Review: Lizzie Wilcock – Thirst

Thirst
Lizzie Wilcock

Karanda has passed through 5 foster homes, and it’s not exactly clear why. But the thing is, her behaviour has been getting worse over time. She’s snarky and completely wary of people – so when she gets the desert all to herself, it seems like the best thing for her. Sol is used to being abandoned – in fact, if you were to count foster homes, he’s been through more than her! But he craves human contact – and Karanda is all he has left.

24866854There is a lot of ‘Auzzie’-ness in this novel that is going to appeal to locals and overseas people alike. Who doesn’t love cute possums? Something that I felt was an inconsistency was how Karanda’s blood lust rose and fell. Is it just the environment, the challenges, allowing her to cry? It doesn’t seem like something she does very often.

Even as their lives entwine, Sol and Karanda have a past together that only one of them knows. The thing that got me going was that I didn’t know what colour their skins were – I assume Caucasian – but it didn’t matter to them. The adversity exposes their secrets, even if all the reader usually hears is from Karanda’s perspective.

It urked me that the author kept referring to Sol and Karanda as ‘children’. Both of them have seen enough of life to no longer be considered children in my mind, and most of their behaviour was as adult-like as it could be in the situation. Otherwise they simply wouldn’t survive.

The ending was very satisfying, right in line with the rest of the novel. What I enjoyed best was that things were never predictable. I fully felt that one of them could die at any point, they could starve, they could die from infection. It adds a bit of spice to a novel which could otherwise because just another bush-survival tale, just pointed at children.

Did I think it was coincidence about the helicopter coming at that point in time? No. Now that I think about it, it’s obvious that it is the natural events going on, not the two kids.  And the car? I don’t even know.

Was I blown away by this? Not really. But for the right audience? For sure. It’s pleasurable, light reading. 3-stars for adult readers, a generous 4 for it’s designated audience of younger teens.

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Review: Mercedes Lackey – Closer to Home

Closer to Home
Mercedes Lackey

Despite having a somewhat unorthodox upbringing and a shiny life respectively, Mags and Amiliy have gone though a variety of challenging situations together. Upon their return to Haven and their Whites, they have to balance their private and public selves to provide a stable face for the kingdom.

20893366Ok, so the summary I just gave you is probably a little too rosy. To confirm your dismay, once again this novel has Mags at its centre. If only this Lackey novel could have had a different hero. There’s plenty of minor meaty bits to work with, but Mags eats them all up with his low-levelview of life and his expectations.

Mag’s terrible speech continues as an ongoing annoyance. I know it’s part of his street persona, but he doesn’t need it to make him stand out from the other characters at all. The other characters seemed defined by their words, rather than their actions, even though a new mind-power mean that more actions could have been described with a hint of emotion.

It took me a little while to get around to writing a review for this novel, simply because I was searching around for other things to read that might be more compelling! I did make a note to jump start my mind for the review though – Another lackluster Lackey offering.

I’ve seen other reviewers complaining that Lackey is simply coming up with ideas for novels from things that have worked previously. In this case, it’s a Romeo and Juliet-esk drama, seen through the eyes of a small dog. Nothing against the small furry dog, just a lot against idiotic noblewomen.

I borrowed this novel from the library. Unless it’s super on sale, I wouldn’t even buy it as a mass-market paperback – nothing new to read here. 2 to 3 stars from me – a bare pass.

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Review: Matthew Reilly – Troll Mountain

Troll Mountain
Matthew Reilly

Raf’s only family has come down with a fatal disease that no human knows how to cure. The secret rests with the trolls of Troll Mountain – the very animals that killed the rest of Raf’s family. When the authorities of his tribe fail to make progress on helping Raf’s sister, he sets out on a quest.

21882602While at first glance things in society seem very simple, the questioning voice of Ko and Raf’s quick learning expose universal truths. Adults will probably see most things coming, but younger readers will appreciate the unveiling of the potential ugliness of society. It also seems as if Reilly is having a quick stab at the current state of politics (but it’s not intrusive).

This is a novel of the journey, the plot, the scenery and lastly the characters. Raf undergoes character development, but it’s really just a side effect of the journey. It certainly isn’t enough to drive the story. But the plot is swift and doesn’t let the reader or Raf catch their breath, ending up in a short read for me that took around a half hour.

I’m not sure what I was expecting from this novel, but I don’t think it was what I expected from knowing about some of Reilly’s more popular works. I expected a gritty, heavy fantasy novel suitable for long-time converts, and instead got an accessible novel for all ages.

This novel was originally published in successive chapters as an ebook. I have to say, I probably never would have picked them up. I’m not very patient, and although each chapter wraps itself up nicely, and doesn’t form too much on an impatient cliff-hanger, I wouldn’t be good at remembering to keep reading it. I received this novel in a beautiful hardback from Macmillian. I’d suggest buying it for your young person in your life though – I think it would be worth reading and discussing. 3.5 stars from me.

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Review: Karelia Stetz-Waters – The Purveyor

The Purveyor
Karelia Stetz-Waters

Helen and Wilson have been forcibly separated in the wake of The Admirer‘s thrilling conclusion. As Wilson suffers from a disorder with no cure, Helen finds herself increasingly lost and uncomfortable, not knowing why Wilson is not returning to her college.

23120239This novel is just as entrancing as the first novel. It is written more from Wilson’s perspective which is a refreshing change after Helen’s insecure narration in the first novel. At the same time, it is obvious that Wilson suffers from the same insecurities. I felt frustrated that they weren’t communicating well, because surely they should have gotten over it in the first novel? But that is what makes this novel more life-like and less like a fiction.

That being said, the things that go wrong that are really random things that get wrong. How likely is it that these things would happen in real life? The whole hierarchy in Wilson’s family seems off, but then again, these atrocities to occur in modern life, and what better way to expose it than in a novel? Her family is seriously interbred and messy, made more so by the questionable sexualities of its members. I wonder how much of this actually goes on…

I had such differing levels of disgust and horror and discomfort all about one person, but I didn’t know that they were someone else until it was too late! I didn’t feel tricked, instead I felt like I’d had an actual expose go on, just like Wilson feels. It’s a clever technique that Karelia uses with expertise in both of her ‘Wilson and Helen’ novels.

I couldn’t make the final connection for what happened to the girls. They’re basically surrounded by myth the whole time. They’re completely legendary, and remain that way. I’d love to hear more from them. I want to know whether they are both happy, whether they decide to study more, and what the collector wanted from them (if it wasn’t sex or religious purposes).

Once again I was left feeling like I’d been walking along hot coals and found myself loving them so much that it felt more painful when it ended. I was pushed along by how things were interconnected and messy and yet not obvious all at the same time. Love, love, loved this novel. Not only did I connect with the characters, the plot didn’t miss a beat and kept moving forward with no inconsistencies.

When I interviewed Karelia, she mentioned that many people seem uncomfortable with the sex scenes in her novels. I think that the majority of them are tastefully done, and actually offer insight into the characters. That is particularly the case in this novel. It’s certainly not a gratuitous pledge to her readers.

I bought this novel for myself after reading Karelia’s other novels, The Admirer, Forgive Me If I’ve Told You This Before and Something True. Let that be a mark to you that I now proudly own all these novels after buying them with my own cash, and would confidently promote them to everyone.

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Review: Mercedes Lackey & James Mallory – The House of the Four Winds

The House of the Four Winds
Mercedes Lackey & James Mallory

Clarice, or Clarence as she prefers to be known, has been sent out from home to seek her fortune as a swordswoman. Determined to explore more of the world before settling down, she finds herself on a ship to the New World. After a mutiny by the crew, Clarence and her Captain find themselves running out of food and water – and instead heading towards an unknown destination.

16059529Clarence is a traditional female-hiding-as-male character. Not only does she pretend to be a passenger when she’s perfectly capable of looking after herself, she predictably falls in love with the Captain – who is understandably confused about having feelings for a young man…

It’s pretty much black and white what each person is feeling and doing. You know some characters are being sneaky, and it’s almost 100% positive that they are ‘bad’. ‘Bad’ dies out, and ‘good’ wins. Even when you put an all-powerful sorceress in the mix.

This novel was the highlight of the ones I borrowed from the library recently by Lackey. Mallory pulls up Lackey’s slack, and makes the story work. That being said, the execution is improved, but there’s not really any real variation from a known and best-selling story-type. I long for something new and unique – and I think I’m going to have to step away from

I’m interested to see what becomes of the next sisters in the series. They can’t all be firey princesses dreaming of adventure surely? Or perhaps this book won’t be successful enough to demand the writing of those… 4 stars from me.

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Review: Brandon Sanderson – Steelheart

Steelheart
Brandon Sanderson

David has been hunting Epics his whole life. Well, not all of them. But enough of them that he can classify them, and knows how to take them down. But there’s only one he wants to take down. And that’s Steelheart, who killed his father. Somewhere in David’s mind is the clue to take him down. He can’t do it on his own though…

17182126Metaphors in a world gone mad. I think that setting up difficult ones is just as hard as setting up good ones! I can’t decide whether it’s overkill, or just adding depth to David’s character. I guess it shows his out-of-contact social skills from living alone for too many years.

Sanderson always picks an interesting idea, and moves away from it in an odd direction. Take a concept that you think you understand, then turn it upside down. Too many times are there heroes and villains as super-people. Sometimes the balance is out. And what happens when they’re always mad and grumpy? Normal humans don’t have a chance.

I would have liked to see a bit more variety in the perspectives offered. David offers a pretty narrow world view to see the whole novel through. But it would have ruined some of the surprises because each person has their own secrets that the hold that are both their own and for others.

Something I love so much about this novel, and others, is that the person you might empathise with the most might turn out to be someone different or die on you! His twists and deaths are real deaths – people stay dead. Not like some series I can mention… *Game of Thrones* cough cough.

Oh Sanderson. You’ve done it again. I felt so shattered by the ending, and it wasn’t what I expected at all, so it was totally awesome. I can’t possibly recommend this novel enough. I’ve loved his work since much earlier, since borrowing novels while I was overseas on vacation (I now own them, not that they are out of their pristine plastic wrap).

I forgot to say thank you to my amazing girlfriend for surprising me with this novel! I have the bestest girlfriend ever.

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Interview with Katarina West

Today I have the honor of continuing my new interview series with an interview with the fabulous Katarina West. I’ve reviewed her debut novel, Witchcraft Couture.

 

Katarina West was born in Helsinki, Finland, into a bilingual family that in addition to humans consisted of dogs, cats, horses, guinea pigs, canaries, rabbits and – thanks to her biology teacher mother – stuffed owls and squirrels.  She spent time travelling in Africa, Asia and Latin America, and went on to study at Queen Mary and Westfield College in London and the European University Institute in Florence, where she completed a PhD in political science and published a book based on it, Agents of Altruism. During those student years she started work as a journalist, and continued writing for various Finnish magazines and newspapers for over ten years, writing on various topics from current events and humanitarian issues to celebrity interviews and short stories. She also briefly worked as a university lecturer on humanitarian issues in Northern Italy.  Katarina lives in an old farmhouse in Chianti with her husband and son and when not writing, she is fully immersed in Tuscan country life, from jam-making and olive-picking to tractor maintenance.

I read Witchcraft Couture what feels like an endless time ago now (November 2014)! When can I expect a copy of your next novel?

  • Hi, Rosemarie! Yes it seems a long time ago, doesn’t it? My next novel is coming out this autumn, and right now I’m writing one of the last drafts. It’s rewarding, to start to see the structure of the story coming out. It’s like sandpapering an old chair, and after a lot of hard work you start to see wood underneath the layers of ugly paint.

What is it about?

  • Entitled Absolute Truth, for Beginners, it tells the story of a twenty-something art history graduate, Elisa, who falls in love with a famous scientist. It’s a love story – but for me it’s first and foremost a coming-of-age story.

Your novel feels strongly literary, which is to say for me it feels like you have stuffed as much detail in there as possible, but somehow you have also managed to make it enjoyable. What called you to writing in this style and genre?

  • Good question. How do authors acquire their voice, their particular way of writing? As for me, much has to do with what I read as a child and a teenager, what influenced me in those years: the novelists I admired, and whose writing I wanted to emulate. I love rich, carefully-woven stories. I love reading them, and I love writing them.
  • Another aspect that has shaped my way of writing is that I write in two languages – Finnish and English – and grew up speaking Finnish, not English, and I live in Italy, which means that in everyday life I speak and think in Italian. Since I have many languages in my life, the languages in which I write are bound to be more literary. I don’t think I could switch between languages so easily if I wrote in a dialect, for example.
  • But it’s one of those eternal questions, really, that of an author’s voice. I think only part of the process is conscious: sure, you can mould your narrative voice, shape it, improve it, push it towards a certain direction. Yet only up to a degree, because so much of writing is instinctive. When you’re seated in front of your computer, you’re just trying to tell a good story.

You say you are an omnivore when it comes to reading novels. Are there some genres that you simply don’t read?

  • Not really, because I don’t always read a book simply because it belongs to a certain genre. If a book sounds interesting, I’m always ready to read the first thirty pages, no matter what the genre is.

How do you feel about erotica and graphic novels?

  • Frankly, I haven’t read enough of them to form an opinion.

When you were younger, did you know you wanted to be an author?

  • Yes, I was about twelve when I solemnly swore to myself that one day I was going to write novels. In the years to come I did a lot of other things though, simply because I kept doubting myself. The fact that I worked as a journalist from early on helped me, because I kept writing, no matter what.

Did you study at university because it was expected, or because you enjoyed it? A doctorate is a pretty heavy time commitment.

  • You know what? I went to study history because Dostoyevsky – my then idol – had said that a writer should have a superb knowledge of people. I didn’t want to study psychology, so I chose history, thinking that history was the human condition on a macro level. Honestly, can you have a sillier reason to study something? In any case, I fell in love with history and political science, and since I was still battling with my doubts, trying to gather that courage to write that first novel, I started to write a PhD instead. For a while I even toyed with the idea of remaining in a university environment. In that sense I can relate to Elisa, the heroine of my next novel, who dreams of becoming an art historian.

What is a usual day like for you now?

  • I wake up at six-thirty, wake up my eight-year-old son and get him ready for school. Once he has left, I go outside for a short walk with my dog, just to get some fresh air in my lungs before I start writing. I usually write till it’s time to go to fetch my son, trying to grab a quick lunch somewhere in the middle. And then it’s family life till my son goes to bed. After that, it’s office time: social media, answering emails, contacting people, and so on.

What does your writing process look like?

  • The first draft is always the worst. The quicker you get it done the better, and no matter what you do, it always looks horrible. Those are difficult months, because the perfectionist in me comes out, and doubts if anything at all will ever emerge from that mess of chapters. But little by little, I start to see light at the end of the tunnel. I love editing, it’s like working with clay, moulding it into a form you like.

Do you give yourself vacations from writing?

  • I don’t write my novel during weekends. But often there are other things to write, like blogs and guest blogs, and so on.

Have you ever been on a scheduled writing retreat, or is your self-motivation enough?

  • No, I haven’t. When I was writing Witchcraft Couture my son was still little, and it would have been difficult to go on a writing retreat. But we live in an isolated farmhouse that is as quiet as a monastery. I couldn’t write anywhere else – it’s so silent here that you really get work done!

Oscar has creative blocks. Do you suffer from these?

  • In the past I have, and that was one of the reasons why I wanted to write this book. There was a critic inside my mind, and nothing I wrote was good enough for that voice. It was really a nasty vicious circle, my own silent nightmare, and I didn’t know how to get out of it. Then one day I saw creative blocks in a larger context and I realised that I could write about them. That’s how Witchcraft Couture was born.

Would you get your own Sampo?

  • I think not. Obviously the temptation would be enormous. But I would prefer to create something that’s mediocre yet mine, rather than to pretend to be the author of a masterpiece. The satisfaction that comes with the first choice is just so much more rewarding. I like the idea of craftsmanship – that many aspects of writing are something that you can learn and improve; and that a quality novel, just like a quality outfit, is first and foremost a question of hard work.
  • One of the things I love most about Tuscany, my home region, is that it has a long tradition of artisans: carpenters, restaurateurs, tailors, shoemakers, and so on. In some sense these people are really like artists – they have such a high degree of professionalism (and obviously so, as often the profession is handed down from one generation to another), and they are so proud of and passionate about their work. I really have such an enormous admiration for them.

You’ve mentioned in other interviews that you are constructing in your mind the Perfect Novel. Do you think it’ll ever be committed to a written page?

  • Unfortunately, no!

Can you tell us a bit about your journey to publication? Why did you go for self-publishing? What made that choice for you?

  • Initially I worked with an agent, who was excited about the combination of folklore, fashion and magic. But publishers were cautious. Maybe that was because as a story, Witchcraft Couture is such a rare bird – it’s on fashion, but it’s not chick lit, and then there’s that magical realism aspect too – and they didn’t want to take risks. So I decided to go solo, and so far the journey has been absolutely fabulous.

Witchcraft CoutureHow long did it take you to write Witchcraft Couture?

  • Several years, because there were so many pauses in between. At times I had other writing projects, and many months passed and I didn’t even open the Witchcraft Couture file. And during the first drafts my son was always sick, and we didn’t have much babysitting help, so I was able to write the manuscript only at night.

How did you know that your book was ready for the general public?

  • You just know it, when a chapter or a scene or a character is working. After a few drafts you’ve got a pretty clear idea of what works well and what doesn’t. The more you write, the stronger your own instinct becomes. Also, I’ve got a brilliant editor and I trust her opinion as to how much work is still needed.

Do you believe in ongoing promotion of your novel?

  • Depends what you mean by promotion. If that means shouting online continuously how marvellous your books are, then the answer is no. But if it means, for example, slowly building a network of reviewers and book bloggers who might be interested in reading your novel, then that’s another story. In any case, I think the best way to promote yourself, especially in social media, is just to reach out to people, just to be nice and human and chat with them.

Is keeping up with your online presence daunting?

  • No, but it can be exhausting, especially if there are problems with your manuscript and you want to focus on that. I try to do the basic minimum all the time, but sometimes there just isn’t enough time.

How do you gauge how successful your social media campaigns are?

  • Both Twitter and Facebook offer possibilities to analyse the impact of your tweets or posts. And then you can of course check your book’s Amazon rating. But that’s all. I don’t do anything elaborate and complicated.

You’ve given a number of other interviews:

Are there any questions you wish people would ask, or wouldn’t ask?

  • I love to talk about writing and books. I love to read other authors’ interviews about their writing, and get a glimpse of how they work. You can always learn something new.
  • There isn’t anything particular I wouldn’t want to talk about, but sometimes even the simplest questions make me panic. Like the question about which book you would take to a desert island, knowing that it’s the book you’ll be reading for the rest of your life. And I answer something, quickly, just for the sake of answering, but then later on start to regret it, because honestly, there are so many brilliant books, and I simply don’t know which one to choose. I think that’s my problem: I have so few good opinions to offer. Maybe that was one of the reasons why I became a novelist in the first place, because writing is my way of getting some answers, of understanding life.

Do you have any further questions you would like to ask of Katarina? Some of the answers she’s provided certainly whet my curiosity about the rest of her life and her writing style.

You can find Katarina West on a range of platforms:Katarina West 1

I hope this interview leaves you wanting more. I have a chance to ask interesting questions of a range of authors that I review novels from. Let me know who you want to see next!

Add Witchcraft Couture on your Goodreads want to read shelf.
Witchcraft Couture is available to buy on Amazon. Grab your copy now!

Review: Leah Raeder – Black Iris

Black Iris
Leah Raeder

I’m not even sure I can write a blurb for this novel, it was so unsatisfying. Complex relationships and a F/F/M love-triangle combined with copious amounts of drugs and a couple of mental illnesses thrown in does not make a good book.

9781476786421This book was raw, rough and sometimes hard to follow. I am a serial ignorer of chapter titles and headings, particularly when reading an e-book. It took me a couple of chapters before I realised that yes, it was all from one perspective, but no, the time wasn’t proceeding in a linear fashion, and yes, some of those were flashbacks, and no, I couldn’t work out from Laney’s unreliable narrating whether things actually happened. It all came across with the same level of importance and the same amount of crudity.

I feel like I am betraying the queer community for saying this, but I don’t think it’s a supportive book for those going through acceptance issues. I appreciate what this novel is doing in terms of trying to expose sexualities and gender balances to a wider community of readers. However, I felt that the execution of this was too extreme for most people to relate to. The important messages were drowned by the characters’ sex and drugs.

There was sex and drugs and sex and abuse left, right and centre. I’ve read other novels with those things in it, and it hasn’t bothered me. Some of the best books I have read manage to make those things available to the reader, by not scaring them off. If anything, this novel seemed to enjoy disquieting the reader for no purpose,

Something that I didn’t agree with at all was the treatment of serious mental illnesses. Two of the characters had bipolar disorder, and the other had borderline personality disorder. No-one made an effort to medication professionally, instead they abused the medications they had and combined it with as many drugs as possible. If it was just them affecting themselves, I’d be ok with that – it’s their business. But when they are affecting close family members and causing deaths, there’s something seriously wrong.

I felt entirely confused and turned around by the time I got to the end. And I never felt any satisfaction. Laney seemed happy ripping holes in as many other people’s lives as possible, but I wasn’t happy with the way things turned out. The things she gets away with, the forgiveness she demands from other people, everything was wrong.

I had to let the book sit for a while before I could review it. Even now, I can feel the rotten taste of it in my mouth. I literally felt dirty once I had read it. I didn’t walk away from it feeling like I had gotten positive out of it – all I’d seen was what the worst of the world had to offer.

Yes, I kept reading it to the end. Yes, I didn’t want to walk away from it. But no, I shouldn’t have started reading it in the first place. Stay far, far away and shop for something with similar themes but a more satisfying ending (I’d suggest Scars, The Burn Journals, The Admirer and Keeping You a Secret). In fact, even the worst of the queer/mental illness novels that I have reviewed on this blog so far are better than this one.

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Interview with Neil Hanson

Pilgrim Wheels: Reflections of a Cyclist Crossing America

Neil Hanson

Pilgrim Wheels - front cover

 

  1. What was the original inspiration for your bicycle trip across America?

I wanted to take a bike ride. A long bike ride. Hundreds of miles, just me and my bike. Why? No particular reason, it just sounded like a neat thing to add to the checklist of “fun and exciting things I’ve tried.” The idea became an adventure. An adventure to plan for and to move toward. A box to check off. Eventually, I was clipping into my pedals in Monterey, California, pointing south along the coast on a beautiful summer day, discovering America and me.

The trip didn’t take shape to be a journey of discovery. I wasn’t trying to heal from a lost job, or a failed relationship, or trying to discover myself. I just wanted to ride my bike a long ways, with a really open mind, to see how I did riding 100 miles a day, day after day.

But then things evolved a bit, and I began to discover more about me, about my journey, about the people I met. About America. It didn’t start off as any sort of pilgrimage or deep journey, but rather as a bike ride. But it morphed into this journey that discovered me, and a pilgrimage I didn’t really expect.

  1. How far did you travel on this journey and did you deviate at all from the route youd originally planned?

Total distance was just over 3300 miles, just under 125,000 vertical feet of climbing. My average rolling speed was 14.2 MPH, the lowest temperature I rode through was 35F, and the highest temperature I rode through was 119.

My route did evolve as I rode, sometimes due to road closure, and sometimes just because I felt like trying something different. This book takes me up to Medicine Lodge, Kansas, which is almost exactly halfway, though Kansas is probably where I deviated from my route more than anywhere else.

  1. What surprised you as you began your journey across the country?

The first surprise was how easy the routine and the travel came to me. I joke a lot about how it was just riding a bike—climbing into the saddle and peddling—but that really is a great description. By the time I got to my second or third night out, I had just fallen into this nomadic routine that worked really well for me.

That little surprise also speaks to the nature of the adventure that this story represents. Too often, we think of adventure as some wild and wooly ride down some class 5 rapids in a raging river. While there were a few “wild and raging” moments I found along this road, the vast majority of what I classify as the adventure of this journey came from the steady nomadic rhythm that became my daily life, quietly pedaling through something completely unknown, discovering an interesting new person around the next bend in the road.

  1. Are there any moments that stand out as being especially meaningful or emotionally transcendent as you travelled?

Beginning in the lush forests of Big Sur, climbing over the coastal range, then spending a couple of days drawn further and further toward the Mojave, really set me up for the depth and meaning I found out on my own in the deserts. Standing on the side of a deserted highway in the Mojave, not long after sunrise, feeling the power and vastness of the desert around me, swallowed in the silence, was one of those moments I write about in the book. Another was the afternoon ride through the heart of the Sonoran, mesmerized by the sensual dance of distant dust devils in the wind, fascinated by the cars disappearing into the shimmering heat of the asphalt in front of me as oncoming cars would appear out of that amorphous mirage.

  1. If someone were to propose a trip like yours, what advice would you give him or her?

First, take the time to decide what it is you’re looking for in a ride. I really like the general route I took, although in hindsight, I probably would make some small changes. What I love about my route is that I was able to find some really fine roads to ride on, I saw a wide variety of landscape, and I feel like I really experienced the heart of American culture.

Second, I can’t stress fitness enough. Be sure you’re fit to complete whatever distance you’re setting out to ride. I’ve read several accounts of cross-country trips where a good percentage of the joy was lost until the rider slowly became fit enough to do the ride.

Third, I’d recommend thinking hard about the “style” or riding you want to do. Do you want to be fully loaded and self-sufficient or minimalist? One of the things I noticed in the accounts I read of other cross country trips was that sometimes folks didn’t think this through a lot. It’s easy to overlook, and my “pack” dwindled considerably as I rode, learning more as I went about what minimalism really meant. Too often folks burden themselves with lots of gear, mostly because that’s their “vision” of touring on a bicycle. Many of them then end up spending a fair number of nights in motels anyway, and eating at diners.

  1. How has this journey changed your impression of our country? Do you feel the same about America as you did before you decided to bicycle across the mainland?

I grew up in Kansas, a product of Midwestern kindness. So I pretty much expect most people to be kind and generous. Even with that as a starting point, I was continually humbled and heartened at the generosity, kindness, and true concern that I encountered from people across America. Sure there were some rude drivers, along with a few other exceptions, but generally I was overwhelmed by the goodness and camaraderie people shared with me. From the young woman I met at the airport in Monterey to the old rancher who pulled over and gave Dave and me ice cold water on a 100+ degree day in Kansas, the goodness in people warmed my heart.

  1. Are you working on a sequel to Pilgrim Wheels? If so, what can you tell us about it?

Pilgrim Wheels takes the reader up to Medicine Lodge in western Kansas, and the next book will take the reader from Medicine Lodge out to Annapolis on the east coast. From the time I left the Big Sur coastline in California, all the way across the western half of the country, I was nearly always riding in some form of “The West.” The landscape varied from semi-arid to deep desert, the air was always dry, the views and landscape big and sweeping.

But Medicine Lodge is where that changed. I swept down into Medicine Lodge out of the big Medicine Hills, with vast views across landscape that is iconic American West, and emerged riding east into increasing humidity and rich farmland. From that point all the way to Annapolis, the journey took me through various forms of the “Old America,” one made up of lush farmland, deep woods, humid air, wide rivers, and more history.

Review: Mercedes Lackey – Blood Red

Blood Red
Mercedes Lackey

Rosamund is the first female Hunt Master. When her first elemental teacher is killed by a werewolf, Rosa is spirited away to a Hunt Lodge where she will make her fame and fortune hunting down others like it. She doesn’t expect to met anyone friendly who might ever have been a werewolf, and holds this prejudice against all werewolves – even cute ones 😉

23296687Nothing breathtaking to see here. Another elemental masters series novel, nothing new and exciting. It covers a new range of geography than previous novels, but didn’t really give me enough to hang on to. A long uncomfortable train ride is nothing new, and a tree falling on the tracks isn’t exactly something that tells me fascinating details about the surroundings.

All of Lackey’s females tend to be of the fighting type, so it’s not like Rosa is adding anything to the stable. Personally, I much prefer the protagonist in The Fire Rose. You don’t have to be all brawny and mannish in order to win your way through obstacles!

I felt myself grasping for something more. The first half of the novel was nothing but social backchat, and I felt like I hadn’t gotten anything! The action occurs right near the end where you’ve basically already give up hope of anything happening. Something that could have been a ‘twist’ just seemed inevitable.

No magic basically, only what you can do with silver shot. I wonder what Rosa does when forced to combat with normal enemies – she doesn’t appear to have any body strength in her besides what it takes to deal with the backlash from her gun. Since one of the favourite parts of these novels is seeing what magic can do next, it’s pretty boring from that perspective. And it was never really explained how the Earth magic that Rosa has lends itself to attack.

Yes, it’s an eligible addition to the Elemental Masters series, but I don’t think it adds anything significant to the body of Lackey’s other works. Pleasurable to read like a sweet candy, but leaves your tummy hungry for something a little more substantial. I’ve got two more Lackey books lined up from the library, so I still have hope.

I didn’t find myself disappointed by what this novel had to offer, but that was mainly because I was already primed to have low expectations. Lackey has been losing her style lately, and dragging novels out to where they are no longer sustainable. If you’re like me, and determined to hang on to the romantic notion of all Lackey’s novels being good, borrow it. Don’t buy it – I don’t think you’re going to want to read it more than once.

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