baronessekat: (book)
A Nun in the ClosetA Nun in the Closet by Dorothy Gilman

My rating: 4 of 5 stars


When the cloistered Sisters of St. Tabitha are bequeathed a large estate in upstate New York, they find that they need to send a couple of their own to inspect the property. So Sister John and Sister Hyacinthe brave the world and go.

Once there they discover an injured man hiding in one of the closets, a huge amount of money hiding in a well and a bunch of activist hippies living in a clearing on the property. Meanwhile unknown people are trying to scare them away.

But the Sisters are stubborn, and less than wordly, and determined to see the best in everything.

******

I have never read anything by this Author, though I've heard really good things about her Mrs. Pollifax books. I picked this book up on a whim from a used book store and am really glad I did. This was just the right mix of suspense and humor. I found myself laughing at situations and turns of phrases.

I would gladly recommend this book to others.



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baronessekat: (book)
The Supervillain Handbook: The Ultimate How-to Guide to Destruction and Mayhem (Supervillainy, #1)The Supervillain Handbook: The Ultimate How-to Guide to Destruction and Mayhem by Matt D. Wilson

My rating: 4 of 5 stars


This was a funny and quick book that felt like a more indepth approach to the Evil Overlords list from the 1990s. There were parts I laughed out loud.

I loved the small tidbits of "failures as a supervillain" and even spotlights on ones that we didn't know were supervillain.

If you need a quick book (the audio was right around 3 hours) that could make you smile, I'd recommend this book.



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baronessekat: (book)
Five Days at Memorial: Life and Death in a Storm-Ravaged HospitalFive Days at Memorial: Life and Death in a Storm-Ravaged Hospital by Sheri Fink

My rating: 4 of 5 stars


During the five days during and after Hurricane Katrina struck New Orleans, the medical care teams there were faced with brutal conditions and then even more brutal decisions that had to be made about the patients that had to be evacuated.

After everyone was rescued, investigators found many patients who had died, but an in-depth analysis revealed that the may not have died of natural causes due to loss of power and lack of supplies - instead, these patients who had been in either hospice care of in the ICU (and all had DNR orders) appeared to have been euthanized.

What's more it looked like the choices did not have to have been made had hospital officials done more than a cursory appearance - informing staff of available thing and easier exits (the staff thought they had to take patients out a hole made in a wall to get them to the helipad due to power being out and elevators not working - when there was a walkway that the management knew about and had been using to get to the nearby parking structure).

This book is an deep look at the reported events, how a system failed and people died. It even looked at how some of the lessons learned during Katrina were almost ignored when SuperStorm Sandy hit NYC.

I found this book to be both engrossing and VERY disturbing. And not just because it was written in 2013 and how back then they were running hypothetical scenarios for what would happen should something like the Spanish Flu pandemic hit a major city like New York and how unless steps were made, health care workers would have to make hard triage decisions, just like they did for Katrina and Sandy. And hey... in 2020 they had to do just that because no one wants to listen to Cassandra until it's too late.



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baronessekat: (book)
Easy Street: The Hard WayEasy Street: The Hard Way by Ron Perlman

My rating: 4 of 5 stars


I fully admit that in the 1980's I had a hard core fangirl crush on the character of Vincent on the CBS TV drama "Beauty and the Beast" and the actor Ron Perlman, who played him. I honestly did not know anyone self-identified female who watched the show who did not. Over the years, as I saw more and more of his work, the more I just flat out crushed on him, loved his work and wanted more.

This memoir is flat perfect Perlman. And it worked even more so because he read it. I loved the look into how he grew into the actor that he is. I had no idea that he has a masters in Drama - though it makes sense. I loved his frank, no regrets talk (fair warning he swears - a LOT) about doing what he had to do to put a roof over his family's heads, how he would spend the days he wasn't on call on sets to watch actors he admired work their craft so he could learn - Connery and Brando especially.

I was moved by his frank talk about fighting depression and self image - he always sees himself at the fat funny looking kid and was floored to be named one of the sexiest men alive.

I would have liked more in-depth looks into the various movies he talked about. Especially "City of Lost Children" and "Alien Resurrection". Instead he really focused on "The Island of Dr. Moreau" and some on "Name of the Rose". But it's his book and he can talk about his life howeve4r he wants.

I do recommend this book. And if you have Audible+, it's in the catalog.



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baronessekat: (book)
SpontaneousSpontaneous by Aaron Starmer

My rating: 3 of 5 stars


Mara's life changed her senior year of high school when a classmate suddenly spontaneously exploded during class. Then another one went kaboom, then another. Needless to say, people start freaking out. Other than all the victims being from the same high school class, there does not seem to be anything connecting them. Experts and feds come in trying to find a cause. But no one can figure out why or what is causing a bunch of kids, from one school in one town in New Jersey to just randomly explode.

But Mara's determined to make the most of her Senior Year and maybe, just maybe survive to graduation.

************

OK, this book was just weird. But then again, how could a book about teenage spontaneous explosions not be.

The part that got me was that I was able to suspend by belief in reality about the exploding teens. But I had trouble with how the adults were portrayed. Mara's parents are just too laid back. The rest of the adults in the town just seem to give up and become "well that crop of kids are a loss, let's just move on and focus on the younger classes." Even the feds and experts come across as apathetic and "oh well."

In the end, I am not the audience for this book. I picked it up because it was mentioned on Pop Culture Happy Hour as the basis for a movie that came out this year. Based on the book, can't say I'm going to be rushing to watch it .



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baronessekat: (book)
Hold Me Closer, Necromancer (Necromancer, #1)Hold Me Closer, Necromancer by Lish McBride

My rating: 3 of 5 stars


3.5 really. If I were younger I might up it to 4.

20 something Sam's day started out on par for normal... work his dead-end burger joint job with his friends, trying to do as little as possible to earn a paycheck. But when he and a coworker accidentally break the tail-light of a car while playing "potato hockey" while on break, his and his friends' lives quickly become surreal.

Turns out that the owner of the car is the city's most powerful necromancer and he pegs Sam as one as well, though Sam has no idea what the weird guy is talking about. But the man feels that the city of Seattle is only big enough for one powerful necromancer and he seeks to make Sam go away - one way or the other.

As Sam fights for his life, he quickly learns about a world that he belongs to but never knew about and he has to do what he can to save no only his life but those of his friends and a cute girl he just met.

*************

For what this book is - A YA Urban Fantasy/Supernatural book, it was good. And as I said, I think if I were maybe 20 years younger I might have liked it more. I liked it enough that if I need to fill a reading challenge category, I would look for the next book, but I am right now not rushing out to find out what happens next.



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AND WITH THAT I HAVE FINISHED THE 2020 POPSUGAR READING CHALLENGE!!!!!
baronessekat: (book)
(Goodreads Choice Award for Science Fiction (2019)

RecursionRecursion by Blake Crouch

My rating: 2 of 5 stars


It begins subtly... people start experiencing memories of lives not lived - so full of details that they seem real but how could they be? False Memory Syndrome (as it comes to be called), starts driving people mad. But doctors and scientists cannot find a cause - it's not a pathogen or some other form of transmittable disease.

But it takes a NYC detective and a neuroscientist studying ways to help Alzheimer patients to realize what is happening, and that only they can stop it.

******************

'WTF did I just listen to? I finished the book and am left with a sense of "I just wasted 10.75 hours of my time".

There were plot holes the size of Mack Trucks, characters I just could not care about and an ending that just was flat. Not to mention that the main reader did not actually do anything for the story to help it along.

I recommend giving this one a hard pass.







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baronessekat: (book)
Innocent TraitorInnocent Traitor by Alison Weir

My rating: 4 of 5 stars


Lady Jane Grey, great grand niece of Henry VIII was a devout Protestant and avid scholar. She wanted nothing more to have a shred of love from her parents and to continue her studies. However, the adults had different plans. First her parents schemed to marry her to her cousin Edward, son of the King, in hopes of her one day becoming Queen and thus improving their standings in Society.

After Edward becomes King, the insiders realize that he is not going to survive due to ill health. So her parents and the head of the Privy Counsel arrange for Jane to marry his son. They also plot and execute a way to put Jane on the throne still. They get the King to declare his sisters bastards (since the marriages of their mothers to Henry were set aside) and through succession Jane would be third in line for the throne - and her mother sets aside her claim so that Jane can be put on the throne.

Jane faces abuse by the hand of her husband, emotional torment by her parents and her conscious as she strongly believes that Mary, the King's eldest sister, should be next. But she is pressured into taking the throne. But Mary rises with the backing of the people and Catholic Spain and fights to regain her rightful inheritance. And in the span of less than a year Jane is crowned, deposed, imprisoned and in the end executed - all because she was an innocent pawn of those who had more power over her life than she would ever have.

*********
I first learned of the story of Lady Jane through the 1986 movie of the same name (incidentally where I formed my first fangirl crush on Cary Elwes). I remember finding the story tragic and my heart breaking for poor Jane and how she suffered at the hands who saw her as nothing more than a means to an end - people who should have been the ones to love and protect her. This book did not change my impression - if anything it solidified it more.

I have also been a fan of Alison Weir for many years now and will not turn away from books she has written. She has a wonderful use of language and an ability to bring to life the lives of very important women in English history. If you are interested in English monarchy history I would recommend her books (she is a contemporary of Phillipa Gregory but I find I like Alison Weir better).



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baronessekat: (book)
You Belong to Me (Romantic Suspense #12; Baltimore, #1)You Belong to Me by Karen Rose

My rating: 3 of 5 stars


3.5 stars

While jogging early one morning, Medical Examiner, Dr. Lucy Trask, discovers a body. At first it was thought to be an elderly neighbor, but it is quickly determined to not be - though it is obvious it was meant for her to find it. As the days progress, more and more bodies are found all with similar wounds and all with ties to her.

Detective JD Fitzpatrick is new to the homicide division and is assigned to the case. But he has to fight the need to find the killer for justice and his growing feelings for Lucy and his need to protect her.

As the case deepens, it all points to a secret behind a crime that happened in Lucy's small home town over 20 years prior. JD and Lucy work to unearth the secrets before more bodies pile up.

**************

This was a pretty standard murder procedural type book. The only thing I could have done without is the romance. But given that this author apparently specializes in "Romantic Suspense" I guess it was needed. But seriously, I would very much love to read these type of books WITHOUT the very trope "love at first sight over a dead body"

I did not dislike the book but I won't be rushing out to read more by the author... though I will keep her in mind should I need other books in the genre.



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baronessekat: (book)
Chaos Rising (Star Wars: Thrawn Ascendancy, #1)Chaos Rising by Timothy Zahn

My rating: 4 of 5 stars


3.5 (I rounded up)

I liked this book as it gives more indepth look into Thrawn's rise in the Ascendancy and even a peek into Chis culture. That being said, I finished listening to the book about 5 hours ago and I'm having a hard time remember much of the plot.

Marc Thompson's reading of the book was amazing as always. But I think had it been anyone else OR had I physically read the book, I'm not sure I would have actually finished it - and that makes me sad as I adore Thrawn and love Zahn's writing.


(the reason it fits this category is that I requested several audiobooks from the library at the same time and this one came in first. I say that counts)



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baronessekat: (book)
Battle Ground (The Dresden Files, #17)Battle Ground by Jim Butcher

My rating: 5 of 5 stars


As this book just came out 4 days ago I will not say anything about the story so as not to spoil.

All I can say is that never before have I cried, swore and laughed as much and as loudly as I did for this book. Even knowing something was coming based on a short story the author published at Christmas... I was still left raw.

I lost count of how many times I verbally yelled "What the actual F*^K Butcher?!?" as the events played out.

To Jim Butcher... I both love you and hate you. Well done.



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baronessekat: (book)
The Handmaid's Tale (The Handmaid's Tale, #1)The Handmaid's Tale by Margaret Atwood

My rating: 4 of 5 stars


4.5 stars.

I was tentative going into this book. I've seen the movie, seen the Hulu TV series. Also I've tried to read Atwood books before and just could NOT get past the second chapter. But I needed to read a book for banned book week and decided to give this one a shot - but as an audio. I honestly think Claire Danes saved the book.

I found her reading compelling and emotional and relatable.

I'm not going to bother summing up the book as at this point, it's enough of a cultural reference item that if you haven't read it, you are still familiar enough with it. But I will recommend doing this book as the audio with Claire Danes reading it. I might actually go look for the sequel. MIGHT.



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baronessekat: (book)
BlindnessBlindness by José Saramago

My rating: 3 of 5 stars


On an average day, a man is suddenly struck blink - but instead of dark he sees nothing but white. within 48 hours more than a dozen people have been inflicted as well, including the eye doctor he saw about the condition, his wife, the man who first helped him and three people who were in the waiting room of the eye doctor's office.

The health ministry, fearful of a sudden outbreak, take those inflicted and suspected of being contaminated to an old hospital for quarantine. Refusing to leave her husband, the doctor's wife pretends to be struck blind as well, though she retains her sight.

Once in quarantine, the "internees" as they are called quickly find themselves in a situation where they are not only at the mercy of the government for survival, but against other internees who revert to the most base of human behaviors. With the help of the doctor's wife, the small group of originally inflicted, struggle to survive in this "new normal".

-----

I got this book free with my Audible Subscription through their new "Audible Plus" program.

This was a deeply disturbing story as it shows how quickly humanity stops almost being human when faced with a crisis. IT was also interesting in that not one character has an official name. They are called "The Doctor's Wife", "The Doctor", "The First Blind Man", "The Boy with the Squint", "The Man with the Black Eye Patch" and so on.

I did enjoy Jonathan Davis' reading of this book. And I think it was his reading that kept me going when it got really uncomfortable.

I haven't decided if I want to actually track down the movie that was made several years ago based on this book - it has several actors I like, but knowing the story I"m iffy. I can't say if I would recommend this book or not. I guess if you want an uncomfortable, though provoking look at humanity, this would be a good book for it.



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baronessekat: (book)
Notes from a Young Black Chef: A MemoirNotes from a Young Black Chef: A Memoir by Kwame Onwuachi

My rating: 4 of 5 stars


3.5 stars but I rounded up.

Kwame Onwuachi had been in a gang, dealt drugs, been kicked out of college and had hit rock bottom. But rather than let that define him, he took inspiration from his mother - a caterer - and followed his love of food and cooking to the prestigious Culinary Institute of America. He parlayed that into working in some of the most exclusive high end, fine dining restaurants. By the time he was 27 he had earned acclaim, been on Top Chef, served food to the President of the United States, opened and closed a high end restaurant in Washington, DC and faced his share of discrimination for daring to be a young black chef who broke into fine dining. But he keeps picking himself up and moving forward.

------

I found this story inspiring and also entertaining. I did this as an audiobook and hope to borrow the physical book from the library as I want to get the recipes he mentions as they sound very intriguing (having never experienced Nigerian food).



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baronessekat: (book)
(a book about a family)

Too Much and Never Enough: How My Family Created the World's Most Dangerous ManToo Much and Never Enough: How My Family Created the World's Most Dangerous Man by Mary L. Trump

My rating: 4 of 5 stars


Mary Trump, daughter of Donald Trump's eldest brother, gives a frank, behind closed doors look at the family that created the man who came to sit in the Oval Office. She describes an environment of lack of empathy, parents pitting siblings against each other in an attempt to gain a father's attention (never mind affection), promotion of lies and fraud. The promotion of the idea that if you have no money you are nothing - blood doesn't matter.

----

This was a quick book (clocking in at just a few minutes over 7 hours). And it was a disturbing book for anyone who has a shred of empathy and frankly, human decency. It really does explain a whole lot, though it doesn't excuse.

I am going to have to sit with my feelings regarding this book and it made me feel... mostly pity.



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baronessekat: (book)
Someone Like MeSomeone Like Me by M.R. Carey

My rating: 3 of 5 stars


Pure and simple I found this story... odd. I loved one of the author's earlier book "The Girl With All the Gifts". I knew going in that this was not related to that story at all. The story was still interesting but it felt more like an homage to Stephen King with the weird factor.

The other thing about this book that threw me was that it was obviously an English author trying to write an American story. It takes place in a Larimer, PA ( a suburb of Pittsburgh) and mostly he got things right. But choices of words here and there made it clear it's not an American Author. He refers to the room that we call the Living Room or Den as "the Lounge". Constantly refers to a fox's tail as the brush. Rubber dish gloves are "washing up gloves". Things like that. But other things were correct - Trunk of a car for example.

I still want to read more by this author but this one left me just feeling... hmmmm. I do think the thing that got me staying with it was the reading talent of Robin Miles. She really managed to capture my attention, even with the story did not.

I don't want to really say much about the actual story as I cannot figure out a way to describe it without giving it away.



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baronessekat: (book)
A Gentleman in MoscowA Gentleman in Moscow by Amor Towles

My rating: 3 of 5 stars


More of a 3.5 stars.

At the age of 30, Count Alexander Rostov is tried and convicted of being an unrepentant Aristocrat by the Bolshevik government. But rather than being put to death, he is declared an "unperson" and sentenced to spend the rest of his life under house arrest at the grand hotel he was living in. But instead of the posh suite of rooms he had been living in, he his given a small room in the attic. Thus begins his life as observer of Russian Society and history from behind the walls of the Metropol hotel. He finds friends, family, love and a sense of purpose.

----

This was a book that left me with mixed emotions. To be honest and frank, I did not particularly care about the characters, least of all Count Alexander. That being said, I found myself pulled in by the language of the story telling. There was a great deal of humor that made me smile. And the way the author put sentences together was very poetic at times.

I can see why this book has received acclaim and I certainly would recommend it for those who like Modern historical fiction. But I am not sure I will be actively seeking out any of the other works of the author.



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baronessekat: (book)
One to WatchOne to Watch by Kate Stayman-London

My rating: 3 of 5 stars


really a 3.75 just not quite a 4 for me.

Bea is a fashion and beauty blogger. Which is not unusual for Los Angeles. But what is unusual is that she is plus sized and proud. One night while watching Main Squeeze (the equivalent of the Bachlorette) she gets annoyed at the lack of diversity on the show - shape, age, race, all of it. And after too much wine takes to her blog to rant about this lack.

So the producers invite her to come on the show and be the one that the contestants vie to woo her. See it as a way to promote her blog and get new sponsors, she agrees - especially after getting her heart broken by a long time friend/crush. Vowing to not fall in love, she enters the world of reality.

Things quickly go bad (starting with the premiere episode) and Bea needs to figure out what she wants and how to deal with her own insecurities to maybe find love (both of herself and another).

*****

I was pleasantly surprised that I enjoyed this book. It may help that I have never watched an episode of the Bachelorete or the Bachelor. Many of the insecurities that Bea has to overcome are things that I have heard my own brain say to me.

There were bits that made me roll my eyes but for a contemporary romance with characters almost 20 years younger than me, it was a fun read.



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baronessekat: (book)
The Trans Space Octopus Congregation: StoriesThe Trans Space Octopus Congregation: Stories by Bogi Takács

My rating: 2 of 5 stars


I totally picked up this book because of the title... that and it would fulfill a category in a reading challenge. I really wish I could say I liked it. I didn't hate it, but I certainly did not like it.

This is a collection of short stories by the author. They seem to have a central theme of gender, body shape and form and a look at power exchange relationships. None of that bothered me. What did was that it felt like every single story just ended. Not even a soft conclusion. Just stop.

I can't say I'd recommend this book but I would not dissuade someone if they wanted to read it. And honestly... it's got a cool title.



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baronessekat: (book)
11/22/6311/22/63 by Stephen King

My rating: 4 of 5 stars


I went into this book a bit skeptical. I stopped reading King a good 25 years ago (maybe closer to 30) because he was getting too epic with the tellings when it could have been easily cut in half and still been a good story. I still think it. This book was over 31 hours long. But while I think it could have easily been cut by a good 10 hours and been fine, it wasn't as tedious as I expected. It's not going to get me back to regularly reading King again but it hasn't driven me away again.

-----

2011, 35 year old Jake Eppings is a recently divorced English Teacher in Maine. He regularly frequents a run down diner and one day the owner suddenly looks much older than he did the day before. Al, the owner, informs Jake that he has found a "rabbit hole" as he calls it that takes him to 1958 - which is where he goes to get his supplies and able to keep his prices so low. Al goes on to say that whenever he returns it's only 2 minutes later in the current time.

Jake has trouble believing it but it's hard to argue that Al has aged seemingly overnight. Al confesses that he spent over 4 years in the past in an attempt to try to stop the JFK assassination, but that lung cancer is stopping him. Al convinces Jake to go back and do what he couldn't - stop Lee Harvey Oswald on November 22, 1963. Jake eventually agrees and starts a strange adventure to try to circumvent history and change the world - but at what cost?



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