Wednesday, October 26, 2011

Wednesday Library Post, 10/26/2011

This is the post I should have made yesterday. It is perhaps indicative of something that my immediate reaction, upon opening the blog and seeing my OWS post from last Friday, was "oh, crap, did I forget to post a review last week?" I'm not sure what it's indicative of, but it's indicative of something.

Anyway. The big kid was away on a field trip yesterday, so the baby and I trundled off to a different library (because that branch had a book I was specifically looking for - Sandry's Book, by Tamora Pierce. Which I am reading to the big kid.) I do like to check out different libraries in my local system - different librarians have different acquisition polices, so there are different books at different branches.

Anyway, two books yesterday:

Jim Butcher - White Night


This is somewhere near the middle of the Harry Dresden "wizard in Chicago" series. Today, I tested the possibility of playing in a Harry Dresden role playing game via skype - it seemed to work. I grabbed this book in the thought that I should probably continue my reading. Plus, I really like Harry Dresden.

Nnedi Okorafor - Who Fears Death


I have had this book before, but did not manage to get to it before it had to go back. It's post-apocalyptic sci-fi, set in Africa, with a strong African flavor. It's billed as "magic realism." I recall it was featured in Scalzi's "Big Idea" series, which is why I grabbed it in the first place. It's fairly chewy, in terms of plot and writing style - luckily, I have some lighter stuff to read first.

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Oh, an African setting is fairly unique for SciFi.....I hope "Who Fears Death" is good! :)
By the by, I got the copy of Zombies vs Unicorns last week- thank you so much! I loved it, and was introduced to new authors that I can't wait to check out now. Yay! I am happily passing it around my office, where zombies are very chic right now. :D
Yay, I'm glad it arrived! It sat on my desk for almost a month, all addressed and ready to go - going to the post office is such a ... thing, you know?

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