This was an impulse library check out since the YA room was right there when I was returning some DVDs and I didn’t feel like running upstairs. I’m so glad that I grabbed it, it was right up my alley. Cadel is a young genius, taken to see a psychologist for troubled youth after he gets caught hacking into the power grid in his Australian city, at the ripe old age of 7 years old. But oddly enough, the first thing Dr. Roth does is […]
Timely yet depressing
This book (mine was an early review copy via LibraryThing) was inspired by Atul Gawande’s “Being Mortal”, and since both physicians have worked at the same Boston hospital, I was interested in reading this take on how doctors deal with terminal patients. It’s pretty much of a memoir of how Zitter came to be a doctor and learned to overcome her training to become more of a patient focussed healthcare provider. She’s worked in ICUs around North America and shares deidentified stories about how people […]
The night is dark and full of terrors
I found this through Scalzi’s big idea series and immediately put it in my library request list. The list of contributing authors is heavily weighted to my recent favourites, not to mention that I always love dark reinterpretations of fairy tales. This was an awesome collection, starting strong and ending great (and the physical book is gorgeous with lovely internal illustrations, I’ll be buying my own copy). There was a good representation of countries as well as a nice mix of modern retellings with more […]
Exploding my to-read list
The prologue to this seemed familiar, but I kept reading since I’d been encouraged to try out this lighter novel after not enjoying Walton’s “The Republic” very much. Turns out that I’d read it in 2012, oops. But that was long enough ago that the details were fuzzy and I enjoyed the re-read. It’s a fantasy story, strongly grounded in the real world of Wales and England in the late 1970’s/early 1980’s, telling what happens to a hero after she’s saved the world, how she […]