rachelmanija: (Books: old)
rachelmanija ([personal profile] rachelmanija) wrote2023-06-26 01:35 pm

Book Barn

I went to the Book Barn in Niantic, CT: three locations, two goats and three cats spotted (one of which licked and two of which bit me), and a very large book haul.



Click to enlarge.

Thoughts on any of the books?

[personal profile] helen_keeble 2023-06-26 08:51 pm (UTC)(link)
I've read In Great Waters! I really enjoyed it. Some excellent non-human perspectives. Her third book was also great, though I'm completely blanking on the title (it's based on British fairy folklore, with some really well-drawn ND human characters).

Her first book, Bareback, SHOULD have been right up my alley (AU where everyone is a werewolf apart from a small minority of the population; werewolves lose their human minds on the full moon - which is the only time they transform - so the few non-werewolves are all conscripted into the dangerous and thankless job of policing the cities on full moon nights; heroine is a "bareback" non shifter). Alas, it's INCREDIBLY slow, tedious, and has a painfully unsatisfying conclusion. I kinda suspect she originally wrote a very different book, and then had it ruthlessly mauled by an editor trying to make it fit into a standard urban fantasy shape (it was published at the tail of the big popular boom in that genre, IIRC). It's notable that the writing style is VERY different to her better works - first person present single POV rather than semi-omniscient third multi POV in the later books.
ethelmay: (Default)

[personal profile] ethelmay 2023-06-26 08:53 pm (UTC)(link)
I have read Arctic Dreams for sure, but probably not in 25 years or so. I do remember enjoying it. Fairly sure I read Go and Catch a Flying Fish over 40 (!) years ago but remember nothing about it.
jazzfish: Owly, reading (Owly)

[personal profile] jazzfish 2023-06-26 09:01 pm (UTC)(link)
Ooh. I remember enjoying Friday The Rabbi Slept Late three decades ago, but nothing else about it. Which, based on my tastes from then, suggests that it's got good dialogue, a decent sense of place, an interesting mystery, and quite possibly a visit from the Racism/Sexism Fairy.

The other two Kemelman books are sequels, but you're missing a couple in between (Saturday and Sunday, naturally).
telophase: (Default)

[personal profile] telophase 2023-06-26 09:05 pm (UTC)(link)
Barry Lopez Arctic Dreams was one of the assigned books in an intro ecology course I took in undergrad. I remember liking it, but nothing else about it.

estara: (Default)

[personal profile] estara 2023-06-26 09:12 pm (UTC)(link)
Oh Kat Kimbriel Kindred Rites. If you like t his the other two books are on Book View Cafe. Also, she has a space/planetary opera series there Fires of Nuala etc. Good fun!
scioscribe: (Default)

[personal profile] scioscribe 2023-06-26 10:00 pm (UTC)(link)
Obviously you have all my opinions already, but aside from Demon Pig (I can't even contain my love for that book's cover/summary), I'm particularly looking forward to your thoughts on the Geoffrey Household book you haven't read yet.

I've already started the Caroline B. Cooney book I picked up!
philomytha: airplane flying over romantic castle (Default)

[personal profile] philomytha 2023-06-26 10:18 pm (UTC)(link)
I have not read any of them, but if I was picking what to read first just based on the title, it would be either one of the Rabbi books, or Go and Catch A Flying Fish.
naomikritzer: (Default)

[personal profile] naomikritzer 2023-06-26 10:29 pm (UTC)(link)
Oh, in addition to the one we discussed already, STATELESS is amazing and probably right up your alley. Have you read any of Wein's other books?
coffeeandink: (Default)

[personal profile] coffeeandink 2023-06-26 10:42 pm (UTC)(link)

In Great Waters is a complex, unsentimental, unsparing look at mermaids with elegant prose; I remember finding the ending somewhat anticlimactic, but the book still worth it.

Demon Pig! I have not read this or The Pig, the Prince, and the Unicorn in decades, and have no idea how they stand up, but I was very fond of the pair as a teen.

My mother had most of the Rabbi Small books and I read a bunch of them as a teen, but again, I don't know how well they'll stand up. They are probably a pretty decent representation of (religiously) Conservative and (politically) liberal American Jewish congregations of the time period, or at least they matched my experience pretty well.

I have read and liked other books by Erin Bow and Robert Newman, but not the particular ones you have.

wateroverstone: Biggles and Algy watching the approach of an unknown aircraft from Norfolk sand dunes (Default)

[personal profile] wateroverstone 2023-06-26 11:38 pm (UTC)(link)
To my surprise, none of these seem familiar but who could resist a book titled DemonPig?
osprey_archer: (Default)

[personal profile] osprey_archer 2023-06-27 01:53 am (UTC)(link)
Elizabeth Wein has a new book I didn't know about?! Well, I have to put that on hold at the library stat!

I don't think I've read any of the books in either stack, but I am always interested in hearing about books by Mary Stolz or Caroline B. Cooney. (With tentacles on the cover no less!)
starlady: Raven on a MacBook (Default)

[personal profile] starlady 2023-06-27 01:54 am (UTC)(link)
I quite liked In Great Waters lo these many years ago. A Scatter of Light is really great, a YA novel about coming out and coming to terms with who you are that lets complicated and messy things be complicated and messy.
owlectomy: A squashed panda sewing a squashed panda (Default)

[personal profile] owlectomy 2023-06-27 01:56 am (UTC)(link)
A Rumour of Otters is my favorite title in the bunch.

I didn't read the whole Claidi series by Tanith Lee, but the books I read felt way less interesting than other books I've read by Lee - sort of by-the-numbers fantasy.
ducened: (Default)

[personal profile] ducened 2023-06-27 03:07 am (UTC)(link)
I read A Paramedic's Story many long years ago, and found it pretty good.
rushthatspeaks: (Default)

[personal profile] rushthatspeaks 2023-06-27 05:06 am (UTC)(link)
In Great Waters is a fascinating historical AU and also a really good book about mermaids, and neither of those are things I encounter as often as I would like.

Yay owning a copy of Rogue Male. Curious about the other Household.

I DNFd My Sister the Serial Killer due to it absolutely failing to do anything I could not predict or have any angles I had not already expected. I was sad, as it came highly recommended, but I just don't get why.

[personal profile] anna_wing 2023-06-27 06:53 am (UTC)(link)
Eliska Kimbriel is always good. Lawrence Block too. I remember Arctic Dreams as being enjoyable, but too much about Barry Lopez and not enough about the Arctic; but that was thirty-five years ago, so I might be doing him an injustice. But I remember that he was the one who solidified my preference for non-fiction about something/somewhere/someone, to be about the subject, rather than the author.
carbonel: Beth wearing hat (Default)

[personal profile] carbonel 2023-06-27 03:40 pm (UTC)(link)
Simon Sort of Says and Stateless are on my current TBR list, and friends have raved about both.

I recently did an audiobook reread of all eleven of the Rabbi Small books with plots (I DNF'd the "conversations with the rabbi" one that was only available as an ebook) and generally enjoyed them. My mini-review are all on Goodreads under my real name, which I think you have. The series finishes fairly strongly, so if you get tired of them, you could skip to the last one. Also, I remember enjoying the earlier Nicky Welt stories as puzzle stories. I recently bought the ebook of that collection, and it's working its way up my TBR stack.

The paramedic book sounds interesting, but my library doesn't have it. (It does have two other books with similar titles, which I have bookmarked for later, since I'm currently trying to deal with five other hard-copy library books.)
skygiants: the aunts from Pushing Daisies reading and sipping wine on a couch (wine and books)

[personal profile] skygiants 2023-06-28 02:24 am (UTC)(link)
I've not read the Rabbi Smalls books, but I remember hearing/reading somewhere that originally the author had simply wanted to write a book about a rabbi and his congregation. When he sent it to his agent, the agent responded that he could sell it if Kemelman would consider having the rabbi solve a murder, but otherwise there was no way. This story may be apocryphal but it does not stop me returning to it as a publishing parable.

(My uncle, who is a rabbi, has read them, and says there isn't enough rabbinical discourse in them, but that's just what I would expect him to say.)

I am also of course very excited to hear about any Isabelle Hollands!
kathmandu: Close-up of pussywillow catkins. (Default)

[personal profile] kathmandu 2023-06-28 04:48 am (UTC)(link)
Oh, I remember the Book Barn fondly!

I haven't read any of your haul; I'll be interested to see what you think of them.
illariy: a woman opens a colourful letter (letter)

[personal profile] illariy 2023-06-28 02:13 pm (UTC)(link)
Wait, there is a bookshop with goats as well as cats? Very intriguing!

I have not read any of those books but based on the title, "The Paramedic's Story" sounds fascinating. :D Also, the Rabbi series.