Monday, August 17, 2009

Catching up on the reviews...

So I read a couple more books that I haven't discussed here. Since my wrist is causing me some pain and I think I should take a brief respite from practicing, I thought now would be a good time to catch up.

First up is "Mistborn" by Brandon Sanderson. The premise of the novel is that the world was saved by this guy who has these remarkable powers granted by that world's god. As a gift to his loyal (and royal) followers, he bestowed some of them upon him. He did not grant any of these magic power upon the proletariat, though.

Okay, the book doesn't refer to them as the prol, but that's what they are. They are actually called "skaa" and they are just the slave workers for the emperor.

Anyway, what follow is a millenium of slavery under the thumb of the immortal emperor. Of course, there are now a few skaa with these powers as the result of "inbreeding" between royalty and skaa.

The novel focuses on a group of such skaa who led life as a crew of successful thieves, but now are attempting to bring about the end of the empire and freedom for skaa everywhere.

In all honesty, it was a pretty engaging read with a nice little quasi-plot twist at the end. I would recommend it for any fantasy fans.

My next book, however, was not quite as enjoyable...


This one was "The Harlequin" by Laurell K. Hamilton. The Harequin is the 8 millionth book in the popular Anita Blake Vampire Slayer series. Laurell was a pioneer of the urban fantasy genre with Anita Blake and her other series focusing on Meredith Gentry, a faerie princess living amongst humans.

For anyone who is a fan of the "True Blood" series, based off of Charlaine Harris's Sookie Stackhouse novels, you are familiar with the urban fantasy genre. In urban fantasy, magical creatures not only live among us, but they are very visible and contributing members of society. Laws have been enacted to protect their rights and they have their own subcultures, much in the way any religion, ethnicity, or racial group might.

This presents an interesting opportunity to address prejudice in a new forum, but also permits the writer to indulge in some wild fantasy about what life would be like if vampires were taxpaying citizens protected by the law.

Hamilton, for example, imagines a St. Louis which has become a tourist spot for vampire watchers. They can visit the vampire district, go to vampire (and shapeshifter) strip clubs, "donate blood," and even become vampire groupies. It's an interesting world.

Of course, since these creatures have supernatural strength and magical powers, someone needs to protect the innocent from vampires run amok with their own power. Enter Anita Blake, state-sanctioned vampire executioner.

At the beginning of the series, Blake worked closely with the cops to solve interesting crimes involving vamps and shapeshifters.

Now, Anita has excessive amounts of sex with excessive amounts of people, Hamilton studies the dynamics of her imaginary preternatural culture, and everybody is along for the ride on an emotional rollercoaster.

They've basically become Harlequin romance novels with monsters.

Speaking of Harlequin, that's the name of the bad guy in this book. Of the nearly 500 pages of book, there are only about 75 dealing with The Harlequin. The remainder is just a flimsy excuse for Anita to have really hot sex with many people and engage in some middle-aged angst.

I'm not saying it's a bad read. I am saying, though, that this series has jumped the shark and is only a shadow of what it once was.

Take that for what you will.

Wednesday, August 5, 2009

The continuing adventures...

Another Marla Mason book down. Now, all I need to do is find the first one and I'll be all set.

This one pitted Marla against, believe it or not, Death. The thing I love about urban fantasy books is that they always tend to center on some epic ass-kicker who can take on any force of nature... or supernature. Who'd have thunk that included Death?!?

I do have to admit, though, that these types of books are becoming a bit cliche. They all seem to follow the same type of pattern, it's just taken me a bit to recognize it because it's a somewhat newish pattern.

Okay, so there's nothing new about it. It's the same old pattern draped in a new cloth. There's a series about a private eye who inhabits a secret realm hidden in the middle of London. He's kind of the resident ass-kicker there. For some reason, the name of the series and author is escaping me.

Anyway, these books could be just an extension of those, with a female ass-kicker instead of a male one.

I'm not complaining, though. It was a fairly decent read. Just a bit cookie-cutter for me.

As for my next literary conquest, I am going to actually get to cross a complete item off my list. I am going to be reading Principles of Orchestration, by Nikolay Rimsky-Korsakov. That would count as my non-fiction book, would it not?

I'm really hankering to do something grand and exciting, though, to cross some more items off the list.

I'll keep you posted...

Monday, August 3, 2009

At least I'm reading...

Whily my social life seems to have disappeared into so much dust lately, at least I have my books. That's a good thing, too, because I have so many to read to satisfy my reading requirement for the list.

I just finished reading "Poison Sleep" by T.A. Pratt. I always find names like this amusing. The bio inside the cover informs me that T.A. lives in Oakland, CA with "partner H.L. Shaw and their son." That's code for "T.A. is a lesbian who adopted a child with her life partner."

The other interesting thing is her vagueness (assuming T.A. is a her). In her acknowledgments, she mentions "Locus, the best day job a writer could have." Her bio also mentions that she works "as a senior editor for a trade publishing magazine." Locus is a magazine specializing in science fiction and fantasy.

Here's where things get interesting, though. It turns out that T.A. Pratt is really Tim Pratt. He lives in Oakland with his wife Heather Shaw and their son River. Aside from this series that I just wrote, there are a number of other pieces he has written (and won awards for).

And that, my friends, is why it is dangerous to make assumptions and jump to conclusions.

Having said all that, on to the book itself. Very good read. It's the second book in a series following Marla Mason, the chief sorcerer of Felport. I haven't read the first book, which shows that you can pick up some series' right in the middle and not skip a beat.

Marla is in charge of keeping the city safe and protecting the ordinaries (Pratt's term for muggles *lol*) from being aware of the existence of magic. The book is full of interesting plot twists and colorful characters, and it is a fairly easy and quick read. I have the next book in the series and imagine I will be done with that one in a couple of days.

If you enjoy urban fantasy (the genre where the supernatural exists in the real world, with entries such as the popular TV show True Blood, based upon the Sookie Stackhouse books by Charlaine Harris and, of course, Twilight), then you should enjoy this read, as well.

Happy reading!

Saturday, August 1, 2009

Damn the Typos!!!

Well, another book down. I'm flying through these things. Three books in, so far, under a week? Not too shabby.

This one, "The Dragon's Touchstone," buy Irene Radford, is about magicians trying too find a new source of magik; On that is less destructive and preserves the balance between magic and nature.

The book was pretty good. The main problem I had with itt was the incredibly large number of typos in it. Weather it was strays quotation marks, making it difficult to tel when a person started and stopped talking, or misspelled words, or varius other mistakes, it made it terribly difficult to read at ties.

I understand that spellcheck misses words that are not the word you intened, but are still spelled properly. In this case, though, there were combinations of letters that simply spelked nothing! As an example, in a sentence about auras, I came across the word "auara." What the hell is an auara?!? Do I need to look that up on Wikipedia?

The funniest part about it is that my built-in spellchecker did not flag that as an improperly spelled word when I typed it here. Hold on a second while I look it up...

According to dictionary.com, "No results found for auara."

WTF?!?

Anyway, the book isn't that difficult to read, in truth. It is a pretty good book, too, with a great cliffhanger, so I highly recommend it.

And no more typoes!!!!!!!!