Zombie Vampires

Of course, there has to be a book about zombie vampires.

I’ve been reading books about zombies, necromancers, and undead creatures the whole year. I picked the Blood of Eden series by Julie Kagawa because I was at a book signing and this series looked pretty. I had no idea it’s about zombie vampires but here we are. My undead books year continues.

The world ended because a virus turned most people into immortal zombie vampires. Durable but not very smart. Allison will try to survive in this hostile environment and preserve a friend here or there. She’ll get herself into a conspiracy of some kind that we will probably uncover in book 3.

The zombie dynamic is about as realistic as the zombie fungus in “The Girl with All the Gifts”. Zombies roam outside of the walled cities, hunting for people. People almost never go out to be eaten. I believe the zombies in a world like that could not last for a hundred years with no humans to renew their ranks and would just die out from hunger. The same applies to the non-zombie vampires, the math doesn’t add up. The vampire lords are very carnivorous and kill so many people that the human race should’ve ended long before the zombies.

Overall, the book is not plausible – if a zombie apocalypse happens, it won’t happen this way. Maybe some other way. Despite that, I liked it and read it quickly. Looking forward to reading the next part. I’d say it was a solid 4*/5.

Adrian Tchaikovsky is Coming to Bulgaria

I had the chance to get autographs from Brandon Sanderson and Julie Kagawa, and I may soon have the opportunity to see Adrian Tchaikovsky as well. He’s coming to Bulgaria for a book signing on September 8th. His most acclaimed work, Children of Time, is on my to-read list, and I might give it priority so I can at least start it before the signing.

So far, I’ve found that the event will be on September 8th at 7 p.m., at Club Grapmophone, Budapesta Street 6. It feels like this has to be correct because the numbers line up so well: 9/8, 7, Budapesta 6. The source, however, isn’t the publisher, so we’ll have to wait for confirmation.

Daily Harvest

I’ve been preparing the next batch of books to read for a week. Tried to use the Marie Condo approach and only ordered books that are likely to bring me joy.

  • Michael Connelly’s Nightshade features a new detective. I personally didn’t feel the need for anyone other than Renee Ballard but looking forward to meeting Detective Stilwell
  • Freida McFadden’s The Housemaid. I felt like reading another Frieda after the series about Freida Klein
  • 2 books by Nicci French – these are 3.5-rated and probably less great than the other 10 I finished. I still feel good about them and think I’ll rate them higher
  • Raymond E. Feist’s latest

The Sword of Kaigen by M.L. Wang

Strange book.

On the one hand, it’s a straightforward epic fantasy in a pseudo-Japanese settings, similar to what I’ve recently read in Jade City and Shadow of the Fox. I can’t say there’s anything surprising—the avalanche of terminology was also expected.

On the other hand, it’s full of Winnetou-type scenes, more suited for children’s books, including endless sword fights. Epic drama-rama, the kind I usually prefer to avoid.

If I had to rate it based on just that, the book would get 2 stars, 3 at most. But there’s more to it—there’s a magical world just beginning to unfold, reminding me of a new series by Raymond Feist or Robin Hobb. There’s a sense of promise. And there’s an unusual structure, as if Maya Wang didn’t particularly care about how books are “supposed” to be written. I liked that part.

So in the end, I think I might eventually read a sequel—unlike with Jade City. I want to find out what these blood puppeteers are.

July in Books

This was an unusual month for me. I got caught up in a the series about Frieda Klein, read all 8 books from the series and as an added bonus, completed House of Correction by the same authors. Nicci Gerrard and Sean French write together under the name Nicci French.

I feel it’s mostly pointless order these books from best to worst, especially when read like that one after the other, they all felt very similar.

Blue Monday, Tuesday’s Gone, and Waiting for Wednesday felt long for my taste but were otherwise great books. House of Corrections (the only one that was not from a series) was a slow start and the settings were static by design, which likely makes it the worst of the 9. Apart from that, all 9 books were solid 4/5 or 5/5, and if there was a 9th book about Frieda Klein, I’d buy it without thinking.

I own one more book by Nicci French but decided to switch back to Fantasy and Sci-Fi for August. I am currently reading a very long and famous book.