Your life is incomplete if you haven't read this Outstanding
Almost flawless - a must-read Outstanding
Top of the range good read Good Read
Good read - I enjoyed it Good Read
A good read but flawed in places - still worth the effort Good Read
Fans of the author/series will enjoy - others maybe not Fans only
Fans of the author/series will get something out of it Fans only
There may be parts of this worth reading but I wouldn't bother Recycle
Not worth the paper it is printed on Recycle
What on earth were the publishers thinking? Burn before reading. Recycle

Mr Darcy’s Diary

Posted on April 28, 2008

Maya Slater
Mr Darcy’s Diary
Phoenix 2007

It is a truth universally acknowledged that all right-thinking readers believe Pride and Prejudice is a wonderful book. It has spawned biographies, sequels, detective stories, fan fic and slash fic. There is probably even a vampire novel out there somewhere (what big fangs you have, Mr Darcy) although I have never been able to find it . Slater continues this fine tradition by producing the previously lost diary kept by Fitzwilliam Darcy during the period covered in the novel.

Slater has taken on a tough job here as all the action must necessarily occur off-stage. It must cover the long period of estrangement between Darcy and Elizabeth (and Bingley and Jane of course) and still maintain interest. There are places where it meanders a bit but on the whole she succeeds admirably.

Particularly well handled is the period following Darcy’s famous and spectacularly inept first proposal of marriage. Over the course of about a week we see Darcy go from incandescent rage and outraged pride, to niggling doubts about his own rightness, to grudging humility and finally to an acceptance that he behaved like a total prat and may well have ruined all chance of future happiness.

Yet we also see the other side of Darcy, the one that makes him beloved of all his dependents. He insists upon his injured and aging valet travelling his coach while Darcy rides alongside. He is generous with his tenants and good to his friends. His friendship with Byron is an inspired touch and shows how Darcy is able to accept the good in people, even such an erratic and depraved genius as his lordship.

The only real plot quibble I had was the device of the letter from Lydia to one of the regimental officers which Darcy believes came from Jane. From this he gets an unfavourable picture of Jane and so removes Bingley from the scene. It is unnecessary. It is quite clear that Darcy’s concern for pride and position is an adequate motivation and it should have been left at that.

Otherwise a good three and a half star read. A must for all fans of Jane Austen. If you are reading this and haven’t (god forbid) read Pride and Prejudice go away and do it now and then read Slater’s book.

0 Comments • Filed in General Fiction, Good Read, Historical

The Opposite of Life

Posted on April 27, 2008

Narrelle M. Harris
The Opposite of Life
Pulp Fiction Press, 2007

Having complained in my previous post that all vampires seem to be a cross between Mr Darcy and Mr Spock it is perhaps to be expected that in the very next book I read I encounter Gary. Gary is a vampire. Gary wears a ghastly bright tropical shirt, has no social skills and spends his days pottering around his late parents’ house reading engineering textbooks.

Harris has come up with an excellent take on vampires. Eternal life is the promise but it is a cheat - sure you live for ever but you are caught in a time warp of the date you died. Your brain has difficulty learning new things and you slowly sink into a sort of lethargic boredom where only fresh blood makes you feel anything at all. Gary makes an effort - he was studying to be an engineer when he was ‘turned’ in the sixties - but he finds the going tough.

Mostly vampires keep to themselves and suck small amounts of blood from volunteers in one of Melbourne’s more exclusive underground night clubs. But now a vampire is apparently running amok and blood-drained victims are appearing everywhere. More specifically they keep ruining Lissa Wilson’s attempts at a social life - dead bodies keep turning up wherever she goes. As a librarian and geek girl who has just been dumped by a weasel of a boyfriend she needs all the social life she can get.

With considerable reluctance on both sides she teams up with Gary to try and find the killer and get life (and unlife) back to normal. Between coping with the undead and her mother Lissa does it pretty tough.

I liked this book. There is no romantic denouement but Gary and Lissa find a sort of friendship. It is a good vampire novel and a good detective cosy. There is clearly another book waiting where we will find out more about Gary and Lissa - how he copes with being undead and how she copes with him. Three and a half stars.

0 Comments • Filed in Fantasy, Good Read

Working for the Devil

Posted on April 23, 2008

Lilith Saintcrow
Working for the Devil
Orbit. 2005

‘Lilith Saintcrow’ is such a great moniker. I love it. Working for the Devil is the first in a series of books (five at latest count) starring Dante Valentine, tough girl and necromancer. The ‘Awakening’ has happened and a few people such as Dante (Danny to her friends) have become psychic in one way or another. She summons up the spirits of the dead - usually to settle disputes over wills or criminal cases. It’s a living (sorry).

When the devil (old Lucifer in person) makes her an offer she can’t refuse she takes off in pursuit of a psychopathic demon who murdered (among others) her best friend. To aid in her quest she is assigned a tall, dark handsome demon who is one of the big D’s assassins.

This is my first quibble with the book. You could virtually substitute ‘vampire’ for ‘demon’ and we would have another vampire novel. Vampire novels are ok I guess but why do the vampires always end up as a cross between Mr Darcy and Mr Spock? To be fair, at least sex with a demon has historical antecedents. Sex with vampires has always struck me as being a bit yucky and who would want an ice-cold phallus anyway? I suppose you could dip it in hot water for ten minutes before you got underway. But I digress.

Accepting Darcy/Spock as a given we get into the chase proper and the build-up of the gang of intrepid adventurers. The most realistic of them is a seriously annoying ex-lover of Danny’s. He is far and away the most rounded character - the others are a bit formulaic.

I won’t go through the whole story in detail (I hate reviews that do that) but I’m probably not giving too much away when I say that the fiend eventually cops it and Lucifer turns out to have not been telling the complete truth. The Darcy/Spock character does end up in an unexpected state so full marks for that.

I had a little trouble grading this one. Certainly I had no difficulty in getting through it - it bubbled along. It was good fun in parts but I felt unsatisfied at the end. Still it is first in a series so maybe it gets better. More than ‘fans only’ but not fabulous. Three stars.

0 Comments • Filed in Fantasy, Good Read

Blood Ties

Posted on April 20, 2008

Pamela Freeman
Blood Ties
Orbit 2007 (Aust) 2008 (USA/UK)

Disclaimer: the author is a good friend of mine - this review may be biased.

Blood Ties is the first volume of a new three-volume fantasy novel - The Castings Trilogy. Freeman has a significant body of work as a writer for children and young adults (17 books at the latest count) but this is her first foray into the adult market.

The novel is set in the Eleven Domains, a loose confederation of provinces ruled by warlords. A thousand years earlier the country was invaded across the mountains by a race of fair-haired warriors (the precursors of the current warlords) known only as “Acton’s People” after their eponymous warleader and hero. The indigenous population was displaced and forced into a peripatetic existence as “Travellers”. Like gypsies everywhere they are despised by the mainstream population.

The Travellers are the focus of the book. The main story arc follows the fortunes of three of their number.

Ash is a young man born to a family of travelling musicians. Unfortunately his voice is so appalling that it would disturb the dead (literally we later find out) so his family apprentices him to a “Safeguarder” - essentially thugs for hire.

Bramble is a young woman whose family has “settled” - the term for Travellers who forsake the road and try, usually with limited success, to fit in with the rest of society. Bramble is something of a throwback and she runs wild, never happy with her settled existence. When an encounter with a warlord’s man leaves her shaken and him dead she is obliged to take to the road anyway in order to protect her family.

Saker is a Stonecaster whose village was massacred by the warlords while he, as a traumatised young boy, hid in a tree. Years later he discovers how to raise the dead and brings Traveller ghosts back to take revenge on Acton’s people. Although his story is the shortest of the main strands, he is the pivot about which the whole book turns and he remains a powerful presence even when offstage.

The most unusual and original aspect of this book lies with a series of short stories interleaved with the main plot. These are the stories, all told in the first person, of the common people whose lives are influenced by the great events going on around them. Their stories are not of heroes and conquerors but of the simple things that affect their lives - love, rivalry, family and neighbours.

These stories bind the book together and give the sense of a complete world not just the two-dimensional tapestry upon which so many fantasy works play out. Although they periodically interrupt the overall story they do not detract from it. On the contrary, you return to the main narrative feeling enriched and even inspired by the small events interwoven with the great ones.

Overall an emphatic four star read. I hesitated over giving it four and a half but I think the second volume is going to be even better so I have to leave some space for it. Recommended.

0 Comments • Filed in Fantasy, Good Read

The Arrival

Posted on April 19, 2008

Shaun Tan
The Arrival
Lothian 2006

I cannot find enough good things to say about this book but I’ll give it a try. Shaun Tan’s book is a masterpiece. It is the only book for a long time where, having finished it, I went straight back to the beginning and read it again.

There are no words in this book. The story is told through a series of pictures, each of which is a work of art in its own right.

It is the story of one man’s arrival in a foreign country. He has left the hardships of his own country and gone ahead to build a new life so that he can send for his wife and child. Although the artist says the book reflects his own parents’ arrival in Australia, he has cleverly made the main character a westerner. The new world has strange customs, language, culture, animals and flowers. Everything is alien.

And yet this world contains people too and the hero discovers kindness and compassion from those who have made the journey before him. He is adopted by a pet - a beautiful and alien creature who comes up to him like a stray cat and decides he needs a companion.

Words are just not adequate to describe this book without words. Buy, beg or steal a copy or, if all else fails, borrow one and refuse to give it back.

A genuine five star work of art.

0 Comments • Filed in Biography, Fantasy, Outstanding

The Execution Channel

Posted on April 17, 2008

Ken MacLeod
The Execution Channel
Orbit 2007

The Execution Channel is an odd mixture of thriller, spy story and science fiction. Mostly it is a thriller set in the very near future. An apparent tactical nuclear explosion destroys a military base in Scotland; simultaneously (for reasons that were never completely clear to me) sundry motorways and bridges across Britain blow up; an Englishman working as a spy for the French (sacré bleu!) goes on the run; his daughter is arrested by a sinister secret service; and shadowy conspiracies er shadow everything.

Jolly good fun with thrilling chases across country and dastardly deeds behind closed doors.

Then there are the odd bits.

There is an alternate history element. Apparently Gore won the 2000 election not Bush. The 9/11 attacks were a bit different. The bit of the middle east that got clobbered was slightly different. Otherwise everything seems pretty much the same or at least could reasonably develop that way. There didn’t seem to be a lot of point to it.

The final chapters appear to have been taken from a SF novel and have only a tenuous connection with the rest of the book. I can only assume the MacLeod was simultaneously working on a piece of full-on techno-futuristic science fiction and the final pages got unfortunately mixed up with this one. I understand that these accidents can happen but I really think the structural editors at Orbit should have picked it up.

Oh yes, and there is a saccharine postscript where all the characters live happily ever after and the evil step-mother gets her just desserts. Oh, hang on - I’ve got the wrong novel again. Maybe it was the big, bad wolf.

Despite this it deserves three stars. The thriller bit was excellent and kept me reading. It was just that I kept finding myself in the wrong book which detracted considerably from what might otherwise have been a four star experience.

0 Comments • Filed in Good Read, SF, Thriller

Confessions of an English Opium Eater

Posted on April 16, 2008

Thomas de Quincy
Confessions of an English Opium Eater
First published: 1821
Second edition: 1856
Penguin edition: 1979

Confessions of an English Opium Eater was the most successful work of Thomas de Quincy, English academic and writer. It had a powerful influence at the time as it detailed de Quincy’s experiences with laudanum, a tincture of opium. I’ve never taken the stuff myself so I was interested to get a first-hand narrative.

Well, I was disappointed. Although there are some descriptions of the effects of opium the vast majority is de Quincy expounding on the topic nearest his heart - Thomas de Quincy. Unfortunately, he is not in and of himself very interesting.

If you are interested in his influence as a writer it is worth reading. If you are interested in de Quincy himself it is worth reading. If, however, you are after a good description of the effects of opium, or even the ravings of a drug-ravaged madman, you are out of luck.

One and a half stars only. For me, its fame is unwarranted.

0 Comments • Filed in Biography, Recycle

Black Powder War

Posted on April 16, 2008

Naomi Novik
Black Powder War
Harper Voyager 2006

Another novel in the Temeraire series which portray the Napoleonic Wars but with an air force of dragons. If you haven’t read Temeraire, the first of the series, you need to read it before attempting this one.

Becalmed in Macau, Laurence and Temeraire (the dragon) receive orders to return immediately to Europe and collect three valuable dragon eggs from the Ottoman Empire. They decide to make the difficult journey overland along the Silk Road accompanied by a guide of dubious loyalties.

If this hard road is not enough they must deal with treachery in the Sultan’s court when they do reach Istanbul. Having dealt with this they then get caught up in Napoleon’s invasion of Prussia. Getting back to England is a tough gig.

Like the others in this series I have read I enjoyed it but I had a few quibbles. It felt a bit of an in-between novel. Previously Temeraire had learned how well dragons were treated in China and, comparing this with their treatment in England, decided that Something Must be Done.

This is setting up what should be a fascinating social struggle when they get back to England and I am looking forward to it. This novel seems to be mostly about getting there rather than having any inherent story to tell.

The individual episodes work ok in and of themselves although I wasn’t very convinced about why they should stay and fight in Prussia when they had strict orders from the Admiralty to get the eggs back to England as soon as possible. This was particularly urgent as one of them was a fire-breather - a breed of which England was in dire need.

I’m giving it three stars. It was a good read and fills in a gap in the greater story but it still needed more purpose of its own.

0 Comments • Filed in Fantasy, Good Read, Historical