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The Moon in Deep Winter
by Lee Polevoi

$0.99
Kindle Edition published 2008-01-10
Bestseller ranking: 460964

Product Description
This literary thriller revolves around Parker Sloane. When he returns from a dismal foray into third-world cash-smuggling to his childhood home in the woods of New England, it seems he’s seeing his country and his blended stepfamily for the first time—and finding both just as twitchy, desperate, paranoid and unpredictable as the underworld types he thought he’d escaped.

Before he can even unpack, Parker goes head-to-head with his relatives—his tyrannical stepfather, seething younger brother, newly evangelical mother, and his alluring younger half-sister Rita—and with the demons they never exorcised.

Delicately but disastrously, Parker attempts to keep his family from imploding, unaware that they have their own plans for escape. The Moon in Deep Winter combines the dark comedy of the Coen brothers with the doomed lyricism of Denis Johnson, creating an airtight world of homicidal family dysfunction.
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Author Topic: The Quasi-Official February Book Reading Game  (Read 7718 times)
Geoffrey
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« Reply #175 on: February 18, 2010, 12:06:49 PM »

Don't feel bad. I did have it on my list. If it hadn't been for this I would have never gotten to it. Even though I didn't enjoy it much, I'm glad I read it. At least now I know I'm not a Gaiman fan and don't have to wonder anymore.

So, you're saying I should be your selector next month to ensure you have the opportunity to read more Gaiman?    Grin
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« Reply #176 on: February 18, 2010, 12:11:23 PM »

good to know you would have spent the money on it anyway..heres to a better book in March Smiley
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« Reply #177 on: February 18, 2010, 12:14:21 PM »

So, you're saying I should be your selector next month to ensure you have the opportunity to read more Gaiman?    Grin

Do I have to add that to my deal-breakers???

No Gaiman and Geoffrey can't pick my books...  Cheesy
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« Reply #178 on: February 18, 2010, 12:33:17 PM »

I just got tired of what seems to be a common technique/theme/motif in fantasy these days: some overwhelming evil/bad thing that threatens everyone, several different and separated characters who presumably will somehow be involved in dealing with the main challenge....

That is one of the reasons I don't read much in the genre.  Too much of it is too much alike, but that said, a fantasy novel without the overwhelming evil or dark overlord would be like a science fiction novel without space ships or aliens.  Good novels can be written without them, but the troupes are so easy to fall into that many authors just use them without thinking.
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« Reply #179 on: February 18, 2010, 02:34:06 PM »

That is one of the reasons I don't read much in the genre.  Too much of it is too much alike, but that said, a fantasy novel without the overwhelming evil or dark overlord would be like a science fiction novel without space ships or aliens.  Good novels can be written without them, but the troupes are so easy to fall into that many authors just use them without thinking.

It's not the overwhelming evil antagonist that bothers me (though I think you could have a perfectly fine fantasy novel with a moderately whelming local evil, it just wouldn't be an epic fantasy Wink ) so much as it is the multiple characters and sub-plots that I find irritating. Maybe it's just as I get older I don't want to have to work so hard remembering names, who was plotting to do what to whom, etc., etc., all while the big evil gets more and more powerful while all the other characters squabble amongst themselves.
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« Reply #180 on: February 23, 2010, 06:37:18 PM »


Done.  A bit later than expected, but it's been a busy past week, almost no reading time.


NogDog...  I may never forgive you...  your recommendation has added several dozen books to my TBR list. 


Thanks for a good read.   The total lack of any connection to reality was perfect for this week.   Cheesy
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« Reply #181 on: February 23, 2010, 06:53:44 PM »

Done.  A bit later than expected, but it's been a busy past week, almost no reading time.


NogDog...  I may never forgive you...  your recommendation has added several dozen books to my TBR list. 


Thanks for a good read.   The total lack of any connection to reality was perfect for this week.   Cheesy

Glad you enjoyed it. Whenever life gets a bit much for me, Pratchett is my go-to author to lift my spirits. I just started re-reading Making Money this week, and it's kind of scary now realizing how applicable it is to the financial melt-down that happened in reality a year or so after it was published.
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Geoffrey
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« Reply #182 on: February 24, 2010, 04:50:47 AM »

Done.  A bit later than expected, but it's been a busy past week, almost no reading time.


NogDog...  I may never forgive you...  your recommendation has added several dozen books to my TBR list. 


Thanks for a good read.   The total lack of any connection to reality was perfect for this week.   Cheesy

For your next Pratchett, I suggest you try Wyrd Sisters.  You really need to meet Granny Weatherwax, Margrat Garlick and Nanny Ogg.
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« Reply #183 on: February 24, 2010, 05:32:25 AM »

Or how about Mort, containing as it does the immortal line: "I don't know about you, but I could murder a curry."  (Or, perhaps more correctly:  "I DON'T KNOW ABOUT YOU, BUT I COULD MURDER A CURRY.")

Don't get us started on Terry Pratchett.  This sort of stuff can continue all day... 
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« Reply #184 on: February 24, 2010, 05:47:41 AM »

For your next Pratchett, I suggest you try Wyrd Sisters.  You really need to meet Granny Weatherwax, Margrat Garlick and Nanny Ogg.
Well, she needs to read The Light Fantastic first, as it finishes the story begun in The Color of Magic. (Fortunately, they are the only two DW books so closely entangled.) While Granny and Nanny are near the top of my list, my personal favorite is the Sam Vimes / City Watch series (starting with Guards! Guards!).

Oh, and the Librarian. *Ook!*
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« Reply #185 on: February 24, 2010, 08:11:52 AM »


Yes, I found the three or four KB threads dealing with his books, and have been trying to determine the best order to read them in.  (I checked online first, but the various sites don't all agree, so I figured KB could give me the real scoop.  Cheesy)   If only there were a way to identify the order once they're on the Kindle. 

I also read his Wiki-bio.  He has a greenhouse full of carnivorous plants.  I like this guy....  (Before I neglected my garden after DD was born, I used to have a corner with a Poison Garden....  all the plants that at some time in history have been thought of as poisonous.  Except for potatoes.)
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« Reply #186 on: February 25, 2010, 05:45:22 AM »

Malweth,  did you finish the Gargoyle?  I'm looking forward to hearing what you thought of the selection.
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« Reply #187 on: February 25, 2010, 05:51:29 AM »

Malweth,  did you finish the Gargoyle?  I'm looking forward to hearing what you thought of the selection.

1.  I am not Malweth.

2.  I didn't officially participate in the February Reading Game (did, however, use it to access a great number of book recommendations.

That said:  I read The Gargoyle late last year and loved, loved, loved it.  (I know it was late last year, because I chased around to about four bookstores locating copies of it to give as holiday gifts.)  What a truly wonderful book!!!

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