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More Books than Time

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

Fantasy, Horror and Suspense All In One: The Reckoning by Carsten Stroud

June 21, 2016 by Kathy Leave a Comment

The Reckoning is that rarest of books, a trilogy finale that stands on its own merits.  It is Book 3 in The Niceville Trilogy yet I found it easy to follow, enjoyable and readable.  I have not read either of the first two books in the series.

The Reckoning combines mystery with horror and a strong dash of supernatural fantasy.  People in Niceville are dying in horrific, gruesome ways, whole families are murdered, their killer dies cut in half by a shifting stalactite.  Thankfully author Carsten Stroud spares us details – no gory scenes or dripping blood – leaving the horror part secondary to the mystery.

Stroud has a gift for bringing disparate elements together and making the whole into a readable novel. Setting and characters are interesting and realistic.

The setting is Niceville, well described and the book includes a map, a ranch several miles out and a Florida beach house.  Stroud describes the settings well enough that you understand and follow the actions as characters travel around town and between the town and ranch, and town and beach house.

The main character is Nick Kavanaugh who is responsible to investigate a horrible murder of a Niceville family, and who with his wife Kate is fostering a 14-year old boy, Rainey Teague, brutally kidnapped in a prior book.  Rainey acts like a normal 14-year old but Nick can’t quite shake the idea that Rainey is far more than he appears.

One of the most interesting characters is Coker, an ex-cop wanted for murder and robbery.  He and his girlfriend are enjoying their beach house under an assumed name when they hear screams on top of an already-raucous party.  Reluctantly they call the police who find the usual, drugs, booze and underage girls.  The young men decide to revenge themselves and attack Coker.  Bad move as he disables and nearly cripples two of them.  This spirals into a game of cat and mouse with the mob, the FBI, a smart widow and assorted stupid side kicks.

Characters reference past events from the first two novels but Stroud provides enough back story that we can fill in the blanks without reading the earlier books.  He does an excellent job, the “bring them up to speed” parts are transparent, let out as part of the story, not patched in with some obvious add on.

Stroud’s writing style is good, with good pacing, reasonable dialogue, interesting characters.  I didn’t care for the events on the ranch or former asylum – nor did they seem particularly germane to this novel.  I think Stroud may have included them to tie up loose ends from the first two books.

Overall I recommend this if you enjoy suspense novels or supernatural suspense.  The fantasy elements are there to serve the plot and let the supernatural suspense lead the show.

4+ Stars

Filed Under: Action and Adventure Tagged With: Contemporary, Dark Fantasy, Fantasy, Mystery, Suspense

The Long Way Down – Nasty, Demon-Filled Las Vegas Sorcery

January 31, 2016 by Kathy Leave a Comment

It’s hard to like a book when you don’t like the characters.  Daniel Faust, the sorta hero in The Long Way Down, is a Las Vegas sorcerer who earns just enough to keep a roof over his head but not enough to stay clear of the seedy side of the town.    Daniel works as a private investigator – not clear whether licensed or informal – and takes on cases involving porno producers, half-demons and murders.

Daniel is meant to be the Good Guy here.  He takes on a case to investigate the murder of a young porno actress, discovers she was murdered, and works out vengeance on her murderer.  The vengeance turns out far worse than he had planned and spirals out to wreck havoc on a group intent on opening the Etruscan Box.

The The Long Way Down moves fast, which is a good thing as otherwise you’ll feel coated with the gunk under your bathroom drain.  The characters are all unpleasant, even Daniel.  If you think about it, a guy who’s willing to impersonate a snuff film maker in order to have revenge, is not the kind of person you want to spend time with.  His heart is supposedly on the side of the good and the true, but his actions show a man willing to murder – but only in the name of righteousness – and to steal and to cohabitate with a succubus.

Sorry, not my kind of guy.

The characters are well done, although icky, and a few are too nasty to be believable.  The best part is the setting.  I’ve not been to Las Vegas but this felt real.

Most novels with creatures from Hell feature good guys who fight the demons; Daniel in The Long Way Down cooperates with his girlfriend/succubus Caitlin to stop the apocalypse.  Daniel is too fascinated with Caitlin to wonder why her boss, demon prince Sitri, wants to avoid the apocalypse.

I finished The Long Way Down (Daniel Faust Book 1)  mostly out of curiosity, but wish I hadn’t.  It left me feeling depressed and not at all interested in further books about the character. The blurb for Craig Schaefer’s second book, Redemption Song, has Daniel enmeshed in the plots of Prince Sitri in order to keep his “girlfriend”, succubus Caitlin.  Anyone with the sense God gave a gnat knows to steer away from demons and the schemes of hell, but apparently Daniel didn’t figure this out.  I shan’t be reading this one as it sounds even more depressing and with more unpleasant characters.

3 Stars

Filed Under: Urban / Modern Fantasy Tagged With: Book Review, Dark Fantasy, Not So Good

The Knowing by Ninie Hammon Supernatural Suspense With a Bang

January 9, 2016 by Kathy Leave a Comment

I was skeptical when I read author Ninie Hammon’s description of her novel The Knowing,  it will “grab you in a reality so gripping you’ll decide you can fold the towels later and the lawn will still be out there to mow tomorrow”.  About 50 pages in I realized it was way past bedtime and 50 pages more finally decided to put it down.  It truly is that good.

The author describes it as supernatural spiritual warfare, or a paranormal thriller with a backstory that depends on “scriptural realities, though, that most Christians say they believe–but really don’t”, dealing with demons, hell, foolish and evil people that knowingly invite in the devil.  Despite this there is no religion in it, no preaching, no reason that non-believers won’t enjoy the story and characters.

Characters

Jack is a cop called in to stop a school massacre.  Daniel is a Protestant pastor who lost his belief but has his wife and daughter to care for.  Theresa is an older lady, a crossing guard, whose husband died in the school shooting.  These three struggle to understand what is happening to them, what happened about 20 years before when Jack and Daniel were 14 and best friends, what the evil is that threatens them and their families.

Author Hammond makes her people so real that you feel as if you know them.  She lets us into their hearts and minds as we ride along, as bewildered and over matched as they feel.  She builds sub plots, such as Daniel’s wife’s infidelity and Daniel’s struggle to understand his faith and its loss.

The bad guys are believable too, what appear to be normal (more or less) guys driven by demons.  Hammond shows us what happens today and what happened 20 years before, and we see pain and fear and misery, that Jack and Daniel and the mystery girl Becca.  Now the demons are back and want to pick up where they left off.

Be Aware

The bad guys are racist and cruel.  Know going in you will hear some disgusting terms for people and animal cruelty.  Several characters have horrible grammar; don’t use this book as a guide to the English language.

The Knowing: Book One launches a series, total book count unknown.  You can read this as a standalone novel as it has a beginning, middle and end, but it’s easy to see where Book 2 will start.

I’ve not read anything by this author before and am fast changing that.  She is exceptionally strong at building characters that are people and fast moving plots.  Five Stars.

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

Not a Vampire Story But Close!

March 14, 2014 by Kathy Leave a Comment

Just like the first novel by Tony Bertauski, The Socket Greeny Saga, The Drayton Chronicles reaches in, grabs your heart, and makes you care for the title character. Drayton is an immortal who feeds on the life essence of a dying person. He began as a savage creature, killing as he wished, but learned to be human and to care centuries ago. Now he thanks the people who give him their dying breath and he takes on their unfinished business.

The Drayton Chronicles is a collection of five novellas, each moving one after the other. There is a narrative break between each story, but there are references back and it would be best to read in sequence. The first novella, Drayton The Taker, is a good example. Drayton finds Blake Barnes freezing to death on Mt. Hood and takes his dying breath along with his aching need to apologize to his family. Drayton makes his way to South Carolina where he finds the family and resolves Blake’s true burning regret. He also finds the bully who is making Blake’s family miserable and resolves that problem too.

We are steadily drawn into Drayton by seeing him through the eyes and feelings of the people around him, those that he is helping to pay back the final breath he took from their loved one. One of Tony Bertauski’s gifts is developing strong characters that you care about. With The Drayton Chronicles we seldom venture into Drayton’s minds but see inside the minds of those he is with. With The Socket Greeny Saga, also by Bertauski, we see the main character, Socket, through his own thoughts. Both are powerful, but I found Drayton even more compelling and with more interesting, fully drawn side characters.

The plot was reasonably good as was the setting. The novellas had varied locations and intricate layers of trouble that Drayton had to work his way through before finding the true nugget at the heart of the misery and anguish he came to solve. I found the first novella, Drayton The Taker the best, with Swift the Current and Numbers creepy. Bearing the Cross and Yellow were compelling.

This is not a long novel as all five novellas together are only about 260 pages and is a fast read. I got mine through the author’s generosity as he offered anyone who signed up for his newsletter their choice of a free E book from him. Thank you, Mr. Bertauski for your offer and for the beautifully done characters and story.

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

The Ocean at the End of the Lane Neil Gaiman Dark Fantasy Fiction

July 24, 2013 by Kathy Leave a Comment

The Ocean at the End of the Lane: A Novel has gotten almost overwhelmingly positive reviews from critics and readers. And rightly so. It is a good story, well written, interesting characters. The narrator is a seven year old boy caught in a frightening, bewildering series of events begun when his parents’ border, an Australian opal miner, commits suicide. The boy wakes up choking on a shilling and others in his neighborhood experience stangeness all related to money.

The boy visits the neighbors at the end of the lane, an eleven year old girl, her mother and grandmother. The girl takes him with her to remove the “flea”, a supernatural creature, that is causing the problems. She thinks she bound the flea to its current location but in fact it sent a piece of itself into the boy.

The boy’s mother hires a new housekeeper, Ursala Monkton, whom the boy recognizes immediately as the flea. The creature wants to make everyone happy, at least at first, but fears the boy and influences the father to nearly drown him in the tub.

Summary, The Good and Not So Good

I got caught up in this and enjoyed it very much while reading the story, but once done it raised nagging questions. The story is sold as a novel but in fact is more a novella; with plenty of white space it is 178 pages, That caused several flaws.

  • The Hempstock ladies were never explained.  The story alludes to them being older than the big bang and immortal, but what they actually are and why they live as they do is never explained.  That’s not uncommon in fantasies where we really don’t want a detailed, technical explanation of every magical element, but it left me wondering what they were for.  A longer book would have given more opportunity to explain.
  • The ending was strange.  The boy revisits his old home after a funeral and wanders down to the Hempstock farm where he remembers the entire story.  Grandma Hempstock tells him he has been there before but as he leaves the memories fade immediately.  We never learn who the funeral was for, nor why the character cannot remember anything once he leaves the farm.
  • Ursala Monkton had immense power, yet was controlled by the Lettie Hempstock and destroyed by the hunger birds.  Yet neither Lettie nor her mother could control the hunger birds when they attacked the boy.
  • The boy gets a cat that becomes his dearest companion yet cannot remember what happened to her.  Nor does he even remember her until he begins to remember that summer he was seven.  If you love a cat you remember it.

These are minor points.  You would expect unexplained characters and events in a short story, not so much in a novel.  Yet the book did not strike me as one that would have benefited had Gaiman written more.  This fit his style and allowed the mood to swing from somber to fearful to contentment.

I read through a few of the reviews on Amazon and noticed that the negative ones either found the book boring or felt cheated by the extreme short length.  I did not find it boring and the length probably fit the story and Gaiman’s style better than a full-fledged novel.

Overall I found The Ocean at the End of the Lane excellent, one of the more enjoyable books by Neil Gaiman that I have read.  Although the main characters are children this is not a children’s book.  Teens would enjoy it but it is written for adults.    Five stars.

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

Another Pan, Dark Fantasy Fiction Review, Daniel Dina Nayeri

April 27, 2013 by Kathy Leave a Comment

I enjoyed Another Faust and quickly checked out the second book by authors Daniel and Dina Nayeri, Another Pan.

Maybe I should have waited a bit to read Another Pan. It was interesting and enjoyable until about halfway through, then it got boring and tedious. I finished it only because the prior book was so good that I kept hoping Another Pan would reach its potential.

Sadly, it never did. The characters and premise were interesting, a play on the Peter Pan story with backdrop of the female demon Legion from Another Faust. The book brought in Egyptian legends, teen girl infatuation, young teen nerd-kid angst along with a heartless, selfish Peter.

I suppose there are girls who could remain infatuated with a young man even after they learn he is actually 80 years old, but I think most 15 year old girls would be repelled by the idea. And sure, there are many nerd boys who are so desperate to be accepted that they could toad eat a gang of older boys, even after realizing they are a gang of criminals.  But both?  At the same time?  And even while they are offered friendship by one of the most popular boys in school?

I also got tired of the repetitive “bitterness” that the Egyptian legendary characters were supposed to have felt.  Lots of people face similar evils and tragedy.   It was hard to believe that only these five individuals died with so much bitterness and were mummified that their very bones could defeat death.

The premise and characters just didn’t work for me. I give this 2 stars.

You can read my review of Another Faust here:

Another Faust Book Review Dark Fantasy Fiction Daniel Dina Nayeri

Filed Under: Dark Fiction Tagged With: Book Review, Dark Fantasy, Not So Good, YA Fantasy

Another Faust – Book Review Dark Fantasy Fiction Daniel Dina Nayeri

April 27, 2013 by Kathy 1 Comment

Another Faust kept coming up on my library searches and popped up in Amazon’s recommendations.  The novel, listed as YA dark fantasy, didn’t sound like something I’d care for.

The blurb was not appealing: “One night, in cities all across Europe, five children vanish only to appear, years later, at an exclusive New York party with a strange and elegant governess.” However, Another Faust was good and I enjoyed it.

The book starts with vignettes where four of the five children face their deepest fears and desires. Madame Vileroy meets each of the four and offers a bargain. They can come live with her, give up something small, and she will make their fears disappear and their deepest wants come true.

Of course, like any bargain with the devil, what the children gave away was far more important than what they received, and what they received was flawed and dangerous.

Victoria wanted to win, to be the smartest, know the most, win at anything that required intellectual prowess. What she really wanted was to be loved and be special to someone. What she received from Madame Villeroy was the ability to listen to others’ thoughts, to find what almost anyone said or did. What she lost was honor, empathy, a sense of fair play, a value for others. She became unpleasant and unlikable.

Belle wanted to be beautiful. At 10 she was already attractive but she wanted desperately to be beyond pretty. She bargained herself and her twin sister Bice and received beauty but at a horrible price. Underneath her beautiful exterior she hid rotting flesh and spirit. And she smelled. She stank of rot and sewage. Of course Madame Villeroy had a cure for that, but again, the cure was barely superficial and the cost was high.

Belle’s twin Bice was not swept up by her own desire. But she too traded. She traded time for learning.

Christian was desperately poor. He feared poverty and wanted to excel at sports to become rich. He traded himself for the ability to steal, however slight, from others with more talent, more ability. Madame Villeroy gave him a dummy man to practice on and a coffin-like chamber to rest and restore his body. Christian puts aside his dreams of being a writer to pursue fortune on the sports field.

Valentin also wanted to win, to be loved, to count for something. He dreamt of being a famous poet. He traded his anchor in time and place for the ability to unwind time and change events, for the illusion of success.

As the novel progresses we see how each of the children, now 15 years old and enrolled in the most exclusive school in New York, realize the poor bargain they made, face the fact that they sold their soul for nothing and what they decide to do about it. Three of them escape, albeit at a very high price, and two remain behind, hopefully to learn later as they grow that they can leave and that they can retrieve their souls.

One point I particularly enjoyed about the book was the way the authors treated “selling your soul to the devil”. The three children who escape realize that the sale is not like selling your house. Instead it is a day-by-day decision and a process of giving away small pieces of yourself over time. This is less dramatic than in “The Devil and Daniel Webster”, but far more likely to be the way it works. You don’t damn yourself in one dramatic action but in small steps, small losses, small cheats, small choices over the course of your life.

I highly recommend this novel to adults or older teens.

4 Stars

Filed Under: Dark Fiction Tagged With: Book Review, Dark Fantasy, Fantasy, Loved It!, YA Fantasy

Barely OK: Witch and Wizard Fantasy YA Fiction, Magic, Dystopian

April 22, 2013 by Kathy Leave a Comment

Witch and Wizard by James Patterson combines magic with a frightening future. The heroes are Wisty and Whit, both 15.

Witch and Wizard has gotten good reviews and has been well-marketed. The Science Fiction Book Club offered it in hardback. However, this is one YA fantasy that is best enjoyed by younger teens, not adults.  There isn’t any substance or meat to the plot, characters, setting or dialogue.  Think of this book as eating cotton candy at the fair; OK while you’re in the middle but when you finish you wonder why you bothered.

I found the book good enough to finish, but not good enough that I care to read the sequels. For one thing, you know right from the first page that there will be sequels. How many books begin with the main characters tied up and ready to hang? You then spend the next 200+ pages reading how Whit and Wisty and their parents got to that point, or at least far enough towards it that the author could bring the book to a cliff hanger ending.

The dialogue is silly, banal and ridiculous. The characters don’t seem like real kids and the villain is an amalgamation of Lord Voldemart with Emperor Palpatine. It’s not enough fun that you can ignore the fake conflicts, ridiculous plot and tepid characters.

I’ll give it two stars just because it is a fast read that didn’t waste too much time.

Filed Under: Young Adult Fantasy Tagged With: Book Review, Dark Fantasy, Fantasy, Not So Good, YA Fantasy

Review: The Forest of Hands and Teeth YA Fantasy Fiction Zombies

April 15, 2013 by Kathy Leave a Comment

The Forest of Hands and Teeth is a popular dystopia set in a post zombie apocalypse world.  The book started out interesting and I found myself almost caring for the characters, but about a quarter through it suddenly went flat.  I lost interest and had to force myself to read further.

I ended up skimming through the last half or so.  I was curious how it ended but not engaged enough to waste more time reading.  The main character, Mary, didn’t make a lot of sense to me.  She didn’t seem to know what she wanted; true, many people never learn that.  But in a book we expect the characters to somehow deal with this.  Mary did not.

The other thing that was just plain stupid was that the world outside the small community was overrun with zombies.  Yet the Sisterhood claimed that no one else existed beyond their small group.  That makes no sense.  If the only source for new zombies was the small contingent inside the community, then how did the zombies outside continue or even increase in number so many years after the apocalypse?

The Forest of Hands and Teeth is being made into a movie and there are sequels. I did not care for the book, but many readers love it. It may appeal to girls in the 15-20 age group.

1 Star.

Filed Under: Dark Fiction Tagged With: Book Review, Dark Fantasy, Fantasy, Not So Good, YA Fantasy

Review: Crewel Dystopian Fantasy Genniffer Albin Crewel World

March 24, 2013 by Kathy Leave a Comment

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

3 Stars

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

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