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review 2016-03-09 09:15
Snow White Red-Handed - Never Again
Snow White Red-Handed (A Fairy Tale Fatal Mystery) - Maia Chance

Warning: gif has strong language

(spoiler show)

 

Next!

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text 2016-03-08 05:58
Reading progress update: I've read 196 out of 336 pages.
Snow White Red-Handed (A Fairy Tale Fatal Mystery) - Maia Chance

 

Well, I'm over half way through.

 

Yeah.

 

The sheer stupidity of these characters...

 

 

The obviousness of the fairy tale elements that everyone is apparently ignoring so that it will seem surprising when it's revealed. (Spoiler: It Wasn't!)

 

And the book still isn't over!!!

 

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text 2016-03-06 09:06
Reading progress update: I've read 23 out of 336 pages.
Snow White Red-Handed (A Fairy Tale Fatal Mystery) - Maia Chance

So, I attempted to read this last year and this is what happened. I said last time I would try again in a year and...here I am. I had actually forgotten how little I cared for it.

 

And then I started reading it.

 

*sigh*

 

I'm going to try to get at least to where we see some actually plot but I'm not holding my breath.

 

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review 2016-03-03 09:30
Murder By Candlelight: The Gruesome Slayings Behind Our Romance With the Macabre
Murder by Candlelight: The Gruesome Slayings Behind Our Romance With the Macabre - Jonathan Yen,Michael Knox Beran

Err. I don't really know what to say about this book. Really.

 

 

Because the audiobook went in one ear and out the other. I remember bits and pieces but it resembled nothing so much as a continuous noise you slowly cease to be able to hear.

 

Part of it was that I never could quite catch the flow of the text. The idea...I think...was to come at the rise in interest of murder during the Victorian times (and slightly before) from a romantic, almost poetic view. The author framed the cases, many of them the exact same ones covered by Lucy Worsley in The Art of the English Murder, around Thomas de Quincy. It was an interesting take...but I never seemed to reach the point of it all.

 

Now, I was listening to this at the same time (not reading and listening at once but going back and forth) as The Science of Sherlock Holmes, so it could be I kept confusing the two and simply remember the one I took notes on. But while they shared some similarities, none of it really overlapped at any one time. And wouldn't one be more likely to enforce the other if they covered similar information?

 

I'm tempted to say this simply isn't a book to be listened to. And while I think there's truth to that, I don't believe it was the only reason. Certainly the narrator was not by any means the worst I've found. I've gotten through truly monotone narrators and still remembered the information.

 

No, I think some of the fault lies with the writing itself but how much, I don't know. I do plan to attempt this again but read it the next time. But that won't be anytime soon. I may be interested in what the author has to say, but I need to forget how I first encountered it.

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review 2016-02-11 07:50
An Edible History of Humanity (Audiobook) [DNF] - Just...no.
An Edible History of Humanity - Tom Standage,George K. Wilson

 

This was...horrible. I don't know that I can put into words how I feel about this book, though I've tried during rants to three different people about this...book. (eye twitch)

 

So sorry, but you're the fourth (fifth, sixth, etc). Hopefully by now I have things lined out in a somewhat understandable way.

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