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coral

coral@bookwyrm.world

Joined 2 months ago

Your bird friend Coral, a library web developer and systems administrator, working remotely. Runs (despite their best efforts) on caffeine and rage.

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Stephenie Meyer: Breaking Dawn (Twilight #4) (2008)

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The last of the Twilight series--in many ways, it's a relief to be done. The ingenue annoys me--the same, on average, in this book, as in the ones before (because for half the book she is way more annoying, and for half the book she is way less)--and I've never liked the guy who serves as the other third of the love triangle; I guess I like high-temperance characters. Admittedly, he redeems himself, a bit, in this one.

On the other hand, yes, I do really enjoy reading about these vampires, who suffer nearly no down side for their immortality, and I think the inter-coven dynamic, particularly between the Cullens and the Volturi, is pretty interesting (though now and then there's still a shocking amount of naivete for people who have lived so long).

But I didn't read it the way some op-ed writers think all women must, wanting …

Tamora Pierce: Melting stones (2008, Scholastic Press)

Residents of the island of Starns send for help from Winding Circle temple, and when …

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I picked up an advance reader's copy at ALA and decided to read through it a few days ago. It wasn't bad; I'm pretty sure I would have given this four stars when I was in middle school. I'd recommend it to any 12 year old who likes fantasy at all.

Dan Brown: The Da Vinci Code on Playaway (EBook, Findaway World)

The Da Vinci Code is a 2003 mystery thriller novel by Dan Brown. It is …

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This book was a pretty enjoyable read. The chapter endings and expository text were unnecessarily formulaic--at times painfully so--but that actually got to be kind of charming, after a while. The puzzles and logical leaps were entertaining, if somewhat implausibly executed (seriously--very minor early spoiler--is the Fibonacci series not something EVERYONE learns about in math class? I remember a Donald Duck video that mentioned it...), though I was kind of disappointed in the last one, which was upsettingly obvious. Worse, he reused a plot device he'd already used to stretch the reader's credulity earlier, at the SAME TIME. So that was lame, but the book as a whole was still fun. And far more accessible than Holy Blood Holy Grail, which I'm still only halfway through.

It wasn't meant to be an intellectual treatise; don't read it like it is one, and you'll likely enjoy it.

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Parts of this were a little (OK, a lot) over-the-top, but I see it as one possible entry point into the game, for people who are leery of more traditional introductions--a fun and engaging one, at that. I'm not a girly-girl, nor do I know many of them, but I still enjoyed the book and took the included stereotypes as illustrative of the author and her gaming group alone and, like I said, over-the-top--not as something particularly deep or harmful or true of everyone.

(I wouldn't use its lessons to bring an already-geeky girl into a game, and I think that's clear to anyone reading it.)

Ian Sansom: The case of the missing books (Paperback, 2006, Harper)

Israel Armstrong is a passionate soul, lured to Ireland by the promise of an exciting …

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I feel sort of guilty about not liking this book--like I really should have liked it--but the characters and the plot just really failed to draw me in. The protagonist is a mishmash of librarian and English person stereotypes, and I disliked most of the side characters, finding very little in the way of redeeming qualities in them. There are interesting points and funny moments, but not enough to carry the book, really. I read mostly in the hopes that the main character would finally stand up for himself and give the council what-for.

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I finished this one on the plane to the ALA conference, and I have to say... I didn't love it. It had uproariously funny moments, and I did kind of like the characters, but far too often the humor attempts just fell flat. For instance, I got annoyed by the constant references to the Beta Male thing; they did not impart enough humor to justify the constant repetition.

I wonder if I'd like something else by this author better. I'm willing to try, anyway.

Philip Pullman: His Dark Materials

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This book was pleasantly subversive, with characters I found myself really rooting for and against, as appropriate. I found myself wondering whether the main characters were going the right way, or whether it would be revealed that they were totally wrong about everything and messing the whole place up.

That said, I made a bad choice in reading this book after the movie came out, when so many other people were reading it and discussing it. I think it might have been a five-star book if I hadn't run into spoilers, which really robbed me of a lot of enjoyment of it.

Don Borchert: Free For All (Hardcover, Virgin Books, Distributed by Holtzbrinck Publishers, Ebury Publishing)

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This is a sweet, funny book--more a series of vignettes than a cohesive story. And while my library is significantly different from Don Borchet's, in many ways, I found myself surprised by the similarities, both in his and my outlook and in other funny little particulars.

I would recommend this book to anyone who is curious about the mindset one needs to work in public libraries--or the bedlam one finds inside them.

Stephenie Meyer: New Moon (Paperback, 2009, Atom)

Love stories. Horror fiction. Now in a Special Trade Demy Paperback Edition. The dramatic sequel …

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This book was, without question, 100% predictable--much of it could be predicted before finishing Twilight, honestly--and the heroine's sheer lack of perspective/insight/brains continues to dumbfound. ... Yet, somehow, I enjoyed the whole thing--couldn't put it down. The series has me addicted; I admit it. (I took out Twilight and [b:New Moon|49041|New Moon (The Twilight Saga, Book 2)|Stephenie Meyer|http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/414jgcy2FAL.SL75.jpg|3203964] from the library and have Eclipse on hold, but I seriously searched two bookstores, trying to find it, so I could read it right away, after I finished this one.)

reviewed Fascination by Stephenie Meyer (Twilight, #1)

Stephenie Meyer: Fascination (Paperback, Français language, 2009, Hachette (Black Moon))

Bella, dix-sept ans, décide de quitter l'Arizona ensoleillé où elle vivait avec sa mère, pour …

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I checked this one out from the library because it was book-trendy (so it must be good, right?), and because I wanted something really fluffy to read at the beach--nothing particularly deep or thought-provoking for me, that week! I was not disappointed on the fluff factor, or on readability; it was a thoroughly enjoyable page-turner.