Current book queue:
Dec. 30th, 2009 02:09 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
Finished the brilliant, nostalgic Child of Man by Kristina Tracer (thank you, Kristy!), and will soon, probably by Friday, finish the utterly delightful (yes, I'm weird) and engrossing Werewolves: A Field Guide to Shapeshifters, Lycanthropes, and Man-Beasts by Dr. Bob Curran, enhanced by gorgeous b&w illustrations by Ian Daniels. This book is everything I love, obsess over, and grow excited about; yet I can never find words to properly explain why such subject matter moves me. Regardless, I recommend this whole-heartedly to any fellow lycanthropy lover and shape-shifter aficionado. Thank you a thousandfold for this, Watching!
Next up: The Werewolf's Guide to Life: A Manual for the Newly Bitten by Ritch Duncan. Thank you for this, Nona! I've skimmed through it briefly, and oh my! -- it is my brand of lycanthropic humor all the way. I'm afraid there won't be much audience for it, many who won't get it or the references, but I do. And boy, do I appreciate it. Makes me feel all warm an' fuzzy. >;-)
Then it's the new Charles de Lint collection of Newford stories, Muse and Reverie. Thank you, Tornir!
Followed by Palimpsest by Catherynne Valente. Thank you, MissLynx!
Next up: The Werewolf's Guide to Life: A Manual for the Newly Bitten by Ritch Duncan. Thank you for this, Nona! I've skimmed through it briefly, and oh my! -- it is my brand of lycanthropic humor all the way. I'm afraid there won't be much audience for it, many who won't get it or the references, but I do. And boy, do I appreciate it. Makes me feel all warm an' fuzzy. >;-)
Then it's the new Charles de Lint collection of Newford stories, Muse and Reverie. Thank you, Tornir!
Followed by Palimpsest by Catherynne Valente. Thank you, MissLynx!