Week Three Prompt Response
1. I am looking for a book by Laurell K. Hamilton. I just
read the third book in the Anita Blake series and I can’t figure out which one
comes next!
There are 26 titles
in the Anita Blake, vampire hunter series. The fourth title is The Lunatic Café published in 1996
(Novelist & KDL What’s Next Book in Series)
2. What have I read recently? Well, I just finished this
great book by Barbara Kingsolver, Prodigal Summer. I really liked the way it
was written, you know, the way she used language. I wouldn't mind something a
bit faster paced though.
For my selections I
focused on the patrons love of the writing style rather than the genre.
Novelist describes Prodigal Summer as
being written in a lush, lyrical, and descriptive manner. So I searched for
books with this writing style but with fast pacing. My results included Champion of the Scarlet Wolf book one
and two by Ginn Hale. These books are epic fantasies / LGBTQIA fiction with a
romantic tone and a strong sense of place. Also fitting this writing style are Yellow emporer’s cure and The miniaturist both by Kunal Basu which
are historical fiction with a dramatic steamy tone.
3. I like reading books set in different countries. I just
read one set in China, could you help me find one set in Japan? No, not modern
– historical. I like it when the author describes it so much it feels like I
was there!
For this query I searched
for richly detailed historical fiction set in Japan. The thousand Autumns of Jacob De Zoet by David Mitchel and The Teahouse fire by Ellis Avery are the
two first recommendations by Novelist.
4. I read this great mystery by Elizabeth George called
Well-Schooled in Murder and I loved it. Then my dentist said that if I liked
mysteries I would probably like John Sandford, but boy was he creepy I couldn't
finish it! Do you have any suggestions?
I’m guessing Sanford
is to violently graphic and dark. I would first be curious to know if the
patron read all of the Thomas Lynley mysteries by George. If not, I would have
them start at book one with A great
deliverance. Otherwise I would recommend the Duncan Kincaid and Gemma James
mysteries by Deborah Crombie. Staring with A
Share in Death. Like the Thomas Lynley series they are British Police
procedurals that are intricily plotted and leisurly paced. The Chief Inspector
Wexford mysteries by Ruth Rendell may also be a good fit.
5. My husband has really gotten into zombies lately. He’s
already read The Walking Dead and World War Z, is there anything else you can
recommend?
I Did a quick search
for books with a theme of Zombie apocalypse, the following titles and series
look promising.
·
Day by Day Armageddon series by J.L.
Bourne
·
Cell by Stephen King
·
Dawn of the Dead by George A. Romero
·
Rot and Ruin, Warrior Smart Graphic
novel series by Jonathan Maberry
·
The Enemy by Charles Higson
·
The zombie autopsies: secret notebooks from
the apocalypse by Steven C. Schlozman
6. I love books that get turned into movies, especially
literary ones. Can you recommend some? Nothing too old, maybe just those from
the last 5 years or so.
For this query I
searched for fiction works with the genre as “books to movies” and limited
returns from 2014 to present. For this search I received 46 results. I then
ordered them by popularity based on the folksonomy premise (which is not always
true) that popular movies tend to more well done. Promising results:
1. The
girl on the train by Paula Hawkins
2. The
Martian by Andy Weir
3. A man
called Ove by Fredrik Backman
4. Orgin
by Dan Brown
5. The
Children Act by Ian McEwan
7. I love thrillers but I hate foul language and sex scenes.
I want something clean and fast paced.
For this query I
searched for fast paced books in the gentle reads genre. Promising titles / series:
·
Better off read: a bookmobile mystery by
Nora Page
·
The Psychic
Eye Mysteries series by Victoria Laurie
·
Aurora
Teagarden mysteries series by Charlaine Harris
Jason,
ReplyDeleteYou and I came to the same conclusion for question 4. The way the question was phrased made it seem like they had no idea that the book they just read was part of a 20-book series. That could keep someone busy for months!
We also chose the same books for the Zombie question. Well, the two I chose are also two of the five that you chose. I personally and not a fan of zombie apocalypse books, (except for the massive amounts of violence) but for some reason The Zombie Autopsies sounds very interesting. Maybe because there is a science aspect to it. Focusing on the cure rather than the survival? Because I feel like most zombie books are the same. Its just a matter of who will be left alive at the end.
I love the direction you took for the Prodigal Summer prompt! Basing your recommendations on writing style more than genre is a neat idea, and reading your recommendations made me realize that I always automatically use genre as my first consideration when searching for recommendations, when that may not always be the thing that the person loved so much about the book they recently read.
ReplyDeleteGreat job with your answers! You used a variety of resources and took your searching skills in some interesting directions to get great answers. Full points!
ReplyDelete