Nancy's Updates en-US Thu, 08 May 2025 16:11:25 -0700 60 Nancy's Updates 144 41 /images/layout/goodreads_logo_144.jpg Rating855556335 Thu, 08 May 2025 16:11:25 -0700 <![CDATA[Nancy Blair liked a review]]> /
Say You'll Remember Me by Abby Jimenez
"3.5 stars As someone who really disliked Abbys last book I found this one so much better. I honestly do not understand the book tok hate but then again I didn't understand the love for Just for the Summer. "
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Rating855556247 Thu, 08 May 2025 16:11:01 -0700 <![CDATA[Nancy Blair liked a review]]> /
To Be Taught, If Fortunate by Becky  Chambers
"While I feel the ending of this novella is a bit of a cop-out (view spoiler), I fully acknowledge that viewpoint comes from my own particular bias toward life due to who I am and my generation. Chambers is different from me in many important ways, some of which are fundamental, so I get that her solutions would not be my solutions.

That said, I liked this novella fine, which features something I haven’t read in a while, namely exploration porn. It’s all about seeking new life on strange new worlds, and I’m all about that. (view spoiler)

The basic idea here is similar to James Blish’s The Seedling Stars, where instead of terraforming planets to suit humans, instead we physioform humans to suit planets. In the Blish stories it’s done for colonization purposes and the changes are permanent. Here it’s for temporary exploration. They alter their bodies for a few years then go on to the next planet. It’s a cool idea, if not entirely original.

Chambers� standard setting of people working together and getting along well while being competent professionals is on full display here. That seems utopian to me, and decidedly Science Fictional, but it’s a nice thing to consider. I haven’t minded it in her other three books and I don’t mind it here.

One thing that does bug me is the Super Science of the ship. The Merian is over 50 years old when the story begins, and then over a period of many years they travel to four planets, spending numerous years on each, yet nothing ever breaks or wears out. I went to the store the other day and my year-old car refused to shift from Park into Drive. I know it’s not the focus of the story, but it’s an important aspect that would add verisimilitude.

All in all this is a pleasant SF tale, but I can only give it 2 stars due to the things I wasn’t buying. I definitely liked Chambers� other books better."
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Review3672742463 Tue, 06 May 2025 04:17:32 -0700 <![CDATA[Nancy added 'Magpie Murders']]> /review/show/3672742463 Magpie Murders by Anthony Horowitz Nancy gave 2 stars to Magpie Murders (Susan Ryeland, #1) by Anthony Horowitz
bookshelves: series, nancy-s-mysteries-and-thrillers
What a disappointment.
The first half of the book (the book within the book) was delightful. Great characters and intriguing mystery.

Then everything grinds to a halt with the painfully long and dull second half. No more interesting characters or cunning dialog, just bland musings. ]]>
Rating854661593 Tue, 06 May 2025 04:16:47 -0700 <![CDATA[Nancy Blair liked a review]]> /
Magpie Murders by Anthony Horowitz
"The murder mystery is one of the longest surviving genres of all time. At a time, it was even my absolute favourite (I no longer know) genre. However, lately I've felt disillusioned with modern attempts to be the next Christie and this novel is another example of why.

This book thinks it's clever, a book within a book following Susan Ryeland- an editor of Cloverleaf Books and the blandest character I have ever read about- and the main character of the book within the book called Atticus Pund. Magpie Murders is actually about Pund's final case and the last book in the series. A murder has happened in Saxby-on-Avon a sleepy English village straight out of a Christie novel and set in the 50s. It was easily my favourite part of the book. The only part I enjoyed.

The story starts with Ryeland reading the manuscript for Magpie Murders by Alan Conway, which begins with a funeral. Local busybody and shit-stirrer Mary Blakiston was found dead at the bottom of the stairs of the house where she worked, Pye Hall. She died within the house but it was locked from the inside. The doctor and gardener had to break into the house to get to her. Mary Blakiston was a poor man's Alison DiLaurentis. She knew a little too much about everyone and was fond of rubbing her illicit knowledge in her victims' faces. Perhaps that was why she was killed. Was she killed? Just when Pund is about to reveal what happened to her, going as far as namedropping the person who could be responsible, the novel within is abruptly cut short.

Now, I have nothing against cliff-hangers. I actually appreciate it when the author has a legitimate reason to withhold information from the reader. But sometimes, it's just a waste of time, energy, money, space, paper and ink. Horowitz owes a big debt to the universe for all the bullshit he had me slog through just to get to the resolution of the real Magpie Murders.

See there is a reason why that information was cut short. Ryeland didn't have the full manuscript and alas, she can't have the rest of them because the author has died of apparent suicide. Ryeland then finds herself in a murder mystery of her own that any sleuth worth their salt would scoff at. The thing I love about mysteries, besides wondering how the crime was committed, is the colourful cast of characters and the setting. One of my favourite mysteries of all time, Stranger on the Shore , is set in a Long Island estate with a wealthy family with its requisite cast of eccentrics. It rewards me with people to hate, people to love, people to root for and people to wish they drop dead. In Ryeland's part of the story, there was no such thing. If anything I just couldn't wait for the story to end.

Being in Ryeland's head is so damn BOOOORING. And my god is she just such an inspiration for ambivalence. Her life is the equivalent of bleurgh. At one point she has to choose becoming CEO of her publishing house after the presiding leader suggests he may retire and wants to hand over the reigns to her. However, her Greek lover has asked her to go with him to Greece where he wants to run a hotel Greekly. Seriously, the author won't ever let you forget Andreas is Greek. Ryeland somehow sees this as such a Problem.
Quite unexpectedly, and without really wanting it, I had come to a crossroads - or more accurately, a T-junction - in my life. I could take over as CEO of Cloverleaf Books. There were writers I wanted to work with... As I'd told Andreas the night before, I could develop the business the way I wanted. Or there was Crete. The choices were so different, the two directions so contrary, that considering the two of them side by side almost made me want to laugh... Why do these things have to happen at the same time?
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Ryeland is also rather the poor narrator. She's even aware of it, and that makes her inclusion in this novel at all even more egregious All of this makes me a poor choice of narrator/investigator. The red herrings in this book feel like a complete waste of time. They even come with a letter written about Conway by his sister which had a few nice lines, He used language as a place for us to hide. But sudden moments of writerly genius weren't enough to compensate for the hand-holding, amatuer hour narration and pure slog that was the second half of this book.

I didn't enjoy the conclusion of Ryeland's mystery and I wondered why it was even necessary. Her bits also had two more books within books with one being Conway satirizing or canonizing a Serious Writer™️ where he referred to a baby as an unlovely ball of poisonous mauve (ew) and another where a wannabe author and waiter was showing Ryeland his novel. I have no idea whether Horowitz wanted to show off his ability to write different voices in which case cool, bro.

This book leaves me with mixed feelings. I loved the Christie call-back of the Atticus Pund story but Ryeland's part of the story can go fuck itself. The cover of my copy has a blurb from the Daily Mail (of all fucking newspapers) calling it the finest crime novel of the year with a stunning twist. It certainly left me stunned as to what was stunning."
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GiveawayRequest709174071 Mon, 05 May 2025 04:39:32 -0700 <![CDATA[<a href="/user/show/20784526-nancy">Nancy</a> entered a giveaway]]> /giveaway/show/408645-the-extinction-of-irena-rey The Extinction of Irena Rey by Jennifer  Croft
10 copies available, ends on May 19, 2025
Enter to win ]]>
ReadStatus9382342508 Sat, 03 May 2025 10:33:07 -0700 <![CDATA[Nancy wants to read 'The Amalfi Curse']]> /review/show/7539667771 The Amalfi Curse by Sarah Penner Nancy wants to read The Amalfi Curse by Sarah Penner
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ReadStatus9379977851 Fri, 02 May 2025 17:32:32 -0700 <![CDATA[Nancy wants to read 'The Deepest Lake']]> /review/show/7538006141 The Deepest Lake by Andromeda Romano-Lax Nancy wants to read The Deepest Lake by Andromeda Romano-Lax
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ReadStatus9378228541 Fri, 02 May 2025 08:28:42 -0700 <![CDATA[Nancy marked as nope 'Annihilation']]> /review/show/5894899047 Annihilation by Jeff VanderMeer Nancy marked as nope Annihilation by Jeff VanderMeer
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Rating853389584 Fri, 02 May 2025 08:28:20 -0700 <![CDATA[Nancy Blair liked a review]]> /
Annihilation by Jeff VanderMeer
"The whole "explore a weird area" tale has been done before and, in my opinion, done better. Darwinia and Blind Lake by Robert Charles Wilson, more recently the comic Manifest Destiny, Vol. 1: Flora & Fauna.

This feels like it was weird for weirdness' sake, and I was left with the distinct impression the entire thing was a delusion of the narrator, essentially revisiting the pool-pond of her youth as she tries to make sense of the institution she's been committed to.

She had some sort of mental break and all of her experiences are filtered through her delusions. The repeated instances of "whiteness" could be that of the institution and the people who work there. Doctor's lab coats, the white clothing of attendants, the white straitjackets of other patients... or even herself.

In that scenario, the repeated leitmotif of doors are actual doors of the institution, and she eventually becomes acclimatized to both her situation and her delusion, so she weaves everything together into a cohesive (if crazy) whole.

Of course, this will probably be completely disproven by the first chapter of the second book, but this one wasn't compelling enough for me to continue. "
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Review7506978313 Wed, 30 Apr 2025 04:47:48 -0700 <![CDATA[Nancy added 'Happiness']]> /review/show/7506978313 Happiness by Will Ferguson Nancy gave 2 stars to Happiness (Paperback) by Will Ferguson
bookshelves: dnf
Maybe satire just isn’t my thing. As with many satirical books I’ve tried, I was totally on board in the beginning. But then the book inevitably dulls down and wears out the humor.

In the case of Happiness. Great start, but by the midpoint, I was bored. The author had made his point and the characters seemed to be on autopilot. Same jokes, same insights, over and over. ]]>