Tuesday, July 24, 2012
Monster Volume 1, by Naoki Urasawa
This is just a picture of the first one, but this is an 18-volume manga series by Naoki Urasawa. I have finished the entire series. It's a really well-written and well-drawn mystery/thriller set in Germany, about a Japanese doctor who becomes entangled in a serial-murder case. Highly recommended!!
Habibi, by Craig Thompson
Habibi is EXCELLENT. For those of you already familiar with the graphic novel, I highly recommend this to you. If you are new to the format, this is a heavy read (literally and figuratively-the book clocks in at over 450 pages), but it's a beautifully drawn and written story about a girl surviving on her own somewhere in the Middle East. You will find yourself spending just as much time appreciating the artistry as you will reading the words.
Liberator, by Richard Harland
Liberator qualifies as steam-punk literature. It's pretty good, though I suggest reading Worldshaker first. Richard Harland is an Australian author, so the third installment may be a while in coming. Worldshaker establishes the characters and the overarching storyline: an alternate history where the major countries of the world have taken over different parts of it. Large populations of people from England, Russia, Japan, etc., live aboard huge juggernauts that are capable of traveling by land, sea, and air. Col Porpentine is a member of a high-class family on Worldshaker (that is the name of the British juggernaut, complete with in-residence Queen Victoria and her consort, Prince Albert). In the first book, he meets a Filthy (one of the lowest social class-the people who keep the juggernaut running far belowdecks), a girl named Riff, who challenges everything Col has been brought up to believe. What follows is an adventure in which Col must decide where his loyalties lie and consider true nature of the current political and social system in which he has lived his whole life.
Ruby Red, by Kerstin Gier
A Confusion of Princes, by Garth Nix
Garth Nix is a great author. If you like Ender's Game and/or Star Wars, or just general science fiction, this is a good one! Also check out Mr. Nix's other books: Sabriel, Lirael, and Abhorsen (the aforementioned three constitute a trilogy), his Seventh Tower, the Keys to the Kingdom series, and Shade's Children.
Wonder, by R. J. Palacio

News flash: I am finally back, after sitting for and taking 4 CPA exams-3 of them passed, with one more to find out about in August! But anyway, I have taken to posting "Mini Book Reviews" on Facebook and just now started duplicating such reviews on Goodreads.com and will now triplicate (is that a word??) on this blog. I have learned that a book review is easier to read if it is one paragraph or less, which is not to say that longer book reviews should not be written. Note that if I really believe a book is worth writing about at length, I will write about it at length. My re-vamped objective with this blog is to reach people I am not connected with on Facebook or on Goodreads.com and people I may not know and will not ever know. This is my thing: I love reading, I love giving recommendations, getting recommendations, and spreading a love of literacy and learning to all. Happy reading!
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