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Book Reviews - Romance, Fantasy, Science Fiction - By an Adult for Adults

Review: Crewel Dystopian Fantasy Genniffer Albin Crewel World

March 24, 2013 by Kathy Leave a Comment

Crewel is dystopian with a young heroine in a world where women must fit tiny, narrow roles.  Our heroine, Adelice, has a rare talent to manipulate the form of her world and has been forcibly enlisted as a Spinster.

We don’t quite see how the Crewel world works until quite late in the story.  The first part of Crewel is taken up with Adelice being hauled out of the escape tunnel her parents built in their basement, then punished for attempting to run, and finally being brought into the training group.

Spinsters are the female leaders who use their unusual abilities to touch and manipulate the world via looms. They are not allowed to marry and are forbidden any sexual activities due to stringent purity laws. The Guild leaders are men who govern and decide. Guild is dependent on the Spinsters to keep Arras functional, but the men are careful to not allow the women power or control.

Adelice has love interests in two young men but since she has had zero exposure to men she doesn’t quite know what to think about them. She is intrigued but fears the retribution should she be discovered in a compromising scene.

About two thirds through the book Adelice learns that Arras is truly woven above and separate from Earth, separated during a time when war threatened and leaders of twelve countries decided to set up the separate world. It is not clear exactly how Arras works. It is physical, with special Thread that forms the physical reality and individual people. Yet it is connected somehow to Earth.

The Creweler – and there is only one – is able to create new Threads and to use Thread to create new places within Arras. The current Creweler is old and wants no part of further renewals.

Adelice is appalled when she learns that the Threads that represent individual people can be cleaned, or even remapped. People who have memories that threaten the Guild or illness or are rebellious or inconvenient are either Cleaned or if severe, Ripped. Adelice learns a new technique to Remap individuals has much promise to leave most of the person’s skills intact. Even worse. Adelice has questioned once too often. Now she faces Remapping.

Adelice has to choose whether to take up her assigned role as the next Creweler, to be Remapped, or to somehow escape. Escape seems impossible. Is it?

Crewel is shown as the first book in the new series Crewel World and ends on a cliffhanger.

3 Stars

Filed Under: Dark Fiction Tagged With: Book Review, Dark Fantasy, Fantasy

Review: Flowers – A Collection of Dark Fiction Scott Nicholson, Short Stories

March 10, 2013 by Kathy Leave a Comment

Flowers by Scott Nicholson contains ten short stories that are labeled as “dark fiction”.

I liked the first story, “The Vampire Shortstop” the best. The characters were good and the plot was excellent. Short stories must make their point quickly and move on and “Vampire Shortstop” touches on acceptance, toleration, importance of winning vs. fair play and sportsmanship. We don’t learn much about the kid vampire who plays shortstop on a Little League team except that baseball matters and he’s really good at it. The story is narrated through the eyes of the team coach.

“Scarecrow Boy” is the only story that is truly horror. A young teen is living with his grandfather on a small farm and is terrified of the scarecrow that stalks him. We learn he was wise to fear the scarecrow, too bad he wasn’t wise enough to latch the gate!

“Invisible Friend” and “In the Heart of November” feature best friends Margaret and Ellen. Ellen lives in a trailer park with her mom and Margaret lives in her graveyard. Both stories are good but neither made a deep impression on me.

“Thirst”, “The Night the Wind Died”, “Luminosity” and “The Boy Who Saw Fire” all use the same magic theme, that it is by human (human like anyway) efforts that the rains fall, the wind blows, the moon rises and the sun sets. These all were reasonably good, enjoyable reads.

I was intrigued that Flowers features young characters – except the baseball coach everyone is in their early teens – yet is not classified as “Young Adult”. All too often excellent books with themes and ideas that appeal to adults are misclassified as “YA Fiction” because the characters are young.

I will look for more by Scott Nicholson.

3 Stars

Filed Under: Dark Fiction Tagged With: Book Review, Dark Fantasy, Fantasy

Couldn’t Finish These – Den of Thieves and Taming Fire – Fantasy Novels

March 8, 2013 by Kathy Leave a Comment

Have you ever had a book that you know is supposed to be good but you just can’t get into it?  These two books both came up in Amazon’s “Customers who bought this item also bought” which works for me about half the time.  Sadly these two both fell in the “didn’t work” half.

Den of Thieves: The Ancient Blades Trilogy: Book One struck me as trite. The main character is a thief in a city where thieves are executed and set in a land where a poor man is fair game for enslavement.

We all know how these books go, don’t we: Boy steals something he shouldn’t which kicks off a series of adventures and misadventures. That’s the plot here. I could see that the book could be good if I were able to get into it or was more in the mood. Or something.

Maybe part of the trouble is this is the first book in a trilogy. Sometimes authors take way too long to set up the story. All I know is I got to about page 50 and took it back to the library.

The second book, Taming Fire (The Dragonprince Trilogy, Vol. 1), has a more unusual premise and parts were quite good. The hero is the son of a now-dead thief, who hired himself as a shepherd to a noble. He taught himself to use a sword and knows a few small magics. A wizard finds him and takes him to the academy.

Yes this book has more promise and was far more interesting. Now that I think about it, maybe I’ll keep this one home a few more days and try once more to get past page 20.

Update:  Nope, still couldn’t get into Taming Fire.

Filed Under: Magic Tagged With: Did Not Finish, Fantasy, Not So Good, Sword and Sorcery

Review: The Girl Who Chased the Moon, Sarah Addison Allen

March 2, 2013 by Kathy Leave a Comment

I don’t know how to categorize The Girl Who Chased the Moon.  Is it fantasy?  Romance?  Coming of age?  It’s all of these.  Sarah Addison Allen also wrote The Sugar Queen and Garden Spells, both also hard to classify.

This is an excellent book, a fast read with memorable characters and just enough plot twists to keep it moving.

All of Ms.Allen’s books are set in southern small towns; all include characters who took a wrong turn somewhere and need to come back and fix it. And all include a dose of fantasy. The Girl Who Chased the Moon includes fantastical wallpaper that changes to match the moods of the girl who lives in the room. There are strange lights that glow on moonlit nights and a continuing sense of things being just a bit awry. Our characters work through the novel to reset those things.

One thing I love about her books is that they have happy endings. No, not everything is perfectly resolved and you can peek around the corner to see that Emily will have the usual high school senior moments, that Stella needs to find her center, that Sawyer and Julia have work to do. But the characters are happy. They found peace and mended the broken relationships.

The Girl Who Chased the Moon has four main characters, Julia and Sawyer, Emily and Win. They have tangled histories, connected through their families. The back stories are left shrouded until the end of the book although we see pieces earlier.

It is this history that must be untangled and set upright. The minor characters are excellent: Stella, Julia’s landlord and friend; Morgan, Win’s father, Vance, Emily’s very tall grandfather, Beverly who is Julia’s rapacious ex stepmother. All are important and all feel like real people. You end up caring about them as much (or more) as about the main characters.

Ms. Allen knows her small town South. She shows the sense of place that is so important to the characters. Not only the geographical place, but the place within the society, the relationships that follow generations. I have never lived in the south but I feel like I have after reading her novels.

I highly recommend The Girl Who Chased the Moon and give it Five Stars.

I got my copy from the library. You can purchase copies of The Girl Who Chased the Moon at Amazon and at Barnes and Nobleicon.  The links in the post go to Amazon and pay commission.

Filed Under: Urban / Modern Fantasy Tagged With: Book Review, Fantasy, Loved It!, Romance Novels

Review: A Measure of Disorder YA Fantasy Fiction Alan Tucker

February 24, 2013 by Kathy Leave a Comment

A Measure of Disorder is truly meant for younger readers, 10 to maybe 15 years old. It is not adult fiction that happens to have young characters.

It’s the sort of book that middle school kids would find fascinating, sweeping story, interesting world building, heroic kids, minor relationship issues. The reviews on Amazon by younger readers praise this to the skies.

Author Alan Tucker’s novel has the usual YA flaws:  Things just happen with major difficulties somehow swept aside, kids are smarter and more capable than adults, writing style is somewhat simplistic.  Tucker’s characters act the way kids act:  intensely self-focused, idealistic and easy to manipulate and everything is urgent/now/important/critical.

I didn’t care for the book but was curious enough about just what was going on to read about half way through. But when I got to the section where one group of kids agrees to go back to our Earth and steal toxic (read radioactive) waste to give their “benefactor” an edge, I basically quit. I paged through to the end to see whether our heroine Jenny made it back home, then quit.

From a moral point of view, the Mother’s (as in Mother Earth) view that good and evil, law and chaos must be balanced and that one is not innately better than the other disturbed me. I hope our kids don’t believe that hogwash. It’s also hard to believe that anyone would be gullible enough to steal radioactive waste. Yeesh.

A Measure of Disorder is meant as the first book in the Mother-Earth series. The second book is A Cure for Chaos. I won’t be reading this second book, but if you are middle school you’ll probably love it.

2 Stars

Filed Under: Young Adult Fantasy Tagged With: 2 Stars, Book Review, Fantasy, YA Fantasy

The Graveyard Book, Neil Gaiman. Fantasy Review Ghosts & Villians Galore

February 10, 2013 by Kathy Leave a Comment

Part of The Graveyard Book was excerpted as a short story that I read last year, and the full novel has been on my Gotta-Read List ever since.

We follow Nob, short for Nobody, from his first toddle down the hill to the old fenced in cemetery, up to his mid teen years. How did he live all that time? Simple. Or at least simple in Neil Gaiman’s world. Ghosts Mr. and Mrs. Owen took care of him. Vampire Silas made sure he was fed. His friends – all dead, all ghosts – entertained him and taught him. Nob grows up to be kind, open-hearted and no one’s fool.

The reason Nob is in the cemetery is that Jack Frost and his entire Order of Jacks hunted his family and killed them and now hunts Nob. Nob has several adventures, from dealing with a lunchroom bully to escaping from a locked room in a pawnshop, before the final reckoning with the Order of Jacks.

This isn’t a deeply serious book. You won’t find yourself thinking new thoughts (except for wondering what really goes on at night among the graves) and you won’t find Nob a character that sticks in your mind and becomes your constant companion. The Graveyard Book is a fun book in the best sense of the word.

The book is well-written with interesting dialogue and characters. There is a back story too, but we don’t see much of it. We see glimpses of the Jacks, and glimpses Silas and his his group and I want to see more. We only get that peek, a tantalizing whiff.

Gaiman won both the Newbery Medal and the Carnegie Medal for The Graveyard Book; both awards are for books written for children.  The novel will appeal to teens and older grade school children because Nob is young and kids can recognize many scenes, such as the lunch room bully, getting stuck in a room, plus the story is not overly complex.  However do not think this is solely a children’s book.  Adults will enjoy it too, and if Gaiman were to write more about the villainous Jacks we could have an enjoyable adult novel.

I recommend The Graveyard Book. It is excellent.

4 Stars

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The Graveyard Book is available from Amazon in paperback and Kindle plus hardcover and at Barnes & Noble.

Filed Under: Fantasy Reviews Tagged With: Fantasy

Review: Tricked Iron Druid Chronicles #4 Kevin Hearne Fantasy Magic

February 6, 2013 by Kathy Leave a Comment

I finally figured out what bothered me about the first three books in the Iron Druid Chronicles.  They all read like a series of vignettes, like short stories or a made-for-television series.  Yes, the plot moved from episode to episode, but you could easily parse the novels into smaller stories.

Tricked is the first book in the series that reads like a novel. Sure, you could probably turn this into television episodes too, but the individual plot elements and characters flow from one to the next.  Tricked takes place in the American Southwest with a plot as old as the ancient Greek tragedies.  Hubris is the downfall.

Tricked is a better book.  Better written, more carefully structured with characters that you cared about.  I’m still not enamored of the main character, Atticus O’Sullivan, but he’s interesting and some side characters like Frank are real people.  Atticus is starting to realize that he’s in a world of hurt.  He made some stupid mistakes, and as he says midway into the novel, he made them out of pride and the desire to think well of himself.  Now he’s paying, and he’ll pay again and again.

Worse from Atticus’ point of view, fixing his mistakes meant he asked help from Coyote, the Navaho Trickster god.  Bad, bad move.  Coyote may be good hearted – sometimes – but he’s not someone you trust.  Despite knowing this, Atticus agrees to a deal without knowing the full conditions, and sure enough, Coyote has a hidden agenda.  Or two.  Or three.   Hidden agendas are what trickster gods are all about after all.  Once more Atticus lets his pride get him in trouble.

This time others get hurt.  Coyote’s second (or third) agenda is getting rid of skinwalkers, evil brothers with powers, strength and speed augmented by Hell; of course Atticus gets stuck helping.  He rids the world of these two skinwalkers but at the price of several good people.

The end of the novel sets us up for volume 5 of the Iron Druid Chronicles, Trapped. I’ve not read Trapped yet, but it’s on my want list!

4 Stars

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Filed Under: Fantasy Reviews Tagged With: 4 Stars Pretty Good, Book Review, Fantasy

Review: The Shadow at the Gate, Christopher Bunn, Tormay Trilogy Fantasy

January 30, 2013 by Kathy Leave a Comment

The Shadow at the Gate: The Tormay Trilogy (Volume 2) is a transition book that sees Jute, the twelve year old boy who has become the personification of Wind, slowly learning his new role and Levoreth, who has been Earth, fighting for her life.

The Shadow at the Gate isn’t quite as much fun or quite as quirky and charming as the first book in the series, The Hawk and His Boy. But it is a very good read and a novel I highly recommend. It’s a little confusing with Jute running north away from Hearne, then running back to Hearne, getting captured, then slipping his way free. The path Jute took feels like the path of the wind on a breezy spring day.

My favorite character is Levoreth and I missed some of the quiet joy we saw in her scenes in book 1, The Hawk and His Boy. The Shadow at the Gate is darker with the villains coming out into the open. Jute gets more detailed, becoming a true person.

The magic is understated, not the focus of the story.  Wind, Earth, Sea and Fire are the still points of the world, guardians against the dark.  The elements, called Anboreum, are powerful but cannot win by pure power and force alone.  They must enlist help from the world and people.

Jute explores the world outside his city Hearne and one of the joys of this series is the richly imagined setting.  We see ducal courts that range from a nice, friendly big house with lots to eat, all the way to palaces full of snooty servants.  Book three continues our journey across the face of Tormay.

I immediately purchased the third book, The Wicked Day,as soon as I finished The Shadow at the Gate.

4 Stars

Please be aware that Christopher Bunn has issued all three Tormay books in a consolidated volume, A Storm In Tormay: The Complete Tormay Trilogy.

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Filed Under: Fantasy Reviews Tagged With: Fantasy

Review: Hammered, Iron Druid Chronicles 3, Kevin Hearne Fantasy Magic

January 27, 2013 by Kathy Leave a Comment

In Hammered our hero Atticus, an ancient Irish Druid alive and well in Arizona, slips further into the consequences of his decision to take the offensive against an Irish godling who has stalked him for almost 2000 years.  Now he agrees to help his lawyer and vampire acquaintance Leif kill the Norse god Thor.  This time the results may be deadly – for Atticus and the world.

Hammered is darker than its predecessors, Hounded and Hexed.  At the same time the characters are getting more interesting, better drawn.  The settings are good and the magic continues to be well thought-out and consistent.

The book ends with a cliffhanger.  What happened to Atticus’ friend, the widow MacDonagh?  Where can Atticus and Granuaile go to avoid the angry Bacchus (Roman pantheon), Russian Hammers of God (more or less normal people), the Norse pantheon?  Can Leif regenerate his vampire self and have any of his personality?

Overall this is another fast read that is entertaining.  It is far fetched and once more I didn’t quite follow the reasoning that impelled Atticus to jump into a quarrel with the Norse god Thor.  I suppose that if Atticus had continued to lay low for another 2000 years we wouldn’t have a story, but this change of character from “let’s hide” to “let’s fight” doesn’t quite fit the personality that Hearne drew.

Another point I must mention.  I am a Catholic, a Christian.  There are scenes here that are a little cutesy and involve Jesus Christ and his mother.  Hearne conveys respect for both, albeit not as we understand them as God and human mother.  When you read fantasies that involve religious or demi-religious figures you will find yourself simply moving past the religious trappings to enjoy the story.

I like the whole series well enough to read the next one, Tricked.  And probably will move right into book 5, Trapped
and then the last one (as of now) Hunted, Book Six
.

3+ Stars

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Filed Under: Fantasy Reviews Tagged With: Book Review, Fantasy

Review: Hexed, Iron Druid Chronicles 2, Kevin Hearne Fantasy Magic

January 25, 2013 by Kathy Leave a Comment

I enjoyed Kevin Hearne’s first Iron Druid fantasy, Hounded, so much I started book 2, Hexed (The Iron Druid Chronicles, Book Two), the same night. Our hero – at least the main character – Atticus O’Sullivan – manages to get himself even more deeply in trouble.

You’ll remember at the end of Hounded Atticus had killed a “god” in the Irish pantheon, a puzzling change from his 2100 year habit of avoiding the confrontation.  Now Atticus gets dragged into helping the local witch coven into removing a cult of Bacchants.  The problem?  The only way to remove Bacchants is to kill them.  Although Atticus has never seen himself being responsible to police the magic community in his long, long life, for some reason he decides to take the Bacchants on.

Atticus promises a powerful witch an apple from the Norse goddess Idunn’s tree, a gift that promises long life and eternal youth in exchange for her help with the Bacchants.

You can see where this is going, can’t you?  Atticus deeps himself ever deeper and ever more at risk by making one bad decision after another.

Some of the adversaries attack Atticus first, but every time something happens Atticus’s freedom of movement is constrained and he becomes more visible, more at risk from annoyed godlings, witch hunters, other witches and magic users.

The good thing about this plot device (increasingly lousy choices that bring up even worse alternatives) is that it plunges the characters into interesting situations and some nifty settings.  Atticus is a little better drawn in book 2 than in Hounded, as are his new apprentice Granuaile and some of the minor characters.   Hearne brings moral dimensions into the plot a few times although the general tone remains one of “I’m the good guy and everyone I’m fighting deserves it”.

Hexed is a fun, fast read and I recommend it if you go in expecting enjoyment and reasonably good writing.

Here’s a link to the blog post about Hexed, volume 1 in the Iron Druid Chronicles.

4 Stars

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Filed Under: Fantasy Reviews Tagged With: Fantasy

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