Monday, April 15, 2019

The Sleeper and the Spindle by Neil Gaiman

4 Stars


Inspiring and superbly illustrated.

Gaiman gave a lovely gift to his daughters with this retelling of Sleeping Beauty. This a fairy tale where the women save the day, the only men that appear and play a role are literally little, dwarves. I like the twist at the end, and while this has violence, it is fairy tale appropriate and therefore suitable for children. I'm considering purchasing the hardcover for my permanent shelf of children's stories because the illustrations are lovely: black and white with highlights of golden and the dust cover is fabulous.


Sunday, April 14, 2019

First Eaglet Hatched at Big Bear!

Jackie and Shadow have been taking turns prepping the nest and keeping the eggs warm. The first eaglet started hatching last night and emerged fully this morning, April 14th.


You can WATCH the LIVE CAMERA FEED: https://friendsofbigbearvalley.org/eagle/

Sunday, April 7, 2019

Troll Bridge by Neil Gaiman

3.5 Stars


Fun twist.

The artwork for this is very good. It manages to capture the fairytale quality and simultaneously express the modernity of the story. As you can imagine, it involves a troll. But what happens is the twist. There is an undercurrent of sexuality and menace, so I'd suggest reading before giving it to a pre-teen.



Friday, March 15, 2019

Funny but Wrong


I read a lot and I interact on Goodreads, but their algorithm for "Recommendations" is really wonky. This is so wrong, not sure what to say other than I hope the reverse recommendation isn't given to readers of It's a Busy, Busy World.

Red Harvest  by Dashiell Hammett is one of the bloodiest books I've read in a long time, and I recently read Titus Andronicus by Shakespeare which is notorious for it's bloodbath. So no. Wrong GR, just wrong.

Monday, November 26, 2018

The Silent Death by Volker Kutscher

4 Stars


"Why shouldn't the Commies and the Nazis bash each other's heads in?" one of them asked. "It would save us a lot of work."

The Silent Death is the second in the Gereon Rath series set during the Interwar Period in Berlin. The period markers between the World Wars are really well done, integrated into the storyline perfectly. 1930 and talkies are taking over the cinema leaving behind one art form for another. The conflict, the change in equipment, and shooting strategies are all touched upon throughout as Rath follows up on a homicide.

Rath has the ambition and personality to create waves and ruffle feathers. His transfer from Vice to Homicide hasn't changed that; he's still rubbing colleagues the wrong way and aggravating his boss, DCI Böhm. Rath gets himself into hot water multiple times, yet manages to find a way to flip the tables. Question is, when will his luck run out?

This is definitely a new favorite series, so I'm glad to see that Goldstein was just released in English (British) translation.