Read-a-Thon 2010

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Viewing 15 posts - 361 through 375 (of 456 total)
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  • #45715
    minihorse77
    Member

    Red Feather Filly (Phantom Stallion: Book 10), by Terri Farley – 197 pages 
    Running Total – 23,276 pages

    #45716
    Kyle
    Member

    The Iron Ring, by Lloyd Alexander – 280 pages

    Running Total: 4,347 pages

    #45717

    Sacred Trust by Hannah Alexander – 346 pages
    A Solemn Oath by Hannah Alexander – 351 pages
    A Silent Pledge by Hannah Alexander – 349 pages
    Oksana by Susan K. Downs & Susan May Warren – 286 pages
    A Wrinkle in Time by Madeleine L’Engle – 203 pages
    A Wind in the Door by Madeleine L’Engle – 211 pages
    A Swiftly Tilting Planet by Madeleine L’Engle – 278 pages
    Eragon by Christopher Paolini – 503 pages
    Eldest by Christopher Paolini – 681 pages
    Brisingr by Christopher Paolini – 763 pages
    Inkheart by Cornelia Funke – 534 pages
    Heir to the Empire by Timothy Zahn – 361 pages

    Total: 11579 pages

    Hannah Alexander books
    I really enjoyed these books. The ending of bk3 was a little forced and obviously was intended to get the characters out of a sticky moral dilemma that they had accidentally gotten themselves into, but overall, I liked them. The style of the author is very good, and the medical problems are handled delicately. Even when a girl has been abused, the author never goes into detail, and instead focuses on the emotional problems that such a victim has. The author has a great sensitivity for ethical and moral dilemmas in the hospital workplace, and I appreciated the strength of the characters to always wish to do the right thing for their patients – even when the laws make life difficult.

    Oksana
    So-so. Nothing wrong with it but not really stellar. A historical love story; wish it had spent more time on the historicalness and less time on the romance. ;) Would’ve been interesting to hear a little more about the Bolsheivik Revolution than just the slight mentions here and there.

    Madeleine L’Engle books
    These are fascinating, despite some theological problems (mainly that L’Engle seems to be an Universalist). At times the stories were so deep that I couldn’t make out what the author was getting at; I’ll have to read again later. Particularly, I liked the theme of that every choice you make matters – you can’t just do whatever you want because it could have cosmic consequences. I also liked the characters and writing style; there seemed to be poetry embedded in prose, which was odd, but flowed very nicely.  I very well may dig up a few more of her books to read, though I will not buy them to keep due to theological issues.

    Eragon books
    Reviewed in my Buzz feed as well as on a thread here on Incredibooks

    Inkheart
    After my mom enjoyed the film, I decided to read the books. I like Inkheart somewhat – it has a very good premise, development, and payoff – but…. Meggie (MC) lies a lot without even the narrator clarifying that it is definitely wrong, her aunt swears, and there is a lot of sneaking that I just do not like. Plus, there are no real character arcs as far as I can tell, which as a writer, annoys me. I am questioning whether or not I’ll read the other two books in the series that I checked out from the library.

    Heir to the Empire
    Ha, my first Star Wars EU book. Not intending to read any more except the rest in the series. This is a good clean action story – not much more. Any character development is apparently going to be slow over the course of the trilogy (I see the act one and part of act 2 of a character arc for Luke at the least)…sadly, my library doesn’t have the other two, so I’m stuck. ;)

    You can’t compare this to the original trilogy, of course. Han continues to quote himself from the films (even lines that rely on Harrison Ford’s acting to actually sound anything but dumb or OTN), Leia’s voice escapes my imagination when reading her dialogue (and I’ll never be able to imagine her with a lightsaber, particularly after the way she used it in this book), and the introduction of alien creatures that provide “Force fields” to protect villains from Jedi doesn’t have near the effect that could be desired. (Mara Jade taunts Luke by asking what it feels like to be stripped of the power that made him special: neither Luke nor the narrator answers the question and Luke eventually escapes through a combination of Skywalker luck and quick thinking) On top of that, the conflict of Mara Jade against Luke, while deep, just can’t match the primal conflict between father and son of the films. (‘Luke, I am your father’ is so much better than ‘Luke, you killed my Emperor’…)

    On the plus side, the character of Luke (and Artoo!) matched that of the films very well, the plot was interesting, I didn’t get lost in all the story threads (mimicking the multiple-thread style of the films very well!), the conflict between Mara and Luke was quite well-done (particularly when Luke wasn’t in the scene and other characters made observances of her character), pretty much all surviving original trilogy characters and many original locations put in an appearance (even characters which were never named in the films…lol), and we finally find out more details on hyperspace and long space trips.

    Ultimately, I’m pretty positive about this book, but I’d take The Empire Strikes Back any day over Heir to the Empire. Even so, I’ll probably go back for another 360 pages of re-reading. ;)

    #45718

    Eight cousins, by Louisa May Alcott. pages 299

    Inkspell, by Cornelia Funke. pages 655

    Running Total: 3,357

    #45719
    Janin of Yen
    Member

    Revelation Space: Alistair Reynolds: 585 pages
    Really, really, really cool.

    Road to Veangance: The Strongbow Sage Book Three: Judson Roberts: 344 pages
    If this series is a set up to a conversion it’s going to be the biggest set up the world has ever seen. My brother loves the series but it’s a little bit gory for me…

    Dragonspell: Donita K. Paul: 334 pages
    Cool.

    House of Brass: Ellery Queen: 288 pages
    I love Ellery Queen. I’m going to run the library out of his books soon.

    Running Total: 10,549

    #45720

    Star Trek: The Next Generation – The Last Stand, Brad Fergerson, 274 pages
    Dreamhouse Kings – Timescape, Robert Liparulo, 138 read pages
    Star Trek: The Next Generation, Maximum Warp – Dead Zone, Dave Galanter, 236 pages
    Star Trek: The Next Generation, Maximum Warp – Forever Dark, Dave Galanter,

    218 pages
    Star Trek: New Frontier, Excalibur – Renaissance, Peter David, 270 pages
    Star Trek: The Next Generation – Losing The Peace, William Leisner, 362 pages
    Dragons In Our Midst – Raising Dragons, Bryan Davis, 371 pages
    Dragons In Our Midst – The Candlestone, Bryan Davis, 388 pages
    Dragons In Our Midst – Circles of Seven, Bryan Davis, 415 pages
    Dragons In Our Midst – Tears of a Dragon, Bryan Davis, 363 pages
    Oracles of Fire – Enoch’s Ghost, Bryan Davis, 416 pages

    Total Count: 21,165 pages

    #45721
    minihorse77
    Member

    Untamed (Phantom Stallion: Book 11), by Terri Farley – 206 pages 
    Key to the Treasure, by Peggy Parish – 154 pages
    Clues in the Woods, by Peggy Parish – 154 pages

    Chancey of the Maury River, by Gigi Amateau – 246 pages

    Rain Dance (Phantom Stallion: Book 12), by Terri Farley – 174 pages 
    The Mystery of Hermit Dan, by Peggy Parish – 151 pages
    Always Watching (the rayne tour: book 1), by Brandilyn Collins and Amberly Collins – 221 pages
    Running Total – 24,576 pages

    #45722
    LucyLou
    Member

    Eulalia – by Brian Jacques    389 pages

    running total 1,131

    #45723
    C Triebold
    Member

    The Last Olympian by Rick Riordan, 381 pages.
    Artemis Fowl:  The Atlantis Complex by Eoin Colfer, 357 pages.

    Running total:  10,790 pages.

    #45724
    minihorse77
    Member

    Heartbreak Bronco (Phantom Stallion: Book 13), by Terri Farley – 220 pages

    Pirate Island Adventure, by Peggy Parish – 167 pages
    The Haunted House, by Peggy Parish – 151 pages
    Running Total – 25,114 pages

    #45725
    Jordan
    Member

    The Complete Sherlock Holmes by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle. 1,122 pages.

    Excellent for the most part, though as with any long series it has its high and low points. Better in the latter half when fewer cases come out unsolved or just-too-late-to-stop-the-crime.

    Aristotle’s Poetics for Screenwriters by Michael Tierno. 167 pages.
    Probably the most blah screenwriting book I’ve read, but it still had its “aha!” moments.
    Running total: 4,460 pages.

    #45726
    Ruth
    Member

    Stepping Heavenward, by Mrs. E Prentiss: 341 pages.

    Thorncastle, by Linda M Burklin: 395 pages. (Still in manuscript form, but it’s in the seeking-publication process.)
    Beyond the Reflection’s Edge, by Bryan Davis: 400 pages.
    Running Total: 2,689 pages.

    #45727
    TahiriVeila
    Member

    Healing Sands by Nancy Rue and Stephen Arterburn 424 pages
    Star Wars: Fate of the Jedi: Allies by Christie Golden 359 pages
    Cyndere’s Midnight by Jeffrey Overstreet 370 pages
    Stargate: Rebellion by Bill McCay 298 pages
    The Politician by Andrew Young 301 pages
    Stargate: Retaliation by Bill McCay 300 pages
    Note-Taking Made Easy by Judi Kesselman-Turkel and Franklynn Peterson 98 pages
    Stargate: Retribution by Bill McCay 296 pages
    How to Feed a Teenage Boy Recipes and Strategies by Georgia Orcutt 232 pages
    The Cooper Kids Adventure Series Book 3: The Tombs of Anak by Frank Peretti 143 pages
    Healing Waters by Nancy Rue and Stephen Arterburn 422 pages
    The Amazing Mystery Show created by Gertrude Chandler Warner 111 pages

     Running Total: 8,413 pages

    And so much more to go!

    The “Stargate” books weren’t that great, in fact, I would strongly advise you NOT to read them… foul language among other things.

    Healing Sands and Healing Waters were terrific. Incredible and exactly what I needed. I highly recommend them. Probably for Middle School or older.

    Boxcar Children are always a safe bet. Simple mystery, but clean.

    ~TahiriVeila

    #45728
    LucyLou
    Member

    352  pages in ”the two towers” 

    running total-1,483

    #45729
    C Triebold
    Member

    The Last Battle by C. S. Lewis, 211 pages.

    Running total:  11,001 pages.

Viewing 15 posts - 361 through 375 (of 456 total)
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