December 27

Best of 2010

In no real order. Also, these are the best from what I read in 2010, not what came out (expect a full list of what I read in 2010 later this week).

Oh, and one more note, there were plenty more books that I adored, but these are the ones I thought had the widest appeal. So consider this list my “You must read this book” list.

Writers Workshop of Horror by Michael Knost
Phoenix and the Darkness of Wolves by Shane Jiraiya Cummings
Odd and the Frost Giants by Neil Gaiman
Inside Out by Maria V. Snyder
20 Boy Summer by Sara Ockler
Valley of the Dead by Kim Paffenroth
Unholy Ghosts by Stacia Kane
Wolf Hunt by Jeff Strand
Troglodyte Rose by Adam Lowe
Yaccub’s Curse by Wrath James White
Impulse by Ellen Hopkins
The Stepsister Scheme by Jim C. Hines
In the Closet, Under the Bed by Lee Thompson

Ones I personally enjoyed the heck out of that might not have as wide appeal:

How to Eat Fried Furries by Nicole Cushing

Afterlife by Naomi Clark

Bayou Moon by Ilona Andrews

Pride and Prejudice and Zombies: Dawn of the Dreadfuls by Steve Hockensmith

Futile Flame by Sam Stone

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December 26

Red Hood’s Revenge by Jim C. Hines

ISBN: 0756406080

Princesses book #3

I bought this book.

With this book I’m finally caught up on this series (until March at least) and it’s this one that has the most complex, detailed world building of the three, which is saying something. Hines’ Princess books follow the further adventures of Snow White (Snow, a talented sorceress), Cinderella (Danielle, happily married princess and mother) and Talia (Sleeping Beauty whose tale is possibly the most vicious of all), fairy tale princesses whose stories didn’t quite turn out as legend would have you believe.

In Red Hood’s Revenge Danielle receives a letter from Red Riding Hood (who is now a widely feared assassin), a bold proclamation of her intent to kill Danielle for no other reason than she’s been paid to. But like in all of Hines’ books the plot (and the emotional story) is not so simple. When Snow and Talia come to Danielle’s aid, the three of them find themselves magically transported to the exotic desert land where Talia’s legend began—and where the Queen has put a death sentence on Talia’s head.

Talia must save old friends, defeat (again) the insidious fairy plot that was put in place when she was first “gifted” as a child, and save her kingdom from the Wild Hunt, which savages towns from dusk to dawn. Hines spins out the well-known fairy tale into a semi-religious and definitely political plot to destroy the human rulers of Talia’s land and bring the world under fairy rule. Likewise the subplot of Talia facing up to her own rage over what really happened to her (I’ll give you a hint if you haven’t read any of these books yet—it wasn’t the prince’s kiss that awoke her) makes for a satisfying read on many levels.

Readers won’t be able to help but become personally involved with these princesses. They’re brave, bold, strong and anything but helpless women waiting to be rescued. But Hines also holds respect for the classic feel of fairy tales, creating something strong enough, and interesting enough to stand on its own in the weight of the classic art of storytelling.

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December 21

The Mermaid’s Madness by Jim C. Hines

ISBN: 9780756405830

I bought this book.

The Mermaid’s Madness follows The Stepsister Scheme in Hines’ Princess series. It focuses on Talia (Sleeping Beauty), Danielle (Cinderella) and Snow (Snow White) whose stories are far darker than Disney would have you believe. In The Mermaid’s Madness Hines takes on possibly the least-happy fairy tale, Hans Christian Anderson’s The Little Mermaid.

Fairy tale fans know that this tale is sad and gruesome while Hines fans will find this to be the prefect tale for Hines’s princesses as Hines uses a heavy subtext of emotional recovery in this series.

Lirea is the Little Mermaid, once friend to Queen Beatrice (Danielle’s mother-in-law) who fell in love with a human prince who didn’t love her and was given a knife that would restore her tail at the cost of her betrayer prince’s life. But something happened and now Lirea is mad, broken and violent. When greeted by the queen after her family of undine return from their winter hibernation Lirea lashes out, stabbing the queen and trapping her soul in the cursed knife along with the prince’s. Now Talia, Danielle and Snow must find the cause of Lirea’s madness, find Lirea herself, and free the queen before her body gives out.

Hines’ work is excellent, layered between the fantasy and fancy of fairy tales with a real world punch that adult readers can’t help but expect. Sure we all want there to be a happy ending, but isn’t it more satisfying when it’s fought for, earned, not merely handed over as if the players are exceptions to human nature instead of parts of it? The Mermaid’s Madness is an excellent retelling of the original that nails the morbid sweetness of the legend while making it a more vibrant, fleshy thing before reader’s eyes. Fantasy and urban fantasy fans are missing out if they aren’t reading this series.

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December 16

Stop Walking on Eggshells by Randi Kreger & Paul Mason

ISBN: 9781572246904

I borrowed this book.

Borderline Personality Disorder is a complex, difficult to deal with and highly undiagnosed mental disease. While the idea of the unstable girlfriend or boyfriend is common enough to be a comedy (and horror) stereotype, this book explores a very real disorder that might be behind the actions. And unlike many books on the topic, it focuses on the supporters, caretakers, or those who have been scarred by the actions of a BPD person.

This book is very clear, easy to read and includes a ton of resources for those struggling to handle the seemingly manipulative and contradictory (and sometimes outright dangerous) behavior of a BPD-afflicted person. Referrals to other books or related topics, online communities and loaded with anecdotes this book is a support itself, and practically screams “We understand. You are not alone.” (Which those struggling sometimes need desperately to hear.)

It’s not perfect, as it focuses more on identifying and explaining behaviors and the anecdotes mostly center on displaying situational BPD behavior, not on the coping side of the book. But it is a handy, comprehensive addition to mental health libraries or a useful guide for those trying to handle the effects of BPD. In fact this is an excellent place to start in a quest to both understand and recover from the damages that this emotionally crippling disease can cause.

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December 14

Dark Scribe Black Quill Awards (vote for me)

You can vote here. I might just be involved with one of the books nominated as best anthology (Horror Library v 4). Of course, my friends Jerry Gordon and Maurice Broaddus (and publisher Jason Sizemore) might just have their epic anthology Dark Faith on the ballot in direct competition with me.

I knew I should have challenged them to duels at Apex Day.

(By the way, pictures of Apex Day are up here, if you’re interested.)

You should vote for me (aka Horror Library volume 4) because, well, it will encourage me to write more. Maybe in a zombie novel. But Jerry and Maurice are evil editor-type people who have rejected hundreds of people. Hundreds! Including me! Multiple times! Voting for them would only encourage them to reject more people, and next time it might be you.

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