Review: The Fireman

The Fireman

The Fireman
By Joe Hill
William Morrow & Company, Hardcover, 9780062200631, May 2016, 768pp.

The Short of It:

Find a cool, shady spot, grab a cold drink, and kick back because The Fireman is the hot read of the summer.

The Rest of It:

Draco Incendia Trychophyton is a plague which causes people to spontaneously combust. As people across the country become infected  with “Dragonscale”, the hospitals in each big city try their best to contain it but there is no cure.

Harper Grayson, a nurse who took special care not to become infected, finds herself covered in “scale” and when her husband Jakob finds out, he doesn’t react the way she expects him to. Instead, she ends up with a group of people who have come together for survival. This group has figured out a way to live with the scale. Led by an unlikely hero in a bright yellow coat and fireman’s hat, they create a world where survival is possible.

The Fireman Read Along

I love read-alongs and this book was perfect to read as a group. It’s long (700+ pages) but I read it in under a week and never once felt its length. It’s got plenty of good storytelling, lots of action and some likable characters for you to cheer for. There is also one really bad seed. There’s one in every bunch.

What stood out:

  • Lots of name dropping and pop culture references
  • Hill is Stephen King’s son and I felt it in the writing (a plus!)
  • Reads like a movie and Fox has taken it on for development.
  • Definitely not horror even though it’s marketed that way.
  • We all felt that it should have been called, The Nurse.
  • Despicable characters are great fun to bash on Twitter.

I received a review copy of this book so imagine my surprise when another blogger pointed out material that was not in my review copy. Yes!! A slightly different ending given the additional material she provided. So if you have the review copy, seek out a finished copy so you can read that very last bit.

I was hoping for a good chunkster to read this summer and this was it. It’s a lot of fun and reading it with a group just made it that much better. I highly recommend it.

Source: Review copy provided by the publisher via Edelweiss.
Disclosure: This post contains Indiebound affiliate links.

What’s For Dinner? Reader’s Edition

What's for Dinner?

It’s been a long time since I’ve made anything from a cookbook. Since going gluten-free, I’ve adapted fairly well to just changing up what we normally have but I am out of ideas and spend way too much money and time at the market wandering around trying to figure out what to make.

Picky kids. Lack of time. Food allergies. Meh.

So, I ask you, what cookbooks are you cooking from these days? What food blogs or recipe sites have impressed you lately? Do you have any must-try recipes you can share with me? I feel as if I need to go back to the basics and cook from a book because my little bits of this and that add up to a lot of ingredients and although most times whatever I make tastes fine, I’m not sure the effort is necessary.

I want simple. Good. Healthy.

Plus, I want time to read in the evenings. It’s my favorite thing to do and if dinner is a simple meal, then I have more time for that.

Anyone?