Picking a best book of the year or even a selection of best books is actually kind of hard, partially because I read so much and partially because 2013 was the year I veered a little - okay make that a lot - from traditional books.
Instead I have been reading fanfic. Lots and lots of fanfic. Which I adore. Still that doesn't mean that I haven given up reading more traditional and accepted stories. But even these I have been doing in slightly less traditional means.
Because e-books and audio dramas ARE THE BEST. Like REALLY. I have become a major convert.
One, because with e-books I can store hundreds and hundreds of books on one little device. No more lugging around bags bursting to the seams with books - well not as much. Instead I can pop in all the stories, books, music and audios that I could possibly get through on a device the size of a paperback.
Two, multi tasker that I am, I can now do housework, exercise, even do my work all while getting my latest story fix courtesy of all the audio dramas I now have.
Bliss. Utter bliss.
So instead of giving you my best of best books for 2013 here are my picks for best stories. Because really they are all one and the same.
A series of murders [compact disc] : a Charles Paris mystery / by Simon Brett.
I adore Bill Nighy. But I really adore him in these series of audio dramas done by the BBC. Wonderfully funny as well as being detective stories, Nighy is glorious as Charles Paris, a sometimes actor, a womaniser, a man who drinks and smokes too much who seems to have a knack for getting involved in solving murders. If only they would turn these into a TV series with him starring in them my life would be complete (well almost...)
Cabin pressure. The complete series 4 [compact disc] / written by John Finnemore.
I love Benedict Cumberbatch but that's not the only reason that I choose this as one of my favourites of the year. After all any audio that makes you laugh so hard that it causes you to shoot drink out of your nose has got to be a winner... Trust me you just have to give these a go.
Dark Eyes: An 8th Doctor Who Adventure
Sadly we don't have these at Auckland Libraries (hint hint hint to any audio selectors) but don't let that put your off in trying to hunt them down because they are well worth it. If you had any doubts about Paul McGann as the 8th Doctor Who then listening to all the Big Finish audio dramas will completely change your mind.
Pines / Blake Crouch
Thrillerly, sci-fiing Pines is one of those books where you just didn't see it coming. Even better the sequel is now out AND it's being turned into a TV series, though I'm not getting my hopes up as they'll probably ruin the book completely. As they do...
Sleepwalkers / Tom Grieves
Another thrillerly, sci-fiing story. I'm sensing a pattern here but that's okay I often find that I tend to go through trends with my story intakes.
Wool / Hugh Howey
An online sensation that resulted in a book deal and a movie deal, Wool is the first in a series and is just my kind of thing. Science fiction rules (as it should) and 2013 was the year of some great science fiction books.
And there you have it. Six stories that stayed in my head. Not necessarily the best books of the year but ones that I enjoyed along with a huge range of others. So why not check the above out as well as these other titles that I enjoyed through 2013.
City of Bones / Cassandra Clare
The Maze Runner / James Dashner
Best Served Cold / Joe Abercrombie
The Fault In Our Stars / John Green
Showing posts with label audio books. Show all posts
Showing posts with label audio books. Show all posts
Tuesday, 21 January 2014
Wednesday, 14 August 2013
Comedians and their books (Part 2) The UK edition
Round 2 the UK edition! A lot of the books below also come in audiobook form. I personally prefer to listen to comedy memoirs than to read them because usually they're read by the author and it's kind of like listening to stand-up that way. Enjoy the hilarity!
Is it just me? by Miranda Hart
Well hello to you dear browser. Now I have your attention it would be rude if I didn't tell you a little about my literary feast. So, here is the thing: is it just me or does anyone else find that adulthood offers no refuge from the unexpected horrors, peculiar lack of physical coordination and sometimes unexplained nudity, that accompanied childhood and adolescence?
I am proud to say I have a wealth of awkward experiences - from school days to life as an office temp - and here I offer my 18-year-old self (and I hope you too dear reader) some much needed caution and guidance on how to navigate life's rocky path.
Because frankly where is the manual? The much needed manual to life. Well, fret not, for this is my attempt at one and let's call it, because it's fun, a Miran-ual. I thank you
Camp David by David Walliams
David Walliams has been the camp aide to the Prime Minister, the rubbish transvestite and the long-suffering wheelchair pusher for an able-bodied man. He was launched to fame with the record-breaking "Little Britain", and for a while you couldn't enter a playground without hearing "eh eh eh eh" or "computer says no". But David Walliams is more than a comedian. He's a fascinating and complex person with a sharp intellect, a sensitive disposition and a refreshing honesty. Often described as 'a bundle of contradictions', he has disarmed people by being camp and a ladykiller, a hedonist and a sportsman, aloof and warm. Like many of our comedic geniuses - Frankie Howerd, John Cleese, Kenneth Williams - he has grappled with depression and remains an enigma. His autobiography "Camp David" is a roller-coaster ride of emotions. It will surprise and entertain, and allow fans and newcomers the privilege of entering David Walliams' uniquely brilliant mind.
My Booky Wook by Russell Brand
In 2006 Russell Brand exploded onto the international comedy scene. He has been named Time Out’s Comedian of the Year, Best Newcomer at the British Comedy Awards, and Most Stylish Man by GQ’s Men. His UK stand-up tour was sold out and his BBC Radio 6 show became a cult phenomenon, the second most popular podcast of the year. Before the fame, however, Russell’s life was anything but glamorous. His father left when he was three months old, he was bulimic at age 12, and began drinking heavily and taking drugs by age 16. He regularly visited prostitutes in Soho, began cutting himself, took drugs on stage during his stand-up shows, and even set himself on fire while on crack cocaine. In 2003 Russell was told that he would be in prison, a mental hospital, or dead within six months unless he went into rehab. He has now been clean for three years, and hasn't looked back since. This is Russell’s amazing story
Nerd do Well by Simon Pegg
Zombies in North London, death cults in the West Country, the engineering deck of the Enterprise: Simon Pegg has been ploughing some bizarre furrows in recent times. Having blasted onto the small screens with his now legendary sitcom Spaced, his rise to the UK's favourite son status has been mercurial, meteoric, megatronnic, but mostly just plain great. From his childhood (and subsequently adult) obsession with Star Wars, his often passionate friendship with Nick Frost, and his forays into stand-up which began with his regular Monday morning slot in front of his 12-year-old classmates, this is a joyous tale of a homegrown superstar and a loyal boy made good.
Moab is my Washpot by Stephen Fry

Fry has already given readers a taste of his tumultuous adolescence in his autobiographical first novel, The Liar, and now he reveals the equally tumultuous life that inspired it. Sent to boarding school at the age of seven, he survived beatings, misery, love affairs, carnal violation, expulsion, attempted suicide, criminal conviction and imprisonment to emerge, at the age of eighteen, ready to start over in a world in which he had always felt a stranger. One of very few Cambridge University graduates to have been imprisoned prior to his freshman year, Fry is a brilliantly idiosyncratic character who continues to attract controversy, empathy and real devotion
I, Partridge: We need to talk about Alan by Alan Partridge
Journalist, presenter, broadcaster, husband, father, vigorous all-rounder -- Alan Partridge -- a man with a fascinating past and an amazing future. Gregarious and popular, yet Alan's never happier than when relaxing in his own five-bedroom, south-built house with three acres of land and access to a private stream. But who is this mysterious enigma?...A literary tour de force, I, Partridge: We Need to Talk About Alan charts the incredible journey of one of our [Britain's] greatest broadcasters"--Publisher's description.
Is it just me? by Miranda Hart
I am proud to say I have a wealth of awkward experiences - from school days to life as an office temp - and here I offer my 18-year-old self (and I hope you too dear reader) some much needed caution and guidance on how to navigate life's rocky path.
Because frankly where is the manual? The much needed manual to life. Well, fret not, for this is my attempt at one and let's call it, because it's fun, a Miran-ual. I thank you
David Walliams has been the camp aide to the Prime Minister, the rubbish transvestite and the long-suffering wheelchair pusher for an able-bodied man. He was launched to fame with the record-breaking "Little Britain", and for a while you couldn't enter a playground without hearing "eh eh eh eh" or "computer says no". But David Walliams is more than a comedian. He's a fascinating and complex person with a sharp intellect, a sensitive disposition and a refreshing honesty. Often described as 'a bundle of contradictions', he has disarmed people by being camp and a ladykiller, a hedonist and a sportsman, aloof and warm. Like many of our comedic geniuses - Frankie Howerd, John Cleese, Kenneth Williams - he has grappled with depression and remains an enigma. His autobiography "Camp David" is a roller-coaster ride of emotions. It will surprise and entertain, and allow fans and newcomers the privilege of entering David Walliams' uniquely brilliant mind.
My Booky Wook by Russell Brand
Zombies in North London, death cults in the West Country, the engineering deck of the Enterprise: Simon Pegg has been ploughing some bizarre furrows in recent times. Having blasted onto the small screens with his now legendary sitcom Spaced, his rise to the UK's favourite son status has been mercurial, meteoric, megatronnic, but mostly just plain great. From his childhood (and subsequently adult) obsession with Star Wars, his often passionate friendship with Nick Frost, and his forays into stand-up which began with his regular Monday morning slot in front of his 12-year-old classmates, this is a joyous tale of a homegrown superstar and a loyal boy made good.
Moab is my Washpot by Stephen Fry
Fry has already given readers a taste of his tumultuous adolescence in his autobiographical first novel, The Liar, and now he reveals the equally tumultuous life that inspired it. Sent to boarding school at the age of seven, he survived beatings, misery, love affairs, carnal violation, expulsion, attempted suicide, criminal conviction and imprisonment to emerge, at the age of eighteen, ready to start over in a world in which he had always felt a stranger. One of very few Cambridge University graduates to have been imprisoned prior to his freshman year, Fry is a brilliantly idiosyncratic character who continues to attract controversy, empathy and real devotion
Journalist, presenter, broadcaster, husband, father, vigorous all-rounder -- Alan Partridge -- a man with a fascinating past and an amazing future. Gregarious and popular, yet Alan's never happier than when relaxing in his own five-bedroom, south-built house with three acres of land and access to a private stream. But who is this mysterious enigma?...A literary tour de force, I, Partridge: We Need to Talk About Alan charts the incredible journey of one of our [Britain's] greatest broadcasters"--Publisher's description.
Thursday, 1 August 2013
This month I'm loving...
Online chatting.
Whether it's via twitter or a forum I just have to say it's absolutely *awesome*.
The conversations that people have online are intelligent, interesting and inspirational. They are also - quite often in fact - really funny. Where else can you chat about the books with outlandish titles, linear writing vs free-form writing (or chapter hopping as I call it - and which I am entirely notorious for doing in my own writing) and which TV show pairing is awesome or just plain icky and voice your opinion that the she or he of such pairing should be killed, preferably in the most gruesome way possible.
I always come away from these chats with a warm, glowy feel-good feeling that helps to inspire and encourage me throughout the day. I also often come away with an ever increasing list of music to listen to, things to read and movies/TV shows to watch. So much so that I've pretty much given up the idea that I will ever get my To-be-read, watched and listen to pile down.
And that's exactly how I like it.
Pitch Perfect
I found out about this movie entirely from twitter conversations which raved about it. So of course I just had to check it out.
As you do.
It's funny, has awesome female characters and some great singing. It also has The Cup song. And if you don't know what this is then you really do need to check it out. It just might make you want to watch this movie for that scene alone.
Bleak Expectations
I *adore* Anthony Head, better known as Giles from Buffy as well as a realm of British TV shows and the Nescafe coffee ads from the late 80's.
I now adore him even more after listening to this radio comedy in which he plays Mr Gently Benevolent, the sinister villain.
Bleak Expectations is a silly, hammy and utterly irreverent take on just about every Charles Dickens novel written plus a few others. My favourite was the War of The Worlds send-up of which I will probably never look at in quite the same way again.
Reviver by Seth Patrick
"Jonah Miller is a Reviver, able to temporarily revive the dead so they can say goodbye to their loved ones--or tell the police who killed them. But while reviving the victim of a brutal murder, he encounters a terrifying presence. Something is on the other side watching..."
A crime novel. A horror novel. A science fiction novel. Reviver combines them all in this creepy and absorbing read.
172 Hours On The Moon by Johan Harstad
"More than forty years since the first moon landing, no-one has been back since then - until now. Three teenagers are about to find out why..."
Blood-curling creepy. The ending will just blow your mind.
Pretty Girl-13 by Liz Coley
"16 year old Angie finds herself in her neighborhood with no recollection of her abduction or the 3 years that have passed since, until alternate personalities start telling her their stories through letters."
Gripping and sad, Pretty Girl-13 is a story of a girl trying to come back after the truly horrific has happened to her.
Backtrack by Jason Dean
"James Bishop is no stranger to being on the wrong side of the law. Finally a free man, with his name cleared, he has the chance to get his life back on track. But as he flees the scene of the hold-up with a terrified hostage, he once again finds himself a wanted man."
This novel starts out one way and then takes a complete 180 and spins everything you thought you know on its head. Don't you just love stories that do that?
Whether it's via twitter or a forum I just have to say it's absolutely *awesome*.
The conversations that people have online are intelligent, interesting and inspirational. They are also - quite often in fact - really funny. Where else can you chat about the books with outlandish titles, linear writing vs free-form writing (or chapter hopping as I call it - and which I am entirely notorious for doing in my own writing) and which TV show pairing is awesome or just plain icky and voice your opinion that the she or he of such pairing should be killed, preferably in the most gruesome way possible.
I always come away from these chats with a warm, glowy feel-good feeling that helps to inspire and encourage me throughout the day. I also often come away with an ever increasing list of music to listen to, things to read and movies/TV shows to watch. So much so that I've pretty much given up the idea that I will ever get my To-be-read, watched and listen to pile down.
And that's exactly how I like it.
Pitch PerfectI found out about this movie entirely from twitter conversations which raved about it. So of course I just had to check it out.
As you do.
It's funny, has awesome female characters and some great singing. It also has The Cup song. And if you don't know what this is then you really do need to check it out. It just might make you want to watch this movie for that scene alone.
Bleak ExpectationsI *adore* Anthony Head, better known as Giles from Buffy as well as a realm of British TV shows and the Nescafe coffee ads from the late 80's.
I now adore him even more after listening to this radio comedy in which he plays Mr Gently Benevolent, the sinister villain.
Bleak Expectations is a silly, hammy and utterly irreverent take on just about every Charles Dickens novel written plus a few others. My favourite was the War of The Worlds send-up of which I will probably never look at in quite the same way again.
"Jonah Miller is a Reviver, able to temporarily revive the dead so they can say goodbye to their loved ones--or tell the police who killed them. But while reviving the victim of a brutal murder, he encounters a terrifying presence. Something is on the other side watching..."
A crime novel. A horror novel. A science fiction novel. Reviver combines them all in this creepy and absorbing read.
"More than forty years since the first moon landing, no-one has been back since then - until now. Three teenagers are about to find out why..."
Blood-curling creepy. The ending will just blow your mind.
"16 year old Angie finds herself in her neighborhood with no recollection of her abduction or the 3 years that have passed since, until alternate personalities start telling her their stories through letters."
Gripping and sad, Pretty Girl-13 is a story of a girl trying to come back after the truly horrific has happened to her.
"James Bishop is no stranger to being on the wrong side of the law. Finally a free man, with his name cleared, he has the chance to get his life back on track. But as he flees the scene of the hold-up with a terrified hostage, he once again finds himself a wanted man."
This novel starts out one way and then takes a complete 180 and spins everything you thought you know on its head. Don't you just love stories that do that?
Friday, 19 April 2013
The Hills Are Alive With The Sound...
A shortish post from me this week.
The body as they say is willing but the brain has decided to go on complete strike and be bloody difficult. Writer's block sucks.
Big time.
Still it could be worse. This post could have started with "See Jane run. See Dick run." which is just about the standard that my brain is capable of at the moment.
I'm going to blame it all on the BBC and Big Finish.
Now I never thought of myself as an audio book fan. I had, of course, tried some many years ago but somehow I found them just a bit... flat.
Then I got onto Big Finish. First with their array of Stargate audio books and then with their 8th Doctor Who adventures starring Paul McGann as the Doctor. Wanting to expand my horizons from just listening to science fiction I then discovered the BBC or more accurately BBC4.
It was like finding the holy grail. Or least what I imagine it would be like.
The variety that the BBC produces is enormous. From comedies to crime dramas to Shakespeare and Sci-Fi. I have become hooked.
And like all addictions I just have to share. So here's just a small taste of what I have been listening to and more.
Murder in the title [compact disc] : a Charles Paris mystery / Simon Brett.
I *adore* Bill Nighy. So when I found that he featured in a series of radio dramas featuring an alcoholic, womanising actor who seems to constantly stumble across dead bodies where ever he goes I just had to give them a try.
And I'm so glad I did. The Charles Paris mysteries featuring him are just marvellous with Nighy being... well Nighy..
Cabin pressure. Complete series 2 [compact disc] / written by John Finnemore.
A BBC4 find. The appeal of this was that it featured Benedict Cumberbatch. Or the Cumberbeast as he is known as to his many fans. It also sounded really funny.
And it is. Gloriously so.
In fact I guarantee this will have you laughing out aloud.
The adventure collection. Volume 2 [compact disc]
As a Doctor Who fan I just had to try these series of adventures read by David Tennant.
Though they don't have a full-cast like the ones above, Tennant's voice worked really well for me.
Then again I'm probably biased.
Torchwood [electronic resource] : the lost files.
The last story in this audio book made me cry.
Really.
I bawled my eyes out.
If that's not a recommendation I don't know what is.
Desert Island Discs [compact disc]
I haven't listened to this - yet.
But it's on my list.
The idea of famous people being interviewed about what book, music etc they would take to a desert island sounds fascinating, so how could I not give it a go.
The big sleep [compact disc] / Raymond Chandler.
I love the movie The Big Sleep with Humphrey Bogart so finding out that there was a audio-dramas - done by the BBC no less, I just had to add it my list of To Be Listened To.
It also features Toby Stephens (member of the RSC, son of Dame Maggie Smith and the villain in the James Bond movie Die Another Day).
I can so imagine him as P.I. Philip Marlowe.
The body as they say is willing but the brain has decided to go on complete strike and be bloody difficult. Writer's block sucks.
Big time.
Still it could be worse. This post could have started with "See Jane run. See Dick run." which is just about the standard that my brain is capable of at the moment.
I'm going to blame it all on the BBC and Big Finish.
Now I never thought of myself as an audio book fan. I had, of course, tried some many years ago but somehow I found them just a bit... flat.
Then I got onto Big Finish. First with their array of Stargate audio books and then with their 8th Doctor Who adventures starring Paul McGann as the Doctor. Wanting to expand my horizons from just listening to science fiction I then discovered the BBC or more accurately BBC4.
It was like finding the holy grail. Or least what I imagine it would be like.
The variety that the BBC produces is enormous. From comedies to crime dramas to Shakespeare and Sci-Fi. I have become hooked.
And like all addictions I just have to share. So here's just a small taste of what I have been listening to and more.
I *adore* Bill Nighy. So when I found that he featured in a series of radio dramas featuring an alcoholic, womanising actor who seems to constantly stumble across dead bodies where ever he goes I just had to give them a try.
And I'm so glad I did. The Charles Paris mysteries featuring him are just marvellous with Nighy being... well Nighy..
A BBC4 find. The appeal of this was that it featured Benedict Cumberbatch. Or the Cumberbeast as he is known as to his many fans. It also sounded really funny.
And it is. Gloriously so.
In fact I guarantee this will have you laughing out aloud.
The adventure collection. Volume 2 [compact disc]As a Doctor Who fan I just had to try these series of adventures read by David Tennant.
Though they don't have a full-cast like the ones above, Tennant's voice worked really well for me.
Then again I'm probably biased.
Torchwood [electronic resource] : the lost files. The last story in this audio book made me cry.
Really.
I bawled my eyes out.
If that's not a recommendation I don't know what is.
Desert Island Discs [compact disc] I haven't listened to this - yet.
But it's on my list.
The idea of famous people being interviewed about what book, music etc they would take to a desert island sounds fascinating, so how could I not give it a go.
I love the movie The Big Sleep with Humphrey Bogart so finding out that there was a audio-dramas - done by the BBC no less, I just had to add it my list of To Be Listened To.
It also features Toby Stephens (member of the RSC, son of Dame Maggie Smith and the villain in the James Bond movie Die Another Day).
I can so imagine him as P.I. Philip Marlowe.
Thursday, 28 February 2013
This Month I'm Loving...
well any month that isn't February.
I hate February.
And yes I know it's kind of silly to hate a month. But I do.
There's just something about February that is off-putting. Whether it's the heat, the fact that the holidays and relaxed mood of Christmas is finally over or strange vibes in the air. There is something about February that is unsettling.
Strangely enough I've discovered that I not the only one to feel this way. Which is nice - it's always great to find someone who shares in your insanity, whether it's rational or not.
Luckily for me I've discovered heaps of new things to help ease the unsettled blues as well as getting reacquainted with some old friends.
So how is the month that shall not be named, treating you?
The Lumineers

Music as always is one of the best way's to shake those unsettled blues away and The Lumineers are one of my favourite new discoveries.
These guys (and girl) are amazing. A folkie-indie-pop band I could easily listen to them all day... oh right I pretty much do. Their music is catchy and bouncy and just a pure delight.
I can hardly wait for them to do another CD.
My favourites are Ho Hey, Stubborn Love, Flowers in Your Hair and Submarines.
My one and only thrill / Melody Gardot.
At 18 a car ploughed into her while she was out cycling. What helped in her in during the years of recovery was music. From her hospital bed she began writing songs.
And this, along with her other 2 albums, are the results.
Featuring nearly all original material she is a jazz-blues singer along the likes of Diana Krall and I have just fallen in love with the song Who Will Comfort Me. It's just a great foot-tapping jazz song that is sure to make you smile.
Punk goes pop. Volume 4

Now I'm not a huge punk fan. But as they say there's punk and then there's punk.
I love the Clash and The Cure and The Pretenders. Bands who had punk roots in their music but who also sang across other genres.
Now of course there's a wide range of punk styles and bands who fit into other genres. It seems that punk has become popular - who knew.
This CD features an array of punk artists doing they own unique take on some popular songs. My absolute favourite is Tonight Alive's version of Little Lion Man which I think is almost better than the original by Mumford and Sons.
Golden age [compact disc] / [by James Goss].
I have a new addiction.
Yes I know I have a lot of addictions (Supernatural, fanfiction, books, chocolate...)
But audio books or more exactly audio dramas have completely hooked me. Or at least the TV show based ones have.
I blame it all on Big Finish. Nearly all their audio's feature a full cast plus sound effects and they are AMAZING!
The Stargate ones were the first and from there I just had to have more and so onto Torchwood and Blake's 7 it was. The Blakes 7 The Dust Run and The Trial had Benedict Cumberbatch (how could I go wrong) and the Torchwood ones... well let's just say the one of the stories in Torchwood: the lost files made me cry.
Now I just holding out for some more Stargate ones to be made and maybe some with David Tennant as Doctor Who (cross fingers). Until then I've got the BBC's Neverwhere with James McAvoy, Benedict Cumberbatch and co to look forward to.
PS: If you've got any recommendations let me know.

Zoo : the graphic novel / James Patterson, Michael Ledwidge
I've read the odd comic in the past.
Buffy Season 8, Angel Season 6. That kind of thing. But I've never gone out of my comfort zone of comics based on TV shows.
That is until I picked up this one.
James Patterson was part of the appeal.
I've always enjoyed his books (at least his earlier ones) so thought it might be alright and the story held even more appeal. Dystopian, animals gone wild, man fighting for survival.
Yep definitely my kind of thing. And books with pictures... well how can you go wrong. I mean really pictures make things a lot easier
Inside HBO's Game of thrones / Bryan Cogman
Game of Thrones.
If you haven't heard of it you don't know what you're missing.
This show has it all.
Betrayal, treachery, blood-letting, sex, violence and families who give a whole new meaning to family squabbles.
It seems like we (the fans) have been waiting for forever for (too many for's) season 3 to start let alone the next book in the series.
Beautifully illustrated, this book might just help with some of the impatience and fill the void in with your Game of Thrones addiction.
Roll on the 31st March.
The Guild
I love Felicia Day.
She's funny and quirky and hugely talented and probably one of the biggest and well known geeks around.
From her writing and starring in her online web series The Guild, to guest starring on Supernatural, to staring up her own YouTube TV channel (Geeks & Sundry - check it out); she is a one of the biggest online personalities around.
Think a female Wil Wheaton (who also appears on Geeks & Sundry) with a bit more sass and red hair and you've probably get a glimmer of who Felicia Day is.
Go the Red-Heads!
I hate February.
And yes I know it's kind of silly to hate a month. But I do.
There's just something about February that is off-putting. Whether it's the heat, the fact that the holidays and relaxed mood of Christmas is finally over or strange vibes in the air. There is something about February that is unsettling.
Strangely enough I've discovered that I not the only one to feel this way. Which is nice - it's always great to find someone who shares in your insanity, whether it's rational or not.
Luckily for me I've discovered heaps of new things to help ease the unsettled blues as well as getting reacquainted with some old friends.
So how is the month that shall not be named, treating you?
The Lumineers

Music as always is one of the best way's to shake those unsettled blues away and The Lumineers are one of my favourite new discoveries.
These guys (and girl) are amazing. A folkie-indie-pop band I could easily listen to them all day... oh right I pretty much do. Their music is catchy and bouncy and just a pure delight.
I can hardly wait for them to do another CD.
My favourites are Ho Hey, Stubborn Love, Flowers in Your Hair and Submarines.
My one and only thrill / Melody Gardot.At 18 a car ploughed into her while she was out cycling. What helped in her in during the years of recovery was music. From her hospital bed she began writing songs.
And this, along with her other 2 albums, are the results.
Featuring nearly all original material she is a jazz-blues singer along the likes of Diana Krall and I have just fallen in love with the song Who Will Comfort Me. It's just a great foot-tapping jazz song that is sure to make you smile.
Punk goes pop. Volume 4

Now I'm not a huge punk fan. But as they say there's punk and then there's punk.
I love the Clash and The Cure and The Pretenders. Bands who had punk roots in their music but who also sang across other genres.
Now of course there's a wide range of punk styles and bands who fit into other genres. It seems that punk has become popular - who knew.
This CD features an array of punk artists doing they own unique take on some popular songs. My absolute favourite is Tonight Alive's version of Little Lion Man which I think is almost better than the original by Mumford and Sons.
I have a new addiction.
Yes I know I have a lot of addictions (Supernatural, fanfiction, books, chocolate...)
But audio books or more exactly audio dramas have completely hooked me. Or at least the TV show based ones have.
I blame it all on Big Finish. Nearly all their audio's feature a full cast plus sound effects and they are AMAZING!
The Stargate ones were the first and from there I just had to have more and so onto Torchwood and Blake's 7 it was. The Blakes 7 The Dust Run and The Trial had Benedict Cumberbatch (how could I go wrong) and the Torchwood ones... well let's just say the one of the stories in Torchwood: the lost files made me cry.
Now I just holding out for some more Stargate ones to be made and maybe some with David Tennant as Doctor Who (cross fingers). Until then I've got the BBC's Neverwhere with James McAvoy, Benedict Cumberbatch and co to look forward to.
PS: If you've got any recommendations let me know.
Zoo : the graphic novel / James Patterson, Michael Ledwidge
I've read the odd comic in the past.
Buffy Season 8, Angel Season 6. That kind of thing. But I've never gone out of my comfort zone of comics based on TV shows.
That is until I picked up this one.
James Patterson was part of the appeal.
I've always enjoyed his books (at least his earlier ones) so thought it might be alright and the story held even more appeal. Dystopian, animals gone wild, man fighting for survival.
Yep definitely my kind of thing. And books with pictures... well how can you go wrong. I mean really pictures make things a lot easier
Game of Thrones.
If you haven't heard of it you don't know what you're missing.
This show has it all.
Betrayal, treachery, blood-letting, sex, violence and families who give a whole new meaning to family squabbles.
It seems like we (the fans) have been waiting for forever for (too many for's) season 3 to start let alone the next book in the series.
Beautifully illustrated, this book might just help with some of the impatience and fill the void in with your Game of Thrones addiction.
Roll on the 31st March.
The Guild I love Felicia Day.
She's funny and quirky and hugely talented and probably one of the biggest and well known geeks around.
From her writing and starring in her online web series The Guild, to guest starring on Supernatural, to staring up her own YouTube TV channel (Geeks & Sundry - check it out); she is a one of the biggest online personalities around.
Think a female Wil Wheaton (who also appears on Geeks & Sundry) with a bit more sass and red hair and you've probably get a glimmer of who Felicia Day is.
Go the Red-Heads!
Monday, 12 December 2011
Grammy shortlist for Best Spoken Word album
I'm not too surprised to see that Tina Fey's Bossypants is on the list, as the print version spent weeks on the US Bestseller Lists.
Tina Fey seems to be one those actresses that polarises people, you either love or loathe her. I'm on the fence as I haven't actually seen much that she is in, but I think I might give her audio book a listen on the way to work.
Labels:
audio books,
grammys,
spoken word,
under 100
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