Wednesday, October 9, 2024

๐Ÿง›๐Ÿป‍♂️๐Ÿ‘ป๐Ÿบ๐Ÿ”ช Book Club for October, ๐Ÿ™€ Dungeon Crawler Carl, and ⏳ Time Travel

 

    In October, my book club reconvenes. Hurray! This season, we are reading Newberry Award winners. So fun! Our first book is The Graveyard Book by Neil Gaiman. I read an informative article by Eva Langston about what she gleaned from Gaiman's writing. He doesn't write down to children in ideas or language. https://evalangston.com/2018/05/13/the-graveyard-book/  I found many words that I paused to recall the meaning of, like "susurrus." (Whispering, murmuring, rustling) The book is unusual in many aspects. The story is told in short narratives occurring every two years about Nobody Owens, Bod to his friends. It starts with the death of everyone in his family when he was a baby. He unwittingly escaped to a nearby graveyard where he was adopted. A hook from the very start. How is that going to work? This book has won many awards and would be a terrific gift for any middle-grade through adult.

๐Ÿง›๐Ÿป‍♂️๐Ÿ‘ป๐Ÿบ๐Ÿ”ช

    I'm hooked on Matt Dinniman! The Butcher's Masquerade is the fifth in his Dungeon Crawler Carl Series. His plots move at lightning speed and are action-packed. The humor is crass at times, but his characters are maturing. The toll of continually fighting for their lives and seeing their friends killed is well portrayed. The narrative is growing beyond the dungeon and into the universe at large. What forces are causing this, and can they be stopped? The tension is high because you wonder if your favorite sub-character will die. 

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    A Contemporary Asshat at the Court of Henry VIII by Mary Janice Davidson was recommended by my husband. We both love a time travel story, and this one was excellent. Time travel books have different "causes." There are magical portals like a wardrobe or scientifically constructed ones like flying Delorian. This book mashes both of them together; there is a magical portal with a scientific reason. From the title, I knew I would be in the Tudor era in England, meeting Henry VIII. Davidson has done excellent research with many atmospheric details. The food descriptions were sensuous in the best way. Joan Howe is an American living a low-key life in England until she has a migraine and materializes in Tudor, England. Her mother was a Tudor fanatic so Joan has a good sense of the timeline and the key players of the court. She works hard not to change history--always the time traveler's dilemma--am I right? She gets herself back to 2023 and is commissioned to return to find those that have slipped back in time, Losties, to return them. However, everything is not as it seems.

    This was a vivacious, well-paced, intriguing book. There may be a setup for a sequel. I hope so!

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