[I've been
reading]
« November, 2025 »
Blades of Furry

I will read most graphic novels which come in to my library, most of which are YA. Which is how I wound up reading this queer, furry, paranormal ice skating story. It was really well done. The story moves along, you don’t need to know/care about skating. The characters are believable, the tension isn’t overdone. My only complaint was that I somehow overlooked at this was just “volume one” and I read 500 pages of it just to have it be “to be continued...” [Deya Muniz is a co-author on this book]

Hunter’s Heart Ridge

This book didn’t cohere quite as nicely as the one which preceded it. It was a very complex story about men who go to a hunting lodge, one of their party gets killed. There’s a “we’re all stuck here” snowstorm. Another member gets killed. The power goes out. That sort of thing, with a side story involving people who I knew and liked from the last book but which barely overlapped with this plot. I felt like the author has created a new series with two people who are at the center of it, but really only one was prominent in this book. I also felt like the author had a definite sense of the place she wanted the story to take place in more than she had a plot which would unfold. I like mysteries which take place in VT but this one was just okay.

Six Centuries of Type and Printing

I am interested in the history of printing and this short and beautifully made short book was a nice little introduction to the various machines which transfer ink to paper to enable us to read it. It got a little in the weeds for me occasionally (complex descriptions of how a printing system worked which were hard for me to visualize) and there’s a LOT of vocabulary. Overall, glad I read it and Glenn was definitely the guy to write this.