Category Archives: Books 2010

Club Dead

Book six of the 2010 reading season is the third novel in Charlaine Harris’ series of Sookie Stackhouse novels. I have to be a bit extra-careful about my review of this one – my wife wants to read it and I hate to give spoilers.
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Right Ho, Jeeves!

Back to P. G. Wodehouse for the fifth book of 2010, and back to the scrambled master / servant dynamic of Bertie Wooster and his man Jeeves. This time it’s a full-length novel, rather than a collection of short stories, which means there’s fewer opportunities for Bertie to screw things up, but more time in which he can make sure that the screw-up is extremely thorough.
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The Red Box

It’s back to the Nero Wolfe series for book four of the year. I suppose I should point out that I’m not making any special effort to get through books faster than usual. This is pretty much my standard consumption rate for the written word – I did use the word “voracious” when I started posting these reviews last week.
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Good Omens

Book number three of the year is a collaboration between Neil Gaiman and Terry Pratchett first published in 1990. The plot is, broadly, a parody of the Omen series of apocalyptic movies blended with a light-hearted mockery of of New-Age spiritualism and end-times prophecies in general. The story centers on the life of one Adam Young, a perfectly ordinary boy from Tadford who just happens to be the spawn of Satan.
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My Man Jeeves

Book two of the year is the P. G. Wodehouse classic, “My Man Jeeves.” This was a collection of short stories originally published between 1916 and 1919, and there are free e-book and HTML versions of the book available from both Project Gutenberg and from Amazon’s Kindle Store.
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The Rubber Band

I’m going to be shamelessly stealing an idea from my wife. She keeps track of the books she reads every year and writes up reviews, part of what she calls the “Read Some More Damned Books Initiative.” I’m a voracious reader myself, so I figure I might as well join in the fun and see just how much I actually do read.
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