Jumat, 30 Juli 2010

REVIEW: Evil for Evil, by K.J. Parker


Evil for Evil, by K.J. Parker
Paperback: 684 pages
Publisher: Orbit, ©2006
ISBN 10: 0-316-00339-5
ISBN 13: 978-0-316-00339-5
Copy: Out of pocket
Reviewer: PeterWilliam

From the back cover: CIVITAS VADANIS is in trouble. The Mezentines have declared war, and the Mezentines are very focused on their goals when it comes to killing.

DUKE VALENS, of Civitas Vadanis, has a dilemma. He knows that his city cannot withstand the invading army; yet its walls are his sole defense against the Mezentines. Perhaps the only way to save his people is to flee, but that will not be easy either.

ZIANI VAATZES, an engineer exiled by the Mezentines for his abominable creations, has already proven that he can defend a city. But Ziani Vaatzes has his own concerns, and the fate of Civitas Vadanis may not be one of them.


The war upon Civitas Eremiae, by Mezentia, is all but complete. The ultimate goal of which, however, has not been achieved. Several of the individuals marked for death, by Mezentia, have survived. As a result, Mezentia's eye turns to Civitas Vadanis and it's remarkable amount of native wealth, in the form of silver mines. It won't be long before Mezentia manufactures a pretext upon which to make Civitas Vadanis the next target of the war.

In fact, who can hope to be safe from Mezentia. Indeed, the only thing they seem to fear are the vast, innumerable hoard of Cure Hardy beyond the desert. The Aram Chantat tribe alone numbers over one million. The only solace for Mezentia is that there is no easy path across the desert. If there were, or one was discovered, Mezentia would be facing what would amount to certain annhiliation, a fact Ziani Vaatzes is poignantly aware of and hopes to exploit.

And then, a most unique political alliance is proposed. Among all these machinations, Ziani Vaatzes continues to poke, file, trim, shave, thread, calibrate and nudge events into an alignment most suited to his own ends. Indeed, Parker's core message is that, for love, a human being will do anything. It is the direct by-product of this dynamic that gives humanity it's notions of "good" and "evil." While I may not agree, you can certainly see that Parker has an extremely coherent and salient point.

The characters are much the same: the Eremian Duke Orsea and his wife, the Duchess Veratriz; the Eremian Duke's former chief of staff, Miel Ducas; the Vadanai Duke Valens; the exiled Mezentian engineer, Ziani Vaatzes; and the Mezentian bureaucrat Lucao Psellus, who is slowly unwinding, and understanding, several intricately laid webs. The only new character installment of note is the unusual and bizarre, Gace Daurenja. What Vaatzes does for the story, Daurenja does to Vaatzes. Daurenja is able to twist and mold Vaatzes to fit his own agenda. As each man vies to incorporate the other into their plan, which one will come to a complete understanding, thus mastering, the other first? It would seem the outcome is overwhelmingly dependent upon the answer.

The more I read this trilogy, the more difficulty I have in pinning down a definitive description of Parker's style. It reads like a hybridization of the third-person voice and narrative, interwoven with first-person thoughts cavalierly tossed onto the page. I really, really like it - with one minor exception.

With perhaps 150 pages to go in the book, I became mildly aware of an acute irritation I was developing toward some of the characters. In stopping to analyze precisely why and what, I realized it wasn't the characters, but a particular theme beginning to be espoused by multiple characters. It was the theme that concepts such as duty and love are the true motile power for other concepts - like good, evil, creativity and destruction. Apparently, love makes the world go round. Some of the characters began to bemoan their individual circumstances because love, duty, or both, had 'done them wrong.' The Self-Pitysburg Address was tolerable once, but after reading it from Orsea, Ducas, Veratriz and Valens, it went from being old to an irritant rather quickly.

All in all, however, this is the strongest 'middle book' to a trilogy that I have yet read. K.J. Parker has, with this book, lived up to the standards set for me in the previous one, and I now look forward to getting my hands on all-things-K.J. Parker that I can find.

Characters - 9
Plot - 10
Style - 9

Overall - 9.5/10

Kamis, 29 Juli 2010

REVIEW: Generation Warriors by Anne McCaffrey and Elizabeth Moon

Generation Warriors by Anne McCaffrey and Elizabeth Moon

Publisher: Baen

Format: Tradepaper, Book Three of The Planet Pirates trilogy, 280 pages.
ISBN 10: 0671721879
ISBN 13: 9780671721879
Copy: Purchased on-line.
Reviewer: Victoria

On the back of the book. . .



The Planet Pirates traces the careers of two remarkable women.. Sassinak escaped from slavery to freedom, and then used that freedom to fight the evil that had wrecked her world, first as a cadet, later as a captain, and finally as an Admiral of the Fleet. Lunzie, one of the galaxy's greatest healers, is Sassinak's great grandmother - but in actual years she is her junior; Lunzie spent nearly a century in coldsleep waiting for rescue when her ship was destroyed. Imagine their mutual surprise when Sassinak rescued her. How together Sassinak and Lunzie save first a world, and then a confederation of worlds - and almost in passing establish amity between the genetically engineered Heavy Worlders and normal humanity - is the story of The Planet Pirates


Generation Warriors, despite the unfortunate name, started off fairly well.  One of the two main characters, Sassinak, continued to be the strong, self-assured military figure she was in the second book of the trilogyHer scenes continued to be fascinating, action-packed and full of adventure.  I really began to think that the trilogy was turning completely around. 

But then Lunzie started getting her own chapters.  While she in and of herself is an interesting character, especially since she's dealing with the psychological repercussions of having been in cold sleep for nearly a century (everyone she knew is dead, for instance, even though for her, it was only yesterday she was speaking with them.), since she's a doctor, not a fighter, she goes off on cultural escapades. These cultural insights are the things that really bother me about this trilogy.  Through her, we meet the sympathetic, but not so sympathetic, antagonists, the Heavy Worlders, who defy Galactic religion and eat meat, have mating rituals which border on rape, and of course, want to take over the galaxy so that they can have nice light weight planets too.  It feels very preachy, and at times, Lunzie can seem overly altruistic.

And then, when everything comes to a head and Sassinak is off on a very fun and interesting adventure to save the galaxy from not the Heavy Worlders, but some other alien race that seemingly appears out of nowhere, the deus ex machina comes out.  Literally.  The ending was such a cop-out that I nearly threw the book across the room in frustration.  And it really seemed like it was more of McCaffrey's doing than Moon's, just in the way it was written.  The transitions between the two authors' parts is not always as smooth as they'd like it to be.

The ending ruined the book.  There was a lot of fun things in this series, but the ending just took them and mangled them.  I honestly suggest to skip this trilogy and read some really fun space opera, like Elizabeth Moon's Vatta's War series.  Those have got it right.

Characterization:  8
Plot: 4
Style: 6

Overall Rating: 5.5

P.S.  I'd really like to give it a higher rating, because generally, this book was the best out of the three, but I could not let that ending slide.  It was dreadful.

Rabu, 28 Juli 2010

Free David Gemmell from FBC

The great folks over at FBC are commemorating the death of one of Fantasy's greatest minds. As you head over to check out the latest reviews you have the opportunity to read a previously unreleased short story from a master of story telling, David Gemmell.

From FBC:


At Fantasy Book Critic, we love to commemorate our favorite authors. Today is the 4th anniversary of the death of one of Fantasy’s brightest stars. David Gemmell left this world in 2006 and left a huge gap in the world of heroic fantasy. Our team of reviewers are huge fans of Gemmell's books.

Fantasy Book Critic has recently been given the opportunity to post this extremely rare excerpt. Originally this excerpt was first mentioned in this interview here (reference to the excerpt is in the last 2 paragraphs).

The Games Master issue has finally been located and Fantasy Book Critic has received all the required permission to be able to post it here for the enjoyment of everyone.

We would like to pronounce our heartfelt gratitude to Mrs. Stella Gemmell, Mr. Howard Morhaim [David’s Literary Agent] and Gareth Wilson[DG fan] for their help in making this excerpt available to all Gemmell fans.

This excerpt can be read as a preface to chapter 1 in The first Chronicles of Druss the legend. As it the first three pages detail Druss’s wedding day[which has not been seen in any of Druss’s books] pages 4 and 5 deal with the first true fight Druss faces[parts of this are already found in the book. Think of this excerpt as a first draft of that scene].

So go ahead and enjoy this small tale which was almost lost and then hopefully you will go on to read the rest of David’s work as well.

Free Bright of the Sky for Kindle

If you haven't heard, Kenyon Kay's Bright of the Sky is free over at amazon for Kindle users.

Kay Kenyon, noted for her science fiction world-building, has in this new series created her most vivid and compelling society, the Universe Entire. In a land-locked galaxy that tunnels through our own, the Entire is a bizarre and seductive mix of long-lived quasi-human and alien beings gathered under a sky of fire, called the bright. A land of wonders, the Entire is sustained by monumental storm walls and an exotic, never-ending river. Over all, the elegant and cruel Tarig rule supreme.

Into this rich milieu is thrust Titus Quinn, former star pilot, bereft of his beloved wife and daughter who are assumed dead by everyone on earth except Quinn. Believing them trapped in a parallel universe—one where he himself may have been imprisoned—he returns to the Entire without resources, language, or his memories of that former life. He is assisted by Anzi, a woman of the Chalin people, a Chinese culture copied from our own universe and transformed by the kingdom of the bright. Learning of his daughter’s dreadful slavery, Quinn swears to free her. To do so, he must cross the unimaginable distances of the Entire in disguise, for the Tarig are lying in wait for him. As Quinn’s memories return, he discovers why. Quinn’s goal is to penetrate the exotic culture of the Entire—to the heart of Tarig power, the fabulous city of the Ascendancy, to steal the key to his family’s redemption.

But will his daughter and wife welcome rescue? Ten years of brutality have forced compromises on everyone. What Quinn will learn to his dismay is what his own choices were, long ago, in the Universe Entire. He will also discover why a fearful multiverse destiny is converging on him and what he must sacrifice to oppose the coming storm.

This is high-concept SF written on the scale of Philip Jose Farmer’s Riverworld, Roger Zelazny’s Amber Chronicles, and Dan Dimmons’s Hyperion.





Click here for the link to get your free copy

Around the Net

This week was a some what slow week for books but with Comic-con in full swing. If I were a publisher I would save all the big news for another day. This week's Around the Net will have a lot of Comic-con news but I will not go into full details as you can find it anywhere on the internet. These are the articles that made it to the top:

Books

Steven Erikson has announced that he has completed his final book in the Malazan Book of the Fallen series (even thought there are more books in the Malazan world to come)

From his Facebook account:

GASP! That would be me, coming up for air. How long was I down there? About twenty years, from conception to completion. The Malazan Book of the Fallen is done. Sure, editing and all that crap to follow. But ... done. I don't know who I am. Who am I again? What planet is this? Three months of butterflies ... maybe this double whiskey will fix that. Hmm. No. Delayed reaction going on here.

Yep, The Crippled God is finished. So unless editing goes wrong, then the current pub date should hold. :)




eReader News

The Android software which allows you to read books on your cell phone has been released for Barnes and Nobles Nook which shows that the Android is on the rise.

Barnes and Noble eReader for your phone download.

From PC World:

Nook App Is Another Sign of Android Ascent

Barnes and Noble just couldn't afford to ignore Nook for Android any longer.

For months, Barnes & Noble has promised a Nook digital book reader app for Android, even though the bookseller's eReader app for iPhone and BlackBerry phones actually launched a year ago, long before the Nook's debut. I don't know why the Android version took so long, but with Android reader apps already available from Amazon, Kobo and Borders, it's about time Barnes & Noble caught up.

Nook's Android app has all the features of its iOS counterpart. You can launch Barnes & Noble's e-book store from within the app, let other people sample your library with LendMe and sync purchases and page counts across multiple devices. The Android app is also Barnes & Noble's first to get Nook branding; according to Electronista, the B&N eReader apps on other platforms will be rebranded in the future.

I'm guessing Barnes & Noble had to hustle on Android with all its competitors already on board, but the bigger picture is that all these new e-reader apps are a sign of Android development heating up. For reader apps specifically, it makes sense to start supporting Android now, with the large-screen Droid X and HTC Evo 4G on the market, and with Android tablets on the way.

Generally speaking, the rise of Android is proving attractive to developers. In related news Thursday, AOL's new content portal app launched for Android first. iPhone users will have to wait, or just use AOL's HTML5 Web app instead.

Why is iOS waiting its turn behind Android? "Momentum is the key reason," David Temkin, AOL's vice president of mobile, told GigaOM. Android phone sales outpaced the iPhone for the first time in Q1, and the activation rate for new Android phones is now 160,000 units per day.

Eventually, all those sales had to pay off for users in the form of new apps, faster development and in some cases priority treatment over the iPhone. Looks like it's finally happening.

Comic-con:

Priest
Tired of all those glittery vampires? Looks like Priest may get you out of your funk. The trailer for the upcoming film Priest starring Paul Bettany, my biggest concern is that it is in 3D which I am already tired of:

Priest trailer
Uploaded by blankytwo. - Check out other Film & TV videos.

Tron
We also got a full trailer for the new Tron movie Tron Legacy. I thought I had seen this extend trailer a while ago but I am told it is new footage, you decide:




Sucker Punch
The movie that I am looking forward to the most is Zach Snyder's Sucker Punch. While the project is still rather hush, hush the posters have been released and I really like the steam punk look and feel of the world and characters. The big debate was which girl looked the best and I have to go with Jaime Chung's Amber. Feel free to add your own voice to the debate. Seems like everyone else likes BabyDoll. Either way a mech with the face of a bunny should be a good time for all:


Sucker Punch is a movie about little girl who is trying to hide from the pain caused by her evil stepfather and lobotomy. She ends up in mental institution and while there she starts to imagine alternative reality. She plans to escape from that imaginary world but to do that she needs to steal five objects before she is caught by a vile man. Story is set in 1950's.


Brandon Sanderson

If you did not get a chance to read some of author Brandon Sanderson's tweets from comic con you missed out but you can still catch his interview from Tor/Forge's blog. The interview was conducted by Suvudu's Shawn Speakman. There is some great insights on his fellow authors and some discussion on The Way of Kings.

Funny
That is about all the news I found and last but not least it would not be Comic Con without some Star Wars:


Stan Lee
Stan Lee, creator of some of the greatest superheroes in the world has finally reached godhood as he sits on the Asgardian throne for the Comic con announcement of the Thor movie. Excelsior!!

Selasa, 27 Juli 2010

REVIEW: The Gate to Women's Country by Sheri S. Tepper

The Gate to Women's Country by Sheri S. Tepper
Paperback: 336 pages
Publisher: Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing Group; (1 Jan 1988)
ISBN-10: 0553280643
ISBN-13: 978-0553280647
Reviewer: Cara
Copy: Bought secondhand

From the back cover:
Since the flames died three hundred years ago, human civilisation has evolved into a dual society: Women's Country, where walled towns enclose what's left of past civilisation, nurtured by women and a few non-violent men; and the adjacent garrisons where warrior men live - the lost brothers, sons and lovers of those in Women's Country.

Two societies. Two competing dreams. Two ways of life, kept apart by walls stronger then stone. And yet there is a gate between them...

Of all the books by Sheri S. Tepper I have read, this is perhaps the most overtly feminist in that the post-apocalyptic society she describes is clearly matriarchal. Yet it is not an angry, man-bashing diatribe. Instead The Gate To Women's Country presents a fledgling eco-utopian society where the ultimate aim is balance and equality between the sexes within a pacifist, non-violent culture. The means by which the Women's Council set out to achieve this balance, however, are both morally and ethically questionable. As well as being a very well written story, with excellent characterisation and a strong plot, this book raises issues that stay with you long after the final page has been turned.

The book opens with Stavia, the central character, meeting with her fifteen-year old son who has made the decision to reject her and Women's Country for the life of a warrior in the garrison outside the town. From this poignant opening the story shifts between Stavia as an adult and member of the Women's Council and her earlier life from the age of eleven onwards. She grows up with her mother Morgot and older sister Myra in Marthatown; a place where sons are given to their fathers at the age of five to be trained as warriors for ten years after which they have the choice to remain in the Spartan-like garrison or return through the Women's Gate for a peaceful life of learning and servitude.

Women's Country is a low-tech culture, still recovering from the destruction that occurred in the time of the 'convulsions' when North America was devastated by nuclear war. Farming, manufacturing, metallurgy, trade, education, medicine; these are all undertaken by women within walled towns, protected by their warrior brothers, sons and lovers in the garrisons outside the gates. Stavia is the daughter of a doctor and Council member and looks set to follow in her mother's path until she breaks the rules or 'ordinances' by giving books to an older boy with whom she forms a close friendship. However, we know that his motives are not as benign as Stavia thinks. There are secrets in Women's Country and while the men in the garrisons do not know what these secrets are, they are very keen to find out, wanting more power and influence in a society that pretty much excludes them.

Without wishing to spoil the plot, the men are right to believe that the women are holding back significant information from them. By segregating the sexes and restricting mens' access to education and pre-destruction knowledge, the women are able to manipulate the technology they have to make advances towards a non-violent society. How this is achieved is the secret that could destroy everything should the men uncover the truth. It also raises a very real moral dilemma... do the means justify the hoped for end result? Certainly it gave me plenty to think about after I had finished reading the book.

Sheri S. Tepper's writing is gentle and allows the plot to develop gradually over time. I found Stavia to be a compelling narrator, particularly when she used her 'actor' persona to hide her conflicting emotions. I also really liked Joshua, the family servitor, who, although very much in the background, was wise and insightful and provided balance to an otherwise divided culture. To some degree he was presented as an idealised male archetype, something the society strived for, yet because he had rejected the warrior life, he was also somehow lacking in honour and not always given the respect he deserved. The men in the garrison, on the other hand, were largely stereotyped as aggressive, resentful and hungry for power and control. Another group, the 'Holylanders', misogynistic polygamous descendents of fundamentalist-type Christians were interesting in that they provided a stark contrast to the culture of the Women's Country.

Throughout The Gate to Women's Country are scenes from Iphigenia of Ilium, the traditional play that the Council put on every year before the summer carnival. This is a reworking of the Greek tragedy The Trojan Women and used as a guiding theme or leitmotif, as the adult Stavia prepares to play her part in the performance. I found this particularly interesting as it was treated almost as a religious text, and indeed, highlighted certain aspects of this post-apocalyptic society.

It is fair to say that I really enjoyed reading The Gate to Women's Country and found it gave me plenty to think about. Would I enjoy living in such a matriarchal society, where, apart from the servitors, contact with men was limited to two carnivals every year? While I appreciated the desire for a completely pacifist society, I am not sure I would be prepared to go along with the measures the Women’s Council practiced in their attempt to achieve this. To me this felt oppressive and lacking in basic respect for the men, and the secrecy surrounding this was deceitful to say the least. However, this is a society still trying to rebuild itself some three hundred years after a nuclear war; a war that was indiscriminate in selecting its millions of innocent victims and blighted large parts of the land; a war that was started and fought predominantly by men… our own current society.

Plot 8
Characters 9
Style 8

Overall 9/10

Senin, 26 Juli 2010

REVIEW: Royal Exile by Fiona McIntosh

Royal Exile by Fiona McIntosh
Publishing Information: Paperback; 464 pages
Publisher: HarperCollins 5 January 2009
ISBN 10: 0007276028
ISBN 13: 9780007276028
Series: Book of the Valisar Trilogy
Copy: Out of Pocket
Reviewer: Tyson


Back of the book: "From out of the East they spread like a merciless plague -- destroying kingdom after kingdom and the sovereigns who had previously mocked the warlord Loethar and his barbarian horde. Now only one land remains unconquered -- the largest, richest, and most powerful realm of the Denova Set...Penraven. The Valisar royals of Penraven face certain death, for the savage tyrant Loethar covets what they alone possess: the fabled Valisar Enchantment, an irresistible power to coerce, which will belong to Loethar once every Valisar has been slain. But the last hope of the besieged kingdom is being sent in secret from his doomed home, in the company of a single warrior. The future of Penraven now rests on the shoulders of the young Crown Prince Leonel who, though untried and untested in the ways of war, must survive brutality and treachery in order to claim the Valisar throne."


Fiona McIntosh's Royal Exile has been sitting in my to read pile for nearly a year and it was not alone. Truth be told I was tired of looking at the title and decided to give the book a shot. The book starts out like many other fantasy novels do, a peaceful and successful empire is rapidly destroyed by a invading horde of barbarians. In an effort to end the conflict the empire prepares for the worst and makes plans for the heir of the throne to vanish and seek his revenge and reclaim his kingdom when he is older and able to gather the appropriate force to deal with the threat.


It sounds good on paper and many of us have read that story on more than one occasion. Usually it is told very well and I find myself looking for more of the story. Royal Exile did not deliver on my expectations. The characters were far to black and white for my taste. If someone in the story was bad they were completely evil with no grey areas. Same could be said for our heroes. They had no shortcomings. I like my heroes to be full of valor but I do not expect or want perfection. I think that is where the story started to unravel for me.


It takes very little time for things to get ugly in the vast and impressive empire that McIntosh set up for us and for a kingdom that was alluded to being vast and powerful they did not put up much of a fight to save their citizens or claims of property. While I can see a king holding his soldiers back to save his own parcel of land the Emperor of Royal Exile did not even bother to do that. He simply had his right hand ride out and deliver terms for surrender. Surprisingly enough the barbarians do not even bother to listen to the offer. While there may be some powerful empires that do not require the use of a standing army in fantasy, I have yet to see one. The empire in Royal Exile seemed to be ruled by a pansy with some narrow-minded flunkies.  McIntosh missed the boat when she outlined her ideas on how a kingdom is to be ruled and it was no wonder that it was steamrolled by anyone with a sword.


While this is a trilogy, and I am told that it does in fact get better in the later books in the series, I have no plans to return to McIntosh's world. I found myself laughing at some of the moronic things that took place in the novel. When I reached the end of the Royal Exile I actually had to wonder if I had gone anywhere. It felt as if the book hardly moved at all or at least came full circle. There was a great idea in there somewhere, it just never came to fruition.


Plot  5
Characters  4
Style  5


Overall  4.5/10

Minggu, 25 Juli 2010

REVIEW: The Hellbound Heart by Clive Barker

The Hellbound Heart by Clive Barker
Paperback: 144 pages
Publisher: Harper Voyager; (Reissue) edition (1 Oct 2008)
Originally published: 1986
ISBN-10: 0006470653
ISBN-13: 978-0006470656
Reviewer: Cara
Copy: Bought secondhand

From the back of the book:
The classic tale of supernatural obsession that inspired the film Hellraiser, from the critically acclaimed master of darkness.


At last Frank had solved the puzzle of Lemarchand's lacquered box. He now stood on the threshold of a new world of heightened sensation.

In moments the Cenobites - who had dedicated an eternity to the pursuit of sensuality - would come and reveal dark secrets that would transform him forever.

But with the exquisite pleasure would also come pain beyond imagining. To escape his hideous tormentors and return to this world, Frank will need the help of his brother's wife, Julia, the woman who loved him. But most of all he would need blood.


The Hellbound Heart is a novella, and a short one at that, but it packs a lot into it's 128 pages. The synopsis on the back cover sets the scene for a dark exploration of the pursuit of pleasure... and how there is always a price to pay.

The principle players are Frank, his brother Rory, married to Julia, and Kirsty. Frank is a total hedonist, living his life in the pursuit of pleasure, excitement and adventure. On solving the puzzle of the Lemarchand box Frank finds much more than he could ever have imagined, and it is here we are introduced to the Cenobites. For anyone who has seen any of the Hellraiser films, the grotesque imagery of the hierophants of the Order of the Gash will be familiar, although they are only briefly described here. However, Barker uses his skill with words to paint a frightening picture of the ultimate in depravity in a few short paragraphs.

I found both the female characters to be the most interesting. Julia is presented as a beautiful woman who I felt uses her beauty to hide the fact that she has little else to offer the world. She comes across as shallow and almost devoid of emotion, yet after one brief sexual encounter with Frank on the eve of her wedding to his brother she is willing to do anything to ‘rescue’ Frank from the Cenobites. This did not work for me as I found it difficult to accept that Julia would go against all social mores and act in the way she did for someone like Frank. But being bored with her life with Rory and having little else to do other than act the role of dutiful wife, she broke with every moral code to help Frank. It was gratifying to read what happens to her in the end though.

Kirsty, on the other hand, was an enigma. Her relationship to Rory (and thus to Frank) was never clearly defined… was she family, a neighbour or a close friend? The contrast between the two women is marked:
“They had little in common: Julia the sweet, the beautiful, the winner of glances and kisses, and Kirsty the girl with the pale handshake, whose eyes were only ever as bright as Julia’s before or after tears. She had long ago decided that life was unfair.”
I gained the impression that Kirsty had an unrequited love for Rory, which may go some way to explain her actions later in the book. Yet, in the early chapters, she is described as
“a hindrance more than a help; her dreamy, perpetually defeated manner set Julia’s teeth on edge”
Indeed I found her passivity and social awkwardness irritating until she draws on some hitherto unforeseen inner strength in the final denouement, thus redeeming herself in my eyes.

Having seen the film Hellraiser before reading The Hellbound Heart I was surprised at some of the differences. In the screen version Rory becomes Larry and Kirsty is Larry’s daughter. While the movie follows the book fairly closely for the most part, I expected Pinhead to feature as prominently as he did on screen. Instead, he is reduced to one brief appearance:
“Its voice, unlike that of its companion, was light and breathy – the voice of an excited girl. Every inch of its head had been tattooed with an intricate grid, and at every intersection of horizontal and vertical axes a jewelled pin driven through to the bone. Its tongue was similarly decorated” 
As a horror story, The Hellbound Heart could have benefitted from more involvement of the Cenobites, something Clive Barker must have agreed with when working on Hellraiser, given that the Cenobites are much more prominent in the movie.

I thoroughly enjoyed the pace of the book. The Hellbound Heart may be a short novella, but it grips from the outset and the fast action never loses momentum. Clive Barker’s writing is wonderful. He chooses his words skilfully, never losing the plot amidst a mire of overly descriptive prose. Much is left to the reader’s imagination and given the nature of the Cenobites and of Frank’s experience, this is a good thing as it enhances the horror of the story. Certainly I found the short descriptions of Frank’s changing appearance unnerving and Kirsty’s final interaction with The Engineer was very creepy indeed. My only regret was that I had seen the film before reading the book as this meant I already had images of the Cenobites in my head. Being a short but captivating book, The Hellbound Heart is a perfect introduction to Clive Barker and his dark and twisted imagination. Best read with all the lights on though!

Plot: 8
Characters: 8
Style: 8

Rating 8/10

Stephen Deas News

While it has already been widely reported on various other blog and news sites, we thought we would let everyone know the great news from Stephen Deas' camp

From John Jarrold's Literary and Script Doctor website:


THIRD MULTI-BOOK DEAL FOR FANTASY NOVELIST STEPHEN DEAS

John Jarrold has concluded a four-book World Rights deal with Simon Spanton of Gollancz, for fantasy novels by Stephen Deas, for a high five-figure sum in pounds sterling. Deas’ debut novel, a dragon fantasy titled THE ADAMANTINE PALACE, was published by Gollancz in March 2009 and followed by KING OF THE CRAGS this April (the third volume in this series, ORDER OF THE SCALES, will follow early in 2011).

The first book in this deal is a one-off, THE BLACK MAUSOLEUM, related to his dragon fantasies, which will be followed by three further adult titles that entwine that series with Deas’ YA fantasies that open with THE THIEF-TAKER’S APPRENTICE in August. THE BLACK MAUSOLEUM will be delivered in the summer of 2011, with the other books following at yearly intervals.

‘Simon and I did our first three-book deal for Steve at the end of 2007,’ said John Jarrold. ‘With the immediate success of THE ADAMANTINE PALACE in early 2009, we were able to follow that up with another three-book deal that May. And now Steve’s third multi-book deal in two-and-a-half years – which is remarkable testimony to his writing and story-telling, and to the fact that Simon and Gollancz know a good thing when they see one!’

Stephen Deas has worked as a systems designer and project manager for a number of technology-based aerospace companies and has reviewed books for the British SF Association’s magazine VECTOR. He currently lives in Essex with his wife and two sons.

Sabtu, 24 Juli 2010

The Year's Best....So Far

Half the year is over and Speculative Book Review thought we would recap our favorite books we have read so far this year. Here are each of our top 5 picks for the best books we have read this year...so far.

 
Tyson
5. The Savage Tales of Solomon Kane by Robert E. Howard Collected in this volume, lavishly illustrated by award-winning artist Gary Gianni, are all of the stories and poems that make up the thrilling saga of the dour and deadly Puritan, Solomon Kane. Together they constitute a sprawling epic of weird fantasy adventure that stretches from sixteenth-century England to remote African jungles where no white man has set foot. Here are shudder-inducing tales of vengeful ghosts and bloodthirsty demons, of dark sorceries wielded by evil men and women, all opposed by a grim avenger armed with a fanatic’s faith and a warrior’s savage heart. This edition also features exclusive story fragments, a biography of Howard by scholar Rusty Burke, and “In Memoriam,” H. P. Lovecraft’s moving tribute to his friend and fellow literary genius. Rating 8.5/10 
 
4. The Terror By Dan Simmons The bestselling author of Ilium and Olympos transforms the true story of a legendary Arctic expedition into a thriller worthy of Stephen King or Patrick O'Brian. Their captain's insane vision of a Northwest Passage has kept the crewmen of The Terror trapped in Arctic ice for two years without a thaw. But the real threat to their survival isn't the ever-shifting landscape of white, the provisions that have turned to poison before they open them, or the ship slowly buckling in the grip of the frozen ocean. The real threat is whatever is out in the frigid darkness, stalking their ship, snatching one seaman at a time or whole crews, leaving bodies mangled horribly or missing forever. Captain Crozier takes over the expedition after the creature kills its original leader, Sir John Franklin. Drawing equally on his own strengths as a seaman and the mystical beliefs of the Eskimo woman he's rescued, Crozier sets a course on foot out of the Arctic and away from the insatiable beast. But every day the dwindling crew becomes more deranged and mutinous, until Crozier begins to fear there is no escape from an ever-more-inconceivable nightmare. Rating 8/10 
 
3. Shadow's Son by John Sprunk In the holy city of Othir, treachery and corruption lurk at the end of every street, just the place for a freelance assassin with no loyalties and few scruples. Caim makes his living on the edge of a blade, but when a routine job goes south, he is thrust into the middle of an insidious plot. Pitted against crooked lawmen, rival killers, and sorcery from the Other Side, his only allies are Josephine, the socialite daughter of his last victim, and Kit, a guardian spirit no one else can see. But in this fight for his life, Caim only trusts his knives and his instincts, but they won't be enough when his quest for justice leads him from Othir's hazardous back alleys to its shining corridors of power. To unmask a conspiracy at the heart of the empire, he must claim his birthright as the Shadow's Son.... Rating 8.5/10 
 
2. The Emerald Storm by Michael J. Sullivan A MESSAGE IS INTERCEPTED. A SINISTER PLAN LAUNCHED. TWO THIEVES STAND IN THE WAY. Ex-mercenary Hadrian Blackwater sets course on a high seas adventure to find the lost Heir of Novron. His only hope lies in confronting the ruthless and cunning Merrick Marius. Fearing his friend is not up to the challenge, Royce Melborn joins his old partner for one last mission. Their journey finds them adrift amid treachery and betrayals forcing Hadrian to face a past he hoped never to see again. Rating 8.5/10
1. Bitter Seeds by Ian Tregillis Raybould Marsh is a British secret agent in the early days of the Second World War, haunted by something strange he saw on a mission during the Spanish Civil War: a German woman with wires going into her head who looked at him as if she knew him. When the Nazis start running missions with people who have unnatural abilities - a woman who can turn invisible, a man who can walk through walls, and the woman Marsh saw in Spain who can use her knowledge of the future to twist the present - Marsh is the man who has to face them. He rallies the secret warlocks of Britain to hold the impending invasion at bay. But magic always exacts a price. Eventually, the sacrifice necessary to defeat the enemy will be as terrible as outright loss would be. Rating 9/10 
 
Yagiz
5. The Dwarves by Markus Heitz For countless millennia, no man or beast has ever succeeded in breaching the stone gateway into Girdlegard. Until now ...Abandoned as a child, Tungdil the blacksmith is the only dwarf in a kingdom of men. But when he is sent out into the world to deliver a message and reacquaint himself with his people, the young foundling finds himself thrust into a battle for which he has not been trained. Not only his own safety, but the life of every man, woman and child in Girdlegard depends upon his ability to embrace his heritage. Although he has many unanswered questions, Tungdil is certain of one thing: no matter where he was raised, he is a true dwarf. And no one has ever questioned the courage of the Dwarves. Rating 9/10
4. The Noise Within by Ian Whates On the brink of perfecting the long sought-after human/AI interface, Philip Kaufman finds his world thrown into turmoil as a scandal from the past returns to haunt him and dangerous information falls into his hands. Pursued by assassins and attacked in his own home, he flees. Leyton, a government black-ops specialist, is diverted from his usual duties to hunt down the elusive pirate vessel The Noise Within, wondering all the while why this particular freebooter is considered so important. Two lives collide in this stunning and innovative space-opera! Rating 9.5/10
3. City of Ruin by Mark Charan Newton Villiren: a city of sin that is being torn apart from the inside. Hybrid creatures shamble through shadows and barely human gangs fight turf wars for control of the streets. Amidst this chaos, Commander Brynd Lathraea, commander of the Night Guard, must plan the defence of Viliren against a race that has broken through from some other realm and already slaughtered hundreds of thousands of the Empire’s people. When a Night Guard soldier goes missing, Brynd requests help from the recently arrived Inquisitor Jeryd. He discovers this is not the only disappearance the streets of Villiren. It seems that a serial killer of the most horrific kind is on the loose, taking hundreds of people from their own homes. A killer that cannot possibly be human. The entire population of Villiren must unite to face an impossible surge of violent and unnatural enemies or the city will fall. But how can anyone save a city that is already a ruin? Rating 9.5/10
 
2. Nights of Villjamur by Mark Charan Newton The ancient city of Villjamur is threatened by a long-expected ice age, and thousands of refugees from the coming freeze are camped outside its gates, causing alarm and the threat of disease for the existing population. When the Emperor commits suicide, his elder daughter, Rika, is brought home to inherit the Jamur Empire, but the sinister Chancellor plans to get rid of her and claim the throne for himself. Meanwhile an officer in the Inquisition, in pursuit of a mysterious killer, also uncovers a conspiracy within the Council to solve the refugee crisis by wholesale slaughter, and a cultist magician is causing a trail of havoc in his search for immortality and his obsessive quest to gain access into another world. To the far fringes of the Empire is dispatched military commander to investigate a mysterious new race of undead that seems intent on genocide of the most gruesome nature. Gradually the separate strands of romance, jealousy, political intrigue and dark violence converge in a superb new action series of enthralling fantasy. Rating 10/10
 
1. Under Heaven by Guy Gavriel Kay An epic historical adventure set in a pseudo 8th century China, from the author of the 2008 World Fantasy winner, Ysabel. Under Heaven is a novel of heroes, assassins, concubines and emperors set against a majestic and unforgiving landscape. An epic historical adventure set in a pseudo 8th century China, from the author of the 2008 World Fantasy winner, Ysabel. Under Heaven is a novel of heroes, assassins, concubines and emperors set against a majestic and unforgiving landscape. For two years Shen Tai has mourned his father, living like a hermit beyond the borders of the Kitan Empire, by a mountain lake where terrible battles have long been fought between the Kitai and the neighbouring Tagurans, including one for which his father - a great general - was honoured. But Tai's father never forgot the brutal slaughter involved. The bones of 100,000 soldiers still lie unburied by the lake and their wailing ghosts at night strike terror in the living, leaving the lake and meadow abandoned in its ring of mountains. To honour and redress his father's sorrow, Tai has journeyed west to the lake and has laboured, alone, to bury the dead of both empires. His supplies are replenished by his own people from the nearest fort, and also - since peace has been bought with the bartering of an imperial princess - by the Tagurans, for his solitary honouring of their dead. The Tagurans soldiers one day bring an unexpected letter. It is from the bartered Kitan Princess Cheng-wan, and it contains a poisoned chalice: she has gifted Tai with two hundred and fifty Sardian horses, to reward him for his courage. The Sardians are legendary steeds from the far west, famed, highly-prized, long-coveted by the Kitans. Rating 10/10
Cara
5. Servant of the Underworld by Aliette de Bodard A supernatural murder mystery set in pre-Columbian Aztec Mexico The basic plot is a whodunnit, where a Priestess disappears and Acatl’s brother is the prime suspect. Acatl, the High Priest of the Dead and the central character, has only a short time to try to exonerate his brother and find the real murderer. This is established very early on in the book and what follows is a memorable and exciting adventure featuring all manner of gods, demi-gods, reanimated corpses, and dark magic with the Aztec culture providing a realistic setting for such fantastical themes. The dark nature of the religion gives an air of believability to the magic. Overall rating 8/10
4. Dante's Journey by J.C. Marino Joe Dante, Boston cop, finds himself in Hell This is an excellent update of the classic epic poem Dante's Inferno, reworked for a modern audience. Some aspects remain true to the original; the nine levels of hell, and the sins that are punished within each level, for example; but it was Joe Dante's personal journey that hooked me in. Why was he in hell? What happened to his family? These questions are finally and satisfyingly answered by the end of the book but for me, added an extra dimension to the plot. I enjoyed that J.C.Marino kept a fast pace throughout without skimping on descriptions of the surroundings. At no point did my concentration drift. The device of intercutting the journey through hell with the events that led to Joe being there was well done and combined with excellent black humour, witty dialogue and some surprises, Dante’s Journey was a very enjoyable read. Round Table Discussion (my Overall rating 8/10)
 
3. The Hundred Thousand Kingdoms by N.K. Jemisin First in an epic fantasy trilogy I loved this book. The claustrophobic feel of Sky combined with a short time frame, gave a sense of urgency to the plot. The writing was descriptively strong, and I found the occasional memory lapses in Yeine’s narration added an extra dimension to a fast paced novel. The Hundred Thousand Kingdoms explores the idea of balance and how things spiral out of control when balance is lost. Race, slavery, and oppression are all explored here, to varying degrees but it is in the portrayal of the gods and their history that N.K.Jemisin shines. A highly recommended read. Overall rating 9/10
2. Walking the Tree by Kaaron Warren [as demonstrated by the link, reviewed elsewhere] Botanica is an island, but almost all of the island is taken up by the Tree. Lillah lives on Botanica, an island where life, society and culture is dominated by the giant Tree. She has come of age and is about to embark on her journey around the Tree as a teacher. Walking the Tree is the story of Botanica as seen through Lillah’s experiences. I can’t recommend this book highly enough. I was hooked from the opening pages and was immediately drawn into Lillah’s world. I feel Walking the Tree is a book that will benefit from re-reading as the earlier sections contain clues to the eventual path Lillah takes. She is a strong narrator and carries the story well, but the ultimate star of the book is the Tree itself. It gives life, nourishes the people, dominates their existence, yet is cruel and demanding in sacrifice, just like nature itself. Overall rating 9/10
 
1. City of Ruin by Mark Charan Newton Book 2 of Legends of the Red Sun Just as Mark Charan Newton’s first book in the Legends of the Red Sun series, Nights of Villjamur, was my favourite read of 2009, his follow up book, City of Ruin makes the number 1 spot in this half-year round up of my top reads of 2010. I admit I am unashamedly a fan of Newton’s writing, and it will take a very special book to knock him off his rather lofty perch! The action moves from Villjamur to the more northerly city of Villiren, a much more sinister and jaded place. The encroaching ice still looms large and the threat of invasion by the Oken adds to the tension within the city. This is urban fantasy in the truest sense of the term, the city is the star in this gritty and innovative novel. Several familiar characters return, having left Villjamur at the end of the previous volume. Investigator Jeryd and Night Guard Commander Brynd Lathraea join forces to hunt a serial killer, plus Randur and the princesses are still fleeing the events in Nights of Villjamur. A host of new characters are introduced, of these Malum, Beami, Dannan and Artemisia engaged me most and provided more depth to the world Mark Charan Newton has created. And best of all, there is a spider… this is not a book for arachnophobes! Mark Charan Newton’s writing style, already proven to be of high quality, continues to impress, and City of Ruin shows no signs of suffering the dreaded ‘sequel syndrome’. It is a gripping and exciting read, enhanced by strong characterisation and a meaty plot. If you have not read any of his work before, you are really missing out on an author who looks set to become a giant in the world of fantasy fiction. Overall rating 10/10
 
PeterWilliam  
5. River Kings' Road: A Novel of Ithelas A debut work by an interesting new author. A pair of rival border lords nearly engage in another bitter feud when hidden interests and a foreign evil collaborate to assassinate the heir to the throne. Caught amidst these machinations are: a peasant woman who is homely, homeless, single and mother to a young infant - and who has just seen her entire village annihilated; a once proud local lord now lost to himself - drinking to assuage his guilty conscience at betraying his lord; a man and woman deeply in love - bound by oath and duty to refrain from doing anything about it; and an aristocrat's second son - a dangerous young man who is a combination of studied intelligence and ruthless ambition. Rating: 8/10
4. Return of the Crimson Guard, by Ian C. Esslemont The Malazan Empire must face it's most ardent rival - the Crimson Guard. After a long absence from events in the Malazan corner of the world, the Crimson Guard has returned - and it's brought Hell with it. The Empress will need every ounce of shrewdness to survive this latest uprising and threat to her position. Even more ominous, who is the swordsman named Traveller? Rating: 9/10
3. Devices and Desires, by K.J. Parker After committing an unpardonable crime within his own culture, Ziani Vaatzes - engineer and fugitive, is playing a long, strategic and patient strategy towards an end the reader can only guess at. As each party and faction plays the other, striving toward juxtaposed goals, pieces slowly connect, interlock and begin to turn as the full mechanism of Parker's drama unfolds. Without any true heroes and villains in the cast, the reader is left upon the edge of their seat pondering, "How can this end well for these characters?" The easy answer - it can't. Rating: 9.5/10
2. Severian of the Guild, by Gene Wolfe [as demonstrated by the link, reviewed elsewhere] Severian of the Guild is the omnibus (yes!!!) version of Gene Wolfe's speculative fiction classic, The Book of the New Sun. Follow along with Severian, as he recounts his life and ascension from discarded orphan to Autarch. The stereotypical, if not perfectly prototypical, unreliable narrator takes you on a tour of half-mad ponderings and epic levels of delusion that will, if only you persist, bring you to deeply layered and largely hidden parallels between the world of Wolfe's creation, and our own. Rating: 10/10 [I originally rated "Must Read and All-time Classic" elsewhere]
1. Shadowrise, by Tad Williams The third book in a series, Shadowrise continues to follow the twists and turns of a series of terribly convoluted paths the Eddon twins must traverse. Neither knows of a true outcome toward which they strive, but, given the circumstances, there simply is no alternative. Beset upon by the Twilight peoples on one side, and the Emperor of Xis on the other, there seems little to no cause for hope. Yet, as forces approach, preparing to collide, several ancient and unremembered facts and peoples begin to arise. Is it masochistic to hope that it will matter? Rating: 9/10
Victoria
5.  Rise of the Iron Moon by Stephen Hunt The Rise of the Iron Moon is part of the steampunk genre. Hunt has borrowed heavily from both the nineteenth and eighteenth centuries, then merrily added generous dollops of magic, steampowered technology and rip-roaring fun. Imagine if I put Errol Flynn, Charles Dickens, the Final Fantasy video games and Robert Heinlein in a box and then shook it all up. The Rise of the Iron Moon is what I would find when I'd peel open the box flaps.  It is a fast paced yarn of adventure. It plays with tropes and cliches with reckless abandon, but leaves us with a sense of the new. The novel is gripping, exciting, and full of a fun, rag tag team of characters. Overall Rating: 8.5/10
4.  Oath of Fealty by Elizabeth Moon After twenty years of waiting, Elizabeth Moon decided to bring us back into the world of her female paladin, Paksenarrion and she did not disappoint.  Oath of Fealty takes place after the trilogy The Deed of Paksenarrion, giving us the story of what happens after a hero completes their quest.  It gives us the political aftermath and ramifications that kings, lords and peasants have to deal with when evil has been thwarted.  Oath of Fealty is fast-paced and full of action. The first fifty pages contain more action than a lot of fantasy books contain in a novel.  If you have not read this series, put it at the top of your reading list.   Overall Rating: 8.5/10 
3.  The Riddle-Master of Hed by Patricia A. McKillip  First published in 1976, The Riddle-Master of Hed is the first book of a trilogy.  Regardless of this being McKillip's first published novel, her prose drips velvet and tastes like a decadent dark chocolate mousse.  There is a reason this novel is found in school libraries: it's a classic, and something that any reader who enjoyed Ursula K. Le Guin's The Wizard of Earth Sea novels will love.     Overall Rating: 9/10  
2.  White as Snow by Tanith Lee White as Snow is the story of Snow White mixed in with the Greek myth of Demeter and Persephone.  It deals with the macabre and the nightmare aspects of the original fairy tales, before they were watered down for children.  Lee's prose, like always, is poetic and fluid.  She creates vivid imagery that will both entice and revolt the reader.  There is a reason why Tanith Lee is considered the queen of dark fantasy.   Overall Rating: 9/10     
1.  Remnant Population by Elizabeth Moon  Ofelia is an elderly woman who has decided to remain alone on a planet after the company who settled it decides to pull out and send its inhabitants to another colony on a different planet.  Living happily away from anyone else and finally able to do as she pleases, Ofelia's world is suddenly turned upside down when she unwillingly becomes humanity's first representative to an intelligent alien race.  This novel was a Hugo Award finalist in 1997, and it shows.  The themes in this novel are rich, poignant and thought-provoking.  Remnant Population is an engrossing tale of a stubborn and insightful woman who just wants to be left alone.  This book is a must read for anyone who wants intelligent science fiction. Overall Rating: 9/10