Friday, July 21, 2017

Book 12: The Half-Drowned King by Linnea Hartsuyker

Note: I know the author of this book socially, and I received an advance reader copy in exchange for a fair and honest review. 

As someone who loves historical fiction, I was extremely excited when a friend of mine started working on a Viking saga many years ago. In a novel which spans many lands and characters, the broader narratives of power and conquest are told primarily through the experiences of a brother and sister, Ragnvald and Svanhild, and how their lives intersect with Solvi, the son of a king. Ragnvald is betrayed within the first chapter by Solvi and then learns that this was the result of a far larger betrayal carried out by his stepfather Olaf and by Solvi's father, one of the many kings of small holdings of land throughout Norway. Ragnvald is determined to take back the land and status he considers to be rightfully his, but he must weigh his desire for revenge against the shifting tides of allegiance among the various rulers of the land. This personal struggle plays out against the larger reality that Harald, one of the kings in question, has far greater ambition than to simply rule a small part of Norway: he wants to rule it all

Ragnvald's experience is contrasted with Svanhild's constrained life as a woman, and in particular as a woman with no living father and no brother present to help protect her. She makes brave and often reckless choices in order to avoid an untenable fate for herself, and her decisions result in her being at odds with her own brother at times. I really loved her journey, especially given that at various points Ragnvald bears more than a passing resemblance to Hamlet: he almost always knows what he wants to do, but often his sense of obligation and honor and self-preservation prevents him from taking that action. He is very conscious of what the long-term consequences of his actions might be, and what his place in a world ruled by Harald would be (and what it would be if Harald fails), and he sometimes hesitates when he would be better served to act (and vice versa). Svanhild, on the other hand, doesn't have the luxury of such contemplation, which makes her arc incredibly vibrant and unpredictable as well. 

The POV of this novel also manages to walk a very tricky line of presenting the religious and, at times, supernatural beliefs of the culture as being real to the characters, while not making a judgment for the reader as to the truth of them. I really liked that approach, and I felt it worked extremely well for this particular story and world. It allowed me to simply accept their reality without questioning my own interpretations of events, which never disrupted the flow of the story.   

One of the things I love most about reading historical fiction is the opportunity to learn about various historical periods and cultures that I know very little about. The Half-Drowned King drops you right into the middle of its tale, and the reader is left to swim their way to shore, much like the titular character. That isn't a complaint, by the way; I found the experience of genuinely not having a sense of where the narrative was going to be fascinating. I didn't have a level of familiarity with Viking culture in the 9th century to know what was likely to happen, and I definitely didn't want to google the real life inspirations for many of these characters and events and inadvertently spoil myself. Preventing myself from doing so will be even more difficult as I wait for the second and third novels of the trilogy, but I am positive that my patience will be rewarded in the end.

Grade: A

Monday, June 19, 2017

Book 11: An Unnatural Vice by KJ Charles

This book is everything for me that the first book in this series wasn't, oh my goodness. Justin Lazarus is a supernatural medium, a man who makes his living by tricking rich people and telling them what they want to hear, and Nathaniel Roy is a journalist out to expose Justin's entire trade. They both find themselves in the middle of a far more complicated and dangerous story than that, and somehow they go from enemies to lovers in the process. Justin is a character type that KJ Charles writes better than just about anyone, and the balance between him and Nathaniel is perfect and satisfying. I understood better what the first book in the series was setting up after reading this one, and it made me like some of those characters better as well. My one critique of this book is simply that I thought it could have been longer; there's a section in which Justin and Nathaniel have to flee London together for a while, and I would have loved for that to have gone even further in depth than it did. The third book in the series comes out this fall, and I cannot wait to read it.

Grade: A 

Book 10: On Point by Annabeth Albert

Oh god, this book had so much potential, and it did not live up to any of it, woof. The setup is something out of my contemporary romance novel dreams: Ben and Maddox have been best friends since SEAL training, and a decade later they're SEAL teammates and also roommates whose friendship is complicated by a threesome they have with a twink from a gay club. But before they can talk about their feelings, they go on a rescue mission that goes bad and both of them are severely injured.

Now, so far this setup is fantastic! At this point we could have amnesia, or one of them confessing his love and then thinking the other one didn't hear him/didn't remember because of the live-threatening injuries, or one of them could almost die because he sacrificed himself to save the other one, or all kinds of things! And instead, they get back to the States after going through this horribly traumatic event, and then they decide to fake date each other? Only they're really dating, they're just...not calling it that? But also going to Ben's dad's wedding together. None of it makes sense, and it has nothing to do with the first half of the book, and all of their emotional issues and how they respond to them don't feel like how real people act at all. But beyond that, they don't feel like decade-long friends to me. Ben is shocked to discover that Maddox wants to leave the Navy and open a bakery. Maddox also has a totally fucked up family situation that is a major plot point while he's in the hospital after almost dying and is then completely dropped after that. This book feels like two novellas stapled together, with no emotional consistency or logic to it. I've liked a bunch of other books by this author, but this one did not work for me at all.

Grade: C

Book 9: Save the Date by Annabeth Albert and Wendy Qualls

So many tropes that I love in one book! Quiet bookish scientist Randall's in town for his sister's wedding, and they go out to a gay bar as part of her bachelorette party. While there, he meets a hot stranger and decides it's time to actually hook up with a guy and stop being so shy! What are the odds that this stranger is also in town for the same wedding and is Randall's future brother-in-law's childhood best friend?

I love the setup of an inexperienced guy discovering sex and love unexpectedly, I love the conflict of them being thrown together during the insanity of a family wedding, and I just really loved the chemistry that they had together. Randall and Hunter work together so well, and they had just the right level of backstory angst and miscommunication mishaps. The whole thing worked for me, start to finish.

Grade: A 

Book 8: At Attention by Annabeth Albert

This is the sort of book that had me at hello. It's a story about Apollo, a single dad who needs a babysitter for his twins. Dylan, his best friend's younger brother, would be perfect for the job...except that Dylan is all grown up and hot and Apollo still isn't over the loss of his husband. Can he find love again??? I just don't know!

Part of what makes this book work so well is that Dylan is exactly the right level of aggressive. He's the younger dude who has to push Apollo out of his emotional shell, and there's nothing creepy or inappropriate about how Apollo treats him. The book probably lasts about three or four chapters longer than I felt was totally necessary, but I liked the characters and the world enough that I didn't mind, and I really enjoyed their happily ever after.

Grade: B

Book 7: An Unseen Attraction by KJ Charles

Sometimes you read a book by an author you love and the only thing you can really say about it is that it's not the book for you. I am obviously a huge fan of this author, and I don't regret reading this book in large part because it's the first book of a trilogy and I absolutely adored the second book in this series, but the setup of the story just really didn't work for me. In part that's because the book starts well after the main couple in the story has already become friends, and while I can often enjoy a friends-to-romance story, in this particular story there was just no there there. The pacing of the reveals about Clem, one of the main characters who's got a bunch of family secrets that are relevant to the entire trilogy, felt really off to me, and I never quite felt the way I thought I was supposed to about his romance with Rowley, a taxidermist with a heart of gold. It just wasn't for me.

Grade: C

Book 6: The Lawrence Browne Affair by Cat Sebastian

Okay so this book is basically everything I want in a m/m historical romance. We have a rogue with secrets who has a heart of gold, a mad scientist who's a recluse and has his OWN secrets, a gothic backstory that actually makes sense and comes to a satisfying resolution, both external conflict that matters and emotional conflict that can only be solved by both characters communicating and growing and they actually do that, and all of the supporting characters are great and charming and don't just feel like plot devices. Essentially, if the idea of a Beauty and the Beast story in which the Beauty is a con artist who gets a job as the secretary for the mad scientist Beast (who is essentially like Belle's father) appeals to you, go read this book immediately. I read it four months ago and loved it and now I'm going to read it again in preparation for this author's next book, which is due out soon.

Grade: A

Friday, February 3, 2017

Book 5: The Soldier's Scoundrel by Cat Sebastian

What a delightful m/m regency romance by a new-to-me author! Oliver Rivington is a former captain who is now at loose ends after his time in the army is cut short by a leg injury. Jack Turner is a man who takes care of problems for ladies when more conventional (and legal) methods won't do. They find themselves thrown together when Oliver discovers that Jack has done some sort of service on behalf of his sister Lady Montbray. Oliver is repelled by Jack's loose regard for the law, and Jack has sworn to himself that he would never be so foolish as to fall for a gentleman, so I'm sure you can all see where this is going.

I really enjoyed the set-up, and the examination of class, and in general the pairing of a morally righteous yet lonely gentleman and a prickly rogue with a secret heart of gold is always going to work for me. I found the mystery the two of them worked together to solve fairly compelling as well. My only real complaint about the book is that the two of them would occasionally get mad at each other for reasons that were never particularly believable, and the great conflict they have is the sort that either should matter a lot (and not be as easily solved as the book's end suggests it is) or not actually be that big of a deal. But those issues didn't do anything to truly affect my enjoyment of the overall story. The next book by this author featuring one of the minor characters in this novel comes out next week, and I will definitely be reading it.

Grade: A

Book 4: The Lie Tree by France Hardinge

This was my January book club read, and man, I loved it. It takes place in the 19th century and focuses on a fourteen year old girl named Faith whose family is in the middle of a mysterious crisis. Her father is a minister and well-respected naturalist until an article accuses him of forgery, and he and his family are forced to flee England for the tiny island of Vane. Faith has long idolized her father and his work, and her attempts to discover the truth behind her family leaving England and her father's alleged misdeeds make up the first third of the novel, until an unexpected death turns the story into a murder mystery. And then we finally get to the lie tree at the heart of it all.

This was the sort of book that I liked a lot for most of it, and then the final five pages turned it into a book I loved; everything that I had found frustrating or that had made me angry pays off, in the end, and it left me wanting nothing. It was a fascinating book to read after having read Bill Bryson's A Short History of Nearly Everything, in part because the conflicts within the upper class scientific community in the novel echoed the actual history so closely that it made it super easy for me to buy into the more fantastical elements of the story. It managed to feel both totally grounded in reality and just out of focus enough to make the mystery ring true. I would categorize this book as historical magical realism YA, which is a mouthful but anything less wouldn't quite capture it all. A fantastic story, beautifully written and beautifully told.

Grade: A

Wednesday, January 25, 2017

Book 3: Wanted, A Gentleman by KJ Charles

Oh look, it's a KJ Charles book that I really enjoyed, imagine that!

This is a standalone regency romance with a framing device I found quite clever - one of the two main characters, Theo, is a writer of romantic melodramas, and the story itself fits within that genre. The characters have an awareness of that at times, but it never collapses under the weight of the meta, and the central love story is charming and compelling.

In addition to writing novels, Theo also runs the equivalent of a personal ads publication. One of the people using his service is the daughter of the former master of Martin St. Vincent, a black man who had been freed by his owner at the age of eighteen. His former master asked him to put a stop to the romance between his daughter and an unknown man, and Martin then enlists Theo's assistance in this matter.

One of the things I love about KJ Charles's books is that she writes historical romances that don't gloss over the realities of an earlier era in order to give the reader a nice romance. Instead she works within that reality to show us a more complete picture while also giving characters we don't often focus on - a free black man and a working class white man in a big financial bind - a chance for a believable and satisfying happy ending. All this while crafting a romance that's well-explored and very sexy. I always feel like I'm getting the chance to read something brand new from her that also scratches the romance itch. I am already looking forward to my first reread of this book.

Grade: A 

Tuesday, January 10, 2017

Book 2: The Long Road Home by Sarah Granger

Sarah Granger wrote one of my favorite m/m historical romance novels (A Minor Inconvenience), so last night I decided to check to see if she'd published any other historical romances that I had missed. This one is more of a novella, and it's kind of a quintessential early book - I can see the foundation for what made A Minor Inconvenience such a delightful book, but The Long Road Home is lacking both the depth and the conflict that made her later book so wonderful.

The story is set in a non-specific historical era, with ruling princes and horses and wars fought and won with bows and arrows and swords, but there's no attempt to actually ground it anyplace or time. Basically, a visiting prince stays at Sir Andrew's estate, and he takes a fancy to the groom, who's wonderful with horses and also is a veteran of the same war the prince himself fought in. There are allusions to secret traumatic pasts for both of them, but we never really get into their backstories, and while the banter between the two of them is readable enough, I never got a sense of why they were supposed to be in love rather than just enjoying a tumble in the hay. The dangers of rummaging through an author's back catalog, I suppose.

Grade: C 

Book 1: The Summer Palace by CS Pacat

Man, I really wanted to love this post-series short story for the Captive Prince books, but I did not. Spoilers for the series and thoughts on what didn't work for me and why under the cut.


Monday, January 9, 2017

2017 Master List


Here is my list of books to read in 2017! There are currently 55 books on the list, which compared with the 132 that I was trying to read last year seems VERY SHORT. However, I can add more books to this list, unlike last year's, when I was deliberately not acquiring new books to read. There are other books that I'm interested in reading this year that I don't own yet (or have requested from the library), like the Rivers of London series and Six of Crows, but I'm not going to add them to the list until I actually have a copy of them. It's so strange, I really do feel like I should be able to just knock all of these books out, but given that we're nine days into 2017 and I've only read one novella so far, my reading pace will have to pick up a lot for that to be the case! Let's see how it goes.



Book 98: A Private Miscellany by KJ Charles

What a lovely little post-series short story this is. A free download for subscribers to her newsletter, this is just a delightful epilogue of sorts to the Society of Gentlemen books. One of my favorite aspects of it is that it's told via letters and newspaper postings interwoven with straightforward prose, which really made me appreciate again how strong her voices are - there's a specificity to all of her characters' voices that is especially wonderful in historical romance.

The story focuses on all four of the main couples to some extent, but the relationship that really gets the chance to shine in my opinion is Silas and Dom. I love the future that she's created for them, and I loved how the scene we get with them (along with bits of correspondence between the two of them and other characters) furthers our understanding of who they are and how they work together, while also being insanely hot. It made me want to go back and reread the entire series again, starting with the short story that kicks it all off. Hers is a newsletter well worth subscribing for, no question.

Grade: A

Book 97: Ghost by Jason Reynolds

I read this book for my YA book club. It's actually a middle grade book, but it definitely is a story that straddles the gap between grade school chapter books and YA in terms of themes. It's about a young black boy named Ghost, who is slipping through life undetected, and running from his circumstances until he stumbles upon a track team with a coach who can teach him how to just run.

This story hit a lot of similar notes as the movie Moonlight did for me, although the intended audience for the two works are obviously different, but there's an overlap and a common resonance in the two stories. One of the things that I really liked about Ghost was that it took a situation that we hear about often - a black boy being raised by a single mother, his father out of the picture under traumatic circumstances, no sense of community or connection he can grasp onto - and the story brings elements and people into his life that can help fill in those gaps. At times it feels almost too easy, but that's true of lots of stories for kids in this age range, with the difference being that usually a kid like Ghost never gets that happy ending, even in fiction.

At times I had that feeling of identifying far more with the adults that I did with Ghost, or wishing that he wouldn't do the not-great things that a kid would do, but obviously in some ways that's the sign of a book that's actually written for a kid and not for their parents. It's the first book in a series, with each subsequent book focusing on a different kid on the track team, and I would definitely recommend it to middle grade readers.

Grade: B

Book 96: Pompeii by Robert Harris

I had seen this book on one of my parents' bookshelves for at least a decade, and it had always intrigued me, because I didn't quite know how a book about a historical volcanic eruption could manage to have suspense and intrigue and all that since, well, we know what happens. But it was also mentioned in Nick Hornby's book (the author of Pompeii is his brother-in-law), and that plus my curiosity about just how this story could work was enough to make me finally pick up and read it.

The answer to the question of how do you build in suspense for a natural disaster is, apparently, aqueducts. The main character is Marcus, an engineer who has just arrived in nearby Misenum after the engineer in charge of the aqueduct supplying the string of cities including Pompeii has disappeared. He's surrounded by corruption and incompetence, and I'll admit that I spent the first half of the book wondering what possible relevance any of this intrigue could have given the eruption the reader knows is coming. But it all ties together beautifully, and both the historical description and the lives of these invented characters are compelling enough to pull you along through the story. This book was exactly what I wanted to read in the first month or so post-election, for whatever reason, and I really enjoyed it.

Grade: A