Reviews and Comments

JuanMoreStory

JuanMoreStory@bookrastinating.com

Joined 3 years ago

I like to read books, but as this instance describes I either procrastinate in reading them or I use it to help me procrastinate my creative writing.

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Percival Everett: ERASURE (Paperback, 2002, Hyperion)

Thelonius "Monk" Ellison is an erudite, accomplished but seldom-read author who insists on writing obscure …

A heartbreaking critique of the POC publishing world

I had watched the movie and really enjoyed it, and was interested in reading the novel it was based off of. While the movie left the viewer the ability to hope for something better, the book has no problems leaving the reader in despair.

Funny enough, I enjoy stories that are wiling to go the distance for the sake of the narrative themes, so I enjoyed this book. It had such a wide range in narrative structure. The main character, Monk, is a literary analyst and as a result tries to write novels that avoids the pitfalls that he thinks could diminish its artistic integrity. The author really hammers his point of view by even including nearly a whole article's worth of text written in that overly analytical style criticizing another character's novel, complete with footnotes. I certainly could not keep up with the jargon, and that was exactly …

Lizz Huerta: The Lost Dreamer (Hardcover, 2022, Imprint, Farrar, Straus and Giroux (BYR))

Half a good story

I have to admit I got fairly frustrated with half of the book. I mean this in a literal sense. The book follows two protagonists, each with their own story that become intertwined by the end.

Saya's story is the half that I liked. It is straightforward, in a good way. We as the reader get to see her character grow in power and learn more about who she really is. Her story is also the half that gets a fairly satisfying ending.

Indir is the other character, and her story has the possibility to be good. There is a lot of setup about the politics of the city she lives in, and a prophecy about a magical change in the world that the city's inhabitants are worried about. There is also a secret from events past that Indir carries which risks bubbling up to the surface. And …

Manuel Gonzales: The Regional Office is Under Attack! (2016, Riverhead Books)

Interesting characters, but that's about it

The story is told mainly from the perspective of 2 characters, with portions of a 'history book' weaved in between the change of character perspectives.

The characters themselves are pretty interesting. The book is a Sci-Fi Action Comedy, and the comedy mostly comes from the narration essentially being the characters' run on thoughts. Since the narration is sort of all over the place it can be a little hard to follow, but once I tried not to think about it too much I came to enjoy the emotional/thought roller coaster.

I would have liked a bit of a break from the thought narration when it switched to a supposedly history book perspective, but that seemed to have the same style of narration only without knowing whom exactly the thoughts belong to.

The Regional Office the characters and the main plot revolve around is sort of interesting too, …

Sophie Cousens: The Good Part (2023, Hodder & Stoughton)

No need to skip to the good part of this book

The book was a decently paced drama book. It was a dramatic fiction genre with a hint of mysticism and science fiction, since the premise is that the main character skips to 16b years in the future through her wish being granted.

The impact the time leap has on the main character is decently fleshed out, with a believable roller coaster of emotions.

A large chunk of the story is focused on the main character catching up to the plot points of her life that she missed out, but it gets a little deeper when it is pointed out she also missed out on the emotional impact of something traumatic that she had skipped over.

After that though, the author tried to inject some sense of urgency that, for me, did not quite make sense as making me feel that same sense of urgency.

Since the …

Kiley Reid: Come and get it (Hardcover, 2024, G.P. Putnam's Sons)

A few decent slices of life

The synopsis on the the dust jacket alludes to a a major conflict for one of the 3 main characters, and yet seems to leave out the fact that there are in fact 3 main characters. The first chapter of the book is from the perspective of one of the other main characters not described. This left me feeling a little disoriented at first, but once I pieced together what was happening I was able to settle in and enjoy the ride a little more.

As for the story itself, it covers 2 characters that become intertwined, while loosely including the 3rd. It feels like a broken romance between the 2 characters for 80% of the book, and then suddenly a dramatic event including the third character forces drama between the 2 characters.

The story could have kept the 2 character's broken romance and life lessons stemming from …

Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles X Stranger Things

A fun crossover

This review will be pretty short and sweet because the title essentially says it all. Stranger Things TV show is filled with nostalgia for a millenial like me, and they doubled down by having a comic where the kids team up with the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles.

I enjoyed the TMNT cartoon back in the 90's and that is really where all my knowledge of the characters comes from. As far as I can tell, they had a decent use of the characters from TMNT and the Stranger Things group. It's a fun little ride that I was glad to have unexpectedly hopped on to.

Ann Leckie: Lake of Souls (EBook, 2024, Orbit Books)

Hugo, Nebula, and Arthur C. Clarke award-winner Ann Leckie is a modern master of the …

Interesting variation of stories

I read this book knowing nothing of Ann Leckie's books. The collection is broken into 3 parts.

The first part is a few short short stories not linked to any of the book series the author has written. The story which the book collection takes its title from was the best out of those. The author was great at crafting a world with a mixture of sci-fi and spirituality in that story.

The second part contained stories from her sci-fi Ancillary series. They were interesting, but I had the sense I was missing a larger picture somehow so it was a little difficult to get into without having read the series.

The third part contained stories based off the Raven Tower universe, which is more fantasy based. I enjoyed all of those stories very much. The author was able to establish simple rules of the world and …

David Wong: Futuristic violence and fancy suits (2015, Thomas Dunne Books / St. Martin's Press)

"Get ready for a world in which anyone can have the powers of a god …

A fun set of characters with a dystopian backdop

This book's genre is a comedic science fiction. The author created a group of characters and placed them in a setting called Tabula Ra$a.

The city is said to be governed by free market capitalism. The author seems to want to leave it to the reader as whether that is a good thing or bad thing, as he depicts the wide gap between rich and poor. The main protagonist, Zoey, is briefly described as poor in the beginning but then is thrust into a position of wealth and supported by the rest of the cast to help her navigate that new world.

While there is no definitive stance of morality in such a world, the characters are fun enough to make you want to finish reading. The author does a good job of playing with expectations of a more upbeat comedy, and lands a few twists in the …