Book Review: Royal Assassin by Robin Hobb

Book #195 of 2017: Royal Assassin by Robin Hobb (Farseer #2) This middle book in the Farseer trilogy was formative in my teenage years, speaking to the idealism and anger that most young people probably feel to some degree. There’s something universal in youths chafing against authority figures who will not see reason, and author …

Book Review: Heir of Sea and Fire by Patricia A. McKillip

Book #194 of 2017: Heir of Sea and Fire by Patricia A. McKillip (Riddle-Master #2) This middle volume in the Riddle-Master trilogy is probably the strongest, but it still moves to the strange internal logic of a dream, often leaving its readers grasping after oblique shades of meaning in under-explained references to this world’s history …

Book Review: Moby Dick by Herman Melville

Book #193 of 2017: Moby Dick by Herman Melville There’s a decent story submerged in this book, but it’s utterly swamped by the narrator’s endless didactic asides on whales and whaling. For every page about Ahab’s obsessive quest or Ishmael and Queequeg’s sweet friendship or even the fate of minor characters like poor Pip, readers …

Book Review: Shadow and Bone by Leigh Bardugo

Book #192 of 2017: Shadow and Bone by Leigh Bardugo (Grisha #1) This is the first novel in Leigh Bardugo’s Grisha trilogy, a series I’m reading after (and on the strength of) the author’s Six of Crows and its sequel Crooked Kingdom. Those books share a world with this series and take place after it, …

Book Review: The Roanoke Girls by Amy Engel

Book #191 of 2017: The Roanoke Girls by Amy Engel Lane Roanoke has never known any family except her mother Camilla, who left home when she was pregnant with Lane and cut off all ties to her past. But when Camilla kills herself, the orphaned teen is sent to live at the Roanoke family estate …

Book Review: The World of Ice & Fire: The Untold History of Westeros and the Game of Thrones by George R.R. Martin, Elio M. García Jr., and Linda Antonsson

Book #190 of 2017: The World of Ice & Fire: The Untold History of Westeros and the Game of Thrones by George R.R. Martin, Elio M. García Jr., and Linda Antonsson The World of Ice & Fire is a Silmarillion to George R.R. Martin’s A Song of Ice and Fire, providing an exhaustive (and somewhat …

TV Review: Jane the Virgin, season 3

TV #39 of 2017: Jane the Virgin, season 3 Same great cast, same terrific writing, and definitely a return to form after season 2 got a little lost in the weeds with its plot. I was a little bit afraid that this season was going to feature more wheel-spinning as we approached the midpoint, but …

TV Review: Cop Rock, season 1

TV #38 of 2017: Cop Rock, season 1 This is such a… unique show. It’s not exactly the trainwreck that its reputation would suggest, but it certainly comes near to that at times. Picture a musical show like Glee (particularly the times when the singing is just supposed to represent characters emoting and not rehearsing/performing …

Book Review: The Infinities by John Banville

Book #189 of 2017: The Infinities by John Banville This story of the Greek god Hermes narrating the events surrounding a modern patriarch’s deathbed is unbearably pretentious and unforgivably cruel to its characters. Add to that an utterly inconsequential plot and I just couldn’t wait to be through with it. ★☆☆☆☆

TV Review: Game of Thrones, season 3

TV #37 of 2017: Game of Thrones, season 3 Another solid season of Game of Thrones, although this is definitely where the seams of adapting A Song of Ice and Fire into a network television show really start to appear. In the books, characters can sit out entire novels when nothing interesting is happening to …

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