You don't actually have to be a cryptozoologist to find monsters in Texas. It's chock full of them. Nevertheless, this looks like good fun.
An Ongoing Exploration of West Texas Wickidity, and its horrid impact on a Girl Named Lulu
Showing posts with label book. Show all posts
Showing posts with label book. Show all posts
Wednesday, February 23, 2011
Book: Monsters of Texas
You don't actually have to be a cryptozoologist to find monsters in Texas. It's chock full of them. Nevertheless, this looks like good fun.
Wednesday, October 13, 2010
Reading "Bamboo and Blood," by James Church
I highly recommend it. James Church's Inspector O books are so good my head exploded three times yesterday alone. His latest is "The Man With the Baltic Stare
Each note was a bell hanging from its own brass hook, an infinity of them cleverly attached to the smooth and rounded edges of the sky. When streams froze, when branches on the trees were solemn and stiff, when every single thing was wrapped in the brutal hush of solitary survival, it was then her song would come to me from where she stood alone on the wooden bridge. No matter how wide I spread my arms, I could not hold the music of her voice. It echoed from the hills, and danced the icy stairways that led, at last, to the emptiness between the northern stars. Strange, what the senses do to each other-- how a raw wind against the skin makes the heart uneasy, how in the crystalline black of long nights, memories become voices close beside you. The Russians love to write about it. They think they are the only ones who know the cold.
The plots of Church's books are subtle and unpredictable, set in the odd, inscrutable culture of North Korea, where nothing is ever as it seems. Church, not the novelist's real name, has worked inside that sealed off country for decades and the books provide a rare glimpse into a world very few Westerners know much about. And the writing is perfect. Everyone should read James Church.
Sunday, August 1, 2010
New Book: Cyber Writers and the Zebra of Life-- Karen Kostlivy
Mason Witt, a skateboarding American teenager catapults himself into the greatest adventure of his life after reading the plight of a new Cyber Writer from Africa. Lutalo knew he would come so he sent Mason an urgent plea for help. His village has lost its precious Zebra of Life and his father has gone missing in the pursuit of the evil men who stole it. Here begins this thrilling adventure of two boys, a smart- talking panther, and an amazing zebra that sustains life. Come and join Mason and Lutalo on this fantasy adventure ... follow the arrow. This fantasy adventure guarantees to delight and entertain young readers as they take an incredible journey through the heart of Africa and learn about courage, family, friendship, trust and loyalty.
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