy, humanity sends Marjorie Westriding Yrarier and her family to investigate a seemingly immune planet." How a pestilence would ravage totally unrelated alien communities across an entire galaxy is the real mystery here. Another dumb plot from another author who doesn't have the first clue about biochemistry and epidemiology, and worse, who doesn't even care.

Unexpected Blessings by Barbara Taylor Bradford

Rating: WARTY!

"From a #1 New York Times bestselling author who “enthralls readers” (RT Book Reviews)" If she's a number one bestseller why is she reduced to flogging cut-rate books in a discount flyer? "In this “lively” family saga" (Booklist)" Seriously, they had to quote that? "...three generations of Harte women must contend with secrets from the past — and an unidentified enemy" Unexpected would be if it wasn't three generations. It. Always. Is. Barf.

The EC Tubb Boxset by EC Tubb

Rating: WARTY!

Discover a universe full of aliens, space travel, magic, and more! Science fiction fans will enjoy these classic stories from an author whose “reputation for fast-moving and colorful sci-fi writing is unmatched by anyone in Britain" Only 'coz I don't live there! LOL! Since when is box set one word? And why box set? Where's the box? Don't they mean 'collection'? Barf.

Captive Star by Nora Roberts

Rating: WARTY!

"Handcuffed together and on the run from hired killers, Jack Dakota and MJ O’Leary aren’t exactly getting along." I think this story is handcuffed to uninventive and unimaginative tedium. I refuse to read any story with a main character named Jack on principal - it's the most over-used go-to name ever. This book smacks of sheer boredom and a chronic lack of originality from the author. yawn.

Atlantis Stolen by Christopher Cartwright

Rating: WARTY!

If it's Atlantis Stolen by Christopher Cartwright, then we know exactly who to arrest! LOL! "A catastrophe on the horizon could wipe out human civilization — and the key to survival is hidden away in the lost, sunken city of Atlantis. Can marine biologist Sam Reilly crack an ancient code and save the world?" Seriously? Atlantis? Can this author not find anything original to write about? Yawn.

Silenced Girls by Roger Stelljes

Rating: WARTY!

"For 20 years, FBI agent Tori Hunter has stayed away from her Minnesota hometown - until a girl’s disappearance brings her back to find the truth." Yet another unoriginal story about a retired agent or police officer, or one who has left their hometown behind, coming back to take on a case. Tired. tedious. Retreaded. Yawn.

The Stationmaster’s Cottage by Phillipa Nefri Clark

Rating: WARTY!

"After Christie inherits a ramshackle seaside cottage, she discovers mysterious wedding rings and a collection of love letters in the attic — and is swept up in a romantic story 50 years in the making." Yet another boring take on a tired trope. How many times has this crap been retreaded? Yawn.

Relationship Material by Jenya Keefe

Rating: WARTY!

"Nurse Evan feels like he’ll never know true love — so when attorney Malcolm, his sister’s sexy best friend, comes around, they agree to a fling with no strings attached. But as they begin to fall in love, can they risk their hearts for something real?" Seriously? You need ask that question when the trope answer is already known? A no-strings fling with all the diseases you can beat. Barf.

Are You There, Vodka? It's Me, Chelsea by Chelsea Handler

Rating: WARTY!

"When Chelsea Handler needs to get a few things off her chest, she appeals to a higher power - vodka. You would too if you found out that your boyfriend was having an affair with a Peekapoo or if you had to pretend to be honeymooning with your father in order to upgrade to first class." So: lying, drinking, cheating? No thanks.

The Academy Journals Volume One by Garrett Robinson

Rating: WARTY!

"Descended from a long line of dark alchemists, Ebon is mistrusted by students and teachers at the Academy. When he gets sucked into a sinister scheme, can he find the strength to battle for good against his wicked family?" My guess is yes, otherwise why write the damn book? So we can see him fail and lose? And sinister? Really? One of the most overused words in book descriptions, along with 'brutal'. I won't read this on principal. And 'Ebon'? Is this guy black? I give up.

Everybody Sees the Ants by AS King

Rating: WARTY!

"...Lucky has a secret-one that helps him wade through the daily mundane torture of his life. In his dreams, Lucky escapes to the war-ridden jungles of Laos-the prison his grandfather couldn't escape-where Lucky can be a real man." Seriously? Double Barf from an apparently appropriately-named author.

Vinyl by Sophia Elaine Hanson

Rating: WARTY!

"In an isolated city, a hypnotic implant keeps citizens under control. When Ronja meets an agent of the resistance, she discovers a movement determined to stop the government’s manipulation." What are the odds that agent is the hot guy she falls for because she's useless without him. Another dumb plot. Another dumb story. Another dumb romance. Yawn.

Deadhead and Buried by HY Hanna

Rating: WARTY!

"City girl Poppy heads to the English countryside to claim a mysterious inheritance. When she arrives, she’s shocked to find herself the owner of a charming cottage garden nursery" Why is she shiocked? Did this dumbass not lsiten to the reading of the will? "...with a dead body on the premises!" Of corpse there is! And so yet another girl running from the city to the countryside to inherit a property with a dead body in it - and of course the cops are so useless that she has to solve it. How unoriginal. Yawn.

Starting Over at Acorn Cottage by Kate Forster

Rating: WARTY!

"Reeling from a devastating breakup, Clara leaves London for a ramshackle cottage in the quaint village of Merryknowe." Merryknowe? Seriously? But this is likely set in Australia.... "She soon finds herself falling in love with the town and its quirky residents — including single dad Henry, her handsome new contractor." Yeah, she's so devastated that she finds love right after fleeing the big city for a safe little town because she's yet another weak woman who can't manage to cope without a guy. Seriously? When are female authors going to quit doing this to women? I guess when female customers wise up and quit buying this shit, huh? That word 'quirky' is your alarm in this book blurb. It warns you to get out now, before this disaster hits you. Clara sure isn't that devastated....

Death of a Dreamer by MC Beaton

Rating: WARTY!

"When an ailing woman is found poisoned after a lovers’ quarrel, it’s up to constable Hamish Macbeth to solve the suspicious case!" Hamish Macbeth, seriously? I wouldn't read this based on the stupid name alone. Could we be any more condescending to the Scots? And why is a constable in charge of such a serious investigation? There are no detectives available? Or is the constable brilliant and the detectives useless? In which case why is Macbeth still a constable? Yawn.

Germania by Harald Gilbers

Rating: WARTY!

"In war-torn Berlin, a vicious killer prowls the shadows, leaving women’s mutilated bodies in front of war memorials. Forced by the Gestapo to investigate the case, Oppenheimer, a Jewish detective, is caught in a dangerous game." Why would the Nazi's have a Jew investigate such a critical case? They didn't like them, they didn't trust them so why employ one? This story makes no sense.

Death in D Minor by Alexia Gordon

Rating: WARTY!

This is how fucktard dumb the blurb is for this novel: "set in the “captivating southwestern Irish countryside” (Library Journal starred review)" The review evidently was so bad that the only thing they could quote from it was that the review said that the novel was set in the Irish countryside. I want you to take a minute to absord just how utterly and mind-numbingly brain-dead that is. They couldn't just inform you as a potential reader that this novel is set in the Irish countryside; they had to quote the Library Journal telling us that it's set in the Irish countryside. I mean how profoundly dumb-ass is that? I think that's hands down the dumbest thing I ever read. You'd have to take a masters-level course to write something as profoundly stupid as that. It's not a thing you can do purely by accident. No wonder Kirk-cussed reviews thinks this is a charming series: it's right up their street (which is Dumbfuck Alley in case you wondered)

The rest of the blurb says, "When her brother-in-law is accused of a crime he didn’t commit, Gethsemane goes undercover at a charity ball to unmask the real culprit — and accidentally summons an 18th-century ghost, who happens to be an excellent sleuth!" See? This is as half-witted as you can get. It's the poop without even the nincom. And 'Gethsemane'? Really? I'm guessing the author was thrilled when she came up with that name. Hopefully not literally. Certainly not literary. And accidentally summons a detective ghost? I'm wondering: did the author write a bunch of random ideas onto slips of paper, toss them into a hat, and then use the first three she picked out of the hat for her plot? It sure sounds like it.