Showing posts with label Special Post. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Special Post. Show all posts

Sunday, December 8, 2013

Special Post - My Old Reliable Authors Who Always Satisfy

It pains me when friends tell me they just read a book they hated. They finished it anyway, gritting their teeth, because they couldn't think of anything else to read. Even worse, they say they now have no idea what title to pursue next.

Judging books and accepting/rejecting them based on their first sentences eliminates this wasting of time on unworthy books. However, when I am stuck to find a quality read, I turn to my "Old Reliable" authors, familiar men and women who deliver their style, great content, and characters that never fail to entertain me. They always make me put aside any thoughts of other books, household chores, or even sleep. 

My Old Reliables thankfully have written multiple books which feature the same characters I love with new adventures that lure me in like a comforting cup of hot chocolate on a rainy night.  

As a kid, I enjoyed the Edgar Rice Burroughs Tarzan books, reading all 26 titles in the series, then starting them over again and then starting over again until my parents told me I had to read something else. Of course, the Hardy Boys and Chip Hilton fed my mystery and sports needs, while Isaac Asimov and Arthur C. Clarke made me dream of the future, space travel, and cool technology. As an adult, I have discovered other writers to turn to.

Below are some of my Old Reliable authors and the first books in their series along with the first sentences and the book jackets should you wish to judge by a cover. Maybe you can find something that will prevent your "nothing to read" blues or find a holiday present for some lucky reader.

Feel free to add your favorite Old Reliable authors in the Comments link below if you have a similar go-to relationship with certain authors and want to share.

Happy reading. 



Fred
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Robot short stories - Isaac Asimov
Ninety-eight -- Ninety-nine -- one hundred. Gloria withdrew her chubby little forearm from before her eyes and stood for a moment, wrinkling her nose and blinking in the sunlight. Then, trying to watch in all directions at once, she withdrew a few cautious steps from the tree against which she had been leaning.
          - from "Robbie" short story in I, Robot








Description:


The fictionalized stories about the history of robots, from early personal nanny units to one that runs for president, but will not divulge whether he is a man or a robot - and what difference it might make. Great stories, great science, and plenty to challenge one's moral and sociological reasoning.


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John Dortmunder and his gang of small time criminals - Donald Westlake
"Yes," Dortmunder said. "You can reserve all this, for yourself and your family, for simply a ten-dollar deposit."

         - from The Bank Shot (The first book, The Hot Rock was previously reviewed here)






Description:

Clever, humorous, complex, and totally satisfying reads about a small time group of criminals, planning and executing interesting crimes, and being thwarted along the way by unforeseen circumstances. Each caper is completely different and beguiling in its own way. Very, very funny and satisfying on every level.


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Bookman crime series - John Dunning
Slater wasn't my kind of cop. Even in the old days when we were both working the right side of the good-and-evil beat, I had been well able to take Mr. Slater or leave him alone. 
         - from Bookman's Wake (The first book, Booked to Diewas previously reviewed here)




Description:

Cliff Janeway, former cop turned rare book dealer after an altercation with his department, loves books - rare, pristine, and full of great words from the masters. Much of Dunning's mysteries explore the pre-Internet world of book dealing, searching for and discovering the perfect edition sitting on the two dollar shelf at a Goodwill or on the shelves of another collector. But there is a darker side to these books, one that pulls at a reluctant Janeway: murder. No graphic violence to speak of here, and the plots, writing, and characters are superb. And as a bonus there is much insider information about rare books, so who could want for more?


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Jeeves and More - P.G. Wodehouse
Archibald Mealing was one of those golfers in whom desire outruns performance. 
          - from "Archibald's Benefit" in The Golf Omnibus









Description:

Wodehouse is one of my ideal writers (with Donald Westlake). Clever, always original, funny, and biting on a wide variety of topics. Whether poking fun at the idle wealthy via hapless Bertie Wooster and his highly competent servant Jeeves, or simply watching R. Psmith, Uncle Fred, or a host of other characters toddle through life, Wodehouse never fails to make me laugh and take a gleeful pleasure in the originality of his stories and wit.


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My name is Kinsey Millhone. I'm a private investigator licensed by the state of California. I'm thirty-two years old, twice divorced, no kids. The day before yesterday I killed someone and the fact weighs heavily on my mind.
          - from A Is for Alibi









Description:


Small town private investigator Kinsey Millhone explores and solves local crimes. While this may sound trivial, the characters, writing and plots are very strong and compelling. Not sure what it is about these books, but they pull me in from the first pages and hold me right up to the end. Don't knock them until you've tried them.


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Swedish Police crime - Maj Sjowall and Per Wahloo
At a quarter to three the sun rose.
          - from The Man on the Balcony (The first book, Roseanna was previously reviewed here)







Description:


Swedish husband and wife authors created this dark, 10-book police procedural series of Martin Beck and his Swedish homicide squad. Their characters are ordinary people, slowly, intelligently, unravelling murder cases using a methodical process that is gripping as it is original in content and writing. 


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Life in the Maine Backwoods - Louise Dickinson Rich
During most of my adolescence -- specifically, between the time when I gave up wanting to be a brakeman on a freight train and the time when I definitely decided to become an English teacher -- I said, when asked what I was going to do with my life, that I was going to live alone in a cabin in the Maine woods and write.   
It seemed to me that this was a romantic notion, and I was insufferably smug over the own originality.
          - from We Took to the Woods




Description:

Author Rich cleverly, humorously, and engagingly tells stories of her life and family living in the backwoods of Maine, from preparing meals when snowed in for the winter, to keeping a pet skunk, to watching the ice break up and the timber log rushing down the river. Absolutely the best books to curl up with on a cold winter night.


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Three Men in a Boat series - Jerome K. Jerome 
There were four of us - George, and William Samuel Harris, and myself, and Montmeremcy. We were sitting in my room smoking, and talking about how bad we were -- bad from a medical point of view I mean, of course.

- from Three Men in a Boat




Description:


These are wry, unbelievably hilarious novels of three men and one dog who set out to sail a small boat down the river in England. The fact that they have no previous boating experience, continually make cutting comments about each other, and generally are completely hapless in all aspects of water transportation (and life) adds to the fun.


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North Dakota homesteading - Carrie Young
My pioneer mother was wild for education. She fervently believed that young people given enough schooling and using the brains they were born with could rise above themselves as far as they wanted to go, the sky the limit. She herself, with no formal education of any kind, had managed to live a life characterized from end to end with vision and courage.
          - from Nothing to Do But Stay






Description:


Quiet, honest, and warmly captivating true stories about life on the North Dakota plains by an intrepid woman trying to survive and hold onto her home alone with her children in the early 1900s. Lovely books written by the main character's daughter - these are great, great reads.


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Man vs. obstacles humor - Tony Hawks
You know, your problem is that you're in denial.  
No I'm not. 
I rest my case. 
          - from Playing the Moldovans at Tennis. (His first book, Round Ireland with a Fridge was previously reviewed here)




Description:

I just love Hawks' ridiculousness, from hitch-hiking around Ireland toting a portable refrigerator to challenging the entire Maldovian national soccer team players to tennis matches, Hawks never fails to entertain and make me laugh.


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Hatchet survival series - Gary Paulsen
Brian Robeson stared out the window of the small plane at the endless green northern wilderness below. It was a small plane -- a Cessna 406 -- a bush plane -- and the engine was so loud, so roaring and consuming and loud that it ruined any chance for conversation. Not that he had much to say.

          - from Hatchet








Description:


Although technically young adult fiction, I love the survival tales of Brian who finds himself stranded alone in the Canadian wilderness who must now survive by his own wits. Hatchet and Brian's Winter are my favorites and worthy gifts for any young person (or adult) to whom you can read these adventure stories or can read by themselves.


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I was arrested in Eno's diner. At twelve o'clock. I was eating eggs and drinking coffee. A late breakfast, not lunch. I was wet and tired after a long walk in heavy rain.

          - from The Killing Floor









Description:


OK, a secret vice of mine. Jack Reacher, ex-military MP, a tough guy's tough guy, drifts around the country with nothing but the clothes on his back, reluctantly being sucked into situations where he faces incredibly bad, violent people. He is a gripping figure, one who thinks and acts clearly and swiftly for the right cause. Not sure I want to actually be him, but I admire his confidence, skills, mental powers, and his commitment to see things through. Caution: each book contains some graphic violence.


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Wit and Relationships - Jane Austen
It is a truth universally acknowledged that a single man in possession of a good fortune, must be in want of a wife.

         - from Pride and Prejudice





Description:

I admit to never having read a Jane Austen book, but I am eagerly looking forward to the day when I finally sit down with one of her magnificent books. Biting, wise, and off-beat looks at the lives and relationships of the wealthy and not so wealthy English landed gentry. True love wins out in the end despite delightful and unwitting obstacles. Definitely my next series to read.

Sunday, June 23, 2013

Special Post - Interesting Titles

My friend, Joe, asked me the other day that, if a book can be judged by its first sentence, what about its title? Can one predict whether a book will be readable based on its title?

My answer is "Yes," but only because an unusual title will lure me to pick up the book and explore its first sentences. Not every quality book has a great title, nor does every interesting title lead to a first-rate read. But any author (or editor) who takes the time to create an unusual title has, in my opinion, at least the potential to come up with a solid first sentence and hopefully a compelling narrative and interesting characters. Worth a shot anyway when faced with the multitude of books available out there.

Below are some intriguing titles, their first sentences, and even their book jackets (should you wish to judge by a cover as well) that I have read or at least have on my list of books to check out. An (*) marks my favorites, but you be the final judge. Explore away!

Happy reading. 


Fred


Our Mum -- or Nicola Fuller of Central Africa, as she has on occasion preferred to introduce herself -- has wanted a writer in the family as long as either of us can remember, not only because she loves books and has therefore always wanted to appear in them (the way she likes large, expensive hats, and likes to appear in them) but also because she has always wanted to live a fabulously romantic life for which she needed a reeasonably pliable witness as scribe.



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If you stick a hatpin in at Boston and drive it through the center of the earth, you come out very near the Bay of Islands. The first Europeans to go south of the equator expected to find a sort of looking-glass world, backward but recognizable, like people who resembled them but walked on their hands.



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Don't let's go to the dogs tonight - by Alexandra Fuller 

Mum says, "Don't come creeping into our room at night." They sleep with loaded guns beside them on the bedside rugs. She says, "Don't startle us when we're sleeping." 

"Why not?" 

"We might shoot you."

"Oh."



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I'm sitting there in my den reading an article about the devastating effects of cyberphilia on the contemporary American family or what's left of it. Cyberphilia, in case you don't know by now, is the compulsion to operate and program a computer, in preference to all other activities (I don't own a computer. I am a cyberphilia).


 
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*End of Your Life Book Club - Will Schwalbe


We were nuts about the mocha in the waiting room at Memorial Sloan-Kettering's outpatient care center. The coffee isn't so good, and the hot chocolate is worse. But if, as Mom and I discovered, you push the "mocha" button, you see how two not-very-good things can come together to make something quite delicious. The graham crackers aren't bad either.



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Fed Up With Lunch - Sarah Woo

In my five-year career as a teacher at a large elementary school in Chicago, I had rarely set foot in the cafeteria. In fact, I hadn't eaten a school lunch since the eleventh grade.



 



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Foreskin's Lament: A Memoir - Shalom Auslander 


When I was a child, my parents and teachers told me about a man who was very strong. They told me he could destroy the whole world. They told me he could lift mountains. They told me he could part the sea. It was important to keep this man happy. When we obeyed what the man commanded, he liked us. He liked us so much that he killed anyone who didn't like us.



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*Honeymoon With My Brother - Franz Wisner


Amid the pine tree windbreaks and the foamy Pacific shore, Sea Ranch, California, is a wonderful place to be dumped.








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*Keeper of Lost Causes - Jussi Adler-Olsen


Carl took a step toward the mirror and ran one finger along his temple where the bullet had grazed his head. The wound had healed, but the scar was clearly visible under his hair, if anyone cared to look. [Note: contains violence. F]







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*Last Night at the Brain Thieves Ball - Scott Spencer


My desk is shaped like a kidney and has a slight wobble. I have finally learned to draw the curtains to the small window in the parallelogram of senseless noise they call my office.







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Let's Explore Diabetes with Owls - David Sedaris

On a recent flight from Tokyo to Beijing, at around the time that my lunch tray was taken away, I remembered that I needed to learn Mandarin. "Goddammit," I whispered. "I knew I forgot something."
 






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*The Mad Scientist's Guide to World Domination - John Joseph Adams, editor


If you're receiving this message then you have probably already made a startling and disturbing discovery regarding the nature of my scientific work. 
Please forgive the unsettling nature of my appearance -- the holographic projector is my own invention and probably very lifelike apart from the change in scale, which I believe lends a dramatic effect.
 
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A Man Without Breath - Philip Kerr

Franz Meyer stood up at the head of the table, glanced down, touched the cloth, and awaited our silence.











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*Round Ireland With a Fridge - Tony Hawks


In 1989 I went to Ireland for the first time. I don't know why it had taken so long. Some parts of the world you make a conscious effort to visit and others have to wait until fate delivers you there. When the moment arrived for me to set foot on the Emerald Isle, it was as a result of a badly written song.






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The Saddest Pleasure - Moritz Thomsen


Among a long list of bizarre social customs that enchant and irritate a North American who has come to live in South America, one of the most revealing about national differences is the Despedida. The despedida is a highly ritualized leavetaking arranged by friends and family when you prepare to set out on a journey.


 


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Saint Lucy's Home for Girls Raised by Wolves - Karen Russell

My sister and I are staying at Grandpa Sawtooth's old house until our father, Chief Bigtree, gets back from the Mainland. It is our first summer alone in the swamp.






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The Tooth Tattoo - Peter Lovesey

Eleven-thirty at night, sweaty in his evening suit and shattered after a heavy night playing Rachmaninov, Mel Farran plodded out of the artists' exit on the south side of the Royal Festival Hall.







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*Three Graves Full - Jamie Mason

There is very little peace for a man with a body buried in his backyard.











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Unbearable Lightness of Being - Milan Kundera

The idea of external return is a mysterious one, and Nietzsche has ofter perplexed other philosophers with it; to think that everything recurs as we once experienced it, and that the recurrence itself recurs ad infinitium! What does this mad myth signify?







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The Weed that Strings the Hangman's Bag - by Alan Bradley


I was lying dead in the churchyard. An hour had crept by since the mourners had said their last sad farewells.