Koncocoo

Best McMurtry, Larry

Streets of Laredo: Sequel to Lonesome Dove
Riding with Call are an Eastern city slicker, a witless deputy, and one of the last members of the Hat Creek outfit, Pea Eye Parker, now married to Lorena -- once Gus McCrae's sweetheart. Accompanied by an inappropriate railroad accountant from Brooklyn, a reluctant Texas deputy and gangling, awkward Pea Eye Parker (who is trying to give up the Ranger life and settle down to farming and family with the lovely ex-whore Lorena), Call sets off, roaming the border country in his competent, unassuming fashion. As in some great 19th-century saga, the story has more than its share of improbable coincidences--people meeting fortuitously in thousands of square miles of empty territory, hearing vital news at appropriate and inappropriate moments--but these seem only mild contrivances to shape a story packed with action, terror, humor and pathos.
Reviews
"Next to Lonesome Dove, this one comes second. I felt the love that she and Pea shared in a way that Gus could never have had with her."
"I would have awarded five stars, but there was so much background given to each character that really wasn't necessary to the story."
"But, I must say, because of McMurtry's masterful style it was a satisfying read; and if one did not read LD this novel would be easily an excellent achievement."
"BUT it also makes you think to remember how each character was in book 2 and 3. some times it did not make sense but still worth the read."
"I loved Lonesome Dove - McMurtry is an excellent writer taking the reader inside of the action where emotions, pain, fury all can be felt."
"It just doesn't measure up to the other three."
"Of all McMurtys books on Lonesome Dove the original is the best as in most sequels later I wish I had not read but this one is the best of the bunch My recommendation read this and go no further His further writings are disgusting imagery and violent."
"My next read is Telegraph Days, and I'm sure I will get the same enjoyment out of it as all the other McMurtry books."
Find Best Price at Amazon
Sin Killer (The Berrybender Narratives)
Lord and Lady Berrybender have abandoned their palatial home in England to explore the frontier and to broaden the horizons of their children, who include Tasmin, a budding young woman of grit, beauty, and determination, her vivacious and difficult sister, and her brother. This deeply self-absorbed and spoiled family leaves England for the unknown of the American West, based solely on a "whim" and Lord Berrybender's desire to "shoot different animals from those he shot at home." Though Sin Killer focuses on a love story and contains plenty of realistic violence, McMurtry's efficient voice and matter-of-fact perspective leaves little room for tragedy or sentimentality, instead emphasizing high comedy.
Reviews
"I think the story could have been told in one large book with a little condensing, but then, that doesn't make as much does it?"
"I absolutely loved this book, and the entire 4 book Berrybender narratives. I listened to all of the books on CD while commuting, and the actor who read the books was terrific."
"But that was just at the start, because by the end of the book I was loving the it and even though it differs from Lonesome Dove in style and atmosphere, it does go a long way to equaling it."
"I love this writer and this is the first in a series I love."
"well written and enjoyable to read."
Find Best Price at Amazon
Telegraph Days: A Novel
Academy Award-winner Larry McMurtry offers his most ambitious Western novel since Lonesome Dove Nobody writes better about the West than Larry McMurtry, and in Telegraph Days he offers the big novel of Western gunfighters that people have been hoping for years he would write. Marie Antoinette "Nellie" Courtright and her brother, Jackson, bereft of family after their Virginia clan dies off one by one, arrive in Rita Blanca in 1876, in what would become the Oklahoma Panhandle, to remake themselves. Other adventures await: she becomes manager of Buffalo Bill's Wild West Show, boldly faces down Jesse James's attempt to rob her and witnesses the gunfight at the O.K.
Reviews
"This is about a smart woman who, left alone with her younger brother, a mule named Percy, and a bunch of gold Eagles in a hole in the wall called Rio Blanca in 1876 manages to parlay an understanding of Morse code into a life that introduces her to most of the famous of the West in the last half of the 19th Century."
"... but s good book and a pleasure to read."
"Nellie and his other characters(Wyatt, Bill Cody) all come alive in this great piece about the changing scene in the old west."
"McMurtry has another great book about the old west."
"The protagonist's exploits and accomplishments as she matures in an old west Arizona town dominated by gruff cowhands and ranchers keeps the reader wondering how she's going to get through her next challenge."
"He is trying to write as a woman character and completely fails."
Find Best Price at Amazon

Best McCaffrey, Anne

The White Dragon (Dragonriders of Pern Series)
Never had there been as close a bonding as the one that existed between the daring and adventurous young Lord Jaxom and his extraordinary white dragon, Ruth. Anne McCaffrey, the Hugo Award-winning author of the bestselling Dragonriders of Pern® novels, is one of science fiction’s most popular authors.
Reviews
"As for the Kindle Edition of this book, I am sorely disappointed in the typographical errors. The Kindle Edition is a sad disservice to the readers and fans of Anne McCaffery."
"The Dragonriders of Pern sets the example for a different kind of Science Fiction adventure, in fact, you will begin by thinking it is Fantasy, but it isn't. Millennia pass and the descendants of the humans begin learning the truth about everything except why this planet, with so many dangers, was chosen...Parallel Earth, Resources Negligible."
"I really enjoyed the story of the teen Jaxom and his unique white dragon Ruth as Jaxom came to terms with his status of one day being the Lord of Rutha hold, a dragon rider but not in the same capacity of other dragon riders."
"Her world-building, characters, animals, etc., are also just so magical that you can get lost in the stories, which is a good reason to read in this stressful world of ours."
"In addition, it was, at the time, a novel and interesting combination of fantasy set-up with good sci-fi world building and characters with some depth."
"The first of the Pern books does an excellent job of setting the scene and the environment for the Pern series."
"I am starting again at the beginning and Ann Mccaffery still transports to another world just like the very first time."
"The relationships between the dragons and their riders are wonderful and deep, and the greatest dangers they face together during Threadfall (the spores) stem as much from centuries of lost lore as the actual Threads themselves."
Find Best Price at Amazon

Best Morrison, Toni

Beloved
Staring unflinchingly into the abyss of slavery, this spellbinding audio transforms history into a story as powerful as Exodus and as intimate as a lullaby. I can’t imagine American literature without it.” —John Leonard, Los Angeles Times. “A triumph.” —Margaret Atwood, The New York Times Book Review. “Toni Morrison’s finest work. [It] sets her apart [and] displays her prodigious talent.” — Chicago Sun-Times. An extraordinary work.” — The New York Times. Resonates from past to present.” — San Francisco Chronicle. “A brutally powerful, mesmerizing story. “Toni Morrison is not just an important contemporary novelist but a major figure in our national literature.” — New York Review of Books. “A work of genuine force. Beautifully written.” — The Washington Post. “There is something great in Beloved : a play of human voices, consciously exalted, perversely stressed, yet holding true. a glorious book.” — The Baltimore Sun. A profound and shattering story that carries the weight of history. rich, provocative, extremely satisfying.” — Milwaukee Journal. Toni Morrison has become one of America’s finest novelists.” — The Plain Dealer. A lasting achievement.” — The Christian Science Monitor. “Written with a force rarely seen in contemporary fiction. One feels deep admiration.” — USA Today. Morrison shakes that brilliant kaleidoscope of hers again, and the story of pain, endurance, poetry and power she is born to tell comes right out.” — The Village Voice. “A book worth many rereadings.” — Glamour. “In her most probing novel, Toni Morrison has demonstrated once again the stunning powers that place her in the first ranks of our living novelists.” — St. Louis Post-Dispatch. “Shattering emotional power and impact.” — New York Daily News.
Reviews
"My least favorite Toni Morrison work, but she's so amazing that it's still good."
"How can one say anything except you do not know whAt you are missing if you do not read her."
"Great book."
"Toni Morrison's writing is beautiful, complex and a treat to read."
"This is the first book I have read by Toni Morrison."
"Draws you in from the first chapter."
Find Best Price at Amazon

Best Melville, Herman

Moby Dick (Naxos AudioBooks)
This epic story, here presented in unabridged form, receives an equally epic reading from the outstanding American actor William Hootkins. The enthusiastic study of the parts of the whale contrasts with the darker innuendos on God; the colorful excitability of Stubb butts up against the diabolic indifference of Ahab's Fedallah.
Reviews
"You know that thin, sixtyish, balding guy at the gym who still uses a disc-man? Thirty minutes on the treadmill, twenty-five minutes on the treadmill, a day-off, and then repeat the three-day cycle and that persistent old guy has powered through all nineteen discs in the Naxos Audio Book. For example, chapters 54, 55, and 56 are: "Monstrous Pictures of Whales", "Less Erroneous Pictures of Whales", and "Of Whales in Paint, In Teeth, & C." And a strong editor might have asked: Gee, Herman, isn't this padding? And the listener who endures such chapters and stays with the complete text will also encounter chapters 42, 47, and 48, which are the absolutely great: "The Whiteness of the Whale", "The Mat-Maker", and "The First Lowering". Then, the listener encounters Melville in his modes of profundity or great action writing."
"Hootkins did a really great job reading through this novel, doing his best to retain interest in even the most boring of chapters."
"A fantastic rendition!"
"There are many parts you must hear twice...or thrice, they are so beautifully written."
"Hootkins is very good at conveying Melville's insouciant tone, especially through many of the cetology chapters, where you intellectually understand that Melville is kidding but it just doesn't work. Well, Hootkins really brings Melville's irreverent tone to the fore. My only possible criticism of his performance is that, in the final act of the book, Hootkins frequently continues with this leisurely, almost jovial tone, even though Melville has gotten by then dead serious."
"I was thrilled to find this audio edition of a lengthy classic that I, like many Americans, doggedly plowed through in high school, when I was certainly much too young to appreciate its depth and meaning. Like Nathaniel Hawthorne, Melville is an author who speaks to the reader who has grappled with the universal questions about life and death, sanity and madness, revenge and forgiveness."
"I will be returning it - two of the CDs do not work."
Find Best Price at Amazon