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review 2018-02-16 18:34
Pilgrimage by Derry Brabbs
Pilgrimage: The Great Pilgrim Routes of Britain and Europe - Derry Brabbs

I love to travel. I love to see new places, experience the sites and sounds of places I have never been. I have been a lot of places, and I will still go to more places. But there are some places I know I will probably never get a chance to visit. So I travel through books about real places. This is one of those books. Pilgrimage by Derry Brabbs is an amazing book to armchair travel and it is also a great guide book if you were to get a chance to actually go to the laces in the book. 

 

There are 11 routes in the book that Europe's Pilgrims used. From 3500 people walking the route from Northern Spain to the Shrine of St James the Apostle in Santiago de Compostela in 1988 to 277,000 as of  2016. 

 

The book features amazing photos along the routes, maps, and lots of information about all the stops along the way and of course the ending point.  It tells you how many miles the route is and how many days it should take to cover the route. These routes are done by walking, they way the original Pilgrimage took place. I am sure some of the routes you could go by car but if you wanted to experience the routes they way the pilgrims did you would want to walk the route. 

 

I received this book from the Author or Publisher via Netgalley.com to read and review.

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review 2017-09-27 22:53
Really Great Book!
The Woman at 72 Derry Lane - Carmel Harrington

I enjoyed this one and am glad I took a chance on it. Fair warning, you will cry while reading this book.


We follow three characters, a young girl named Skye, a woman in a terrible marriage, named Stella, and a woman who can't leave her home, named Rea.

 

Rea and Stella are neighbors and we find out that Rea realizes exactly what kind of marriage Stella has right now. When the two women finally meet and become friends the book works much better. Thankfully the author, only keeps the women solo at the first little part of the book before merging them. You are going to wonder who Skye is and what she has to do with things, I guessed, and was wrong. And then I guessed again, and was right. I was shocked at Skye's story though. Harrington takes on some very tough subjects in this one and I think she did them very well.


I did think though that Rea's issue was a bit too readily resolved. I loved the outcome of Stella's though. We have some additional characters in this one and they all get a chance to shine.


Unlike with other books taking place in Ireland, this one really is just focused on three homes. We don't get a sense of Ireland in this one. This could be every women's story, which I liked. 

 

The writing was very good and you get a sense of three distinct voices while reading this. You get headers for each chapter though that let you know who is speaking. But after a few chapters, I didn't need those at all.


The men are not that important in this one, the women really are and we get to see how past and present link up between these women and families. 

 

The flow worked great, though I found myself most eager to read Skye's story and wanted to rush to get back to her again and again. I even had to go back and read this book twice, since in my hurry sometimes, I skipped over a few things about the other characters.


The setting of this book really is a small neighborhood in Ireland, as well as another country. I won't say which, cause that will spoil you to other plots in this book.

 

The ending I found lovely, though I wanted more. It was way too short an epilogue for me.

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text 2017-08-28 17:30
Erster Satz | Stephen King: Es
Es - Stephen King,Alexandra von Reinhardt,Joachim Körber

Der Schrecken, der weitere achtundzwanzig Jahre kein Ende nehmen sollte - wenn er überhaupt je ein Ende nahm - begann, soviel ich weiß und sagen kann, mit einem Boot aus Zeitungspapier, das einen vom Regen überfluteten Rinnstein entlang trieb. 

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review 2016-01-23 08:55
Idyll- James Derry

   This is one of the best books of any genre I have read for some time. Idyll is very much at the intelligent end of speculative science fiction. The technologies, once you start to understand them, may seem thin on scientific logic, but the philosophical speculation behind the storytelling process is extremely stimulating. How unique Derry's vision is I couldn't possibly say, as there is just so much brilliant and diverse science fiction out there now that the publishing walls have tumbled, but what I can say is that Derry is a good writer and an even better storyteller. There are certainly a host of books that cross the divide between the 'Western' and Scifi, in fact a huge sway of modern SF and Sci-fi books and films owe much of there appeal to 'Space Western' themes but Derry's creation reads as very original to me. I don't think, oh yes, this author has borrowed from Orson Scott Card, Michael Crichton or Alice Mary Norton; not a bit of it. Rather I think that Derry has absorbed a great deal of visionary depth from such writers, remodelled it brilliantly, and is himself adding must read copy to future SF authors.
   Apart from one particular continuity jump as the book started to build to completion which I felt needed a bit of smoothing, the plot line read very well. The interactions between the characters were truly fascinating. They would have worked in any genre setting. The book seems to have been finished with a sequel already well plotted. I hope that one soon emerges. Every now and again, at least for a while, one's favourite book becomes the one just finished. Derry has given me my recent favourite.

AMAZON LINK

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text 2015-08-09 18:16
A Stephen King Guide for Beginners

If you're a frequent reader of my blog or you've followed this link from Facebook, you're probably quite aware that I am a big Stephen King fan. Like a lot of people, I discovered him in my early teenage years and his stories and way with words spoke to me, filling a hole. I always loved to read growing up, but when I discovered King I was in a weird in-between place -- I was too old for books I had loved in elementary school, and I felt I wouldn't like "adult novels" or anything over 200 pages or so. 

 

I found myself in a used bookstore in summer of 2010, and it was on a whim that I bought a few old King paperbacks -- Dreamcatcher, IT, Different Seasons, The Running Man, Misery. I had no clue which of his books were good and which weren't -- all I knew was he was popular and I was desperate for something to read. I guess the covers of those particular books caught my eye, so to the cash register I went. 

 

I went on vacation to the beach soon after that bookstore trip, and I took along the two slimmest volumes -- Misery and The Running Man. If I remember correctly, I started TRM first but gave up only a few chapters in (fun fact: I still haven't read that book!), so I picked up Misery and was a bit more interested. It wasn't great, but it was serviceable and I finished. 

 

A little over a year later, I got Christine. That's when my reading affair with Stephen King truly began. 

 

It is for that former self that I am writing this post. It is for the young book lover (or maybe you're a grown adult coming late to the party) in Books-A-Million or shopping on Amazon, unsure of which Stephen King novel to choose. Let's face it, the dude's written almost seventy novels. And while 95% of them are good, there are a couple of clunkers and if one happened to pick up one of said novels.... well, that'd be one less person who would have a chance at fully experiencing the depth and magic that is the Stephen King universe. I'm writing this for you, gentle book lover, with ten bucks in your pocket and a burning desire to finally experience Maine's Favorite Son. You're tired of hearing me fanboy over him, and you want to see what the fuss is all about. You've seen the movies and want to see what King is like in the written form. You want to be thrilled and chilled and touched. I'm writing this for you. 

 

The Starters

1. Christine

2. The Shining 

3. The Dead Zone 

4. Misery 

5. Dolores Claiborne 

 

The most important part of becoming a Stephen King fan is starting out with the right book. King tends to be verbose and self-referential in his later work (a habit I absolutely love, but some aren't so crazy about), so starting out with his earlier books that have little to no connections to other King novels is key. The five I have listed are all pretty well-known, even among folks who aren't Constant Readers. They've all been made into movies -- who could forget Jack Nicholson swinging that ax or Christine the haunted car chasing punks down empty back-roads? The great news is the books are even better

 

I realize Christine is sort of a weird choice to put as THE book to start out reading King with, so if you feel like that particular book might not be your speed, feel free to go with any of the other four listed above. I only picked it because that's the book that made me a fan. It pulled me into the Kingverse completely. I'll admit, it's a little hollow and lacks SK's penchant for deep characterization. In spite of that, it combines horror, rock and roll, and campy fun into a chilly novel that's just a pure thrill ride. I would definitely recommend this to young teens or lovers of anything '50s. 

 

The Shining  is arguably, King at the height of his story-telling powers -- there's a nary a word out of place, and he dishes out horror and genuine literary moments in equal doses. The Dead Zone, the fifth novel published under King's name, showed him branching out into other genres besides classic horror tropes, i.e. vampires, haunted houses, etc. Set against the backdrop of the 1970's, Dead Zone is a tragedy that, perhaps more than any other King novel, becomes more and more rewarding with each subsequent reading. It showed that SK is more than just a scary writer -- he's a writer, period. 

 

Misery and Dolores Claiborne tend to get lumped together in my mind, if only because both of their movie counterparts star Kathy Bates, and they're both relatively enclosed and claustrophobic tales -- especially Misery. Of the two, Misery is most the more obviously "scary" book, and fits in pretty nicely with public assumption of what King should and should not do. Who could forget Annie Wilkes? Dolores Claiborne is a first-person narrative of life of the title character. Written entirely in dialect, DC is one of King's most memorable stories and hardest to put down. 

 

The Cementers 

1. Different Seasons 

2. 'Salem's Lot

3. Night Shift 

4. Pet Sematary 

5. Carrie 

 

So you've become a Stephen King fan, and you want to read further. This second group of books -- The Cementers -- are just that. They will probably do well to "cement" your King fan status. You've started out with five of King's strongest novels, and now it's time to, perhaps, read some of his shorter fiction. Different Seasons is a collection of four novellas, all around 125 pages in length. Two of the stories found here are "Rita Hayworth & The Shawshank Redemption" and "The Body" (made into the film Stand By Me). Need I say more? 

 

'Salem's Lot is a classic horror novel by any measure. It showed King's true mastery of characterization and plotting, and it was only his second published novel! I was tempted to put this one in the starters group, but decided against it -- while it is well-known, it moves rather slowly for the first half and newcomers to the King Universe might not have patience for it. Regardless, this is one that's bound to make your hair stand on end and checking to see if your doors are locked at night. What's that scratching at the window? Hmmm....

 

Night Shift is King's first short story collection and is chock full of classics -- I'd say at least 15 of the 20 stories here are must-read material. I only put this one after Lot because of the two stories that book-end that earlier work. 

 

Pet Sematary is another classic King novel, one we're all familiar with -- a man and his family move to a new home in rural Maine. Man discovers a path behind his house leading to the woods. Things....happen. This is King at his bleakest, unafraid and unashamed to peer fully at death and grief while dragging his reader along with him. I wouldn't recommend this to one starting out reading King, unless you've got a strong grip on your emotions and have plenty of tissues ready. 

 

And, of course, Carrie -- the book where it all began. The writing here is amateurish and downright strange in places, and I feel like the epistolary form doesn't entirely work in the author's favor all of the time, but it's a good -- heck, great -- novel from a beginning storyteller that is necessary when getting into the works of Stephen King.

 

The World-Builders 

1. The Stand 

2. IT 

3. 11/22/63

4. Under the Dome 

5. Dark Tower Series 

 

So you've now read most of the classics in the King canon, as well as a few that aren't quite so well-known to the general reading public. This is the section of books that bring on the jokes lobbed at King from time to time -- that he can whip out 1,000-pagers in no time, which...seems to be true. These are King's "epic" works, and while they don't have to all be read back-to-back (methinks that would be exhausting), they should all be read. While King is a master at claustrophobic fear -- Paul Sheldon's predicament in Misery; Mom and Son being trapped in a Ford Pinto in Cujo -- he's also just as good at building worlds to believe in. 

 

The Stand and It are often declared King's best work, and it's hard to disagree -- I'm currently on my seventh (or is it the eighth?) reading of The Stand, and I've read IT probably three or more times. In these novels, King pulls out all stops, creating three dimensional characters -- and there are a lot of them -- that the reader can fully believe in. These are worlds we can believe in -- whether it's a flu-ravaged New York City or the sewers beneath Derry, Maine. 

 

11/22/63 and Under the Dome are recent entries in the King back-list, and show him at his expansive universe, world-building best. Under the Dome is proof King is still a master at exploring small town life, and 11/22/63 is any history nerd's wet dream.

 

And, of course, there is the Dark Tower series -- the eight books that connect and encompass every other short story, novella, and novel King has penned. (No, that isn't hyperbole!) It's truly King's masterwork and reading it is prudent for those who want to explore all of SK's strengths as a writer -- reading his popular horror novels only is doing yourself a great disservice, potential new Stephen King Constant Reader. However, one must be careful when approaching the DT series. A read of The Stand, 'Salem's Lot, and IT  is very necessary. One would argue reading Insomnia  and Hearts In Atlantis before approaching the Dark Tower series is necessary as well, and that's totally valid -- both books introduce characters that are vital to the journey to the Tower in book 7. However, those books rely a great deal on the reader already being familiar with Roland Deschain's journey -- there are references in both Insomnia and HIA that will go over a newcomer's head without reading -- at least -- the first three books in the Dark Tower series. 'Salem's Lot and The Stand work on their own with nary a Mid-World reference, so reading those before the Dark Tower series is fine and, honestly, the only way to go.

 

Of course, it's not necessary to read all five of the works listed in this section back to back -- in fact, I would advise against it. Reading such long, intricate books right after one another could be exhausting. I will say, however, The Stand and IT need to be read before Dark Tower -- but I've already covered that. IT needs to be read before 11/22/63, and Under the Dome can be read pretty much whenever. These works are King's longest as well as some of his most rewarding. Enjoy! 

 

The Later-Taters 

1. The Tommyknockers 

2. Insomnia 

3. The Regulators 

4. From a Buick 8 

5. Cell 

 

These are books that need to be put off until you're sure King is the author for you. These aren't bad novels (although I will say I'm a fan of only numbers one, two, and four)... they just aren't good for the new-comer. The Tommyknockers -- a personal favorite of mine -- is a cocaine-fueled, paranoid hot mess. I love it, but it isn't a friendly book and most folks don't take too kindly to it. 

 

See the Dark Tower section a couple of paragraphs up for my reasoning behind putting off Insomnia.

 

From a Buick 8 is a quiet novel that doesn't give away all of its power at once. If I were to rank all of King's work, it would probably be in the upper half somewhere. Not his best, but not his worst either. It doesn't thrill or chill -- it's merely a contemplation of life and unsolvable problems. It has no conclusion or truly memorable elements. The narrative structure is weird and a little off-putting. For all of that, I like it.... but, again, most folks don't. 

 

As for The Regulators and Cell.... ugh. If you feel like punishing yourself, feel free to check out these bad boys.

 

And from there.... the King universe is yours. Perhaps you could explore the Castle Rock world set up in The Dead Zone with Cujo, The Dark Half, and Needful Things. Perhaps you want some literary novels. If so, you could do much worse than Bag of Bones. Maybe you'd like to try a newer work! The Bill Hodges trilogy or Revival would suffice. The beauty of King's catalog is there are so many books to choose from, for every mood and taste. So get to reading! 

 

 

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