winterbadger: (books)
33. For some reason, I got sucked into re-reading The Eye of the World, the first of Robert Jordan's Wheel of Time books. I'm still exasperated with his writing (if I had a braid, I'd be tugging on it). I really do enjoy the pace, the description, and the places where he just lets his own storytelling talent show through. But his compulsive need to take pieces from other writers' books and insert them into his own, covered with a shallow veneer, is just as annoying, if not more, than the first time I read him. And his inability to drop something, to say or describe or depict something and then leave it alone, instead of constantly repeating it--as if he either thinks his readers are idiots or as if he's so pleased with his own little joke that he can't stop telling it over and over again--it's amazingly tiresome and childish.

He was tremendously successful. It's a pity he never had an editor who he would allow to really work with him. He could have been a very good writer as well.
winterbadger: (books)
31. Roma by Steven Saylor. My mother was very fond of Edward Rutherford's historical novels, which are each of them set in a place and track the lives of people there over centuries. I tried one and didn't care for it at all; he didn't strike me as a very good writer.

In Roma, Steven Saylor gives the city of Rome the same treatment, in my opinion to better effect. I like his Roma Sub Rosa novels, detective stories set in the late Republic, very much. This isn't as good (I think I just don't think the whole place-over-time novel idea works very well), but parts of it are engaging, and he does a good job of tracing some of the important events in Roman history and working them into the narrative (it really took me back to my undergrad class in Roman studies). I'd give it a solid three stars out of five.

I need to polish off some of my low-hanging fruit (the half-dozen or so books I've half-read) if I'm going to get close to 50 at this rate...
winterbadger: (books2)
One new book, one re-read, and a review of a previous title.

29. The Girl Who Played with Fire by Stieg Larsson. Read more... )

30. The Return of Jeeves by P.G. Wodehouse.Read more... )

And, because [livejournal.com profile] watervole asked for it last time, a few comments on #21, Dolly and the Nanny Bird by Dorothy Dunnett.Read more... )
winterbadger: (books)
I was thinking the other day, "I have this big pile of books I need to add to my 50 Books 2010 list reviews." Well, I'm looking at my tags, and I appear never to have *started* my 50 Books 2010 list. Ooops!

Well, I certainly don't have time to review them all, but I'll list the ones I have to hand and try to get to them soon. If there're any in particular you'd like to see me write on, comment and I will do those first. Read more... )

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