gilda_elise: (Books - World at Feet)
Choose 20 books that have stayed with you or influenced you. One book per day for 20 days, in no particular order. No explanations, no reviews, just covers.

20. The Terror
gilda_elise: (Books - Reading raven)
Choose 20 books that have stayed with you or influenced you. One book per day for 20 days, in no particular order. No explanations, no reviews, just covers.

19. Famous Science Fiction Stories
gilda_elise: (Books-Owl with books)
Choose 20 books that have stayed with you or influenced you. One book per day for 20 days, in no particular order. No explanations, no reviews, just covers.

18. The Keep
gilda_elise: (Books-Birds with book)
Choose 20 books that have stayed with you or influenced you. One book per day for 20 days, in no particular order. No explanations, no reviews, just covers.

17. The Scarlet Letter
gilda_elise: (Books-Owl with books)
Choose 20 books that have stayed with you or influenced you. One book per day for 20 days, in no particular order. No explanations, no reviews, just covers.

16. Where the Wild Things Were
gilda_elise: (Books - Reading raven)
Choose 20 books that have stayed with you or influenced you. One book per day for 20 days, in no particular order. No explanations, no reviews, just covers.

15. Century of Great Short SciFi Novels
gilda_elise: (Books - World at Feet)
Choose 20 books that have stayed with you or influenced you. One book per day for 20 days, in no particular order. No explanations, no reviews, just covers.

14. Unearthing Atlantis
gilda_elise: (Books - World at Feet)
Choose 20 books that have stayed with you or influenced you. One book per day for 20 days, in no particular order. No explanations, no reviews, just covers.

13. The Sunne In Splendour
gilda_elise: (Books-Bibliophilia)
Choose 20 books that have stayed with you or influenced you. One book per day for 20 days, in no particular order. No explanations, no reviews, just covers.

12. The Far Arena
gilda_elise: (Books - Reading raven)
Choose 20 books that have stayed with you or influenced you. One book per day for 20 days, in no particular order. No explanations, no reviews, just covers.

8. Grimm's Fairy Tales
gilda_elise: (Books-Birds with book)
Shiver


In this propulsive locked-room thriller debut, a reunion weekend in the French Alps turns deadly when five friends discover that someone has deliberately stranded them at their remote mountaintop resort during a snow storm.

When Milla accepts an off-season invitation to Le Rocher, a cozy ski resort in the French Alps, she's expecting an intimate weekend of catching up with four old friends. It might have been a decade since she saw them last, but she's never forgotten the bond they forged on this very mountain during a winter spent fiercely training for an elite snowboarding competition.

Yet no sooner do Milla and the others arrive for the reunion than they realize something is horribly wrong. The resort is deserted. The cable cars that delivered them to the mountaintop have stopped working. Their cell phones--missing. And inside the hotel, detailed instructions await them: an icebreaker game, designed to draw out their secrets. A game meant to remind them of Saskia, the enigmatic sixth member of their group, who vanished the morning of the competition years before and has long been presumed dead.

Stranded in the resort, Milla's not sure what's worse: the increasingly sinister things happening around her or the looming snowstorm that's making escape even more impossible. All she knows is that there's no one on the mountain she can trust. Because someone has gathered them there to find out the truth about Saskia...someone who will stop at nothing to get answers. And if Milla's not careful, she could be the next to disappear…


I enjoy stories set in the polar regions, and though this one doesn’t quite make it there, it was close enough, and the cover intriguing enough for me to give it a try. I’m glad I did. It’s a mystery, a type of story that I’m not usually drawn to, but this one did, draw me in that is, and kept me turning the pages.

I don’t know if the sport vernacular was correct; it sounded like it was to me and that was good enough. Luckily, there wasn’t so much of it that it bogged down the story. The thing that almost ruined the story was how little the characters grew in those ten years. Especially Milla, who does some really stupid things as a twenty-something, and is still doing them as a thirty-something. To the point that she’s almost unlikable.

There are plenty of red herrings, so that the ending took me by surprise. Will I read other books by this author, mystery or no? I just might.


Mount TBR

Mount TBR 2023 Book Links

Mount TBR 2023 Book Links 1-50 )


51. Lady in Waiting by Susan Meissner
52. Jackdaw (Jackdaw #1) by K.J. Charles
53. Blightborn (Heartland #2) by Chuck Wendig
54. The Harvest (Heartland #3) by Chuck Wendig
55. The Midnight Library by Matt Haig
56. Black River Orchard by Chuck Wendig
57. The Change by Kirsten Miller
58. The Hacienda by Isabel Cañas
59. The Witching Hour (Lives of the Mayfair Witches #1) by Anne Rice
60. Abandon by Blake Crouch
61. Planet B (Architects of the Apocalypse #1) by Jasper T. Scott
62. Shiver by Allie Reynolds


Goodreads 62
gilda_elise: (Books-Owl with books)
The House on the Borderland


At an ancient and crumbling estate, overrun by wild gardens, resides a man who has a most unusual story to tell--a story that blends horror, fantasy, and science fiction. He recounts his descent into the Pit, his desperate battle against sub-human creatures and his voyage across the dimensions of time.

As a beautifully written work of pure imagination, it has few equals, and has been compared to the writings of Poe, Machen, Blackwood and Lovecraft.


Though some might compare Hodgson’s writing to the other horror writers of his time, and the reason I decided to read the book, I’m not sure how true that comparison is. Though Hodgson does use some of the tropes used by Lovecraft in this novel, he doesn’t seem to know what to do with them.

The book starts well enough. Two men on a camping trip stumble across a decaying castle and a manuscript written by the estate’s previous owner. The man’s battle with the creatures unleashed from the Pit is suspenseful, though some of his actions border on the absurd.

It’s the second half of the book that I found somewhat boring. The voyage through time is a situation where much is going on while nothing is going on. The man describes his voyage, but he’s little more than a passive passenger. It seems to have nothing to do with the rest of the book, a side trip to pass the time. No pun intended.

The campers finish reading the manuscript and then leave the area, never to return. What becomes of the sub-human creatures remains a mystery.


Mount TBR

Mount TBR 2023 Book Links

Mount TBR 2023 Book Links 1-25 )


26. Bethany's Sin by Robert McCammon
27. Mexican Gothic by Silvia Moreno-Garcia
28. The Tea Party by Charles L. Grant
29. Seeker (Alex Benedict #3) by Jack McDevitt
30. Jizzle by John Wyndham
31. The Taking by Dean Koontz
32. Frozen in Time: An Epic Story of Survival and a Modern Quest for Lost Heroes of World War II by Mitchell Zuckoff
33. A Thousand Ships by Natalie Haynes
34. Hamnet: A Novel of the Plague by Maggie O'Farrell
35. Only the Beautiful by Susan Meissner
36. The House on the Borderland by William Hope Hodgson


Goodreads 36




Set in the past

1. The House on the Borderland by William Hope Hodgson
gilda_elise: (Default)
First Friends


In the bestselling tradition of The Presidents Club and Presidential Courage, White House history as told through the stories of the best friends and closest confidants of American presidents.

Here are the riveting histories of myriad presidential friendships, among them:

Abraham Lincoln and Joshua Speed: They shared a bed for four years during which Speed saved his friend from a crippling depression. Two decades later the friends worked together to save the Union.

Harry Truman and Eddie Jacobson: When Truman wavered on whether to recognize the state of Israel in 1948, his lifelong friend and former business partner intervened at just the right moment with just the right words to steer the president’s decision.

Franklin Delano Roosevelt and Daisy Suckley: Unassuming and overlooked during her lifetime, Daisy Suckley was in reality FDR’s most trusted, constant confidant, the respite for a lonely and overworked President navigating the Great Depression and World War II

John Kennedy and David Ormsby-Gore: They met as young men in pre-war London and began a conversation over the meaning of leadership. A generation later the Cuban Missile Crisis would put their ideas to test as Ormsby-Gore became the president’s unofficial, but most valued foreign policy advisor.
These and other friendships—including Thomas Jefferson and James Madison, Franklin Pierce and Nathaniel Hawthorne, and Bill Clinton and Vernon Jordan—populate this fresh and provocative exploration of a series of seminal presidential friendships.

Publishing history teems with books by and about Presidents, First Ladies, First Pets, and even First Chefs. Now former Clinton aide Gary Ginsberg breaks new literary ground on Pennsylvania Avenue and provides fresh insights into the lives of the men who held the most powerful political office in the world by looking at the friends on whom they relied.

First Friends is an engaging, serendipitous look into the lives of Commanders-in-Chief and how their presidencies were shaped by those they held most dear.


An interesting, though sometimes simplistic look at the best friends of some presidents. I didn’t feel that there was much depth to some of the writer’s take on some of these friendships. Still, I enjoyed learning some new things. Such as:

Jefferson and Madison
I didn’t realize that these two were such good friends. All I ever read about was Jefferson’s relationship with Adams, and Adams’ last words: Thomas Jefferson still survives (he didn’t; he had died five hours earlier.)

Pierce and Hawthorne
As the author noted, Nathaniel Hawthorn is the only First Friend to be better known that the man he befriended. Which is probably for the best, since Pierce was a terrible president, his actions moving the country closer to war. His friendship with Hawthorne was interesting, though ultimately, tragic.

Lincoln and Speed
Though they met later in life (Lincoln was in his thirties,) their friendship was deep, Lincoln looking at Speed as his best friend, even his soulmate. Which, along with them sharing a room, later gave rise to the rumor that there was more between them. But rumor is all it is. Nothing has even been found to substantiate it.

Wilson and House
I’m not sure if what these two men had was truly a friendship, since it basically only encompassed the years Wilson was in the White House. For House, the friendship seemed more as a stepping stone to power. Wilson, on the other hand, was too cold, rigid, and unforgiving to do the work a friendship often entails.

FDR and Suckley
Daisy Suckley may have been what was at the time called an old maid, (regardless what some think, it seems that, not only did she not have a sexual relationship with FDR, but probably wasn’t intimate with anyone,) she would lead a fascinating and thoroughly interesting life. All because of her friendship with FDR. It does happen from time to time, that two people mesh so thoroughly that a deep and abiding friendship is inevitable. That seems to be the case with these two. And their story is both interesting and moving. Together, they made history.

Truman and Jacobson
I was surprised to learn that Truman had a best friend. I don’t know a lot about the man, but what little I’ve read he didn’t appear to be very likable.

Kennedy and Ormsby-Gore
The type of person we have as a best friend can say a lot about the type of person we are. Jack Kennedy’s best friend seemed to have been as extraordinary as he was.

Nixon and Rebozo
It’s odd that such a well-known friendship should be so little known. Nixon, the loner, and Bebe, the extrovert. It shouldn’t have worked, but somehow it did.

Clinton and Jordon
Because of all the scandals that surrounded Clinton, some real, some created by enemies, Jordon would pay for being Clinton’s best friend. Yet, though it all, he stuck it out and stayed squarely by Clinton side.






Goodreads 71


4. First Friends

Read a book recommended to you - First Friends: The Powerful, Unsung (And Unelected) People Who Shaped Our Presidents by Gary Ginsberg, Wayne Coffey

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