There is no plot. There are just a bunch of rich people behaving badly. They have no self-respect, no boundaries. They self-medicate by drinking 24-7. They dehumanize anyone they perceive as beneath them. The characters are well drawn but there are no character arcs and no reason to care about any of them. The prose is spare, and in a lot of places reads just like a bad diary entry listing all the things they did that day, but without giving any reason for listing them. I would have DNF'd except I read it with a book club.
Wow. I love mountaineering books, especially about Mt. Everest, and this is a great one. Add a high altitude thriller plot line in the last quarter of the book, and this is a banger. Don't be confused. Dan Simmons is known for horror, but this book is not horror. It was not at all what I expected - it was so much more. If you love high altitude adventures, you'll enjoy this book.
This book was published in 1990, but the audiobook version I listened to was recorded by Kingsolver herself in 2018. My initial reaction was that she should have gotten a professional narrator, but within the first hour, I changed my mind. Her voice in this story is so personal and she allows the emotion to come out in the narration. I felt it added an additional layer of meaning to the text, which is already a treasure. While I know that people are very focused on reading contemporary texts or older classic texts, don't sleep on this one. It is wonderful, gentle, and both sad and inspiring.
Vintage novelette from pulp publication Weird Tales. Mad scientist conducts occult experiments to create a comic book world. This is a parody of HG Wells' The Island of Dr. Moreau. It is, as expected quite deliciously over the top.
Originally posted at pseudopod.org.
I'm tired of haunted house books that focus on the house and the characters are just afraid. The thing that I love about this book is that it is a complex psychological portrait of a character, which includes more than just her reaction to the house. From the first that we meet her, Eleanor is a compelling character. What makes her fascinating is that you just can't quite figure out what is going on with her. And that makes the ending, although heavily foreshadowed, shocking.