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ARC August 2016 TBR

ARC August is a reading challenge hosted by Shelly and Octavia of Read.Sleep.Repeat with the only goal to read ARCs in August. I was very excited to find out about this challenge since I have a whole bunch of ARCs sitting around that I want to read, and my NetGalley ratio really, really needs improving (it’s basically non-existent now…)ARCaugust

First, here are the books I want to get to first, things that have just come out or that are coming out soon:

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  • False Hearts by Laura Lam
  • Ghost Talkers by Mary Robinette Kowal
  • Dragon’s Blade by Michael R Miller
  • A City Dreaming by Daniel Polanski

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  • Poison City by Paul Crilley
  • After Atlas by Emma Newman
  • The Obelisk Gate by NK Jemisin

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[one_fourth]false hearts[/one_fourth][one_fourth]26114291[/one_fourth][one_fourth]dragons-balde-403x620[/one_fourth][one_fourth_last]51E6jXu7dcL[/one_fourth_last]
[one_fourth]20160229_poison11-666x1024[/one_fourth][one_fourth]28361265[/one_fourth][one_fourth]26228034[/one_fourth][one_fourth_last] [/one_fourth_last]

And a few older ARCs I should definitely get to if I can!
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  • Deep Sea Diver’s Syndrome by Serge Brussolo
  • Nancy Parker’s Diary of Detection by Julia Lee

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  • Starborn by Lucy Hounsom
  • Sleepless by Lou Morgan

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[one_fourth]25279790[/one_fourth][one_fourth]28504531[/one_fourth][one_fourth]21416669[/one_fourth][one_fourth_last]9781847154552[/one_fourth_last]
Finally, I also have a large stack of comics I was sent for review, and while they weren’t advanced copies, I do want to get to at least some of them in August:

comics

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The Great Harry Potter Re-Read of 2016

Welp, I did it, I re-read the Harry Potter series for the first time in ten years in preparation for Harry Potter and the Cursed Child!!


[one_third]4.5 stars
PS[/one_third][one_third]4 stars
CoS[/one_third][one_third_last]5 stars
PoA[/one_third_last]


[one_third]4.5 stars
43509[/one_third][one_third]3.5 stars
444327[/one_third][one_third_last]4 stars
93124[/one_third_last]


[one_third]3.5 stars
818056[/one_third][one_third]2.5 stars
626F6F78747265616D=7474747474727576707<7473[/one_third][one_third_last] [/one_third_last]


I’m still working on the last few reviews, but you can already check out the playlist below for over an hour of Harry Potter discussions & opinions:

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March 2016 Reads


5 stars

Persuasion by Jane Austen

persuasion

I love this story now just as much as I did the first time I read it & it remains my favourite Austen. I was struck by how fresh & modern the story – especially some of the dialogue – remains. Of course the issues addressed are timeless (money, love, resentment, hope, regret, loyalty, mortification, jealousy, vanity) but it’s also about more ordinary people, with motives are way more relatable than some of Austen’s other characters.

No need to try & ignore things which would befuddle us now (Edward Ferrars’ loyalty to a years-old engagement), or things which would rightfully make us dislike a character now (Emma’s manipulative streak; Darcy’s objections to the inferiority of Elizabeth’s birth).

I wish there was a bit less reported action and dialogue – as it is some passages made me want to scream “SHOW DON’T TELL” at the book – but it’s a fairly minor complaint compared to how much I love this story!


5 stars

Witches of Lychford by Paul Cornell

Witches of Lychford

“A witch, a hippy and a vicar walk into a magic shop” sounds like the setup to something quite silly, but there’s a kindness and a humanity to Cornell’s writing – to the way he portrays the characters, their motivations, the town life – that says these people and their stories are important. The conflicts that drive this story aren’t all end of the world stuff, but everything that happens is serious and important to the specific characters it affects and is treated as such.

I was quite impressed with how much Cornell packed in a novella, especially with several POV characters, who all feel pretty well developed. There’s a twist at the end of the novella that just punched me in the feels, one of those twists that makes complete sense once you read it, but couldn’t have guessed before. It makes me want to re-read the book now that I know what’s in store.

In short, I loved this to bits. It was so very, very British and very warm. I can’t wait for the sequel, which is a Christmas story. As a fan of big, traditional British Christmases, I am there with bells on.


4 stars

Binti by Nnedi Okorafor

binti

Binti was a very engaging protagonist, a smart, capable young woman making a difficult choice and venturing into the unknown. I also really enjoyed the themes of language and translation in this story since those are things I’m interested in and passionate about in general.

The story was very tense and brutal in a way I definitely found effective, but somehow the story didn’t grab me in the same way as it did many SFF bloggers and booktubers I know (and Hugo voters!)

I enjoyed the story, but it didn’t adore it; I was left wanting more, perhaps because of the length of the piece (I’m new to reading novellas, and I’m partial to a big, fat doorstopper). I would definitely read a sequel (it looks like there’s going to be one!), especially something about Binti’s experiences at Oomza Uni.


[one_fourth]2.5 stars
I Call Myself a Feminist[/one_fourth][one_fourth]3.5 stars
Lumberjanes Volume 1[/one_fourth][one_fourth]4 stars
Giant Days Vol 1[/one_fourth][one_fourth_last]4.5 stars
Descender Vol 1[/one_fourth_last]