Archives for posts with tag: books

Perdido cover image
Title: Perdido Street Station
Author: China Miéville
Year of publication: 2000
Genre: Mixed — SF Fantasy Horror
My rating: 4.5 stars or A-

New Crobuzon is a sprawling, messy, dark city in which, since I only recently finished reading Peter Ackroyd’s London, I couldn’t help but see the echoes of that great metropolis during the Industrial Revolution. But Miéville’s imaginative power in authentically re-creating such a city in another universe, a city full of non-human races trying to make a living, honestly takes my breath away, and that’s speaking as someone who normally can’t stand a lot of description in her reading.

The story opens with Isaac and his non-human lover, Lin (alien, as in actually alien, not Star Trek alien — she has a giant insect for a head) both receiving unusual commissions. Read the rest of this entry »

Heroines cover image
Title: The Heroines
Author: Eileen Favorite
Year of publication: 2008
Genre: Fantasy — Literary
My rating: 3 stars or C

Penny’s mother runs an isolated boarding house with a difference…amid the usual run-of-the-mill guests, the occasional heroine from literature will show up, beautiful and distraught and needing a break from her narrative. They don’t know they’re in a narrative, and Penny’s mother is adamant that the storylines can’t be interfered with. All they can offer is tea and a shoulder to cry on before the heroines disappear back into their books, usually to meet some tragic fate.

But Penny is frustrated and feels neglected by her mother. When she runs off into the woods, she finds out that the heroines aren’t the only ones escaping the pages — but is this stranger a hero or a villain? Read the rest of this entry »

How cool is this? Bookseer. All right, it’s just linking to Amazon recommendations (the LibraryThing search never turned up anything for me), but it’s still fun.

It’s been posted a lot, but what the hell: www.bookshelfporn.com. This is how you cope with overcrowding-by-book — turn it into a feature and pretend you did it on purpose.

Neil Gaiman has written an episode of Dr Who which will be airing next year.

Australian members of Good Reads might like to enter a giveaway for a free copy of my latest book, Bastard’s Grace. The rest of the world, you had your chance last week…

Sex in terms of male or female, my friends (usually now called the inaccurate ‘gender’). This entry is about how the author’s sex/gender influences reading decisions.

I reviewed Of Bees and Mist earlier this week (I was a little disappointed). I picked this book up based on the first few pages, the presence of leading female characters, and a bit of a whim. When I got it home, I realised the author’s name was EricK, not EricA and I have to admit that my heart sank and that I would not have bought it had I noticed that it was written by a man, not a woman.

The reason for that is simple: I generally don’t think male authors do a good job portraying woman as actual people rather than as stereotypes of their ideal or nightmare Read the rest of this entry »

Curse cover image
Title: Of Bees and Mist
Author: Erick Setiawan
Year of publication: 2009
Genre: Fantasy — Literary
My rating: 3 stars or C+

Of Bees and Mist is touted as a adult fairytale, which is usually the wording used when publishers or reviewers don’t want to admit they’re reading a fantasy. It’s probably closest to magic realism.

Meridia grows up in a house haunted by yellow-eyed ghosts and coloured mists. They take her father away every night, and return him home each morning. Her mother, Ravenna, seems mad as she haunts the kitchen. Gradually, as Meridia grows up, she learns more about her parents’ tragic history. Her escape comes when she meets the charming Daniel. However, when she moves into his parents’ house, she soon discovers her new mother-in-law, Eva, is not the loving, supportive woman she appeared to be before the marriage. Daniel’s house is haunted too, by swarms of bees rather than mist. Read the rest of this entry »

Twists are the big surprises to do with plot or character motivation or hidden information that are usually revealed towards the end of the book, if not the very end. Often they’re just about throwing a spanner in the works of the story (the last minute betrayal by the trusted friend, for example), but when they’re very good, they are such that they change the interpretation of all that has gone before.

Twists are pretty tough for writers to pull off, because readers are such a diverse bunch that you’ll never get the same reaction out of more than one of them. As a writer, I tend to avoid them except where the narrative ends up requiring it (and they’re the simple sort that add a bit of complexity to the current plot, not the interpretation-changing sort). As a reader, twists tend to fall into a handful of categories for me. Read the rest of this entry »

Name of the Wind cover image
Title: The Name of the Wind
Author: Patrick Rothfuss
Year of publication: 2008
Genre: Fantasy — Noir Epic
My rating: 3.5 stars or B+

This book has been on my reading pile for almost two years: I’ve left it alone for a long, long time and to explain why, I’m going to quote the back cover.

‘I have stolen princesses back from sleeping barrow kings. I burned down the town of Trebon. I have spent the night with Felurian and left with both my sanity and my life. I was expelled from the University at a younger age than most people are allowed in. I tread paths by moonlight that others fear to speak of during day. I have talked to Gods, loved women, and written songs that make the minstrels weep.’

Doesn’t that sounds fantastic (though slightly Gary Sue-ish — is there anything Mr Wonderful can’t do?)? I knew nothing about this book but that people were raving about it and that the back cover indicated it was going to be a fantasy book of a different ilk.

And then there’s this next line on the back cover:

My name is Kvothe.

Me: I’m sorry, Cough? The name of the wind is Cough? Oh, come on. Back on the pile with you. Read the rest of this entry »

Court of the Air cover image Title: Court of the Air
Author: Stephen Hunt
Year of publication: 2007
Genre: Fantasy — Steampunk-ish
My rating: DNF

This is the first victim of my new stringent abandon-book policy. The plot and the first few pages sounded interested: we meet Molly, an orphan at the workhouse, thrown out of her latest near-slavery job and dreading what the Beadle (boss of the workhouse) is going to do about it. Amid a whole lot of info-dumping (the first warning bell for me), we learn what he’s going to do about it: ship her off to a brothel.

Then we meet Oliver, who is an outcast in his town, suspected of harboring dark powers due to a childhood accident. Before he knows it, his uncle’s been murdered and he’s on the run. Meanwhile, Molly too has had those around her murdered and is running for her life. I would suppose they meet eventually to work out why a lot of bad people want to kill them. Read the rest of this entry »

Margarets cover image Title: The Margarets
Author: Sheri S. Tepper
Year of publication: 2009 (paperback)
Genre: SF. Technically
My rating: 3 stars or B for story, D- for preachiness

In a near-future world where Earth teeters on the edge of ecological collapse and total destruction because people are stupid (bear with me until I get on to the preachiness of Tepper) and one-dimensional aliens are greedy, a young girl named Margaret is the key to the survival of the human race. As a child on a Mars colony, the lonely Margaret imagined playmates for herself — a queen, a warrior, a healer, a spy, a telepath, a linguist, a shaman. At certain decision-points in her life, these imaginary personas split off into real versions of her, making their lives on far-flung colonies, some as slaves to evil alien races, some in the care of mysterious otherworldly people, one as a woman raising a family, one as a man training as a soldier, and so on. Their purpose, all unknown to them, is to walk seven roads as once to meet the Keeper, as orchestrated by some nice (and yet one-dimensional) aliens and the psychic manifestations of humankind’s desires ie the gods (though technically SF because it’s set on alien worlds and has wormholes and such, this is much more fantasy than SF, and the riddle, resolution and ending are all very fairytale-like).

This is the fourth book I’ve read by Tepper, and it will be last. And it’s not because it’s bad, by any means. The writing is decent, the plot is solid, and most of the various versions of Margaret are interesting to follow, especially as they begin to meet and the story builds up to its climax. I shot through this book in a day and mostly greatly enjoyed reading it. So why wouldn’t I read more?
Read the rest of this entry »

Pearls cover image Title: Two Pearls of Wisdom
Author: Alison Goodman
Year of publication: 2008
Genre: YA Fantasy suitable for adults (Part 1 of 2)
My rating: 3.5 stars or B.

In a China-like setting, powerful men called Dragoneyes control the twelve elemental dragons. Every year, the old Master of that year’s ascendant dragon steps down, his apprentice becomes Master, and a new young apprentice is chosen to unite with the ascending dragon. Eon is training, under harsh tutelage, to compete for the coveted place as this year’s apprentice — but Eon is not a preadolescent boy. Rather, she is Eona, a 16-year old girl pretending to be male. She has the talent to see the energy dragons and her master is determined that she will win the place despite being the wrong sex and crippled to boot.

On the day of the choosing, things take an unexpected turn, and Eona is thrust into court life, struggling to control her powers, keep her deadly secret hidden, fulfil her duty to her master and the ailing and beset emporer and his true heir, and stave off the hostility of the nasty Lord Ido and his faction, who support a false claimant to the throne. When the emporer dies, Eona, still without proper control, faces a life-and-death struggle against Lord Ido.
Read the rest of this entry »

Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.

Join 25 other followers