Monday 27 April 2009

The Way of Shadows by Brent Weeks

The Way of Shadows (Night Angel Trilogy) The Way of Shadows by Brent Weeks


My review


rating: 4 of 5 stars
My partner read this first and said it was really good so I read it too. I really loved it. The characters are so rich and the book is well written seeing it is Weeks first book.

I had trouble putting the book down and several times was reading to 5am in the morning. I am looking foward to reading the other two books.


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Synopsis.

The perfect killer has no friends. Only targets. For Durzo Blint, assassination is an art. And he is the city's most accomplished artist, his talents required from alleyway to courtly boudoir. For Azoth, survival is precarious. Something you never take for granted. As a guild rat, he's grown up in the slums, and learned the hard way to judge people quickly - and to take risks. Risks like apprenticing himself to Durzo Blint. But to be accepted, Azoth must turn his back on his old life and embrace a new identity and name. As Kylar Stern, he must learn to navigate the assassins' world of dangerous politics and strange magics - and cultivate a flair for death.

Saturday 18 April 2009

Half Way There!

I am now halfway through War and Peace by Leo Tolstoy.
Only another 1700 pages to go! lol

Thursday 9 April 2009

The Tenth Circle by Jodi Picoult

The Tenth Circle The Tenth Circle by Jodi Picoult


My review


rating: 4 of 5 stars
This was my first Jodi Picoult book and I have to say I enjoyed it tremendously. I had trouble putting it down. I thought that the characters were very strong and very believable.

The book revolves around a young teenage girl who is raped. And it does get you thinking how you would react if you were that childs parent.


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Author Synopsis

When Daniel Stone was a child, he was the only white boy in a native Eskimo village where his mother taught, and he was teased mercilessly because he was different. He fought back, the baddest of the bad kids: stealing, drinking, robbing and cheating his way out of the Alaskan bush – where he honed his artistic talent, fell in love with a girl and got her pregnant. To become part of a family, he reinvented himself – jettisoning all that anger to become a docile, devoted husband and father. Fifteen years later, when we meet Daniel again, he is a comic book artist. His wife teaches Dante’s Inferno at a local college; his daughter, Trixie, is the light of his life – and a girl who only knows her father as the even-tempered, mild-mannered man he has been her whole life. Until, that is, she is date raped…and Daniel finds himself struggling, again, with a powerlessness and a rage that may not just swallow him whole, but destroy his family and his future.

Map of Bones by James Rollins

Map of Bones (Sigma Force #2) Map of Bones by James Rollins


My review


rating: 3 of 5 stars
I did enjoy this book although it was not my favourite one of his.

It's a good old fashioned thriller/adventure book, with a good plot and lots of twist and turns. Pure escapism!


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Amazon review From Publishers Weekly A mysterious biblical object, nefarious Vatican spies and a deadly centuries-old religious cabal—sound familiar? Sacramento veterinarian Rollins offers more Da Vinci Code–style thrills for the seriously addicted. In this seventh outing, hooded men invade midnight mass at the Cologne Cathedral and slaughter almost everyone present, then break open a gold sarcophagus and steal... the bones of the Three Wise Men. Grayson Pierce, top agent in the Department of Defense's covert Sigma Force, takes a team to Rome, joins up with love-interest Rachel Verona, a carabinieri corps lieutenant, and her Vatican official uncle, Vigot. It seems that the Dragon Court, a medieval alchemical cult-cell that still operates within the Catholic Church, is to blame, and it also seems that the bones of the Magi aren't really bones, but the highly reactive Monatomic gold that the group plans to use to accomplish its ultimate goal—Armegeddon. Rollins has few peers in the research department, which makes the historical material fascinating, and he keeps the dialogue believably colloquial and the incidental elements motivated—and plausible for at least short stretches. Clumsy romance is mostly overcome by lots of action. Dan Brown-ers looking for methadone will add to Rollins's usual solid numbers.