Kiddo is 5 and LOVES Frank Einstein - we listened to the audiobook (at least 3 times) but will be looking for the print version so he can see the illustrations
I wish I'd abandoned this one. Honestly, I just don't get what all the hype is about with Cheryl Strayed. Maybe I disliked this because I read Torch first - and I wish I'd abandoned that one as well (I only finished it to see if Bruce would follow through).
Positive point: it's very admirable that she writes so truthfully and seemingly without regrets. I can see this as a reason for people to like her writing so much.
The reasons I didn't like this book: reading some sections felt like I was re-reading Torch, only it was worse since Torch is supposed to be a novel and this was a memoir. And I couldn't believe she actually survived the trail, given her naive and lackadaisical attitude towards a long-haul hike and all the accompanying danger of doing it on your own. As a hiker and a once wilderness ranger, some of her descriptions made me cringe. Overall, it was like watching a train wreck and being surprised that there were hardly any casualties . Granted, some of her attitude changed over the course of the hike, but I came away from the book feeling like she missed her own point of hiking the PCT.
And finally, I do wonder if I ran into her out there - I was working as a wilderness ranger then and the PCT was part of my patrol...at least I didn't have to go out looking for her!
I read this about 20 years ago and liked it then, so I thought I'd give it a re-read. It's nothing like I remember.
Good opening chapter - I could really relate. But I just couldn't get into the rest. It might just be that it isn't the right for me at this point, so I'll try again next year...it did have promise.
I read Richard Adams' Traveller long ago and enjoyed seeing history from the point of view of an animal that experienced it, but this book just didn't hold my attention the same way - I only made it about halfway.
So fast-paced it was like reading a movie. I love Norse mythology and started the book with high hopes, but predictable and convenient plot points wore thin fast - I would have liked to see more character/world building. Abandoned about 1/3 the way through. Will appeal to readers that like dialogue-driven books.
Kiddo is 5 and LOVES Frank Einstein - we listened to the audiobook (at least 3 times) but will be looking for the print version so he can see the illustrations
A baby with a mustache floats through fantastic (trippy) backgrounds (sharks, unicorns, bees, space) with accompanying quotes by Nietzsche. Pictures are goofy, quotes are profound and this book makes Silas smile every time. This is one of his first books and one that he gravitates to over and over again.
Having grown up in the Northwest, I found all the background history to be tedious, and at times, was wondering if it had been lifted straight from Schwantes (https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/606039.The_Pacific_Northwest) and Egan (https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/6452538-the-big-burn?ac=1&from_search=true). I liked learning more about the lives of the folks that perished, but I downright disliked the cold descriptions of their deaths and the factual way the deaths were presented - the facts are not known and we can only speculate, yet the author presented last moments as strict fact and that somehow managed to dehumanize these unlucky people.
This book sounded pretty good, but I was disappointed. It was more about the people the dog encounters, and less about the dog. Which is ok for some books, but this book could have been so much better. I think that the author just needed a vehicle to tell some short stories, and he just tied them all together with the story of Timoleon Vieta and his owner's messed-up life. The stories are all good, but I mostly didn't like this book because of the ending. I could see two ways for the book to end, one good and one bad, and I was hoping it wouldn't be bad. I was wrong. I should of put it down before I finished it.
I applaud the effort it took to weave a story of multiple accounts of the devastating impact this blizzard had on the lives of those that experienced it into a full-length book. However, all the accounts are of white settlers - apparently, the blizzard sidestepped any and all of the native americans that lived in the region. It would have been nice to learn how the native experience compared...or, at the very least, have a paragraph or two about why native americans weren't included so it doesn't seem like they were omitted on purpose.
I don't know what I was expecting, but I know I was hoping for a book that struck me as much as Animal Dreams did. This book just didn't grab me and had strong after-school special vibes.
I had such high hopes, but not even the promise of “ultraviolent zombie action” was able to hold my attention through a Jane Austin novel. I tried. Now on to “World War Z”!
There was so much potential. So much. I can't believe this was a finalist for two different major awards - it seems unfinished, with so much left to be filled in.
Abandoned after first chapter but I will concede that I am probably the wrong audience for this book; it would more likely appeal to mid-teens. I usually love YA fiction, but I just could not get past the arrogant whine of the main character. I flipped through to spot read to see if her entitled attitude would dial back and then realized I wasn't invested enough in the hints of the story to come presented in chapter one, so back to the library for something different.
A really great imagining of sweeping pandemic and complete societal collapse bogged down by too many side stories of half-formed characters and convenient contrived coincidences that detract from what could have been a fantastic piece of post-apocalyptic fiction.
It was ok - not really my style of book. The summary I read that led me to pick the book was misleading. I should have read the goodreads summary instead - it was much more on target.
The first third was good, then there was a sudden jarring time shift and I should have listened to my gut instinct and abandoned the book right there. The last two thirds wandered around in circles, attempting to tie everything up, but it was so rambly and so full of convenient coincidences that I found the last two thirds of the book to be distinctly tedious. I ended up skimming the last 30 pages, just to get it over with.
Meh. The premise was good, but I wasn't a fan of the pacing and short, stabby sentence style.