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Rivers of London
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November 2017 Group Read: Rivers of London, by Ben Aaronovitch
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Nancy, Co-Moderator
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Nov 01, 2017 04:53AM

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This was smart, hip, ultra-contemporary, full of humor and ultimately satisfying even if I didn't know where it was going most of the time!



Yes to "perfect marriage"! I thought many times that I might not like these in print. Oh, and thanks for the reminder about the graphic novels. I'm going to check them out from my library.



Reminded me quite a lot of early Terry Pratchett, especially the Neil Gaimen co written Good Omens: The Nice and Accurate Prophecies of Agnes Nutter, Witch, and of course American Gods. Terry Pratchett is my favourite author and I miss reading new books by him, so this was a treat for me.
I'm not a Londoner, but I have visited the area in and around Covent Garden quite a lot, so I enjoyed those references and had the advantage of being able to visualise the Royal Opera House Riot. I can understand why those unfamiliar with London might not find the book as easy to follow, but it's interesting that people are using the word 'meandering' in relation to the plot. That's what the Thames does, so perhaps this was intentional?
Wasn't so keen on the 'magic tricks' and I'm not sure I even followed what happened near the end (view spoiler) , but liked Peter Grant and want to find out more about the enigmatic DCI Nightingale.

Set at time of London 2012 Olympic Games, but referring neatly back to the London 1948 games. As I said, very short and left me wanting more (view spoiler) but good for completists like me!

I had noticed his absence also, but we're doing great without a moderator, it seems!

Set at ti..."
thanks, will check it out.


Pleased I read it though ... it deserves four stars, even though not quite my cup of tea.

Interesting you mention "comic book action" because these are available in graphic novel form. I plan to check out that format just to see. I liked this book well enough to move immediately into book 2 - both in audio. The narrator is fabulous!

Not sure I would go for the comic books, Suzy (although ... whispering here ... in my youth I was an avid reader of Spiderman comics) (!). But I will certainly give the audio books a go if the narrator is good, thanks for the tip!

I think the book could've been a little bit shorter and i got lost a couple of times nearly the end but overall, it's a great book and i can't wait to get my hands on the next book of this series.

One of the later books in the series contains one of my favourite quotes about reading “in the winter, she curls around a good book and dreams away the cold”.


I purchased the book before the voting for the group read was concluded because I thought "Rivers of London" was a book I would read regardless of whether the rest of the group read it. I got "Midnight Riot" delivered to my e-reader. After verifying that it wasn't some strange error that had me purchase one book and receive a different one, I was ....disappointed.
I tagged the book as currently reading but actually picked up and read another book before this one. Since then, I have begun reading the book and am nearly finished now. I am far enough along in the book to know why the UK and US editions were titled the way they were. I am enjoying it. But I remain disconcerted at the strong reaction I had to the changes in book title and cover art.
I find the US title "Midnight Riot" mundane and boring. And the cover art on the US edition looks like a thousand other books. I probably would have passed over it for something else if "Midnight Riot" was the only title presented to me.
As I eye other books in the series, I wonder about title changes and whether I will find them as distracting as a I found this one.

I plan to start book 3 in the series this week - I fell in love with it, even if I didn't always know where things were going in the first book. The audiobook narrator is fantastic!

Does anyone know if the US version is different, besides the title? I know sometimes US versions of UK books will tone down the slang a lot, or at least change it to something more US-familiar. I didn't mind it, personally. I had to look a lot of terms up, but I'd rather learn them for next time than be sheltered from them.
Books mentioned in this topic
A Rare Book of Cunning Device (other topics)The Home Crowd Advantage (other topics)
The Home Crowd Advantage (other topics)
Good Omens: The Nice and Accurate Prophecies of Agnes Nutter, Witch (other topics)
American Gods (other topics)
More...
Authors mentioned in this topic
Ben Aaronovitch (other topics)Jussi Adler-Olsen (other topics)
Patrick Rothfuss (other topics)
James S.A. Corey (other topics)