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Nollaig

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Posts posted by Nollaig

  1. On 8/20/2017 at 0:21 PM, Chrissy said:

     

    Some people? Lol. Yeah - me. :rolleyes: 

     

    Okay? I don't know who has read it or not. It wasn't meant as a slight - it worked for a lot of people, it's a popular book. I was just underwhelmed by how straightforward the plot was after the reveal of a central bad guy a fifth of the way into the book.

     

    Edit: I've since noticed it was your blog that I got the recommendation from. And it was 3 weeks later that I wrote this review - I never remember where I heard about books on this forum, certainly not three weeks after the fact. I hadn't the slightest clue when I read the book whose thread I read about it in - I read too many threads and don't note sources of recommendations. So it most definitely was not a slight aimed at you, and I apologise if you thought it was. When I wrote 'some people', I had 5 star reviewers on Goodreads in mind (I always read Goodreads reviews after I finish a book).

  2. I'm nearly halfway through The Burning, a DC Meave Kerrigan crime thriller by Jane Casey. I'm not entirely sure how I feel about the title character or her colleagues yet, but the writing is very good and I'm enjoying the story, so will definitely continue with the series. There's six books in this series, so I'm glad I'm enjoying it as the other two series I've enjoyed recently (Maggie Neville and Matilda Darke) have only 1 and 3 books respectively so far.

  3. I'm most of the way through A Room Full of Killers by Michael Woods, the third Matilda Darke installment. Enjoying it, but not as much as the previous books. I think it could have been great, but fell short a little bit.

     

    I've also bought Under The Hawthorne Tree by Marita Conlon-McKenna, which is a children's book about the Irish famine in the 1800s. Read it as a child, and been meaning to reread it for years, so I got it on Kindle for my Irish Counties Challenge. Bought another one for the same reason but do you think I can remember what it was? Nah. :roll:

  4. Three new full reviews above, and two short ones here:

     

    I'm not writing full reviews for these two as I haven't much to say on them, even though I enjoyed them.

     

    The Escape - C. L. Taylor

     

    Agoraphobic and generally anxious mother believes someone is after her daughter and out to get her. A good easy read, all the usual elements of paranoia, distrust, everyone thinking the protagonist is mad etc. I liked the characters, the paranoia of the main character was not annoying and the ending was fairly believable. I preferred her other book, The Missing, but I enjoyed this one too and will read more by the author.

     

    Rating: 3/5

     

    How I Lost You - Jenny Blackhurst

     

    Woman convicted of killing her baby has just been released from jail and, with a new identity, is trying to start a new life. But when a photo arrives through her door, she begins to question whether she really killed him - or if he's even dead. This was a great read. As with The Escape, it has all the usual tropes like a ransacked house (this happens in both books) and a female protagonist fighting for a child while everyone around her isn't sure she's all there. This one was better than The Escape simply in that the writing was a bit better, the plot a bit more layered and complex, and while I thought I had it all figured out, I was totally, totally wrong, which I always like in a book. I preferred this book to her other novel Before I Let You In. The ending was a bit OTT, but I can forgive it.

     

    Rating: 4/5

     

    I've also updated my book blog and to date I have reviewed 213 different authors. Yay! I've reviewed more books and read way more than that, because I stopped reviewing for ages and don't review every book fully. So I'm happy to have broken 200.

  5. Pretty Girls - Karin Slaughter

     
     
    Genre: Thriller
    Synopsis:  Sisters. Strangers. Survivors. More than twenty years ago, Claire and Lydia's teenaged sister Julia vanished without a trace. The two women have not spoken since, and now their lives could not be more different. Claire is the glamorous trophy wife of an Atlanta millionaire. Lydia, a single mother, dates an ex-con and struggles to make ends meet. But neither has recovered from the horror and heartbreak of their shared loss—a devastating wound that's cruelly ripped open when Claire's husband is killed. The disappearance of a teenage girl and the murder of a middle-aged man, almost a quarter-century apart: what could connect them? Forming a wary truce, the surviving sisters look to the past to find the truth, unearthing the secrets that destroyed their family all those years ago . . . and uncovering the possibility of redemption, and revenge, where they least expect it.

    *** 

    Review: I picked this up for 2 reasons - 1. I have been well aware of Karin Slaughter for years, though I had never read anything by her - until recently, I was wary of getting into series, but the fact that this is a standalone book negated that, and 2. I heard it was dark/graphic and I'll be honest, I like my thrillers dark and graphic. I was really excited about reading it, as I know Slaughter has a great reputation, and this book seemed to both have great reviews and have utterly grossed people out.

    There were a few things I liked about this book - the writing is great and the book is very readable (I read nearly 300 pages in one sitting), which means it's also very compelling. I liked the characters; they were fleshed out, credible, and the story of the Carroll family - the disappearing eldest daughter and the devastated lives of the remaining family members over the years - reeled me in. I'll admit, when Paul is killed at the beginning of the book (not a spoiler, it's literally in the synopsis), I was genuinely moved by the scene. All in all, a great start, living up to the expectations I held for it.

    However, a revelation occurs about a fifth of the way into the book, and without trying to spoil anything, literally nothing that happens after that point (except one thing) is unexpected. Most thrillers pivot around finding 'whodunnit' or who the bad guy is. Well, it's kind of hard not to anticipate where this book is going from very early on. Sure, the finer details I didn't guess, but there are no surprises in the broad plot of this book, which I found very disappointing. The result was, most of the book dragged out while the characters stumbled around arguing and struggling to accept what was blatently obvious. Despite this, the bad person or persons seemed paper thin with a very flimsy explanation (or none at all) for their involvement. I really felt the book fell apart towards the end.

    Overall, I felt the graphic nature of the violence in the book was meant to distract from the fairly dull and suspenseless plot. I guess that worked for some people. For me, it lacked in a lot of core areas.

    Rating: 3/5
  6. Irregular Creatures - Chuck Wendig

     

     

     
    Genre: Short Stories, Fantasy, Horror
    Synopsis:  Contained within are nine stories featuring bizarre beasties, mythological mutants, and overall “irregular creatures” – including flying cats, mermaids, Bigfoot, giant chickens, and mystic hobo hermaphrodites. Horror, fantasy, science-fiction and humor abound in these nine stories.

    *** 

    Review: I ususally struggle somewhat with reviewing a collection of short stories, as there may be one I absolutely loved surrounded by several I really disliked. Do I then give the collection 3 stars, underselling the great story while perhaps giving the lesser ones more credit than I feel they deserve? Fortunately, this whole book was solidly three stars in the best way. Sure, if the whole thing had been five or four stars, that would have been great. But this collection of tales is (mostly) fairly light reading with a good sense of humor woven throughout. While it's nothing outstanding, it was a book I was happy to pick up and read the next story.

    My favourites were probably Lethe And Mnemosyne, Dog-Man and Cat-Bird, Product Placement, and This Guy. Two of these (Lethe, and This Guy) were exceptionally short with zero explanation, but they were just so random that I actually got a good laugh out of them. I can't summarise them because so little happens that I would be spoiling the stories. Dog-Man and Cat-Bird is also random (okay, the whole book is pretty random), but it is quite a bit longer and as the first story in the book, it is responsible for setting reader expectations. With a winged-cat defending a family from other, evil winged cats, it left me expecting and unquestioning amusingly-written weirdness, which is pretty much what I got. Product Placement is one of the few that has an explanation, but it isn't any less odd - a man wakes up one day to find all of the familiar brands of the world have ceased to exist, and have been replaced by ones everyone around him seems to be familiar with. He is the only one that has noticed something odd is happening to reality.

    The remainder of the stories I wasn't really pushed on - there were bits I liked and bits I didn't, but they were all easy to read. All in all, a good fun collection.

    Rating: 3/5 
  7. Nothing on Eath - Conor O'Callaghan

     
     
    Genre: Gothic/Mystery
    Synopsis: It was a time when nobody called. Early evening, the hottest August in living memory. A frightened girl bangs on a door. A man answers. From the moment he invites her in, his world will never be the same again. She tells him about her family, and their strange life in the show home of an abandoned housing estate. The long, blistering days spent sunbathing; the airless nights filled with inexplicable noises; the words that appear on the windows, written in dust. Where is her family now? Is she telling the truth? Can the man be trusted? Beautiful and disturbing, her story – retold in his words – reaches towards those frayed edges of reality where each of us, if only once, glimpses something nobody will ever explain.

    *** 

    Review: Having heard great reviews of this book, I wanted to read it for ages. After purchasing it, I put it aside due to being on a roll with thrillers, and an awareness that (in my experience of my Irish Counties Challenge), some Irish authors are a bit too lyrical in their writing for their books to be easy reads. However, for whatever reason, I decided to pick this one up a couple of weeks ago, and it was an unexpected delight. It's a short novel, so I tore through 80% of it in one day, having read a few pages the night before.

    It's a difficult one to describe. It begins how you would imagine a thriller would begin, as described in the synopsis. However, as the girl's story is recounted it gradually becomes characterized not just by the oddness of the girl's family and their strange living arrangements, but by a sense of detachment from the world outside the ghost estate. The family seem unmoored from the real world, meandering through an undefined life. Beautifully and eerily written, anything seems possible in their isolation. The gothic element takes the form of the aforementioned inexplicable noises, words appearing on the window, and the family slowly vanishing.

    There is no real point to this novel, it is all about the atmosphere and getting lost in something a bit different. The ending was very interesting - it definitely raised a lot of questions (none of which are answered) and brought up a very broad range of possibilities in my mind. There was one unnecessary bit at the end, I felt, which made me bring my rating down to 4 stars from 5, but overall this is a really unique, immersive, and enjoyable story.

    Rating: 4/5 
  8. County: Louth

    Book: Nothing on Earth - Conor O'Callaghan

     

    Genre: Gothic/Mystery/Fiction

    Synopsis: It was a time when nobody called. Early evening, the hottest August in living memory. A frightened girl bangs on a door. A man answers. From the moment he invites her in, his world will never be the same again. She tells him about her family, and their strange life in the show home of an abandoned housing estate. The long, blistering days spent sunbathing; the airless nights filled with inexplicable noises; the words that appear on the windows, written in dust. Where is her family now? Is she telling the truth? Can the man be trusted? Beautiful and disturbing, her story – retold in his words – reaches towards those frayed edges of reality where each of us, if only once, glimpses something nobody will ever explain.

     

    ***
     

    Review: Having heard great reviews of this book, I wanted to read it for ages. After purchasing it, I put it aside due to being on a roll with thrillers, and an awareness that (in my experience of my Irish Counties Challenge), some Irish authors are a bit too lyrical in their writing for their books to be easy reads. However, for whatever reason, I decided to pick this one up a couple of weeks ago, and it was an unexpected delight. It's a short novel, so I tore through 80% of it in one day, having read a few pages the night before.

    It's a difficult one to describe. It begins how you would imagine a thriller would begin, as described in the synopsis. However, as the girl's story is recounted it gradually becomes characterized not just by the oddness of the girl's family and their strange living arrangements, but by a sense of detachment from the world outside the ghost estate. The family seem unmoored from the real world, meandering through an undefined life. Beautifully and eerily written, anything seems possible in their isolation. The gothic element takes the form of the aforementioned inexplicable noises, words appearing on the window, and the family slowly vanishing.

    There is no real point to this novel, it is all about the atmosphere and getting lost in something a bit different. The ending was very interesting - it definitely raised a lot of questions (none of which are answered) and brought up a very broad range of possibilities in my mind. There was one unnecessary bit at the end, I felt, which made me bring my rating down to 4 stars from 5, but overall this is a really unique, immersive, and enjoyable story.

    Rating: 4/5 

  9. I would love if public transport was sufficient in Ireland to not need a car. I don't have one, neither I nor OH can drive, but the older I get the more I want to be able to simply for convenience. Work is a 10 minute drive from me, or a 40 minute walk. Getting the bus takes 45 - 50 mins, including the walking to and from on either end. As well as that, we can't bring our dog anywhere, or go anywhere that public transport doesn't go (which in the west of Ireland, is a LOT of places). I love the idea of being able to drive, and just borrow a car when needed. I could just hire one for the day when we want to e.g. to take the dog to the beach, and that's a route we may go down, but I may also just get a little car.

  10. I finished Pretty Girls yesterday. I was underwhelmed, to say the least (though to be fair I had very high expectations). Definitely as graphic as everyone said and the characters were engaging (as was the Carroll family's story), but I thought the plotting and pacing were kind of terrible. There was only one twist, everything else I saw coming from a quarter of the way in. @frankie I really look forward to your thoughts on it. I also got really into it, and tore through it, but was still left underwhelmed.

     

    I've started the third Matilda Darke book, which so far I am loving (as usual). It's weird though, because a character in the book was named after an Irish book blogger I know of on Goodreads, and I can't help but picture the blogger instead of the tough prison guard I'm meant to be picturing! :lol:

  11. We had a pretty nice weekend. On Saturday we went to the Fota Island Resort spa to use the pool and other spa facilities (not any actual spa treatments), courtesy of OH's boss. It was a little bit soured by the fact that it was meant to be a thank you from the boss, since OH manned the shop and did two people's jobs for over 3 months, and continues to be the backbone of keeping the customer-facing shop going, but it wasn't much of a thank you when the boss kept forgetting to book it, said he'd pay for travel and didn't, and the travel cost more than the 25 euro per person he spent for us to basically use a pool. We didn't expect anything, but we did wish that after something had been promised it would have been followed through on.

     

    Anyway, we're very easily pleased and had a grand aul time in the pool and surrounding facilities. On Sunday I spent literally 9 hours playing through 2,5 episodes of Life Is Strange. I took yesterday off, and divided my time between reading and cross-stitching. The only thing I didn't get done was a bit of study, so all in all a good weekend.

     

    Also, I recently got told that there may be a permanent job-opportunity here in the university next month that I should go for. I was a bit torn at first, as it's a job I've done before and hated, and I've already sunk a grand into study and been literally a couple of months researching ways to retrain and upskill in administration, as well as finding a place on a course. It's the most preparation I've made for my future probably ever, which I did because I was so convinced that once my job here ended in September, that was really it this time. I've decided I'll go for the job because of the permanence and financial security, and if I get it, I'll keep studying in my own time. Will be harder and take longer, and might come to nothing, but it'll definitely come to nothing if I don't try. Plus, I may not get the job, in which case, on with the course.

  12. I've read another 6 books since my last update, not sure if I'll review them all but I'll definitely write something for a few of them.

     

    Also, I've read another Irish Counties Challenge book, which is the first this year, I think. Must read more, but happy I've done one. I'm not sure if the author is from Down or Louth, as different sources say he's from Newry but was born in Dundalk. So I'm guessing he grew up in Newry, and am counting him as Dundalk (Louth) because he was born there (and my options for Louth are slim!). It was a really good book too, one I'll definitely be writing a review for.

  13. I finished The Escape by C. L. Taylor. It wasn't as good as The Missing, but I still enjoyed it.

     

    Also read How I Lost You by Jenny Blackhurst. Really enjoyed this one, more than the other one I've read by her (Before I Let You In).

     

    I've started Pretty Girls by Karin Slaughter, and am about 70 pages in. It made me realize how many British thrillers I read, because this one being set in America seems really weird to me now! I do prefer my British thrillers (or Irish ones!), they seem a bit more 'real' to me, as I am more familiar with my neighboring countries and the cultures I suppose. I am enjoying Pretty Girls, though.

  14. I didn't do my totals on Sunday, so here they are. I included Thursday simply because I read almost an entire (187 page) short book that day and wanted to count it!

     

    Thursday: Nothing on Earth - Conor O'Callaghan 161 pages (finished)

    Friday:      The Escape - C. L. Taylor 280 pages

    Saturday: The Escape C. L. Taylor 153 pages (finished)

                     The Slap - Christos Tsiolkas 177 pages (finished)

                     How I Lost You - Jenny Blackhurst 140 pages

    Sunday:    How I Lost You - Jenny Blackhurst 212 pages (finished)

                     Pretty Girls - Karin Slaughter 40 pages

     

    Total: 1163 pages across five books.

     

    Definitely the most reading I've done in ages and the best read-a-thon since sometime last year. Very happy with that :)

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