One of the best ways to spend your time during a pandemic is with Repairman Jack. I figure if he can't fix the problem, he can certainly take my mind off of it. Legacies is the second book I've read in the Repairman Jack series and I was not disappointed. As a matter of fact, I plan to buy all of the books in order and savor each one. To encourage others to read these books, I've decided to review each one and give a top 10 list for reasons to read the series and each book in the series.
Top 10 reasons to read the Repairman Jack Series in order
10. Jack seriously reminds me of Dean from Supernatural. He's a resourceful guy with heart. I'd follow him anywhere.
9. It doesn't matter what genre your into, you'll find it with Jack. He explores conspiracy thriller, paranormal mysteries, medical mysteries - you name it, Jack has fixed it.
8. Dialogue is real and funny with spot on allusions I get.
7. Jack's movie collection steals my heart.
6. Jack has a darkness and he gets scared sometimes. Even though everyone loves Superman, its Batman they find the most interesting. A hero should be flawed for me to follow.
5. F. Paul Wilson gets to the point and doesn't load the reader down in exposition.
4. Plots work weaving details from page one to the last page, so that every question is answered in the end. Yes, there is a semi-certain formula, but like a well-shuffled deck of cards, every game explores chance endings.
3. Love the mystery! I would even compare these to Agatha Christie.
2. Stephen King is the president of the Repairman Jack fan club.
1. The books always fight injustice. In the first book it was Jack's revenge for what happened to a loved one. In the second book it was the injustice of children born with AIDS, and other stuff, but I won't spoil that mystery.
Top 10 reasons to read Legacies with spicy glimpses under the cover - that don't spoil.
10. Santa saves the day.
9. Female power.
8. Questions paranoid Jack.
7. Jack fixes several problems.
6. Jack gets the girl.
5. Complicated interesting villains.
4. Different viewpoints.
3. Jack's claustrophobia.
2. Someone with an S in their name dies.
1. Where Jack spends Christmas.
Go out and buy these now. They leave you with a warm fuzzy feeling that all is now right with the world. I wish Netflix would pick this series up. They would have some serious viewers. I can see Jack Reynor playing Jack.
Followers
Sunday, March 22, 2020
Friday, March 6, 2020
5 Stars for Shadowland by Peter Straub
Shadowland by Peter Straub is hard to begin. The setup is initially boring, but once you muddle through it is well worth the wait. If a book makes me loose sleep to read, then I'm giving it a five. This is definitely one of the creepiest books I've ever read warping fairy tales into nightmares and forcing youth into a fast adulthood. The main characters, Tom and Del are forced into challenges that only an adult should face and not even then. Straub is a story teller first. The characterization of Del and Tom simply fell in line with the story he wanted to tell. It did not matter if you liked them or not, but their story was so incredibly interesting - you had to follow. Betrayal wove through as an underlying theme forcing your compassion to flee for both Del and Tom. Both boys were driven intrinsically by curiosity, love or jealousy. In the end they were boys trying to experience magic even though all that remained was ugly and dark leaving a wolf rather than the girl in the red hood open to love. Shadowland wasn't just one story, but a creative mix of so many fairy tales heard before. Musically it was an overture of classic 80's stemming from an old Doors album lighting fires with baby. I found it totally bitchin' and copacetic all at once. I highly recommend it and hope to see it as a Netflix series staring Timothée Chalamet as Tom and Max Charles as Del.
Thursday, February 20, 2020
5 Stars for Breathing Lessons by Anne Tyler
Breathing Lessons by Anne Tyler deserved the 1989 Pulitzer Prize. Any writer who can make boring everyday life absolutely meaningful gets my vote. Reviews that rank this book lower than four stars seem to base their score on this story not being thriller content. Real people are not interesting all the time, and a trip to a funeral isn't high on the list of exciting things to do; however, in the midst of commonality - I kept discovering little pockets of truth parallel to my own life and people around me.
For example, Ira, the husband's need to play solitaire all of the time while keeping a cool distance from emotional drama sounded much like my husband and my father-in-law. I loved Ira from the beginning, because I knew beneath his carefully carved out unobtrusive personality was a guy with deep emotional ties to the people he loved dearly. Ira's wife, Maggie, was quite a busybody, but no matter how annoying she became - Ira loved still loved her.
Maggie wasn't my favorite character, but reflecting upon my own flaws I certainly didn't wish for her death in the story, rather I tried to understand the loneliness she felt. Maggie's children has recently left home. Maggie wanted to desperately hold on to them.
Maggie's character needed a dynamic change from something she had been to something she could be with her husband and as a person on her own. This change couldn't happen unless she changed her way of thinking.
She couldn't see what worked in her life. For example, Maggie couldn't accept Ira and his flaws without losing the idealism she held in the things she could not control. Her journey is not unlike my own as a mother, and like my mother. All moms have a tough time letting go of their kids. I can't dislike Maggie for holding onto her children a little longer.
I highly recommend this book to every married couple and all mothers. For Maggie, a day trip to a friend's funeral changed her way of thinking, but for me it was watching the love between my mother and father-in-law, and appreciating my husband a little more every day. Thank you, Anne Tyler.
For example, Ira, the husband's need to play solitaire all of the time while keeping a cool distance from emotional drama sounded much like my husband and my father-in-law. I loved Ira from the beginning, because I knew beneath his carefully carved out unobtrusive personality was a guy with deep emotional ties to the people he loved dearly. Ira's wife, Maggie, was quite a busybody, but no matter how annoying she became - Ira loved still loved her.
Maggie wasn't my favorite character, but reflecting upon my own flaws I certainly didn't wish for her death in the story, rather I tried to understand the loneliness she felt. Maggie's children has recently left home. Maggie wanted to desperately hold on to them.
Maggie's character needed a dynamic change from something she had been to something she could be with her husband and as a person on her own. This change couldn't happen unless she changed her way of thinking.
She couldn't see what worked in her life. For example, Maggie couldn't accept Ira and his flaws without losing the idealism she held in the things she could not control. Her journey is not unlike my own as a mother, and like my mother. All moms have a tough time letting go of their kids. I can't dislike Maggie for holding onto her children a little longer.
I highly recommend this book to every married couple and all mothers. For Maggie, a day trip to a friend's funeral changed her way of thinking, but for me it was watching the love between my mother and father-in-law, and appreciating my husband a little more every day. Thank you, Anne Tyler.
Saturday, February 8, 2020
5 Stars for Neil Gaiman's Norse Mythology
Everyone should read this. Neil Gaiman certainly did not inhale the fumes of Odin's odious fart. This is a spoiler I will not spoil. He was certainly blessed with the gift of retelling a story and reinventing his own. I loved his retelling of Norse Mythology. His voice carried the harsh tempos of the tragic moments, but also humor in the more flute-like places. I began this book with Marvel knowledge and came away feeling a bit like a mythology historian. Neil Gaiman can do that for a person. I also began this book as a respect towards my dad, who found a hero in Thor, also Conan the Barbarian, but that's another story. For me, Loki is certainly my favorite, and I was happy to discover his tale did not disappoint. Gaiman should seriously think about a story that involves both Othello's Iago and Loki in a modern world setting. They could pour poison into the ear of great leaders turning the world into what it is not. And who to save the world but a child not yet born, one of a new birth out of the death of the old one. Everyone should read this! Seriously, I might listen to it again.
Saturday, January 25, 2020
5 Stars for The Tomb (Repairman Jack, #1) by F. Paul Wilson
The Tomb (Repairman Jack, #1) by F. Paul Wilson is not an original horror or thriller novel. In fact, Jack is your typical tough guy with a superman moral compass. I adored his character. jack reminded me of Dean Winchester from the TV show Supernatural. Like Supernatural's Dean, Jack operates under a code of honor killing monsters along that path. If this book made it to the big screen, I could see it having a cult following. Think about cult movies like The Big Lebowski, or The Princess Bride that drip with warm familiar cheese. The Tomb, like Supernatural, Lebowski, and The Princess Bride swim in sliced melted cheddar. Elements of humor, gut wrenching monsters, and cool backstories echo in well told stories creating a solid plot line. Wilson certainly knows how to sew up a dang good plot. Repairman Jack doesn't seem to ask you take him too seriously. But, you do, because the stakes are raised high enough to keep you reading. I cannot wait to read more. And my fingers are crossed that Netflix might find this book as charming as I have.
Sunday, January 19, 2020
Thinking Outside My Coffee Cup: 5 Stars for The Shining Girls by Lauren Beukes
Thinking Outside My Coffee Cup: 5 Stars for The Shining Girls by Lauren Beukes: The Shining Girls by Lauren Beukes shines. The plot twist the typical serial killer story into a web of time traveling, creepy madness. Th...
5 Stars for The Shining Girls by Lauren Beukes
The Shining Girls by Lauren Beukes shines. The plot twist the typical serial killer story into a web of time traveling, creepy madness. The killer, Harper, travels through time to murder girls who have glimmering potential. However, one girl, Kirby, survives a vicious attack and becomes the hunter. Kirby and the rest of the shining girls are characterized splendidly, unfolding like a well-constructed origami butterfly colored in shades of yellow and gold.
With each girl, I died a little with them. But for all the characterization given to Kirby and the shining girls, Harper remained bland like a paper doll, completely non-dynamic and static. I am sure Beukes intended him to be this way, because he foiled against the girls making them shine even brighter and causing me to root against him. Harper's reasons to kill did not follow logic.
The reasons followed that of a deranged one-dimensional monster who only wanted to snuff out the life of those who were born three-dimensional meant to add to the world around them rather than take from it. Harper seemed lost in finding something shiny in himself and this black hole inside him seemed to grow larger and more persistent sucking him in a void of nothingness.
With this in mind, I didn't need a scientific explanation for his time travel nor did I need rational from the mind of a monster on why he murdered. The story unfolded throughout time and reason and became a need to survive. The story traveled through time in darkness and in light and ended up on one of those sides. No spoilers, but I highly suggest reading it.
With each girl, I died a little with them. But for all the characterization given to Kirby and the shining girls, Harper remained bland like a paper doll, completely non-dynamic and static. I am sure Beukes intended him to be this way, because he foiled against the girls making them shine even brighter and causing me to root against him. Harper's reasons to kill did not follow logic.
The reasons followed that of a deranged one-dimensional monster who only wanted to snuff out the life of those who were born three-dimensional meant to add to the world around them rather than take from it. Harper seemed lost in finding something shiny in himself and this black hole inside him seemed to grow larger and more persistent sucking him in a void of nothingness.
With this in mind, I didn't need a scientific explanation for his time travel nor did I need rational from the mind of a monster on why he murdered. The story unfolded throughout time and reason and became a need to survive. The story traveled through time in darkness and in light and ended up on one of those sides. No spoilers, but I highly suggest reading it.
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