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mgouker@wyrms.de

Joined 2 years, 7 months ago

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Michael Gouker's books

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Jen Campbell: Weird things customer say in bookshops (Hardcover, 2012, Constable)

Review of 'Weird things customer say in bookshops' on 'Goodreads'

This was some quick fun. There is a Pythonesque air about it, dry humor, a bit sarcastic, but it gives a faithful perspective of "bookseller" and how some customers try their patience. Most of the stories have a truth about them that should be depressing, but what can you do but laugh at them, and, in turn, at ourselves?

reviewed Skin game by Jim Butcher (Dresden files, #15)

Jim Butcher: Skin game (2014)

Chicago wizard Harry Dresden must help a hated enemy, Nicodemus Archleone, break into a high …

Review of 'Skin Game (The Dresden Files, #15)' on 'Goodreads'

Jim Butcher has created a world with so many rivals, all with their own motives, that the series has an ever-increasing momentum. Butcher's characters are all well-known now. As a reader, I--like Harry--have seen Murphy, Molly, Butters, and the rest grow. With Harry now sold to Mab, he must do her bidding, and Mab puts him in the worst situation imaginable. The story has been described as a heist and, yeah, that happens too, but there is a bigger story being prepared, and Skin Game gives us a ton of clues.

Meanwhile, Harry must navigate Mabs deadly restrictions and is challenged like never before (again). This story is how he can rise to the occasion and survive, if he can. We already know by now that's no foregone conclusion.

Jim Butcher: Cold Days
            
                Dresden Files (2013, Little, Brown Book Group)

Review of 'Cold Days\r\n \r\n Dresden Files' on 'Goodreads'

Butcher knocked this out of the park. Brilliant. He basically retells the entire story from a new perspective, and just like that, the series has a wide-open future.

There are also plenty of reasons to worry about Harry, especially with all the rapey thoughts he must constantly fight. I don't think his relationship with Murphy has a great chance.

Naomi Shihab Nye: A maze me (Hardcover, 2005, Greenwillow Books)

A collection of seventy-two poems written especially for girls ages twelve and up by the …

Review of 'A maze me' on 'Goodreads'

A lovely collection of poems that express the awe and frustration of youth. Nye's language and vivid imagery combine with a natural rhythm that disarms. Here we see watermelons in a truck as "fat stacked bodies/striped like animals" and learn of a turtle who walked for twenty years with a keychain. This is the happiest of a half-dozen poetry collections I've read the last few days, and most of the time it warmed my heart. I'll read it again when I'm sad.

Rupi Kaur: the sun and her flowers (Paperback, 2017, Andrews McMeel Publishing)

Divided into five chapters and illustrated by Kaur, the sun and her flowers is a …

Review of 'the sun and her flowers' on 'Goodreads'

Many of the poems have accompanying artwork, spare depictions of scenes in lines and curves, but never complex. Kaur uses white space simply, and decreases the length of the line sometimes to be more percussive, while letting some lines wax further, usually with more multisyllabic words. Some pages have a single line like “you break women in like shoes” One poem, “questions,” uses anaphora quite a lot, and the title poem uses italicized dialogue, and, because most of the poem is a conversation (“together we are an endless conversation,” she adds later), we realize the deliberate engagement in love that is often absent from her other pieces. My favorite in this vein is “- our souls are mirrors,” which I will not quote here but hope you go seek it.

The poems are about love (“a double-edged knife”), addiction, immigration, betrayal, loss, self-love, therapy, motherhood, insecurity, and (in a dramatic …

Amanda Lovelace: The Princess Saves Herself in This One (Women Are Some Kind of Magic, #1)

Review of 'The Princess Saves Herself in This One (Women Are Some Kind of Magic, #1)' on 'Goodreads'

Lovelace (she/they) writes lines of short jabs and uses tons of whitespace, sometimes even making shape poems, like a keyhole where the act of reciting the poem is like inserting the key. They write heavily emotional poems about love, loneliness, abuse, fat-shaming, the joy of writing, and death (a mother and a sister!)

Some of the reviews on Goodreads vilify the poet, claiming they do not write poetry, only chopping up prose into lines of one or two words and a carriage-return. They include personal examples, humorous efforts, and, yes, I get the joke, but... WELL, I loved this book and the critics are completely missing the point, concentrating more on form than the unique way Lovelace's poetry conveys meaning,.

And there is humor too, much of it dark, like a house-shaped poem “there/was never/enough alcohol/to keep my mother warm/in a house/as cold as/t h i s.//- but you kept …

"A completely new collection of poetry with a celestial theme"--Publisher website.

Review of 'The universe of us' on 'Goodreads'

A mostly upbeat collection of poetry and prose mostly about Love and relationships. One "poem" that really stood out for me was "Postcard," a piece written to a future lover. It felt so joyous, and then there is this piece in the middle, an apology of sorts, "I know I’m running late—I’m sorry. Things haven’t worked out the way I planned. But believe me when I tell you I am on my way." Two souls fate for each other, but they haven't found each other yet. Pretty cool.

George R. R. Martin, Gardner Dozois: Dangerous Women (2013, HarperCollins Publishers)

Review of 'Dangerous Women' on 'Goodreads'

I only read the Butcher story about Molly's visit to a club. Molly is the protagonist and is joined by a vamp from the white court (Justine) and Andy (a werewolf.) Like the rest of the series, there is an tumescent male gaze, which is especially off-putting because now it's Molly that's on about women's racks, but like... in a male way. The story itself fills in a piece of the background, showing how two adversaries contrast. I'll leave it at that.

It's worth reading. It's probably important in the context of the story (I don't know... I have several books to read before I finish the series.) The characters are great, and Molly does reflect upon more than bodies, but when she does, it sounds like Dresden is retelling her story. That's how I have it anyway.

Jim Butcher: Ghost Story (The Dresden Files, #13) (2011)

Ghost Story is the 13th book in The Dresden Files, Jim Butcher's continuing urban fantasy …

Review of 'Ghost Story (The Dresden Files, #13)' on 'Goodreads'

Things are worse after the end of the Red Court. This would be 4 stars, especially because of Butcher's post-mortem worldbuilding, and though some of the story felt predictable, it's a ploy. Butcher keeps a right hook waiting for you just when you've got it all figured out.

Also, Butters is the real hero!

reviewed A Deadly Education by Naomi Novik (The Scholomance, #1)

Naomi Novik: A Deadly Education (Hardcover, 2020, Del Rey)

I decided that Orion Lake needed to die after the second time he saved my …

Review of 'A Deadly Education' on 'Goodreads'

In Naomi Novik's strange world, potentially gifted wizard children are hunted as sources of mana, which they earn through different activities, as varied as crochet, yoga, push-ups, and (in Orion Lake's case) hunting mals, the name given to the evil creatures that roam about trying to consume mages and their children. The protagonist, El (short for Galadriel, her hippie-mom's choice), attends Scholomance, the teacherless, self-aware school created by the wizarding community to help its children survive to adulthood. Scholomance has been for many generations overrun by mals and surviving graduation means literally living through what amounts to a bull run of horrors.

In A Deadly Education, we follow El's progress through her junior year. The story is told in 1st-person with minimal psychic distance, though it is also clear from numerous presumptions that El's perspective is not the only side of the story, even if she doesn't see …

reviewed Changes by Jim Butcher (The Dresden Files, #12)

Jim Butcher: Changes (2010)

The new novel in the #1 New York Times bestselling Dresden Files series. Long ago, …

Review of 'Changes (The Dresden Files, #12)' on 'Goodreads'

Brave novel. Butcher turns the entire story on its head, and once you are sure nothing more can flip, you get a knockout blow. I am looking forward so much to what is coming.

Review of 'Side Jobs' on 'Goodreads'

These are important stories that fill out the background of the Dresden Files world. While it's true that the main story is told in the novels, these short stories tell us a lot about both Harry and characters like Thomas & Murphy. Be careful with the reading order or you will experience serious spoilers. ;-)

Emily St. John Mandel: Station Eleven (Hardcover, Fr language, 2016, Payot et rivages)

Dans un monde où la civilisation s’est effondrée suite à une pandémie foudroyante, une troupe …

Review of 'Station Eleven' on 'Goodreads'

A story about how people behave when everything is gone. Survivors in a post-apocalyptic world brought on by the Georgia Flu (LOL, one of the many things St. John Mandel got right) are tested as people. We are also afforded a look behind a much lesser Randall Flagg and asked to understand his origins. It's very well told with great characters and hard choices that make sense.