Book Review: Jonathan Strange and Mr. Norrell by Susanna Clarke

Fantasy 5-/5

Mr. Norrell doesn’t want an assistant or a rival, yet Jonathan Strange becomes both as they bring practical magic back to Napoleonic-era London. Stylishly written and full of interpersonal passions, one of the things I absolutely loved was the footnotes that spoke volumes about the world and the place of magic in it. I was disappointed in the ending.

Book Review: The Rose Code – Kate Quinn


Historical 4-/5

Osla and two friends work at Bletchley Park during World War II breaking codes and managing their love lives and relationships with others—and hunting down a spy. I was a bit disappointed with this book because I so adored The Alice Network, and this one, though expertly written, felt unfocussed. The spy plot was too thin and seemed artificially propped up by Beth’s unfounded incarceration for madness and an unreasonable vendetta sparked by Mab. Altogether, there was a lot of cool stuff about how codes were broken at Bletchley, and a lot of time spent on girls living their lives, but not a lot of story.

Book Launch: Gathering of Ghosts

My productivity was inhibited by my son’s emergency retinal detachment surgery this week, as well as the follow-up appointments and eye drops, but I did teach a class and do the Calgary book launch for my most recent title. Also, I signed up to attend ICFA as an invited creative (I’ve never been before, but people tell me it is excellent) and was accepted. YAY! Also did some editing on my novel.