Thursday, September 29, 2011

Book Haul

I got a few this week from Gallery and one courtesy of Tor. I can't keep up (what a terrible problem to have I know) and they all look awesome.


Laddertop by Orson Scott Card and Emily Janice Card, Illustrated by Honoel A. Ibardolaza - I've only read a couple manga novels (One Piece) and loved every one. It's fun and fast and I hope this lives up to my expectations.

Twenty-five years ago, the alien Givers came to Earth. They gave the human race the greatest technology ever seen— four giant towers known as Ladders that rise 36,000 miles into space and culminate in space stations that power the entire planet. Then, for reasons unknown, the Givers disappeared. Due to the unique alien construction of the Laddertop space stations, only a skilled crew of children can perform the maintenance necessary to keep the stations up and running.

Back on Earth, competition is fierce to enter Laddertop Academy. It is an honor few students will achieve. Robbi and Azure, two eleven-year-old girls who are the best of friends, are candidates for the Academy. They will become entangled in a dangerous mystery that may help them solve the riddle of the Givers...if it doesn’t destroy the Earth first!


Thawed Out & Fed Up by Ryan Brown - Can't say I've heard of Brown before, but this seems pretty interesting.

Sam Bonham—bad husband, deadbeat dad, and possible criminal on the run from the law—wanders out of modern-day East Texas into an ersatz Wild West boomtown created for a movie that never happened. And when Sam strikes a blow against the gangsters who’ve been terrorizing the town, the locals look to him to save them. He’s no hero, but he’s stumbled upon someone who is: John Wayne. But the John Wayne of this story is not the stalwart lawman of Hollywood films—he’s a seventy-two-year-old man who had himself cryogenically frozen. He’s weak, bald, frail…and unrecognizable to everyone but Sam.

In The Duke’s “defrosted” state, he’s not entirely himself. In fact, he believes he’s actually Ethan Edwards, the character he played in The Searchers, one of Wayne’s most beloved films. Ethan or Duke or Marion Morrison, at his side Sam learns how to be a man, and a hero—and a pretty good shot! As he takes on the Old West gang of thugs, he finds that he might have become a family man at last. But back in the real world, someone has his eye on Sam’s wife, and if Sam doesn’t get back soon, the results could be devastating.


Day by Day Armageddon: Origin to Exile by J. L. Bourne - This is an omnibus of the first two books in the Day by Day Armageddon series. This is supposed to be similar to Max Brooks' World War Z, which I also need to read. :)
START INTERCEPT
Armies of undead have risen up across the U.S. and around the globe;there is no safe haven from the diseased corpses hungering for human flesh. But in the heat of a Texas wasteland, a small band of survivors attempt to counter the millions closing in around them.

INTERCEPT COMPLETE

Survivor,

Day by day, the handwritten journal entries of one man caught in a worldwide cataclysm capture

the desperation—and the will to survive—as he joins forces with a handful of refugees to battle

soulless enemies both human and inhuman from inside an abandoned strategic missile facility.

But in the world of the undead, is mere survival enough?

8 comments:

  1. Oh, so you have read some manga. I'm a huge manga reader (though over the past 6 months I haven't read much). One Piece is awesome indeed.

    I usually read it while I'm at work, but haven't found the time lately.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Nice Haul! I haven't started the Day by Day Armageddon first book but its on my zombie shelf waiting to be read.

    Speaking of zombies - yes I have like 1 and half shelves devoted to them. My sis even made a zombie plush to giveaway as part of a review I did check it out it ends tomorrow.

    Its so nice to find other blogs that have the kind of fiction I like - for awhile there all I could find was paranormal YA book blogs.

    I haven't read any manga but I watch a lot of anime =P I do like some graphic novels though.

    Pabkins @ Mission to Read

    ReplyDelete
  3. @Bastard - Yep, but I'm still criminally under-read.

    @Pabkins - Nice, I'm really excited to read it and thanks for the heads up.

    ReplyDelete
  4. Well, if you feel like it, give me a list of what you've read some time, and I'll give you some recommendations.

    ReplyDelete
  5. Deal. My list:

    A couple Once Piece's
    Laddertop

    I think that's it, but I might have read something else.

    ReplyDelete
  6. Lol, oh man. You're going to make this hard for me aren't you.

    Well, any respectable manga reader has to start with Berserk by Miura Kentaro. After reading this, you'll have yourself a new definition of what it means to be a badass.

    Fair warning, it's very graphic and at times disturbing sexually wise.

    If you want something more along the lines of One Piece (shounen), then my favorite series is Hunter X Hunter by Togashi Yoshihiro.

    He also happens to be the mangaka of Yu Yu Hakusho, which should be more familiar with since the adaptation of it in Cartoon Network (I used to hate it, but then watched it in Japanese and loved it).

    ReplyDelete
  7. All sound awesome. I love the extremes that manga goes to. It's not afraid to make someone super bad-a and the creativity is just unique...from what I've read. Just reserved a copy of Berserk at the libary (intentional spelling).

    ReplyDelete
  8. Cool, as far as I know, Dark Horse is doing a good job on it.

    A lot of US manga publishers censor a lot of shit, but as far as I know, Dark Horse has left Berserk intact.

    ReplyDelete

Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.