Slow Reader’s Quarterly Reports

Titles in Red are books we have (or have had) in stock.

Titles in Bold Black indicate autographed books we have (or have had) in stock.

These reports have been posted on rec.arts.mysteries and, more recently, on the dorothyl list. Book titles in color are or have been in stock. Those in red are unsigned copies, those in bold black are autographed. See the List of Residents for details.

Posted October 9, 2000 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Back to Top
    There were only a few really good books I did in the last few months. I can't really blame it on my tendency to try new authors. Two of the worst books I did were back to back (and both on audio) which made it a VERY long September.  
       
  The biggest disappointment was Lee Child's Running Blind (the title in UK is The Visitor) I really loved his first three books, but this one...How do I put this gracefully … is, without a doubt, not my favorite. The story itself wasn't bad (by that I mean the crime to solve and its solution), but almost every other aspect of the book was out of character or off the mark.

I hesitate to get into too much detail for the sake of spoilers, but Reacher is coerced by the FBI to help them on a case. It is not unlike Reacher to be coerced, but it is unlike him to submit to it. He didn't want to do it, but he didn't want to quit and the FBI wasn't taking his input seriously and treated him with hostility. So why'd they want him in the first place? Why did he stick around? There were two good things. The price of the book was less than $19 and it's always nice to visit Reacher. Maybe it was just me, others didn't seem to have the problems I did with it. It is a must read, though, because it has some significant changes for the series.

 
    The other looser was The Doomsday Kiss by Robert Davis. It's about a serum that was supposed to cure aids but is actually lethal. It comes in two forms one which transmits itself via contact and the other which is airborne. Again, the basis story is good and the solution is fine as well, but God, getting their was horrible. The "suspense" wasn't really suspense but teases; questions are ask and no answers are given then the scene changes. Countless descriptive passages were handled with stock cliché's; "...he took the reins in his hands..." for he took control of the situation.
  Even Tom Boddett wasn't a relief. Willowaw! is about a couple of kids (10 and 11 ish in age) who are left alone while the father goes off on a business trip. They handle some remarkably mature chores and do some equally remarkably dumb things. But it was nice to visit Alaska again, so I don't hold it too much against him.
  On the up side, Stephen King's Hearts of Atlantis was a refreshing return to the likes of The Body, Shawshank and Dolores Clairborne. It was more human interest than "horror" or "weird tales". But what weirdness there was, were tie-ins to his Dark Tower Series, which I always find fun. For the more "horror/ghost" story stuff, there was Blood and Smoke (available only on audio). These stories all related to smoking or smoking quitting.
  I did my first Clive Cussler with Atlantis Found. This adventurer was hot on the trail of some Nazi-Remnants that had a unique plan to take over the world. The premise was really intriguing. The remains of an advanced, ancient culture is discovered. They were apparently killed off in a pre-ice age comet impact. They leave a warning of the return of a civilization-shattering comet.
  I also, finally, got to read my first John Sandford (Rules of Prey). This introduces Lucas Davenport, a detective who uses the media to expose a serial kill that doesn't follow the "rules of prey".

And Janet Evanovich's High Five was pleasantly amusing, as always. Funny from the very first line:

When I was a little girl I used to dress Barbie up with underpants.

Stephanie is trying to find her Uncle Fred (things being a bit dull around the FTA office) and she also picks up a little extra work from Ranger.

I also did Kenneth Fearing's The Big Clock, from 1947. This story is the basis of the Kevin Cosner film, "No Way Out". It was also a film back in the late '40's, but I've never seen that one. This book was not as intricate as the Cosner film. The style was interesting in that it told the story from different points of view from the various characters in the story. A similar technique was used in Vera Caspary's Laura.

  Another nice read was The Little Sister by Raymond Chandler. It is the kind of story that makes me wonder why I bother reading new people. A woman offers Marlow $20 to find her brother. That leads him into blackmail, dope and starlets.

But then I pick up Barbara Seranella's No Human Involved and say, "This is why I read new people." A nice treat. "Munch" Mancini (short for "Munchkin") is a victim of life and is fighting back. She gets caught up in evil doings and has to fend for herself until the police can catch up. All this, of course, while she fights off a drug addiction, quits prostitution and gets a job as an auto mechanic while going through withdrawals. Not a bad first showing.

  Another nice surprise was John Gilstrap's Nathan's Run. John now has his third book out, but this is his first. A real thriller, mostly from the eyes of a young kid who has escaped from a juvenile detention center and attempts are made on his life. With the "bad guys" and the police after him, he has no where to go. But he is able to turn public opinion in his favor by calling into a talk radio show to air his side.  

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