Sunday, November 3, 2024

Her Night With the Duke by Diana Quincy

 Ok. So. Yes, I like the occasional romance novel.  I do. I'll even admit to appreciating the occasional R+ rated scene. However, I don't generally go for reading smut just for the sake of smut. I want a good story. I want the ... ahem... physical exertians... to mean something more than just physical gratification. One of the romance series where that has always been true is the "Bridgerton" series. It's a historical romance series and there is more going on there then just a wrapper for smut. I like both the books and the Netflix adaptations. However, when my TBR.co recommender sites Bridgerton as a reference for recommending something that looks entirely like a regency romance series, I worry a bit. 


In all honesty, this was a little too far off in the romance novel angle for me. My reviewer recommended this to me saying that it was remniscent of the relationship between Anthony and Kate (Netflix version). The Bridgerton novel is really just an adaptation off of "Taming of the Shrew" which makes it a lot of fun. However, that's not really what Her Night with the Duke was really doing. It's a much different narrative. 

Taming of the Shrew is really about gender relations within a marriage and it was really just the same lesson as Chaucer had in "A Knight's Tale." The central idea for both of these stories is that women want control over their own destinies. They want choice. (Remarkable that they got it in Medieval England but somehow Trump misses the point...isn't it) 

Her Night with the Duke actually goes a step futher and suggests that women want the ability to shift for themselves in society. Delilah, the main character, is a writer and a business person in her own right. Romance is nothing but a distraction. 

Delilah is also only half caucasian which adds an element to be sure. However, I really think the stronger point has to do with the idea of woman been the intellectual and commercial equals to men. 

Ultimately, this was a good read. Not my cup of tea, maybe, but ultimately a good story. The first 30 pages are entirely blush worthy, but if you get past them, there's some excellent character development and a good story. It's a good story but it could do with a little less sex. 

Saturday, November 2, 2024

November List

In all reality I only read 4 books last month, yet somehow it ended up feeling like a very successful month which I suppose is the importan thing. The point of the pre-randomized order is to get through the list even if it means I'm dropping something, but I haven't really figured out what to do with the new books each month. One kind of logic suggets that I should just tack them on at the end of the list. It makes sense but it's not a lot of fun. This month I decided to move everything on the old list up and then insert the new books into the list by rolling for their positions. I don't know if I love it, but it's what we are doing this time. 

Last month's reading had no bad reads. Everything was good... or at least fun. My favorite was A Market of Dreams and Destiny but the other three were all good. I'm also proud of myself for getting more book reviews on the blog. I'm going to try hard this month to keep it all going. 

  1. Quasar, Quasar, Buring Bright by Isaac Asimov 4
  2. Navola by Paolo Bacigalupi - Dropped it, seems like a good book but more dense than I can really do right now.
  3. Atlas of AI by Kate Crawford (professional Reading) - NF 2
  4. Red Team Blues by Cory Doctorow (Library Book) - 9
  5. I am Not Okay With This  by Charles Forsman 14
  6. Burning Chrome by William Gibson  12
  7. Lord of the Flies by William Golding (class novel) - 18
  8. Lady Jaines series by Cynthia Hand, Brodi Ashton, & Jodi Meadows
    1. My Lady Jane (Finished 11/4/2024) 
    2. My Calamity Jane - 11
  9. YouSpace Series by Tom Holt (Fantasy)
    1. Doughnut (Finished 3/5/2024)
    2. When It's A Jar (Finished 7/6/2024)
    3. The Outsorcerer's Apprentice (Finished 1/15/2024)
    4. The Good, the Bad and the Smug - 16
    5. An Orc on the Wild Side - 17
  10. Spider Gwen, Ghost Spider (Marvel Universe - Graphic Novel) - 10
  11. Lagoon by Nnedi Okorafor - 8
  12. A Stroke of the Pen by Terry Pratchett - 13
  13. The Discworld Graphic Novels by Terry Pratchett - 15 
  14. You Sexy Thing by Cat Rambo (Finished 11/25/2024)
  15. Cover Story by Susan Rigetti (previous TBR) - 20 
  16. The Algorithm by Hilke Schellmann - NF 1
  17. The Walls Around Us by Nova Ren Suma (Finished 11/27/2024)
  18. Code Name Verity by Elizabeth Wein - 19
  19. Artemis by Andy Weir 6
  20. How to Live Safely in a Science Fictional Universe by Charles Yu (Science Fiction) -5
Assigned or otherwise pre-scheduled Reading:
  1. Strategic Communications for School Leaders by Vicki Gunther, James McGowan, and Kate Donegan (Grad School) - Finished 11/26/2024
  2. The Principal's Guide to School Budgeting by Richard D. Sorenson & Lloyd M. Goldsmith (Grad School) - Finished 11/25/2024
  3. Percy Jackson and the Olympians: The Titan's Curse by Rick Riordan (Thomas Book)

August List

 July got away from me. It went by fast too. We spent a big chunk of the month doing a massive book sort and cull. We off-loaded around 500 ...