Search
Reviews by Category
-
Recent Posts
Archives
- February 2022 (1)
- January 2022 (2)
- December 2021 (2)
- November 2021 (5)
- October 2021 (4)
- September 2021 (4)
- August 2021 (5)
- July 2021 (4)
- June 2021 (6)
- May 2021 (5)
- April 2021 (4)
- March 2021 (5)
- February 2021 (5)
- January 2021 (5)
- December 2020 (5)
- November 2020 (5)
- October 2020 (9)
- September 2020 (8)
- August 2020 (6)
- July 2020 (7)
- June 2020 (11)
- May 2020 (6)
- April 2020 (8)
- March 2020 (5)
- February 2020 (8)
- January 2020 (5)
- December 2019 (8)
- November 2019 (6)
- October 2019 (11)
- September 2019 (11)
- August 2019 (8)
- July 2019 (12)
- June 2019 (10)
- May 2019 (8)
- April 2019 (5)
- March 2019 (4)
- February 2019 (4)
- January 2019 (4)
- December 2018 (16)
- November 2018 (20)
- October 2018 (25)
- September 2018 (20)
- August 2018 (26)
- July 2018 (25)
- June 2018 (23)
- May 2018 (25)
- April 2018 (28)
- March 2018 (24)
- February 2018 (23)
- January 2018 (26)
- December 2017 (12)
- November 2017 (10)
- October 2017 (37)
- September 2017 (48)
- August 2017 (19)
- July 2017 (30)
- June 2017 (30)
- May 2017 (44)
- April 2017 (32)
- March 2017 (49)
- February 2017 (32)
- January 2017 (54)
- December 2016 (29)
- November 2016 (36)
- October 2016 (39)
- September 2016 (31)
- August 2016 (49)
- July 2016 (64)
- June 2016 (52)
- May 2016 (52)
- April 2016 (66)
- March 2016 (72)
- February 2016 (60)
- January 2016 (59)
- December 2015 (72)
- November 2015 (81)
- October 2015 (59)
- September 2015 (41)
- August 2015 (33)
- July 2015 (30)
- June 2015 (25)
- May 2015 (42)
- April 2015 (40)
- March 2015 (32)
- February 2015 (25)
-
Net Galley
Daily Archives: December 16, 2016
Re-release of a 1989 collection of short stories involving Christmas mysteries
Mistletoe Mysteries: Tales of Yuletide Murder
Collected By: Charlotte MacLeod
Rating: 5 of 5
This is a fun and fairly quick read of mystery short stories by some of my favorite authors, including the late Charlotte MacLeod. There are stories by Sharyn McCrumb, Issac Asimov, Aaron Elkins and Mary Higgins Clark among others.
The stories are quite fun and run the gamut of whodunnit to the planning of a murder or two. I found that I could read each story during my lunch break, so the book provided a great break read for more than a week.
Posted in Mystery/Suspense/Thriller
Leave a comment
I like the designs but have some reservations about how it was published printed both sides of the page
Art of Coloring Star Wars: Rogue One
By: Disney Book Group
Rating: 4 of 5
Attached to this review will be a silent flip-through of the entire coloring book so you can make an informed decision as to whether or not it will work for you.
I’m a fan of Star Wars and have been looking forward to both the Rogue One movie and coloring book. I’ll be seeing the movie shortly but I received my coloring book ahead of time. The designs are well done based on what I have seen of trailers and movie stills. The characters look true to life and the creatures and machines are well drawn. The designs span from detailed to very simple. There are many wall-paper (repeating pattern) designs and there are really nice character studies. The designs range from simple line drawings to those where there are heavy lines and heavy use of black (which may be a problem for some.)
Where I have some problems with this book is how it was published. If I could give this book a 3.5, I would do so based on the publishing and the abundance of wall-paper designs. As I cannot, I rounded my stars to 4.
The book is part of the Art of Coloring series and has changed format in a number of ways from the earlier Star Wars book. Rogue One has a soft cover, is smaller, has thinner paper, has glue binding and has perforated pages. Personally, I don’t mind the change (except for the thinner paper) but it makes for a mismatched set. Having said that, I’ve been told by some individuals who are just now buying the older books that they are now being published with soft covers as well. I can’t confirm that as I purchased mine and my husband’s copies earlier on.
The book is sized smaller at 10 7.8 x 7 inches (compared to approximately 11 1 /2 x 8 inches. For those who like to scan and print their pages on better paper, this will make it easier as it should work with most standard scanner/printers.
The soft cover is okay but I would have hoped for a better value on the book if the quality of the publishing was being diminished. That is also true of the paper. Rogue One has more of a medium weight versus the heavy weight of Star Wars.
The change from sewn to glue binding makes it more difficult to get the book to open flat for coloring. As the pages are now perforated, the lack of ease of snipping threads to remove pages is less important.
The perforated pages is a nice change; however, given that the designs are printed on both sides of the page and many of the designs spread across two pages, the usefulness of the perforated pages is diminished. The only way I think that these larger designs can be printed effectively would be to use a fold-out page. I’ve seen this done in a number of coloring books and hope that the trend will catch on.
One of my issues with designs/publishing is a heavy use of wall-paper designs (oddly with a number of them repeated throughout the book). I would have been okay with this if the publisher had used some forethought and placed the wall-paper designs on the reverse of the more unique designs. There seems to have been an attempt to do this (at least with the character designs) but about half way through the book, that seemed to mostly disappear.
Because of the way the book was put together, for the most part, I will be using colored pencils. I will be willing to give up most of the wall-paper designs if I prefer to use markers on the reverse page but that will be limited to maybe a third of the designs in the book.
This is what I found while coloring in the book and testing my color medium on the paper.
126 Rogue One inspired Design pages (plus designs on title and copyright pages.)
51 pages are of wall-paper style repeating designs
10 of the Designs spread across two pages
Printed on both sides of page
Paper is medium weight, white, very slightly rough, and perforated
Glue binding
Many designs extend across the perforations, some into the binding. Certainly true of the two-page spreads and removing them from the book will result in loss of design. I was able to break the spine to get into the binding area a bit easier but there are still some issues.
Alcohol-based markers bleed through the paper
Water-based markers either bled through or left colorful shadows on the back of the paper.
Gel pens and India ink pens left anywhere from colorful shadows to indistinct shadows on the back of the page but even at best, where still noticeable.
Colored pencils worked well with this paper. I was able to get good, deep pigment. I could layer easily (both same and different colors.) Blending was okay though the tooth of the paper was not optimal. I was able to blend with a pencil style blending stick.
Posted in Adult Color Books
Leave a comment