Showing posts with label games. Show all posts
Showing posts with label games. Show all posts

Saturday, December 10, 2022

The Christmas Murder Game by Alexandra Bennett

December 9, 2022

The Christmas Murder Game by Alexandra Bennett

On the first Christmas following her death, Liliana Armitage-Feathers has arranged for her surviving family to assemble at Endgame House, the family's country house. Every Christmas, they play a game, following clues that lead them to their Christmas presents. This year will be no different, except the clues will lead them to the ultimate holiday gift: the deed to Endgame House.

The Westing Game meets Clue (or Cluedo, it you're a Brit). I love mysteries set in country houses but this one was disappointing. The author was so focused on showing the reader how clever she is, that she neglected to use that same focus on the mystery. I had a good idea pretty early on about who was the murderer and who was working behind the scenes. I always read a few seasonal books, and this is my last Christmas mystery for 2022.

Disappointing.

Many thanks to Edelweiss and the publisher for providing an eARC for review.

Christmas at an English Country House - always wanted a place like this

Saturday, September 10, 2022

One of Us is Next by Karen McManus

October 10, 2021

One of Us is Next by Karen McManus

Welcome back to Bayview High! A year has passed since Simon's death, and there's a new class of seniors. No one has filled the gossip void left by Simon's app - until now. But it's not an app, it's a game on social media. Truth or Dare. It soon becomes apparent that if you're targeted, you always take the dare. But when the game turns deadly, some of the students team up to figure out who is the mastermind behind the game in order to stop them.

This is the sequel to One of Us is Lying and feature the younger siblings of some of the characters in the first book. There are a lot of characters with multiple POVs, and they have complicated love lives. Like many YA books, the characters' actions and dialog will make you cringe at times, and some characters are TSTL. But it's a quick read that will keep you turning the pages.

Wednesday, November 13, 2019

The Starless Sea by Erin Morgenstern


November 12, 2019

The Starless Sea by Erin Morgenstern

The son of a New Orleans fortuneteller, Zachary Ezra Rawlins is a graduate student majoring in Emerging Media studies, specifically gaming.  Shortly before the new term begins, Zachary is browsing in the university library when he comes across an old book called Sweet Sorrows which appears to be a collection of short stories.  He begins to read and is shocked to find a story from his own life in the book.  He sets out to discover the origin and meaning of the book, a quest that will take him to an underground fantasy world centering on a magical library.




There is definitely a gaming theme and references to role playing games (RPG).  The player is on a quest or journey, seeking something or someone, or trying to get to a particular place or time.  I play hidden object games sometimes, and it's common for the player's progress to be barred by a locked or blocked door (or gate, window, staircase, etc.).  In order to move forward, the player needs to search the area to find the key or objects that will assist in opening the door, sometimes having to follow instructions on how to use an object.  The player often collects items that may be useful later; unlocks and explores multiple levels; encounters other players or beings who may or may not be helpful, and decide if they are friend or foe; and is forced to choose the right way to proceed.  Players sometimes change identities or assume disguises.

I loved Morgenstern’s first book The Night Circus, also a fantasy, from the first page.  I don’t like circuses, but this was one circus that I would gladly have sought out.  I liked The Starless Sea, her second book, but I didn’t love it.  It’s basically a book-within-a-book (or three books within a book), which usually really appeals to me, and the plot reminds me of Neil Gaiman’s Neverwhere (the main character is an everyman thrust into an extraordinary and fantastical situation).  The cover art is beautiful and almost three dimensional.  The story is full of literary illusions, and beautiful and fantastic descriptions of magical places, and in order for the book to make any sense, you have to put it in the context of an elaborate video game.  The storyline is confusing because there are so many parts and so many things that are not fully explained.  For example, the reader is told repeatedly that the pirate, the first character introduced in the book, isn't really a pirate but is actually a metaphor, but the reader is never told what he is a metaphor for.  When you get to the end of the book, you almost need to go back to the beginning and start over.  When the audiobook is released, I may try listening to it.

Thursday, August 1, 2019

Never Have I Ever by Joshilyn Jackson

August 1, 2019

Never Have I Ever by Joshilyn Jackson



This is a story about games and people who play them, especially about the worst thing you've ever done (and more than one character has a dark secret).

Amy Whey is living a quiet orderly life and she likes it that way.  She has her husband Davis, her stepdaughter Madison, and baby son Oliver.  Her career as a diving instructor is currently on hold since the birth of her son, but she looks forward to going back to it soon.  About the most exciting thing she does is host her friend Charlotte’s neighborhood mommy book club, which focuses on classical literature and 19th century comedies of manners.  That is, until a new neighbor named Roux moves in and takes over the book club, insisting that they play a game similar to the high school game of Never Have I Ever.  But the game seems to be specifically aimed at Amy, and Roux hints that she knows all about the past that Amy left behind.  Unless Amy gives her what she wants, Roux will make the information public.

Several party and “icebreaker” games are mentioned:  Never Have I Ever, Mother May I, Truth or Dare, Two Lies One Truth, Spin the Bottle, Bet.

Having read Jackson’s last novel, The Almost Sisters, this title is something of a departure for her.  Probably 20 pages of baby chores could have been omitted (feeding the baby, changing the baby, checking the baby, etc.), but unlike Ruth Ware’s The Lying Game, the baby conversation doesn’t hijack the story.  Several good plot twists kept me turning the pages.

Many thanks to NetGalley and the publisher for an e-ARC in exchange for a review.