June 12, 2012

Book Review: Last Call for the Living


Peter Farris's debut novel, Last Call for the Living, is an in-your-face crime thriller that starts out with a simple heist: Hobe Hicklin, a violent ex-con, hits up an isolated bank branch in rural Georgia. For reasons that Hicklin can't quite explain, though, he takes one teller hostage, and the life of Charlie Colquitt, a quiet and nerdy college student, life will never be the same.

Hicklin takes Charlie to his hideaway in the woods, where Charlie lives in fear of his life, and yet is undeniably fascinated by the enigmatic Hicklin and his meth-head girlfriend, Hummingbird. As the days pass, the three of them fall into uneasy patterns of familiarity, and Charlie begins to feel a surprising bond to Hicklin. But Hicklin's Aryan Brotherhood pals, who set up the robbery, are very unhappy that he jumped the gun and took the cash for himself. They're torturing anyone who knew Hicklin to find out where he is, and the cops and the Georgia Bureau of Investigation are on Hicklin's heels too. Suddenly the hideaway is a lot less hidden, and Hicklin must run for it again.

Gritty and real, Last Call for the Living shows the dark side of rural Georgia's sketchy bars, trailers and snake-handling charismatic churches. As the cops and the villains work equally hard to find Hicklin, they showcase two very different sides of southern society. Readers along for the ride may be shocked and horrified, but never bored.

The back of the book had a blurb comparing it to Cormac McCarthy novels. The only Cormac McCarthy book I ever read was The Road (and I hated it) - but I saw the movie of No Country for Old Men, and this book did remind me of that. So I think if you're a McCarthy fan you'd probably enjoy this. And, you can picture Hobe Hicklin with a haircut much better than Javier Bardem's.

Rating: 4 out of 5
Should I recommend this to my grandma? Nope. There are some pretty graphic torture scenes which I feel that grandmas will not enjoy.
I wrote this review for Shelf Awareness. It originally appeared in Shelf Awareness for Readers.

Do you like dark mysteries? 
Are you a Cormac McCarthy fan?

June 10, 2012

Speedreading and Audiobooks


 Ahem. You know how I got all those books in my mailbox?

I've been reading like crazy, and I'm making good progress, hooray! I still need to start The Eyre Affair  for next Sunday's first link-up for the Summer Reading Club, but otherwise I'm feeling a lot better than I was a few days ago. I meant to write another audio review for National Audiobook Month, but I figure that can wait a bit since I'm on a reading roll. And I think for future reference I need to work on scheduling things better so that I don't end up having a bunch of reviews due all at once!

In the meantime, here are a few quick audiobook* recommendations:
And, just out of curiosity, let's talk about reading speeds for a minute. I can finish an average fiction book in about 2-3 hours. I'd say I read about 2.5 pages a minute for light fiction, 2 pages a minute when I'm reading for review, 1.5 for nonfiction. It's part of what makes my goal of reading 150 books this year possible.


How fast do you read? Are you a procrastinator too?

*(Audiobook? Audio book? I'm just not sure about the proper spacing.)

June 8, 2012

Summer Reading, Hunger Games, and BEA (Links)

If you follow me on Twitter, you probably saw me gushing about my new bookshelf. Makes me so happy every time I go up the stairs and walk past it!



  • Don't forget that the first link-up for the Summer Reading Club is only a little more than a week away! Have you been reading The Grand Sophy or The Eyre Affair?
  • Anyone thinking of having a Hunger Games DVD release party*? Check out these Hunger Games inspired cocktails and these Hunger Games party food ideas. 
  • If you follow any other book blogs you've probably seen all the hype about Book Expo America. I so wish I could be in New York for BEA right now! But since I can't, there's always Armchair BEA. I've been having fun reading link-ups from tons of other book bloggers that I didn't know. Next year I'm going to have to be ready and link up some posts of my own.

*Ok, maybe (just maybe) some friends and I are having one. But you already knew we were Hunger Games dorks.