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jmc_bks ([personal profile] jmc_bks) wrote2006-11-09 02:48 pm
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Thursday Thirteen



Thirteen Things about JMC
13 Authors I Love Right Now





Yeah, you can probably guess a lot of these without the 13, based just on what I blog about. But I was looking at my shelves last night, thinking about which books I keep and why, and then wondering about some books that I’ve kept for ages but haven’t re-read recently.

1. L.M. Montgomery. She was my very fist glom as a kid, before I even knew what a glom was. I loved Anne and Valancy. Emily was okay and Pat was just tolerable. Love The Tangled Web and some of the short story anthologies, too.

2. Lois McMaster Bujold. I’ve blogged about her before, so I won’t bore you again. But if you haven’t read The Curse of Chalion yet, what’s stopping you? If you aren’t willing to drop the cash on an unknown author, check out the free short stories by LMB at Baen and the excerpts on her website

3. Jane Austen. Persuasion. Have you ever read the original ending? Even JA needed to draft, because the first ending was, shall we say, disappointing? “I can listen no longer in silence . . . I am half agony, half hope...” gives me goosebumps.

4. J.D. Robb. I know, she’s not to everyone’s taste, and a lot of readers think that Born in Death is a little stale, but I love how she has flipped the male-female gender roles between Eve Dallas and Roarke.

5. Megan Whalen Turner. Eugenides the Thief is the most intriguing character I’ve read about all year. King of Attolia is on my Best of 2006 list.

6. Naomi Novik. I think her writing style could use some editing, but her world-building and historical research in the Temeraire books are excellent.

7. Anonymous Lawyer. I laugh my ass off when I read his blog, and I’m reading his book now.

8. Gabriel Garcia Marquez. I should probably re-read One Hundred Years of Solitude, but I think I’m going to pick up Living to Tell the Tale first. Fascinating. When’s the next installment of his memoirs going to be published, I wonder? Oh, I see that a collection of short stories is being released next week. Woo hoo!

9. Carla Kelly. I picked up Marian’s Christmas Wish after reading Kate’s SBD post about Regency holiday short stories. How does she manage to take all of the clichés of trads and still manage to come up with a good story?

10. Tamara Pierce. I think the conventional wisdom is that TP’s earlier Tortall books are best, but I love her Trickster books enough to re-read them regularly.

11. Indu Sundaresan. Go get a copy of The Twentieth Wife. Right now. You’re welcome.

12. Whoever wrote Eats, Shoots and Leaves. The author’s name escapes me and I don’t feel like going back to bn.com to look it up. Hurt myself I laughed so hard. And I need to find a copy of the parody, Eats, Shites and Leaves.

13. Jim Butcher. Do I even need to explain why?




Links to other Thursday Thirteens!

1. AngieW's Authors Gone Stale

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The purpose of the meme is to get to know everyone who participates a little bit better every Thursday. Visiting fellow Thirteeners is encouraged! If you participate, leave the link to your Thirteen in others comments. It’s easy, and fun! Be sure to update your Thirteen with links that are left for you, as well! I will link to everyone who participates and leaves a link to their 13 things. Trackbacks, pings, comment links accepted!



[identity profile] nm-eviled.livejournal.com 2006-11-09 08:47 pm (UTC)(link)
This is me chanting JD Robb's name. I tried to buy her new book at both my Wal-mart's the past couple days. Why don't they have it? At one, the lady stocking books looked at me like I was on crack when I explained JD Robb was also Nora Roberts and I thought they'd have it. She kept pointing to some random hardcover and saying "this is the latest Nora Roberts book". I refrained from pointing to the trilogy two feet from her which would actually be the latest. *sigh*

Here's my TT: http://nicemommy-evileditor.com/blog/?p=695

[identity profile] jmc-bks.livejournal.com 2006-11-09 09:10 pm (UTC)(link)
I was in Books a Million last night, buying a copy of Rolling Stone for the Stewart-Colbert interview, and I looked for Born in Death to torture myself (I pre-ordered it and was pleasantly surprised to find it waiting for me at home last night). They had NO copies. None. Not in romance w/ NR; not in mystery; not in scifi/fantasy, where I occasionally find them since they are futuristic; not in straight fiction. No end cap. No table display. Nothing. Maybe they were sold out or maybe they just needed to replenish their shelves. I was surprised, because BAMM is normally pretty good about new releases.