Thursday, December 2, 2021

The Second Day of Christmas

Rating: WARTY!

The second day of Christmas is dual first-person stories - which SUCK! You know they do. The problem with these stories its that they tick with such metronomic tedium back and forth between the dual-narration - which is nauseatingly often in first person - that they will put a reader to sleep in short order, so as an insomnia aid, they can be invaluable. But for all other purposes, they are utterly useless. It's just another admission by an author that they can't write a competent novel in third person which is how stories have been successfully and powerfully related for eons.

Here is a couple of titles I ditched unread in the last month that suffer from this syndrome:

  • The Girl in Between by Laekan Zea Kemp. Love the 'Laekan' - makes you think this author should try their hand at werewolf stories! But seriously, the pointless contents list has nearly every single chapter titled 'Bryn'. There are one or two titled 'Roman' and some inexplicably, with nothing save a period serving as the 'title'. I ditched this novel based purely on that idiotic chapter listing. I didn't even need to look at the first chapter because I knew this was a first person calamity! Sure enough, when I checked for this review, it was! The very second paragraph read: "I saw his face, lashes tangled over blue lids, his lips parted against the sand. The breeze rippled off his clothes, ocean peeling from his face and ripping onto my hands. I was steeled there...." But the very next paragraph begins: "My hands trembled...." So is she steeled or trembling? I can't figure it out. But more to the point, who the fuck ever narrates like that? Even your own internal narration never runs along those descriptive lines, Only a stupid first person narration in a YA novel runs like that and it's farcical to the point of idiocy! When you discover a dead body, there are two things you can do if you're female. If you're in a movie or a TV show, you scream shrilly every time you find a dead body - no exceptions. It's the law. In actual real life, you check the body for signs of life as best as you're able, and/or you immediately call the police. There are no other options, unless you're an asshole who just quietly tiptoes away, pretending you saw nothing. This story sucked which is why I proudly walked away pretending I wasn't nauseated.
  • Heartache in Heels by Cate Lawley is the second strike against this author, who was, prior to this, batting a .500 with me. I actually read and reasonably enjoyed one of her first person stories, but even so I felt no attraction to continue that series, and that was before I grew to detest 1PoV with the growing passion I do today. This one went down the drain by going on about the right wardrobe from the very first sentence. It was utterly unrealistic and it's one of those stories that bounces between two main protagonists. Hillary gets the lion's share of the chapters - by a ratio of around 3:1 according to the two-page contents list, which will let you jump to any chapter, but then in the Kobo books ebook reader, becomes a fucking nightmare to get back to the contents list because in its dumb-ass non-wisdom, Kobo not only fails to let you jump back to the contents list in case your finger - which for the average reader is larger than an infants - hit the wrong chapter, it also doesn't even offer a slider bar to get you all the way back. All it seems to offer is a slide to the start of the chapter you're in. There's a chevron button to go back chapter by chapter, but try that for thirty or forty chapters! You can search for the phrase 'Chapter 1' and jump there, but in this case there's no such thing since every chapter is called either Hillary or Brad. In short, you're fucking stuck. If there's a convenient way to do it, I dontl know of it, so I could only get back by exiting the book altogether and marking it as unread to bring me back tot eh start, but when I did that, Kobo ripped the book out of my current reading list and then I had to go search for it to bring it back and then get back to the content list! Thanks Kobo. You jackasses. I like kobo to publish with; I just think their reader was designed by morons who can't themselves read. Fortunately I'm not usually skipping around chapters like that so it's not a problem. I'm typically doing that only when reviewing a book, and I'm happy to say in another ten days or so I won't be facing that nightmare anymore! The author admits what a stupid mistake she made by choosing first person voice when she's forced into having two 1PoV protagonists; she further admits what a dumb-ass decision it was by adding a third first person in the penultimatre chapter!
  • More to come

Wednesday, December 1, 2021

The First Day of Christmas

Rating: WARTY!

So! Let us commence into the twelve days of Christmas! Not the actual twelve days of Christmas, or Twelvetide which, depending on your denomination, runs either from December 25th or from December 26th, aka Boxing Day and ending on twelfth night. Nope, mine start today and run through December 12th whereupon I shall retire from reviewing and devote all my writing time to creatively producing my own stuff instead of spending way too much of it reviewing the work of others. This has been a long time coming.

I don't consider that it has been a waste of time, because all of the reading and analyzing I've done over the years has, I hope, taught me a lot about writing, but it's time to move on from that. That's not to say I have nothing left to learn, but the law of diminishing returns inevitably ends in 'urns', as in 'funeral urns' and I'm not ready for that yet! Selflessly giving my time to promote the work of others hasn't done a darned thing for my own work, and for the most part didn't even get me a thank you from the author or the publisher, so what's the point in continuing to waste my valuabel time?!

The first day of Christmas then, is devoted to first person novels, which I detest for a variety of reasons, not least of which is that they are so vacuous and self-centered. Once in a while there comes along an author who can carry a novel in that voice, but for the most part they are awful and unrealistic, and tedious to read, particularly the YA novels in this voice. YA novels in general are tedious for the most part, but even some YA stories make for a worthy read. Never in first person voice though.

I have a large collection of unread ebooks which I delve into regularly for a new reading experience, but if I open one of those and see it's in first person, I immediately delete the book because I don't have the patience for that trash anymore. Those novels are all about 'me'! Lookit me! Look at what I'm doing now! Ignore everyone else! Pay attention to MEEEE! Hear what I'm thinking! See what I'm doing! Listen to me tediously describe the minutest details of my life in a thoroughly inauthentic manner that no real person even thinks about let alone takes the time to voice. It's ridiculous.

So I'm also steadily performing a slash-and-burn culling of my ebook collection. No more first person, please! Delete! Delete! Delete! It would be real helpful if publishers put a warning on first person books, like cigarettes have. In my parody novel Dire Virgins I actually did put such a warning on the front cover: "Quitting reading this novel now greatly reduces serious risks to your mental health!"

Let me exemplify: imagine you're sitting with a friend, telling them of something that happened to you. Think about how you say it; how you convey that story. Do you even remotely tell it like an author tells a first person PoV novel? Hell to the no! Nowhere near. Now I agree that if you're writing a novel, you need to pass on a bit more than you'd normally include were you relating that same event to someone who knows you, precisely because the reader isn't a close friend and so needs a bit of background, but you still need to tell the story realistically as if you were talking to a real person - because you are! The last thing you want is to tell it annoyingly, stupidly, and unrealistically!

Arguably the biggest problem with these stories is that they hog-tie the author. This results in authors hilariously admitting this through the inane acrobatics they perform to try to circumvent the in-built iron-maiden coffin that a first person story inevitably imposes, such as by alternating first person voice with third, or paradoxically employing a second first person voice.

1PoV limits everything to what that person sees, reads, hears, smells, tastes, and touches. Why would a smart author want to impose a straight-jacket like that on their story? I know some of the lesser thinkers among them - typically YA authors, mistakenly think that first person gives their character more immediacy, more agency, and offers a more powerful link to their reader, but the truth is it just makes them more annoying and makes them look more stupid than YA characters typically do. Authors who think like that are simply saying, "I'm such an incompetent writer that I can't create a third person story that achieves these same objectives." It's an admission of being a lame writer.

When you write in 1PoV you not only immediately limit the story, you also make your main character an insufferable egotist. It's tedious to read. On top of that, nobody - I mean nobody in the entire history of planet Earth's hominin population has anybody ever behaved like a first person character does in this ridiculous fiction! They don't have the same thoughts. They do not constantly narrate every tedious detail of their lives. They don't describe people in their thoughts! They don't make the same dumb decisions and mistakes. They do not behave at all in the thoroughly unnatural way that a first person fictional character inescapably does. It's entirely unrealistic.

What's also unrealistic is how 'correct' people are in these stories in their use of English. This is also a problem in third person speech. It's worse in first person because we inevitably use shortcuts with ourselves in our own thoughts and this never comes through in those first person novels, not least because it would make the novel unintelligible if it were done realistically, so you'd have to cheat on that anyway if you were making the mistake of chosing first person as your voice for a story. No-one these days, for example, ever says 'whom' but I've seen it in speech frequently in novels. Yes, if you must, use it in the descriptive writing, but for fuck's sake never have someone say it, not unless they're a pretentious asshole or maybe an English language professor, or British nobility or something. It's stupid. Personally, I'm all for banning 'whom' from the language. It's antiquated and laughable.

Here are just a few titles I ditched unread, just in the last month, as I went through my collection looking for an interesting ebook to read:

  • Sound of Sirens by Jen Minkman. There's a nude woman on the cover. Is that honestly necessary or is the cover designer just an asshole? There's a table of contents which literally has just a list of numbers - one through eighteen! If you tap on one of the numbers, it does take you to the chapter, but there's no way to get back from the chapter heading to the contents list if you tapped the wrong chapter by mistake, which is so very easily done since the numbers are never spaced generously. Instead, they're listed one after another with tight, single-line spacing. I've honestly never understood the point of listing the chapters, even in print books, even if you name your chapters rather than just number them. What purpose does that accomplish? When have you ever opened a brand-new ebook and thought, "Oh, I'll start this one on chapter seven, just for the hell of it. Seriously? In an ebook you can search to find what you want. A table of contents is entirely unnecessary which is why I never use them, yet the morons in Big Publishing™ insist on it. They're fucking imbeciles who even now do not remotely understand the power of ebooks, or that it's an entirely different publishing proposition to print books. Here's a quote to show how profoundly moronic first person authors all-too-often are. This is just page two of the novel, and already Le Stupide is strong with this one: "I get dressed in my simple jeans and white tank top. I brush my long brown hair and pull it back into a ponytail. The cracked mirror shows me the faint rings of exhaustion under my eyes...." When have you, or anyone you know, ever got up in the morning and described yourself - to yourself - like that? Try it! Tomorrow morning, when you wake, start describing every detail of your day for say fifteen minutes or so and see how inane it makes you sound! Even if you were telling this in first person to a friend you would never say that sort of thing! It's pathetic and it's the sad and tired hallmark of first person YA stories. Contrast that with a third-person version of the same event: "Enna dressed in jeans and a tank top as usual, pulling her hair back into a ponytail. She ignored the dark rings under eyes that looked sadly back at her from the old mirror." I know which one I prefer and which one wouldn't make me nauseated by page two. But that act of describing your character's appearance from looking in the mirror has been done to death. This novel SUCKED majorly.
  • Rosemary's Gravy by Melissa F Miller. Again, dumb-ass contents list which literally lists every chapter from "Chapter 1" to "Chapter 23" spaced so closely together that, unless you have the fingertips of a child, you're as likely to hit "Chapter 2" as you are "Chapter 1". Once you hit the wrong one, you can't get back by tapping on the chapter title. This list of chapters serves zero purpose, yet the antiquated dumb-fucks in Big Publishing™ insist you do it. Morons. On page one we get the inevitable first person for the thoroughly unimaginative and uninventive genre of private dick slash interfering amateur story. I read, "I was up to my elbows in Pomegranate seeds when Felix, my client's impossibly hot stepson, strolled into the kitchen...." That would have been quite sufficient, right there, to ditch this summarily, even had there been no other indicators. We have the older woman pigeon-holed as kitchen help and her inappropriate lust for a boy. Reading just a little further, we learn that she's a scientist, supposedly, so naturally she's required to wear eyeglasses. All scientists do without exception. It's Federal law, you know. Barf. This was all in the first five paragraphs on page one! This story is the shits.
  • The Bionics by Alicia Michaels. Again with this one, every chapter is listed in the contents starting with "Chapter 1" and so on. Pointlessly. This is one of the dumb-ass stories which lists time and place at the start of every chapter. Really, who gives a fuck about that? Who even reads that shit? At least I assume it starts every chapter like that since that's how "Chapter 1" began and I had zero desire to read any more of this shit since it was another first person disaster, and worse, this was told from the PoV of a cyborg, making it even more idiotic than usual. The very first sentence ran: "I am awakened by my internal alarm system and all I want is to turn it off, roll over, and go back to sleep." This moron then complains that her internal alarm will not shut up until she's upright with her eyes open, but none of that precludes her from lying right back down after the alarm shuts off. She's evidently too stupid to do that though. None of the narration she spews out is remotely natural. No human - even one with robotic implants, ever thinks like this one does; never has, never will. The story was just as inane as I expected for a first person story: it was unrealistic, tedious, predictable, and again it has this character staring at themselves in the mirror. That trope is long dead and buried, yet moronic first person authors can't imagine any other way to write than to copy what everyone who preceded them has done; then they wonder why no-one buys their shit. This is why I do not read these uninventive stories. They're pathetic. But at least the cover doesn't show a naked chick for no reason.
  • Resonant by Alexia Purdy. This is another stupid first person story about a vampire apocalypse. It seems like a rip-off of that zombie movie which starred Brad Pitt, the name of which escapes me. If you ask yourself who the fuck she's telling this story to, it really makes it stand out how stupid her narration is. She's not writing it down. She's just saying it. Did she memorize every single word in every single conversion? "I slipped my fork onto the plate before taking it to the trashcan." Really? Who gives a shit? Would a young woman facing a vampire apocalypse, stranded alone with her kid-brother in their house, seriously be this calm and narrating this shit like she's telling it to someone over coffee one morning? Fuck no! It's ridiculous. The cover shows her wearing the same jeans and tank top that the other girl was in a previously listed story! LOL! There are only six chapters since it's intended to lure readers into buying the entire worthless series. The chapters are listed "One", "Two" and so on in the contents - so it's the same old shit. There's nothing new here; nothing original; nothing inventive; nothing imaginative. You can see it all right there in the contents list. You don't even need to go to the first chapter to know you should ditch this crap and never look back.
  • Paradox by Kelly Carrero starts with this dick of a girl jumping off a bridge to impress friends. The first three sentences are "With my heart in my throat, I climbed over the railing. I wondered how on earth I had gotten myself into such a situation. A few days ago, I would've thought there would be no way in hell I would be standing on a bridge about to let go. But there I was, and there was no backing out." Yeah, I know you counted four sentences, but there really are only three. Carrero apparently was never told not to start a sentence with 'but'. You can do it when it's right, but in this case it wasn't. That last 'sentence' is really was a clause which belongs with the previous sentence, not standing alone. She used 'would' three times in that third sentence, rendering it tediously repetitive, and 'gotten'? I would have used 'got' since 'gotten' really has no strong currency.
  • City of Skies by Farah Cook. Not to be confused with City of the Falling Sky by Joseph Evans. The first sentence reads, "The familiar spell of moist pine wafts through the air as I sprint through the wilderness." Who the fuck ever had that thought? I mean realistically? No-one! The next sentence is worse: "Strident steps close in on me, crushing the leaves on the earth." It's hard to know where to begin, isn't it? Strident is not, technically speaking, wrong, but given that it's usually applied to a voice, it seems out of place here, especially since the word is a little like 'stride' and the author is talking about steps. But she's in a pine forest, so how is anything there strident? She talks about leaves, when she ought to be talking about needles, and the the environment is moist, so how is anything strident even if there were leaves? She hasn't thought this through. That told me, right there, that I would not like this novel - after only two sentences.
  • Going for Kona by Pamela Fagan Hutchins. The opening sentence reads: "The best-looking man in the River Oaks Barnes and Noble had his hand on my thigh, and with the weight of hundreds of eyes on us, I snaked my hand under the table, laced our fingers, and slid mine up and down the length of his, enjoying the contrast of rough against soft." This tells me all I need to know about how pointless it would be for me to try to read this garbage.
  • Rippler by Cidney Swanson is all kinds of bad. Samantha is a 'rippler' because you have to have a cool new name for turning invisible. Samantha keeps talking about being out of her body, but she's still in her body. It's just not visible is all. This tells me the author is very confused and she proves it within the first couple of pages by channeling Marvel's X-men which operates on the asinine premise that one mutant gene can have a stunning array of physical effects. This is patent bullshit. The author claims - in her book blurb, that Samantha has a "freak gene that lets her turn invisible." Let's not get into how poorly-worded that is. It's a book blurb after all, so of course it's horseshit, but don't worry! There's the usual guy around, in this case the "hunky Will Baker" who knows all about her power and who will validate and save her, because as you know, every YA girl is worthless without a man. Barf. This book is total shit.
  • Dream Casters: Light by Adienne Woods is another crappily-written and badly-laid out novel. The first page is the title and author's name, evidently included for morons who didn't manage to find that information on the cover. Page two and three are the contents - split into three parts, each containing, "Chapter _" and whatever the chapter number is. Again, stupid and pointless. Again no way to get back to the contents list from any given chapter. The author admits right up front that she made a serious mistake in choosing first person voice because chapter one starts off in third person and is a prologue. I avoid prologues like Dwayne Johnson movies, but in this case at least the author had the wherewithal to put it into chapter one. The problem though, is that this simply made the book more misleading, because after about eight pages, the author clunkily switches to first person with the sub-heading "Sixteen Years later" meaning we're starting the novel here with the usual ignorant female YA main character who is a special snowflake and doesn't know it. What this means in effect is that this novel starts with two info dumps one after another, and that's precisely two more info dumps than I ever want to read in a novel. It's also where I gave up on it. It sucks.
  • Skylar Robbins: The Mystery of Shadow Hills by Carrie Cross. I think Carrie Cross is actually a pretty cool name for an author, but this first person novel ran right into the swamp in the first two sentences by being utterly unrealistic in how it told the story, and also in setting up Skylar with a hunky guy before the second sentence ended. The author wants it made clear that Skylar, despite being championed right up there on the book cover, is in fact useless without a guy to lend her value.
  • The Second Sister by Rae D Magdon. It opens with: "I peeked out of the rain-streaked windows, searching for green as the carriage jolted over slick cobblestones." I'm sure the author was pleased-as-punch with herself for cramming all that information into one sentence, but the fact is that no-one ever talks like that, much less thinks such things. Try it next time yourel traveling. Describe your experience in this sort of ridiculous detail in words that would never normally even cross your mind, much less form full sentences. It turned me off right away.
  • Spellbound by LA Starkey. Novels with the word 'bound' in the title are usually a waste of time, so I have no idea how this came to be in my e-shelf. Maybe I fooled myself into thinking the plot might be entertaining, but I was unaware it was also first person, so that was two strikes against it. The first sentence has the main character expressing relief at arriving at their destination and she says, "I pushed my brother's shoulder in the back seat as we drove up to the beach house that held all my summer memories." Ignoring the poor wording, it makes me sad that all these kids' parents ever did was take them to the same place every summer. How tedious that must have been. The second sentence has "...my father put the old Buick into park." Who cares what kind of car it is or how old it is? Is it relevant? Doubtful! The third paragraph has "My mother laughed and got out of the car before bending back in to pin me with a loving stare." A stare is loving? Her mom then says, "Come on. We have a lot to do over this four-day weekend." Who speaks like that? Who specifies the weekend length when everyone present already knows it? I'll tell you who - idiot authors who don't stop to think about how real people behave because they, as an author, are so desperate to cram as much information as they can into what they're telling the reader! Never mind that it makes the story sound ridiculously contrived and keeps kicking the reader out of disbelief suspension. And it's YA, so you know on top of this poor writing, there's going to be the inevitable guy show up because no YA female character can survive without one. I ditched this one on that first page.
  • Better Off Wed by Annabelle Archer. Here's the descriptive section for the opening to this garbage pile: "I stood near the top of the wide marble staircase that swept down the middle of the Corcoran Gallery of Art’s central foyer. Below me, dozens of tuxedo-clad waiters scurried around the enormous hall filled end to end with tables and gold ladder-backed chairs. After having draped ivory chiffon into swags on all forty tables, I massaged the red indentations left on my fingers by the heavy pins." That was it for me. No one speaks like that, much less thinks like it. No one tells a story to a friend in words like those. It's kicking me out of suspension of disbelief with every other word, and I have zero interest in waiting around until the inevitable guy shows up to make this loser's life worth living. On top of all that, there's this wedding planner who's about to solve a murder, because as you know, wedding planners are much better at solving murders than trained police detectives, who are clearly useless. It's a fact. Barf! The entire premise of this inevitable series is fucked-up. What's the author's plan? To have this planner go through a series of weddings, and at each one there's a murder? How stupid of a concept is that?
  • First Touch by Teyla Branton. This is three strikes against this author for me. Here's the first jam-packed unrealistic paragraph from this effort: "Two minutes before the cop entered my antiques store, life was good. My best friend, Jake, had bought Winter’s Herb Shoppe and was making regular payments that kept the bank off my back, my own business was growing slowly but steadily, and my recently-married sister was six months along with my niece or nephew. And, perhaps best of all, I’d begun helping people with the strange gift that had manifested the day of Winter’s funeral." Her gift is psychometry, and you know it will be just enough to give a useless clue without telling anyone anything of real value. Horseshit that it is. I dream of the day someone will write a novel of this nature and actually have the psychic give useful information, but make the issues be something else that prevents them from nailing the villain on page two. That would take some writing skill. This crap does not. Even disregarding that, what an unrealistic pile of info-dumping trash this first paragraph is! No thanks! Who gives a shit about best friend Jake and his shop? Is that necessary in sentence two? No! Who cares about an impending niece or nephew? Is it relevant? No! The psychometry would be better introduced when you get around to letting the fucking cop get into the store and say something! But no! By the bottom of that first page, he's still not inside, because we have to learn that she has an electronic doorbell and is helping a solitary customer, and that this cop is going to be the inevitable never-consummated love interest that these women so desperately need because they have zero value until a hot and hunky man comes along to lend them some utility. Barf!
  • Other by Karen Kincy starts her novel with "I can't last much longer. It's been one week, three days,and I forget how many hours." Of course all sick/suffering people think like that. Not! Any first person novel that starts so unrealistically is going to be a fail so we need read no further into this one.
  • The Sorcery Trial by Claire luana, JA Armitage. It took two people to start this novel like this: "I noticed two things in quick succession. One - the tops of his ears tapered to a delicate point. And two - his white button-down had been soaked in a tidal wave of coffee." The authors write literally a page and a half of info-dump before any words are spoken, because forever is typically how long it takes to speak when you bump into someone. How stupidly unrealistic can you get? Again, the authors are thinking of writing a story. The very last thing they're thinking about is how real people react in the real world. If they were, they wouldn't make the laughable mistake of writing in first person. And they'd probably be writign a movie script! LOL! Again in this book, nt he contents are lsite dover two pages as a sumb-ass list of "Chapter 1..." and so on. The cove ris pathetic, featuring five YAs in a standard V formation like a bunch of frigging geese. One of the guys has a glowing ball which he's holding right at his crotch. Seriously? None of these cover models actually look like people you'd meet.
  • The Rosewoods by Katrina Abbott opened the first chapter with the narrator salivating over this guy who was approaching her. No one thinks like that, and certainly not for a whole page, when someone approaches you. That alone, even had it not been first person, was enough to turn me off this. It was way-the-hell too much squared. Barf!
  • All Eyes on Me by Lindsey Lanier starts out with this long, rambling narration of a woman driving out into the desert, to dump a body - in sight of the city of Las Vegas behind her and the mountains ahead of her. Vegas has I-15 running roughly north-south through it. Perpendicular to that runs state highway 95. Those are hardly the deserted roads she describes. There are only a couple of minor roads out of there that might work for dumping a body, but they don't have that long highway, city behind me, mountains ahead of me, perspective to them, so the narration would appear to be inaccurate at best, and those minor roads hardly a good place to dump a body. I didn't like this at all.
  • The Boy Who Painted the Sky by begins with "I remembered certain things about my mom." This approach is guaranteed to turn me off the story and it's only the first sentence. The story was boring.
  • Blood of Stone by Jayne Faith begins with a narration that's utterly alien to how people actually think. "With an impatient tug on the cross strap of my broadsword's scabbard, I watched the bouncer, a lanky man of elvish descent, examine my mercenary credentials." This tells me everything I need to know about how pointless is it to try reading this crap. The sword is a broadsword, but worn on this asshole's back? How are they going to draw it? The truth is that you can't unless the bottom of the sheath is loose and therefore slaps your ass hard with every step you take, and since you're drawing it right by your neck, you're likely to cut your own throat in the event of a hasty draw during a fight! This carrying o'th' sword on your back is pretentious horseshit and needs to die a horrible death. The bouncer is "of elvish descent"? What does that mean? If he's an elf, say so. What the author seems to mean is that he's a cross-breed, and this tells me that the author knows shit about evolution, which shows that you cannot successfully breed outside of your own species - so are elves the same species as humans? Or is magical reproduction involved? If so, how does that work exactly and why does no one ever talk about it?! Every trope in the book is revealed right here in that first sentence. This tells me this author is unimaginative and is copying everyone else who writes fantasy instead of trying something new. I don't want to read the same shit that's been done to death already. This book is a no-no. And from only one sentence! But guess what? You could have told all of this from the novel's dumb title, without even having to open the cover at all.
  • Kill Process by William Hertling into this at full tilt. "I scream. Not some girly scream. A full tilt blood-curdling yell...." A scream is a fucking scream. There's nothing girly about it - except, evidently, to sexist authors. It turns out that Angie had a bad dream and of course she screams because girls have to: it's the law. And she's narrating this collection of bad grammar in the most unnatural, unrealistic, and inauthentic manner imaginable. Another dumb-ass first person story - and I immediately put it on the bookself where it belonged - the one marked 'trash'. Truth be told though, you can readily discern what to do with this novel from the pretentious title alone.
  • The Faerie Prince by Rachel Morgan begins with this execrable opening: "Every night I watch the same window on Draven Avenue. I keep my distance, and I never watch from the same place or at exactly the same time. Creepy, I know, but I have my reasons." Creepy doesn't begin to describe this, and how does this asshole manage to stake out a house in a residential area without anyone reporting her? It's an avenue! It's not a city street. She would be seen no matter how much she tries to change-up her stalker behavior. It turned me off this character right from that first sentence. This is even before the story gets into the same tired trope bullshit with calling them 'faerie' because the author is too chickenshit to call 'em 'fairy', and with having the way over-used 'unseelie' court - like the fairy world is organized exactly like ours, and everyone is beholden to someone, and how they behave just like humans - in a world of magic, yet! I call horseshit on that, and file this poor excuse for a novel under 'T' for trash as is meet and right to do so.
  • The Secret Sharer by Joseph Conrad opened in first person with language so stilted I couldn't stand to read it! So that was a non-starter.
  • Sammie & Budgie by Scott Semegran began, "I discovered that my boy Sammie - my son, my first child, my spawn, a chip off my ol' block...." That was enough for me to utter a disturbed shriek of a 'no'! A chip off my old block? Seriously? Budgie is an abbreviation of budgerigar, which is what Americans call a parakeet. It's a small short-beaked parrot which is found in a beautiful array of colors. I have no idea what relevance that has. The only other time I heard of the name being applied to a human was in an old Brit TV show known as Budgie. The amusing thing about this novel, given that immediately before it I looked at a Joseph Conrad novel, is that this one quoted Joseph Conrad on a page right after the contents listing! Usually such quotes appear at the start of chapters, and I routinely ignore them, as I did this one. This book presented a tedious string of boring pages before ever you could reach chapter one. There was one page after another of preliminary material which was way-the-hell overdone even by the pretentious standards of Big Publishing™. There was the front cover, as there usually is, but next after this came a black and white copy of the same cover, followed by another page with the title and author's name, followed by an extensive copyright blurb,followed by two pages of boring Scott Semegran publicity material, followed by a dedication, followed by a pointless tiny illustration, followed by a two-page pointless table of contents - one that gets you to a chapter, but from which you cannot return to the contents list by, say, tapping on the chapter title. At least this contents list was double-spaced, so it did have that going for it, worthless as a contents list is to begin with. This was followed by an illustration of a popsicle and a label identifying "chapter one." Finally, after all that shit, there actually was chapter one! On page 11! The thing is if you tap the chapter One in the contents list, you don't go to the illustration; you go to this page 11. So what the fuck is the point of the illustration? There's one right before every chapter and this is the entire extent of the "illustrated by Scott Semegran" proudly displayed on that third page. Tedious!
  • Deadlines by Camilla Chafer actually does chafe. The narration is totally unrealistic and constantly kicks a reader out of suspension of disbelief. Total loser of a novel.
  • Never Enough Time sounded interesting from the book description, but it's an insane first person which lists no less than ninety chapters in the contents list, not one of which worked to actually get a reader to that chapter in the Kobo e-reader. They did work in the Nook version, although again, there was no way to get back to the conents list from the chapter if you hit the wrong one by mistake, and what's the fucking point of listing ninety chapters one after another, Chapter 1...Chapter 90? So no thanks to the first person crap.

Tomorrow? Dual-first-person voice novels!

Monday, November 29, 2021

Graceling by Kristin Cashore - Graphic Novel

Rating: WORTHY!

This review is from an advance review copy for which I thank the publisher.

I already reviewed the print novel of Graceling back in June of 2013 (https://ianwoodnovellum.blogspot.com/2013/06/graceling-by-kristin-cashore.html), but I was very curious to see what they did with the graphic novel version, so when I saw this on Net Galley I asked to review it and the publisher kindly granted my request.

I was not disappointed. This is my last Net Galley review before I retire from reviewing altogether, to concentrate on my own writing, so I was very glad to find one that I could end my career of some five thousand total reviews on a positive note for my last Net Galley.

The story is no different from the original print version I reviewed almost a decade ago, but it's been so long, that I had forgot a lot of it, so this was a nice refresher and it had some enjoyable and nicely-worked art to go with it. I ended-up liking the original so much that I went on to read two other novels set in the same world: Fire and Bitterblue.

This one tells the story of Katsa, who is an enforcer for King Randa of the Midluns, but she isn't happy in her career. When she discovers another one like herself - a person who has a 'grace' or special skill - her life begins to change in ways she had not foreseen. Katsa ends up on a quest of sorts. It is long and demanding, and during it, she makes some fascinating and unexpected discoveries, about herself, about her companion, Prince Po, and about the two of them as companions. She learns that she's prone to misunderstanding what a 'grace' actually is, at least with regard to herself and Po!

As I mentioned in my original review, I initially had no interest in reading Graceling because I mistakenly assumed from the title that it was about fairies and I wasn't tempted by it. It was only when I saw Fire and realized that it wasn't a fairy-tale (so to speak!) that I also picked up Graceling at the same time, and read that one followed by the other. Fire precedes Graceling, but the author recommends reading them in the order they were published, so I did! Perhaps if this graphic novel does well, as it ought to, we can expect that there will be two more following it as there was with the original publication. I commend this as a worthy read.

Tuesday, November 9, 2021

King of the Mountain by Aiden Ainslie

Rating: WARTY!

"Multimillionaire, champion cycler, and extremely gorgeous — these are just a few ways to describe Clifford Du Frey. But there’s one thing that most people don’t know about the famous athlete: He’s in love with art student Gabe O’Reilly. Can their relationship survive a media frenzy...." And there's a media frenzy why, exactly? Fifty years ago this plot would have been cutting-edge. Now, it's just...yawn.

Mindspeak by Heather Sunseri

Rating: WARTY!

"Lexi can influence people’s thoughts — a power she’s kept hidden for years. But when newcomer Jack heals her broken arm with his touch, Lexi is thrown into a world of danger and deadly conspiracy." Right, because Lexi is useless unless she's validated by the mysterious Jack-ass, who has the most over-used, clichéd 'goto-guy' name in literary history. Barf. Why would I want to read a novel where the book blurb makes it crystal clear that the author has absolutely no imagination or originality?

Big Girl Panties by Stephanie Evanovich

Rating: WARTY!

"When her husband dies, Holly is at her lowest point — and her highest weight. Trainer Logan helps her get back into shape, but what happens when the rest of the world starts noticing her, too?" Another fat-shaming novel where a female author who should know better tells every woman that she's useless unless she conforms to a white men's skin-deep beauty "norm". Forget the kind of person she is. Forget whether she's intelligent, companionable, capable, reliable, trustworthy, or can contribute in any other way. No. This is just about a woman's true worth according to this author: how attractive she is. Barf

Ever Shade by Alexia Purdy

Rating: WARTY!

"Fire-wielding faeries, a sinister queen, and a perilous mission through an enchanted land — join Shade as she battles evil and discovers her own extraordinary magic!" No thanks. I can't get with any author who's too chickenshit to call them fairies. Barf.

The Love Bet by GL Tomas

Rating: WARTY!

"Magazine journalist Luz knows plenty about sex and hookups — after all, that’s her specialty. But when she’s assigned to write a column for Valentine’s Day, she decides to use the opportunity to answer a question: Will three nights of mind-blowing sex cause a person to fall in love?" How is she going to have anything going on in her mind if it's blown? This story is brain-dead, period. Barf.

A Girl's Guide to Vampires by Katie MacAlister

Rating: WARTY!

So rather than think up something original, this author clones "Twilight." Here's the asinine blurb: "Dating is hard." How exactly is dating hard" If it's hard you're doing it wrong, period, but how would this brain-dead YA character ever figure that out? "But as Joy Randall is about to find out, dating a centuries-old vampire is even harder!" And why would a centuries old vampire have the slightest interest in a teenager other than pure lust? That would be like a forty-year-old guy taking a romantic interest in a newborn. Imagine a ninety-year old dating a teenager and then multiply the ninety by three or four and see how much that grosses you out. That's this story. This author is evidently utterly clueless and has not an original bone in her body judged by her cookie-cutter approach to novel-writing.

Once Upon a Power Play by Jennifer Bonds / Good Guy by Kate Meader

Rating: WARTY!

Once Upon a Power Play by Jennifer Bonds

"After her latest relationship ends via text, Chloe Jacobs decides to swear off men altogether." This tells me she's an asshole for two reasons. First that she'd get involved with a guy like that, and second that she makes such a childish declaration. "But arrogant, drop-dead gorgeous hockey player" What's with the fucking hockey player obsession? "Ryan Douglas might tempt her to break her rule" Sorry, my bad. She's an asshole for three reasons because she's going to get right back into the same sort of abusive relationship that just failed so catastrophically. Chloe is an irremediable asshole and I sure as hell have no interest in reading about a clueless jerk-off like her.

AND

Good Guy by Kate Meader

"Military veteran turned hockey star Levi" There is it again. What's with the obsessive compulsive hockey player? Barf. What this tells me is that there are far too many female authors out there who have szero creativity and no imagination. Why is that? What are they afraid of? Missing a sale if they write something truly original?

American Christmas by Adriana Herrera

Rating: WARTY!

"Yin and Ari are celebrating their first Christmas together — and they’ve got some big ideas for presents. But when a holiday disaster ensues, both men are reminded that their love is the best gift of all." That may be all well and good, but why is it an American Christmas? There are some fifty nations, territories, and protectorates in the Americas. It's not just the USA. So my question is: are we so insecure that we have to nail this to a nationality or are we so arrogant and self-centered that only an American Christmas is worth telling a story about? Either way this is a fail. There are so many other ways this title could have played out. I'm just sorry this author wasn't imaginative enough to think of one.

Monday, November 8, 2021

The Austen Playbook by Lucy Parker

Rating: WARTY!

No wonder the morons at Kirkus's Last Stand thought this was "witty and compelling" so rumor has it. It's another tedious, unimaginative, uninventive, retreaded, cookie-cutter clone of Jane Austen. Why wouldn't they think it was sparkling? Barf! You know when it's evidently your policy to positively review everything that's out there, your reviews are utterly useless, right? Well, they don't know that at Kirkussed. Here's the idiot blurb: "Freddy is the star of a live-action TV show" Right - because naming your female star with a guy's name is witty and compelling and has never been done before. And of course it's "...based on Jane Austen’s novels" because why not? There's absolutely no point in doing any actual work when you can just repurpose antique romance novels. "...but she’s having trouble concentrating on her lines, especially when handsome, arrogant critic Griff is hanging around the set." Oh look - the infuriatingly handsome trope, and the enemies who fall in love trope, both on the same story! How witty and compelling. This author evidently does not have an original bone in her entire body. Yawn.

Ransom by Laramie Briscoe

Rating: WARTY!

"Even though Stella has known him her whole life, she’s never given Ransom much thought." Ransom? Seriously? Barf. "But after the daring K-9 handler comes to her rescue, she begins to see him in a new light...." What a fucking moron Stella must be. And how misnamed! Maybe she'll pay a Ransom for sex? Yawn.

The Rage of Dragons by Evan Winter

Rating: WARTY!

"Sent into a war that has been waging for almost two centuries, Tau is confronted with death - and vows to become the greatest swordsman alive." Oh wow! What a sterling ambitiion. I am so excited by this book. Barf. Can anyone say George...ah...ah...Martin rip-off?

Real Food, Fake Food by Larry Olmsted

Rating: WARTY!

"...an award-winning journalist reveals shocking secrets and deceptions behind common foods" This is shocking only to those morons who don't care what they put into their mouths, and who would never actually read a book like this anyway. Yawn.

Thomas Jefferson by Robert McDonald

Rating: WARTY!

Because if there's one thing this world needs right now, it's yet another biography of unreprentant slave owner Jefferson. "Thomas Jefferson was a Founding Father and president" Like we don't know that already to the Nth degree? Yawn.

Hunter Killer by David Poyer

Rating: WARTY!

Seriously? Hunter Killer? That's the best title you got? "As war between the US and China rages, admiral Dan Lenson is tasked with clearing the sea lanes around Guam and taking back an island that’s under Chinese control. Can he succeed — and give the downtrodden Allied forces a fighting chance?" Is that a serious question, or does the book blurb writer really think all readers are imbeciles? Yawn.

Secret Service by Tom Bradby

Rating: WARTY!

"When MI6 agent Kate Henderson uncovers a Russian plot to unseat the British prime minister, she’ll have to risk everything to avert an international crisis before the next election." Nope, Not her jurisdiction! It's MI5 that needs to handle this. And like the Russians give a shit about Britain anymore! Boris Johnson is already doing a classic job of fucking things up there, so the Russians don't need to do a thing while he's in power.

The Courier by Holly Down

Rating: WARTY!

"Mourning her once-perfect life, Laurel now works as a courier and relishes delivering mail to the residents of an elite cul-de-sac. One day, looking through the window of a perfectly manicured house, Laurel sees something that makes her world crumble...." Can anyoen say "Rear Window redux? Yawn.

Thanatos by Eva Pohler

Rating: WARTY!

"While in a coma, Therese falls for Thanatos, the handsome god of death. When she wakes up, she learns that he’s crossed into the mortal realm to be with her. But can he and a host of other Greek gods help her avenge her parents’ murders?" Who gives a shit? None of this takes place in Greece. It's been culturally appropriated into the USA because fuck Greece, right? No story can have any value whatsoever unless it's set in the USA or unless at the very least it has a USA main character driving it. Barf. Therese isn't even a greek name. It's Spanish! Yeah, there's a claim that it may have originated from a Greek word, but nowhere does it appear until 4th century Spain. Neither is the Greek god's name THanatos per se. It's more like Tanatos with a hint of an 'H'. So this is a non-starter and really just retreaded Rick Riordan for adults. Yawn.

Sanctioned by RA McGee / Blueblood by Matthew Iden

Rating: WARTY!

"Retired covert operative Czerny Clark has sworn off the black ops world — until his former partner disappears" and he gets pulled in from retirement to fix a situation that not one single other person out of seven billion on the planet can possibly resolve. And how many times has this exact plot been retreaded? Barf. Just title it "Body Count" - all these novels are exactly the same - why not employ the same generic title - pulled out of retirement each time a "new" story appears?!

AND

Blueblood by Matthew Iden

"With a deadly cop killer on the loose, former homicide detective Marty Singer must come out of retirement to chase down the culprit" Why? Is every other cop incompetent? As I've pointed out many times before: this trope is way the hell overdone!

Claiming London by Becca Jameson

Rating: WARTY!

So yet another female author who is evidently operating under the delusion that women are property who need to be claimed like so much baggage at the airport carousel. The title is all you need to know to avoid this like the plague, but the blurb, believe it or not, gets worse. "After her abusive marriage, London wants to experience all the things she missed out on, including submission." Excuse me but WHAT THE FUCK???? She was abused in her marriage and now she craves dominance? What the fuck is wrong with this author that she thinks this utterly wrong-headed idea is ripe for a fictional exercise in trying to make a few bucks? Seriously? Fuck. This. Shit.

Mrs Hudson and the Spirits’ Curse by Martin Davies

Rating: WARTY!

"An irresistible spin on the world of Sherlock Holmes!" No, it really isn't. Look, here am I resisting it. "With a sinister force stalking London merchants, Mrs Hudson sets out to solve the mystery - and proves she might be Baker Street’s most talented detective." Seriously? Another tired, unoriginal rip-off? At least it isn't Sherlock's niece so I guess it has that going for it, but that bar is so low that it really doesnlt say much. Mrs Hudson did literally nothing in any of the Holmes stories except in one where she moved a bust of Sherlock around to foil a sniper. She was mistakenly referred to as Mrs Turner in one Holmes story due to a writing mistake by Doyle, but she never exhibted a single isntance of any sort of crime-solving ability or even interest in any such thing. This story is quite obviously an ill-begotten dud. I'd have a lot more respect for writers if they came up with something original instead of ripping-off and repurposing all the frigging time.

Walking Shadows by Faye Kellerman

Rating: WARTY!

"When a clean-cut young man is found dead," That;s hilarious. Is tha thow he died? Fromt ehc lean cuts? Yawn. "...detective Peter Decker and his wife, Rina Lazarus, investigate the murder." Wait what? This dick has his wife investigate the crime with him? How the fuck does that work? He doesn't have a partner - I mean a police partner to work it with? This is the dumbest shit I've not read in a long time. Maybe his wife is a ghost. She is named Lazarus after all - risen from the dead. Maybe that qualifies her somehow. Yawn.

The Jigsaw Man by Nadine Matheson

Rating: WARTY!

"A heart-pounding roller-coaster ride" says Tami Hoag, but really, who gives a shit what she thinks? I don't get the logic here - most probably because there is none, and this book blurb writer quite obviously thinks we're all sheep - that if Tami Hoag directs, we'll all follow? No thanks! Are we supposed to bow down to the recommendation from a woman with whom most of us have zero in common? Because...what? She's a known author? She writes similar books? She's god almighty and we poor miserable peons should gratefully receive her every utterance as gospel? Fuck that shit. The book blurb only makes things worse: "When two victims wash up from the Thames, DI Henley...." I get it: Henley-on-Thames! Hilarious. "...recognizes the gruesome work of Peter Olivier, the Jigsaw Killer. But Olivier is in prison, thanks to Henley, and all bets are off when he learns he has a copycat." Oh, the copycat serial killer. How stunningly original! That's never been done before. Except for the scores of times it has. Yawn. And all bets are off? What fucking bets? Bêtes Noire? Barf. The only thing off was the blurb writer's brain - turned off when they wrote this blurb. Sorry, but the jig is up for this unoriginal author.

To Lahore with Love by Hina Belitz

Rating: WARTY!

"Irish and Pakistani, Addy has always struggled to square the seemingly opposite sides of her identity." How are they "opposite"? Is Irish alien? Is Pakistani alien? Is Irish animal and Pakistani human? Is Pakistani animal and Irish human? Is it because one is white the other is black and this racist book blurb writer thinks the two can't possibly be compatible? Fuck. This. Shit.

Pipe Dreams by Sarina Bowen

Rating: WARTY!

"Hockey star Mike..." so, another romance with another fucking hockey star. What is wrong with these asshole authors who believe that there's nothing out there other than muscular hockey stars? I'll tell you what's wrong: they don't have an original neuron in their entire brain, so they have to endlessly clone the work of others and retread it for their own use. "...broke Lauren’s heart, so the last thing she wants is to spend time with him..." but she inevitably will. This is just another urging from a female author to female readers that no matter how badly treated you were by the jerk-off son-of-a-bitch you were with, you're so lacking in worth and utility that the only smart solution is to run right back to him at the crook of his dick - or his pipe, as the title has it.... Barf.

Tallgrass by Sandra Dallas

Rating: WARTY!

According to Audiofile - whatever that is - this book is "a rare treasure." I wish. But no it really isn't. The truth is that it's yet another in an endless garbage pile of warmed-over World War Two stories that have been run into the ground already. "When a Japanese internment camp is created in her Colorado farming town, Rennie uncovers secrets that will forever change her life." I doubt it. Yawn.

A Postcard from Italy by Alex Brown

Rating: WARTY!

How many scores of times has this exact story been told? "When Grace uncovers a stack of letters and diaries dating back to the end of World War II, she travels to the Italian Riviera to unravel their author’s story" Like I give a flying fuck. World War Two was three-quarters of a century ago. It and every story imagineable that can ever be told about it has been done to death over and over again. Let it go. Find a new shtick. For fuck's sake please try and write something original.

Floored by Karla Sorensen

Rating: WARTY!

"While studying abroad in London, Lia Ward meets handsome footballer Jude McAllister." How to unpack this pile of rank festering garbage? Yeah, he's a muscular sporty type. So what's new there? Short answer: nothing. The only studying abroad here is the footballer studying a broad. I guarantee you there will be no depictions of Lia actually studying because that's utterly irrelevant, as is this dude's career. The only thing that's important in this story is a muscular dick and an ever-welcoming pussy. That's it. It's tempting to joke that it should be titled 'Nailed' not 'Floored', but 'Bored' would be the most apt title because it's tedious, retreaded trope. These two fucking clueless assholes have unprotected sex on their first date. She's actually lucky that all she contracted from unsafe sex was a pregnancy. What this tells me is that these two people are morons, and I sure as hell don't want to read a damned thing about them.

The Trouble with Hating You by Sajni Patel

Rating: WARTY!

That title right there tells you all you need to knwo about what a pile of garbarge this story is. If you had any doubts even after that, the book blurb should kill it very effectively, but even ebfore that we get the usual meaningless trash: "Farah Heron promises: 'You’ll be rooting for these two from their first meeting!' " Who the fuck is Farah Heron?! I've never even remotely heard of her so why the hell should I give a flyign shit about what she thinks?! Here's the story - so-called: "Liya Thakkar is happy with the single life even if her parents aren’t. When Jay Shah, their latest matchmaking candidate, arrives for dinner, she makes a quick getaway - only to bump into him again at the office." There is quite literally not a single thing new here. This exact story - with a name change here and there - has been told over and endlessly over again. Yawn. Worse though, is this feamle author's apparent absolute conviction that every woman is utterly useless unless she has a guy to validate her. You're not a real woman, says she, unless some guy is willing to rescue you from being single. Yeah. Right. Barf.

Sunday, November 7, 2021

The Iron Tiger by Jack Higgins

Rating: WARTY!

"Stranded in the Himalayas, British Navy pilot Jack Drummond" Stop right there. The most over-used name ever in action stories: 'Jack'. What's his nickname? "Bulldog"? Barf. Nothing original here. This is a DNS (Did Not Start) from less than ten words of the book blurb.

Daughter of Time by Sarah Woodbury

Rating: WARTY!

"When Meg is catapulted back in time, Prince Llywelyn of Wales is her only hope for survival." Of course he is, because if there's one thing far too many female authors desperately want you to embrace, it's that every woman is completely useless without a man to rescue her, preferably a prince or a billionaire. "Outlander" was bad wnough. Do we really need more? Barf.

Christmas Inn Love by Samantha Chase

Rating: WARTY!

"Getting snowbound in Silver Bell Falls was not part of Beckham’s road trip plan. When beautiful innkeeper Cassidy lets him stay at her bed-and-breakfast, he offers to help her fix it up in return" Because the only quality this woman could ever have is her pretty skin, and as hundreds of female authors are evidently so desperate to convince you, every single woman on the planet is utterly useless without a guy.

Book of the Dead by Michael Northrop

Rating: WARTY!

"Perfect for fans of Rick Riordan...." Why doesn't that claim suprise me? "When lost spells from the Egyptian Book of the Dead accidentally awaken five ancient terrors, Alex and his best friend, Ren, must fight to save the world." Because eight-year-olds are without question the ebnst people to put on a case like this. Barf.

Wood's Hope by Steven Becker

Rating: WARTY!

"After his boat is wrecked in the Bahamas, diver Mac Travis accidentally discovers a 60-year-old plane — one rumored to contain over three billion dollars in gold." Does this dipshit author have any clue how much three billion dollars of gold weighs? Hint: it's a hell of a lot more than any airplane in existance back in the early sixties could carry, so this story is shit from the off! And who would let a plane with that much gold on it sit in the water for sixty years without making any attempt to recover it? Barf.

Saturday, November 6, 2021

Witchcraft by Jayne Ann Krentz

Rating: WARTY!

"Author Kimberly Sawyer enjoys her solitary life — until a mysterious figure threatens her in her own home. But handsome Darius Cavenaugh is back in town, and he’ll do whatever he can to protect Kimberly from harm" Because, as hundreds of female authors are evidently quite convinced, a woman is fucking useless without some guy to rescue her from her own weakness and stupidity. Barf.

The Knight Brothers Series by Carly Phillips

Rating: WARTY!

"Three billionaires discover..." - if it isn't a cure for cancer or a cure for climate change, who honestly gives a flying fuck what asshole billionaires discover, because chances are it's just more millions they discover....

George Lucas by Brian Jay Jones

Rating: WARTY!

"From Star Wars to Indiana Jones, acclaimed filmmaker George Lucas" sold his Star Wars empire to Disney making them an even bigger mega-corporation than they already were. Now they have Pixar, Marvel, and Star Wars. Anyone want to hand them anything else and make 'em even bigger and more monopolistic, and more unassailable so they can continue to turn out pap? Do you? George Lucas? The guy who ripped off Buck Rogers, Edgar Rice Burroughs, and Frank Herbert? Really? The Farce is definitely with him. Barf.

The Last Mona Lisa by Jonathan Santlofer

Rating: WARTY!

Lee Child claims this is "instantly immersive, intriguing, and suspenseful". That tells me I never need to read anything by Lee Child. "When professor Luke Perrone begins researching his famous ancestor - who may have stolen the Mona Lisa over a century ago, replacing it with a forgery...." No, he didn't. Are we done here? Can I go now?

The Lancaster Brothers Box Set by Ava Harrison

Rating: WARTY!

"Meet the billionaire brothers of the Lancaster family in this box set" where 'box' is a euphemism for the female genitalia. "...full of sexy bosses, one-night stands, and forbidden passion… A complete collection!" A complete collection of veneral diseases, no doubt. Barf. Now, to close out the HTML on this entry I have to write slash body! How appropriate.

Rider’s Revenge by Alessandra Clarke

Rating: WARTY!

"After her father’s murder, young K’lrsa...." Stop right there. That's an automatic DNF for me if I start reading one of these asinine fantasy novels where the idiot author starts injecting random apostrophes into the middle of character names. Barf.

Pretty Funny for a Girl by Rebecca Elliott

Rating: WARTY!

"Haylah" Haylah? Seriously? "...dreams of becoming a stand-up comedian" so naturally, instead of being a stand-up comedian, she "...agrees to help popular Leo write jokes for his own sets." What an asshole! "...will she end up heartbroken - or will she find the self-confidence she needs to shine?" Who honestly gives a shit what happens to this dumb-ass?

Thursday, November 4, 2021

Hating the Player by Natalie Wrye

Rating: WARTY!

"Publishing agent Ana Lexington finally gets a manuscript that could make her career — a juicy peek behind the scenes with infamous football star Colton Evans." Who would even care? Really? "The arrogant playboy might have abs for days," What the fuck does that even mean?! "...but he’s also insufferable… So why can’t Ana get him out of her head?" Could it be because the author doesn't have an original or imaginative bone in her body and so she channels all the other novels that tell the exact same story this one is retreading? Just a wild-ass guess. Yawn.

Finding Home by BE Baker

Rating: WARTY!

"When she’s stranded in Europe, Beth finds herself rescued by Cole, a man who’s handsome, kind - and also happens to be royalty!" Of course he is. It's the billionaire story all over again, and the helpless, useless, pointless woman finally can get validation for her worthless life. Barf. "As the two discover they’re more alike than they thought possible, a surprising connection blooms" Surprising to who exactly? There's nobody this is a surprise to except the idiot book blurb writer evidently. Yawn.

Romerica by David S Brody

Rating: WARTY!

"When historian Cameron Thorne is hired to raise a Roman-era ship off the coast of Massachusetts, he finds himself in unexpected danger… Can he unravel a far-reaching mystery with deadly global consequences?" Because archaeology routinely has life-threatening global consequences. Yawn. Could it not have been pitched just a shade lower? This isn't fiction; it's fantasy.