melreads: text: "I think the sub-text here is rapidly becoming text." (subtext)
(possible spoilers!)

Sunday, August 9, 2020
I feel like I ought to read something new instead of re-reading all the time. I like to re-read, but if you never read anything new then re-reading eventually gets very repetitive. I need to pull something out of my unread books list on the Kindle and just read something completely new. (But not until after I finish the Survivor's Club re-read. That won't take that long.) The Expanse books can wait.

I was talking about Flavian and Agnes before, but now I am on to the next one, which is Ralph and Chloe. Ralph is an earl but his grandfather is a duke, and the grandfather dies about, I don't know, a third of the way in. The day after the wedding, in fact - Chloe is nobody one day, a countess the next, and a duchess the one after that.

Monday
"Dulce et decorum est pro patria mori." Apparently that means "it is sweet and right to die for one's country." What hogwash. (That's what the guy in the book - the aforementioned Ralph - is saying too. "There is nothing sweet or right about war," he goes on to say.) This is the Survivor's Club books again, I should say. They're basically a long meditation on the aftereffects of trauma, disguised as romance novels. (The romances are sort of a coping mechanism, I guess you'd say. Most of the woman are traumatized in one way or another as well.)

Tuesday
I just finished that book, at 3 in the morning. It's good but not as good as the one before it. Next is Only a Kiss, a title which always makes a "Mr Brightside" earworm start up in my head for the duration - but this is a really good book, and a funny one, when it's not all about trauma. (The hero, Percy, is the comic relief. The heroine is the Survivor here, so you know she is PTSD personified almost to the very end.)

(written on a separate sheet - front and back)
I forget between times the source of comedy that is Only a Kiss. In fact, I forget the name of the book and the name of the hero and much of the plot. (This is why I reread a lot - because my mind is a sieve - am I spelling that right? I tend to have trouble with ei vs ie - and I re-read to remind myself of the large parts of these books that I've forgotten.) Anyway, parts of this book are quite serious - Imogen's PTSD-inducing experiences in Spain, vicious smugglers lurking around the estate - but it's also quite funny.

A new(-ish) earl decides to visit the "seat" of his earldom, which is in Cornwall and he's never been there before. The book starts during his 30th birthday party in London, with a very drunk Lord Percival meditating on all his blessings. He grew up with adoring, rich parents, an only child. He is good looking and intelligent - "firsts" at Oxford is how historical romance novels tend to indicate intelligence for men - and then he unexpectedly becomes an earl when the older, more stuffy branch of his family fails to produce heirs (or they all get killed in the war, I suppose).

The heroine is the traumatized Imogen, who is the widowed daughter-in-law of the previous earl. The two of them do not initially get along, not surprisingly. Imogen is blond and has been described repeatedly in the (five) previous books as resembling a marble statue - I guess that means she has what the psychiatrists call a "flat affect"?

The late earl's sister lives in the big house with a companion, while Imogen lives in the dower house - only the roof of that house is always under repair so I. is temporarily living in the big house. Percy knows none of this, he just sends a letter (written drunkenly during that first chapter) saying he's coming, and then shows up not far behind the letter. - I haven't even gotten to the part about all the stray dogs and cats. It almost sounds like some kind of 90s Disney comedy, really. One particularly funny thing is that the ugliest of the stray dogs immediately attaches himself to the earl and follows him everywhere. Percy grumbles, of course, but he also has a sense of humor - without it, he would be intolerable in his perfection - and is actually kind, and before long is surreptitiously helping Hector (the dog) over gorse hedges and such.

Both Percy and Imogen have a Lizzie-Bennet type of sardonic humor where they sit back and observe the neighbors, as well. (Before this book, it's been obvious that Imogen is kind but not so much that she has a sense of humor, too.) I guess that's why it's eventually very clear that these two suit.

Wednesday
Have now finished that book and am onto the next - which is the last - it's George the duke (who has always been a duke - for many years, anyway - as opposed to the one a couple of books back who became a duke mid-story). Anyway, George goes and asks Agnes' spinster sister Dora - who he had only met fairly briefly, a couple of books back - to marry him. I don't remember much else about it except that much family drama is involved.

Friday
I don't really think this is the best of Ms Balogh's books, unless there's something I've forgotten that redeems it. Not that it's bad, I'm just not completely enthralled.

early Sunday morning
I've just finished that book, and I haven't especially changed my mind. It does get much more interesting toward the end, but the first half - well, the middle third, especially - is very slow-moving. It may even have been deliberate! I actually had forgotten the whole big drama at the cliff-top but I did remember what the big dark secret was the George had been guarding. It's funny what you remember and what you forget.

melreads: Text: "The earth is doomed" (it's a Buffy quote) (Buffy: earth is doomed)
possibly spoilers!!

Monday, August 3, 2020
So I'm still reading Nemesis Games, and also The Arrangement, which is another romance novel that goes with the last one I read. I'm at about the 80% mark on both, but of course the romance is much shorter. (In novels, anyway!) Nemesis is probably one of my favorite Expanse books, on a par with the first one. The way the puzzle-pieces of the plot fit together is just so awesome. And also I like that the female characters start to drive a lot of plot.
 
Tuesday
Finished Nemesis. Also finished The Escape, another romance. I really do like this particular series, although I like everything of Mary Balogh's written after 2000 or so, and a lot of what she wrote before that. Earlier on her writing style was spotty, and even after she got over that she had a thing for alpha-males (which I don't) - or maybe that was just what was in at the time - I suspect it was. (In fact it was never all her heroes, only some of them, even in that period.) "Survivor's Club," this series, is possibly an attempt to have it both ways, in a sense, because the heroes are all military men, but they are all PTSD victims in one sense or another - I suppose nearly all soldiers are! - so they are vulnerable. (Very much so.) It's mostly the women who do the rescuing in these books.

Thursday
Now I've moved on to Only Enchanting, another romance in the same series. The last several titles in the series have "Only ___" as a title, and what happens is that I can't remember which is which. I know "The ____" is not a title that works for everything, either (that's what the first part of the series uses). You kind of have to have something dramatic to justify it. ("The Proposal" is only interesting as a title because the guy bungles it!)

Anyway, this one is about a woman (Agnes) who's the friend of one of the previous heroines,and a viscount who had a head injury and now stutters. I have trouble with all these noblemen - in this series I get the viscount (Flavian) mixed up with the one who is an earl (Ralph) - they were the two out of the group at the beginning who didn't stand out. Agnes is a widow, and a nobody next to a viscount (not that most American readers know wtf a viscount is, anyway), but she's a very likeable character. Flavian is too, once you get past the "blond god" aspect of him. Actually this is one of my favorites of this series.

melreads: Text: "The earth is doomed" (it's a Buffy quote) (Buffy: earth is doomed)
(discussion of fictional violence, & spoilers)

Friday, July 24, 2020
Hmm, I haven't actually read much in the last day or two. I was kind of looking at some things I might want to read in the future, some recommendations and such... For one thing, I have one of the Murderbot books, I think, and that seems like something I'd like. (I say "book" but I think maybe they're novellas?) I also saw some recommendations from the Expanse guys about "spaceship" SF, which might be interesting!

Sunday
I don't know that I have much to say. I finished the romance novel. (The one guy did commit suicide, the other guy did egg him on, but this is something that happened several years in the past, in the book, and the protagonists agree that there's not going to be a way to punish the egger-on, and they move on. A lot of Mary Balogh books seem to be about getting past the traumas that happened in your past.)

Meanwhile, I'm back to slogging through Cibola Burn. I'm to the part where there's a huge apocalyptic event on the other side of the planet Holden and Amos are on, and it seems for a while like everybody's absolutely going to die, but actually most of them don't, in the end. This book has now been done by the TV series, too. We watched one episode (of the 4th season, that is) and Rob seemed interested but we haven't come back to it. I guess I'll go finish it on my own, at some point. Rob and I tend to have difficulty coordinating on TV shows sometimes. Anyway, I will get through this book eventually. Possibly with another romance novel going in parallel!

melreads: text: "I think the sub-text here is rapidly becoming text." (subtext)
I think I should just make this line standard in every entry:
Note: definite possibility of spoilers!
(and then if I get way spoilery like I did way down below with The Expanse, I'll put it in the title, too!)

Monday, June 29
(Writing in my brand-new journal, a Happy Planner Classic Horizontal)
Currently reading: Leviathan Wakes

I can't resist writing here even though it's early. (NOTE that this refers to the paper journal - I was writing in the July start journal even though it was still June.) The plan is that this will be my book journal - we'll see how I stick with that. There's not a lot of room here so I'll have to write short bits here - unless I get behind, which I often do in my regular journal. And if I have anything lengthy to say it'll just have to go elsewhere! So I'm reading Expanse #1 (the one above), but I've stopped for the moment and I'm reading romance novels instead. My favorite romance novelist is Mary Balogh, who writes characters much more realistic than most, it seems to me. (No matter that her sex scenes are in fact mostly the same one over and over, with some variations. Sex scenes don't interest me as much as they used to, anyway.)

Wed., July 1 - I wanted to read "Someone to Remember" which is a novella so it will go fast, but first I re-read Someone to Honour, which is the book before it chronologically, and which has a plot that intertwines with the novella. (All the books in this series are "Someone to _____" which makes it hard to remember which is which.) I just finished the first one so I can read the novella tomorrow.


Thurs. - So, Someone To Remember is the very unusual romance with a middle-aged heroine. The funny thing is that I noticed the minute the author started thinking of her as a person. For the first few books of the series she was a bit of a caricature, the maiden aunt who stayed at home. Then she started to change, gradually. I became convinced a couple of books ago that she would get her own romance, and she did.

Friday - Okay, I veered off to romance-land long enough to read three books, no less, but I'm ready to go back into The Expanse this weekend, skipping some 4 or 5 hundred years in one fell swoop. (The books are vague about what year it is, but the TV series says 23rd century - not the near future but not unimaginably far, either.)

Saturday - I am 2/3 of the way through Leviathan Wakes, lest you think I read nothing but romance novels all week. I'm just reading in fits and starts. It's funny how I visualize this in my mind now that I've seen the TV show. Left on my own, the way I visualize book characters is pretty vague. I don't really form much of an idea what they look like, exactly (past whatever description is in the book, I mean), although once in a while I'll realize that I've "cast" some character in my head and I'm thinking of a certain actor, usually without even realizing it for a while. Here, I seem to see them now as somewhere between what I originally saw in my head and the TV actors - except Miller, who I'm pretty definitively seeing as Thomas Jane, most of the time.

Monday, July 6th
OK, done with Expanse #1, on to #2, which is Caliban's War, the one about Ganymede, the one where Bobbie shows up. (After that is the one out at the gate, then the one at the planet on the other side of the gate. Then Marco drops his stealth rocks on Earth - that's the next two. Then the ones about, um, the ex-Martians - Laconians, is that it? That makes eight, right? And #9 isn't out yet. So seven more books to re-read, that'll keep me busy for a while.) Will I go straight into Caliban's War? Yeah, maybe I will - well, maybe not right this minute. But I'm pretty sure I'll at least start it before I veer off into anything else. That book is one of my favorites.

Tues. - I'm now a good way in on Caliban's War - 12%, says the Kindle. Prax is a good character, it's a shame he didn't fit into the other books - but what would be their excuse for carrying around their own botanist? (I do think he and Mei make some brief appearances later.) Avasarala and Bobbie both stay around for ages, so you can't have everything. (Now I'm thinking about character deaths and such. They killed Miller off in book one and he was back for two more books. Amos is also effectively dead but it looks like he'll make it into #
9.)

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