I always love football season, but one thing I look forward to when it's over is getting back to a little more reading. So here are a couple books I've finished recently (and one I'm reading now). Let me know in the comments what you've been reading.
The Poet by Michael Connelly. I just finished The Poet after skipping it a little bit earlier. I was trying to read the Harry Bosch books in order, but just before I read The Narrows, I saw that it was a follow-up to The Poet. Since Bosch wasn't a character in it, I didn't think it was necessary. Anyway, The Poet is about a reporter named Jack McEvoy whose brother was murdered by a serial killer. McEvoy goes on a nationwide search for the story, which ends up with him teaming up with the FBI in an attempt to find the killer. There's no mention of Bosch anywhere, but he does end up in Hollywood at one point and a couple characters from the Bosch universe are mentioned. Now I'm looking forward to seeing how The Narrows ties in to the separate character arcs.
Dune by Frank Herbert. Some of you are going to be upset with me, but I was not a big fan of Dune. It took a long time to get into it. One of my issues with a lot of fantasy books is that authors often try to dump you into the middle of a universe about which you have no idea what the terms mean. What is Arrakis? Where is it situated in the universe? When is it supposed to have taken place? How did these people get there? How do they all speak the same language? What do all these individual words mean that Herbert seems to have created? I wanted to finish reading the book before the movie came out, but unfortunately, I just didn't have time and missed being able to go see the movie in the theater.
I'm currently reading 'Cane Mutiny by Bruce Feldman, which tells about the rise of Miami football. Feldman is a Miami alum who obviously has some ties to the school, and he talks mainly about the time from coach Howard Schnellenberger onward. I really like Feldman as a writer, but it's kind of funny to me how awkward some of his writing is in this, which was his first book. He's definitely improved as a writer since this book was written in 2004. (The title is a play on the movie The Caine Mutiny which came out in 1954.)
Bought one of my kids the Vonnegut box set for his birthday. decided to keep it until his next birthday.
ReplyDeleteDune is a father-son thing in my house. I guess I had similar questions on my first read, but that was in the early 2000s, and have since shared reddit theories back & forth that fill in some of the gaps
ReplyDeleteMy biggest thing is, the movies are not capable of doing the books justice. Just too big a world, too big a story. I don't think viewers have the patience to let it all unfold over yeh course of a decade (about how long a trilogy-plus might take to complete)