25 February 2010

Author Answers with Jon F. Merz


Jon F. Merz is this week's guest author. Recently, he's teamed up with author Joe Nassie to write a seriel novel, "The Cerberus Protocol" for your cell phone and he graciously agreed to explain just how that works.


WN: "Cerberus Protocol" is written for mobile phones? How does that work?
MERZ: The Cerberus Protocol is delivered in installments through a basic subscription model. The first installment is absolutely free and anyone with a smart phone can download it by visiting our site at http://www.hellstalkers.com/. Future installments will be available through subscriptions. Once you subscribe, the installments are automatically delivered to your phone for your reading enjoyment.


WN: What was different about writing for this format than writing a "traditional book"?
MERZ: Actually Joe and I write this book the same way we write any other book. We didn't think in terms of the platform that would be delivering the story; we focused on telling the best exciting tale that we could. Of course, given that the mobile phone is a much smaller screen, there are obviously some formatting challenges to be overcome, but we think the end-result will be well worth it.


WN: Where did you come up with the idea for the story? (And what's it about, in a nutshell?)
MERZ: Joe and I had been tossing ideas back and forth for a while about several projects, and Joe suggested we do something timely around the Large Hadron Collider in CERN, Switzerland. We started churning out some possibilities, focused on a few key elements and before we knew it, we had the basis of the series. As for what the story is about, I think the blurb we have at the official HELLstalkers.com site says it best:


On February 5th, scientists at CERN in Geneva, Switzerland ran a short test on the newly completed Large Hadron Collider. For that brief period, protons swarmed back and forth along the seventeen miles of carefully constructed tunnel and slammed into each other with devastating force, generating power the likes of which had not been seen since the moment of the Big Bang. Just a few short hours. That was all it took for our world to be invaded. My name is Captain Memphis Stone, commander of the Hellstalkers, the armed response unit hastily assembled to face this growing threat. This is the story of the men and women under my command, those who stand in the gap and shed their blood to protect the rest of humanity from creatures that we never imagined we’d ever face, not even in our darkest dreams. Welcome to the front lines.


WN: Am I going to need a special phone/gadget/whatzit to be able to read this book?
MERZ: Joe had initially approached a Vienna-based company to handle distribution via mobile phone networks, which means that you need to have a smart phone capable of reading an ebook file (such as epub or .prc). But our overall goal is to acquire a print publisher and bring this series out in the "traditional" format as well. Joe and I are all about producing properties that lend themselves to a wide variety of platforms. In keeping with that, we want our audience to be able to enjoy our work no matter how they choose to read it.


WN: How does writing for a platform like a mobile phone change people's understanding of a "book?" Is this just part of the evolution going on in publishing right now?
MERZ: There's definitely an evolution happening, it's just a matter of whether people want to admit it or not. In the US, it would be fairly uncommon to see someone devouring a novel on their handheld cell phone, but internationally a huge amount of content is consumed this way. Ebooks, printed books, cell phone novels, social media - all of it is part of the ongoing process and writers need to be familiar with all of it. Our audience doesn't simply read books anymore and many of them are preferring to embrace new technology as their principal means of entertainment. Writers who are reluctant to explore new ways of delivering their work to the changing tastes of their audience will undoubtedly find themselves with an ever-dwindling readership. Personally, I happen to love the feel of traditional books. But I don't let my personal inclinations deprive my audience of enjoying my work wherever they prefer to. That's simply not very smart. So, yes - things are evolving and Joe and I are happy to be part of the evolution rather than the grumpy old guys in rocking chairs shaking our canes at those "young whipper snappers" who don't appreciate traditional books.

09 February 2010

Book Banter -- A Darkness More than Night


Title: A Darkness More Than Night

Author: Michael Connelly

Genre: mystery

Length: ~450 pages

Where Word Nerd's Copy Came From: Indianapolis Marion County Public Library

Plot Basics: Former FBI agent Terry McCaleb is enjoying the quiet life with his wife, stepson and new baby daughter. But a sheriff's deputy brings him a case she can't untangle and McCaleb realizes he's still hooked on investigating. The vicious murder consumes him and he becomes obsessed with finding the perpetrator. Meanwhile, LAPD detective Harry Bosch is a key witness in the trial of another brutal murder. As the two cases weave together, two of Connelly's greatest characters come together one opposite sides -- one investigator, and one suspect.

Banter Points: This is the first of Connelly's books where he crosses characters together and he does it in a big way. Both McCaleb and Bosch are integral to the plot and reporter Jack McEvoy makes several appearances that also are key to the story. It was nice to see Bosch from McCaleb's perspective and how both of them reacted to Jack. It added layers of depth to these already complicated characters, while still delivering a great mystery.

Bummer Points: Connelly got a little repetitive with language, talking about the "darkness more than night" over and over. It lost its punch when it got repeated.

Word Nerd Recommendation: Word Nerd's still on her Connelly reading jag (about one a month) and this one was definitely better than Void Moon. (It was nice to see some references to that book, however, in this one.) This one is a should read because of the blending of the universes of Bosch and McCaleb and how they fit together.

08 February 2010

Word Nerd hasn't been hibernating...

So, Word Nerd got a little consumed with life in the past two or three weeks, moving to a new house, etc. etc.

But, the move is done (photos are coming) and blogging will resume on a more normal basis.

Things to watch for soon --
1. Book Banter -- A Darkness More than Night by Michael Connelly
2. Book Banter-- The Rowan by Anne McCaffrey
3. January's bibliometer
4. A book giveaway. Yes, you heard that right. Free stuff.
5. Author interviews, guest blogs and all the great stuff you've come to expect on Word Nerd.

Happy 2010.

21 January 2010

Book Banter -- Faces of the Gone


Title: Faces of the Gone
Author: Brad Parks
Length: 330 pages
Genre: mystery
Where Word Nerd's Copy Came From: Indianapolis-Marion County Public Library

Plot Basics: Carter Ross, investigative reporter for the Newark Eagle-Examiner, lives for untangling good stories. When four bodies turn up murder in a vacant lot, and the police spoon out a feeble story for how the four are connected, Carter starts doing what he does best -- asking questions to put together a real scoop. With the help of his sexy city editor, gay Cuban intern, a bum, a stripper, and some shoe leather, Carter uncovers the links between the four victims, and puts him in the sights of ruthless killer.

Banter Points: Word Nerd met Brad Parks at Bouchercon, interviewed him a few weeks back and had to wait (more or less patiently) on the library to get a copy in her hands. And the wait paid off.

Word Nerd approaches books with reporters as the main characters with some hesitation, but given that Parks is a recovering reporter too, she hoped his novel would ring true, and it did. The whole process of how editors want stories and how reporting gets handed around on a big case, and the demise of the newspaper industry and how to work sources and all of it -- right, right, right. In fact, reading the book made her miss the old adrenaline rush of a big scoop, the hum of the newsroom... not enough to go back, but enough to remember why she used to love that career.

For non-ex-journalists, the book is still a great read. Carter is the kind of protagonist people relate to and supported by a comic set of secondary characters, it's hard not to like the guy. The plot moves at a good clip, and keeps the reader guessing up to the end about who's really behind everything. Carter's also great a dry sense of humor -- his journalistic cynicism, no doubt -- that makes for some great one-line zingers throughout the story (one in particular about the worthlessness of TV reporters had Word Nerd laughing aloud.)

Bummer Points: A few times, even for those who still love newspapers, Carter's waxing on about the industry, it's demise (or not) or why journalism is so important feels a little self-indulgent on Parks' part.

Word Nerd Recommendation: Read it. Three weeks and six books in to 2010, Faces of the Gone is the best thing Word Nerd's read so far this year and will likely hold up as the year progresses. Word Nerd's glad Parks is busy writing more Carter Ross books because this is one veteran reporter Word Nerd hopes doesn't bail from the industry.

19 January 2010

A loss in the mystery world

Word Nerd's having a little trouble confirming this (like in a newspaper), but from several reputable places in the blogosphere/twitter-verse, the news seems to be that mystery writer Robert B. Parker has died while writing at desk.

Word Nerd's only read a few of Parker's books, but her dad loves them. Moreover, she knows that Parker has been a staple in the genre for years. Spenser is an iconic character.

She'll update when she finds a link to official news story about this.

UPDATED: 12:41 p.m.
A story on NPR's blog confirms Parker's death, including a link to his publisher.

18 January 2010

Book Banter -- Jhegaala


Title: Jhegaala (Vlad Taltos #11)
Author: Steven Brust
Genre: Fantasy
Length: 300 pages
Where Word Nerd's Copy Came From: Indianapolis-Marion County Public Library
Plot Basics: This is a probable spoiler alert. With 10 books already in this series, it's hard not to give anything away and still have a meaningful review.




Vlad is on the run from the Jhereg organized criminal empire, whom he has managed to piss off royally. He's also on the run from his failed marriage. Curious about his own roots -- and with few ideas of where else to go -- Vlad heads east, back to Fenario where the humans live, to seek out his family. When he starts asking questions, people start ending up dead. Vlad decides he needs to get to the bottom of what's going on, and in the process, brings down a Jhereg assassin, an iron-fisted merchants' Guild, Coven of witches and the local lord down on him. To stay alive, Vlad will have to use all of his cunning to untangle the ever-changing picture before him.

Banter Points: Though this book came out at least a year ago, Word Nerd decided to reread through the whole Vlad series before tackling this new one, a project that took her far longer than she expected. The reread was great and helped her get the timeline of the stories more firmly in place which was good for this one. Word Nerd's constantly amazed that Brust isn't telling these stories in chronological order. Jhegaala jumps back to some time before Issola and Dzur (bks. 9 and 10). The plot was the generally tangled web that Brust always manages to set up and then get Vlad out of.

Bummer Points: Word Nerd really likes the secondary characters (Morrolan, Sethra, Kragar) and this one didn't have them. Also, without giving anything more away, Word Nerd just wasn't thrilled with this, particularly with what happens to Vlad (call her crazy, but she doesn't like it when her favorite fictional characters get injured).

Word Nerd Recommendation: Word Nerd will probably go back and reread this one some time in the future and she'll probably like it better than this time through. Sometimes books are like wine. Or cheese and get better with age. And more time to breath. She will, however, gladly pick up Iorich (Vlad #12) as soon as the library fills her hold on it because all in all, it's still Vlad.

11 January 2010

Book Banter -- Void Moon


Title: Void Moon

Author: Michael Connelly

Length: ~450 pages

Genre: mystery/thriller

Where Word Nerd's Copy Came From: Indianapolis-Marion County Public Library

Plot Basics: Cassie Black is trying to live on the straight and narrow after serving five years in prison because of a casino robbery gone bad. But when senses a big change in the routine she's got laid out for herself, Cassie decides to do one last casino job. When she ends up trapped in the job during a void moon -- a superstitious time of night according the guy who set her up on the job -- everything with the score starts to go wrong. Cassie finds herself running from a Vegas "fixer" and having to use everything she's got to stay one step ahead of him.

Banter Points: Continuing on in reading all of Michael Connelly's back list in publication order, Word Nerd came to Void Moon, disappointed that it wasn't another Bosch novel. That said, she actually enjoyed this one. It was nice to have the female protagonist instead of Bosch or McCaleb or McEvoy. And, the really nifty part was that the whole story was about criminals -- there really weren't good guys in this one (it's still crime even if the people getting ripped off are criminals). The fact that Connelly had Word Nerd rooting for the bad guys (in alternating turns... the bad guy and the BAD guys) was some slick writing.

Bummer Points: Word Nerd liked the book, but it wasn't a home run. There's nothing specific she can put her finger on for what she didn't like, just that she didn't finish it with that sense of awe that sometimes accompanies books.

Word Nerd Recommendation: Keep reading Connelly. Word Nerd can't wait to see what he'll try next.

07 January 2010

Hitting Shelves Soon

Word Nerd discovered recently some exciting news for upcoming books in series she reads and release dates! Wanted to pass it along.

Iorich, Vlad Taltos #12, Steven Brust, Jan 2010

Changes, Dresden Files #12, Jim Butcher, April 2010

Deceiver, Foreigner Series #11, C.J. Cherryh, May 2010

Namaah's Curse, Jacqueline Carey, June 2010

What new releases are you looking forward to?

06 January 2010

Book Banter -- Catching Fire


Title: Catching Fire (Hunger Games bk. 2)
Author: Suzanne Collins
Length: ~300 pages
Genre: YA sci-fi
Where Word Nerd's Copy Came From: It was a gift. The very cool high school student she mentors gave it her as a Christmas present.

Plot Basics: SPOILER ALERT! If you haven't read Hunger Games Stop reading. Right now. Go get a copy. Read it. Read Catching Fire. Then come back.









Katniss Everdeen survived the Hunger Games through a gutsy act that forced the Gamemakers to save face. But her act has sparked the fires of rebellion throughout Panem and the political powers that be want her to quell them, and fast, or else her family and good friend Gale will be at risk. While Kat tries to play along, her actions on her victory tour only fan the rebellion more. As the political powers attempt more and more to force Kat into compliance, she sides more and more with the rebels, but the personal cost grows even higher.

Banter Points: Collins, quite frankly, did it again. Hunger Games was a home-run book and she followed it up with a second. Word Nerd figured out what the first twist would be (she's not saying to try to keep spoilers to a minimum) but it didn't detract from the story. Like the first one, it was un-put-down-able. It's a complex world that Collins has built and she has yet to really give the reader the full back story. However, the pieces she drops are so relevant and she knows her world so well, the story moves through it effortlessly and makes the reader feel comfortable in her dystopian future.

Bummer Points: Word Nerd doesn't know when the next book in the series is coming out. Whenever that is, it's far too long.

Word Nerd Recommendation: Jump all over this bandwagon. You'll be glad you did.

05 January 2010

Book Banter -- Issola


Title: Issola (Vlad Taltos, bk 9)
Author: Steven Brust
Genre: Fantasy
Length: ~250 pages
Where Word Nerd's Copy Came From: Indianapolis-Marion County Public Library
Plot Basics: Lady Teldra, the doorkeeper for the Lord Morrolan, finds Vlad and brings him back to Adrilankha because Morrolan and Aliera have gone missing. In finding them, Vlad goes up against the Jenoine -- a primal creature of the world. To get them released, Vlad only has to assassinate a god...
Banter Points: Ah Vlad Taltos. He's so much fun. Issola is a great return in the series from Vlad's exile out of the city to bring back the secondary characters everyone likes (Sethra Lavode, anyone?) This one follows in Brust's 17 chapter motif, this time dealing with manners in polite society.
Bummer Points: There's a lot of world-building philosophy in this one that cuts away from the swashbuckling and wise-cracking Vlad we all love. Word Nerd admits that she got pretty lost with the creation myths in this story.
Word Nerd Recommendation: This is one of those that sort of weigh the middle of this series down, but it's foundational for what happens next. NOT a good place to start if you are just getting your first taste of Vlad.

04 January 2010

December 2009 Bibliometer

Time to close out the bibliometer readings for 2009.

The tally for December was:
6 books
2080 pages
avg. 67 pages/day


2o09 Totals
87 books
29589 total pages
average book length: 340 pages

31 December 2009

Best of 2009 -- Top Ten Books of the Year

Finally, the moment you've all been waiting for, Word Nerd's top ten list for 2009.

A few reminders on the selection process: Word Nerd decides the top ten of what she's read in the past 365 days, publication year matters not. Several of the titles or authors have popped up in the other awards posts, but hey, they do that for the Oscars and things, so Word Nerd thinks there's precedent.

So, the envelope please....

Word Nerd's Top Ten Books of 2009:

10. Cold Tangerines, Shauna Niequist (non-fiction)

9. Sandman Slim, Richard Kadrey (urban fantasy)

8. The Historian, Elizabeth Kostova (historical fiction)

7. The Poet, Michael Connelly (mystery)

6. The Hunger Games, Suzanne Collines (YA)

5. The Graveyard Book, Neil Gaiman (YA)

4. Love in the Time of Fridges, Tim Scott (science fiction)

3. The Domino Men, Jonathan Barnes (science fiction)

2. The Time Traveler's Wife, Audrey Niffenegger (literary fiction)

1. The Selected Works of T.S. Spivet, Reif Larson (literary fiction)

Top honors went to T.S. Spivet because it has pictures. Seriously. The book is so endearing because of all the doodles and maps and things in the margins. Word Nerd is a sucker for mixed media like that.

Other than the first two, most of the list is a surprise to Word Nerd. As she was compiling it, she kept thinking of titles only to discover she read those books in 2008 and already gave them an award. So, with a general criteria of "if I had unlimited time to read, which of the booksread this year would stand up to a second reading" Word Nerd combed her list and searched her reviews for ones that she prognosicated would end up in a top ten list.

Sandman Slim, Love in the Time of Fridges and Domino Men are definitely the dark horse picks for this year, particularly Domino Men ringing in at number 3. All three are bizarre, bizarre books which is why they stuck with Word Nerd. A second read would likely make them all make more sense. Hopefully.

So these are Word Nerd's picks, along with the rest of the awards for Best First Book in a Series, Best Discovered Author and Best of the Genres.

What books topped your list(s) this year?

30 December 2009

Best of 2009 -- The Best of the Genres

This year, Word Nerd is introducing a new awards category -- Best of the Genres.

Word Nerd reads gobs of genre fiction, across myriad genres (and subgenres, come to that.) While these books don't always rise to the level of a top ten, many of them are downright entertaining reads. So, starting this year, Word Nerd's opening a new category, to recognize the best in the genres that she's read in the past year. Like many awards, there will be some double winners from this category and others.

But without further delay, here are this year's Best of the Genres winners:

Fantasy -- Taltos, Steven Brust
Word Nerd's been rereading this highly entertaining series over the past year. They are all good, but Taltos is probably the best, telling Vlad's backstory is such a captivating way. It's an amazing skill that Brust has to tell the story out of chronological order and get all the pieces to line up.

Historical Fiction -- The Cavalier in the Yellow Doublet, Arturo Perez-Reverte
Perez-Reverte is somewhere is Word Nerd's awards almost every year and 2009 is no exception. The fifth Captain Alatriste book exemplifies the political intrigue, romance and swashbuckling that makes the whole series so good.

Mystery -- The Poet, Michael Connelly
From her Michael Connelly jag this year, The Poet is Word Nerd's favorite so far. Finally, a realistic portrayal of what reporters are really like. Plus, a darn good mystery story in the process that kept the pages turning right up to the end.

Paranormal -- Shadowlight, Lynn Viehl
Word Nerd is a regular reader of Lynn Viehl's great blog, Paperback Writer, and through there, got introduced to her paranormal Darkyn series. Shadowlight was the first of a few spin-off series, the Kyndred, and Word Nerd's loving the new take. It's great to see the cross-over characters and the wrinkles to the already deep world Viehl has created are amazing.

Urban Fantasy -- Deathwish, Rob Thurman
Cal Leandros. Sigh. Niko Leandros. Sigh. Ok, Word Nerd will admit a bit of a literary crush on this pair of monster-slaying brothers. Thurman's use of mythology and legends is great, weaving old stories into modern-day New York. Moreover, her monsters stay scary (and her heroes are scary too sometimes, which makes for great reading).

Science Fiction -- Conspirator, C.J. Cherryh
Since Word Nerd's on this trend... Bren Cameron. Double sigh. When Cherryh's Foreigner universe series caught Word Nerd's attention back when she was in high school, Bren Cameron has been such a clear character in her mind. Once again, in the 10th volume in this universe, what it means to be human and alien is challenged, flipped over and done so with deft prose.

Young Adult -- The Hunger Games, Suzanne Collins
A student in the program Word Nerd works for in her day job recommended this book and wowzers, is it a doozy. Word Nerd laid awake one night worrying about the protagonist. That alone gives the book high marks for tension, pacing, plotting, character development and that sine qua non that makes a book like this special. The sequel, Catching Fire, also gets big thumbs-up.

29 December 2009

Best of 2009 -- First Book in a Series

Awards week rolls on here at Word Nerd with the next annual category -- Best First Book in a Series.

Word Nerd is a big series reader, loving the big story arcs and characters who develop over time. She is also fairly careful to not be in the middle of more than, say, seven series at the same time. 2009 has been a year of series reading, but some rereads and some that she'd already started in 2008. Nevertheless, a clear winner emerged.

For its breezy tone, fun premise and engaging characters, 2009's Best First Book in a Series for Word Nerd is... The Secret History of the Pink Carnation by Lauren Willig.

This year's runner up for best first book was Michael Connelly's The Black Echo.

Pink Carnation won because its premise is so original. Take the Scarlet Pimpernel, make him real, and see how England and France react with their litany of flower-named spies. Intrigue and romance round out a fun read.

28 December 2009

Best of 2009 -- Best Discovered Author

Welcome to awards season at Word Nerd for 2009.

Things are starting with this first category -- Best Discovered Author. Word Nerd isn't after a new author (as in debut) here, just the best author who she started reading in 2009.

So, the first envelope please ....

The winner is Michael Connelly.

Word Nerd started reading his Harry Bosch series in February because Connelly was coming to Bouchercon as the keynote speaker and she thought she should read at least one of his books in preparation. Seven books later, she is a definite fan and will continue reading through his backlist.

21 December 2009

Book Banter -- Red Blooded Murder


Title: Red Blooded Murder (Izzy McNeil bk 2)

Author: Laura Caldwell

Genre: mystery

Length: 453 pages

Where Word Nerd's copy came from: Indianapolis-Marion County Public Library

Plot Basics: Izzy is trying to piece her life back together after her former boss was murder, her former fiancee implicated and her former law office fired her. She's still moonlighting for PI John Mayburn when she gets offered a job as a reporter for the brand-new Trial TV. But when Trial TV's star anchor ends up dead, Izzy is suspect number one. Desperate to prove her innocence, Izzy puts herself and many of her already floundering relationships in danger to clear her name.

Banter Points: Amazingly, this book is WAY better than the first one. Often, series have the second book slump, but not here. Izzy lost a lot in the first book, but in this book, the stakes feel higher, that losing any more will be a real problem for her life. Moreover, the whole plot was tighter and kept Word Nerd guessing about the real identity of the murdered the whole time.

Bummer Points: Like the first one, the book was too long. 453 pages for an almost-chick-lit mystery just feels too much. The problem is the subplot. Again, it was good and provided needed comic relief. But on the other hand, it just made things wordy.

Word Nerd Recommendation: Easy read, albeit with a bit of a commitment given the length. Word Nerd will read the last one of the Izzy books out so far.

15 December 2009

Book Banter -- Out at Night


Title: Out at Night

Author: Susan Arnout Smith

Genre: mystery/thriller

Length: 293 pages

Where Word Nerd's Copy Came From: Authors on the Web review copy

Plot Basics: Crime tech Grace Descano is called into a hotbed case by her FBI agent uncle -- uncovering the truth about the brutal murder of a professor in a field of genetically modified soybeans -- right before a big agriculture conference. Protestors abound and tempers are high about the modified seeds, leading to plenty of suspects, even within Grace's own family. As as radical environmental group plans a major act of terrorism, only Grace can stop it and save thousands of lives.

Banter Points: The whole premise of this book -- genetically modified food and ecoterrorism -- was what kept Word Nerd reading. It was clear that Smith had done her homework on this topic, but not to the point of overwhelming readers with science. She put enough info to make it more than a little creepy to think about what could be (or is) going on in the food industry.

Bummer Points: This book needed another pass by a copy editor. The number of typos that made it through was astounding, from characters names being misspelled to many sets of missing quotation marks. Also, this is a sequel and Word Nerd felt like there was a lot about Grace Descano that she should have known from book one and didn't. Word Nerd didn't really like Grace, as a character, because she let the people in her life walk all over her. Smith tried to make her a 3D character with a subplot involving her daughter and her ex-guy (never clear if they were married or not), but it just took away from the good thriller plot and made Grace seem less strong as a character.

Word Nerd Recommendation: It was an OK read, but she's not going into the library stacks to find the first one.

14 December 2009

Book Banter -- Coop


Title: Coop: A Year of Poultry, Pigs, and Parenting

Author: Michael Perry

Length: ~300 pages

Genre: nonfiction/memoir

Where Word Nerd's Copy Came From: Indianapolis-Marion County Public Library

Plot Basics: Perry continues to entertain with his life story. After Population 485 and Truck, Perry is now taking on family duties. He's married, gained a daughter and has a new baby on the way. Perry decided to take up some simple farming -- including getting pigs and chickens to help feed his growing family. As Perry shares, his plans for building things -- in this case, a grand chicken coop -- often exceed his abilities. Perry's story of the chickens is interwoven with humorous insights into life and poignant stories.

Banter Points: Word Nerd thorougly enjoyed Perry's latest book, taking her back to her few years in Wisconsin. While she never lived as far north as Perry, some of the general culture was the same and it was fun to reminisce while reading. As always, he had some absolutely phenomenal catch-your-breath sentences. More than once, Word Nerd either laughed aloud or reached for her Kleenex box, because it's that kind of book. Even though Word Nerd is not a father, not a farmer, never been an EMT, doesn't have foster siblings and so much else that Perry talks about, the book is accessible to all kinds of readers.

Bummer Points: It'll be a few more years before Perry has another book.

Word Nerd Recommendation: Anyone who wants a good glimpse at life in rural Midwest needs to read Perry.