Top Ten Tuesday: Modern Books You Think Will Be Classics In The Future 

TTT

Today is the first Top Ten Tuesday I’ve participated in for a while, mainly because of being busy and personal reasons, but, I’m getting back on track and, I love this topic.  So, here’s my take on modern books (which I’m taking to mean recently written as oppose to contemporary setting – although, obviously, you could interpret it either way) that I think could be classics in the future:

King Sorrow by Joe Hill – I haven’t written my review for this one yet but I absolutely loved it.  It’s a chunkster of a book but it’s so good that it doesn’t feel that way.

The Everlasting by Alix E Harrow – this is another recent read that I loved.  Again, I haven’t posted my review yet (which will follow shortly) but this was so good.  The writing is fantastic, the story is totally absorbing, literally a story that spreads across the ages.

Ten Thousand Doors of January by Alix E Harrow – yes, two books by the same author on this list.  It probably seems a little indulgent but I love her books and this particular book is like a love letter to readers.

Station Eleven, the Glass Hotel and Sea of Tranquility by Emily St John Mandell.  This is not a series as such but the books all interconnect in ways that you wouldn’t be aware of without having read the others.  Basically, each book is a standalone and brilliant in it’s own right but if you have the pleasure of reading all three, well, it’s really quite mind blowing.

The Justice of Kings, The Tyranny of Faith and The Trials of Empire by Richard Swan.  Fantasy books with murder mysteries, epic in their scopo but with a more modern feel in terms of ease of reading, great writing and totally gripping.  I would love to see these books become recognised for the scope, writing and originality.

A Dowry of Blood by ST Gibson.  I’m not always a fan of classic retellings but this story works.  Told from the point of view of one of Dracula’s ‘bride’s this is a dark tale of doubt and seduction and based itself on a ‘classic’ I would love to see it last the test of time.

A Boy and His Dog at the end of the World.  Such a fantastic tale, told in a way to deliver a really powerful twist.  I loved it and didn’t see it coming.

The Mermaid and Mrs Hancock by Imogen Hermes Gowar.  Oh dear me, how much did I love this book?  Ridiculously so.  It’s an absolute keeper.  A new story told in a way that brings all the charm of many older classics but easily readable and with hints of fantasy.

The Winternight Trilogy by Katherine Arden.  The Bear and the Nightingale, The Girl in the Tower, The Winter of the Witch.  This series is so good, beautiful writing, fairytale fantasy and Russian Folklore.  Quite mesmerising.

Finally, The Broken Empire series by Mark Lawrence.  This series definitely falls into the ‘grimdark’ genre (and, as such, maybe isn’t for everyone) but being the first of it’s kind that I read it felt so unique and unusual, plus the writing is superb and the overall scope, of not only this series, but all the following series by this author, well, it really is impressive.

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Delayed Update? Booking Ahead/Weekly Wrap Up

Sunday Post

Weekly Update

Well, until the last month I was doing very well with my review books – then everything went to hell in a handcart and you think to yourself that’s hubris for ya because up to that point I was actually on track!  Anyway,  here we are.  I’m back to blogging, slowly catching up with all you peeps out there.  Reading my books – and my lord I’m having some good reads.  This week, I completed The Everlasting by Alix E Harrow – if any book was going to bring me to tears it would be this.  Absolutely brilliant.  I loved it.

Next Week’s reads

I’d like to read The Blackfire Blade by James Logan because I feel like I’ve been bursting at the seams to pick this up for so long now. And, maybe I’ll have time to pick up The Austen Christmas Murders by Jessica Bull – I’m really enjoying this series.

Reviews Posted:

King Sorrow by Joe Hill (spoiler alert – this book is phenomenal)

Outstanding Reviews

Review: King Sorrow by Joe Hill

My Five Word TL:DR Review: Where Do I Even Begin?

This book!  It definitely has the wow factor.  I’m not gonna lie – when I saw the page count was just shy of 900 pages I had a little moment – but, having been granted a wish and receiving a review copy I also confess I was dancing a little happy dance.  I’m only sorry that this review is later than planned due to personal reasons that I won’t bore everyone with.

First things first, this book didn’t feel like I’d read 900 pages!  I’m absolutely serious.  I’m not going to say I breezed through this in a couple of nights because that would just be silly (for me at least) but I was enjoying myself so much that I practically inhaled the first 30% of the story (which is  a book in itself if we’re going to be honest).

Secondly, how to even begin to review this.  I don’t really want to talk too much about the story so this will probably be more a short recap and then a good amount of gushing about what I really liked.

In a nutshell, King Sorrow (and I do love the title) brings to us a bunch of characters, friends (although they don’t always act like it) that strike a kind-of ‘Faustian” bargain – but with a dragon instead of the devil.  And, to be fair, deals with devils, dragons and the fae – well, they’re never quite what they first appear.  This is a sneaky dragon and these ‘young uns’ really didn’t look into the finer detail of what they were actually getting into. Long story short, this wasn’t a one time deal, it’s for life, and if our little group of friends don’t get their acts together they’ll be next up on the menu.

What worked really well for me?  Well, everything to be fair.

The writing is perfection.  It’s been a while since Joe Hill’s last book but this was, without doubt, worth the wait.  A mystery, a fantasy, a horror and a story told by a group of friends who fall into a terrible pact that changes their lives beyond their wildest dreams (or nightmares), and definitely not in a good way.  It has that wonderful feeling of familiarity somehow, like there’s elements of other much loved books (just enough to make you recall them but not enough to feel the same) A Secret History, for example, when the friends are a group of privileged students attending an elite college together (all except for one of their number that is), there are hints of Tolkien (terrible dragon! quest), and elements of old folklore – Arthurian legend (two of the characters are named Arthur and Gwen) but with a feminist twist and all sorts of wonderful little references to other books that I really enjoyed – of course, it’s possible that I just imagined those (or give things extra meaning than was intended) but I enjoyed myself regardless!  The author has impeccable timing.  I didn’t want to read a novel that turns into a yearly hit list, as creative as that might become, and so to keep up the momentum we move on to other dreadful encounters such as abduction and then deeper still into the land of fantasy with trolls and a seemingly impossible quest.  Come on, everyone loves a quest!  This is a story that is constantly evolving, rolling forward and taking you in directions that you really didn’t expect or see coming.

The characters are really good, their development so well crafted.  I mean, would they be friends in the later stages if not for this terrible deal they struck?  Probably not.  As it is, they’re stuck with each other and, without doubt, the dreadful pact they made and it’s implications definitely shaped them in ways that would probably not have otherwise occured.  There’s lost love, lust, manipulation, death, sorrow and definitely some backstabbing.  I’m not even sure who the main character is.  I felt like it started off as Arthur, perhaps it was Gwen?  But, the others also have their share of the limelight as the story moves forward into the most unexpected territory.  Hill manages to tie in many world events in a really creative way, even making this small group come to the notice of people that would be incredibly dangerous, if not for the fact that they have their very own secret weapon.

Then we have the dragon.  An entity that can cross into our world.  Despicable, cruel, can’t be bargained with, absolutely will not stop (much like the Terminator) until the mission is accomplished, and loves a good riddle.  I loved the way that this dragon is bigger than an aeroplane and yet small enough to fit under your bed or into a cupboard.  He can tap you on the shoulder with one claw that seems to come from the dark shadows in the corner of the room and loves nothing more than to cause confusion and discord between these friends – it’s like an ode to the imagination, anything is possible here.   (I admit that I had the voice of Smaug running through my head at times!)

I’m not sure that I can really do this book justice.  It’s definitely one of the best stories I’ve read for a long while.  I was totally blown away and frankly I’d love to read it again because I think it would be even more satisfying the second time around.  Perhaps I’ll pick up the audio copy and see how that compares.

Anyway, in conclusion, I have no hesitation in recommending this.  Yes, it is a weighty tome indeed but it’s worth every minute of your time.  Savour it and be happy.

I received a copy through Netgalley, courtesy of the publisher, for which my thanks.  The above is my own opinion.

My rating 5 of 5 scorching, dragon breath stars

Monthly/Weekly Wrap Up/What’s On My Plate July/August

I’m trying to post a wrap up for the end of each month, mainly to help me to keep track of my reading and at the same time look at what I’m intending to read during the month ahead (inspired by Books Bones and Buffy’s What’s on My Plate.

This month’s wrap up post will be a bit messy again like last month’s because I’m combining it with my weekly wrap up.

Weekly Update

The weather has been great, my hip is improving little by little every day and the reading has also been very good.  So, in the past week I read The Bone Raiders by Jackson Ford which was very good fun, I also read and thoroughly enjoyed Hemlock and Silver by T Kingfisher.  I’m a third into The Dead Husband Cookbook by Danielle Valentine and I’m also a third into Forget Me Not by Stacy Willingham so doing quite well with my August review books.  I also managed to post three reviews last week so making steady progress with that as well.  I’ve not been doing much blog hopping but hoping to catch up with everything over the next few days.

Next Week’s reads

Complete Forget Me Not and The Dead Husband Cookbook and move on to Aphrodite by Phoenicia Rogerson and then maybe The Last Soul Among Wolves by Melissa Caruso.  (Which perhaps seems like a lot but I’ve already made a good dent into the first two.

Reviews Posted:

  1. It Was Her House First by Cherie Priest
  2. My Ex, the AntiChrist by Craig DiLouie
  3. Another Fine Mess by Lindy Ryan

Outstanding Reviews

My Monthly Wrap Up:

Books read in July:

  1. Paved With Good Intentions by Peter McLean
  2. The Bewitching by Silvia Moreno Garcia
  3. The Enchanted Greenhouse by Sarah Beth Durst
  4. The Knight and the Moth by Rachel Gillig
  5. It Was Her House First by Cherie Priest
  6. My Ex, the AntiChrist by Craig DiLouie
  7. Another Fine Mess by Lindy Ryan
  8. The Library at Hellebore by Cassandra Khaw – DNF
  9. Fateless by Julie Kagawa
  10. The Bone Raiders by Jackson Ford

I’ve had a very good reading month reading 10 books, I completed my July review books and even made a dent in my August reads.  I did have a DNF – The Library at Hellebore – which really didn’t work for me.

Here’s what I’m hoping to read in August:

  1. The Dead Husband Cookbook by Danielle Valentine
  2. The Bone Raiders by Jackson Ford – already read
  3. Aphrodite by Phoenicia Rogerson
  4. The Last Soul Among Wolves by Melissa Caruso
  5. Hemlock and Silver by T Kingfisher – already read
  6. Damned by Genevieve Cogman
  7. This Vicious Hunger by Francesca May
  8. Forget Me Not by Stacy Willingham

BTB

Lets just be honest – I’m not doing well so far – I need to give my head a wobble.

Bookforager‘s Picture Prompt book bingo.

and the text version:

PICTURE PROMPT BOOK BINGO 2025 (TEXT VERSION)

1. A prehistoric flint knapped stone knife 2. A lighthouse 3. An apple on a leafy branch 4. An archery target with three arrows in it
5. A very large mechanical telescope 6. A human skull 7. A stag 8. The ruins of a temple-like structure
9. A crab 10. A sheaf of wheat 11. An old mechanical typewriter 12. A cluster of four mushrooms
13. A fringed umbrella / parasol 14. A chemistry set-up of bottles and tubes 15. A stylized sun with a human face 16. A Roman helmet

Today, I’m ticking off another two prompts.  No. 3 – an apple on a leafy branch – I’m using Hemlock and Silver for this one by T Kingfisther (if you’ve already read this you’ll know why) and I’m also ticking off No.10 – A Sheaf of Wheat – which I’m using The Enchanted Greenhouse by Sarah Beth Durst – because those greenhouses are amazing and everything grows there.

The prompts I’ve crossed off so far:

No. 11 – An Old Mechanical Typewriter – The Bewitching by Silvia Moreno Garcia

No.8 – The ruins of a temple-like structure – I’m using Daughter of Chaos by A S Webb

No. 12 – A cluster of four mushrooms – I’m using Emily Wilde’s Compendium of Lost Tales by Heather Fawcett

No. 13 – A fringed umbrella/parasol – I’m using A Fortune Most Fatal by Jessica Bull

No.14 – A chemistry set-up of bottles and tubes – I’m using Wooing the Witch Queen by Stephanie Burgis

No.9 – A Crab – I’m using The Devils by Joe Abercrombie – if you’ve read this already you’ll be able to guess why.  There are some very unusual creatures in this story.

No.6 – A Human Skull – I’m using The Man Made of Smoke by Alex North – because this is about a serial killer and there are definite human remains included in this one.

Number of books read this year: 54

Review: It Was Her House First by Cherie Priest

My Five Word TL:DR Review: A View to Die For

I loved It Was Her House First by Cherie Priest.  It was easy to read, the writing is excellent and there’s a mystery at the core of this haunted house that I really wanted to uncover.

Ronnie Mitchell has just bought a house at auction, unseen, with the intention of renovating it and making a beautiful place to live.  What she is perfectly unaware of is that the house is haunted.  It has a tragic past that continues to draw attention, in fact Ronnie isn’t the first person to purchase the place hoping to go to work – and it hasn’t ended well for the previous owners.

By way of a little background.  Ronnie is suffering from a huge dose of guilt, her brother died in a tragic accident and she believes herself to be guilty through neglect.  Ronnie has severe anxiety issues and was, at the time of her brother’s demise, taking medication that left her feeling numb and oddly disconnected with the world around her.  Now, she is able to purchase this huge project courtesy of the money bequeathed to her upon her brother’s death – this was unexpected and Ronnie is determined to make the most of this legacy by renovating this project to the best of her ability.  She’s accompanied by her brother’s girlfriend Kate (another source of guilt for Ronnie as Kate did not inherit a thing).

In terms of the house.  The house was built for Venita Rost, a successful movie star from the silent movie era.  Venita and her husband have an almost idyllic existence shared with their young daughter, that is until Venita’s husband befriends a famous investigator called Bartholomew Sloan.  At first everyone bumbles along quite nicely until Venita starts to develop suspicions about Bartholomew and begins to snoop into his affairs.  Within fairly short order the entire family is dead as is Bartholomew and the house is neglected, standing empty with just the ghosts from the past rattling around.

So, what I really enjoyed about this.

Firstly, the writing.  Priest writes with such flair and confidence.  Her characters all shine off the page and the jump between past and present is handled with finesse.  Clearly, this author knows a thing or two about renovating houses (or she’s undertaken a lot of research) and these elements really play into the story rather than feeling tacked on just for convenience’s sake.  In fact that’s true of the entire story.  There’s substance to everything included.  The house is a gothic masterpiece, the ghosts themselves feel fleshed out and the mystery is the hook that propels everything forward.  Plus the attention to detail, particularly the dialogue which feels really fitting depending which story you’re currently reading.

Secondly, I love a story with a dual timeline and this one is no exception.  We jump back and forth between now and the 1930s and Priest captures the element of both periods so well.  Ronnie is the central pov and she is accompanied by Bartholomew as he follows Ronnie around the house, gradually telling us his story, and of course the mesmerising Venita’s sections told through her water damaged journal.  I loved the way Venita shines from the page, she has a captivating presence and allure that has been honed during her time trapped as a ghost, her fury becoming a thing to be feared.

I loved the house setting.  It really feeds into the narrative with it’s creepy basement, dodgy floors and rat infested walls.  It really is a ‘fixer upper’.  And, it still contains most of the original furniture and trappings, right down to a rather spooky mirror on the Parlour wall.  I also think it worked really well as we flit between the past and present seeing the house in its splendour compared to the spooky thing it has transformed into.

And, I liked Ronnie, she doesn’t always make the best choices or indeed trust her gut instincts but she has a no nonsense approach to the house and it’s strange inhabitants.  Me, I’d be terrified, no way could I spend a night in that house but Ronnie just gets on with it – although she does use alcohol and other ‘things’ to sometimes boost her courage – which sometimes gives off slight ‘whiff’s of unreliability in terms of what she thinks she’s hearing or seeing.

Personally I thought Venita kind of stole the show with her magnetism and her beautifully written journal.  Bartholomew comes across as a slightly lumbering, guilt riddled guy who made bad choices and suffers terrible regrets.

I don’t think I can add too much more.  This isn’t a totally ‘in your face, all out action, story.  It does take it’s time a little to set the scene and develop the characters but this is something I really appreciated as it adds a certain gravitas.

A haunting with a difference, angry ghosts, a vaudevillian style villain and a protagonist determined to make her peace with this house and its strange inhabitants.

I received a copy through Netgalley, courtesy of the publisher, for which my thanks.  The above is my own opinion.

My rating 4.5 of 5 stars

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