2025 Book Club, first quarter!
6Whatcha reading?
I just read Grady Hendrix’s new book, Witchcraft for Wayward Girls. It was pretty good (I read it in a day), but my favorites are still Horrorstör and How to Sell a Haunted House. Its witchcraft was a little Neo-Pagan-y for me at times, which is both fine and true to the era (1970), and I knew that it would be. Once again, he’s taken a social/political issue (here, maternity homes for unwed teens before Roe) and used horror to explore the history and express the emotions around it. It works really well here.
Before that, I read Woo Woo by Ella Baxter, a short novel about the unravelling of an Australian conceptual artist being stalked in the run-up to a solo gallery show (it features the ghost of famed conceptual artist Carolee Schneemann!). It’s super-weird and hard to explain, and reminded me in that regard of Candelaria by Melissa Lozada-Oliva, although, to be clear, they have nothing in common beyond a gonzo commitment to their narrative. It’s also very funny, and I will probably have to read it again eventually to highlight my favorite lines.
Before that, I read The House That Horror Built, by Christina Henry, which was okay. The impetus for the novel felt like it was “what if Guillermo Del Toro moved to my town, and I got to see all his cool stuff, and also Doug Jones is there and we’re friends.” And the plot is to justify those elements (which is not intrinsically a bad thing, I have always maintained that Todd Haynes just wanted to make a movie about David Bowie and Iggy Pop having sex, and grafted on the plot of Eddie and the Cruisers to get it made, and that’s why we have Velvet Goldmine).
Left over from last year:
I am still working on finishing an extremely overdue library copy of Diners, Dudes and Diets: How Gender and Power Collide in Food Media and Culture by Emily J.H. Contois. I’m enjoying it, it has that this is someone’s dissertation vibe for which I am an absolute sucker. It’s mostly about the last 20-25 years, lots of stuff about the changing roles of men during and after the recession, and how marketing changed. I stopped in the middle to read a book from the reference list, Houdini, Tarzan, and the Perfect Man: The White Male Body and the Challenge of Modernity in America by John F. Kasson, which I adored. I had no sense of how much of Houdini’s persona and marketing involved his being naked. And I didn’t realize the extent to which Eugen Sandow’s career was being a publicly nude man who everyone enjoyed looking at. It’s charming. And all of the issues with manhood and fitness and technology making men soft and feminine compared to a mythic past are still around, so the book still feels pretty fresh for being 24 years old and about culture approximately 100 years before that.
- 9 comments, 40 replies
- Comment
I wish I could read more serious books sometimes, but my attention span has decreased enough that it just doesn’t happen.
I did, however, just read Holmes is Missing - the latest in the Holmes, Marple and Poe series that Patterson has his name on, but didn’t really write ya know. otherwise, just fluff
@Cerridwyn Pish tosh. You’re reading and enjoying yourself, and that’s all that matters.
@Cerridwyn @mossygreen I’ve been enjoying audiobooks of the Sherlock Holmes Cthulhu casebooks. That makes your books look like fine literature. (They’re really fun, I recommend them.)
@Cerridwyn @sammydog01 I am a sucker for any and all Sherlock Holmes stuff, so this all sounds great to me.
My “listen to while doing chores” audiobook have been the Long Earth books by Terry Pratchett and Stephen Baxter.
My next to-read book is A Fire Upon the Deep by Vinge.
The under-the-radar book that I think absolutely EVERYONE needs to read (ignore the silly cover imo) is Theft of Fire: Orbital Space #1. John Carmack, ESR, Steve Jackson, just a tons of neat people like it, I don’t know why more people aren’t reading it.
TOF is kinda The Martian and The Expanse but with a lot of flavors of classic scifi thrown in.
@Calantorntain Interesting, and available through the library app! That is a terrible cover, though.
@Calantorntain Not available as an e-book through BN. Is one of my ‘no way in fucking hell’ when it comes to Amazon. Maybe it will show up sometime
@Calantorntain
Love Vinge
@Cerridwyn Looks like they have it, it’s just separate from the physical books for some reason https://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/theft-of-fire-devon-eriksen/1144335979?ean=2940179192145
I’m reading Milovan Djilas’ Fall of the New Class (in English obviously) which I wanted to read after reading Christopher Hayes’ Twilight of the Elites some months back (I read Djilas’ Conversations With Stalin some years ago, it’s worth reading.)
I was hoping to find a good biography of Ed Koch, but all my library system has is I’m Not Done Yet, which is apparently diet and health advice a la Ed, not what I’m looking for. Ladies and Gentlemen, the Bronx is Burning was recommended to me but I could only find the DVD series at the library, which was pretty much all about baseball. I’m trying to decide if I should get the book Inter-Library Loan or ask for something like Ed Koch and the Rebuilding of New York City.
@aetris Not gonna lie, I want to read Ed Koch’s diet book now.
@mossygreen - Just remember, he died after writing it.
Not IMMEDIATELY afterwards, but still…
Winston and Franklin
Perhaps got the naked in the wrong order.
About the obvious WWII relationship
—-
Kingmaker
Reflected Glory
Both bios of the Hon Pamela Digby Churchill Hayward Harriman
Born a Baron’s daughter, daughter in law of Winston Churchill, courtesan of the century, married also to Leland Hayward and Averell Harriman, lover of Aly Kahn, E Rothschild, Gianni Agnelli, Bill Paley, Jock Whitney, Edward R Murrow and many others …
Became an American citizen and then US Ambassador to France.
And excellent horsewoman. (She had a thrilling ride to hounds the day before she had an aneurysm and died in Paris.)
—-
Also several books by Robert Edsel, the historian who covered the activities of the “Monuments Men”.
The autocomplete to “naked” took my mind to some odd places. All these books sound good, though, as long as the first isn’t slash fic.
@mossygreen
Names. Naked.
According to SIRI they’re the same thing.
Progress!
@f00l Who are we to argue? (Typing too fast, first wrote “augur.” It would have worked, I think.)
@f00l @mossygreen Especially funny since mossygreen was talking about Eugen Sandow and Houdini being known for getting naked!
@f00l - I like to try to read a couple of related books at more or less the same time and recently read CHIPS The Diaries of Sir Henry Channon and The Maisky Diaries: Red Ambassador to the Court of St James’s, 1932-1943. Channon was an American millionaire who married an earl’s daughter and became a British parliamentarian; he was a social butterfly and had a minor position in the British government in the late '30s and '40s. Maisky was a former Menshevik who was Stalin’s ambassador to Britain in the same period; he and Channon were friends with some of the same people and saw the same events from very different vantage points!
@f00l - I’ve put in a request for Kingmaker, should go well with the Koch story.
@aetris Wow, did you make this or did we accidentally tap into a very unique corner of the Internet?
@aetris
Kingmaker is a good book and is the new newest one
However the writer of kingmaker seems to be a little bit in love with Pam
Reflected glory is a better book overall and they cover the same ground
There is another book about her called life of the party, which is quite decent but was published before her death and I think maybe before she was appointed to Paris, I forget
That book is not available in an E or audiobook format
Reflected glory is available at least in an e-book format. I can’t remember if there’s an audiobook version but I can get my e-book software to read books aloud for me so sometimes I have to do that.
Since kingmaker is brand new it’s available in all the formats one would wish
—-
I’ve got the unexpurgated versions of the Channon diaries in audio format
Theyre v long and I presume have incredible details
at some point I’ll set aside whatever time it takes and do them
—-
in his will or in his publishing contract or something specified that it would be the 2020s before the unexpurgated versions were available
Before that you could only get some much safer versions
Safer for the participants I mean in terms of their social reputations
supposedly when he died, and then London found out that he had kept an expurgated diaries of everything he had been involved in some people fainted, and some people ran away to the continent for a while before they figured out that you wouldn’t be able to get the intact version of the diaries until long after everybody was gone
@f00l - I just ran over to the library, grabbed Reflected off the BIO stacks, and started in! Pam and Maggie sharing the stage at William and Mary! Fireworks to follow!!
My edition of CHIPS was expurgated, alas! But as you mention, I heard that the unexpurgated version is RATHER long. Still I’d be interested in some of the un- parts? Where did you get the audio?
@mossygreen - Oh, you are so tapped into a VERY unique corner of the Internet!
@f00l - Maisky, whose real name was Jan Lachowiecki, obviously had to hide his diaries during his lifetime, they didn’t become available until after the collapse of the Soviet Union. He published some heavily edited memoirs after having been purged shortly before Stalin’s death, then rehabilitated by Beria apparently as a possible foil for Molotov, then being rearrested after the liquidation of Beria and his buddies, then being rehabilitated by Khruschev in 1955.
@aetris @mossygreen
About the chips channon diaries
They are really long. I think each one might be like 30 or 40 hours of audio and there’s three parts to it.
That’s the biggest reason I haven’t started on them yet
They were recorded in audio format for the original release of the unexpurgated versions, and I got them from Audible
They are also available in e-book format
if you purchase the e-book format versions from the Kindle store, it is possible you can get a discount on the audiobook versions. I don’t know because I own both and have for so long, but I can’t see how the combined pricing does or does not exist.
if you want to see the pricing, etc., at Amazon/Audible go here
https://www.amazon.com/s?k=henry+chips+channon+kindle+the+diaries&crid=5ZK8UW761MB7&sprefix=henry+chips+channon+kindle+the+diaries%2Caps%2C187&ref=nb_sb_noss
——
Some people quite understandably don’t want to buy from Amazon and they don’t want to buy from Audible because it is owned by Amazon
I doubt you can get a combined audiobook e-book price from any other retailer, but it’s possible you just have to poke around and see
Barnes & Noble ought to have both versions the e-book and audiobook
Kobo ought to have both versions
Google books ought to have both versions
Apple ought to have both versions although I don’t know if the Apple versions can be viewed or played on an android device or not
For the combined pricing discount for getting both the e-book and audiobook. You’d have to probably go to Amazon and I’m not sure whether Amazon does that for these books. It’s kind of up to the publisher in each case I think to allow or disallow that.
However you might be able to get them and read them for free legally
Contact your local library or get the Libby app or find out what e-book an audiobook app your library uses
Your library might not have these in the catalogue, but they might be able to borrow license copies for you so that you would get them at no charge or you might be able to for a small fee join a very large library that has these in the catalog and then you can enjoy them for free
Since I already own them, I haven’t gone poking around to see which library have them
Also since the behavior counted as in many cases extremely risqué
It’s possible that public library think these books are not family friendly and therefore won’t buy licenses for them
But if you don’t wanna spend the money, the public library option is always worth a shot
Some public libraries allow for people who don’t live in the area to join the library for a small fee and then have all the privileges
Houston maybe do that
And some other large library do
For more information on which library is allow that you might try the sub Reddit about audiobooks. I think they have that info.
in my case I’m a book buying addict and so I just bought them
@f00l Thank you as always for your very full reply; I will only add that in addition to the Libby e-delivery app, my library system and many others also have hoopla which provides downloadable audiobooks, eBooks, comics, movies, music, tv, and “bingepasses”, through which entire collections of streaming content are at your fingertips, borrowable with your library card number and uploadable to your tv set using Roku. Roku also allows you to stream free movies you can borrow from your library’s licensed collection using kanopy, offering ad-free films and series that can be enjoyed on your TV, mobile phone, tablet and online.
Anyway, I don’t know what I was thinking. We had Audible at one point and I’ll bet Tom Ward does a great job with the narration but especially for something like that I like dipping in and out of a narrative so at some point I will try getting a print copy through InterLibrary Loan (the local system doesn’t have 'em in any format.)
And yes I AM thrifty - I shop in THIS unique corner of the internet, eh?
@aetris
If you are willing to pay for print copies maybe search on Bookfinder.com.
?I think the print copies are also published in 3 volumes for to length.)
(Warning, can be addictive and expensive to get a “habit” on bookfinder.)
BookFinder will search eBay abebooks alibris Amazon and other book retailers, etc. Will likely find something close to the best price for used.
When you see the results of the given search on bookFinder, you will see the same book mention several times based on variances and how the book is listed by the various retailers
so you have to check out all the results that seem to clearly referred to the book you want to see who’s got the good price
by the way alibris will cover use books for sale by half price books in addition to other retailers and sources,. If half price books is doing an online listing of the book.
They’re various ways to search bookFinder
You can just search on title and author’s last name
or you can go into a complicated advanced search involving whether or not you want a first addition whether or not it’s new or used what is the year of publication, etc. etc. they have all sorts of stuff you can choose as factors for your search if you wish
I don’t think they give e-book and downloadable audiobook results unless they’ve upgraded their search capacities and I haven’t noticed
I usually go on bookFinder to search for a physical copy
I just go to Amazon and get the ISBN if I want to and I’m not finding the book through a simpler search and search on the ISBN and it usually comes up
if you are looking for a physical copy of the audiobook, for instance something published on cassette or CD you can usually go get the ISBN off Amazon and search on that in order to eliminate the print copies and get the audio versions
But those are dying out because with audible and similar service is taking off and nobody wants to mess with 48 cassettes or 24 cities that make up a book anymore so books aren’t even published that way for the most part unless it’s going to be some monster seller
Physical audiobooks used to be a huge market. But I think that after first the iPod and later Android and iOS phones, the audiobook market started to default to non-physical-media copies available for download.
Most publisher won’t even bother worth CS’s anymore I suspect.
In addition to
BookFinder.com
This is a similar site
Bookfinder4u.com
Which can be useful if you can’t find something in some easier fashion
Both of these sites search the entire world so for instance, if Amazon in Japan has a copy but nobody else does they’ll tell you that
Most of the smaller used books sources that participate in online sales will either put their stuff on eBay or on abebooks or on alibris
so if it’s out there and not completely obscure, you can probably find something maybe at a significant cost depending on the book
—-
I try not to go to those sites if I don’t need to because I always wind up getting sucked in and wanting to buy books that I won’t have time to read for the next year and I’m already spending probably too much money on books
but they can be a lot of fun if you want something specific and it can feel wonderful to find something you thought there would be no way to find
—-
For people who want to avoid Amazon entirely:
Abebooks.com is now owned by Amazon.
Alibris and eBay are separate from Amazon.
All of these sites that help small use book retailers sell. Their books have been perfectly reliable for me. I bought tons of books from each of them over the last 20 years or so and I’ve always gotten the book quite promptly.
@f00l - You’re feeding a dangerous addiction! The female of the species already gives me grief when she sees packages from ThriftBooks arrive!!
She says that’s what the library is for…
But thanks!!!
Oooo, there’s I See By My Outfit - humph, $17.45… Decisions decisions…
@aetris
Before e-books and downloadable audiobooks I used to buy physical copies. I was a habitue of used bookstores in New York City way back when
And then later I would crawl the library outlet shops and all the half price bookstores for stuff and I still owe too many
I used to periodically give a lot of books away just so that I would have space for more books that Iwanted
This isn’t self-indulgent or anything is it?
This doesn’t help you on the road to bankruptcy does it?
When downloadable audiobooks came in and e-books came in. I was so happy because suddenly space wasn’t an issue and I could save my shelving space for books with lots of images and very special books to me and stuff like that.
I still on way too many and the good part is since they’re downloadable e-books and audiobooks my friends and family can’t tell
ha ha ha
I own way more than I will ever go through in my lifetime, but that’s fine because I love living in what’s is really my own private library
I own a very embarrassing number of audible audiobooks plus some from Barnes & Noble and from Google and from Kobo and elsewhere
But these days I buy more audiobooks from Chirpbooks than any other place.
Chirpbooks is the audiobook arm of BookBub and right now they just have better sales and pricing on their monthly and weekly sales than Audible does.
But Audible has the biggest library at least for sale in the United States
Chirpbooks, for instance, doesn’t seem to have the channon diaries available at this time
@aetris
Btw
If you want the unexpurgated Channon diaries in audiobook format you could take advantage of the current Audible member promo and get each of them for $.98 plus tax. Yours to keep btw.
You just have to set a calendar reminder to cancel the subscription after the promo monthly rate expires so before the fourth month hit your payment method
if you decide you like audible and want to stay a subscriber, don’t do the monthly thing for 15 bucks or whatever there are far cheaper ways to subscribe to audible than that just let me know if you wanna pursue them
but the intro pricing for the first three months on this particular deal would get you the three volumes of the newly released Channon diaries at about a dollar a book
As for how to justify this to the spouse - well - I’d have no insight to offer in that area
: )
https://www.audible.com/series/The-Diaries-Audiobooks/B098T11FP7?ref_pageloadid=ZK7Nu9dQrQHXIGCH&pf_rd_p=0edfee29-887b-4885-b15e-e099c1b52d98&pf_rd_r=26B8EHRGJ008XVWRJ1XX&plink=9i57NsXoDtY6OLng&pageLoadId=ZSYDM9gcvt4fHHjP&creativeId=0e5797a6-2dec-4ca4-a423-727d8382d5c3&ref=a_pd_Henry-_c12_series_1
—-
if you go this route, be aware they have more than one promo for new subscribers
Choose the promo that’s $.99 a month for three months and that will get you all three books
Don’t choose the promo that’s first month free or some other promo
@f00l - Ah, it looks like BookFinder presents the TOTAL cost INCLUDING SHIPPING! Very nice indeed!
@aetris
Yeah bookFinder is pretty wonderful.
@f00l - So just off a chat with the female of the species viz Audible and the judgement is negative but I MAY get back to you at some later date. As aforesaid we HAD a membership and still have a virtual stack of unreads; circumstances changed as they have a way of doing and commutes became too short for audiobooks. The future may hold something even newer howsoever.
@aetris @f00l As much as I am auditory in overall basic learning style, I do not like audiobooks. I find them boring because they take so long to tell a story. I read fast, not a speed reader but a quick reader (always have, > 60 years), so audiobooks take to long to unfold a story.
@f00l
Don’t get me started! But there’s all the difference in the world between surfing a site and browsing physical shelves, and I have the gluteus to prove it.
I hear ya viz stowage and there’s a lot to be said for reading an eBook on a tablet while someone else is sleeping but there are books I have to have in hardcopy: the Earthsea trilogy without the Pauline Ellison covers is no more use to me than Dunsany without Sime.
On a related topic, I see no references to ThriftBooks at BookFinder even when I know TB offers a title listed at BF - you don’t happen to know howcomewhyizdat?
@aetris @Cerridwyn
I’m addicted to audiobooks because you can do two things at once you can take some mindnumbing chore and listen to an audiobook and barely know that you got the chore done
Also all the decent audiobook players allow you to select your own listening speed
And they do that without making it sound like the chipmunks are your readers
How fast I listen depends on the book some books I cherish, and I wanna go slow because I think the writer put so much into every word that I want to be there for it
I suppose most books I listen to at about 1.3 to 1.6 of the default recorded speed
it just varies, depending on the material and the characteristics of the narrator
Sometimes I listen to a book at a high speed. That’s usually when I think there’s only a little I wanna pull from for me and I’m just running through it.
people’s play backspace very tremendously. There’s no one best feed although I’ll say this much about audiobook, narrators, and the customary production of audiobooks.
Audiobook started being produced and shipped out essentially after World War I both in the UK in the US as a service to disabled veterans, and then it quickly expanded to include all people who were movement or site impaired, and couldn’t easily read for themselves
in the US this became part of the Library of Congress program and it is still exist and is still free
The initial technology I think was wire recording, and you have to have a special player obviously, but it meant that disabled persons could listen to a book without having to have somebody else in their household, sit down and read to them, which had been the previous default
Later on Audiobooks in the 30s graduated to being on 78th
Can you imagine wanting to listen to a long dense book such as the Bible and getting it shipped to you and boxes is full of 78 from the Library of Congress?
That would be quite a shipment, but that’s the way it worked
Back then due to the technology it was difficult to skip back-and-forth if your brain wandered or you were distracted or something, and so narrators attended given that they were dealing with a movement or site disabled audience they tended to go a bit slower than normal speech
And that has kind of remain the default. Most audiobooks are recorded a little bit slower. The average listener wants to listen
This is to make it easy for the disabled community, who, even in the days of touch friendly devices and smart phones is going to have more challenges with the controls and the jump jump back options than I normally function person would so they go a bit slow to make it easier for that group
The average audiobook listener speeds it up, just finds the sweet spot for a given book in narrator
I’ve gotten so accustomed to audiobooks that I’m now not accustomed anymore just sitting in a chair and reading a book because it makes me feel antsy that I can’t get up and do two things or three things at once
But that’s just me getting habituated
Obviously I still read with my eyes thinks it don’t work well in an audio format that would include just about everything that’s high-tech or scientific or similar
Books of instructions usually don’t go well in audio format
Anything highly visual such a special font, layout or type faces or something with a whole lot of illustrations or photographs
But audiobooks are now my default and have been for I guess 30 years or more since I first found them on cassette and discovered how much I love them especially during really long drives
if one is an avid reader in a print format switching to audiobooks might take a little bit of adjustment and getting used to just like it would for me if I suddenly switch back to reading everything with my eyes
But people adapt pretty quickly. It just depends on what fits an individual and their preferences.
There are some books which are so well narrated that you might even think of better in audio format
For most books it’s just reader preference
@aetris @Cerridwyn
if anyone wants to give audiobooks to try and doesn’t want to play them on a speaker or other people can hear
my current fave audiobook headphones are shockz.
These are bone conduction headphones and they work great for spoken voice, but they don’t cover your ears and you can hear everything going on around you also
Those our ideal for daily life and doing stuff at home or at work where you can get away with listen to audiobooks, but you also need to be aware
if somebody is especially something like an airplane I go with something with really good noise, cancellation instead, Bose or some AirPod max headphones or something like that
@f00l - When I’m doing chores I prefer to tell the Tap to toot some tunes: audiobooks are too distracting or vice versa, anyway music gets the glutes shaking which I consider a benefit when no one is there to see them.
A few decades back I was almost a librarian at the Library for the Blind and Physically Handicapped (now the Library of Accessible Media for Pennsylvanians). At the time they had recording facilities in Philly but some years later I decided to try doing a recording for them and it turned out budget cuts had eliminated the production facility. They mailed me a book to read (about Sun Tzu, who I’d always intended to read so THAT was good), told me to get a good microphone setup and download Audacity, then start recording and if I made a mistake yell “STOP” and begin again from the beginning of the paragraph. It was a HUGE pain in the glutes and no fun at all but an interesting learning experience.
@aetris
I’m not up on thriftbooks. Gotta rectify that.
Thriftbooks prob blocks bookFinder for some reason. Or V V.
@aetris @f00l All true enough
But still not for me. I would space it out and be reading a book the same time it was on (this morning I was watching an episode of One Chicago while reading, and yes I can tell you what both of them were about) (An old friend, a physician, blamed it on me being both a woman and a nurse, said if we couldn’t multitask and pay attention we would fail at both.)
@aetris @Cerridwyn @f00l I do a lot of rewinding with audiobooks, whole chapters sometimes. But they’re great for long drives and better than silence.
@f00l - Never mind, I now see that ThriftBooks books ARE available on BookFinder but through ABE or Biblio somehow? The ways of eCommerce are eCcentric!
Tragedy! My extremely overdue copy of Diners, Dudes, and Diets has locked my libby account and is stopping me from listening to the audiobook of Hampton Heights: One Harrowing Night in the Most Haunted Neighborhood in Milwaukee, Wisconsin by Dan Kois. And I just started it yesterday and was really enjoying it so far! It is not a kids’/young adult book, but is the tale of a group of middle-school-age paper boys who are obligated to go out canvassing for new subscribers once a year, with the reward of a bonus for the top seller and a Burger King dinner for all. I was charmed by an interview with the author where he made it clear that this is not a book that messes with you the reader: the boys all survive and do indeed get Burger King. Sigh. I have to get to the library before the horrible cold snap that’s coming. And put my kindle on airplane mode in case I don’t make it, so I can keep on reading what’s on it. I should go do that right now.
Three Girls from Bronzeville by Dawn Turner.
I actually started the book last year but put it down more than I picked it up. Memoirs are not my favorite genre. However, I am glad I stuck with it because once I reaching her high school years (part ii/chapter 11), the book really picks up and as I read on, I appreciated the importance of her early years (part i). It’s not going to be a book for everyone but man, once you reach a part you enjoy, it may grab a hold of you.
https://app.thestorygraph.com/books/1d53bd84-9ecd-4a36-9ddb-4af1bf49ff1a
@njfan But they don’t even play football? Sounds like a good read.
@sammydog01 lol, no football in this one.
I’m having attention span issues too these days and read a lot of horror.
I finished Mexican Gothic by Silvia Moreno-Garcia a while ago. It’s very atmospheric and reminded me of Lovecraft.
My current read is Devil of Nanking by Mo Haydur, also fairly slow moving but it’s really sucking me in. I just hope it doesn’t get too graphic (but I have a feeling it will.)
My audiobook for chores is How to Make a Horror Movie by Craig DeLoiue. It’s fun. I should go fold some laundry and finish it.
And I just put a hold on Witchcraft for Wayward Girls. It should be available by maybe summer. Or fall.
I do love a good horror story.
Finished Wind and Truth by Brandon Sanderson today. Good story except it is the middle of a series that is not written and released. Before that I read a bunch of light romance and mystery that were free, now buy my series of books. Not bad or great but relaxing and I could put them down. Wind and Truth was hard to stop reading “just a little bit more”. I have decided I need to revisit the earlier books maybe when the next one is announced.
I have not picked the next book yet. I added a couple of the books mentioned above to my pile. Not sure I am in a horror mood.