Waiting on Wednesday : The Stone in the Skull (Lotus Kingdoms #1) by Elizabeth Bear


“Waiting On Wednesday” is a weekly meme that was created by Breaking the Spine.  Every Wednesday we highlight a book that we’re really looking forward to.  This week my book is : The Stone in the Skull (Lotus Kingdoms #1) by Elizabeth Bear

stone.jpgThe Stone in the Skull, the first volume in her new trilogy, takes readers over the dangerous mountain passes of the Steles of the Sky and south into the Lotus Kingdoms.

The Gage is a brass automaton created by a wizard of Messaline around the core of a human being. His wizard is long dead, and he works as a mercenary. He is carrying a message from a the most powerful sorcerer of Messaline to the Rajni of the Lotus Kingdom. With him is The Dead Man, a bitter survivor of the body guard of the deposed Uthman Caliphate, protecting the message and the Gage. They are friends, of a peculiar sort.

They are walking into a dynastic war between the rulers of the shattered bits of a once great Empire.

Due October 2017 so not too much longer to wait.

School’s out forever

Posted On 22 August 2017

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Every Tuesday over at  The Broke and Bookish we all get to look at a particular topic for discussion and use various (or more to the point ten) examples to demonstrate that particular topic.  This week’s topic is:

Back To School Freebie

The following are all books I recall reading in my early teens – I became a little bit obsessed with the classics at the time so they made up a lot of my reading:

  1. Rebecca by Daphne DuMaurier – this remains one of my favourite books.  I love this and also Jamaica Inn which I read around the same time.
  2. Gone with the Wind by Margaret Mitchell – I was completely sucked into this book, I could barely put it down – the romance just swept me away.
  3. Lord of the Rings by Tolkien – this book is amazing, I reread it fairly recently and still love it.
  4. Pride and Prejudice – which definitely set me off on a Jane Austen splurge of reading.
  5. Great Expectations by Charles Dickens.  I haven’t read much of Dickens but I do really like this one.
  6. Christmas Carol by Charles Dickens – another favourite, and short story with a good message.  I had a romantic whimsy as a teenager that made me want to read this every Christmas.
  7. The Hobbit by Tolkien – I didn’t enjoy this book at the time, it was a school reading and being forced to stand up and read, or equally listening to the painfully embarrassing reading of others rather killed the story off at the time.
  8. Lord of the Flies by William Golding – this is a book that I feel I should reread.  I can’t remember really well what my feelings were at the time.  I liked it of course and found it shocking.  It would be interesting to see how I felt about it now.
  9. The Day of the Triffids by John Wyndham – I really enjoyed this book and have actually reread it a few years ago.
  10. I’ve left this blank for you to tell me one of your well remembered school age reads.

Weekly Wrap Up : 20/8/17

Posted On 20 August 2017

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August is slowly diminishing, the summer is rolling onwards apace. This has been a busy month for me on a personal level and my reading has slowed somewhat – I’m not experiencing a slump in books more that I just have so many things occupying my time.  Still, I have read a couple of books and I now need to write a few reviews up.

Hope you all had a good week.  Here are my books:

  1. The Curious Affair of the Witch of Wayside Cross by Lisa Tuttle
  2. The Punch Escrow by Tal M. Klein

I’m still reading Naamah’s Blessing by Jacqueline Carey, this is for a readalong that I’m behind for but hoping to catch up soon.  I’m also still listening to Neil Gaiman’s American Gods and loving it.

Next week I’m hoping to read:

  1. Swarm and Steel by Michael R Fletcher
  2. The Word is Murder by Anthony Horowitz
  3. The Turn by Kim Harrison

My cover compare this week is for a book that I’m really looking forward to – very much:

I love the first cover – the colours, the fairytale feel, the tower, everything, but then the second cover is gorgeous too – it reminds me of a beautiful tapestry topped with Christmas icing.  I can’t choose.  What’s your favourite?

How was your week? What you currently reading?

‘Mine eyes smell onions; I shall weep anon.’

Posted On 18 August 2017

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FFO.jpg

Here we are again with the Friday Face Off meme created by Books by Proxy .   This is a great opportunity to feature some of your favourite book covers.  The rules are fairly simple each week, following a predetermined theme (list below) choose a book, compare a couple of the different covers available for that particular book and choose your favourite.   Future week’s themes are listed below. This week’s theme:

The world was my oyster but I used the wrong fork (A cover which features food)

This book cover is the only one that I could come up with this week!

My favourite this week:

I’ve had to go with the obvious one this week:

twi1

Which is your favourite?

Next week – Insect

Future themes:

25th August 2017 – If I be waspish, best beware my sting (A cover which features an insect)

1st September 2017 – Being born in a stable does not make one a horse (A cover which features a horse)

8th September 2017 – That great condenser of moral chaos, The City (A cover which features a city)

Snowspelled (The Harwood Spellbook) by Stephanie Burgis

snowspelledSnowspelled is the latest book that I’ve read and enjoyed by the wonderful Stephanie Burgis and I can say in all sincerity that I hope that there are more adventures from the plucky new heroine from within these pages.

This is an entertaining, Austen style, Regency period set in an alternate country known as Angland.  Mr Bennett would surely run for his inner sanctum if he was magically transported to this universe where women are the politicians and men deal with the magical elements.  The countryside is a place where trolls hide in the snow and elves appear mysteriously and silently along secret paths.

As the story begins we make the acquaintance of Cassandra Harwood.  Accompanied by her brother and sister-in-law Cassandra has foolishly accepted an invitation to a party and now deeply regrets that decision.  Her ex-fiancee will be present and whilst the stubborn part of her wishes to attend to prove to everyone else, and perhaps herself most of all, that she is over the relationship, you can immediately detect that her emotions are still running deep.  On top of that a strange snow storm has broken out, many of the invitees have found the roads impassable and it seems that one particular group of young females has gone missing in the storm.  Always a bit of a rule breaker Cassandra is determined to be part of the search party, even though she no longer has the ability to wield magic and so begins a string of events that see Cassandra making an unlikely agreement with a rather devious elf Lord – and the clock is ticking.

The world here is one in which a tentative pact exists between humans and elves, a pact that requires a renewal and show of faith at certain times of the year – for example the Solstice.  It would be considered incredibly rude and a massive slight if things didn’t run to plan, the elf King would be affronted and some of his subjects, the ones who maybe don’t like having their hunting enjoyment curtailed, would be only to happy to see the pact fail and so Cassandra is under incredible pressure to solve the mystery of the snow storm.

Being an alternate history this gives the author the freedom to turn things on their head and Burgis takes great enjoyment in doing so and thereby creating a witty and charming story of manners with a difference.  The ladies retire to the drawing room after dinner and the gentleman await a call to inform them that they may now enter – the important political matters having been dealt with.  I loved the world created here, there’s so much to explore and I truly hope that there will be further series.

In terms of the characters.  I liked Cassandra, she’s certainly an easy character to read and I was definitely curious about her story – being the first woman to enter the all male world of magic and actually becoming one of the foremost magicians of the period.  I feel that there is plenty more from this aspect of the story and that the author is simply whetting our appetites here.

Now, as you may know, I don’t tend to read a lot of books that focus on romance and there is undoubtedly a romance that plays a fairly central theme here, but, this has such a lovely period feel that I simply couldn’t resist, plus it isn’t the main thread of the story, just an aspect that helps to create chemistry and build tension.

This is undoubtedly a step away from the grimdark blood filled books that I quite often read but it was a lovely and welcome respite.  It brought back fond memories of some of my earlier classical reads and succeeded in bringing back to light a Regency style story with a more modern twist.  I had fun reading this, it was light and charming and a book that I devoured in one helping.  In (almost) the words of Oliver Twist – please Miss, I want  some more.

In terms of criticisms – my usual refrain, as a novella I wanted much much more but I guess that’s not a bad criticism really, after all, if I wasn’t enjoying it I would have wanted a much quicker end to the story.

I received a copy courtesy of the author for which my sincere thanks.  The above is my own opinion.

I would also quickly give a little shout out for that cover which I think is just lovely.

 

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