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review 2020-06-09 06:33
Six Cats a Slayin' (audiobook) by Miranda James, read by Erin Bennett
Six Cats a Slayin' (Cat in the Stacks Mystery) - Miranda James
Charlie has an uncomfortably flirtatious new neighbor, Gerry, who seems interested in buying up homes in the area. When she invites him to her big Christmas party, he decides to go in order to be polite but makes sure to take Helen Louise, his girlfriend, with him. Both of them are shocked when the party ends with Gerry's death, quite likely due to poison.
 
Kanesha's in charge of the investigation, and Charlie does his best to stay in her good graces by keeping his nose out of it. Mostly. It helps that he has a lot on his plate. His daughter-in-law is running herself ragged trying to take care of her new baby and might land herself in the hospital soon if she doesn't accept help. Also, in addition to Diesel, Charlie now has five mystery kittens to take care of. Someone, quite possibly a scared child, left them on his doorstep, and he's determined to find out who it was and see if they can be reunited.
 
Content warning for this book:
Transphobia, although not on the part of the main character or any of his friends.
(spoiler show)
 
The only other book I've read in this series was the first one. I normally like to read series in order when I can, but this was the only audiobook in this series that my library owned, so I figured I'd give it a shot. Honestly, skipping eight books wasn't too much of an issue. I could tell character relationships had changed: Kanesha has softened towards Charlie, Charlie now had a girlfriend, and his relationship with his son was better. There was even a part where Charlie thought back to what his life was like at the beginning of the series, so if there were any gaps in my memories of him and his relationships, they were filled in pretty neatly.
 
I read the paper version of the first book, so this was my first audiobook experience with the series. Bennett was a good cozy mystery narrator, but maybe not the best choice for this particular series, which features a first person male POV. Most of the secondary characters are female, so maybe that was a factor, but I still think a male narrator would have been better.
 
Anyway, now for the story itself. Oddly enough, the primary mystery seemed to be the kittens and the identity of the person who dropped them off. The murder was more secondary - although Charlie chatted with friends about it and did a little bit of research, he did mostly stay out of it, and as a result, most of the resolution happened off-page. While it was certainly a tragic story, I found it to be a bit weak.
 
The kitten storyline, on the other hand, was nice. Diesel got multiple opportunities to act as their adorable giant babysitter, and Charlie tried to resist being charmed by Ramses, the only one of the bunch with a distinct personality. I enjoyed Charlie's efforts to figure out who left the kittens, and the whole thing was resolved in a very warm and fuzzy way.
 
All in all, this made for a decent listen. I wish my library owned more audiobooks in this series, although thankfully I do own a used copy of Book 8 that I haven't read yet.
 
(Original review posted on A Library Girl's Familiar Diversions.)
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text 2016-02-04 22:06
Books I Cannot Get Out of My Head
Something More Than Night - Ian Tregillis
Archivist Wasp - Nicole Kornher-Stace
Lord of Light - Roger Zelazny
Code Name Verity - Elizabeth Wein
The Fifth Head of Cerberus: Three Novellas - Gene Wolfe
Shadowshaper - Daniel José Older
Love Is the Drug - Alaya Dawn Johnson

I haven't managed to finish a book in a while. Yeah, just keep starting new ones instead of finishing anything. Ha. So instead of a review this week, here's a bunch of books that drilled into my brain in the best possible way.

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review 2016-01-02 00:00
Archivist Wasp
Archivist Wasp - Nicole Kornher-Stace Seen also at http://www.honkifyoulovejustice.com/2016/01/05/book-review-archivist-wasp

For months, one of my online friends has been recommending Archivist Wasp to pretty much everybody. It was on my list to check out some day, but when it went on sale a few weeks back she decided to just gift the book to a few of us and be done with it. I’m very glad she did.

At first glance, the world seems like a typical fantasy realm, where you take a medieval setting and add something weird (ghosts, in this case). ‘Wasp’ – not her real name – is the Archivist, one of a group of young women marked at birth by a goddess, and taught to catch and study the ghosts that linger all around the landscape. It’s a brutal life, as the role of Archivist is won through, and held onto, via knife fights to the death versus ‘upstart’ challengers.

Even that life is turned upside down when Wasp meets a special ghost – one that has no problem communicating with her. He shows her worlds never glimpsed by normal people, and shakes the foundations of everything she was raised to believe.

Archivist Wasp is a quick read that you’ll want to finish in one sitting. If there’s one flaw, it’s that it relies a bit much on flashbacks to the ghost’s previous life. But I was dying for that information so it didn’t bother me. Felt like the flashbacks to the island on Arrow in that way. Anyway, check it out at Amazon, you’ll be glad you did.
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review 2015-08-16 00:12
Review: Archivist Wasp
Archivist Wasp - Nicole Kornher-Stace

Every positive review of this book is true. OMG STOP WHATEVER YOU ARE DOING AND READ THIS BOOK RIGHT NOW, WHY ARE YOU STILL HERE? WHY ARE YOU LOOKING AT ME LIKE THAT?

 

Seriously, I am so delighted with this wonderful, weird book that gave me everything I wanted at the end. Fantastic. Lovely. Brutal. 

 

Don't miss out on this. 

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review 2015-07-10 00:00
Archivist Wasp
Archivist Wasp - Nicole Kornher-Stace I am so, so dissapointed. I was expecting this amazing book, and it's ok but I wouldn't call it amazing. first of all there just isn't enough world building. this isn't an underworld and ghosts that have always existed, they appeared. it doesn't make sense. then the rivalry between the archivist and the upstarts. there needs to be something that causes it to endure for centuries. the priest is just one man, you're telling me it evolved that way for no real reason and just stuck? uh.... no. I'm perfectly willing to throw logic out the window for a good book, but there is only so much I can take. there is no logic, things are because the plot needs them to be and that's not enough for me. beautifully written though.
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