• Buncombe Brief Book Review

    Buncombe Brief Book Review: The Song of the Quarkbeast

    This is a sequel to the book The Last Dragonslayer that we reviewed a while back and it’s another venture into the world the the wizarding business of Kazam.  This time, King Snodd, the ruler of the Ununited Kingdoms, has ordered a contest where wizarding agencies in the land would compete and there would be one winner and one magical company.  This contest pits Kazam again a rival company and it seems the king wants, rather, has an interest in Kazam losing the contest. This, they believe, is because of the events that took place during The Last Dragonslayer. There is also the problem of a Quarkbeast on the loose.…

  • Nonfiction of Note,  Writing

    Nonfiction of Note: The Writing Life by Annie Dillard

    I really enjoy books about writing but not “How To” books on writing.  Rather, I really enjoy books about how actual writers write. The practices, the techniques, the habits, and all that are fascinating to me and can be inspiring for those who have trouble sitting down at the keyboard or finding time to put their story onto paper.  However, there are a lot of variations of this type of book and some are much better than others. There are letters from writers to others that talk about the craft, there are memoirs that tell a great deal about authors and writing, and there are some books that, sadly, border…

  • Buncombe Brief Book Review

    Buncombe Brief Book Review: Turtles All the Way Down by John Green

    I enjoy John Green’s books, but this one was a far cry from his previous works.  I really enjoyed The Fault in Our Stars and Looking for Alaska, and I even enjoyed the novel, Paper Towns, despite the story being a little far-fetched.  However, Turtles All the Way Down was a miss for me.  I know there are a lot of people who enjoyed the book and it was an okay read, but this story wasn’t for me.  I do think Green understood his characters well but the story was just not for me. I feel like the pacing was a bit off.  The main character Aza seems to jump…

  • Books From My Younger Days

    Books From My Younger Days: A Taste of Blackberries by Doris Buchanan Smith

    This is one of the first books that was really heartbreaking for me and being a children’s book, it took a toll on me as a young reader.  It’s a story that focuses around two friends, and kind of reminded me of Harris and Me by Gary Paulsen but this is a different kind of tale in many ways.  While it does center around two friends, one of which is rather wild and carefree, it allows us a more serious look at a friendship and less of a zany story like Harris and Me. The title comes from the outings to pick blackberries the boys go on but the book…

  • Buncombe Brief Book Review

    Buncombe Brief Book Review: Death Comes for the Archbishop by Willa Cather

    This novel is considered a classic and has a lot of beautiful language but it is a work that is a great example of what many might call “literary fiction” as it’s not very plot driven and can be a difficult read for some.  The story centers around Jean-Baptiste Lamy and Joseph Projectus Machebeuf who are catholic priests that are assigned to New Mexico in the hopes of starting a church and establishing catholicism in the area. There isn’t much by way of story but the book does have a few accounts and reflections by the characters. Death Comes for the Archbishop does a great job of showing how difficult…

  • Books From My Younger Days

    Books From My Younger Days: Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire

    This book in the Harry Potter series gets serious but, for me, is one of the most entertaining as well.  While I think this might be my favorite, it’s also one of the darker books and, arguably, is the start of where the books become more dangerous and show us why Voldemort isn’t to be taken lightly. While the Triwizard Tournament is so much fun, and is enough of a story to hold up the book, the ending is heartbreaking, terrifying, and brings so many things together in the Harry Potter universe (like where Peter Pettigrew ran off to) and it kicks off the urgency to contain and destroy Voldemort.…

  • Buncombe Brief Book Review

    Buncombe Brief Book Review: Pet Sematary by Stephen King

    Pet Sematary is one of the more creepy books by King, in my opinion, due to the theme of death being at the forefront.  It’s not a monster or supernatural occurrence but simply death that is the main antagonist here. Louis Creed, and his wife Rachel, move near the University of Maine for a job.  Their home is near the road so, during the course of the novel, their cat is hit by a car. The problem is death has been haunting their family in different ways so Louis is hesitant to tell them about the cat but their neighbor, Jud, leads Louis to a place with the sign “Pet…

  • Buncombe Brief Book Review

    Buncombe Brief Book Review: The Elementals by Michael McDowell

    The Savage and McCray families own two homes on a secluded area of beach in Alabama, which has been a long staple in their families lives, going back to the younger days of members of both families.  However, a third house in their little hamlet is slowly being devoured by a sand dune and both families warn their children not go to near it. While they make the argument that it’s simply unsound, the truth is there is a terror that lives in the house which seems to have awoken and begins to follow the younger members of the families as they vacation in this off-the-map area during the summer.…

  • Buncombe Brief Book Review

    Buncombe Brief Book Review: The Last Juror by John Grisham

    I’ve not read a great number of John Grisham’s books but The Last Juror is one that I really enjoyed because it was pretty much in the style of Grisham but also different enough that I didn’t feel like I was reading a legal thriller.  And, in truth, it’s not really a legal thriller in the courtroom-drama vein. We follow Willie Traynor and a cast of characters as they are thrown into the middle of one of the biggest scandals/crimes in Clanton, Mississippi.  The Padgitt family, a notorious group that is known for being a reclusive criminal family, has one of their own brought up on rape and murder charges.…

  • Books From My Younger Days

    Books From My Younger Days- The Giver by Lois Lowry

    This book is one of my favorites from when I was a kid simply because it hit on a lot of “firsts” for me.  It was the first dystopian-like book I’d read, it was the first book where I realized more was going on than just a basic story, and it was the first cliffhanger ending I had dealt with.  While I don’t want to go into much detail of this book because if you’ve never read it I don’t want to spoil it but I will try to give a brief summary. The novel centers around Jonas, a young boy that’s lives in a very structured community where laws,…