Monday, April 5, 2010

Chapter Six

Spring is here, and I've got some interesting stuff to tell you about - including a couple of Holy Crap Look What I found items.

Series

The Girl in the Plain Brown Wrapper - John D. MacDonald (256 pages, $4.95/$.50, copyright 1968, Paperback)
The first of the Holy Crap items - a Travis McGee novel! I haven't seen one of these in about 30 years. McGee is still the salvager with a past, who does things when he needs the money, usually. This time he does his thing for someone he once knew. He meddles, he takes his lumps, and he figures it out. And he gets the girl. I enjoyed it.

Murder on the Eiffel Tower! - Claude Izmer (286 pages, $23.93/$.50, copyright 2003, Trade paperback)
This is supposed to be the first in a series centering on a bookseller in Paris in the late 1800's, along with his oriental partner/father figure, clerk, and mistresses. The method of the murder is interesting, as is the murderer, but I would've liked a little more historical information. After all this is set during the exhibition when the Tower was opened to the public, and Buffalo Bill and his Wild West Circus were there. OK.

A Catskill Eagle -Robert B. Parker (368 pages, $4.95/$.50, copyright 1985, Paperback)
Spenser at his best. Hawke is in jail, and Susan is in trouble. All of the usual comfortable characters help them out on both coasts. I enjoyed it.

Miscellaneous

You Don't Love Me Yet - Jonathan Lethem (224 pages, $24.95/$.25, copyright 2007, Hard Cover)
If you've been reading this blog, you may remember that back in Chapter One I enthused over Lethem's Motherless Brooklyn. This is totally different. The alternative rock scene in Los Angeles, with the band mates, their day jobs, and a Complainer. I tried for about 50 pages but lost interest, even though the way Lethem writes is very entertaining. Back on the pile.

Bored of the Rings - The Harvard Lampoon (Henry N. Beard and Douglas C. Kenney) (160 pages, $1.00/$.50, copyright 1969, Paperback)
You read that title right. This is the second Holy Crap item, a spoof of The Lord of the Rings. I read this back in 1969, after having read the Trilogy. I still found myself laughing out loud at some of the inventive things the Lampooners came up with. It does drag from time to time, since they do tend to overdo it. But then again, so did Tolkien. I enjoyed it.

Comics

Kick-Ass - Mark Millar (writer) and John Romita, Jr. (penciller) (Issues 1 - 8, $24.99/30% off coupon, Copyright 2010, Hard Cover Trade Edition)
This has been made into a movie that opens soon, so I was very curious about it. Simply, it's about the real world, and what happens when a young man attempts to become a "superhero" in it. It's very graphic, and very interesting. But it's only one man's opinion as to how the world would react. I enjoyed it.

That's it for now.

Read on!

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