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ThunderCats READ BOOKS
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Sheila
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Dec 12, 2014 11:31AM

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I've heard of the Montalbano series, but I haven't read any of the books. I may try some out at a later date. Always in search of a new series!


- It was okay, I enjoyed it enough, I liked Don and Rosie but was less invested in a particular subplot. Glad I tried it. Not planning to read the sequel in the near future.
- BR: Yes - here: https://www.goodreads.com/topic/show/...
Time to dig some longer shelved books for the mini-challenge.


Alex and Milo take on acadamia and the entitled kids that go to an exclusive boarding school.


I've had this book a long time, but I can't say it's been on my TBR list forever. It's one of those books that you set aside to read later and later never comes around. It was good though. I think I enjoyed it more because I've never seen the movie and wasn't trying to compare and contrast the two.

Not as good a read as the first 2 books. I'm still interested enough in the Ruth/Nelson relationship to continue with the series, however. I know there are peaks and valleys in series.


I felt like a teenager again, reading a Lestat novel. I didn't realize until I got to the end of the book, where all of the vampire chronicles are listed, that I stopped reading after the first 5. I guess they weren't on my radar. This one was good but not great, and I think Rice was attempting some kind of metaphorical spiritual blah blah blah that I just wasn't feeling. I just wanted a vampire story.
I read the large print version, which has 800 pages, but I listed the regular hardcover. I don't know how anyone over the age of 30 could read a book compressed from 800 to 480 pages, but anything is possible!

We now have 8570 points!
Go team, GO!


The Winter People Buddy Read Thread
I'm still waiting for the Pretty Little Liars Buddy Read to start. I didn't care for the book, which makes me want the points even more....HA! to you, book!


I signed up for a BR of the next book mainly to force me to finish this one. I was less than enthused, but it did pick up at the end.

2nd book of a trilogy.
And now I only have one book on my Currently Reading shelf! I'll struggle to finish that one tonight.


Psychological thriller by British author. Good story but could have been much more intense and much shorter.


Regan and Jack don't quite get the honeymoon of their dreams
◆

REally good historical fiction set in 1850's London, this is the first in a series following an inspector investigating a train robbery.


I loved it!

Very emotional book. So much is said in so few pages. Not for everyone. I won't recommend it to my mother, probably ever. She believes Granny was happily unaware up to the very end, and I'll let her keep that.


When a college professor is killed in London and it is discovered that he is really an Al Quieda recruiter Gabriel is asked to investigate. On the man's laptop is discovered a plot to kill the Pope and Gabriel becomes part of the Pope's protection detail. Fast paced and scary.
On tbr list since May 26, 2011

First in the Michael Seeley attorney series. As an intellectual property attorney he gets involved in the case of who really owns the rights to a movie franchise ala James Bond. The case goes back to the Nazi era and the Hollywood blacklist days.
On tbr since Jul 05, 2012


This is the 12th Pendergast novel, and a re-read. I couldn't remember everything that happened. I originally rated this book ★★★★, but down-rated this time. Too much of the Corrie and Constance stories detracted from the main plot.

This is another book that started out as 'Hey, I think I can fit in another BR' and turned out to be a good book.
There are some complex issues presented, and I like the dystopia built.


Three holiday novellas, two of them by my favorite romance authors Robyn Carr and Sherryl Woods. Cute holiday reading.
*TBR since May 2013


- Great sequel to Howl's Moving Castle. This is a wonderful series. I enjoyed it so much. Both the books and the animated movie are unique, and can be enjoyed separately. This book has characters from the first book plus additional new characters. Looking forward to the last installment.



I hated this book, but it wouldn't be fair to give it 1 star because I find Corrie Swensen intolerable and her character implausible. I jinxed myself, zooming through Two Graves and hating every moment her character appeared. I think she's on every d*mn page of this book.
I've been on the waiting list for Blue Labyrinth since it came out. If she's the
MC in this one, then I am DONE with this series.

I picked this up after reading Feed for a BR. I liked Grant's writing style and was interested to see what she could do with characters I didn't hate.
The next book in the Parasitology series is Symbiont, and I will be reading it if it's at the library.


The 2nd book in the Dark Tower series, and a re-read. It was so long ago that I read these books (my children weren't born yet when I read this one). It's familiar in style, but the details were lost long ago. I'm enjoying reading the series again, in another stage of life.


- 400 pages
- I wasn't a fan of the writing style, it was too wordy & and overly descriptive. Plus the mystery was underwhelming. It's ok but I don't plan to read the sequel.



I'd like to claim BR points for



- 400 pages
- I wasn't a fan of the writing style, it was too wordy & and overly descriptive. Plus the mystery w..."
I DNFed that one after two chapters. The writing style really turned me off.


Started reading this back in Oct for the mystery sub-genre challenge, and I almost gave up several times. It's not my kind of book, and I feel bad giving it 2 stars. I don't usually read books that I know ahead of time I won't enjoy.

Reading for another challenge. This was interesting, but I was familiar with most of the cases due to watching entirely too many forensic history tv programs.

On my TBR for ages and ages.
2nd book in the Codex Alera series. Not quite as good as the first one, but a good read still.

Don't forget to let me know if the books you are reading have been hanging around on your TBR from before 2014.


This was a different style book in this cozy mystery series. It centered around the 1900 Galveston Hurricane that killed up to 8,000 people. Interesting historical fiction entwined in the current haunted bed and breakfast in Galveston.
Added to my TBR on Nov 07, 2013

Sorry, I had done the override but not remade the sheets. It should be OK now...


This book starts out in the mid to late 1930's in Germany where adult friends Alex and Nicholas lead the aristocratic life on beautiful horse farming estates. Alex breeds and trains the famous Lipizzaner Stallions for the Spanish Riding School in Vienna. Their lives are about to change in ways they can't imagine as Hitler comes to power.
Nicholas gets a total shock when his father informs him that not only did Nicholas' mother NOT die in childbirth when he was born, but that she was also 1/2 Jewish which means that Nicholas and his sons also have Jewish blood in them and will soon be arrested and sent to a camp for undesirables. In order for Nicholas to immigrate to another country with his sons before this happens he needs to have someone on the other end sponsor him.
His friend Alex writes to John Ringling North and offers to send his prize Lipizzaner Stallions to the circus if Ringling Circus will sponsor his friend Nicholas and let him immigrate to the United States which is what happens.
I loved this story that goes through generations. It has been a long time since I've read a Danielle Steel novel and I had forgotten how immersed I get into these characters lives. 12/20 ★★★★★ 352 pages


Reading for another challenge. This was interesting, but I was familiar with most of the cases due to watching entirely too many forensic history tv programs. "
I read this one a couple of months ago. It was really interesting. I love forensics shows too :0)


Spreadsheet updated to here - we have 9950 points. 50 more and we hit the 10,000 mark!


I've had this book on my TBR for ages, was recommended by a friend at work. Finally got it read, mainly because I needed a memoir for a challenge. Still, it counts!

I think this may be the best book of the Dublin Murder Squad series I've read. It's been a while since I read the first one, so I can't say for sure. But it was excellent.

Saw this book at the library yesterday, and remembered Skandia had just read it. Couldn't remember what she said about it though, so I just took a chance.
I liked it a lot. The format, alternating past and present, worked well for me. I hated to go to sleep with it unfinished, and stayed up entirely too late reading.



- Nothing groundbreaking on the YA front. If you are expecting kickass nuns/assassins I don't recommend this one. Not bad but extremely dull and not what the cover & blurb promised.
* Mini-challenge: on my shelf since April 2013.
Lauren wrote: "I DNFed that one after two chapters. The writing style really turned me off"
Same here. Also it's written in the first person in that writing style, I thought it was off-putting. Could have been much better.


I liked the idea of this book more than the book itself. It was entirely too long. Just a bit of paring down would make it a much better book.
I've had this book ages, It was a free Kindle book and I have no idea how long it's been hanging around waiting for me to read it. Finally getting to it so I can buddy read The Dark Monk.


On tbr since Apr 24, 2013



On my tbr since Sep 13, 2013
This is a crossover of 2 of Iris Johansen's series. It introduces Catherine Ling as she enlists Eve Duncan's help in finding her son who was kidnapped 9 years earlier.


I'd give this 6 stars if I could. Brought back a lot of feelings from that age for me, including some unresolved things. Even for those with an idyllic high school experience (do those exist?) this would make an enjoyable read.

Final book for my challenge! I chose this one for History because I like the era and I have family in the Oak Ridge area. There was a lot more science in it than I expected, which I liked. I think the science may have been more in-depth than the women's stories, which I had hoped would be more substantial. Still a good read.


Buddy Read
This was pretty hard going but still enjoyable. A good story, but it had quite a lot of dense, rather obscure, history which didn't always take the story forward.
And I first bought this book back in about 1996! I can't believe it has taken me this long to get around to it.


Finished 12/23 4 stars 496 pages
Once again C.J. Box brings the beauty and the harshness of the Wyoming wide open spaces. Game warden Joe Pickett is on patrol investigating poachers when he comes upon the body of his father in law chained to the blade of a working windmill.
There are disputes over the wind ranch blighting the landscape and there are abundant suspects in the murder with the primary being Joe's mother in law.
Love this series and recommend all of the books in it.
On my TBR since May 04, 2012
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