Category Archives: books

2009 Year in Reading

So this year I read 68 books and 219 manga and graphic novels. This is up a bit from last year’s totals. For books I tended to read a lot of easy mysteries, romances, and fantasy novels. I read through all of the Sookie Stackhouse books that are in paperback and I really enjoyed Kate Ross’s four Julian Kestrel murder mysteries. I also enjoyed Maria Snyder’s Poison Study books. I read a little bit of non-fiction, just 6 books, and most of those were related either to research about twins or child development.

Out of the 219 manga/graphic novels I read I probably was most captivated by We Were There, Swan, and 20th Century Boys. It has been a very good year for manga. I think this year I need to get caught up a little more on regular graphic novels. I’m really behind in following Ed Brubaker’s Captain America, so I need to pick up some of the GNs I’ve missed.

Books Read, November and December 2009

Books

12 Kingdoms 2 and 12 Kingdoms 3 by Fuyumi Ono
Curse of Chalion and Paladin of Souls by Lois McMaster Bujold – I’ve been meaning to read more Bujold after finishing the first three Sharing Knife books.
The Broken Vessel By Kate Ross – Now I’ve read all the Julian Kestrel mysteries!
Soulless By Gail Carriger – The paranormal romance genre is played-out, but I was entertained by this book about a soulless bluestocking with a deadly parasol running around a slightly steampunk Victorian London.
The Knitter’s Book of Wool by Clara Parkes
My Body Lies Over the Ocean by J.S. Borthwick
In the Bleak Midwinter and A Fountain Filled with Blood by Julia Spencer-Fleming – These are very good murder mysteries about a female ex-army helicoptor pilot turned Episcopal priest who finds herself caught up in a murder investigation in her new parish.

Manga and Graphic Novels

Aria #5
Swan 6-14
Oh! My Brother #1
Skip Beat #19
Apothecarus Argentum #8
20th Century Boys #5
Lovers in the Night
.hack//Legend of the Twilight Complete Collection
Honey Hunt #3
Liberty Liberty!
Mikansei No. 1
Momogumi Senkei #1
Papillon Volume 4
Fushigi Yugi Genbu Kaiden 1-8 (reread), #9
Happy Cafe #1
V.B. Rose #1 and 2
Night Head Genesis #1
Nana #19
Vagabond #4
All Star Superman Volume 2
Showcase Presents: Legion of Super-Heroes, Vol. 3
Incredible Hercules Vol. 1: Against The World

Twelve Kingdoms Volume 3: The Vast Spread of the Seas

Twelve Kingdoms Volume 3: The Vast Spread of the Seas by Fuyumi Ono

The Twelve Kingdoms books are the only series of light novels that I follow with great enthusiasm. I like the Twelve Kingdoms anime quite a bit, but since the story didn’t conclude in the anime so I look to the novels to fill in the gaps. I’ve read the first and second novels in this series, and from what I remember they closely parallel the anime. The Vast Spread of the Seas focuses on one of the more dynamic characters shown in the anime adaptation, the King of En.

The fantastic world of the Twelve Kingdoms lies across a vast sea from Japan, and frequently people from the Twelve Kingdoms end up accidentally being born in Japan. So there is a steady stream of immigrants from Japan coming over to fill important roles in the Chinese-inspired fantasy world which filled with scheming government officials, talking animals, and demons. The King of En was found by his kirin Rokuta who is a mythical beast who performs the will of heaven by choosing a ruler, just when he was losing his small seafaring colony in Japan. Faced with the inevitable destruction of his people and the opportunity to rebuild a kingdom in another world Naotaka agrees to journey far away from Japan and takes the new name Shoryu.

Rokuta was abandoned as a young child so he feels horrible about the state of the Kingdom of En which was brought near the edge of destruction by the previous king. So he is less than happy when Shoryu appears to spend his days lazing around, gambling, and chasing after loose women. Rokuta previously met another abandoned child who was raised by a demon. Rokuta gives the barely literate child the name Koya and promises that one day the Kingdom of En will be save for him and his demon to live together without being persecuted. Several years later the Kingdom of En has just begun to recover but the new King still seems hesitant to clean house of the corrupt government officials that gained power during the reign of the old King.

Rokuta ends up being kidnapped by a governor of a province who appears to care greatly about his people and he has some sympathy for his captor as it appears that he might be a more effective ruler than Shoryu. He meets Koya again who is now in the service of his kidnapper. Little does Rokuta know that while Shoryu was carefully cultivating the reputation of an idiot king he was actually sneaking around his own kingdom as a royal super-spy. A crisis occurs and Shoryu proves to Rokuta that he does have the capacity to become a capable ruler. Shoryu’s charismatic nature and innate sneakiness made finding out how he prevented civil war and preserved his kingdom very entertaining. I think this is my favorite of the Twelve Kingdom books so far, and I’m very much looking forward to the fourth volume in the hopes that I’ll encounter some new characters or storylines that weren’t present in anime version of the story.

Review copy provided by the publisher.

Books Read, September and October 2009

I forgot to keep track of my September reading, so some of this is a half-remembered reconstruction:

Books

The Julian Kestrel Mysteries – Sometimes it is a little sad to stumble across a series of books written by an author who is no longer living. Once you’ve finished the series, you’re left without the happy anticipation of a new adventure featuring one of your favorite characters. The Julian Kestrel mysteries would be a good pick for anyone who enjoys fiction set in the regency era AND murder. I’ve read three of the four books in this series.

Cut to the Quick – Kestrel is introduced in this volume, where an acquaintance of his is saddled with an inconvenient fiancee. Kestrel is a regency dandy and he uses his supposed preoccupation with cravats to lure his murder suspects into not taking him seriously. Things don’t go well for Kestrel when he is invited to a house party and an attractive female corpse shows up in his bed.

Whom the Gods Love – A paragon of society is bludgeoned to death, and the murder victim’s father asks Kestrel to solve the murder. Kestrel ends up untangling a complicated history of deceit, as the murder victim wasn’t the man he appeared to be.

Devil in Music – Kestrel’s most personal case takes place in Italy, where he investigates a cold case in which a patron of the arts is murdered on the evening a mysterious young English tenor goes missing.

Storm Glass and Sea Glass by Maria V. Snyder

You Slay Me by Katie MacAlister

Manga and Graphic Novels

Wild Act 1-5
Flat Earth Exchange #1 and 2
Papillon 1-4
Karakuri Odette #1
Black Bird #1
Animal Academy 2
Takeru #2
We Were There #1-5
Ooku: The Inner Chambers #1
Maria Holic #1
Mad Love Chase #1
Detroit Metal City #2
Yotsuba&!#6
The Color of Heaven
Tsubasa: Those With Wings #3
Shinobi Life #3
Bloody Kiss #2
Game X Rush #2
Mikansei #1
Kaze Hikaru #1
High School Debut #11
Nana #18
Rasetsu #2
Swan #1, 3, and 4
A Tale of an Unknown Country #1

Books Read, August 2009

Books

Her Royal Spyness by Rhys Bowen
The Knitting Circle by Ann Hood
The Lord of the Sands of TIme by Issui Ogawa
The Barbed Rose by Gail Dayton
Skin Hunger: A Resurrection of Magic by Kathleen Duey

Manga and Graphic Novels

High School Debut #10
Nana #17
Bloody Kiss #1
Game X Rush #1
Vampire Knight #1, 2 (reread)
Honey Hunt #2
Marmalade Boy #1-8
Maid Sama #2
Tsubasa: Those With Wings #2
Phantom Dream #2
Ludwig II #1
Fruits Basket #23
Children of the Sea #1
Maria Holic #1
Rasetsu #1
Tail of the Moon Prequel: The Other Hanzo(u)
The Color of Earth
The Color of Water

The Lord of the Sands of Time

The Lord of the Sands of Time by Issui Ogawa

I was curious about the new Viz line of scifi books, Haikasoru. I tend to enjoy books about time wars because I like the complexity found in the idea that a battle in the past can change the future of time traveling soldiers. In The Lord of the Sands of Time, humans in the future have engineered soldiers called messengers to fight a war across time against insect-like alien invaders. Since the aliens can travel through time, war is fought in multiple time streams and the messengers are aided in the necessary temporal battle logistics and planning by an almost all-knowing artificial intelligence program.

A messenger with strong feeling about the need to protect humanity finds himself in ancient Japan, and he meets the priestess Miyo. Messenger O starts to prepare Miyo’s people to fight the enemy. Japan may be the battleground for humanity’s last stand throughout time. Ogawa takes full advantage of time traveling in the way he structured the book. Flash backs and flash forwards abound as the novel switches back and forth from Messenger O and Miyo’s points of view. There is a bit too much exposition front-loaded into the first couple chapters, which I found a bit difficult to get into. But once I’d read the first 35 or so pages I felt I had the background information about the characters I needed to proceed.

O has already been profoundly affected by the human Sakaya, who instilled in O the value “Devotion to humanity.” Miyo sees O as someone who can help her not only with the alien bugs, but someone who may be an ally in the shifting political machinations of the ruling court that she serves as a figurehead. Her exposure to battle causes her to see many of the nameless people that serve her as human for the first time, and her admiration for O turns into affection. O finds a few brief moments of respite from battle in Miyo’s company. I’d say that Miyo is more changed by O than he is by her, but he has a perspective that has been shaped by centuries of battle across time.

I found the details about the society of the messengers very interesting since they look human and have relationships with humans, but are always set apart. The shifting time lines cause people and relationships from their past to simply disappear when the messengers fail in battle. These lost connections only exist in the memories of the messengers that are left behind to fight again as they travel through time.

At only 250 pages, The Lord of the Sands of Time is a brisk read and definitely worth checking out if you enjoy time travel stories. When I finished the book I wished it had been a bit longer because I was enjoying the intricate plot and developing relationships between the characters.

Review copy provided by the publisher.

Books Read, July 2009

Books

Victory of Eagles by Naomi Novik
Poison Study, Magic Study, and Fire Study by Maria V. Snyder
Beyond Heaving Bosoms by Sarah Wendell and Candy Tan
A Company of Swans by Eva Ibbotson

Manga and Graphic Novels

Two Flowers for the Dragon #2
Boys Over Flowers #36
Detroit Metal City #1
Shirley #1
Emma #8
Angel and the Aromatic Bitters by Erica Sakurazawa
Nana #16
Tsubasa: Those With Wings #2
Phantom Dream #3
Prince Valiant Volume 1
Marmalade Boy #1-3
Power Pack Classic Volume 1
Immortal Iron Fist #4
The Photographer

Power Pack Classic Volume 1

Power Pack Classic Volume 1 by Louise Simonson and June Brigman

This is a title I read as a kid that I’m excited to see in print again. Although Power Pack has had new adventures, this trade paperback reprints the first 10 issues of the series from 1994. Alex, Julie, Jack, and Katie Power are normal children, squabbling over chores and teasing each other. Their father is a brilliant physicist who has developed an anti-matter device that attracts off-world attention. When the kids sleep out on the porch of their beach side home they spot a falling star. They go to investigate and they find a horse-like alien who introduces himself as Whitey, a Kymellian. Whitey has a sentient space ship named Friday. Whitey is a huge fan of human literature and rushed to Earth to prevent the testing of Mr. Power’s new machine. His race made a similar anti-matter discovery and testing the concept blew apart their world. Whitey doesn’t want to see Earth be destroyed too. Unfortunately an evil race of lizard-like aliens Whitey names the Snarks have also learned of the anti-matter device and are determined to harness its power. The snarks kidnap Mr and Mrs Power. Fatally wounded by battle, Whitey decides to transfer his Kymellian powers to the children so they can save their world.

Alex has the power to control gravity, making whatever he touches light. Julie can fly super-fast, leaving a rainbow trail behind her. Jack can assume a gaseous form or become super dense by shrinking. Katie can disintegrate matter and use the energy to fire off explosive power balls. The first half of the series has a space-opera feel, as the kids try to rescue their parents from the Snarks. When the family return to Earth, they move to New York and the children start to figure out what life might be like for kid super heroes in the big city. Their parents don’t know about their super-powers, so they deal with trying to practice their powers while keeping their identity secret.

A big part of the appeal of Power Pack is reading about true kid superheroes that aren’t functioning as a sidekick to an adult hero. The concerns of the Power children match their ages. Katie is concerned about the tooth fairy being able to visit her when she loses her tooth in space. Alex has to deal with a tragic first day of school outfit when he goes to school in New York. Julie struggles with being overly bossy and her desire to spend all of her free time reading. Jack thinks that his super powers are lame and is constantly teasing his sisters. As the youngest Katie has the most destructive power and the least amount of maturity in order to handle the consequences of losing control of her explosive blasts.

The art is clear and expressive. The main creators of Power Pack were both woman (June Bridgman and Louise Simonson) which was pretty rare when the comic was coming out. I do think that the suggested retail price point ($30 for a trade paperback!) is definitely on the high side. While the paper stock used for the reprint is high, I quail at the idea of paying $30 for a paperback without any extras. For a great series that kids today could enjoy, I almost wish that they’d used cheaper paper and produced a more affordable edition of this series. Still, it is very nice that these stories are back in print, and I enjoyed rereading them.