Thursday, March 3, 2011

Chapter Seventeen

I was going to wait another week or two before I made another entry here, but I think I've got enough to talk about and besides I found this really cool picture to add to the site. Interestingly, all the books fall into the same category.

Series

Cadillac Beach - Tim Dorsey ( $7.50/$.50, 376 pages, copyright 2004, paperback)
Apparently, Dorsey has written several books revolving around the exploits of Serge Storm and his good buddy, Lenny - a maniac and a doper. This one revolves around Miami history and brings in Murph the Surf, the Beatles, Cubans, the FBI and CIA, and a whole bunch of other stuff while Serge tries to solve his grandfather's murder. This may sound confusing, but it is laugh-out-loud funny. I enjoyed it.

The Dangerous Days of Daniel X - James Patterson & Michael Ledwidge ($7.99/$.50, 247 pages, copyright 2009, paperback)
I'm a big fan of Patterson's Alex Cross series so every once in a while I pick up another book of his. This is a sci-fi series about a teenage alien bounty hunter that is strictly aimed at the tweens crowd. To be honest, I'm not too sure they'd like it. I didn't.

The Watchman - Robert Crais ($7.99/$.50, 384 pages, copyright 2007, paperback)
Usually, Crais' books center on Elvis Cole, with Joe Pike - his silent partner - coming in towards the end as sort of a "deus-ex-machina". This book revolves around Pike, with Cole in a supporting role. Simply put, Pike agrees to protect a young lady until she can testify at a trial, but it's more then that. And you learn a lot more about what makes Pike tick. I enjoyed it.

Stone Cold - Robert B. Parker  ($7.99/$.50, 300 pages, copyright 2003, paperback)
Parker is the creator of the Spenser books, which I really enjoy. This is one of his Jesse Stone books. Jesse is the polar opposite of Spenser - he's a loner, he drinks too much, and he has an unhealthy obsession for his ex-wife. That said, he's good at what he does - police work - and he has a real sense of right and wrong. He also has a great supporting cast, and here they try to solve a serial killer case. Unfortunately, I don't think his books end well. The payoff seems to take place off-screen, and Jesse gets to react but it doesn't feel satisfying. It was OK.

Comic Books

I've ranted in the past about my experiences with the comic book industry, so this shouldn't come as a surprise to anyone.

First Wave - Brian Azzarello, writer; Rags Morales, artist ($3.99 per issue, 6 issues)
I mentioned this particular mini-series before. In fact, I first mentioned it in my May 12, 2010 Special Insert #2 after I'd read the first 2 issues of the 6 issue run. It is now March 3, 2011, and issue number 6 just came out yesterday. That means that it took 9 months to produce 4 issues. Very disappointing. I probably won't be buying into any mini-series runs any time soon. That aside, Azzarello has told a very interesting, post-WW2 story. Batman is a young, gung-ho, gun-toting hero; Doc Savage is his usual pulp-fictiony adventurer; but The Spirit disappoints. I think he's only interesting when someone uses the Eisner approach to drawing. I did enjoy it.

Batman: The Return of Bruce Wayne - Grant Morrison, writer: various artists ($3.99 per issue, 6 issues)
I'm not going to go into why there was a need for Bruce Wayne to return - frankly, it's too complicated. Suffice it to say that Grant Morrison wrote this, so we have issues ranging from the prehistoric, through the Wild West and the Future, and ending back here. I mention this because it appears to have come out on a monthly basis. Maybe this has to do with multiple artists. The down-side to that is the visual changes can be jarring. But the main reason I bring this one up is that I saw it at Barnes & Noble's as a Trade Edition for $30. I'm sure they include extras like scripts and storyboards, but I don't look at those. $30, to me, is a lot of money for 6 issues at one time. (I actually paid $12 for all 6 issues at a comic store in Oakhurst.) I'm guessing that I won't be buying too many Trades anymore. Other then that, I enjoyed it.

Keep reading.

Friday, February 11, 2011

Chapter Sixteen

Not very many books to discuss this time around. There's a reason for that, and I'll bring it up later. Also, there's something that's been bothering me, so I'm going to get it off my chest as well.

Miscellaneous

The Grapes of Wrath - John Steinbeck ($13.00, 619 pages, copyright 1939, Trade Paperback)
For those who read this blog, you may remember this volume as being something I bought as a Christmas present for a family member. I wound up getting her a newly published filmography of Frank Sinatra and I kept this edition for myself. As I said before, to me, the story of the Joad family's struggle to cross the country and reach the "Promised Land" is the story of America. And since the movie took a lot of its dialog directly from the book, I can almost hear Henry Fonda and Jane Darwell giving some of the speeches. I enjoyed it.

The Road - Cormac McCarthy ($14.95/$.50, 287 pages, copyright 2006, Trade Paperback)
Let me preface this by saying that I've read several remarks by my nephew that McCarthy is the greatest writer in the world. This may not be the book to start trying to find that out. I admit that he writes very well, but the subject matter was very, very bleak, and reading it during the winter - in between 9 snow storms - is probably not the best time to approach it. I had hopes for this post-apocalyptic story of a man protecting his son, but to me, it fell flat and the ending was too pat. It was OK.

Series

Dead Irish - John Lescroart ($7.99/$.50, 420 pages, copyright 1989, paperback)
This is the first novel in the Dismas Hardy series. I've read several others over the last few years and, like them, this one never fails to entertain. Lescroart jumps right in, introducing Dismas and the supporting cast as he goes along - and filling in their backgrounds and connections in a very natural way. Here Dismas uses his past skills and contacts to try to prove that a suicide is really a murder. I enjoyed it.

PC Games

That's right, folks, having read about the gaming exploits of the younger generation - and remembering the hours of fun I had playing my daughter's Super NES - I've passed a lot of this dismal winter playing video games on my PC. Of course, I'm just a novice and I refuse to spend a lot of money, but I have enjoyed what I've been playing.

Fate - ($9.99, WildTangent/Encore, Rated E)
This is a role-playing game where you try to help out some villagers by taking on quests that involve entering the Dungeon. Along the way, you pick up gold, weapons, and skills. There are, I think, 46 levels to the Dungeon, and I've made it through 7. Should take me a while to go all the way through. This is the closest game I've found to the "Legend of Zelda". Still playing, and I'm enjoying it.

Hidden Mysteries: The White House and Lost Secrets: Ancient Mysteries  - ($9.99, Game Mill/Spark Plug, Rated E)
 This is a 2-pack, and each game is what's called a Hidden Object game. You enter different sites/rooms and try to find hidden objects that are listed for you.Each of these games has an underlying story that keeps moving forward as you progress.Finished it, and I enjoyed this.

CSI:NY - ($5.00, UbiSoft, Rated Teen)
There are 4 different "episodes" to this game, and they play just like the show. All the major characters are there (and they did the voices). As either Mac or Stella you start with a death. You pick through the crime scene (and other locations) for clues; pursue leads at the morgue and the crime lab; and grill and accuse suspects using clues you've found. (I have to admit that I got completely stumped at a couple of spots, and had to Google a Walkthrough to proceed). Finished it, and I enjoyed it.

Something That's Been Bothering Me

I read about a month ago that a Professor of English at Auburn University in Alabama - Alan Gribber - was going to publish a new edition of Mark Twain's "The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn" replacing the word "nigger" with "slave", and the word "Injun" with "Indian". He said that with this new edition his fellow teacher's wouldn't have a problem teaching this book, and we wouldn't offend anyone. Now, I know that "Huckleberry Finn" was banned for a time because of its language, but that was years ago. Those words are part of the original manuscript, and Twain was simply trying to reproduce a way of speaking that he felt Huck would use. In my lifetime, I don't recall ever reading that a teacher was having a problem with the book. Have we become so scared of offending someone that we will tamper with a classic. Does this lead to putting pants on the statue of David (which has had its share of offended people)? What has happened to America? Aren't we the Land of the I Don't Want to use the Metric System? Don't we put the month before the day? Isn't this the Home of the If I Offended You at Least I Know You're Paying Attention? Twain - an American - wrote an American novel. Leave it alone!

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Tuesday, January 11, 2011

Chapter Fifteen

A New Year, and a new post. I remember struggling a bit to get through some of the books at the end of last year, so I started this year with a couple of old friends. Sort of a "sorbet" to cleanse the palate. There are also a couple of oddities this month, and what I think is a real find.

Series

Walking Shadow - Robert B. Parker ($7.50/$.50, 281 pages, copyright 1994, Paperback)
Spenser and Hawke. Two old friends that I can always rely on to provide a few hours of entertainment. Add Susan into the mix and you almost don't need a plot. The conversations alone could probably carry a book. Anyway, this one starts with a stalker, leads to a murder, and mixes in a Chinese Tong. Classic Parker. I enjoyed it.

Miscellaneous

Her Forbidden Knight - Rex Stout ($4.95/$.50, 248 pages, copyright 1997, Paperback)
Don't let the copyright date fool you, that applies only to this volume. The nearest I can figure this was originally published back in the 40's. That is an appropriate time period, because I can see this as the basis for one of those movies from back then, maybe with Lew Ayres as the lead and a cast of the usual back up players. It nominally involves a group of guys who hang around a New York hotel lobby, a telegraph girl, and a handsome stranger passing bogus $10 bills. The oddity here is that it is written by a pre-Nero Wolfe Rex Stout. I enjoyed it.

Welcome to Xanadu - Nathaniel Benchley ($5.95/$.50, 304 pages, copyright 1968, Hard Cover)
The oddity here is that it is a Hard Cover book, published in 1968, with a cover price of $5.95. You can't even get a paperback for that price now (unless you do what I do). This is an story about a farmer's daughter in New Mexico who gets kidnapped by an escaped patient from a mental institution, and how they both learn something from each other. I found it to be very interesting.

Let the Great World Spin - Colum McCann ($15.00/$.50, 349 pages, copyright 2009, Trade Paperback)
The central point for this book is that in August of 1974 a man walked across a tightrope stretched between the Twin Towers. Maybe that's what attracted me to the book. Maybe I thought it would be based on what happens down there in lower Manhattan - a place I worked in for 20 years. I was wrong. It is so much more. The tightrope walker is peripheral, and the other characters are tied to each other in an almost "six degrees of separation" way. I think the author is trying to show that each off us walks a tightrope every day - life. AND McCann's writing style had me locked in from the very first section. I found it hard to put down. I really enjoyed it.

Serendipitous Side Note

As anyone who's read any of these posts knows, I enjoy comic books (please note, I said "comic books" and not "graphic novels"). To that end I'd like to mention that NBC is now airing a show called The Cape on Monday nights at 9:00 PM. I saw the 2 hour pilot last night, and enjoyed it a lot. There are elements from established comics that run through it - Batman, Luthor, Oracle, The Circus of Crime from Spiderman to name a few - and they have been blended together in a very enjoyable way. I don't know if it will last long but I intend to go down with the ship.
The serendipity part comes in now - when I sat down to write this, I put the TV on as sort of background noise. I found that the SyFy channel was broadcasting the old Green Hornet show. Unfortunately, these are not as good today as I remember but what the hell - Van Williams and Bruce Lee for a few hours? I'm down for that.

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Sunday, December 12, 2010

Special Insert #4

I hadn't planned on posting any more additions to this blog this year and then something happened.

 I spent some time today with people who got their presents early this year, and they were really into them. I started thinking about all the presents I've received over the years, and which ones stood out - which ones I still remember and still think about. Most of them were received on Christmas Day, but one was early and one was a little late. Here are the stand-outs, with the years I received them, as near as I can remember. (I can add this to this blog because there are at least 2 books listed.)

1.) 2008. Some people I didn't know donated their late son's organs and I received the heart. The gift of life. You can't beat that. (This was about a month early.)
2.)  1984. My daughter was born. She has brought joy to my life. (This one was a few days late, but well worth the wait.)
3.) Anything my daughter has ever given me. Specifically, in 2005 she gave me a DVD player, and in 2007 she gave me the gadget that allowed me to hook it up to my TV. (That was OK, because I didn't have any DVDs at the time anyway.)
4.) 1983. We had just moved into the house in New Jersey in July, and money was a little tight. And yet, for Christmas that year my wife (at the time) gave me the Annotated Sherlock Holmes. A 2 volume, hard cover edition in a slip case, written by William S. Baring-Gould one of the preeminent Sherlockian scholars. It detailed all the stories, using photographs, maps, and illustrations, had loads of details, and retailed, at the time, for $50.
5.) 1974 or 1975 (?). My mom gave me an autographed copy of John Huston's autobiography. We were both fans of Huston's work and this was a really wonderful surprise. (Thanks have to go to my cousin Anne, who was working at a book store in New York and got the copy for my mom.)
6.) 1960(?). A 2-foot long submarine from my folks. The top came off, revealing the various rooms within, and it came with scale-size navy crewmen and frogmen, and fired torpedoes and missiles.

There have been lots of gifts in lots of years, but these stand out because they touched me. For the most part, they showed that someone thought about me, and got a gift that showed how much they cared. Having given one of those early presents I mentioned at the beginning of this post, and really enjoying how much that person enjoyed the gift, I can only hope that the givers of the presents I've received have enjoyed my enjoyment.

I remember these gifts, and I remember the people who gave them to me. And I'm pretty sure I always will.

Wednesday, December 8, 2010

Chapter Fourteen

I've been thinking today about the two sides to things. This blog entry is the Start of my second blog-year, and it's the Last for the calendar year. Today is the 30th anniversary of the Death of John Lennon, and the Birth of my first grand-nephew Thomas Anthony. One door closes and another opens.

Anyway, on to this month's and a Special Mention at the end.

Series

Irresistible Impulse   - Robert K. Tanenbaum ($6.99/$.50, 434 pages, copyright 1997, paper back)
This series revolves around Butch Karp, Manhattan DA; his wife Marlene Ciampi, private detective/one-woman army type; and their family, friends and associates as they work their way through various trials, crimes, and personal crises. This volume deals with a multiple-murder trial and a deadly stalker case that start out as separate issues but wind up connected. Usually, I enjoy these but this is one of the early ones, and I found it slow going. It was OK.

Golden Buddha - Clive Cussler and Craig Dirgo ($15.00/$.50, 420 pages, copyright 2003, Trade Paperback)
This is billed as "The First Novel of the Oregon Files". The Oregon is a super-secret, high tech, private spy ship hidden inside a decrepit old cargo vessel and run by a group of mercenaries. This volume involves stealing a 600 pound golden statue of the Buddha and reinstating the Dalai Lama in Tibet. It's almost like reading the script for a Mission Impossible movie. (Do you ever wonder how the work is divided between the Big Name Writer and the little name one?) I enjoyed it.

Miscellaneous

Cold Steel Rain  -   Kenneth Abel ($5.99/$.50, 368 pages, copyright 2000, paper back)
Here's a crime novel set in New Orleans. The main character is a one-time Assistant DA who now serves as a bag man for a hotshot politician. There are, of course, underlying motives. AND there are problems. The two main female characters are both in law enforcement and have similar names so it gets confusing. At least one character, who I thought was going to be a major one, disappears. And if your going to set a book in New Orleans it should feel like New Orleans. Here the only weather is rain, and it could be any other inner city. Didn't really like it.

Too Close to Home - Linwood Barclay ($7.99/$.50, 500 pages, copyright 2008, paper back)
The premise here is how the murder of the family next door, impacts the lives of the neighbor family. Information comes out way too slowly, including connections among characters, and personal secrets. Not a bad book, but too long. Barclay trails a lot of strings throughout, and does tie everything up neatly, but he could've cut out 50 pages or so. It was OK.

Great Books

It's Christmas time, and I was trying to come up with a gift for a relative.Since she's always asking me about books to read, I was browsing through a local bookstore when it hit me.............

The Grapes of Wrath -  John Steinbeck ($13.00, 619 pages, copyright 1939, Trade Paperback)
I've read this book at least 3 times and, to me, it is the Great "American" Novel. The story of the Joad family's struggle at home, difficult journey to and harsh reception in a "Promised Land" just resonates with the American experience. You can get a cheaper edition, of course, but this one looks good and has a picture of Steinbeck on the cover. Great Book.

Special Mention

OK, I don't watch her show, but I have to give credit where credit is due - Oprah Winfrey gets my first ever Special Mention. Why, you might ask? Well, I'll tell you. She has a Book Club. I haven't read any of her previous selections, but she is getting people to read. Also, she likes real books - yes, she has a Kindle but she says she only uses it when she travels. AND her latest pick(s) are "A Tale of Two Cities" and "Great Expectations" by Charles Dickens. If she can get people reading the classics, more power to her. (Extra kudos for getting Penguin to issue both books in a single volume.)

That's it for now. Merry Christmas. Happy New Year. And....

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Saturday, November 13, 2010

First Anniversary Issue!!!!!!!!

That's right, today - November 13th - is the First Anniversary of this blog. Actually, the first entry only laid out what I hoped to do which was to tell you of the things I've read or watched, and any other thing that piqued my curiosity. Maybe I succeeded, maybe I didn't, I don't know. I do know that I've had fun. So, first I'll go over this months books, and then I'll give you some numbers for the past year.

Series

Darkly Dreaming Dexter - Jeff Lindsay ($12.95/$.50, 288 pages, copyright 2004, Trade paperback) OK. I know that ShowTime has made a series out of this book and it's sequels but I haven't seen it. I understand a lot of people like it. Given that fact, and that the main character is a sociopathic serial killer, you'd think I'd like it too. Not so much. Don't get me wrong, it was interesting, but I figured out the hook early on, and that kind of ruined it for me. It was OK.

Sherlock Holmes

There was a certain amount of serendipity to how this particular section came together over the last month. I had picked up the first book, then found the second, then the TV series started, and I came across the DVD. Coincidence? I think not. Holmes doesn't believe in coincidences.

Night Watch - Stephen Kendrick ($23.00/$.50, 258 pages, copyright 2001, hard cover)
Holmes and Watson in late 1902. Older, wiser, and involved in a secret meeting of the world's major religions in London. And, oh yeah, murder. PLUS FATHER BROWN, G. K. Chesterton's famous sleuth as a young cleric. I enjoyed it.

The Exploits of Sherlock Holmes - Adrian Conan Doyle and John Dickson Carr (No Price/$.66, 338 pages, copyright 1952, '53, '54, hard cover)
Adrian Conan Doyle is the youngest son of Sir Arthur, and John Dickson Carr is a well-known mystery writer and a master of the "locked room" puzzle. The pedigree is there, and yet the 12 stories in this collection are uneven. Some of them are excellent, but some lack the atmosphere that Sir Arthur could bring to a damp, foggy London night or a cold country setting. Taken as a whole, they were OK.

Sherlock 
A new TV series, produced by the BBC, and shown here on PBS over the last 3 Sundays. The interesting twist in these 3 90-minute episodes is that they take place in the current time. That's right, Watson is a veteran of Iraq, and writes of their exploits in his blog. Holmes' nicotine habit is seen through his use of nicotine patches. And they call each other by they're first names. As I said, there were only 3 episodes, ending in a cliff-hanger. I enjoyed them, and look forward to the second season. (For those of you who missed this, the DVD came out at the same time as the first episode was aired.)

Young Sherlock Holmes 
This DVD is of a movie released in 1985. It was directed by Barry Levinson, produced by Steven Spielberg, ans some effects were done by Industrial Light & Magic. It imagines a first meeting of Watson and Holmes at a prep school, where they unravel a series of murders. A good period piece, and interesting enough, but it could have been better. Perhaps unintentionally, I kept finding visual references to earlier Spielberg productions like "ET and "The Goonies". But for a movie that's 25 years old, it holds up. I enjoyed it.

 OK. Now for some Anniversary numbers. Over the last year (including those mentioned above) I've told you about:
10 Comic Book Trade Editions/Graphic Novels. I may not be covering any more, due to the rising prices of these collections.
4 individual DVDs and 1 boxed set of TV Westerns from the 1950's. I may be watching more of these since I can usually get older ones for $5.00 and I can borrow the newer ones from my daughter, who has NetFlix.
6 Sherlock Holmes books, for a cover price total of $88.85, but I spent $25.61.
18 books from various different series' for a total cover price of $178.92, for which I paid $10.50.
28 miscellaneous books/novels for a total cover price of $382.51, for which I paid $17.43.

My totals for the year are 52 books read, with a combined cover price of $650.28, for which I paid $53.54. Or 1 dollar per book per week. Not too shabby.

I have made no progress on that jigsaw puzzle I told you about back in January.

Shameless Plug: I have spent a lot of time on my other blog http://www.ramdomblogsdennyoneill.blogspot.com/ . Faction (fact and fiction) based on my true story. Check it out and let me know what you think.

Another year awaits, and I've already got some interesting reads lined up.

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Sunday, October 17, 2010

Chapter Thirteen

This time around, I have the longest book I've read since I started this blog, and the "shortest". I'll explain why I have quotes around the "shortest" when I get to it.

Non-Fiction

30 Second Mysteries - Bob Moog/Jeff Pinsker ($9.95/$.25, 238 pages, copyright 2002, soft cover)
This is actually a game (complete with spinner) where you have a series of "mysteries" broken down into 4 categories - who, what, where, and why. "Mysteries" is actually too strong a word - they`'re more like situations, and there are 28 in each category. You're given a couple of paragraphs and you are expected to solve it for points. There are clues for each "mystery" which, if given, lower the point value. Some of these were pretty good, but many rely on fairy tale characters, which cheapens the game, to my mind. It was interesting.

Series

The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo - Stieg Larsson ($7.99/$.50, 644 pages, copyright 2008, paperback)
This is the longest book that I referred to earlier, and the first of 3 that Mr. Larsson wrote before he passed away. The main characters are a reporter hired to solve a very old missing person's case, and the young female researcher who helps him. That description in no way will prepare you for the depth of characters and the twists and turns that flow freely throughout the book. Originally written in Swedish, this translation is excellent and, outside of a few place names and phrases, made it feel as though it was situated here. I enjoyed it.

A Kiss Gone Bad - Jeff Abbott ($6.99/$.50, 404 pages, copyright 2001, paperback)
A first novel in, what I hope, will be an ongoing series. The main character is a Justice of the Peace (sort of a junior judge) in a coastal town in Texas. It starts with an apparent suicide, brings in murders, missing persons, drugs, and a little local color. I enjoyed it.

Miscellaneous

Under the Black Ensign - L. Ron Hubbard ($9.95/$.50, 121 pages, copyright 2007, soft cover)
Apparently, some one had the bright idea to publish all of Hubbard's pulp stories in brand new editions. Not a bad idea, but poorly executed and done at the expense of the reader. The story here - a typical pirate novel that evokes Errol Flynn as Captain Blood - is only 84 pages long, with blank pages between chapters and full page illustrations that lowered the page count to less then 80. The rest of the book is an excerpt from another story, a complete list of Hubbard's stories, and a biography of the author. Not bad for an old, pulp story but - really? $10? I don't think so.

OK. Next time around, I'll be writing about the First Anniversary of this blog. Maybe a recap of the whole year, but definitely some new stuff to consider. Till then...............

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