A Little Chuckle  

Posted by Falla

Don’t Do Anything you don’t want to explain to the paramedics!


"Simon Archer" overheard on 106.5 The Arch









ape%20kisses
From Cute Pics



GATES OF FIRE FROM BRYAN WELMON  

Posted by Falla

The Gates of Fire

By Steven Pressfield
1998


ISBN 978-0385492515



An historic fiction concerning the Battle of Thermopylae as told by the sole survivor of the Spartan defenders. There are a few glaring historical inaccuracies but nothing that is so overwhelming that I wanted to stop reading. The action starts very close to the beginning of the story and does not let up until the last page.

We start the story, as told by
a Spartan regular named Xeones while on his deathbed in the Persian camp, from his childhood days as a Spartan. His training and the friendships he forges are the prominent elements of the story up to the battle. If I said any more I fear that I would be taking away some of the magic that comes from a first reading of this compelling story.

A wonderful depiction of Leonidas and his band of brothers as they pledge their lives to the survival of their homeland.

A must read for Martial Artists and Soldiers everywhere.

"Go, way-farer, bear news to Sparta’s town
that here, their bidding done, we laid us down."
--Translation of the monument at the Gates of Fire

ZEKE AND NED FROM CYNDI SIXKILLER  

Posted by Falla


* Mass Market Paperback: 448 pages
* Publisher: Pocket (October 1, 1997)
* Language: English
* ISBN-10: 0671891685
* ISBN-13: 978-0671891688


This is another book I just finished – for the second time <g> It’s pretty good reading – just don’t take it as totally factual!

Basically I read the back cover of this book and since it mentions some of my long ago relatives (the Sixkillers) I just had to read it. Most people are well aware that Larry McMurtry is a good author of western type books so I won’t go into much about that. I thoroughly enjoyed this book – it’s written in typical McMurtry style (altho Diana Ossana is listed as co-author) Low key but filled with details that would seem to be typical of life back then in Oklahoma territory, it tells the story of Zeke Proctor and his friend, Ned Christie. Both men existed in real life – there is a lot of info on the web especially about Ned Christie, a kind of folk hero at the time. The two men were good friends and the book tells the story of their lives during a rather lawless time of history not long after the civil war. Loosely based on facts, this novel still gives one a good feel for the times and the place where it all happens. Neither man is portrayed as a typical hero which gives the novel the feel of an autobiographical book. Lots of gun play and action along with down home humor and talk – great book about the Cherokee people at that

Name of the Wind from Cyndi Sixkiller  

Posted by Falla

Okay – this is a new one that I just read and it was very very good – so here is a review for you to post – I can probably send you a ton of them since I read like 2-3 books a week but I’ll start with this one (and relax I don’t intend on sending that many reviews in every week!)

**Cover of book will be uploaded shortly**

From Publishers Weekly
The originality of Rothfuss’s outstanding debut fantasy, the first of a trilogy, lies less in its unnamed imaginary world than in its precise execution. Kvothe ("pronounced nearly the same as ’Quothe’ "), the hero and villain of a thousand tales who’s presumed dead, lives as the simple proprietor of the Waystone Inn under an assumed name. Prompted by a biographer called Chronicler who realizes his true identity, Kvothe starts to tell his life story. From his upbringing as an actor in his family’s traveling troupe of magicians, jugglers and jesters, the Edema Ruh, to feral child on the streets of the vast port city of Tarbean, then his education at "the University," Kvothe is driven by twin imperatives—his desire to learn the higher magic of naming and his need to discover as much as possible about the Chandrian, the demons of legend who murdered his family. As absorbing on a second reading as it is on the first, this is the type of assured, rich first novel most writers can only dream of producing. The fantasy world has a new star. (actually taken from Amazon site)


This book was a real find – caught me up in it’s world within a few paragraphs and kept my interest til the end. It’s the first in a trilogy with the second due to come out in 2009, so I must wait a long time to see the next one but no matter, I’m willing to wait for something that I felt was good. The book jacket compares Patrick Rothfuss’s book to the Arabian Nights, the Harry Potter series and the Lord of the Rings. My own opinion is it belongs up there with the Lord of the Rings type of books (but I’m not willing to say it belongs next to it yet) and can compare it more to Terry Goodkind’s series. Easy to read – nice and long so it doesn’t end quickly and altho there are more to come, doesn’t leave you feeling like you are still missing something. Believable world, great characters that are well fleshed out and a continuous story line that holds your interest.

If you are a fantasy buff, and like trilogies, this one is a good bet. Kvothe – the main character is not a perfect person but his characterization is well done and the other members of the story line are believable and entertaining. The author does use some humor in appropriate situations but basically this is a great fantasy novel. Give it a try, I’m sure you’ll like it.

Cancer Ribbons  

Posted by Falla

THE BOOK  

Posted by Falla


After searching for nearly 20 years I finally found this book. Tomorrow my sister is giving it to me for my birthday so a review will be coming soon.

The Iron Hunt  

Posted by Falla



The Iron Hunt

Marjorie M. Liu

320 pages

June 24, 2008

ISBN-10: 0441016065

ISBN-13: 978-0441016068

Ace

Synopsis:

Living tattoos: Demons of the flesh, turned into flesh. The only family demon hunter Maxine Kiss has ever known. The only way to live—and the very way she’ll die. For one day, her demons will abandon her for her daughter to assure their own survival—leaving Maxine helpless against her enemies”

“Silver smoke winds around my torso, peeling away from my ribs and back, stealing the dark mist covering my hands and lower extremities…tattoos dissolving into demon flesh, coalescing into small dark bodies. My boys. The only friends I have in this world. Demons.

I am a demon hunter. I am a demon. I am Hunter Kiss.

By day, her tattoos are her armor. By night, they unwind from her body to take on forms of their own. Demons of the flesh, turned into flesh. This is the only family demon hunter Maxine Kiss has ever known. The only way to live—and the very way she’ll die. For one day, her demons will abandon her for her daughter to assure their own survival—leaving Maxine helpless against her enemies

But such is the way of Earth’s last protector—the only one standing between humanity and the demons breaking out from behind the prison veils. It is a life lacking in love, reveling in death, until one moment—and one man—changes everything..”

Review:

“When I was eight, my mother lost me to zombies in a one-card draw.”

It is not every day that you read something like that as the first sentence of a book, so when I caught sight of that while standing in the grocery store I couldn’t resist making the purchase and checking out the entire story.

The Iron Hunt by Marjorie M Liu is a novel about a woman named Maxine Kiss, but Maxine is no ordinary woman. By day she her body is covered with tattoos, by night she has no tattoos and a group she fondly refers to as “the Boys” are at her side. Maxine is one of a kind, a Hunter. She hunts demons, as her mother and her mothers mother and the women of her line have done for centuries.

Unfortunately for Maxine everything gets pretty tangled when a man is found dead with her name written on a scrap of paper in her pocket, and she has to figure out what happened before the police get to nosey.

Marjorie M Liu weaves a wonderful tale, rich with detail and vibrancy that draws the reader in. Iron Hunt is the first book in a new series by Ms Liu but there was a novella about Maxine in a compilation a few years ago. Reading Iron Kiss there are times when you feel that you are missing a piece of the puzzle, that piece being that you did not read the novella, but on the whole the story is well written and stands alone without the absolute necessity of reading the novella first. There are mentions of things that happened in the past, I assume that occurred in the novella, but they are not so central to the story that you loose any of the experience if you have not read the novella first.

The book is well paced, the events flow well and the reader does not get bored while reading. It is a good beach book. One to read while relaxing but not so engrossing that you cannot put it down to go to bed at night. The characters are strong out of the gate and you see much development as the story progresses, and I am sure there will be even more as the series progresses.

All in all I enjoyed the book, and look forward to the next installation in the series. I give the book a solid B.

Moonlight shimmers across the open waters of life as we all seek our path. And sometimes we are luck enough to cross paths with those who we will share a deep portion of our lifes with. Dear friends are a blessing and we should guard each one as a precious gift from the Creator. Always watch out for those you love and help them along the path as well as you can. May your path be one of love and happiness and may you never slip into the depths of the waters and loose your trail.

Cassandre WhisperingCrow Hickinbotham