Saturday, November 24, 2012

Two from the Hip(1): Reapers and Ghost and Lost oh my....






Bang Bang....
.

Over the last year PYR has put out some excellent YA branded fiction; Lightbringer by K.D. McEntire was the flagship title; it is the first in what I hope to be many urban fantasy novels featuring live and ghostly characters referencing the mythology of J.M Barry's Peter and the Lost Boys. This world is one split between the living and the dead, the real and the Never, a place where the spirits of people animals and even loved things exist after their passing. In Lightbringer we are introduced to Wendy who much like Buffy has an inherited responsibility, Wendy's to reap the various souls lost in the never into the "light". We also see the world from the point of view of the riders, ghosts of those that died in their teens who persist in the never protecting the child ghosts from the decayed walkers who would feed on their essence.

Lightbringer is an action adventure tale, a love story and a mystery that pushes Wendy its protagonist deeper into the realm of the Never which reveals it has many more secrets then her mother ever told her. The novel deals with the complex relationships that we all have with family friends and our past which we may be trying to protect our loved ones from. K.D. pays respect to the memory J. M Barry, who created Peter and the Lost Boys and also makes me fondly recall my hours of enjoyment watching Buffy and the sarcastic wit of Joss Whedon. Like Fair Coin this is a YA that lacks nothing in complexity or heart and is nothing quite akin to the big names in that movement at the moment. Lightbringer is everything that a fan of Buffy or Once upon a Time might want in a novel and will please fans of the likes of Jim Butcher and Patricia Briggs too; Its a book that is the beginning of something bigger and drops the next plot threads along the way but is a complete story fulfilling and heartfelt. Like any Romeo and Juliet tale you know tragedy is in the cards and here the cold or the burn of that pain is worth it.

The setting of these stories is also one close to my heart seeing as it is in the San Francisco Bay area and K.D. has a good feel for the area and made it come alive both the living and the Neverlands. She makes geek references to warm the heart and shows an obvious love for all that genre fiction has to offer in this and its follow up novel Reaper....


And now...

Reaper is the follow up and comes thankfully not even a year on the heels of Lightbringer. I will strive not to give too much away here but I will say that Reaper builds the size and scope of the Lightbringer universe quite some ways. Wendy is some the worse for ware in this story from the trials and reveals after then end of Lightbringer and has a new loved one in a mysterious death yet not deathlike state. I was struck by how absent her father is and maybe that is one of the reasons I feel a bit of kinship with her. We also see Piotr, her other main protagonist suffering the losses from Lightbringer; he is as much adrift as one can be and is searching for purpose in his confusing afterlife in the dark and ever more sinister Never. K.D. expands our knowledge of the realities of the wider world of the reaper with the introduction of more of the family of reapers( think the slayers council) and more of the hierarchy of the recently and long long departed in the Never. Things are no where near as clean and clear cut as we were lead to believe and the games afoot are more deep and complex then we assumed at the end of Lightbringer.

This is a novel that feels much more dangerous and cynical then the initial volume. The stakes are higher here as we learn why Wendy's mom kept her from the wider world and the role she played in keeping the wider world out of the San Francisco bay area that had been her stomping grounds. Reaper is a book that deals a lot with obfucation and betrayal and fear. There are multiple players working behind the scenes of fhe story and lying to the multiple protagonists and as a reader its hard to tell who is playing whom; and its half the fun of the read. I look back on Lightbringer and see the realities of that book broken down by the truths revealed by Reaper. This book does horrible things to our heroes and makes a great second act. Wendy is given some of the training she should have received from her mother. The roles of the Riders have changed in the aftermath but they are as much stalwart friends through thick and thin.

Reaper though a full novel left me hanging and I hate the mid season breaks just as much now as I did watching episodic TV in the late nineties. Reaper is a novel of twists and turns as much as any great spy of thriller novel and ratchets up the emotional tension a couple notches. Sure we and her heroes learn so much in the course of the adventure but even with all the new heroes and opponents it just may not be enough.

Existential horror is my thing and the eire portrayal of the land of the never appealed to my spiritual angst. Loved both these suspense filled horror tinged romance adventures.... K.D. has the goods as a writer and delivers with, I hate to say it but, both barrels with these novels.... all I will say is where is volume 3.... please....

Anyway here are the links to the novels and to K.D.'s web site...

K.D. McEntire can be found here on the internet go and check her out and really give the books a look...




Lightbringer
by K. D. Mcentire
Powells.com
Reaper (Lightbringer)
by K. D. Mcentire
Powells.com


Tuesday, November 20, 2012

New feature intent....

Hello faithful readers...

Seeing that I have so many books in my que and my thought that sometimes giving away too many plot points and character moments is not a good thing I will be doing a weekly column I an calling Two from the Hip. At the moment since I've got some series books to review the articles will feature books of a certain series.... This week I will post my reactions to the YA urban fantasy series by MD McEntire that started with Lightbringer and continues in Reaper. Fans of Buffy, Tru Calling and Peter Pan should check back in a couple days....

Monday, October 1, 2012

Question for a Monday night...

As a speculative and weird fiction fan and reviewer I have a thought and would like to pose it to readers. I think that thought I have comments and thoughts about the current and past big names in genre fiction I'm not sure I should. I read a lot of by comparison to Martin, Mieville, Card and Sanderson lesser writers and I think it more important to spotlight them.

This year I read Patrick Rothfuss' Wise Mans Fear and honestly loved the he'll out of it but I think reviewing the work of great authors like Ari Matmell, Saladin Ahmed James Enge and EC Meyers might make more sense since the big guys get a spotlight already.

I just want to know what people think. This next week I'm planning to review Quantum Coin and Guile of Dragons.... They are out now-ish and are great offerings....

Anyhow I want to get more notice for the less noticed writers out there...

Wednesday, September 26, 2012

Arabian Style



"Simple things ought not be taken for granted" - Litaz Daughter of Likami

The above quote by one of Saladin's quintet of characters I think characterizes why this novel was such a success to me. It was the little details he included about his cast that made them more real and the descriptions and inclusion of small details made Dhamswaat the city it is set in more present. It's the importance of tea and poetry, the indulgence of expensive imported sweets, the friendly banter and gentle play between friends on a night of celebration that really bring the characters to life along with their worries fears and desires. Though the setting is marvelous and the enemies truly monstrous in all the best and pulpy ways his cast steal the show.

Throne of the Crescent Moon is a deceptively short fantasy novel at 274pages for how big it feels. Saladin filled the world with palpable and vivid details of it's setting, hints of its myths and history, and with a cast of characters I will sorely miss till the next volume . It's exactly the kind of book I love discovering; one that can move me to both honest smiles and tears, what more it managed to surprise me when I though I had it kind of figured out. Throne is not the first book to pull its inspiration for its second world setting from the stories of the Arabian Nights or the folklore of the near east and Northern Africa but coming from someone who is of Arabian heritage there seems to be more vitality and passion for the material, an internalizing of it and a je ne cest qua to the feel. It was a great unashamedly pulp style fantasy adventure tale and is a measure of Mr Ahmed's art as a storyteller and world builder.

Ok, I know what is the story and would it be for you. As a fan of sword and sorcery style adventures and pulp fiction I can endorse the action adventure feel of the story. The tale starts as a search for ghulish killers of the main characters one time loves family and grows into a threat to the city and the world from an ancient and malicious evil. In the city of the Khalif there is a hero of the people the Falcon Prince waging a fight against the abuses of the new ruler; there cruel guardsmen punishing pick-pocketing with execution and roving groups of religious thugs. Saladin gives lots of little hints to the bigger picture and wets the appetite for more. The story is told from multiple viewpoints following the inner lives and actions of the heroes as they learn about the threats facing them. His characters are familiar heroic types to fantasy readers but the choice to make several of them older and some retired monster hunters and not making them merely mentors but able if weary heroes along with the young devout and hotheaded ones.

I think this is a great and possibly overlooked book among the doorstops that are also among my favorite books and writers. I think Saladin's focus on the important parts of telling a story makes this tale so strong. I, as a old D&D player, love all those books that spend time with the crunch, the mechanics, of their new unique magic systems and that magi-babble is abscent here and I really iked that. There are multiple paths to power in his setting with different costs and uses and Mr. Ahmed just shows this through their use or the way characters talk about them. I'd love to BS with him about thoes things given the chance but I rather enjoyed the focus on the smells of the tea, the visceral descriptions of the food and the everyday life along with the horrors of the man-jackel beast and other nasties.

I could write about the creatures ot the brilliant way he got to explore several different expressions of love or how he looks at questions about societal evils versus magical threats but I should stop before I ruin anything. I could but why not go to his website and read the free chapter and the Conan pastiche in his blog. He is a writer who deserved the nominations he got for his short fiction that is as unique, new and yet familiar like Throne. If I have wetted your appetite go and take a look; we have to make sure he gets to write more of this world he's got in his imagination.... I for one would love some of the adventures of his characters in their earlier days.....




Saladin Ahmed's website is here you can get a taste of Throne on the site here along with the map of his world
You can get a hold a e-book collection of all his fabulous short fiction here at Amazon, B&N, Smashwords and Kobo
My copy of Throne of the Crescent Moon was purchased.

Monday, September 3, 2012

Alternate-History

This is not so much a post about anyones fiction in particular but more a thought on the kernel of the fictions we tell ourselves and the stories that get told about family. Today I spent the majority of my free time using Ancestry.com to explore my grandfathers line on my mothers side of my family. The website was allowing free access to census records and the tidbits I learned were proto-stories and confirmations of things I treat as apocryphal about my families past.

The one thing I did not learn was wether I have American Indian blood somewhere in the family tree and that still saddens me because it's the ibe thing my grandfather wanted to find when he was alive. What I did find was an amazing group of clues to a past that is hidden and made mysterious by the limited records. His grandmother on his fathers side lived for a long time with her father on an Ohio farm but soon after marriage live for a time in a boarding house with many foreign immigrants without her husband for the tine before her children's births back at her fathers farm. There are no records if the father anywhere other then the name. It's a mystery and one no obe has every spoken of. She crossed a state line in the mid 1800s and crossed back when travel was a hardship.

I also happily learned that I did have a Scottish relative on his side... My grandfathers great grand mother was from there. It does not match the myth of the crazy scottsman who got himself a Indian wife but poses a deeper and more interesting story.

My day has barely toughed the surface since there are records I have not yet seen that would yield answers while opening yet more questions. It's experiences like this that stimulate my imagination; I want to make up and tried to make up the stories of these people now forever lost to me. There is a distant uncle that fought for several tours in the civil war across three different companies and another that seemed to have served to. Farmers, electricians, servants and engineers dot my families past along with cooks and gardeners. I'm afraid I'm no where nest as interesting....

Ok I know it's nothing about books but I can see so many stories out there that if your families history intrigues you I'd encourage you to dig in. It's as cool as anything you can read by our best fantasy authors....

Sunday, September 2, 2012

Mail bag, 1-9

Hey all...

Yesterday I received a couple packages for my reviewing fun.... I had decided that Sept. would be my sword and sorcery and epic fantasy month this year seeing as I have so many fantasy books in my to read shelves...

So yesterday I got from Pyr James Enge's Guile of Dragons that fits right in to my intended theme and Reaper by M. D. McEntire so I'm expanding it to Urban Fantasy too... I love adventure fantasy and miss my D&D days and now participate in playtest for D&D next since I miss my adventuring days so much...

So this month you'll be seeing reviewed and posts about all stripes of fantasy fiction including crossovers from my comics blog and my gaming blog where I do board, RPG, and miniature gaming reviews...

I miss the old days but the present is filled with much more challenging fantasy I'd never go back .....

So ride with me and I hope your up for adventure and peril....

Tuesday, August 14, 2012

Burton's return to Africa




If you have been browsing my blog over the last couple years you know how much I've enjoyed the alternate history steampunk Albertan era adventures of Burton and Swinburne and this third novel was just as good if not the best if the trio of books. Expedition to the Mountains if the Moon is a culmination of all the promises made throughout the series taking Sir Richard and his ever entreating cast of agents, metal men, bobbies and such back to Africa and towards that elusive source of the Nile and the source of the current and future woes. Though the other volumes were complete tales all of their own this one picks up on the dangling threads throughout and resolves questions I had in very satisfying ways and opening all new ones. This story is one of the roughest on it's players and though it's hard on them the overall tale is stronger for it. Of all the steampunk out there and I've loved all of it I've read this is the series that gets my most enthusiastic vote.


Expedition follows mainly Richard Burton and is broken up chapter wise between three separate time periods reading it is like piecing together obe larger mystery puzzle. The separate Burtons stories often foreshadow one another but for reasons that become pretty evident don't really reference each other much till the climax of the novel. Even though at moments you know the tragedy to come to one Burton the emotional impacts seem stronger rather then weaker for the foreshadowing. In the period closest to the other books events start with a botched assassination attempt prompting a Holmes-ish like little myster and chase tale and culminates in an expedition to Africa in a race with the continential forces allies against the British. The second era is an alternate Great War pitting the forces of the technologists vs the eugenicists, the continental vs the decimated remains if the British and involves another expedition across Africa and more famous historical guest stars then you'd expect going in both old friends and wonderfully new. The third I'll leave readers to encounter on their own.

Mark Hodder has been great about tantalising us with little details of real and alter history from the first volume on. In the first he gave us the urban mythic Spring Heeled Jack and in the second he played lots with the Victorian (well our Victorian) fad of mysticism, occultism, the hoaxes of the fairie pictures, the famous Madame Blavatski and the bizarre Titchbone affair. This time around is no different but he pretty much pushes all the envelopes to the breaking point. His creations make me jealous not just that he thought them up bur makes all his fun and fabulous concepts plausible and Lovecrafty horrible at the same time.

The gonzo travels and trials faced by the gathered agents, police, scientists, flying squad, and soldiers leave no one unaffected. This is as I said in the beginning a rough book for his cast and as in The Strange Affair Mark pulls no punches and the novel is stronger for it. I don't think it a spoiler to say major characters make very final sacrifices in Expedition and there are some shockingly tear evoking moments. I enjoyed the tragic along with the heroic, the great pulpy adventure along with the heartfelt moments. Mark as I said hits all the right notes with me by making the hard choices and giving a truly satisfying and dark finale to this novel.

Further I have read that Pyr have contracted Mr Hodder to write more Burton and Swinburne novels.... I want more.... eventhough I'm curious as to where things go from here....

I received my copy from Pyr for review...

And now the blurb from Pyr

CONTINUING THE HIT STEAMPUNK SERIES!It is 1863, but not the one it should be. Time has veered wildly off course, and now the first moves are being made that will lead to a devastating world war and the fall of the British Empire.The prime minister, Lord Palmerston, believes that by using the three Eyes of Naga—black diamonds possessing unique properties—he’ll be able to manipulate events and avoid the war. He already has two of the stones, but the third is hidden somewhere in the Mountains of the Moon, the fabled source of the Nile.Palmerston sends Sir Richard Francis Burton to recover it. For the king’s agent, it’s a chance to redeem himself after his previous failed attempt to find the source of the great river. That occasion had led to betrayal by his partner, John Hanning Speke. Now Speke is leading a rival expedition on behalf of the Germans, and it seems that the battle between the former friends may ignite the very war that Palmerston is trying to avoid!Caught in a tangled web of cause, effect, and inevitability, little does Burton realize that the stakes are far higher than even he suspects.A final confrontation comes in the mist-shrouded Mountains of the Moon, in war- torn Africa of 1914, and in Green Park, London, where, in the year 1840, Burton must face the man responsible for altering time: Spring Heeled Jack!Burton and Swinburne’s third adventure is filled with eccentric steam-driven technology, grotesque characters, and bizarre events, completing the three-volume story arc begun in The Strange Affair of Spring Heeled Jack and The Curious Case of the Clockwork Man.

You can find Mark Hodders website here

and links to stores follow

Monday, August 13, 2012

You and me and him against Them....



The Wolf Age for me was predominately a book about friendship, the bonds that grow between people who suffer indignity together and the strength they can draw from one another. This book for all its grim gritty noirish sword and sorcery action and artifacts felt very personal and I had a great amount of empathy for many of its characters no matter how small a part they may have had. James managed to mix genres and folklore in ways that I really could not predict the direction the third adventure of Morlock Ambrosious would take and that is hard to do with sword and sorcery that feels so much like Moorcock or Liber's iconic stories. I wholeheartedly recommend reading James Enge's sometimes enigmatic heros tales but with the caveat that this is not the story to start with.

Here is the blurb from Pyr:

"Spear-age, sword-age:
shields are shattered.
Wind-age, wolf-age:
before the world founders
no man will show mercy to another."

Wuruyaaria: city of werewolves, whose raiders range over the dying northlands, capturing human beings for slaves or meat. Wuruyaaria: where a lone immortal maker wages a secret war against the Strange Gods of the Coranians. Wuruyaaria: a democracy where some are more equal than others, and a faction of outcast werewolves is determined to change the balance of power in a long, bloody election year.

Their plans are laid; the challenges known; the risks accepted. But all schemes will shatter in the clash between two threats few had foreseen and none had fully understood: a monster from the north on a mission to poison the world, and a stranger from the south named Morlock Ambrosius.


James Enge has so many great little and big surprises in store for readers in The Wolf Age its hard to write about the cool stuff without spoilers and since I enjoyed the reveals I don't want to say too much. I will say that when I was only a third into the nearly 500page adventure I wanted to go back to the start just to experience it all again and revisit events which I am sure I missed things. His writing is as many reviewers write akin to the noir masters; his prose is not overworked, plots move fast with wit, snappy dialogue and he pulls no punches with the grim and dark events.

So what are you getting from The Wolf Age...

Among the numerous schemers in this novel the main orchestrators are the conceptual Strange Gods; they remind me of the endless from Neil Gaimens Sandman. They are very human like embodiments of concepts like war, wisdom, justice, stupidity death and play a similar manipulative roll in The Wolf Age as do the Greek gods in the Illiad. They appear at times in the story as viewpoint characters revealing plot elements outside the other players or giving a different view of events once to oddly funny scene descriptions.

James created an entire culture of all were-wolves building a consistently interesting and fascinating society driven both by animal instincts and human seeming ideas of democracy and progress. The werewolves he created get to exist outside our modern world they are allowed to be fully in tune with both if their natures even if some of them cant fully change into both their forms. The were-characters we get to really know are just as driven, quirky, funny, and tragic as any human (or whatever other race again fantasy) I encountered in James' stories. Since they are fast healers and hard to kill the scenes that happen while the three main heroes of the story suffer a lit of pretty nasty damage making the prison scenes and even the escape very cringeworthy and grizzly.

And Morlock Ambrosious, well if you've not encountered him yet he is a names sword weilding, artefact creating, ambidextrous swordsman wizard who has been a hero, a killer, a notorious hopeless drunk and a figure of stories used to frighted naughty kids. He is also a man of his own honour and principals. At the beginning of this story he's left behind friends and companions for their protection and is in a bleak mood but gets drawn into a net cast by the strange gods and others and shown what hitting rock bottom can be like... Again. He's a long lived character, heals much better then humans (more fodder for the prison scenes) and prone to manic bursts of creative fervour and deep depressions. He's complicated and though a viewpoint character remains tantalisingly enigmatic though I felt I knew him. He is driven in this story by his strong feeling for his blood bonded friends and they to him so the tragedies that occur hurt all the more.

The Wolf Age is both one of the roughest books I read this year on terms if the wringer the characters went through. I loved reading about Morlock and his faithful wolf brothers of choice; the tale is a full heroes journey for the lot of them and it's one I want to read again.


As an addendum : there are several awful things that happen in this novel that happen as a direct result of choices characters make; characters pay permanent prices for their actions or inactions and just as the friendships are a core element of the plot so are mistakes they make.

You can find James Enge's website here and a free Morlock story at Pyr's website here.
I received my copy from Pyr for review
Here are links to places where you can get copies.....

The Wolf Age
by James Enge
Powells.com

Thursday, August 9, 2012

Mail-bag.....

Over the next weekend you can expect two reviews from me. Over the last six months I've read a mail bags worth of books and plan to hit them with some regularity; I'm trying to catch up somewhat with my enormous backlog.... So I'm now going to go against the grain of my habits...

Of all the books I've yet to touch on from my library I'm going for the ones that hit me the hardest emotionally since my move thus last January. On Saturday I'll be posting the review I'm working on now... The Wolf Age by James Enge.

The Wolf Age is the third Morlock Ambrosious book and though it's the first I'm reviewing it is most certainly not the first you should read ( I will be reviewing the others very very soon so watch the feed). Wolf Age hit me pretty deeply so I want to give it it's due since it might be my top read this year (and that says a lot since I loved Wise Man's Fear.....)

Come Monday or Tuesday at latest I'll be reviewing the third Burton and Swineburne novel Expedition to the Mountains of the Moon.

Both if these books rank among the roughest books I've read this year... I mean this in that the authors put the characters through hell in their respective books....

You can guess I'm pretty enamoured of both these books but that's my point with my blog to write about what I love...

Once I write what I love I'll be doing a Deadwood stories blog......

Till then...

Adieu

Friday, July 27, 2012

Testing the waters

Hello ....

I just wanted to inform everyone I'm testing the waters for linking my reviews to a couple online book sellers, namely Powells and Amazon in case people want to order from there. It is an attempt to monetize things a little. I'd prefer to have you go to a small local shop and spent the money where you live but if your ordering from online shops....

Anyhow the links will be at the end of the review with all the other links I tend to throw around... Let me know if this bugs you at all...

Short Fiction is so not dead.....

I love short fiction collections of all kinds and with all the original anthologies coming out now you can'c help but miss some here and there. This is even more true of authors like Jeffrey Ford who's fiction falls well into numerous genre's. I'e read a bit of his work here and there and getting a collection like is a treat. I got my ARC copy from the author himself a couple weeks back.

Crackpot palace is collected from the last 4 years covering a wide range of fiction; noir, steampunk, Sword and sorcery, memoir , almost all weird and some hard to pigeon hole all is his enigmatic and appealing style. He follows up the the stories with an easter egg essay about the creation or inspiration for the story. His stories remind me of the best of staying up late to watch Twilight Zone, Night Gallery and Creature Features they all take you along on a trip that is exiting and touched with danger and mystery. I have not yet read his novels but this is a taste of something I want more of.

He opens the collection with an introduction which is equal parts hallucination, daydream and welcome. It is in itself a little piece of weird storytelling that strikes me as a bit of how he gets his ideas. The are several shorter pieces in the the book that are great pastiches Polkadots and Moonbeams is the first tale and it sticks with you with its 60's americana setting and noir hip jazzy story. After Moreau takes you to an all together different interpretation of the Wells story from the animal angle that familiar is very new and creepy. In his story Ganesha he explores the folklore of India and I think may be my favorite tale for its take or creativity and respect for the other. Dr. Lash Remembers is a unique steampunk story that goes to places that are uncommon for the genre and need to be more explored.

I have to admit to being a bit of a horror fan and that is the appeal of many of the other stories in the collection; they hit that sweet spot between weird and shocking that did give me just the bit of a chill I look for. This was even true of the stories that had no mystical or weird element to them including his memoir tale. I could hit the titles that gave me these feelings but in some ways I do think that would be telling and since it was cool to find which stories were factual in some ways was great too. A few of the easter egg essays clued me into my ignorance of the folklore of our own country particularly New Jersey and its great to learn something new to look into for a source of mythology.


Jeffrey in a couple of the stories toys with some of the popular mythologies I grew up with. A couple of the stories take a mad scientist tale and run with it. Daltharee is a story that has a miniature bottled city in it that is reminiscent of Kandor and gets to one of those creepy skin crawly endings. I could easily say that the story The Coral Heart, the sword and sorcery tale, struck me as a take of the Michael Moorcock Elric stories feeling familiar but filled with genuine creativity and love for the tradition it comes from. So many of the characters we meet through Jeffrey are quite clearly doomed to make bad choices or even have a bad end but reading their stories is a joy none the less.

I know I have said it several time but the strength of the stories in this collection is their initial familiarity to genre tales we may know in one way or another. He takes what we think we know and adds twists and turns to the familiar hallways of the stories much like the Crackpot Palace in his opening finding new treasures among rooms that seem like ones we know. Short stories are much overlooked by many genre fiction readers who tend towards the doorstops lining the shelves; these short weird tales (and one was in Weird Tales magazine) show the strength of the medium.

He wrote one story for the collection called The Wish Head that tickled the police procedural/crime scene fan in me. Saying much more would give the great bits away as would saying more then a little about his vampire tale or his inclusion of Native mythology in one of his noir pieces. I really just want to wet the appetites for this many course meal of dark weird fiction with bits of reality and wonder thrown in for good measure...


Jeffery Fords website can be found here Crackpot Palace is out on August from Morrow/HarperCollins


Crackpot Palace: Stories
by Jeffrey Ford
Powells.com



.....if wishes were fishes.....




Fair Coin is yet another great addition to the YA shelf of books from PYR. EC Myers novel is filled with emotional tension, moral questions and highly believable characters and situations; it is another novel that I think works on multiple audiences because adolescence is something pretty much was turbulent for everyone. Myers hits right away with the turmoil in Ephraim's life as he gets home to find his alcoholic mother having attempted suicide; his already shaky life clicks down another couple notches. The troubles he is in and the magical coin that seems to get him out resonated with me and though readers might figure there is more going on then mysterious items and notes lead the hero to think the reveals and repercussions hit on the emotional issues.

I empathized with Ephraim from the beginning; he is in a much worse situation then I was so many years ago but i can imagine taking care of an alcoholic mother and relate to his being bullied in school and being attracted to someone but feeling hopeless about it. He is a geeky guy as is is buddy Nathan and though its more in fashion now he is still not gregarious or a hit at parties. His situation goes from bad to worse with his mom in the hospital from a suicide attempt because of his apparent death. This twilight zone situation lands him with a bizarre quarter that should not exists showing Puerto Rico as a state in 1998 and according to a note fulfills wishes. His life changes as does the subtle relationships in his life as he wishes for this or that and odd sighting haunt him throughout. I related to the feeling that if only I could change "X" my life would be great and the prospect of wish fulfillment without the work sadly still appeals to me. As a reader its easy to suspect there is much more going on plot wise and, oh , there are but the emotional center of the story and his relationships play the major roles.

Of the aspects of the main characters that makes them real are their foibles. E.C. 's heroes are the geeks in the school, they are the ones bullies and belittled or used by the popular kids. This is something that is sadly universal and I was one of those people who had been bullied and my life has been affected by it ever since. I enjoyed Fair Coin because Ephraim has courage I never had and well wish I did have. Wishes are a big part of the novel and I think a big part of peoples lives. Ephraim and his cohort of buddies have to live with the consequences of wish fulfilment and they do a much better job then you'd expect.
No matter how Ephraim might think his social circle is small just him and his buddy and fellow geek Nathan as a observer in his life I saw that his circle was bigger then he knew. Before all the wishes and the twists and turns that those cause good and bad he has a connection to the girl of his wishes Jena and her friends Mary and Shelly. There are numerous geek culture winks like that appearing through the novel; EC must have grown up like I did on 50's 60's sci fi reruns on TV and his world though much younger then I am right now really feels of home. I wish I had encountered this story as a teen; I may have missed it being a depressive but its pretty clear Ephraim has more friends then he knows before the first wish. As the world changes around him he gets good with bad and more bad and the creepy. He reveals things to Nathan and well its a interesting ride to say the least.

To be honest though I know blowing the story from there on is so tempting, blowing what is happening if you got clued into it by the story or not; its all to cool to read it for yourself I think. The beauty of the story from the realization of the truth on is the moral implications of what happened and the implications for the future. The friends he has once the third act starts are in much more danger then the bullies and concerns of a teenager. The adventure from there on in is more a caper story and its a real great twist on things; still emotionally charged but grown out of the teen angst to something more adult. E.C. Myers does not opt out of the implications of his story and take the easy way out.

In the end of the story Ephraim though changed in his desire for instant gratification is changed by his experience. The knowledge he gained through his trial and his decisions have made a more fully realized person and again I would love to have read this at much less then more then twice the protagonists age. His supporting cast of geeks, freaks and above all friends are all as vibrant as he. The many changed Jena's, Mary's Shelly's and Nathan's are all as unique was you'd want from a novel that shows multiple views of the same people. I do not want to say more. I got what might be the reveal early on and it ruined nothing. I loved this book and felt for the characters. One of the nicest part of the setting and familiar to me was the mix of people in the core group there was not a self conscious mix of races or mixed race characters but the multi national mix of players was so much like my groups of friends; I wish I appreciated them more then I did.

Really saying more would be giving things away. The end delivers on all the promises E.C. made in the opening and I can not wait for more from the author. Ultimately the characters make the hard choices taking the paths they can live with, again it's moral and emotionally loaded in ways some spec fiction does not get near. Strong characters and strong storytelling make this a must read novel no matter your age; Myers hits where we live and sometimes not where we still live at times. I wish I had another chance yonder it right so often but one chance is all we get really.

EC Myers bio and website can be found here


Lest I forget I received my copy from Pyr for review and am very happy they sent one.....


Fair Coin
by E C Myers
Powells.com

Tuesday, July 10, 2012

Mr. Scalzi, your with us on this away party....



John Scalzi's satire about a classic episodic science fiction shows is something I have looked forward to since his reading of the first chapter at Borderlands last year; I was in the audience of people he made swear they would tell no one about it not even it's title other then the fact it was great, inspired and really funny. It was and I actually told no one, that's me I keep my promises, well mostly. I've been looking forward to getting my hands on a copy since the reading; the book is out now and I was lucky enough to get a review copy from Tor Books.

John plays fast and loose with both narrative and science in this loving send up of the convention of throwing a recent addition to the crew under the bus to display the gravity of the situation in the opening minutes of the episode before the commercial break. He introduces the premise right away he read this chapter at Borderlands Books last year and honestly then it was hysterical. So its out now and is getting a lot of attention..... so if your on the fence about it let me tell you how I feel about it now.

I'm honestly conflicted because there are moments I really loved and was either moved to chuckle or to tear up but on the whole i have to question the cost of admission to this show. I know I say I will only talk about novels and stories I like and to be honest I do like this book, but I really wanted to love it. I was turned onto Scalzi because someone mentioned hearing about Old Mans War on Nancy Pearl's show on KUOW (plug plug) years back. I gave her first crack at Redshirts when TOR graciously providid a review copy. Its one of the few books I saw her actually frustrated with and one she ultimately did not finish. I liked it more then her, that is mainly what I will cover, but we have spoken a lot more about it then most books we have both read.

The Good or the reasons to buy this book. I teared up in the ending scene of the last of the codas, which my partner may never have gotten to. I empathised with the feelings of the background characters brought to greater life by the codas and particularly the last; itreminded me of the feelings I had for the XO in Battlestar Galactica (the remake) in the opening episodes of the third season in dealing with his wife it was not at all the same but it was that strong for me. Scalzi effectively played with the formula of episodic TV working faithfully withing the framework and the rules of the game he set up. He maintained tension in scenes that well knowing his title youcould write them endings. I found lots of geeky injokes and dropped names funny along the way particularly thatof the..... oh well that would be telling. I also enjoyed the fact that I reallyfelt like I got what he was doing..... ok so I was wrong along the way butI'd have been sad to have predicted the whole thing. Lastly I did like his protagonists, they were in an unenviable positionof being background in someone elses story but sometimes aren't we all.

TheBad: or why I am conflicted about Redshirts. I have been a sci fi TV watcher since i was a child... Original Star Trek(reruns Im not thatold) STTNG, STDS9, Space 1999 (original run sadly I'm that old) Galactica (both new and old), Buffy, Angel, Farscape(yeah), Babalon 5, Sanctuary... you get the picture not counting comics and reading and gaming (yes I'm thatkind of geek). Ok bad run on sentences aside I am versed in geekdom (long before it was cool) and though all that allowed me to really get what he was well getting at it may have been an issue too. He sort of breaks the fourth wall but not having a history with the characters like when they did it on Farscape or Buffy/Angel/Firefly the impact was more along the lines of "well that was a little funny but (fill in the blank did it better) and that was from more history with the characters. John also appealed to the game theorist in me but it was too much in the narriative for my taste, the storywas maybe too conscious it was a story. I enjoyed reading his exposition of the theory and his cracking of jokes directly to me much in the way Terry Pratchett, Douglas Adams and Grant Morrisson does but maybe he got there a little to late for me.

The Ugly: though I realy really want to love this book because of the emotion I felt for it's end I can't say its worth the ticket price right now. At this time with the economic straits I and other fans may find themselves in paying 26 plus dollars for this is just too much my tearing up not withstanding. I enjoyed the book much more then my partner; I still would love to see John Scalzi get a dumptruck of money backed up to his house. I hope I'm wrong and that I'm in the minority about how funny the novel is and from the other reviews I read it seems that way. I loved it for what I got from it and if you are along term sci fi comic and pen and paper role playing geek you may get as many or more laughs then me but I can't say its worth the ticket price.

Had John posted this as a lark on his Whatever blog it would have been an amazing easteregg for his fans. I enjoyed the book; I just did not think it that funny overall..... It did lead me to several thoughts about what I may write for NANOWRIMO this year and what I'd like to post for people to read....

As an aside for everone out there....


Tor and John Scalzi recently posted here that beginning this winter he will be returning to the Old Mans War universe and that is something to be exited for even if this light satire is not your cup of jo. It will be published initially electronicly in episodic instalments to be followed by a print version. I am looking forward to this a lot.... I love episodic stories and short fiction is so under rated. Me I'm still wanting to love all of Redshirts and will be bringing it to a signing since I'm a sucker for those and maybe I'll find it pee myself funny after my next stab at NANOWRIMO this winter when I try to do a bit of satire myself.




Monday, May 7, 2012

The Night Sessions.....


      
     The Night Sessions is my first foray into the novels of award winning Scottish SF author Ken MacLeod's body of work and now used to his writing style I can say it won't be the last.  I can say that with confidence since I received not only this great short novel but also The Restoration Game review copies from PYR press. The Nigh Sessions fits well among the stable of Scottish crime and police procedural stories if you overlook the hard science fictional elements like the space elevators, the smarter then now smart devices like the iThink and the existence of both self aware and non self aware machines.  His world is one I can well see happening technology aside looking at the tense political and theological situations of today's newspapers and tele.  Again like his thriller and mystery writer stars Ken creates characters that breath and make you want to like them, they are beings with flaws and beliefs the first that make them human and the second that in almost all cases for the viewpoint character are tested and are found wanting in many cases. I'll say this a second time about his setting to me the situations Ken presents are well too plausible given the polarized situations I see in the world today.

    I have read a few UK police procedurals, I'll mention the novels of Mark Billingham for example, and love me some good old BBC dramas like Inspector Lewis and the ever dark and wonderful Luthor so when I encountered DI Adam Ferguson and his leki (read robot partner) Skulk I was looking forward to something gritty and familiar with a spice of hard sci fi. Ken MacLeod did not disappoint I must say; his handling a half dozen plus viewpoint characters in a spare dare I say quick 264 pages reminds me novels of old and could well make an excellent BBC tv drama of three to five parts with the possibility of more (oh yes please sir).  The situation he presents grows out of today's headlines; the was of today fuled by oil money influence peddling and the auspice of faith boil out to encompass the world. The debate oh his world over climate change went on well too long and there have been both sea and temperature rises to deal with; there has been a second enlightenment the advent of self aware computer systems, humanoid robots and the construction of space elevators satellite environs and small extra Terran stations. None of these things have altered mans ability to maintain his hatred for his fellow man and the creations of his hands. With all the change that is in the backdrop of the setting humanity is still at war with itself religion is finally out of politics but it is if anything more of a PC subject then it is today.


    With slightly over half a dozen points  of view the Ken manages to tell a complete story that does not feel crowded once it's all said and done; as a matter of fact I  have some trouble thinking  about how many characters actually had section to themselves since some were so well written from their fellows point of view. The majority of the action is seen from the eyes of Adam the Detective Inspector who starts as the lead on a case where a priest is killed by a package he receives. His squad get nerves when it becomes obvious it's a case involving religion; the separation of church and politics was not at all a bloodless struggle and it's scarred society as much as terrorism and economic struggles along with religious extremism is scarring us now. Adam is the older gritty inspector his partner is and ex soldier artificial intoxicants relegated to a new and less dangerous body they are backed by a anti terrorism squad including many none white English characters which are as colorful in personality as they are in name.  Ken treats characters equal wether they be flesh or machine, or at least the one machine we get the viewpoint from and though there are some stereotypes  in the tale there are sadly sterotypical people in real life too if you only see a little of them.

     The strengths of this story beyond the well written and plotted police mystery story are the philosophical questions it raises. The Night Sessions calls into question the effects and the problems that beliefs cause for everyone not just the believer and the people who hold conflicting convictions.  Our world is polarized and seems to be getting more so and his setting as I said seems all to possible from the current state of things. I do not want to give away any of the neat little twists and turns he foresees  since they are all too interesting to discover as the story goes on.  I will say that if social, hard science fiction  or detective fiction is your thing especially if you enjoy stories that will challenge you to think a bit outside your comfort zones thus is worth a read. And if this wets your appetite reading the short story  iThink from the third Solaris Science Fiction is recommended since it plays a characterful part in one small scene. I like Adam Ferguson and Skully and hope this is not our last  glimpse of their version of our future.
   
      A last thought I'm right there in this mix of today's polarized society mess and I'm also convinced I'm right just as much as the right wind fundamentalist bleeptards.  My attitude us sadly just as bad as theirs and reading a novel like this was a great and enjoyable reality check since like I said I choose a side and think I'm in the right. Novels like The Night Sessions are thoughtful challenging and thought provoking; I think the author has a side but he portrays both viewpoints with respect and though there is a message dark as it is it is a very good read. It won't be my last.... Where is that copy of Cosmonout Keep...   

Thursday, April 19, 2012

Thief's Life


   With Thief's Covenant Ari Marmell joins the ranks of established authors entering the YA market; this sword and sorcery adventure novel following the life of a young female thief in a Renaissance like era city could easily sit beside the rougher adventures written by Brent Weeks, Joe Abercrombie, Scott Lynch and  Richard Morgan.  The world  Widdershins inhabits is one of many gods, political and social intrigues  schemers, backstabbers, social climbers fools fops and thugs; much like one one outside our windows the numerous often meddeling household gods  aside . The tale is told in Terrintinoesque out of order fashion building the characters and setting slowly maintaining tension with breaking scenes to jump ahead or back at just the best moment to keep you wanting more. Multiple viewpoints are head from mainly Widdershins, sometimes Adrianne, sometimes Madaline, all the time wry witty and headstrong but we get her friends, acquaintances, antagonists and the occasional newcomers point of view too. The nove is a spare 280 pages in length and they pretty much fly by because it's kind of hard to put down once you start.

     Though Thief's Covenant is being marketed at the YA market even being printed in a pretty handsome hardcover edition it lacks nothing for grit, action and complexity standing well with the Nighangel and
First Law books etc I mentioned above.  Ari's book is like them  in all the ways that make sword and sorcery stories among my favorites; the characters drive the story along and are not driven by the plot itself; Widdershins is put in many situations where other people including friends try to get her to do or in many cases not do what she sees as the best course. She is smart and canny enough to know following her intuition is going to be best for her and has a strong sense of right and wrong though it is a pretty personal one at times.  Like Brent Week's Kylar she is someone who has had a hard and violent life coming up as an orphan and though we see less of her past then his Ari includes enough  hints and details to let you know her childhood was not an easy one. Through some of the "x" years ago chapters he fills in chapters in her story where she witnesses and causes some deaths and losses that form who she is in the now and to come chapters. Like the so called adult stories there is trash and garbage and more filling the ally's of her city of Davilon there are viscous thugs and nameless or in this case named cults that consort with unclen things; there is some onscreen blood and gore with mostly only the swearing used by others abscent.  

        Ari tells Widdershins tale out of chronological order effectively starting where her personal god Orgun becomes a dirty with a single worshiper. That scene happens in the first chapter which is set in her recent past and then proceeds to jump from past to present and beck building both impression of characters and the world. The way her builds temsion with foreshadowing and backshadowing effectively kept me in the story wether the viewpoint  was any of the aliases his protagonist uses or if it happened to be any of his other interesting cast of characters. They people he populated his tale with are all a little recognisable types but they never feel stale or one-sided no matter how short their lives may actually end up being. He leaves lots of clues around to figure out who is doing what eventhough for his heroine it's pretty much a mystery and she even jumps to some wrong but useful and fun conclusions in the corse of the story.

     I would happily recommend this to readers of fantasy adventure fiction with no reservations... it appealed to the young role playing gamer in me that is still dying to play in a setting and with characters that are are multi-layered and real as he writes. I want more of her adventures to be honest and I hope he has got a good number of them up his writing sleeves..

I received my copy from PRY for review....
You can look up Ari Marmell at mouseferatu to check him out and see his other pretty cool novels.....



       

Saturday, March 10, 2012

Plans redux....

Has some events the last few days...

Don't know if any if the plans will be carried through ... The reviews at least...

And well the MIT thing that was a longshot anyway...

Wednesday, March 7, 2012

Plans....

Currently I'm spending time with friends in Holland... I've got quite a few books lined up to review including Lightbringer, Planesrunner, Jack of Ravens, the last Burton and Swineburne to name just a few and that's just from PYR... I am also participating in the pilot MIT online Electronics Engineering course that started this month that I hope to get the certificate from... the instructors seem really cool and quirky in a good way and I think I'm going to like doing the course... When I get a card reader I plan to start posting images from the walks we are taking daily in addition to photographing the food I'll be cooking. One if the books I have for review is Cook like a Rock Stat by Ann Burrell and I hope to cover that in some detail... Well I've got some coursework to get too and a review to write to post...

Sunday, February 26, 2012

not at all about dead wood fiction....

Hi all...

I know I have been silent of late and I apologize for that ....

I follow a lot of author blogs and the one by Jay Lake is the one I have to say that has touched me the most... he is one of the most prolific authors in spec fiction these days and is totally open on his blog about his life and his troubles....

this morning I read a post about one of the people he turned me onto internet wise and the fact that this person recently passed away from an unexpected coronary event ... an I was terribly saddened by this.... and it makes me wonder at the magical effect of the technology of the day .... I have been touched emotionally by events in the lives of people I follow because of authors I follow and will never meet in person...

Some geeks like me morn the fact that the future we live in is mundane and lacking flying cars and personal jetpacks and colonies on the moon and mars but the reality we inhabit is magical in ways past authors did not see...

today I was moved to tears by the passing of someone I'll never know but in a way knew through electronic media..... namely twitter and blogs...

its really odd the future we live in and poo poo on a regular basis....

comedian Louis C.K. did a bit on this in one of his shows about the iPhone and smart devices and how people somethins think the tech is so slow and dumb but really its a kind of magic that we live with all the time.....

thinking back to when I was a kid the TV and the phone were magic in ways I never apperciated as a teen and well

I get now to miss someone I'll never get to meet but he has touched my life in a special way....  who says we don't live in a time of magic...

G.