Archives » February, 2009

Midnight Never Come

Marie Brennan
Midnight Never Come
Orbit 2008

As with many works of fantasy, I find myself in two minds about Midnight Never Come. I like the conceit - that beneath Elizabethan London is another court, that of the Fae. It too is ruled by a queen, this one going by the slightly odd name of Invidiana - which sounds like some sort of meld of Invidious and Titania. This may be intentional for it sums up the character rather well.

Invidiana rules the Onyx Hall with a fist of capricious iron. In this she mirrors the mortal Queen Elizabeth who is less capricious but definitely steely. The central characters are also mortal and Fae - the mortal being a young courtier named Michael Deven, the fae a woman named Lune. Deven has just come into favour at the Elizabethan court via the patronage of Sir Francis Walsingham, the Queen’s Principal Secretary and spymaster. Lune has just fallen out of favour with Queen Invidiana.

I was a little disappointed with Walsingham. He was a fascinating figure and is on the invitation list for my hypothetical dinner with anyone in history. In this portrayal he is a rather subdued character - admittedly he is ill and dies about a third of the way through the book but he should of been stronger.

I had a similar problem with Dr John Dee - another great character of the Elizabethan age: magician, philospher, scientist and sometimes credulous converser with angels. The Dee in this book is a kindly old man who acts mainly as a plot device and I would have liked to see more bite to his character.

Having said all this, it is still a good read. It held my interest and its history is good (the language wanders into modernity in rare instances but these can be forgiven). The plot, which centers around a pact between Elizabeth and Invidiana is reasonably tight. It suffers a bit from the fact that the Faerie court is a royal court much like any other with its intrigues, backstabbing and general betrayals and I would have liked more sense of otherness. However, it is true to the Elizabethan vision of the Faerie court so one cannot be too critical. This tension between modern and period sensibilities is an eternal problem for historical novelists.

I found the introduction of the emissaries of heaven and hell in the final chapters a little gratuitous but again, to be fair, we are warned by the title of the book. It is from Marlowe’s Dr Faustus and Faustus is contemplating his final hour before the eternal damnation to which his pact with the devil condemns him.

Stand still, you ever moving spheres of heaven,
That time may cease, and midnight never come.

There is more than one hint about the book here which I will leave readers to discover for themselves.

Despite my reservations, I would recommend giving this book a go. I enjoyed it enough to have a look at Brennan’s other books, upon which I will report in due course. A three star good read.

In search of stupidity

Merrill R. (Rick) Chapman
In Search of Stupidity
Apress 2nd Edition 2006

I’m a long way off base with this one - not only is it three years old (in the second edition) but it has nothing to do with Fantasy/SF. I’m adding it anyway because a) a lot of SpecFic readers are geeks and b) it’s a great book and c) it’s my site and I can do whatever I want. So here it is.

It is in part an answer to In Search of Excellence - a self-congratulating book about the excellence of American companies written in 1982. Most of these companies are either gone now or in crisis. Chapman takes the opposite approach and looks at the high-tech industries from the seventies onwards and how a series of dreadful decisions left Intel and Microsoft in a position of complete dominance.

There are chapters on the decline of IBM - the horrible debacle of OS/2 (remember that?) and the loss of the PC market; on how an inferior operating system called DOS became the industry standard; on how Ashton-Tate and dBase managed to alientate their own developer base; on how Borland managed to choke itself with acquisitions; and on much, much more.

It is all written in a wry, entertaining style, often illustrated by Chapman’s own experiences in the industry. It is, of course, written with the clear vision of hindsight but there are important lessons here for anyone attempting to invest in the high-tech area. Geeks will recognise others (and possibly even themselves) in the parade of larger-than-life characters.

The book has its own website (www.insearchofstupidity.com) which is in itself worth a look. As well as excerpts from the book it has a lot of supporting material including an online museum of stupidity.

Thoroughly recommended, even if you have never had anything to do with high tech. A good four-star read.