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Sparrow Hill Road – Ghost Stories by Seanan McGuire that Read Like Folk Songs

February 23, 2018 by Kathy Leave a Comment

Sparrow Hill Road is a ghost story that reads like a folk song.  The book is made of small snippets of story, between refrains about Rose, the ghost of Sparrow Hill Road, a hitcher who travels from one end of America to the other.

Rose is ghost who takes on living flesh when someone gives her a coat.  She makes her way hitching with truckers, eating in roadside diners and truck stops (but can only taste what someone living freely gives her).  Rose is also a psychopomp, someone who guides the souls of newly dead to their afterlife.

Several of the stories have multiple parts which connect and disconnect from the flow.  The author used headings to anchor us in time and place and introduced each scene change so the narrative flow was not confusing.

Overarching all of these vignettes we see Rose desperately trying to stay ahead of Bobby Cross, the man who sold other people’s soul to the cross roads to obtain immortality.  Bobby believes he owns Rose’s soul because he ran her off the road and killed her.  Rose escaped him then and now.  (It’s ridiculous of course to think that someone could obtain a lien on another’s unwilling soul.)

The ghost stories are OK and a few are better than OK.  When Rose acts heroically she is interesting and the stories feel whole, complete.  Otherwise she is tiresome and the constant repetition about the twilight roads is annoying.  Only one character is aware of the spiritual life or death implicit in the ghosts’ actions and Rose herself neither knows nor cares about heaven and hell.

I didn’t care for the repetition refrain in between each story and wasn’t crazy about most of the characters.  Sparrow Hill Road is more of a series of short stories and novellas than a true novel and we do not get a resolution for Bobby Cross.  He is delayed once again but not stopped.  Rose herself rejects travelling to the end of the road, to go to the next place whether heaven or hell and prefers her hitching present.

I would have preferred a story structured more like a novel and not a folk song turned into a semi-novel.  A novel requires a heroine with more gravitas than Rose who is lightweight, with not enough going on to carry a full novel.  She is suited to a folk song.  As a story this is flat.

3 Stars

I received this for free through NetGalley with the expectation of providing an honest review.

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Filed Under: Dark Fiction Tagged With: 3 Stars, Book Review, Fantasy

Sad Times for Max – A Second Chance – Chronicles of St. Mary’s Book #3

February 22, 2018 by Kathy Leave a Comment

Have you ever shut someone out of your heart because you could not accept something they did?  They did something so heinous that you could not see them with loving eyes?  Max and Leon come to this point in A Second Chance, where both look at the other and see behavior that they cannot accept.

Max and the historical research unit at St. Mary’s are in for grim times in book #3, A Second Chance.  Max and Leon have their ups and downs, mostly because they don’t or can’t talk to each other and Max is an emotional midget, albeit a midget who takes the first steps to growing up.  Unfortunately she and Leon come to a point where neither can tolerate the other’s action and attitude.

The novel works on two levels:  plot and character.  The plot involves the usual mayhem punctuated with serious events, concussion by cheese and mass rape and murder in Troy.  The historians thread their way through the Trojan war, they observe Troy at peace before the Greeks, then observe Troy as it falls.  No one could see this and remain unmoved.

If we view the St. Mary’s stories purely as historical fiction they are outstanding as Taylor brings the conflicts and the historical people to life.  She adds details to the stories and verisimilitude by having a real observer right there to see and feel everything.  Max enjoys the peaceful year before the Greek war and walks the Trojan streets, watches the royal family and mingles with the inhabitants, and Max is a keen observer.  She sees it, records it and tells it so that we are there too.

The characters’ growth parallels the historical actions.  Max shuts Leon out, but too late realizes she still cares and that manic action doesn’t do much to heal heartbreak.  (Max’s go-to strategy for any emotional upset mixes work and booze.)  She very slowly comes to realize that just maybe she made a mistake when the question becomes moot.

Jodi Taylor does a fairly good job on the people, although I’ve noticed her female leads in this series and the Nothing Girl are emotionally stunted and/or not able to step up like adults and take responsibility for their own future.  Max hides behind “history” and her job and settles in to nurse a grudge.  Is her grudge justified?  Somewhat, yes.  But that’s what it means to be an adult and to love someone:  It’s an act of will, and no, you will not always like (or even tolerate) the one you love.

Max reveals a streak of cowardice that turned me off.  She didn’t even want to try to save a little boy, not even to make a short side trip in space and not in time to get him to a safer place.  It was only later that she realized she could have tried something, and in fact, should have done so.

The best part of this novel is the up close and personal view of Troy and Agincourt.  We are right there.  Taylor adds a lot of guesswork and embellishes the story from the bare facts we know, so the plain narrative comes alive and we see and feel the Trojans’ terror and the desperate clash of armies.  I suspect many of her readers are closet historians, or like me, interested but ignorant, and that’s one reason we love the books.

Why is it called A Second Chance?  Max gets a second chance – more than one actually – including the biggest chance of all at the end.

4 Stars

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Filed Under: Action and Adventure Tagged With: 4 Stars Pretty Good, Book Review, Fantasy

Time Travel for Historians 2 – A Symphony of Echoes – Jodi Taylor Chronicles of St. Mary’s

February 18, 2018 by Kathy Leave a Comment

Jodi Taylor continues her frantic race up and down Time while Max struggles with an emotional seesaw in her second book, A Symphony of Echoes, in her Chronicles of St. Mary’s.  We start off with Max and best friend Kal jaunting off to late Victorian London to see Jack the Ripper.  Unfortunately they find Jack.  And worse, bring it back with them.

Plot

Max deals with Jack for the first quarter of the novel, followed immediately by: Max rescues Leon from dastards who kidnap and bring him to a future St. Mary’s where they also take over and kill most of the personnel (reason hinted at but not really explained), then Max takes over as temporary director of this future unit, visits Mauritius to abscond with some dodos as a works outing, returns home, witnesses Thomas Beckett’s assassination, gets incandescently angry with Leon, wrecks his car and drives it into the lake (necessitating tens of thousands worth of repairs),  gets stranded in Nineveh, gets rescued, reconciles with Leon, shoves Mary Queen of Scots into a locked room with Bothwell, and ends with her learning the next mission is to Troy.

Yes, the plot truly is this busy.  The emotional highs and lows go along in parallel with the action as Taylor shows us what Max is doing and we see how she reacts to and feels about Leon and her friends.  This is a book you read for the plot more than for the people.

There are plot weak spots.  For example, why would someone select Jack the Ripper/Victorian London when they can choose any time or place?

And why would Ronan and accomplices want to capture Max so badly that they first kidnap Leon and leave coordinates on the mirror in the men’s room?  I understand one villain hates Max but really, there should be easier ways to get her alone and vulnerable than to go through the fuss of getting Leon.

Max speculates the villains want to control a St. Mary’s point in time in order to have a base of operations; that makes sense but also invalidates kidnapping Leon.  They would have to know that the original St. Mary’s wouldn’t abandon Leon without a fight.

Characters

While Taylor shows us Max as a person with emotional depth she leaves most of the other characters less finished.  She tells us that Tim Peterson is calm and solid, warm and caring, but we see Tim in relationship to Max, through Max’s eyes.  We don’t get to know Tim.  We get more acquainted with Leon, but he too remains a bit vague.  Taylor concentrates on her plot and Max and everyone else is something more than backdrop and less than a full person.

Max’s reaction when Leon spurns her is overwrought.  Max and Leon have gone through some rough spots before but this time she goes up like a rocket and simply cannot stop being angry.  Max gives in to temper and severs relations with Leon in the first three books in the series and I think it’s flaw that the author corrects in the later novels.  I get tired of Max acting like a kid.

Overall

A Symphony of Echoes is very good, enjoyable, and a very fast read.  Don’t budget more than an evening for this despite the length.  The story moves so fast that I got caught up in the plot and, to some extent, the characters.  The book is plot-heavy, not so much driven by characters as it drives the characters and us readers.

I’ve read all of Jodi Taylor’s novels and this is one of the weaker ones, plot heavy and character light.  Mind you I still loved it despite the flaws.

4 Stars (3 Stars if it weren’t so entertaining)

 

 

 

Filed Under: Action and Adventure Tagged With: 3 Stars, Book Review, Fantasy, History, Science Fiction

Time Travel for Historians – Just One Damned Thing After Another – Jodi Taylor

February 14, 2018 by Kathy Leave a Comment

Just One Damned Thing After Another is a lot of fun wrapped around people and history, full of quirky humor and an incitement to delve into Wikipedia.  (I only thought I knew some of these events!)  It is the first of several books featuring Max, a historian working at St. Mary’s Institute for Historical Research which “investigate major historical events in contemporary time”, i.e., sends historians back in time to observe and record what really happened.

Max is a complex character who tries desperately to be one-dimensional, hard-drinking, loud, incorrigibly curious, uncaring, but her bursts of common sense and exposure to death and misery make her far more than the cardboard cutout she wants to be.  Max prides herself on her attitude and her “we can do this” approach, but gets sidetracked by the people around her and the human misery she views as part of her job.

Overall the book is reasonably well-written, although it jumps around a lot and we often lose the sense of time passing.  Everyone around Max is gung-ho dedicated to history (or to historically-inspired R&D) to the point where it seems almost a caricature.  Would you really be that thrilled to go witness a hospital blowing up after The Battle of the Somme?

These events take a toll on Max and the others.  She and a few others compartmentalize, separate their feelings from their experiences.  Some leave St. Mary’s.  Some act stupid.  To me the biggest weakness of this first novel and all the others is how poorly the characters face and deal with the emotional toll from seeing other people die, including all too often, their friends and colleagues.

I loved the plausible historical accuracy – of course the author is guessing for meat to add to history’s bones – and the novel inspired me to check references to learn more about the background and key players in these scenarios.

This first novel takes Max and colleagues back to Edward the Confessor’s coronation, World War 1 and the Cretaceous, back to the Cretaceous twice (one an unauthorized rescue), on to the burning Library of Alexandria to rescue scrolls. That’s quite a range although Max manages to get injured in two of the events and wet on by colleague and friend Peterson in the other.  History, you see, is jealous of herself and barely tolerates historians observing.  She does not tolerate even tiny interference, such as warning a mugging victim.

The plot is full and busy and moves at lightening speed.

There are plot holes.  For example, why does Thirsk University fund St. Mary’s?  How on earth can it justify the enormous expense for historical research?  (We learn in a later novella that St. Mary’s founder actually captures British government support and patronage which filters through Thrisk.)  Even so it is hard to imagine the funding nightmares.

There is one serious sex scene in this first novel that I did not see as necessary.  Just One Damned Thing After Another has the usual vulgarities and a couple blasphemies against the name of the Lord.  I didn’t like either the smutty scenes or the blasphemy, but I’ve learned to read past them.

The biggest flaw from a narrative / literature perspective is the constant harping on historians being disaster magnets.  They apparently have the attention span of a fly and can’t stop themselves from acting stupid.  Jodi Taylor uses this as a convenient catch-all to explain any inconsistencies or flights of fancy that creep in.  I understand someone not wanting to stop a good thing (like watching dinosaurs) to deal with housekeeping, but the characters do this all the time and it gets a little annoying.

Overall this is a very enjoyable start to a very enjoyable series.  I would not recommend reading all the books immediately after one another because some of the flaws become obnoxious with repititon.  I do recommend that you read the first three books close together, Just One Damned Thing After Another, A Symphony of Echoes, and A Second Chance because these flow one after the other.

4 Stars – Almost 5

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Filed Under: Action and Adventure Tagged With: 4 Stars Pretty Good, Book Review, Fantasy, Science Fiction

Don’t Look at the Cover! Piercing the Veil: A Supernatural Occult Thriller by Guy Riessen

January 26, 2018 by Kathy Leave a Comment

Ignore the cover.  Please.  This book is pretty good, enjoyable with plenty of nutty characters, a wild plot and enough background to make it all work.  Just get by the cover, open it up and enjoy.

Guy Riessen creates a world where all the Lovecraft horrors are real, where the veil between our world and Evil is slim and frayed.  And researchers/monster-busters Derrick and Howard, with their team members Mary and Sara, are professors at Miskatonic U in the day and creepazoid slayers at night.  Derrick teaches astrophysics and is an electronics whiz with eidetic memory.  Howard, former military and NAS, is a peerless sharpshooter, teaches history and is a linguist.  Mary is a medical doctor and scientist.  Sara leads the team.

The chemistry among the team members is real and believable and makes the book.  We open with Derrick and Howard investigating a poltergeist report in national forest somewhere remote in California.  They enter a deserted house, find the meth operators cut up in the basement and barely manage to escape a giant bone monster.  In fact Derrick breaks his leg and the necromancer behind the trouble captures Derrick to learn as much as he can about security around artifacts that Miskatonic holds.

This small part and a few others were a bit confusing.  Howard gets away but Derrick doesn’t, yet Howard leaves and we don’t even see where the necromancer had been hiding.  With books like Piercing the Veil you usually find a few implausible leaps of plot, and if the author is good you don’t stop reading, you shrug and go on.  That’s what I did.

I’ve been reading several books in Larry Correia’s Monster Hunter series and found Piercing the Veil a notch above for readability and enjoyment.  (Correia spends way too much time describing his guns.)  It reminds me of Charles Stross’ Laundry series more than anything else, but with less moral ambiguity, less bureaucracy, and more interesting people and more fun.

Characters

Piercing the Veil  spends many pages showing the interplay between Howard and Derrick.  Both are – or can be – completely serious, adult, dedicated.  In the meantime they play games like Dungeons and Dragons, drink beer and watch bad movies.  They are friends.  Derrick is the prototypical clueless nerd, desperate to go past “colleagues and friends” into romance land with Sara, but he’s afraid and keeps waiting for the perfect moment.  Howard urges him to man up, stop waiting and take a chance but it doesn’t happen here.

Riessen describes Mary as the stereotype girl scientist, right down to glasses, lab coat and pocket protector, but it’s obvious that Mary is far more.  She and Sara risk their lives working with Howard and Derrick to stop the Shadow Men, then the necromancer.  All four have unique gifts and one of Mary’s is the ability to see real vs. fake artifacts, to see through magical deceptions.  The book ends with her discovering that the recovered artifacts are mostly fake…leading of course to a sequel!

We don’t get a good idea of the villainous necromancer.  He’s obviously short on ethics, but we don’t know much about his motivation.  You have to be pretty motivated to kill a bunch of people, suck an entire town into worshiping the elder pseudo-gods, kill even more people, sacrifice more people, and send Shadows against the Miskatonic team.  We know his wife and son were killed in a brutal attack, but not who killed them, why or how that connects to his nastiness now.  That’s probably in the sequel too.

Overall

Piercing the Veil is not great literature.  it is entertainment.  It’s reasonably well-written, with a fast plot that’s fun to read, with characters that I liked, with a villain that is not so villainous as to be unbelievable.  I will certainly look for the sequel.

I tend to rate books at face value; so a book that aims to entertain and does so, that only minor eye-rolling moments, that keeps my interest, that I look forward to reading, that I stayed up to finish, I rate based on the entertainment value, not for its literary quality.

4 Stars (entertainment)

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

Monster Hunter Memoirs: Sinners by John Ringo and Larry Correia

January 18, 2018 by Kathy Leave a Comment

The Monster Hunter Files, an anthology of stories set in Larry Correia’s Monster Hunter International world, prompted me to read other books by Larry Correia or set in his world.  John Ringo has written three Monster Hunter novels, that star Chad Gardenier, also called Iron Hand, set about 30 years prior to the rest of the series.  I reviewed the first novel, Monster Hunter Memoirs: Grunge here.  Ringo tells a pretty good story although he does go off on tangents.

Ringo’s second novel is Monster Hunter Memoirs: Sinners, tells more about Chad, this time fighting waves of monster invasions in New Orleans.

I didn’t enjoy this second book quite as much.  Sinners has plenty of action – New Orleans attracts plenty of people that believe in and practice witchcraft or sorcery – and this activity fuels the ongoing problems.  Sinners does not have quite the character depth.  We already know a lot about Chad from Grunge; we know he’s fatalistic, unwilling to say no to carnal desires, a lounge lizard, brave, smart, a natural leader, and has a good sense of humor.  Sinners builds on this Chad foundation but now we see him more as a hardened fighter, less funny, less introspective, less humble and more obnoxious.

Sinners has some very good points.  Although Chad is a girl aficionado Ringo avoids smut.  Chad talks a lot but thankfully avoids giving us the details up close and in person.

I really appreciated the Catholic, religious angle.  Remember, Chad died in Grunge and came back because St. Peter asked him to.  He converted to Catholicism in Grunge and although he’s surely not the most faithful worshiper, he believes and takes advantage of the sacraments to strengthen himself and cleanse his soul.  Ringo covers this with a light touch, just a few sentences.  If you don’t believe you can still enjoy the book.

Maybe I liked Sinners less because I read Monster Hunter International at the same time, and simply had a surfeit of monster, guns and violence.  I don’t know.  I will read further books in Ringo’s series because he is so good at telling a story, but I think I will wait a while for those.

3 Stars

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Filed Under: Action and Adventure Tagged With: 3 Stars, Book Review, Dark Fantasy, Fantasy

The Mongrel Mage – Recluse Novel by L. E. Modesitt, Jr. – Not His Best

January 10, 2018 by Kathy Leave a Comment

I read everything Modesitt writes although sometimes I wonder why.  Some of his novels are excellent, full of interesting, well-developed characters, rich setting and back story, detailed world building.  A few are less rewarding to read due to an abundance of minutia, slow pacing and wooden dialogue, but all have something to offer.

The Mongrel Mage falls on the less-exciting side of the scale.  Modesitt places the events a few centuries, after The Chaos Balance when Cyador falls to the Accursed Forest, and before The Towers of the Sunset when Creslin establishes Recluse and the Westwind falls.  That’s an interesting time, when white and black mages co-exist, before the white order establishes their mage-ocracy and there should be plenty of room for Modesitt to write more stories in this setting.

Beltur lives in Fenard with his uncle Kaerylt, a strong white mage.  Beltur learns white chaos magic but isn’t very good at it.  The Prefect of Gallos sends his uncle, his uncle’s apprentice Sydon, and Beltur along with a small squad to check out some problems with the herders in the southern grasslands part of Gallos.  This section of the novel lasts a long time, pages and pages of riding, meeting with people, eating, riding some more.  Oddly, Beltur is viewed as weak but he is very good at casting concealment.

When the group returns to Fenard the Prefect summons them, attacks and kills uncle Kaerylt while Beltur escapes.  He flees to a healer he is attracted to, who connects him to black mage Athaal who is returning to Elpatra, part of Spidlar.  This then kicks off the middle part of the story where Beltur travels with Athaal, learns how to be a black mage and handle order, then gets himself employed to forge cupridium.

Eventually Gallos decides to invade Spidlar and attack Elpatra.  Beltur is drafted to act as a mage in support of a reconnaissance company and of course manages to save the country.

Major Problems with the Book

Beltur Character.

Beltur is a typical older teen wanna-be-entitled brat.  Uncle Kaerylt treats him well but not any better than he treats apprentice Sydon, and Beltur gets all the dirty jobs because Sydon dumps them off unless Uncle sees it.  But our hero manages to stifle his sighs and grin and bear it because he is so, so, so something.  Frankly I don’t see a problem with making apprentices or nephews work, and labor division never feels fair to those doing the work.  I kept wanting to yell at Beltur to get a grip, quit your whining and get on with it.

When he escapes Fenard, Beltur discovers he is actually more an order mage than a chaos mage, and darn good at it too.  In fact he’s pretty much the strongest guy around!  But of course he manages to remain humble etc., etc.

Then when he’s drafted he discovers that some of the other mages, those who have been order mages all their lives, think he’s a mongrel, not a real black, doesn’t deserve the pretty girl, and work to get him killed.  There is absolutely nothing given that would explain their attitude aside from jealousy over the girl and the fact that Beltur started as a white.  Beltur figures it’s because he isn’t good looking and is so powerful despite being trained as a white.

In a word, Beltur is obnoxious.

Beltur felt like a hanger onto which Modesitt hung the suit “Black Order Mage / Young Guy Finding Himself” and not like a real person.  ALL of Modesitt’s heroes are misunderstood, suffering types, ALL are stronger than/wiser than/better than and all are beset by other who want to kill/exploit/dominate them.  It gets tiresome.

Glacial Pacing.

After we spent a third of the book riding through grasslands, then another 10% or so journeying from Fenard to Elpatra, we then go on yet more tours with the reconnaissance company.  Modesitt used to write tight novels that balanced action with description, but he’s gotten way more descriptive in many of his recent books.  He doesn’t use the extra filler to develop his characters or increase tension.

The result is a book that is less enjoyable to read, doesn’t feel as meaty.

Formality.

Beltur himself says that he was raised by his father, then his uncle, to be quite formal and disciplined.  Formality itself isn’t a problem, but it adds to the overall slowness and lack of coherency.

For example, in all Modesitt’s books characters all conform to some dress code.  Black mages wear black, healers wear black and green, so on.  When they talk to each other they don’t make small talk or chit chat, they talk serious.  When they talk to people outside their group they are pure business.  Beltur buys a set of clothes from a tailor who appears quite interesting but never even attempts to talk to her.

The lack of normal conversation often underlies many of the plot conflicts.  Majer Waeltur didn’t know Beltur could shield himself and others or toss back chaos bolts.  Of course he didn’t ask Beltur either.  No one in a Modesitt book ever thinks to just talk to someone.

Political Correctness

Let’s see.  We get a short musing on income inequality when Beltur realizes he made more in a couple days forging cupridium blades – which no one has done for centuries – than his friend Athaal made in a week spotting diseased sheep and plants.  We have a gay couple whom some see as “different”, almost mongrels themselves, and of course it’s only the evil mages who dislike Beltur who think this.  Once again traders care about money and status and nothing else, certainly not people or fairness or helping anyone.  Beltur just sadly shakes his head at the overall stupidity, cupidity of it all.  Gaah, I dislike this character!

Lots of science fiction and fantasy authors shove their politics into their books, sometimes by having the main character explain something (see John Ringo) or by matter-of-fact comments that of course thus and such is…  I don’t care for it unless the politics are directly part of the story.  In this case they feel shoved in.

No Map!

Not sure who fell down on this one, but the action all takes place in Gallos and Spidlar.  The book includes a map of the whole of the world and more detailed map of Hamor.  It was hard to keep straight all the roads to Elpatra, which side of the river we were on, why the better road was on the side opposite from the city, where Axalt was, Suthya, so on.

Put a nice, detailed map of Elpatra and regions around it, and a map of Candar that shows all these countries and cities.

Good Points

As usual Modesitt builds on his already well-developed alternate world, Recluse.  The backstory is hinted, not rehashed.

Overall

I used to buy most Modesitt novels because I re-read every one, many over and over.  But the later Recluse novels aren’t worth re-reading.  I don’t expect I’ll re-read Mongrel Mage either, although I’ll ask our library for the sequel, Outcasts of Order.

3 Stars

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Filed Under: Action and Adventure Tagged With: 3 Stars, Book Review, Fantasy, LE Modesitt

Assassin’s Price by L. E. Modesitt, Jr., Imager Series, Finally a Different Hero

January 8, 2018 by Kathy Leave a Comment

If you read any of L. E. Modesitt, Jr.’s novels you are familiar with the basic plot and characters in his books.  We have the quintessential hero, a man (or woman in the Soprano Sorceress series) who has unusual talents, sees deeper and farther than anyone else, is self-controlled and emotionally disciplined, struggles to right deep-seated wrongs despite some amount of suffering.  The hero is always the person with the talent, the person who grins and ruefully shakes his head at the unfairness and how other don’t understand.  The hero is never the actual political leader.

In fact, most of Modesitt’s rulers and leaders are obsessed with power and money and seem to care little for the health of their people.  It’s the talented hero who cares and who forces the leader/ruler into governing wisely.  The other books in the third Imager series, Madness in Solidar and Treachery’s Tools, fit this formula.  Alastar is the enormously powerful imager who leads the collegium to once again serve Solidar and who pushes ruler Rex Lorien to act.

Assassin’s Price is refreshingly different as to the hero.  Alastar and the imagers play supporting roles and the lead is young Charyn, heir to Lorien.  The novel opens with Charyn acting as do most of Modesitt’s young heirs, petulantly demanding better pistols to overcome his inability to hit targets when he shoots.  We don’t see what exactly causes it, but Charyn grows up, matures to take responsible interest in commerce, innovation, people, the country’s finances, legal matters.

Charyn’s father doesn’t want him involved in much, seemingly resents his son’s interest, so Charyn does some of his work quietly.  For example, he opens a trading account at the new exchange so he can learn about the factoring businesses that seem to be growing ever larger and richer.

Villains in the past novels play returning roles in Assassin’s Price and we see new, different threats and conspiracies.  We get hints at the end that Charyn may increase council involvement in governing Solidar, which may eventually cause the Rex to fade out.  (From the first Imager novels set several hundred years after Assassin’s Price we know the Rex institution does not last.)  It will be interesting to see how this plays out in sequels.

Pacing

I’ve complained about Modesitt’s glacial pacing in past novels, books that go on and on without telling us anything new about the people or that have odd scenes that do nothing to advance the plot.  People walk and armies march for pages and pages, never really doing much in several Recluce novels, notably Heritage of Cyador and The Mongrel Mage.  (The bird attack in Antiagon Fire is a good example of an odd scene that adds bulk without content.)

Assassin’s Price moves along well.  There are a few slow spots and a few scenes that move a little too quickly.  The confrontations with Ryel and with his wife just happen, blink, and you miss them.  But overall this novel has the quality I enjoyed so much with Imager and Scholar.  It is by far the best of this new series.

Overall

I enjoyed Assassin’s Price considerably more than most of Modesitt’s recent work.   He has a story to tell, an interesting and likable character, decent writing, his usual solid world building.

4 Stars

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Filed Under: Action and Adventure Tagged With: 4 Stars Pretty Good, Book Review, Fantasy, LE Modesitt

Silver in the Blood by Jessica Day George: New York Society Meets Romanian Politics, Werewolves and More

January 7, 2018 by Kathy Leave a Comment

Jessica Day George’s short story A Knight of the Enchanted Forest, published in the Monster Hunter Files (see review here) was excellent, funny with a streak of serious, and I checked out her other novels.  While George writes mostly teen fantasy, Silver in the Blood is suitable for older teens and adults looking for a quick, enjoyable read with historical interest.

We meet devoted cousins, Dacia and Lou, both children of New York high society with mothers from a aristocratic Romanian family.  The novel is set in 1897, when Romania is independent, beginning to step onto the larger European stage, with culture from both Paris and the Near East.  Both girls are intelligent and rich; Lou is more timid while Dacia is braver and occasionally flouts social conventions.

Plot and Conflicts

The novel opens with Dacia, stuck in her family’s townhouse in Bucharest, waiting for Lou to arrive, bored, looking for friends and a little entertainment.  Lou and Dacia meet some of their mothers’ family and realizes that not everything matches what they have been told.  Grandmother is nasty and drops mysterious comments, Aunt Kate worries about something, Lou’s father is dismissed to leave Bucharest – with Lou’s twin brothers but without Lou and Dacia – and a somewhat mysterious man drops cryptic comments and questions when he meets Lou.

What makes Silver in the Blood work is the political tension that underlies the main conflict.  Prince Mihai, descendant of Vlad the Impaler from centuries ago, intends to usurp the throne and he needs Dacia and Lou and their family to do so.  Lou and Dacia know nothing about any of this and must discover what they truly are (not 100% normal human) and decide themselves whom and what they will support.  The political angle makes the conflicts more believable.

The other conflict is between Lou and Dacia against their family elders.  Lou and Dacia are Americans, not terribly impressed by centuries-old ties of loyalty and even less impressed by old prophecies.  This conflict starts small and grows along with the political tension, then finally both resolve together.

Characters

Characterization is a little light.  Lou and Dacia are more than debutantes or silly girls, as George uses diaries and letters along with the novel’s events to show us what they think and feel.  Both are 19 or 20, old enough to marry, rich and attractive with many suitors in New York, then in Europe.  Both girls are believable characters, but realize this is not a character-driven novel.  It’s a fantasy with believable emotions.

Prince Mihai is a villain with virtually no redeeming qualities, drawn broadly, who displays his villainy through his actions.  Lou and Dacia’s Romanian family also show their allegiances and character by the choices they make.

Overall

Silver in the Blood is interesting, especially if you enjoy fantasy with a slight historical twist.  It reminded me a little Patricia Wrede’s Sorcery and Cecilia novels, mixing fantasy with high society in a late 1890s milieu.   It is a light, easy read, and I enjoyed it on a cold winter afternoon in front of the fire.

3 Stars

 

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Filed Under: Paranormal Romance Tagged With: 3 Stars, Fantasy, YA Fantasy Fiction

Monster Hunter Memoirs: Grunge by John Ringo in Larry Correia MHI Universe

January 7, 2018 by Kathy 1 Comment

I enjoyed Monster Hunter Files short stories (see review here) and requested several more in the series from our library.  First one up was Monster Hunter Memoirs:  Grunge, written by John Ringo using the backstory and characters that Larry Correia created for his Monster Hunter International series.

John Ringo writes well-crafted, fast-paced near future science fiction and fantasy novels, many excellent and a few (Ghost) that are unreadable if you aren’t into smutty violence.  He is generous to fault sharing his thoughts about society and politics.  The other thing Ringo novels have is bad language, lots and lots of cussing and vulgarities.  Grunge has cussing and violence and sociology and it also has a good story with interesting, likable characters.

Synopsis

Our lead character, Chad, has two professors for parents, mom an unrepentant hippy type and dad a womanizer who hunts coeds.  Chad dislikes his mother – it is mutual, in fact she hates him – and for spite decides to get a perfect C average, 2.00000, in high school.  That is harder than it sounds since you have to know the right answers in order to get half of them wrong.  He joins the Marines and dies in the Beirut barracks bombing.

The story picks up when St. Peter asks Chad to forego heaven in favor of a mission on Earth.  Chad agrees, wakes up into a shattered, agonizing body, heals in Bethseda and looks for the sign God promised him, 57.  The 57 eventually leads him to a zombie outbreak where he meets the Monster Control Bureau (FBI) and MHI (Monster Hunter International, a for-profit eradication company).  The story goes on from there, through his training and first many missions.

Grunge has some excellent, funny moments that highlight the dead serious situation that Chad is tasks to resolve.  The Old Ones are waking up and causing mischief – think vampires, werewolves, giant blood-sucking spiders, zombies, ghouls etc. and etc.  The Fae are not pretty Disney creatures but powerful creatures who do not like humans.  The vampires do not sparkle and do not seduce nice young ladies.  To quote Chad, if an Old One or Fae got into the world the whole world would scream for decades until there is no one left.

Characters

Thus Chad justifies his life.  He hunts monsters for a living, plays violin as a hobby, studies languages for two PhDs and is a lounge lizard the rest of the time.  He looks at cute coeds the way the rest of us look at spaghetti (or chocolate).  He becomes a Catholic but somehow doesn’t quite get the 6th commandment and thinks fornication is a Sunday-Saturday avocation.

Chad makes the novel work.  Ringo did a great job on him; he feels like a real person with virtues and failings, odd habits and quirks. Ringo doesn’t spend as much time on the other characters, enough that they too feel like real people, although with less detail.

Now for the less pleasant parts.  Chad talks about girls but we do not have sex scenes, more lust scenes.  There are a couple blasphemies, F bombs and other vulgarities, lots of violence.  Chad talks about his guns, but nowhere near as much or as annoyingly, as Larry Correia did in Monster Hunter International.  (I’ve not figured out why, but a lot of science fiction authors bore the heck out of me by describing space ships and lasers in overabundant detail, and it seems we can’t get away from it even with books like this with not a space ship in sight.  All I need to know is that 1., it’s a gun; 2., it’s big; and 3., it kills things.  I do not care what type and how big it is and what type of ammunition it uses, but apparently a lot of science fiction readers enjoy that stuff.  Me, I skim through those sections if the story is good and toss the book if it’s not.)

I recommend Monster Hunter Memoirs:  Grunge if you enjoy fast-paced science fiction-y fantasy or lots of action or a complex character.

4 Stars

Filed Under: Action and Adventure Tagged With: 4 Stars Pretty Good, Book Review, Dark Fantasy, Fantasy

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