Top Ten Tuesday – Ten of Eleven

This week’s topic is wide open. Anything we want to write about. I’m choosing not to write about books this week. Because good stories can be told in any media. Instead, I’m going to talk about Doctor Who – because season 9 finally starts this weekend and I am stoked! Doctor Who is my favourite. And like any good Whovian, I love the series as a whole, but I have my favourites. Favourite doctor. Favourite companion. Is playing favourites good? Who knows. But the joy of the changing doctor is that each one brings a different vibe fans can relate to. I loved classic DW as a kid. I adore the revamp. But most of all, I love Matt Smith’s doctor. I know there are rabid Tennant fans that will want to convert me to their side, but let’s all just have our own things, okay. Tennant is good in his own right. I totally appreciate what he does, but I love Smith. That young, quirky, but fiercely loyal and protective vibe. And my favourite companion is, without question, Rory. Because he also embodies those qualities, but in a completely different fashion. It is fortuitous for me that they overlap. I also love Donna – so no accusing me of being an eleven snob.

I started doing this list as a Doctor Who top ten. Favourite episodes of the series. I could not limit it to ten. Like absolutely could not. It was an impossible task. It meant leaving out episodes I loved that aren’t necessarily the best episodes. Or leaving out episodes that are legitimately amazing, but everyone knows that, so I figured I could leave them off… It was becoming stressful – which is just ridiculous. Blog posts should not be stressful. Especially when it’s just a list. And when I reviewed my shaved down list, I still had twenty episodes – nine of which were Smith episodes anyway. And I’d skipped some I love because I was trying to shorten the list. Honestly, I could list all of season six (except the rebel flesh episodes. I’ve grown to appreciate them, and their importance in the storyline, but man, it took several watchings to not hate them). It is my favourite season. So a new list was born – ten favourite eleventh Doctor episodes.

They’re listed in chronological order, cause actually ranking them might have given me a meltdown. Continue reading

Top Ten Tuesday – Winter TBR

Winter technically doesn’t roll in until the end of December but really, who believes that? When we’re living in inches-to-feet of snow with the constant threat of more to come, it’s winter, calendar be damned. With the new season comes a review of the TBR list. What was on my previous list? What did I get finished? What did I skip? Is there anything I want to carry forward? What’s sitting on my Goodreads list that I want to actually get around to reading?

I went into this list with only one book I knew I want to read, but when I started looking at my option, I realized there are a lot of books I want to read. I’m excited about this list. It keeps up with my super depressing book trend, but adds a couple injections of humour. Here’s my Winter TBR. What’s on yours?

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Fiendish by Brenna Yovanoff

When Clementine was a child, dangerous and inexplicable things started happening in New South Bend. The townsfolk blamed the fiendish people out in the Willows and burned their homes to the ground. But magic kept Clementine alive, walled up in the cellar for ten years, until a boy named Fisher sets her free. Back in the world, Clementine sets out to discover what happened all those years ago. But the truth gets muddled in her dangerous attraction to Fisher, the politics of New South Bend, and the Hollow, a fickle and terrifying place that seems increasingly temperamental ever since Clementine reemerged. Continue reading

Top Ten Tuesday – Summer TBR (@brokeandbookish)

Today’s TTT prompt from The Broke and The Bookish is dedicated to that books deep summer reading list that’s been slowly building for months. These are the books I’ve been compiling on my ever growing Goodreads list and my holds list at the library. A few of these are hopes since they’re on order at the library and their arrival date will dictate my read date.

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I don’t normally use book blurbs in the blog, but since I haven’t read any of these yet, that’s all I’ve got.

Bird Box – Josh Malerman

I’m actually starting this one tonight. June here is pretty gloomy, but we get so little summer it counts. This book seems pretty dark so it fits with the grey skies and rain.

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Most people ignored the outrageous reports on the news. But they became too frequent, they became too real. And soon, they began happening down the street. Then the Internet died. The television and radio went silent. The phones stopped ringing. And we couldn’t look outside anymore. Malorie raises the children the only way she can; indoors. The house is quiet. The doors are locked, the curtains are closed, mattresses are nailed over the windows. They are out there. She might let them in. The children sleep in the bedroom across the hall. Soon she will have to wake them. Soon she will have to blindfold them. Today they must leave the house. Today they will risk everything.

 

In the Woods – Tana French

This was supposed to be my next one to read, but Bird Box is due back first and has holds. This one doesn’t.

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As dusk approaches a small Dublin suburb in the summer of 1984, mothers begin to call their children home. But on this warm evening, three children do not return from the dark and silent woods. When the police arrive, they find only one of the children gripping a tree trunk in terror, wearing blood-filled sneakers, and unable to recall a single detail of the previous hours. Twenty years later, the found boy, Rob Ryan, is a detective on the Dublin Murder Squad and keeps his past a secret. But when a twelve-year-old girl is found murdered in the same woods, he and Detective Cassie Maddox—his partner and closest friend—find themselves investigating a case chillingly similar to the previous unsolved mystery. Now, with only snippets of long-buried memories to guide him, Ryan has the chance to uncover both the mystery of the case before him and that of his own shadowy past.

 

The Girl with All the Gifts – M.R. Carey

This is one of those ‘hopes’ books I mentioned earlier. It’s been on order at the library since February. It still hasn’t arrived. This girl is missing the gift of promptness.

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Melanie is a very special girl. Dr Caldwell calls her ‘our little genius’. Every morning, Melanie waits in her cell to be collected for class. When they come for her, Sergeant keeps his gun pointing at her while two of his people strap her into the wheelchair. She thinks they don’t like her. She jokes that she won’t bite, but they don’t laugh. Melanie loves school. She loves learning about spelling and sums and the world outside the classroom and the children’s cells. She tells her favourite teacher all the things she’ll do when she grows up. Melanie doesn’t know why this makes Miss Justineau look sad

 

Jason Priestley: a memoir – Jason Priestley

Memoirs are usually pretty fluffy. I tend to save them for summer reading. I have a bit of a big girl crush on Jason Priestley – I was not a fan in the 90210 days, but I love the snarky but adorable characters he’s played in recent years. His appearance on Haven – delightful! I’m actually looking forward to this one.

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The hit Fox show Beverly Hills, 90210 became a cultural touchstone of the 1990s and propelled its young cast to mega-stardom, including Jason Priestley, who played honorable Midwestern transplant Brandon Walsh. Yet despite more than twenty years in and out of the limelight, Priestley has carefully maintained his privacy. In this compelling memoir, the actor, director, and race-car aficionado invites us into his private world for the first time. With humor, sincerity, and charm, Priestley offers little-known details about his life and stories of his nine years in America’s most famous zip code. He talks candidly about celebrity, marriage, fatherhood, and his passion for car racing. He does not shy away from the devastating lows—his brief jail sentence for drunk driving and the crash at the Kentucky Speedway that nearly took his life. Priestley shares his innermost thoughts about life as a ’90s icon, and goes beyond the Brandon Walsh squeaky-clean image, revealing the tumultuous events that have shaped him, and where he finds his greatest happiness today

 

Fangirl – Rainbow Rowell

Because everyone is talking about it. And I’m a fangirl.

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Cath is a Simon Snow fan. Okay, the whole world is a Simon Snow fan… But for Cath, being a fan is her life—and she’s really good at it. She and her twin sister, Wren, ensconced themselves in the Simon Snow series when they were just kids; it’s what got them through their mother leaving. Reading. Rereading. Hanging out in Simon Snow forums, writing Simon Snow fan fiction, dressing up like the characters for every movie premiere. Cath’s sister has mostly grown away from fandom, but Cath can’t let go. She doesn’t want to. Now that they’re going to college, Wren has told Cath she doesn’t want to be roommates. Cath is on her own, completely outside of her comfort zone. She’s got a surly roommate with a charming, always-around boyfriend, a fiction-writing professor who thinks fan fiction is the end of the civilized world, a handsome classmate who only wants to talk about words… And she can’t stop worrying about her dad, who’s loving and fragile and has never really been alone. For Cath, the question is: Can she do this? Can she make it without Wren holding her hand? Is she ready to start living her own life? Writing her own stories? And does she even want to move on if it means leaving Simon Snow behind?

 

Life After Life – Kate Atkinson

I’ve received several recommendations about this one over the last few weeks. It seems worth a try.

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On a cold and snowy night in 1910, Ursula Todd is born, the third child of a wealthy English banker and his wife. Sadly, she dies before she can draw her first breath. On that same cold and snowy night, Ursula Todd is born, lets out a lusty wail, and embarks upon a life that will be, to say the least, unusual. For as she grows, she also dies, repeatedly, in any number of ways. Clearly history (and Kate Atkinson) have plans for her: In Ursula rests nothing less than the fate of civilization.

 

After the End – Amy Plum

I don’t really have a reason for this one.

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World War III has left the world ravaged by nuclear radiation. A lucky few escaped to the Alaskan wilderness. They’ve survived for the last thirty years by living off the land, being one with nature, and hiding from whoever else might still be out there.

At least, this is what Juneau has been told her entire life.

When Juneau returns from a hunting trip to discover that everyone in her clan has vanished, she sets off to find them. Leaving the boundaries of their land for the very first time, she learns something horrifying: There never was a war. Cities were never destroyed. The world is intact. Everything was a lie.

Now Juneau is adrift in a modern-day world she never knew existed. But while she’s trying to find a way to rescue her friends and family, someone else is looking for her. Someone who knows the extraordinary truth about the secrets of her past.

 

The next three haven’t been released yet, but I know I’m going to read them cause they belong to series I already read and like.

Visions – Kelley Armstrong

Book 2 in the Cainsville series

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Olivia Taylor-Jones, daughter of notorious serial killers, and Gabriel Walsh, the self-serving, morally ambiguous lawyer who became her unlikely ally. Together, they chased down a devious killer and partially cleared her parents of their horrifying crimes. Their success, however, is short-lived. While Olivia takes refuge in the old, secluded town of Cainsville, Gabriel’s past mistakes have come to light, creating a rift between the pair just when she needs his help the most. Olivia finds a dead woman in her car, dressed to look like her, but the body vanishes before anyone else sees it. Olivia’s convinced it’s another omen, a sign of impending danger. But then she learns that a troubled young woman went missing just days ago—the same woman Olivia found dead in her car. Someone has gone to great lengths to kill and leave this young woman as a warning. But why? And what role has her new home played in this disturbing murder? Olivia’s effort to uncover the truth places her in the crosshairs of old and powerful forces, forces that have their own agenda, and closely guarded secrets they don’t want revealed.

 

Silkworm – Robert Galbraith

Book 2 in the Cormoran Strike Series – J.K. Rowling’s pseudonym series

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When novelist Owen Quine goes missing, his wife calls in private detective Cormoran Strike. At first, Mrs. Quine just thinks her husband has gone off by himself for a few days–as he has done before–and she wants Strike to find him and bring him home. But as Strike investigates, it becomes clear that there is more to Quine’s disappearance than his wife realizes. The novelist has just completed a manuscript featuring poisonous pen-portraits of almost everyone he knows. If the novel were to be published, it would ruin lives–meaning that there are a lot of people who might want him silenced. When Quine is found brutally murdered under bizarre circumstances, it becomes a race against time to understand the motivation of a ruthless killer, a killer unlike any Strike has encountered before…

 

A Dark and Twisted Tide – S.J. Bolton

Book 4 in the Lacey Flint series

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Young policewoman Lacey Flint knows that the Thames is a dangerous place – after all, she lives on it and works on it – but she’s always been lucky. Until one day, when she finds a body floating in the water. Who was this woman and why was she wrapped so carefully in white burial cloths before being hidden in the fast-flowing depths? DCI Dana Tulloch hates to admit it, but she’s fond of the mysterious Lacey. Even if she keeps on interfering in her investigations, and is meddling with the latest floater case. But now she’s got to break some terrible news to her – news that could destroy Lacey’s fragile state of mind. And Lacey will need to keep her wits about her because there’s a killer that’s lurking around her boat, leaving her gifts she’d rather not receive . . .