Categories
Books

March Books

Wanderers by Chuck Wendig (4/5). An excellent story, though it IS about a pandemic, so this might not be the perfect time to read it. Interesting characters, challenges and good development; the only real letdown was the epilogue.

The Door Into Fire (The Tale of the Five, #1) by Diane Duane, A fantasy book with tremendous and costly powers, with a feel of a very different path than roleplaying powers and spell memorization took. A fascinating cosmology, and favorite reread.

The Door Into Shadow (Tale of the Five, # 2) by Diane Duane. The story continues, but now from Segnbora’s point of view. Real sacrifices and difficult decisions are thrown at the heroes — as are warmly embraced periods of calm.

The Door into Sunset by Dianne Duane (Book 3 of Door into series). A solid continuation, with good and off kilter (in a good way) plot developments. Shifted to a multiple POV, which was a bit disappointing after the excellent single POV of the last 2, but still good.

The Murders of Molly Southbourne by Tade Thompson. Molly grows into a weird, unique situation; it’s a well crafted and off, but plausibly. Very tight focus — it’s short and solid; Molly’s engaging despite horrors. Well done; 4/5.

Alanna: The First Adventure by Tamora Pierce. I remembered liking it but few details — it felt new. YA off to “school” (for pages, actually), slightly more medieval instead of a totally fantastic setting. Interesting challenges, very appealing heroine. 3/5

In the Hand of the Goddess by Tamora Pierce (Song of the Lioness 2). Even stronger; Alan’s struggle with the challenges of squiring intensify, dedication pays out… but an interesting mix of over-performing and doubt. Captivating and fast paced. 4/5

The Woman Who Rides Like a Man by Tamora Pierce (Song of the Lioness 3). Interesting jag sideways, interesting exploration of another culture. Maturity brings new challenges, some that perseverance can’t answer. 4/5