
WWW Wednesday is a weekly book meme run by Sam over at Taking on a World of Words.
The Three Ws are:
What are you currently reading?
What did you recently finish reading?
What do you think you’ll read next?
Currently Reading
I’ve taken it upon myself to read more books concurrently than is normal for me at the moment. The first, and lightest, of these is the Age of Reptiles Omnibus Vol. 1 by Ricardo Delgado et al. It is an omnibus collection of stories about dinosaurs told completely visually. No word bubbles, narrative boxes, or even text sound effects grace the pages whatsoever. It is all completely visual storytelling and so far I think it’s done very well. The style is very evocative, perhaps giving these colossal creatures more expression than they were capable of, but it’s artistic license I can more than accept. The only place I’ve stumbled with it so far is that some packs of dinosaurs, with members who are at times distinct, can also be hard to tell apart.
I also started Tales From a Galaxy Far, Far Away: Aliens by Landry Q. Walker. It is a collection of short stories written for younger audiences about some of the aliens that appear as background characters in Star Wars: The Force Awakens. I wanted to start this as a supplemental read to my primary book, and so far I am finding it a fair breeze to get through. While the writing definitely reads easier, I’m surprised at some of the content considering the intended audience. The second story involved a sous chef being found butchered and strung up in a meat locker. I enjoyed it fine, but that’s a bit dark for a “kids” book isn’t it?
Lastly, I decided to start Fire & Blood by George R. R. Martin, the latest book published related to the Song of Ice and Fire series. I forgot to put this on my scrappy list for the year, but since I’ve made better progress than I thought I would I decided to take the plunge with it now. I knew it was an account of the past in this narrative world, but I did not know that it was written like an in-universe historical text. This had made the prose a lot more dry than I was expecting. Martin’s writing is still strong, but I was hoping for more of a narrative. I really hope another big red book doesn’t slow down my reading progress this year. 2019’s only just started!
Recently Finished
Over the weekend I finished two books, the first being Lost at Sea by Bryan Lee O’Malley. Despite being a fan of the author/artist’s work for a long time, I’ve never gotten around to this one, his first ever graphic novel. The blurb says the main character Raleigh believes she has no soul—that it was stolen by a cat—it’s a much more grounded story than this suggests, intimately exploring the character’s state of mind as she takes part in a road trip from California to British Columbia. She’s at a turning point in her life, confused and with no sense of direction. I loved the way that O’Malley captured this in his quirky style without diminishing the weight of her emotional situation.
I also finished The Saturday Night Ghost Club by Craig Davidson, which I posted a review of yesterday. I enjoyed this novel a lot, though it was much more of a coming-of-age story than I expected going in. The mystery around Uncle Calvin became too predictable for me, but it was still effective in the end. I simply loved the characters in this novel; Davidson crafted them into such living, breathing people that the familiar formulas at play hardly mattered. I especially found that I could relate to the main character, finding a lot in common with myself when I was that age. I think this has become my favourite of his novels that I’ve read.
Reading Next
With as many books as I’ve got on my plate at the moment I really don’t know what’s next, except I definitely want to veer back onto my scrappy list so I can continue getting it done. I started strong getting two books crossed off, but now I’ve picked up two deviations from the plan, so more fool me.
Until next week, thank you for reading!
“I knew it was an account of the past in this narrative world, but I did not know that it was written like an in-universe historical text.” Oof, I’m less excited to read that one now. Maybe I’ll get the audio book so I can multi-task while reading it. Martin really just needs to get the next ASOIAF book out already. Nobody asked for this prequel. lol.
My thoughts exactly. I was a lot more open to this book when I thought it was a narrative prequel. Now I’m just a little more bitter that we still don’t have Winds of Winter yet.
The Saturday Night Ghost Club is going on my TBR. It sounds fun, and I enjoyed your review of it. Have a great week of reading!
I will be interested to see how concurrently reading different books works for you! I know before you said you were a one-book-at-a-time person. It works for me until around 4 books and then chaos reigns supreme. Lost at Sea looks great too. I need more graphic novels in my life!
Lost at Sea is definitely a good choice! The stuff I’ve got around Fire & Blood is a lot less dense so hopefully it won’t be an issue. I can do multiple books at once — wouldn’t have survived university if I couldn’t — but one at a time is definitely a more comfortable choice for me.
I know I won’t be able to get through Fire & Blood, so I’ve decided to pass on that one. If it was about half the size I might attempt it.
Lost at Sea was a fun read! Borderline too teenager-y for me, but I remember still really enjoying it.
Yeah, I’m just hoping Fire & Blood won’t bog me down too much. I’ve started it so I can’t bring myself to turn back now. Here’s hoping I won’t be in the middle of it until May-June.
I really want to read fire and blood but I’m boycotting it until he gets the winds of winter out lol look forward to hearing your thoughts