Boy, with Accidental Dinosaur

Boy, with Accidental Dinosaur by Ian McDonald

Sometimes you can tell a book by its cover. This science fiction/western novella is set in the future, after the Chaos. It’s dystopian, and absolutely fascinating. Latif Tamim, or Tif, wants to work with dinosaurs in a circus. There is a time portal in the southwest where the present connects to various times in the Mesozoic era, including the Cretaceous and Jurassic periods. Dinosaurs can come through the portal, for a while.

Orphaned Tif finds his home with a small circus, bringing an old carnotaur with him. A Silver Clown, a mysterious buckaroo named Prince, a vet/dinosaur wrangler, and the manager run the circus, along with a couple of self-driving trailer trucks. This is a wild, adventurous story, full of loss, longing, and hope, set in a largely nomadic society. Wrangler Matilda goes on a road trip with Tif to Montana so that he can reconnect with a fellow orphan. The Kaiju Preservation Society by John Scalzi is close to a readalike, though it has more humor, and no actual dinosaurs. A short, memorable read.

Brenda

The Astral Library

The Astral Library by Kate Quinn

Known for her historical fiction including The Rose Code, the author now turns to magical realism. This novel has been highly publicized, and Quinn has the storytelling chops to lure a reader into The Astral Library and make them not want to leave.

This is definitely not a cozy fantasy, but compelling settings, a fast-paced and twisty plot, and memorable characters make this a book to cheer for. Alix Watson is desperate, and her past as a foster child and her present as a twenty-something working three part-time jobs are both rather bleak. Where Alix feels most at home is in the library, re-reading a favorite book.

Then she gets invited into a very special library, where she can finally say yes to the question: “Have you ever wanted to live inside a book?” Only the Astral Library and its Patrons are threatened, and it’s up to the Librarian, Alix, and struggling costume designer Beau to save the day, along with the Library itself.

While the opening is reminiscent of early 20th century novels by Grace Livingston Hill in which a young, poor heroine does a good deed and then gets a good job and meets a gentleman, Alix is not exactly sweet and kind, and swears rather a lot. Once Alix enters the Library, I was reminded of the Thursday Next novels by Jasper Fforde, beginning with The Eyre Affair, set in Book World, and also of humorous fantasy novels by Terry Pratchett set in the Unseen University’s library, with a librarian turned orangutan.

Daughter of a librarian, Quinn has created a magical library for book lovers and library fans to dream about. More, please!

Brenda

The First Time I Saw Him

The First Time I Saw Him by Laura Dave

If you read the 2021 bestselling thriller The Last Thing He Told Me, this sequel is a sure bet. A thriller/beach read that you can’t put down, it is sweet, tender, tense, anxious, and full of plot twists with an intensifying pace. Don’t start this at bedtime or you won’t get much sleep!

Hannah and stepdaughter Bailey are a team, along with Bailey’s grandfather Nicholas, who has not always done the right thing. Owen, Bailey’s dad, disappeared several years ago, to keep them safe. Hannah and Bailey go on a journey together, sudden but not unexpected. They learn that Bailey’s grandfather has died, and they are no longer safe. Going back and forth in time, we learn that Nicholas and Owen worked together to make contingency plans to protect Bailey. While this is a plot-driven novel, the settings really enhance the story, moving from the California coast to Miami, Hawaii, Paris, and the south of France. Love and loyalty are key here, along with figuring out who is trustworthy and when it’s time to move on. The love of family, the emotions of missing loved ones, and very appealing main characters make this memorable read well worth the thrill ride.   

Brenda

Costumes for Time Travelers

Costumes for Time Travelers by A. R. Capetta

I really enjoyed this teen time travel fantasy. There is plenty of adventure and some romance. Calisto (they/them) is growing up in Pocket with three parents and siblings. One parent was a history professor in Australia, another was a priestess in ancient times, while the third parent is a Pocket native. Pocket has several moons and is a waypoint that most time travelers pass through. The travelers get new costumes for the next time period they’ll be visiting and have the cobblers resole their time boots. Calisto works in the costume shop with their grandmother Mena, a tailor. They design and sew costumes with a huge variety of fabrics for their customers. I really liked how the author makes costume design and sewing seem very cool.

Fawkes, a time savant, arrives in a dramatic fashion from the far future, where he had a mostly solitary upbringing. Calisto is shocked that Fawkes has only one outfit, and no home to return to. In a kaleidoscope of a story, Fawkes and Calisto time travel to the Elizabethan era where Fawkes is in one of Shakespeare’s plays. They also meet the Minotaur in Crete, and travel to Stanford University where Californians are worrying about Y2K and computers. Time wardens want to stop new time lines, and Fawkes and Calisto try to stop a time quake that may affect Calisto’s beloved Pocket, which is governed by a group of elders at their book club meetings. The romance is sweet, and the sense of place and time are vividly drawn, along with the costumes. I didn’t get any sense of how time travel actually works, and wasn’t sure if this was as much science fiction as it is fantasy, but definitely enjoyed the journey.

Brenda

Gemini

Gemini: Stepping Stone to the Moon, The Untold Story by Jeffrey Kluger

Mercury astronauts were first in space while Apollo astronauts went to the moon. Gemini, the NASA program in between, sometimes gets overlooked. Kluger, the author of Apollo 8 and Lost Moon: The Perilous Voyage of Apollo 13, tells the story of Gemini very well. The Gemini Project began in 1961 and was always meant to set the stage for the Apollo missions. The new spacecraft held two men (no mention here of the Mercury 13 women who hoped to be astronauts), used a larger rocket to launch, and included the first spacewalks and attempts to rendezvous with another spacecraft. Ten manned missions were launched in 1965 and 1966, which was truly unprecedented.

The names of many of the astronauts who flew the Gemini missions will be familiar to space buffs, including John Glenn, Neil Armstrong, Jim Lovell, and Gus Grissom, as well as flight directors Chris Craft and Gene Kranz. The quest to build the spacecraft did not go smoothly, and there was always the pressure of not enough time, trying to catch up and pull ahead in the space race with the Soviet Union. The flights themselves make for compelling reading, and the personalities of the astronauts and NASA engineers are memorably sketched. Very interesting and informative reading. Here’s one fun fact: NASA pronounces Gemini as “Geminee”.

Brenda

North to the Future

North to the Future: An Offline Adventure Through the Changing Wilds of Alaska by Ben Weissenbach

Young journalist Ben Weissenbach, when not scrolling on his phone, is fascinated by Alaska. At 20, he spent the summer of 2019 with climate scientist and adventurer Roman Dial trekking across the eastern Brooks Range. During another trip to Alaska he experienced an Arctic winter fortnight on Kenji Yohikawa’s off-grid cabin near Fairbanks, tending to his reindeer. Ben also flew over part of the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge with glaciologist Matt Nolan, occasionally dealing with smoke-filled skies.

The longest section of the book is about a hiking and pack rafting expedition in the Western Brooks Range in 2021, led by Roman Dial, studying the spread of spruce trees in the Arctic. Many adventures and misadventures are described, including encounters with wolves and grizzly bears, along with his struggle as to simply be present in the amazing expanse of Alaska. I very much enjoy the combination of real-life adventure, travel, science, and memoir, and look forward to reading what he’s up to next.

Brenda

Thus With a Kiss I Die

Thus With a Kiss I Die by Christina Dodd

Well, that’s not a very cheerful title, is it? Since I thoroughly enjoyed the first Daughter of Montague novel, A Daughter of Fair Verona, I knew the book would be much more entertaining than a quote from Romeo and Juliet would lead the reader to expect. In Christina Dodd’s fictional Verona, Romeo and Juliet are alive, in love, and married with several children. Rosaline, called Rosie, is 20 and helps run the Montague household. While dreaming about handsome Lysander, she has somehow become betrothed to Escalus, the prince of Verona.

Rosie is not at thrilled by her betrothal. But she likes Escalus’s little sister, Isabella, his Nonna Ursula, and his father’s ghost. The ghost of Escalus the Elder is problematic as no one else can see or hear him and he never saw his murderer, who was masked and cloaked. Escalus, nicknamed Cal by his ghostly father, also enjoys spending time with Rosie’s large, chaotic family. When there is unrest in the city, even the prince’s home isn’t safe. On one eventful night Rosie must get home to her mother, then quickly solve two crimes and decide how she really feels about Cal. Of course, both Cal and Rosie are in danger, and deciding who to trust is key.  

This historical novel has witty banter, quirky characters, and is full of adventure, humor, mystery and some romance. The next book, Much Ado About Mistletoe, will be published in late October.   

Brenda

Murder on the S.S. Cleopatra

Murder on the S.S. Cleopatra by Sara Rosett

This historical mystery is the sequel to Murder Among the Pyramids, with a third book planned. In 1924, Blix Windway, an adventurous lady traveler, embarks on the Blue Lotus Line steamer S.S. Cleopatra for a cruise down the Nile, as does her new friend Hildy Honeycutt. Blix takes photos and gives lectures about her travels, occasionally funding her travel by working as a paid companion.

Blix has a small but charming cabin, while Hildy has a much larger one. Blix is startled to meet Rafe Briarcliff on board, the handsome but annoying man who shared some of her recent adventures in Cairo and at the pyramids. Rafe is travelling undercover, assessing the ship and crew for the Blue Lotus Line. Hildy gets a couple of anonymous threatening notes and reluctantly shares a big secret with Blix. They get to know the other travelers before a suspicious death, or possibly two, occurs.

The captain asks Mr. Briarcliff and Blix to interview all of the travelers in hopes that they can solve the mystery before the ship arrives at Luxor. The ship is described in just the right amount of detail, as are the travelers, crew, and their activities. Rosett really did her research on 1920s Egyptian tourism, but shares just enough of what she learned to enhance the mystery, not overwhelm it. Gossipy tidbits from a fictional newspaper begin each chapter. I read the deluxe trade paperback, which includes extras such as photographs of the main characters, the deck plan of the ship, and color illustrations of a blue lotus. I enjoyed this book just as much as Murder Among the Pyramids, and look forward to reading about Blix’s adventures in Luxor.

Brenda

Brigands & Breadknives

Brigands & Breadknives by Travis Baldree

Fans of Legends & Lattes, your wait for a sequel is almost over. Brigands will be published November 11. I was lucky enough to read a digital review copy. The title confused me for quite a while; I thought there’d be more of a bakery setting with Breadknives as part of the title. I am happy that the author didn’t want to write another book too similar to Legends or the prequel Bookshops & Bonedust. Not really a cozy fantasy, this is still a very satisfying read.

Fern, a ratkin, instead of running a bookshop, finds herself on an adventure with Astryx One-Ear, the famous elf oathmaiden, along with Nigel, an Elder Blade, Bucket the horse, and Zyll, a gnome who is definitely serious trouble. Fern isn’t brave, doesn’t have a plan or a clue, and swears a lot, including in gnomish. She also feels guilty for going on an adventure without telling her friends first. Enjoy!

Brenda

Outlandish

Outlandish: Walking Europe’s Unlikely Landscapes by Nick Hunt

I enjoyed reading this combination of hiking memoir, geography, nature, history, culture and more. In 2019 Nick, a British travel writer, hikes through arctic tundra to visit two tiny glaciers, in Scotland. Wintry weather makes the hikes quite challenging. But maybe he’ll see the Gray Man, or reindeer.

Next, he travels to Poland and Belarus to walk through parts of the Białowieża rainforest, which is threatened by logging and road building like so many forests, as well as disease. Bison and wolves might be glimpsed here. The border area is quite militarized, yet Nick feels the urge to stray from the paths. Sometimes he camps in a tent during his adventures, other times in motels or guest houses.

In Spain, Nick travels thru the Tabernas desert, made of rock, not sand, during the 2nd hottest summer on record. The desert is near the Mar de Plástico, the Plastic Sea, which is made of polytunnels where more than half of the fruit and vegetables sold in Europe are grown. Many of the workers are migrants from Northern and Saharan Africa who endure sauna-like conditions. In the Spanish desert, many western movies were filmed, and there is still entertainment styled after the wild west. Nick finds the light dazzling, and while having stored several days of water at his camp in a slot canyon, has to remind himself to return each day before running too low on water. Ibex are frequently spotted on the heights of the canyon walls.

The final adventure is on Hungary’s grassland Steppe, almost completely flat, except for ancient burial mounds. He sees native horses, wallowing water buffalo, and miles and miles of grassland. A festival of Europeans and Asians of the grasslands celebrates horses, unusual alcoholic drinks, and even remembrances of Attila the Hun and Genghis Khan.

Vivid writing, great armchair travel writing, and thoughtful explorations of places that are remnants of the past, and how changing climates affect them. A memorable read.

Brenda