Book reviews for March 2016
The Girl on the Train by Paula Hawkins
2/5
I found it hard to care for anyone in this book. Pedestrian mystery.
2/5
I found it hard to care for anyone in this book. Pedestrian mystery.
4/5
Very good, I was rather hoping Howey was a one hit wonder but now I see that I'm going to have to read the whole cannon.
4/5
Finally the #2 Hole has been translated. It's a good one. Sad because it's saying goodbye all over again.
4/5
Starts with a black guy called Me in the Supreme Court for slavery and gets progressively more weird and funny from there. Excellent.
5/5
Stonking collection of perfect short stories. After I finished each one I was gutted that it wasn't turned into a whole book.
3/5
It's a prequel - how Hutch became Hutch - and because of that it's a bit limited in scope. Comfortable filler with a few good moments - worth reading for completeists.
3/5
I always want to like Kim Stanley Robinson more than i do, this time was no different. It's a generation ship colonization story with a pretty decent if depressing twist and I really enjoyed the fist half of the book. After that it gets pretty slow and repetitive and then ends in a pretty unsatisfying and trite way.
3/5
Too much flat pack furniture assembly, not enough slaying of eldrich horrors. Also I miss Bob.
3/5
Everything you need in a Reacher book, and nothing you don't. Too well oiled.
5/5
I wanted to like The Atrocity Archives more than I did (which is still quite a bit)... I'm glad I pressed on to The Jennifer Morgue which is a tight spy thriller, a send up of spy thrillers and manages to be funny and moving in turns. I'm stuck in for the duration of the Laundry Files at this point.
4/5
4/5
4/5
I really enjoyed it but the timescale is so long and so much happens that it feels a bit rushed until the last section of the book. I wish this had been teased out into a trilogy.
2/5
4/5
This is now the book I'd recommend to anyone implementing Google Analytics (and wish had been available when I started). It spends a lot of useful time on how to get data to be trustworthy, how to keep it that way and how to make sure that analysts have the right context when trying to use the data. Great stuff because this is the hard part. Getting data in is easy, being convinced that it's right and useful is complicated. My only real ding is that for some inexplicable reason you have to buy two ebooks instead of one. But that's minor, it's worth it.
4/5
Fitting end to a brilliant and disturbing trilogy.
4/5
I don't know why this comes as two ebooks... will review at the end of ebook 2.