Reviews – Books: F

RATINGS KEY
0/5  –  Terrible. Avoid this book at all costs.
1/5  –  Bad. Only read it if you’re a truly hardcore fan of the author/topic.
2/5  –  Okay. It’s not bad, but it’s not good either.
3/5  –  Average. A decent one-time read.
4/5  –  Good. Worth reading and worth buying.
5/5  –  Excellent. One of my favorites; a worthy classic.

The Favored Child by Philippa Gregory

1/5 | Reviewed 2.10.06

Quite frankly, I’m starting to wonder about Gregory’s obsession with incest. I’ve read three of her books so far, and all of them have featured incest as a prominent theme; whatever shock value the topic first held has long since been lost. Besides, any more Lacey inbreeding and the heroines won’t be slim and beautiful, they’ll be fat and cross-eyed. | Read Full Review

The Franklin Conspiracy—Cover-up, Betrayal, and the Astonishing Secret Behind the Lost Arctic Expedition by Jeffrey Blair Latta

3/5 | Reviewed 6.21.07

I guess I should have known from the title that this book was going to be a bit—how shall I say this?—out there. I love a good conspiracy theory as much as the next girl; sadly, this isn’t a good conspiracy theory. In fact, it’s not even a theory at all. The book consists mainly of well-researched facts (give the author props, he does do his homework) paired with rhetorical questions—tons and tons and tons of rhetorical questions, which are never answered and are apparently included merely to give an appropriately spooky, paranoid feeling to the text. I kept waiting for the author to produce his theory and answer the barrage of unanswered questions . . . but he never did. Aside from a few unconnected tales of mythical northern monsters and a tentative speculation on radiation poisoning (which seemed to be heading towards a flying saucer theory, but fell short of the connection), the author is apparently lacking in any sort of theory or answer to his own questions—that, or he’s keeping his ideas under wraps because he fears public riducule or a powerful backlash from the conspirators (whoever they are). Whatever his theory may or may not be, it seems to involve the entire British Admiralty of the early 1800s, most of the explorers who sought the Northwest Passage, and probably a few polar bears; the plot (what there is of it) is not entirely dissimilar to Dan Simmon’s novel The Terror, which makes for compelling fiction but is decidedly less compelling when presented as fact. It’s a technically well-written book (aside from all the obnoxious hanging questions) which left me a little sad, wishing that the author had just played it straight and written a “normal” book—despite his wilder musings, he seems neither stupid nor unhinged, and struck me as genuinely curious and open-minded about the fate of the Franklin expedition. Unfortunately, he couldn’t convince me to share his doubts about the generally-accepted views on the subject. Give Latta credit for keeping an open mind, but take everything in this book with a heavy dose of salt.




A snapshot of me (Romy)

Hi. I’m Romy. without-feathers.com is my personal site, where I blog and review things and make lists and write bad poetry and do whatever other silly things come to mind. If this sounds like fun to you, it’s probably time to take your meds. But first, stick around and surf my site a little.

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