2017-11-28
George RR Martin (Ed) and others: Mississippi Roll - A Wild Cards Book
Rod Duncan: The Bullet Catcher’s Daughter - The Fall of the Gas-Lit Empire #1
BTW, I love the cover.
Booklog 54/2017 - Jennifer Ashley: The Madness of Lord Ian Mackenzie - Mackenzie and McBrides #1
BTW, hideous generic cover.
Booklog 55/2017 - Lisa Shearin: Ruins and Revenge - A Raine Benares World #9

Booklog 56/2017 - Jodi Taylor: The Long and the Short of It - Chronicles of St Mary’s #9
This collects together all the short stories (thus far) from the Chronicles of St Mary’s, which if you haven’t read them, go back and start from the beginning. I’ll wait. Done it? Good. Now you know about the time travelling disaster-magnets who comprise St Mary’s historians and their support teams, especially Max our (usually) main viewpoint character. (I particularly love reading about Markham in security.) I’d read (and reviewed) all but one of these before because I buy anything from Jodi Taylor on sight, but I was happy to buy it for the new story, which has since been published as an individual short, but it’s good to have all the short stories together in one place and if you haven’t read any of them yet, it’s a bargain.
Booklog 57/2017 - Jodi Taylor: A Perfect Storm - Chronicles of St Mary’s #8.5

Booklog 58/2017 - Lois McMaster Bujold: Penric’s Fox – Penric #3

Booklog 59/2017 - C.E. Murphy: Bewitching Benedict – Lovelorn Lads #1
A straight Regency historical from an author I usually associate with urban or historical fantasy. I love Catie Murphy’s writing so was very pleased to read this. Benedict Fairburn stands to inherit his great-aunt’s fortune, but only if he marries. He doesn’t need the money and he’s inclined to let it go to the default inheritor, an orphanage, but his family are pushing every winsome spinster at him. He only has eyes for one, but sadly he once unwittingly insulted Claire Dalton past bearing and it’s going to take a lot to gain her forgiveness. A neat story, much enjoyed.
Booklog 60/2017 - Jodi Taylor: White Silence

Booklog 61/2017 - Indrek Hargla: Apothecary Melchior and the Mystery of St Olaf’s Church

Booklog 62/2017 - Patricia Briggs: Silence Fallen – Mercy Thompson #10

Booklog 63 - 65/2017 - Andre Norton's Gryphon Sequence
Andre Norton: The Crystal Gryphon - Witch World Series 2 – High Hallack 5
This is a re-read of a book read and enjoyed many years ago. It’s sometimes a mistake to go back, but though it’s of its time, this stood up pretty wall. Kerovan, born with hooves instead of feet and with amber-coloured eyes, is his father’s heir, but he’s raised away from the castle, and by the time he’s ready to inherit invaders from over the sea, the Hounds of Alizon, have turned his homeland into a battleground. His proxy marriage to Joisan all but forgotten, he becomes a scout. Joisan in her turn, has nothing of her husband except for hids gift, a tiny globe which encases a perfect miniature gryphon. Told by the pair in alternating chapters we see the war unfold and each of them do their duty before finally coming together.
Gryphon in Glory - Witch World Series 2 – High Hallack 6
Another re-read. Like an idiot Kerovan leaves Joisan behind and heads off into the Waste, but she’s having none of it, and before long she’s packed up and trailing behind, having adventures of her own, meeting up with Elys and Jervon along the way (characters I’m sure I’ve met in other High Hallack novels). This begins the move from the dales to Arvon and we meet the Wereriders for the first time. It’s hard to get all of Norton’s stories in the right order because they weren’t written chronologically and I’m sure Norton herself sometimes had characters meeting who couldn’t possibly have co-existed.
Andre Norton & AC Crispin: Gryphon’s Eyrie - Witch World Series 2 – High Hallack 7
Another re-read. Kerovan and Joisan have been travelling together for three years. He is drawn towards the mountains, she ends up following doggedly even though she’s rather stay with what looks like a tribe on Native Americans who seem to have found their way into the Witch World. They do, eventually find a home. Not as riveting or exciting as the previous two Gryphon books. I’m always a little wary of co-authored books. How much of it is actually Andre Norton’s fingers on the keyboard?
Booklog 66/2017 - 66. Lois McMaster Bujold: The Prisoner of Limnos – Penric and Desdemona #6

Booklog 67/2017 - Stephanie Burgis: Snowspelled - The Harwood Spellbook #1

Booklog 68/2017 - Adrian Tchaikovsky: Ironclads

Movie of the Week: Thor Ragnarok

Meanwhile Thor crash-lands on a garbage planet, gets a haircut (pity) and is forced into the arena where he discovers that his opponent is 'a friend from work', yes, the big green guy himself. mayhem ensues.
Eventually Thor, Hulk and Loki go up against Hela and Fenris the wolf in a no-holds-barred finale.
Well worth seeing. One of this year's better movies.
Movie of the Week: Murder on the Orient Express
The five-star cast was largely wasted. Johnny Depp, Judi Dench, Derek Jacobi and Michelle Pfeiffer all had roles that were little more than cameos, though it was nice to see daisy Ridley not carrying a light sabre.
Instantly forgettable.