Book Review: By Book Or By Crook (A Lighthouse Library Mystery) by Eva Gates
A proposal from her long-time boyfriend prompts Reference Librarian Lucy Richardson to reevaluate her life. Although she loves her job, she doesn't love Ricky or the social circle she's allowed herself to be part of for so long. She leaves Boston for North Carolina's Outer Banks and is thrilled with her new life. Things are going exceptionally well until a priceless first edition Jane Austen novel on loan to the library is stolen, and a library board member is found murdered inside the library.
A librarian who has a small room above a library in a lighthouse? And the library has a cat? I wanted to like this book. Wanted to but didn't. I love the details about the library and the setting itself. Gates establishes a sense of place well. Character development, not so much. Gates offers a potentially interesting assortment of characters, and tells us a lot about them, in a gossipy sort of way. At this point, the first book in the series, they seem like caricatures. There's no depth, which is a shame, because it's characters' backstories that make for a compelling read.
I will give the next book in the series a try before calling it quits.
Book Review: Booked for Trouble (A Lighthouse Library Mystery) by Eva Gates
Lucy's mom comes to visit (and presumably convince Lucy to return to Boston). Because only the best will do for Suzanne Richardson, she stays at the most expensive hotel in the area, where she snubs her former classmates who work there. Suzanne and former bestie, Karen, have a loud argument in front of several hotel guests, during which Karen threatens to tell everyone about Suzanne's past. Which, of course, makes Suzanne a person of interest when Karen is found murdered soon after.
I'm done. There's potential here but there are too many books on my TBR list to see if it ever comes to fruition. Even if I don't like them, I need characters to feel real. Not a single character in this series -- and there are several to choose from -- feels like anything more than a caricature. Reviewers have praised the colorful cast, and I agree that Gates has assembled a quirky group -- but there's still no depth. Worse than that, characters change their behaviors overnight, with nothing to make the change believable.
Showing posts with label Fictional Libraries. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Fictional Libraries. Show all posts
Friday, July 27, 2018
Friday, December 8, 2017
Things will go wrong. Be prepared.
Book Review: The Invisible Library by Genevieve Cogman
In a world of parallel universes, the Library exists in its own space and time, and collects unique books from all realities. Irene literally grew up in the library and she’s now a junior grade librarian. She’s accustomed to traveling between universes to retrieve important items. She’s not accustomed to being sent on missions with students however. Nothing about this mission is typical: not the secrecy, not the student partner, not the quarantined alternate London they must infiltrate in order to get the book.
I love this book!!! I've already read it twice and I purchased my own copy so that I can re-read it whenever I like. Which I expect to be often, despite the fact that my To Read List is currently 10 pages long. It's a brilliant beginning to a series.
The story begins as Irene is attempting to retrieve an elusive copy of a famous necromancer's book. This particular alternate world is filled with magic and she finds herself pursued by the security systems set in place by Prince Mordred's Private Academy for Boys.
"There was no time for her to pause and feel smug, so she ran. Then the howling started. It was either hellhounds or teenagers, and she suspected the former."
Irene escapes but that's the last spoiler I'm offering. It's what happens next that drives the story. Within minutes of returning to the Library, her supervisor gives Irene a new assignment. That's unusual in itself. The lack of detail, the inexperienced trainee she's partnered with, and the urgency are unsettling. This is one assignment Irene isn't looking forward to.
Steampunk typically isn’t my thing, and there are steampunk elements in this story, but they are simply characteristics of this particular London. This particular London also features fae, vampires, and werewolves, so it’s definitely a happening place. While Irene and Kai encounter trouble from a variety of sources, it’s the Chaos that’s the real challenge. Chaos throws all of the rules -- natural, magical, and technological -- out of the window. Everything tends to work in unexpected ways.
Lots of action, lots of adventure. Intriguing mysteries. Interesting characters. This is simply the most fun book I've read since The Spellman Files. I’ve also read (and purchased) the next two books in the series, The Masked City and The Burning Page -- LOVE them!!! The fourth book in this entertaining series, The Lost Plot, comes out January 2018 and guess who has already pre-ordered it?
In a world of parallel universes, the Library exists in its own space and time, and collects unique books from all realities. Irene literally grew up in the library and she’s now a junior grade librarian. She’s accustomed to traveling between universes to retrieve important items. She’s not accustomed to being sent on missions with students however. Nothing about this mission is typical: not the secrecy, not the student partner, not the quarantined alternate London they must infiltrate in order to get the book.
I love this book!!! I've already read it twice and I purchased my own copy so that I can re-read it whenever I like. Which I expect to be often, despite the fact that my To Read List is currently 10 pages long. It's a brilliant beginning to a series.
The story begins as Irene is attempting to retrieve an elusive copy of a famous necromancer's book. This particular alternate world is filled with magic and she finds herself pursued by the security systems set in place by Prince Mordred's Private Academy for Boys.
"There was no time for her to pause and feel smug, so she ran. Then the howling started. It was either hellhounds or teenagers, and she suspected the former."
Irene escapes but that's the last spoiler I'm offering. It's what happens next that drives the story. Within minutes of returning to the Library, her supervisor gives Irene a new assignment. That's unusual in itself. The lack of detail, the inexperienced trainee she's partnered with, and the urgency are unsettling. This is one assignment Irene isn't looking forward to.
Steampunk typically isn’t my thing, and there are steampunk elements in this story, but they are simply characteristics of this particular London. This particular London also features fae, vampires, and werewolves, so it’s definitely a happening place. While Irene and Kai encounter trouble from a variety of sources, it’s the Chaos that’s the real challenge. Chaos throws all of the rules -- natural, magical, and technological -- out of the window. Everything tends to work in unexpected ways.
Lots of action, lots of adventure. Intriguing mysteries. Interesting characters. This is simply the most fun book I've read since The Spellman Files. I’ve also read (and purchased) the next two books in the series, The Masked City and The Burning Page -- LOVE them!!! The fourth book in this entertaining series, The Lost Plot, comes out January 2018 and guess who has already pre-ordered it?
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I wanted to like this series
Book Review: By Book Or By Crook (A Lighthouse Library Mystery) by Eva Gates A proposal from her long-time boyfriend prompts Referen...

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Book Review: The Invisible Library by Genevieve Cogman In a world of parallel universes, the Library exists in its own space and t...
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