Crusie, Jennifer, and Bob Mayer: Wild Ride

Wild Ride is the most recent book from Jennifer Crusie and Bob Mayer and a departure from their prior collaborations in two ways. First, it’s a fantasy: five Etruscan demons are imprisoned in an amusement park, and they’re getting loose. (Crusie has written at least one other collaborative fantasy before, The Unfortunate Miss Fortunes; Dogs and Goddesses probably is too, but I haven’t read that.) Second, it’s not structured around a romance arc.

The fantasy plot of the book is fine; even using the amusement park as a prison ends up making enough sense that it didn’t bother me. But the characterizations feel unusually flat, which is odd, because it’s not as though Agnes and the Hitman didn’t have just as much plot, and those characters felt very vivid and rounded to me. Also, one of the arcs uses an annoying cliche to speed things along. The net result was that I finished it this morning, thought about it a bit, and realized I had no urge to go back and re-read even the best plot bits. Back to the library it goes tomorrow.

No Comments

Resnick, Laura: (02) Doppelgangster

Hey—remember four years ago, when I said that Laura Rensick’s Disappearing Nightly was a lot of fun?

Well, the next book in the series, Doppelgangster, has finally been published. (It was a temporary victim of its original publisher’s convulsions.) As the title suggests, this expands and significantly modifies the short story of the same name in the anthology Murder by Magic. And like both the prior works, it’s light and fun and an enjoyably non-angsty urban fantasy. Bonus: the next one will be out in August.

No Comments

Gabaldon, Diana: (107) An Echo in the Bone

An Echo in the Bone is the seventh and most recent in Diana Gabaldon’s Outlander series. At this point all I can usefully say is that we’re finally into the thick of the American Revolution; I find Gabaldon’s war plots less interesting than the rest of her books; and every single damn plot thread in the book ends on a cliffhanger—including at least one for which the cliffhanger is completely and utterly unnecessary.

Oh, and the continuity error from last time is explained, and it might almost be theoretically possible that the series is coming to a close. (Though the author says on her website (5 February 2010) that she doesn’t know if the next book is the last.)

2 Comments

Klasky, Mindy: How Not to Make a Wish

I think I must’ve heard about Mindy Klasky’s How Not to Make a Wish from a Big Idea post at Whatever. It sounded like light fun, so I put it on my list of things to look for and eventually read it.

It does have very nice theater stuff that is amusing and feels quite real. And if only it hadn’t involved completely removing genies from their cultural context, I might have liked the concept of them as civil servants who are pressured to grant wishes in a timely fashion. But it uses Western standards of feminine beauty in a way I strongly object to, and its plot rests on a glaring inconsistency and a random, nonsensical revelation. It might have been a fast read, but I still regret the time I spent on it.

No Comments

Moon, Elizabeth: Heris Serrano

More quick catch-ups:

Elizabeth Moon’s Heris Serrano is an omnibus of the first three books in her Familias Regnant series, Hunting Party, Sporting Chance, and Winning Colors. Jo Walton has a good overview of the series at Tor.com.

However, I would have located the thing that keeps these three books from greatness in their pacing, rather than their points of view. They are oddly lumpy in spots, diffuse in others, and are really best read all together because they break at weird places—people who are impatient with drawn-out endings want to avoid these. I do like the way the fairly narrow world of the first book opens up, and most of the characters, and the competence porn (one of a set of useful terms for talking about literature that I picked up from the Internet). I’m curious to see where the series goes from here.

If you read e-books, this omnibus is available for a startlingly low price from Webscriptions. Either in print or electronic format, unfortunately, it has a whitewashed cover; Heris is explicitly described as dark-skinned.

2 Comments

Brust, Steven: (112) Iorich

This is unfair to Steven Brust’s Iorich, but I wanted it to be a different book.

Iorich is set four years after Dzur, and unquestionably has a great premise: Vlad comes back to Adrilankha because Aliera has been arrested on charges of practicing Elder Sorcery—a capital crime. And it gets a great deal of the feel of legal stuff right.

But it’s four years after Dzur and Vlad is in basically the same position he was at the end of that book. (There’s one thing mentioned in passing that’s different, but it doesn’t seem to have any effect on him here.) Four years! This is the book that made me realize that, for all that he’s shown skulking in the woods in Issola, I just can’t see it: I can’t envision him having that kind of existence in the time between books. I gave Dzur a pass on not making progress on Vlad’s big-picture problems because I loved the characterization so much, but this book frustrated me when I was finished because its ending seems to promise future movement Real Soon Now, which just pointed out how much still needed to be resolved.

I also wanted this to be a different book because Vlad’s POV is unfortunately limited. The plot does not make a lot of sense to me (Chad and I, in fact, came up with completely opposite understandings of it), and I suspect much of the problem is that at least one major player simply would never tell Vlad just why they acted as they did.

There are some very good things about the book, among which are a non-annoying Cawti, a great moment with Kragar, and some hilarious “deleted scenes” at the end. Almost everyone who’s not me likes it a lot. If you haven’t read it yet, you probably will too. (Hey, I said I was being unfair.)

(Note: I originally read this in an ARC from the publisher.)

10 Comments

Griffin, Kate: (01) A Madness of Angels: Or, The Resurrection of Matthew Swift

I am so far behind on the booklog that I am just to going to pick whatever I feel like talking about. Tonight, that’s Kate Griffin’s A Madness of Angels: Or, The Resurrection of Matthew Swift.

I initially picked this up in the bookstore because of the cover, and then was intrigued by the fourth paragraph as the narrator describes his wakening:

I lay on the floor naked as a shedding snake, and we contemplated our situation.

As regular readers know, I am a terrible sucker for narrative voice, and those pronouns were thus guaranteed to catch my attention, and then to keep it:

I tried moving my leg and found the action oddly giddying, as if this was the ultimate achievement for which my life so far had been spent in training, the fulfilment of all ambition. Or perhaps it was simply that we had pins and needles and, not entirely knowing how to deal with pain, we laughed through it, turning my head to stick my nose into the dust of the carpet to muffle my own inane giggling as I brought my knee up towards my chin, and tears dribbled around the edge of my mouth.

A Madness of Angels is a fantasy novel set in a very concrete and specific present-day London. Matthew Swift was killed two years ago as the opening shot in a sorcerous war and now finds himself resurrected. He sets out to find out who killed him, who resurrected him, what’s hunting him now (a particularly creepy entity calling itself Hunger, among other things), and why, a process that ends up bringing him into contact with most of London’s magical population.

The book’s virtues are its location, its magic—which is inextricably intertwined with its location, as urban magic arises from and is shaped by the rhythms of life in different places—and its narrative voice, which is a lot smoother than I’d have thought a mix of singular and plural first-person could be. Its weaknesses are that its energy is mostly in the above and it doesn’t have as much left over as I would like for characterization or pacing (most obvious in a regrettable plot cliche at the end). However, its location and magic and voice are enthrallingly vivid and, if you like those kind of things, very much worth a look. Try the Prologue, which is, yes, rather long, but which concludes with a really great bit of magic that is too long to quote and that I’d hate to spoil anyway.

Meanwhile, here’s a short bit of London description to wet your whistle:

The bus shelters in London are, more often than not, badly designed. Roofed with thin plastic sheets that sag under any weight, curving downwards to form a slight bowl, they collect pools of rainwater on their tops, which can remain there for days. Most of these shelters are below tree height, so that fallen leaves can rot down in these pools, creating the odd muddy pond with its own fungal subculture that nothing can erase, short of a burning August drought.

The flatness of these shelters allows other things to be left on top of them. A single, decomposing sock is a common feature, or a laceless left-foot plimsoll. Half a shopping trolley has been known, or a bicycle handlebar, as have Ikea catalogues and plastic bags full of broken bananas. However, above everything else, on the top of every other bus shelter in London there is almost invariably a rotting copy of the Yellow Pages.

People tend not to ask what a copy of the Yellow Pages is doing on the roof of a bus shelter, nor how it got there, and this is probably a good thing — a poor reflection on the curiosity of the human spirit, perhaps, but an excessively useful defect for the struggling sorcerer, for inside every Yellow Pages left on the top of the shelter, and those pages only, are the exclusive listings.

And this is just because it amuses me:

We had never been to the cinema before. The plot was something about a genius arms dealer who discovered redemption, cardiac conditions and an interesting and potentially lethal use for spare missile components in a cave. It wasn’t my thing. We were enthralled, and staggered out blinking from the cinema two and a half hours later with our mind full of pounding noise and our eyes aching from the overwhelming brightness, resolved to see more films as often as possible.

(The mass market paperback will be out at the end of the month. A sequel, about which I admit some doubts, will be out in March.)

2 Comments