August 2020 TBR

Hello Kittens! I hope August is off to a good start for all of you. I’m coming into this month with a lot of optimism about the amount of reading that I will be able to do. Life is settling down a little and there are several great titles coming my way soon. Without further ado, here’s my reading plan for the month of August.

All links go to Goodreads

Leftovers from July:

Malice by John Gwynne. I’ve made it more than halfway through this book and I will be finishing it in the next week or so.

Red Rising by Pierce Brown. I’m about 15 chapters into this book and am also listening to it on Scribd, which is a surprisingly enjoyable experience. I get nostalgic when listening to a book that I am also physically reading because it takes me back to those times when we would listen to a book that we were reading as a class in elementary school. I swear I can actually smell the crayons each time I sit down to read this.

Read-a-longs:

The Guest List by Lucy Foley. This is for one of the Facebook book groups that I participate in and is the only read-a-long that I am doing this month. I felt like I was really overloading my month with ultra-structured reading, so I’ll only be choosing one or two books each month from a book group from now on.

Librarians in Literature:

I’ve got my first two titles for my Librarians in Literature project that I blogged about last month. The goal of the project is to read some books featuring a main character who is a Librarian and examine the book from the perspective of a professional Librarian. I want to take a look at how accurately books are portraying the work that we do. Plus, it’s just fun for me to read about a Librarian in a different context.

Killer Librarian by Mary Lou Kirwin. Okay, so i’m starting off with a title that’s a little outlandish, but this project is supposed to be fun as well as academic.

The Book of Speculation by Erika Swyler. I think this will be a slightly more serious treatment of the profession. It also looks like there is more than one Librarian featured.

ARCs:

The Nothing Man by Catherine Ryan Howard. Pub date is 8/4.

Six Angry Girls by Adrienne Kisner. Pub date is 8/18.

All Eyes on Her by L.E. Flynn. Pub date is 8/18.

Now That I’ve Found You by Kristina Forest. Pub date is 8/25

Everything else:

Murder, She Wrote: The Murder of Twelve by Jessica Fletcher and Jon Land.

Total August books: 8 (+2 to finish)

I’ve kept it a little more modest this month in an effort to take a little pressure off and leave more room for spontaneity. I hope you all have a great reading month ahead of you full of fantastic titles. Stay well, Kittens.

July 2020 Wrap-Up

Hello Kittens! I am so happy that this year seems to be flying by and we are already into August. I am more than ready for the Fall and getting to August means we’re almost there. July ended up being a poor reading month for me in the second half of the month, mostly due to the fact that I moved at the end of the month. Moving in July is its own particular form of Hell, in my personal opinion, and resulted in me struggling to finish any books these last 10 days or so. Without further ado, let’s take a look at what I did manage to get through.

(Title links are to goodreads.)

Total Books Read: 9

Exit Strategy by Martha Wells, Rating: 5 stars

The Shadows by Alex North, Rating: 5 stars (check out my review here.)

Cinderella is Dead by Kalynn Bayron, Rating: 4 stars (I reviewed this one here.)

An Extraordinary Union by Alyssa Cole, Rating: 3.5 stars (rounded up to 4)

Distress Signals by Catherine Ryan Howard, Rating: 4 stars

The Invisible Library by Genevieve Cogman, Rating: 4 stars

The Priory of the Orange Tree by Samantha Shannon, Rating: 5 stars (this was one of my favorite reads of the month and I reviewed it here.)

Once & Future, Vol. 1 by Kieron Gillen, Rating: 4 stars

True Story by Kate Reed Petty, Rating: 3 stars

I finished 6 of my 11 planned July TBR books. This is roughly 55% of what I had planned, but I did read a few books that weren’t on the list. I’m giving myself a break on these this month because I severely underestimated how disruptive moving would be. I do have 2 of the remaining 5 books already in progress, so I will be finishing Maliceby John Gwynne and Red Rising by Pierce Brown in the next few days.

Stats:

5 stars: 3

4 stars: 5

3 stars: 1

2 stars: 0

1 star: 0

Format:

Physical: 5

Ebook: 4

Audiobook: 0

Genre:

Sci-Fi: 1

Thriller: 2

Young Adult: 1

Historical Romance: 1

Fantasy: 2

Graphic Novel: 1

Mystery: 1

New to me Authors: 6

Authors I’ve read before: 3

Total Pages: 3,189

In conclusion, I read a lot of good books this month, but I will hopefully be reading and posting more in August.

Mid-month Check-in and New Project

Hello Kittens! July feels like it’s operating on warp-speed and I can’t believe we’re more than half-way through the month already. I wanted to give a quick update on my TBR and give you a head’s up about a project I’m planning to start in August that will impact future TBRs. (All links below are to Goodreads)

 

July TBR progress

So in July, I had planned to read 11 books and I’m doing okay with the goal so far.

I’ve managed to complete:

The Priory of the Orange Tree by Samantha Shannon

Cinderella is Dead by Kalynn Bayron

The Shadows by Alex North

The Invisible Library by Genevieve Cogman

Exit Strategy by Martha Wells

 

I’ve also read a few things that weren’t on the official TBR:

An Extraordinary Union by Alyssa Cole

Distress Signals by Catherine Ryan Howard

Once & Future v.1 by Kieron Gillen

 

And I have one book from the TBR that I’ve already started reading:

Malice by John Gwynne

 

A New Project:

I’ve been fascinated by how librarians are represented in literature for a long time, but starting next month, I’m really going to be leaning in to this trope. I am going to be attempting to read 2 books each month that feature a librarian, and I will be ranking them on the lemonade scale, my personal rating, and a new rating that will evaluate how accurately I think they represent the profession. My ultimate goal is to take this reading experiment and turn it into an article for publication (probably in a boring professional magazine that only other librarians will read…but still). I’ll be putting together an official reading list and posting it soon, but if you know of any books featuring a librarian main character please comment with your suggestions! Any genre is fair game!

The Priory of the Orange Tree by Samantha Shannon

Hello Kittens! Today I have for you one of those books that everyone agrees sounds great, but few people actually pick up and read. That’s because this is on big honkin’ book. It’s just over 800 pages long. I actually read it in about a week, though that’s just a guess because I paused and read a few other things that had piled up after I got to the end of part 1. In any case, this is a standalone high fantasy book for adult readers that has dragons, magic, court intrigue, and a strong f/f romance set in a partially matriarchal society. While it is a large book, the experience of reading it didn’t feel that way. I felt like I was flying through this book and the only thing that reminded me that it was big was the fact that my arms kept getting heavy while I read it. It looks daunting, but it is absolutely worth the read.

Title: The Priory of the Orange TreeThe Priory of the Orange Tree

Author: Samantha Shannon

Author website: https://sshannonauthor.tumblr.com/books

Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing

Publish date: February 26, 2019

ISBN: 9781635570304

Buy the Book: Amazon, Barnes and Noble

Summary:

In The Priory of the Orange Tree we meet an expansive cast of characters. We meet Tané, a young woman who has trained for most of her life to be eligible to become a dragonrider in the East. She is getting ready to take the test that will determine if she is worthy to be chosen by a dragon when a stranger appears in the night who could alter her fate and delay or destroy her dream. She asks a friend for help in dealing with the situation and both of their lives, plus several others, are changed from that day forward.

We meet Ead, a young woman serving in the court of Queen Sabran IX, the 36th Queen of Inys and head of the House of Berethnet. Ead has been placed in the queen’s court to secretly protect her. While the court thinks she is an average servant, she is actually a mage working on behalf of the Priory of the Orange Tree. In Inys, she is forced to worship a religion that goes against everything the Priory has taught her, but she will risk everything to keep Queen Sabran safe. The longer she stays at court and the closer she gets to Queen Sabran, the more her feelings for this foreign Queen grow. While Ead may have a duty to the Priory, she is finding that more often than not, situations are not as clear as she once thought them to be.

Queen Sabran is a force to be reckoned with who has lived her life with the shadow of prophecy on her shoulders. The Queens of the House of Berethnet all have exactly one child, a daughter, and as long as they do, they keep their world safe from a red wyrm known as the Nameless One. The Nameless One has been sealed in a watery tomb for 1,000 years, but there are rumors all over the land that he is about to break free. The last time the Nameless One was free, he destroyed cities and brought a deadly plague to people that causes them to burn with an unquenchable fever. Sabran and her people believe that as long as she can keep the bloodline going, they will be sage from the Nameless One. As such, there is tremendous pressure in her court for Sabran to marry and become pregnant, thus ensuring the safety of her people.

We also meet Areloth, known as Loth to most. He is Sabran Berethnet’s best friend and when we first meet him he is being banished to Yscalin, a nearby land that has been invaded by enemies of Inys. He is being sent away because some in the Queen’s court felt that he was getting too close to the Queen and would not make an appropriate husband for her. As he faces an uncertain future, Loth has to work to figure out how to survive, how to get back to Inys, and how to make sure Sabran is safe. When he discovers that matters in Yscalin are more complex than he first thought, he will set out on an adventure in an attempt to keep all those that he holds dear safe. He is hardly an adventurer, but he pulls courage from somewhere deep inside to do what he must for those he loves.

All of these stories and more come together to tell a tale of many lands preparing to do battle with an old and dangerous foe. Across an immense world that Shannon weaves brilliantly, these characters will bring pieces of information from one land to the next that will help them figure out how the Nameless One was defeated last time, and how they might do so again. Watching all of the pieces come together is masterful, and even though this is a fantasy book, there are plenty of twists that will have readers flying through the pages.

Why I liked it:

The world-building is amazing here. In 800 pages, there was only one small part of the book that I didn’t feel had a lot of importance to the entire book. That’s amazing for a tome of this size. Every little thing flowed into the next thing and so on so that very few words are wasted. It was a huge book that didn’t feel cumbersome to read.

I also loved that we had matriarchal societies that were functioning beautifully. While there was trouble brewing on the horizon, all of the female characters are presented a formidable in their own right. We get some representation here, in that as far as I can tell, most of the characters are described as having dark or brown skin. We also get a variety of romantic relationships, with m/m, f/m, and f/f relationships represented. We don’t get any graphic descriptions of sexual scenes, but we do get beautiful relationship development. This is the kind of book that is going to hit you with some feelings.

I know we’re not supposed to judge books by their covers, but the cover on this book is truly stunning. I got the paperback edition (a trade paperback, not a mass market) and it has the most beautiful blue foiling on a dragon on the front. It features a slightly raised tower (which the dragon is curled around), and the rest of the cover is a vibrant orange-yellow tinge. It is absolutely stunning in person.

What I would like to change:

Like I said, there’s only one scene in the entire book that I didn’t completely understand. It is a scene where Ead is crossing a desert while attempting to return to the Priory. She meets a character and has a conversation with him, but as far as I can remember, we never see that character again and Ead leaves soon after without explanation to the rest of the party. It was just a little bit like a throwaway scene for me. It could have just been written in a few sentences and appended to the beginning of her next chapter. There were other places in the book where the passage of time was indicated and characters were in a new place without us getting detailed information about their journey, and it worked fine.

Disclaimer: No disclaimer needed. I purchased this book to participate in a read-a-thon and it looks gorgeous on my shelves.

My library rating: While the representation of homosexual relationships will turn some readers away, the lack of violence or descriptive sex scenes makes this one easy to recommend. The biggest hurdle other than that will just be getting people to pick up a book that big.

lemonade_iconlemonade_iconlemonade_iconlemonade_icon4 glasses of lemonade= a book you could recommend to a book group or anybody who reads.  You might find controversial subject matter, but it is handled delicately.

My personal preference rating: I gave this book 5 stars and I’ll be picking up more of Shannon’s work in the future. While this is a standalone, she also has a 7-book series that already has 3 works published, with a 4th due out next year.

Series plans pt. 2

Hello Kittens! Welcome back for part two of my post about the series that I will be attempting to read this year. In my last post, I showed you which series I have already started, but for this post, I’ll be showing you the series that I would really like to start this year. I have seen so many good recommendations for series this year, many of which are actually not new series. I am really excited to give them a shot in the second half of 2020 because, let’s be honest, books are the only good thing about 2020 thus far.

Series I’m looking forward to starting (links are to Goodreads):

LIFEL1K3 (Lifelike, #1)

Lifelike series by Jay Kristoff. This is a YA dystopian sci-fi trilogy. The last book just published at the end of June. All that I know about it thus far is that is has a steampunk vibe and is written by half of the writing duo that brought me the Illuminae Files. That’s enough information for me to at least pick these up.

Nevernight (The Nevernight Chronicle, #1)

On that same note, I’m looking to get into the Nevernight Chronicle by Jay Kristoff. I’m not sure Kristoff writes anything except trilogies. Either way, I’m giving it a try just because he wrote it. On reflection, I’m putting a lot of stock in the works of a guy from whom I’ve only read one book…which he co-authored. Anyways, tons of people have raved about this one so I’ll be going for it soon. (Also, can we just talk about how awesome that cover is?)

The Long Way to a Small, Angry Planet (Wayfarers, #1)

The Wayfarers series by Becky Chambers. This series has 3 books currently, with a 4th book expected out next year. I know very little about this series except that it is a space opera sci-fi novel for adults. One of the Booktuber’s that I follow selected it as a book club choice, so I added it to my list but had too much on my plate at the time that the book club actually read it.

Sleeping Giants (Themis Files, #1)

The Themis Files by Sylvain Neuvel. This is a Sci-Fi/Fantasy trilogy that was highly recommended by the same Booktuber. I know that it starts off with a young character falling into a crater with a giant hand and that the series is that character growing up and looking into the mystery of that hand and why it came to be there.

The Black Prism (Lightbringer, #1)

The Lightbringer series by Brent Weeks. This is a 5-book Fantasy series that I’ve heard has a unique magic system. The series is complete as far as I can tell, with the last book publishing last year.

The Final Empire (Mistborn, #1)

The Mistborn series by Brandon Sanderson. A lot of people at work are reading Sanderson right now, working through his entire catalog as far as I can tell. I’m going to start here because a lot of people talk about this series. It looks like it started out as a trilogy, and then Sanderson added on 3 more books set in the same world several hundred years after the events of the first trilogy ended. Right now, I’m only going to commit to the first 3 books. If Sanderson is as good as everyone says he is, then I’ll continue on and look at which of his series to move to next.

Red Rising (Red Rising Saga, #1)

The Red Rising Saga by Pierce Brown. I’m venturing into this series because of a book club that I’m in. There are currently 5 books in the series and the book club plans to launch into the second book next month (for all I know we’ll just continue reading one of these a month until we run out of books). This is a YA Fantasy/Sci-Fi book with a color-based caste system.

Total books if I finished all of the currently published titles: 25 (not including the second half of the Mistborn series)

That’s a pretty lofty set of series goals for the rest of this year, and in all likelihood, I will probably start more of these series than I will actually finish this year. That’s okay. That’s the best part of getting most of my books from my local libraries; if I don’t like something, I can put it down or give it back without consequences.