Senin, 31 Mei 2010

REVIEW: Star Wars: Lost Tribe of the Sith #1 Precipice by John Jackson Miller


Star Wars: Lost Tribe of the Sith #1 Precipice by John Jackson Miller
Publisher: Lucasbooks 26 May 2009
File Size: 142 KB
ASIN: B002B9MGIM
Free download
Copy: Free from Amazon.com


Product Description: "SURVIVAL—NOT SURRENDER For the ruthless Sith Order, failure is not an option. It is an offense punishable by death—and a fate to which Commander Yaru Korsin will not succumb. But on a crucial run to deliver troops and precious crystals to a combat hotspot in the Sith’s war against the Republic, Korsin and the crew of the mining ship Omen are ambushed by a Jedi starfighter. And when the Sith craft crash-lands, torn and crippled, on a desolate alien planet, the hard-bitten captain finds himself at odds with desperate survivors on the brink of mutiny—and his own vengeful half brother, who’s bent on seizing command. No matter the cost, Korsin vows that it will not be his blood and bones left behind on this unknown world. For the way of the Sith leaves little room for compromise—and none for mercy."


I have had this free short story on my Kindle for a long time and finally got around to reading it when I was between books. The story is the precursor to a new series in the Star Wars saga Fate of the Jedi. While a quick blurb is available at the end of the first story, I did not bother to read it.


Precipice starts out with a Sith vessal smuggling goods (crystals) that are badly needed by the Sith in order to continue their war with the Jedi. When a jump goes bad, they find themselves stranded on what appears to be a fragile planet. It quickly turns into a "Alive" situation ala Sith style when resources quickly become depleted. 


The characters are very one dimensional and that may be due to the fact that it is a short story and that it continues in two more installments, which they may build upon what is here in part one. However, I was not all that intrigued with what I read. I will more than likely delete the other two sequels that are in my Kindle as Precipice left a bad taste in my mouth and did little to advance the myth of the Sith.


I would have loved to have seen more of the backstabbing and underhandedness that we would expect a group of Sith to behave. Instead we get a story with a good premise but finds itself failing to deliver.


Precipice is exactly what it appears to be. A backstory that prepares the reader for what is to come in the next Star Wars series. As a free story you are not out anything for reading it but time. Precipice and the three other sequels are free from Amazon and can be read on iPhone, PC, and blackberry.


Plot:  4
Characters:  4
Style: 2


Overall: 3





SFF Blog Recap

24 May - 30 May

Welcome to this week's SFF Blog Recap! I enjoy gathering these very interesting posts every week. I hope you enjoy reading them too.

(The blog posts below are ordered alphabetically according to their Blog Site names. So there's no favoritism. You should have picked a name starting with one of the first letters of the alphabet ;) ).

Babel Clash

Alastair Reynolds is now blogging at Babel Clash and his first post is an interesting one.

"I wanted to kickoff with some discussion about optimism and pessimism in SF/F (mostly SF, since that’s what I do) because it’s a topic that’s been much on my mind of late, and not least in the last couple of weeks. But let’s go back a bit further than that to begin with."

Fantasy Book Critic

Mark Charan Newton's City of Ruin has been one of this year's best books for me. You can also read Cara's excellent review here.

"City of Ruin is the second novel in the Legends of the Red Sun series - currently projected at four volumes - and it follows Nights of Villjamur which I reviewed last year."

Floor to Ceiling Books

Aidan runs one of the most successful book blogs on the Web: A Dibble of Ink. Last week, Amanda posted an excellent interview with Aidan.

"The reason I wanted to invite Aidan in to chat is because I am one of the very teeniest and newest book bloggers around, and I thought it would be amazing to find out the perspective of someone who has seen blogs come and go, and knows what it means to run a highly successful book blog. Without further ado, let's get to the questions!"

Orbit

Can the writers be surprised by the characters that they create?

"When I was about two or three chapters into Land of the Burning Sands, I sent a note to my agent to ask, facetiously, whether she could provide a role for the leading female character to play besides merely serving as the love interest in the story. If I didn’t come up with something important for that character to do, I said, I’d write her out of the book entirely."

I think we are becoming a pessimist, selfish, scared and unthrustworthy species in general. Does that cloud our judgment in what's realistic in fiction?

"’ve been seeing some interesting discussions around lately about realism in fiction — to wit, that positive portrayals of various human experiences and relationships were 'unrealistic' and ought to be confined to the lowest forms of genre fiction."

Pyr-o-mania

I personally don't think that iPad is the right eBook reader mainly because of the display. And I can probably thrown in the battery argument as well. But if you're using your iPad to read books, here's a good article about various iPad eBook reader apps:

"Yesterday, Barnes and Noble released their much-anticipated, long-awaiting B&N eReader app specifically for the iPad. With its arrival, there are now three excellent eReading options, and as a user of all three, I though a follow up to my "My Life in eBooks" post might be due."

Science Fiction & Fantasy Novelists

I'm not an aspiring writer, however Coe's good advice may serve others.

"I answered their questions for a while, but soon realized that they were overthinking the process. One of the students seemed to recognize this at about the same time I did. He asked, 'Okay, what is the one thing I should be doing now if I want to be a writer someday?'"

SFScope

Here's the winners of the Canadian The Prix Aurora Awards:

"The Prix Aurora Awards, the Canadian Science Fiction and Fantasy Awards, are being handed out right now at Keycon 27 / Canvention 30, in Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada."

Wondermark

If you've ever wondered about "supernatural collective nouns", here's an excellent list for you:

Free Reading

A Dribble of Ink

"Cherie Priest’s Boneshaker, a tale of Steampunk Seattle beset by zombies, is hugely popular, into its seventh printing and collecting nominations for both the Hugo and Nebula Awards for Best Novel. It’s easy, then, to imagine the excitement building for the stand alone follow-up Dreadnought."

Pat's Fantasy Hotlist

"Thanks to the folks at Pyr, here is an extract from Ian McDonald's upcoming The Dervish House. "

Tor.com

"The city was old, begrimed by time. A place of wind-worn stones and tumbled masonry, its towers tilting and its walls crumbling. Wild sheep cropped the grass that grew between cracked paving stones, bright-plumed birds nested among columns of faded mosaic. The city had once been splendid and terrible; now it was beautiful and tranquil. The two travelers came to it in the mellow haze of the morning, when a melancholy wind blew through the silence of the ancient streets. The hoofs of the horses were hushed as the travelers led them between towers that were green with age, passed by ruins bright with blossoms of orange, ochre and purple. And this was Soryandum, deserted by its folk."

Giveaways

Grasping for the Wind

"Thanks to Sarah Totton, I have a signed copy of her story collection, Animythical Tales to give to one lucky winner."

Fantasy/Sci-Fi Lovin' Giveaways!

"Courtesy of Tor Books I have a copy of Black Blade Blues by J. A. Pitts to offer for giveaway."

Temple Library Reviews

"The Mylex Five-Shelf Bookcase is a great way to store your books, CDs, DVDs or other items without having to sacrifice style for function. Featuring a sleek black finish, this bookcase has five adjustable shelves to accomodate your storage needs. Perfect for use in the home or office!"

Minggu, 30 Mei 2010

REVIEW: Contact by Carl Sagan

Contact by Carl Sagan
Paperback: 432 pages
Publisher: Orbit
Originally published: 1985
ISBN-10: 1857235800
ISBN-13: 978-1857235807
Copy: Bought online
Reviewer: Cara

On the back of the book
We are being watched

At first it seemed impossible – a radio signal that came not from Earth but from far beyond the nearest stars. But then the signal was translated, and what had been impossible became terrifying…

For the signal contains the information to build a Machine that can travel to the stars. A Machine that can take a human to meet those that sent the message.

They are eager to meet us: they have been watching and waiting for a long time.

And now they will judge.


Several people have recommended I read Contact in recent weeks so, having enjoyed the film version, I thought why not and duly ordered my copy. I am very glad I did as Carl Sagan explores more than just what could happen if SETI detects a signal from extraterrestrial intelligence. Religion, politics and human fear and prejudice all play their role in the story of Ellie Arroway’s discovery of a coded message from the Vega star system and the events following on from this.

Contact is Carl Sagan’s only work of fiction, and reflects much of his scientific pursuits, the importance of the SETI (Search for ExtraTerrestrial Intelligence) programme being one. I particularly enjoyed the religion vs. science aspect of the novel, which is particularly relevant today, as science is being severely undermined by the religious right especially in America (e.g. Creationism and the rejection of the body of scientific evidence in support of evolution). A strong theme is one of belief in the human race and hope of a better future for all.

Following the detection of a radio transmission consisting of a string of prime numbers, it soon becomes clear that a more detailed message is contained with the transmission. Blueprints for a Machine are encoded within the transmission and while there is some initial resistance, the project to build the Machine and use it to meet the senders of the message forms the basic plot. Contact is told mainly from the viewpoint of Dr Ellie Arroway, astronomer and Director of Project Argus, similar to the current SETI project, which Sagan championed for many years before his death in 1996. Ellie is one of the five-person team who travel through wormholes to meet the senders who appear to each as person significant in their life.

One distraction, for me, was the occasional foray into scientific theory. I found some of these sections were more like transcripts of a lecture rather than useful background information and was tempted to skip them. They did not add to the story and at some points confused my decidedly non-mathematical brain. Sagan also attempts some socio-political commentary, with mixed success. Given that Contact was written 25 years ago, parts of the book have been overtaken by events and the world political balance has shifted. That aside, Ellie’s experience of discrimination within the scientific community rang very true and, for me, was an important theme in the book.

I enjoyed Contact particularly as it left me questioning the readiness of the human race to encounter extraterrestrial intelligence. I share Carl Sagan’s belief that there is indeed life out among the stars and tend to agree that we need to get our own planet in order before venturing outside our solar system. Having Ellie Arroway as the lead character worked well for me, particularly as her frailties and insecurities made her sympathetic and likeable despite her driven obsessive nature. I felt that there were too many peripheral characters, however, and the plot became confusing and cluttered on occasion. That aside, the larger themes in Contact I found thought-provoking and very relevant to western society today. The science vs. religion debate has taken a (downward) turn that Carl Sagan did not envisage 25 years ago. But the main question I was left with was “Are we, as a species, ready for contact with extraterrestrial intelligence?” I would like to think I am as hopeful of the outcome as Carl Sagan was, but with the current depletion of natural resources and destruction of the environment on our own planet, I wonder if the human race will survive long enough to find out.

Plot: 8
Characters: 8
Style: 7

Overall rating 8/10

Jumat, 28 Mei 2010

INTERVIEW - Jonathan Maberry

Recently New York Times Bestseller and multiple Bram Stoker Winner Jonathan Maberry took time out of his busy schedule to sit down and answer some of Speculative Book Reviews questions. Maberry discusses his latest Joe Ledger novel The Dragon Factory, his latest young adult series starting with Rot and Ruin, and the possibility of seeing Joe Ledger on the small screen. 

Speculative Book Review: Why should Patient Zero or THE DRAGON FACTORY be the next book everyone reads? 

JONATHAN MABERRY: The Joe Ledger series combines elements of hit shows such as 24, The X-Files, Fringe, and The Unit, puts them in a blender with some smartass humor and cutting-edge science, and shotguns then mix into your system.  The books are fast, action-packed, funny, but they have heart and strong characters.

SBR: Who is the inspiration for Joe Ledger?

MABERRY: He’s an amalgam of a number of folks I know (or have known) who do some edgy stuff.  Special Ops guys, SWAT shooters, street cops, detectives and others.  His childhood trauma and martial arts background –and his smartass sense of humor—are mine.

SBR: In Patient Zero you had the DMS go up against genetic terrorists, in THE DRAGON FACTORY they went up against genetic Nazis. In the next book THE KING OF PLAGUES, they will go up against plagues created by a mad scientist, how do you come up with your ideas for antagonists/threats and do you have a concern with science and its oversight?

MABERRY: I read a lot about politics and science, and about the military.  I’m idealistic enough to hope that man has a better nature; but cynical enough to accept that with any new technology, the first people to use it are the ones who can profit from it or use it as a weapon.  We have decades of proof that this is so.
            I interview scientists, doctors, cops, and soldiers quite a lot, always looking to learn what they’re working on now, and what they expect to be working on soon.  Everything in my novels –from the prion plague in Patient Zero to the transgenic monsters in THE DRAGON FACTORY —is based on things that either are possible now or WILL be possible in the future.  Usually in my lifetime.
            A good example is a subplot in THE DRAGON FACTORY, which deals with cloning Neanderthals.  The same month the book came out, Archaeology Magazine did a cover story on how scientists are working toward cloning Neanderthals.
            Michael Crichton wrote, in Jurassic Park, that ‘we spend so much time wondering if we can, we seldom stop to consider whether we should’.  Because I know that most modern science follows that line of reasoning, I will always have plots for my thrillers.  And, disturbingly, most of them will probably come true.

SBR: With each new Joe Ledger novel we learn more about the elusive “Mr. Church,” will we ever learn his real name, motivation, and background?

MABERRY: In THE KING OF PLAGUES, we meet one of his family members, and we learn about some personal tragedies.  As far as his real name…you’ll have to wait on that. 
            However, I have worked out his entire story.  He’s the most interesting character for me to write.

SBR: The Joe Ledger series has been optioned by Producer Michael De Luca on behalf of Sony, could you tell us where it is in terms of production and how much influence will you have in the final product?

MABERRYCan’t really say much at the moment due to contractual restrictions.  What I can say is that a major network is looking at a pilot script and we should have an answer from them in late May.
            The screenwriter is a brilliant guy, and even though there are some changes in the script that differ from my novels, I love what he’s doing with it.

SBR: Many of your novels deal with zombies and vampires, how did you become so enthralled with the undead?

MABERRY: My grandmother taught me a lot about folklore and what she called ‘the larger world’, so that by the time I was ten I knew about the myths and legends of supernatural creatures ranging from Redcaps to Draugrs. I got into ‘horror’ by writing several nonfiction books on these themes.  VAMPIRE UNIVERSE, THEY BITE, and THE CRYPTOPEDIA (all from Citadel Press) deal with various aspects of the supernatural.
            My interest in zombies came about from an incident when I was ten, back in October 1968.  I snuck into a movie theater and up into the closed (and condemned) balcony and watched NIGHT OF THE LIVING DEAD.  It terrified me….so, I stayed to see it again.  From then on zombies were my favorite monster.

SBR: What is the most satisfying aspect to writing?

MABERRYIt’s all satisfying.  But I guess the best part is when a reader contacts me to say that he or she has been genuinely touched by something I wrote.  Or that a character, scene, line, or theme helped them feel connected to something else they value. I get a lot of that from soldiers overseas who like to read about heroes with a strong moral sense and who understand what it means to sacrifice so much for what they believe.  Sometimes these connections transcend party lines or political affiliations.  They connect us as people.

SBR: What authors/works have had the most influence on you and what type of influence (e.g. good/awful) were they?

MABERRYI never comment on authors who have had a negative impact on me.  It’s counterproductive.
            However, I’ve been fortunate in my life to have met a number of great writers, many of whom took some time to offer guidance and advice. As a young teenager I got to meet Ray Bradbury and Richard Matheson.  Both of them were amazing, and very generous with their time.  Bradbury gave me tons of practical advice about managing a career as a writer; and Matheson engendered in me a love of books of all genres, saying that the best books always overlap two or more genres.
            More recently I’ve become friends with David Morrell, James Rollins, MJ Rose, Peter Straub, and a number of others, and it’s wonderful to be able to pick their brains and learn from their many successes.
            As far as influences on style (or, at least, on the various forms my personal style has taken while on the path to a comfortable individual style), I can look back to quite a few.  Reading Edgar Rice Burroughs as a kid showed me how much fun can be had with heroics.  Ed McBain taught me that the devil was in the details. John D. McDonald influenced my love of rational and layered thought; and Sprague DeCamp influenced my sense of fairness and honesty as a writer.  And as a person.

SBR: What are you currently reading and what is in your to-read pile?

MABERRY I’m currently working through a stack of manuscripts in order to give cover quotes.  The only chance I have to read published work right now is on audio disk while driving, and at the moment that’s Rough Country by John Sandford; and next up is A Dark Matter by Peter Straub.

SBR: Aside from your own work, what series or novel should people be reading?

MABERRYAnything by John Connolly, Peter Straub or James Lee Burke.

SBR: You have a new young adult series about to be released in October entitled Rot & Ruin that is being described as “George Romero meets Catcher in the Rye: a coming of age story set during zombie times.” Care to tell us a little bit more about the series?

MABERRYRot & Ruin takes place fourteen years after a zombie apocalypse of the kind described in George A. Romero’s original Night of the Living Dead.   Zombies rose, we fell.  All that’s left of humanity are a few scattered fenced-in communities in central California.
            Benny Imura has just turned fifteen. That means he has to get a job or have his rations cut in half.  After trying –and failing—to land an easy job in town, he reluctantly agrees to apprentice to his zombie-hunting brother, Tom.
            What follows is an adventure where Benny, who loathes Tom and believes him to be a coward, learns the realities of the world that his generation will be inheriting.  It’s a broken world that the adults have all lost faith in.  And there are seven billion shambling, mindless zombies who have, for reasons no one can explain, not rotted away completely.
            Tom Imura is a ‘close specialist’.  He is hired by survivors to look for relatives and loved ones who have become zombies, and he puts them to rest.  But there are other bounty hunters in the Rot & Ruin who do horrible things –to the zombies and to kids they capture and use in the Z-Games. 
            In Rot & Ruin, Benny and Tom go on a rescue mission to save Benny’s friends from the Z-Games and avenge the murder of the woman Tom loves.
            The book comes out October 5, a hardcover from Simon & Schuster.  I’m currently writing the second in the series, Dust & Decay.

SBR: Final Question, you hold an eight-degree black belt in Shinowara-ryu Jujutsu and have been inducted into the Martial Arts Hall of Fame, can you describe a head to head (or fist to feet) battle between you and the legendary Chuck Norris, using your skills as an author?

MABERRY:  Chuck’s a good guy and I know him.  We wouldn’t fight each other.  We’d get a beer and talk about the ‘old days’.

Everyone at Speculative Book Review and I would like to extend another thank you to Mr. Maberry for taking the time to answer our questions. If you have not had the chance to read anything by Jonathan Maberry we suggest you get down to the bookstore and pick up Patient Zero or any of Maberry's other books. You will not be disappointed. Jonathan Maberry can also be found at his website and Facebook page.

Kamis, 27 Mei 2010

Joe Ledger May Be Coming to ABC

From Deadline.com:

ABC Puts 5 Projects In Active Development

EXCLUSIVE: While gearing up for the upfronts over the past few weeks, ABC also opened a second, slower track for projects it wanted to spend more time on off-cycle. I hear five hourlong scripts are on the so-called spring development list, which is expected to yield two pilot orders this summer. The list includes Charlie’s Angeles, from Sony TV, with new writers Al Gough and Miles Millar, another Sony drama, Javier Grillo-Marxuach’s Department Zero, as well as three projects from ABC Studios: the Taye Diggs-produced family cop drama Behind the Blue; the ghost-themed Ghostworld, from Ghost Whisperer executive producers Ian Sander and Kim Moses; and the Matthew Gross-produced medical male buddy show Island Of Women. Additionally, Rand Ravich’s pilot Edgar Floats, which just received an order for six additional scripts, is also a major part of ABC’s midseason plans, which we may hear more about this week. (On the comedy side, the network had been mulling new pilots for Wright vs. Wrong and Awkward Situations For Men.)
 
Behind the Blue, from Diggs’ ABC Studios-based company O’Taye Prods was written by Scott Veach. The character drama is set in Austin and follows a family of police officers – a female Chief of Police and her four adult children, all of whom are in some facet of politics and/or law enforcement. Grillo-Marxuach is working on a second draft for Department Zero, which is based on the best-selling Joe Ledger novels by Jonathan Maberry. Described as is a high-octane techno-thriller, the project centers on the Department of Military Sciences - a special unit that fights enemies armed with cutting-edge technology. Ghostworld, written by What About Brian creator Dana Stevens, is about a ghost on the other side who helps an ambitious young female homicide detective solve crimes in the hopes of uncovering clues to his own life and death and centers on the mysterious, intense and sometimes infuriating connection the two feel toward each other. In addition to developing Ghostworld, ABC is still in talks with ABC Studios about possibly picking up the Sander/Moses produced Ghost Whisperer,Island of Women, written by The Days creator John Scott Shepherd, revolves around three male surgeons who share office space but nothing of their personal lives with each other until a perfect storm of romantic catastrophes and a lot of alcohol makes them finally turn to each other for support. which was canceled by CBS.

This is great news for Jonathan Maberry fans as Joe Ledger is one step closer to being to on the television.  Stay tuned for more information as it becomes available and tomorrow will be our exclusive interview with Jonathan Maberry.

Rabu, 26 Mei 2010

Around the Net Week of May 24th

Books


Andy Remic/Angry Robot


I have been waiting for the sequel to Kell's Legend for quite some time and had the chance to ask Andy Remic when SoulStealers would be out and available. He let me know that due to the fact that Angry Robot is now independent the publishing dates have been pushed back to ease the printing schedule.


From Angry Robot:




Press release: Angry Robot Books to Join Osprey Publishing

Leading Non-Fiction Publisher Acquires Specialist Sci-Fi Fiction & Fantasy Imprint
Following an acclaimed first year of publishing, the revolutionary science fiction imprint Angry Robot Books has parted company with HarperCollins UK. It will now run as an independent publishing imprint, with the full backing of niche publishing experts, Osprey Publishing.
Angry Robot will continue to operate from its Nottingham base and with its existing team under Marc Gascoigne, its founder and publisher. Marc said: “With the support of HarperCollins UK, my team and I have worked very hard on Angry Robot since it was founded. We have a great publishing programme in place and a dedicated bunch of supporters, the Robot Army, as well as some excellent sales of our first titles in the UK and an imminent launch into the USA. We are very pleased to have become part of the burgeoning Osprey empire. They understand our business and the enthusiasts who drive it.”
Chris Michaels, HarperCollins Digital Publisher, Fiction/Non-Fiction, who helped set-up Angry Robot, said: “Having helped build the foundations for a successful future, we are delighted that the Angry Robot team has found a new publishing partner in Osprey. We believe this will help them develop their niche offering, supported by Osprey’s specialist sales and marketing teams. We wish them good luck for the future.”
Marc Gascoigne added, “Our publishing programme for 2010/11 will be basically unaffected by these changes. There will be a short break while the transition is sorted out, but we will be re-launching in September 2010 and then it will be business as usual.”
Osprey’s move is a reflection of the company’s continuing strategic drive into niche communities that share a deep enthusiasm for their interest or hobby, whether it be military history (Osprey Publishing), heritage (Shire Books), or science fiction and fantasy.
Richard Sullivan, Marketing Director at Osprey commented: “We have a great deal of experience of serving specialist niches with a very tight product focus. Angry Robot is a great fit with our existing businesses. We are very excited about the opportunity to enter into a new market and we are looking forward to helping Angry Robot, its authors and its readers go to some exciting places.”
For more information check out the FAQ we’ve drawn up, or contact Angry Robot direct via the form on this website.
And from Andy Remic:






OK. For those who haven’t yet heard, Angry Robot Publishers have become independent of HarperCollins Publishers, and are now working alongside Osprey Publishing in the marketplace.
Chris Michaels, HarperCollins Digital Publisher, Fiction/Non-Fiction, who helped set-up Angry Robot, said: “Having helped build the foundations for a successful future, we are delighted that the Angry Robot team has found a new publishing partner in Osprey. We believe this will help them develop their niche offering, supported by Osprey’s specialist sales and marketing teams. We wish them good luck for the future.”
Marc Gascoigne added, “Our publishing programme for 2010/11 will be basically unaffected by these changes. There will be a short break while the transition is sorted out, but we will be re-launching in September 2010 and then it will be business as usual.”
A full breakdown of what’s happening can be found on the AR website here http://angryrobotbooks.com/2010/05/press-release-angry-robot-books-to-join-osprey-publishing/
The *bad news* for you guys and gals is a change to various publications dates. Sadly, SOUL STEALERS has been put back 6 months, as has the US and Canadian releases of KELL’S LEGEND and SOUL STEALERS. New publication dates are as follows:


Kell’s Legend – US: September 2010
Soul Stealers – UK: October 2010
Soul Stealers – US: November 2010
Vampire Warlords – UK: May 2011
Vampire Warlords – US: June 2011
So!! There you go. Many apoplogies if anybody’s been waiting with gnashed teeth forSoul Stealers……… it’s coming, baby, it’s coming……..
Cheers
Andy Remic.

Scott Lynch

The Republic of Thieves cover for Scott Lynch's forthcoming book has been leaked. James over at Speculative Horizon has uncovered the gorgeous UK cover.

James is also responsible for the blurb on the book:
After their adventures on the high seas, Locke and Jean are brought back to earth with a thump. Jean is mourning the loss of his lover and Locke must live with the fallout of crossing the all-powerful magical assassins the Bonds Magi. It is a fall-out that will pit both men against Locke's own long lost love. Sabetha is Locke's childhood sweetheart, the love of Locke's life and now it is time for them to meet again. Employed on different sides of a vicious dispute between factions of the Bonds Sabetha has just one goal - to destroy Locke for ever. The Gentleman Bastard sequence has become a literary sensation in fantasy circles and now, with the third book, Scott Lynch is set to seal that success.
It should be a great book and one that I am waiting impatiently for.


Brian Ruckley


Brian Ruckley has launched a new website. His latest post is about his book habits. Some interesting, and at times, humorous. Check out it out at brianruckley.com.










Walter Jon Williams


Willams has a new novel coming out and has launched the cover to Deep State, the follow up to This is Not a Game.


The blurb:

Dagmar Shaw is back at it again. She is the Puppetmaster and this time thousands of gamers are dancing on her strings. But when the game she is running in Turkey comes into conflict with the new, brutal regime, she realizes that games have consequences.
When an old friend approaches Dagmar with a project so insane, so ambitious, she can’t possibly say no, she is plunged into a world of spies and soldiers. Dagmar is a Puppetmaster, but when the bullets are real and her ‘puppets’ start dying, is any cause worth it? A nation hangs in the balance and in a world of intrigue and betrayal, Dagmar needs to figure out just what part she plays.

Selasa, 25 Mei 2010

REVIEW: Dark Genesis: The Birth of the Psi Corps by J. Gregory Keyes [Babylon 5]

Dark Genesis: The Birth of the Psi Corps by J. Gregory Keyes
Book1 of the Psi Corps trilogy, Babylon 5 tie-in fiction
Paperback: 256 pages
Publisher: Boxtree Ltd; paperback / softback edition (6 Nov 1998)
ISBN-10: 0752221124
ISBN-13: 978-0752221120
Copy: Bought second hand

On the back of the book:
Long before the Babylon 5 space station brought humans face-to-face with alien races, they discovered an extraordinary breed among their very own…

The year is 2115. Shock waves follow in the wake of astonishing news: science has proven the existence of telepaths. Amid media frenzy, panic and bloodshed, Earth’s government steps in to restore order – and establish tight control over the newfound special population… by any means necessary.

Ambitious senator Lee Crawford spearheads the effort, overseeing the creation of the Psi Corps – an elite unit charged with tagging and monitoring all telepaths “for their own protection.” But the real agenda behind the crackdown is one of government control. Many question the telepaths’ origins, while others view them as a coveted weapon. As the Corps tightens its iron grip, the stage is set for a cataclysmic confrontation – one in which the future of Earth will be decided.


For me, Babylon 5 was the best sci-fi series on TV ever, but strangely I never knew there was tie-in fiction until I found Dark Genesis: The Birth of the Psi Corps in a second hand bookshop. My favourite character in the TV series was Alfred Bester*, who, surprisingly only appeared in 12 episodes over the five seasons. He was a senior Psi Corps officer who was particularly devious and not averse to breaking the rules on using telepathy when it suited his own agenda. When I spotted a book that promised to fill in the Psi Corps back story, I just couldn’t resist!

Dark Genesis: The Birth of the Psi Corps covers a timespan of around 100 years, opening with the publication of a scientific research paper proving the existence of telepaths. Once the news breaks, fear and paranoia lead to violence and the persecution of anyone suspected of having telepathic ability. An opportunist politician uses the discovery to further his ambition and is instrumental in setting up the Psi Corps, an organisation created not only to protect telepaths but to identify and control them too. All persons with Psi abilities are required to either join the Corps, face lifetime imprisonment, or submit to a lifetime of drug treatments to suppress their abilities A resistance movement emerges, comprised of ‘rogue’ telepaths who resent the pseudo-fascist culture of the Corps, who by now were attempting to increase their power by selectively breeding highly talented telepaths.

Being already familiar with the Babylon 5 universe, I found Dark Genesis: The Birth of the Psi Corps an enjoyable read. It was fast paced and had some excellent plot twists along the way. There were also small details that only someone familiar with the TV series would pick up on, which I particularly savoured. I thought the reaction of the general population to the discovery of telepaths in their midst was, sadly, all too realistic as was the response of the cynical senator Lee Chapman. Some of the darker aspects of human nature are explored here, but not in the depth I would have preferred.

One notable disappointment was the characterisation. I felt it was too one-dimensional at times. However, given that this book is the first in a trilogy focussed on Alfred Bester, it gives us the history of the Psi Corps that made him the sinister person we know from the TV series. I was pleased to see the appearance of a Vorlon, the enigmatic race personified by Kosh in his encounter suit in the series. Dark Genesis: The Birth of the Psi Corps is an appetiser, a taste with the promise of much more to follow and it does require some prior knowledge of the Babylon 5 universe.

Overall, my view is that this is one for the fans. It is a good read, but I think someone with no prior knowledge of Babylon 5 would struggle a bit. But I am a big fan and I am seeking out the 2nd and 3rd books as I really, really want to read more about Alfred Bester.

*Note: J. Michael Straczynski named the character after the science fiction writer Alfred Bester, since telepathy is a recurring theme in his work (most notably The Demolished Man). Alfred Bester was played by Walter Koenig, otherwise know as Pavel Chekhov in the original Star Trek.
It is worth pointing out that J.Gregory Keyes (also known as Greg Keyes) has since gained success as both a Fantasy and a Science fiction author. He wrote the steampunk/alchemical quintet The Age of Reason and also the Fantasy series The Kingdoms of Thorn and Bone. 

Plot: 7
Characters: 5
Style: 6

Overall rating 6/10

Senin, 24 Mei 2010

REVIEW: The Dragon Factory by Jonathan Maberry

The Dragon Factory by Jonathan Maberry
Publisher: St. Martin's Griffin, 2 March 2010
Format: Paperback, 496 pages
ISBN 10: 0312382499
ISBN 13: 978-0312382490
Copy: out of pocket


Back of the Book: "Joe Ledger and the DMS (Department of Military Science) go up against two competing groups of geneticists....


One side creating exotic transgenic monsters and genetically enhanced mercenary armies; the other is using twenty-first century technology to continue the Nazi master race program begun by Josef Mengele. Both sides want to see the DMS destroyed, and they've drawn first blood. Neither side is prepared for Joe Ledger as he leads Echo Team to war under a black flag."


Jonathan Maberry's Joe Ledger series is a guilty pleasure. A lot of what Ledger and his team do are implausible but that does not make The Dragon Factory or the Joe Ledger series any less entertaining.  The fact of the matter is that Maberry can write a very entertaining and fast paced novel that leaves you at the edge of your seat and begging for more. It was where I found myself when I finished the first book in the series, Patient Zero. It is still the case at the end of The Dragon Factory.


The great thing about The Dragon Factory is that since we have already read the first book in the series we can take right off and start the show, no need for formalities. With that in mind the pacing is a faster than in Patient Zero but at times I found it does get bogged down in some explanations and exposition, but only slightly. This is somewhat expected as few readers will be geneticists, some explanation is required and it is done quickly and simply enough for the reader. Once that is out of the way it is pure adrenaline. There is no complaint when it comes to Maberry's pacing in his Ledger novels.


The characters in The Dragon Factory are all familiar faces with the doctors who discover the plot and the bad guys being the new additions.  The mysterious Mr. Church has a bit more light shed on his background, but he is still as elusive as ever.  Joe's team is back as is Grace. Maberry throws us a few curve balls as some members of the team will not be returning for the third installment. I would elaborate more but I do not want to ruin it for readers.


While the plot in Patient Zero was more like "24 meets 28 Days," The Dragon Factory seems to remind me more of a James Bond story as the villains are over the top with their massive hidden bases and nefarious plot to usher in a new world through their "Extinction Clock" and leave the world for the Nazi master race.


One of the reasons that I enjoy Maberry's Joe Ledger series is that as bad-ass as Joe is, there is another side to the character. He has a dark past that he carries with him and refuses to let go. While most heroes would leave the past behind, Joe carries it with him and it effects his decision making as the novel and series moves progresses. He is constantly tormented with the decisions that have made him who he is and when he is under pressure he recalls those agonizing incidents with horrific clarity. It makes Ledger more than a two dimensional character and more realistic even if some of the things that take place in the novels are not.


On a side note, I happen to have the copy of The Dragon Factory featured above and while the cover is not all that exciting, I would like to say that I like the feel of the paper/material that they made the cover with. It has a different texture to other novels out there. It has a sort of unfinished feel that gives it grip. 


The Dragon Factory, just like Patient Zero could be read as a standalone, but the end of The Dragon Factory has a small cliff-hanger which should lead into the next book in the series The King of Plagues which is due out March of 2011.


Plot:  7
Characters:  8
Style:  8


Overall:  8/10