Tagged with female
Data, a Love Story: How I Gamed Online Dating to Meet My Match
Amy Webb, a journalist and serious data geek decides she's going to meet her husband through JDate. After a few bad dates she realizes that it's going to take more than posting snippets from her résumé into her profile and responding to invitations from whatever guy seems cool to find her beshert, so she launches an obsessive data gathering operation, which ultimately works.
author gender:
medium:
Beautiful Creatures
I read Beautiful Creatures because it's vampire YA, and I tend to like that sort of thing, but what I liked most about it was the depiction of life in a small southern town. Although authored by women it's told from a teenage boy's point of view. Since I mostly eschew books written by men, don't meet a lot of male narrators, and it's kind of neat to spend time in a dude's head once in awhile.
author gender:
medium:
Worries: Ridiculous Crap That Makes Me Anxious
Sarah had me at the title of her 24-hour zine about her anxieties, and I'm probably going to emulate the concept in my next zine. I feel your pain, girl! Sarah's fears are wide-ranging: from pop culture (Kiefer Sutherland) to practical (data errors) to the sociopolitical (cultural miscommunication). While Kiefer Sutherland doesn't bother me, I do relate to a lot of Sarah's worries, and more essentially, that she has them at all and that they're central enough in her life to make a zine about them.
author demographic:
author gender:
book type:
free:
medium:
recommendation:
Blood Trail
This time our visually impaired private detective is tracking a killer of werewolves, which she didn't even know existed until the end of the first chapter, and she's doing so in rural Ontario. A lot of times I didn't entirely follow Huff's connections, but I still found the book compelling and am intrigued enough by the hint that a cop character could be transgender that I'll read the third installment.
author gender:
book type:
medium:
Fingertips of Duncan Dorfman, the
author gender:
book type:
medium:
Hot Flash Club, the
The first entry in my menopause book club with Kate Haas, The Hot Flash Club did not meet many of the criteria for what we're looking for in middle-aged lady lit, but it wasn't the worst read either. The Club consists of four women, ages 52-62, all of them going through changes, if not The Change.
author gender:
book type:
medium:
Ever After
With my read of book eleven of the Hollows series, I've logged enough time with Rachel Morgan that I'll probably stay with her indefinitely. That's why I stuck with this entry, even though it was pretty far off the rails with lots of mystical shit like balancing ley lines and detecting aura signatures.
author gender:
book type:
medium:
Dead and the Gone, the
A companion to Life as We Knew It, The Dead and the Gone tells us what it was like in Manhattan after the moon got knocked out of place and messed up life on Earth.