STACKING THE SHELVES, VOL. 24

sTACKING THE sHELVES

Stacking the Shelves over at Tynga’s Reviews is all about sharing the books you are adding to your shelves, whether it be physically or virtually. This means you can include books you buy in physical store or online, books you borrow from friends or the library, review books, gifts and of course ebooks!

This week my dearest dreams have come true, as two books I desperately wanted appeared on my doorstep, courtesy of the wonderful publishers!

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Saint’s Blood by Sebastien de Castell

Genre: Fantasy

Series: Greatcoats #3

Publisher: Jo Fletcher Books (April 7, 2016)

Author Information: Website | Twitter

Length: 576 pages

How do you kill a Saint?

Falcio, Kest, and Brasti are about to find out, because someone has figured out a way to do it and they’ve started with a friend.

The Dukes were already looking for ways out of their agreement to put Aline on the throne, but with the Saints turning up dead, rumours are spreading that the Gods themselves oppose her ascension. Now churches are looking to protect themselves by bringing back the military orders of religious soldiers, assassins, and (especially) Inquisitors – a move that could turn the country into a theocracy. The only way Falcio can put a stop to it is by finding the murderer. He has only one clue: a terrifying iron mask which makes the Saints vulnerable by driving them mad. But even if he can find the killer, he’ll still have to face him in battle.

And that may be a duel that no swordsman, no matter how skilled, can hope to win.

Purchase the book at Amazon.

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The Knights of Crystallia by Brandon Sanderson

Genre: Fantasy — Middle Grades/Young Adult

Series: Alcatraz #3

Publisher: Starscape (April 19, 2016)

Author Information: Website | Twitter

Length: 320 pages

The Knights of Crystallia is the third action-packed fantasy adventure in the Alcatraz vs. the Evil Librarians series for young readers by the #1 New York Times bestselling author Brandon Sanderson. These fast-paced and funny novels are now available in deluxe hardcover editions illustrated by Hayley Lazo.

In this third Alcatraz adventure, Alcatraz Smedry has made it to the Free Kingdoms at last. Unfortunately, so have the evil Librarians–including his mother! Now Alcatraz has to find a traitor among the Knights of Crystallia, make up with his estranged father, and save one of the last bastions of the Free Kingdoms from the Evil Librarians.

Purchase the book at Amazon.

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VENDETTA

Vvendettaendetta by Gail Z. Martin

Genre: Urban Fantasy

Series: Deadly Curiosities #2

Publisher: Solaris (December 29, 2015)

Author Information: Website | Twitter

Length: 459

My Rating: 3 stars.

Vendetta is the second book in Gail Z. Martin’s Deadly Curiosities series (though there are also several story stories and novellas as well).  Set in Trifles & Folly, the antique shop of twenty-something Cassidy Kincaid, it chronicles our heroine’s urban fantasy adventures, as she uses her psychometry gift (knowing an objects history after touching it) to continue her family tradition of aiding the “Alliance.” This shadowy group led by a 600-year-old vampire named Sorren, whose goal is to safeguard the mortal world by acquiring and disposing of dangerous supernatural artifacts.

As the tale begins, Cassidy along with her friend and assistant Teag Logan find themselves investigating an abnormal amount of spirit activity in Charleston.  Not that ghostly visits are rare; in fact, they are fairly common in this haunted, southern city: some appearing regularly; others coming and going.  But things are different now; the spirits themselves in an uproar, terrified by something in the otherworld.

Normally, Sorren would lend help to Cassidy with a situation this large, but he has his own problems.  Hundreds of years of undeath having caused him to acquire a lot of enemies; most of them forgotten (or almost forgotten) by Sorren.  One of that shadowy multitude is now attacking Sorren’s other holdings, causing him to be absent when his help would have been very welcome in South Carolina.

With her immortal mentor absent, Cassidy calls in some outside experts; several Root Workers lending a hand getting to the bottom of the escalating weirdness enwrapping Charleston.  Their investigation leading the group to an ominous conclusion, one which threatens the entire population of Charleston!

Because I have only experienced a handful of urban fantasy, I tend to compare every new novel I read to those which came before it, and because of its feel, I have to place Vendetta on the shelf next to Jim Butcher’s Harry Dresden.  Cassidy reminding me of Harry in many ways, especially how she is learning to deal with her powers and adapt on the run as supernatural crisis after supernatural crisis envelop her.  Even the story itself is very Dresden-like, filled with non-stop action, focusing on Cassidy and her friends struggling to unravel mysteries, then avert imminent disaster.  All of which really means Vendetta is a pulse-pounding adventure on par with (arguably) the best urban fantasy in the business.

One of the stellar qualities of this novel is Gail Z. Martin’s portrayal of Charleston.  Here the city is a huge part of the narrative.  Much more than a mere name for the setting but an integral component of the story.  Its history rendered in exquisite detail.  Each character living with its embrace, exhibiting the intricacies of its unique culture.  Ms. Martin succeeding in capturing the essence of this place, showing it in all its southern glory.  Vendetta truly fulfilling the promise of urban fantasy by making the “urban” environment just as much a part of the tale as the “fantasy.”

The characters are the other strength.  Cassidy is a strong, skilled, and capable young woman; someone who is powerful but not overpowered, complex but not moody, approachable but mysterious, knowledgeable yet willing to take advice.  Her friends are all unique, original, and more than willing to take turns lending aid to our heroine; they are never one dimensional in any way, but bursting at the seams with untapped potential and hidden history; all of it just waiting to be explored.

The only criticism I would level at Vendetta is the pacing; at certain points in the narrative, it  is very slow.  For instance, there are many chapters devoted to investigating the current supernatural crisis: clues are uncovered, leads are followed, and revelations are made, but it doesn’t result in anything other than a few fights and another mystery to resolve.  Nothing wrong with that, but Cassidy and Company’s new riddle is too similar to the last one, resulting in a feeling that you’ve read all this before.  All of which results in this story feeling too long, too drawn out for the payoff at the end.

Despite this one flaw, Vendetta succeeded in being an entertaining urban fantasy with an amazing setting, supernatural mysteries, compelling camaraderie, satisfying diversity, and raw emotions.  Cassidy and Company braving the realistic haunting of the city, dealing with hurt, pain, and loss.  Hints of romance do swirl around a bit, but it isn’t the true heart of the story.  Rather, this is a tale about saving the world, or, at least, saving Charleston, South Carolina, which was a very fine read in my opinion; one all urban fantasy fans should give a try.

The publisher provided this book to me for free in return for an honest review. The review above was not paid for or influenced in any way by any person, entity or organization, but is my own personal opinions.

Purchase the book at Amazon.

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AUTHOR SPOTLIGHT: CHARLES E. YALLOWITZ

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Thank you Wendell for helping to promote Legends of Windemere: Beginning of a Hero, which will now be available for free.

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Guest Post: Keeping the Humor in an Evolving Fantasy Series

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Looking back at the first book of my series, I’ve
picked up on how it’s become darker. Yet there’s still some humor in there to prevent things from going entirely over the edge.

When Luke Callindor’s adventures started, he would stumble into comical situations and there was a joking comradery with his friends. This was definitely a lighthearted YA romp full of action and amusement. Beginning of a Hero had some emotional and semi-dark events, which usually involved the Lich or the Hellfire Elf. Still, even the bad guys had the occasional moment of levity. The book was definitely a different beast than the later ones.

I’m not sure when things changed so much, but I’m pretty sure it can be blamed on a certain villain showing up in a later book. When the bad guys reach a new level of brutality and menace, it gets harder to fit humor into the story. Though it isn’t impossible. Many people use humor to handle stress and make it through dark periods. It’s a defense mechanism that not everyone agrees with. Think of the person who chuckles at a funeral instead of crying like those around them. Many will perceive that as rude when it could just be the person’s kneejerk reaction to stress.

Humorous events can happen more when a character is in a group like Luke and the other champions. This is made even easier when you have a few that make it their mission to keep their friends smiling. Sari the gypsy is always trying to keep things light and then there is Fizzle the drite whose innocence is a source of laughs. The others have their moments with some friendly ribbing and sarcasm when things go wrong again. Giving the heroes a combination of frustration and acceptance in the face of unexpected obstacles helps lighten the mood of some scenes. For example, Luke or Nyx groaning that there’s always a waterfall when doing a river battle can prevent a dark mood from taking over completely.the mercahnt of nevra coil

It’s been a big decision to step away from the lightheartedness and make the path harder for Luke and his friends. I was tempted to do just that until I realized the villains wouldn’t mix well with that type of story. Humor has always been one of my favorite things to add into my stories and I had to use less of it to make the pieces fit. I found spots to put it though like the downtime between actions scenes or if a hero decided to mouth off to a villain. Have a little slapstick in a fight or a plan goes so humorously wrong that the reader has to smile a bit. Though I admit my favorite tactic is the dry wit where a character slips a snarky comment into a conversation.

Will the humor stay until the very end? I don’t know. Seeing where the series is going, it’s going to be much harder to fit many laughs into the scenes. Still, I’m up for the challenge and may have to read the early ones again to remind myself of where I’ve been. With the first book now being free, it’s even easier to . . . yeah that plug was forced and shameless. Sorry about that, folks. Couldn’t resist, but really should have.

Grab Beginning of a Hero for free!

Don’t forget to mark it as ‘To Read’ on Goodreads too!

 

About the Author:

Charles E. Yallowitz

Charles E. Yallowitz

Charles Yallowitz was born and raised on Long Island, NY, but he has spent most of his life wandering his own imagination in a blissful haze. Occasionally, he would return from this world for the necessities such as food, showers, and Saturday morning cartoons. One day he returned from his imagination and decided he would share his stories with the world. After his wife decided that she was tired of hearing the same stories repeatedly, she convinced him that it would make more sense to follow his dream of being a fantasy author. So, locked within the house under orders to shut up and get to work, Charles brings you Legends of Windemere. He looks forward to sharing all of his stories with you and his wife is happy he finally has someone else to play with.

Blog: Legends of Windemere
Twitter: @cyallowitz
Facebook: Charles Yallowitz
Website: www.charleseyallowitz.com

Don’t Miss Out on Any of the Legends of Windemere!!!

BEGINNING OF A HERO

PRODIGY OF RAINBOW TOWER

ALLURE OF THE GYPSIES

FAMILY OF THE TRI-RUNE

THE COMPASS KEY

CURSE OF THE DARK WIND

SLEEPER OF THE WILDWOOD FUGUE

THE MERCHANT OF NEVRA COIL

THE MERCENARY PRINCE

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INTERVIEW WITH HARRY TURTLEDOVE

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I’m so very honored to welcome Harry Turtledove to Bookwraiths today.  As a longtime fan of all his amazing books, I’d be hard pressed to name my favorite.  Publishing stories in the fantasy, historical fiction, science fiction, and alternate history genres, there is a Turtledove story which will tickle everyone’s fancy, and now he has turned his sights to the world of baseball, where his alternate history novel The House of Daniel takes place in a Depression Era America where magic works and baseballs fly!

Hello, Mr. Turtledove. Welcome to Bookwraiths. Thanks so much for sparing some time to answer a few questions.

Thanks for inviting me here.

the house of danielYou have a new book coming out, The House of Daniel. Some might call it a departure, of sorts, from most of your recent alternate history series. What can you tell us about it?

It isn’t really. Something like a third of my overall ouput is fantasy of one kind or another, though I haven’t done so much the past few years. THE HOUSE OF DANIEL is an urban fantasy set during the Depression in a world that isn’t quite ours because magic works and things like vampires and zombies and werewolves coexist with ordinary people. It centers on baseball, because I’ve been a fanatical fan for many years.

How long did it take this story idea to germinate before you were able to put it down onto paper?

I spent one summer night talking baseball with Peter S. Beagle over dinner; he’s the same sort of obsessive fan at I am. He’s older than I am, too, and he remembers further back. I thought, I ought to do something baseballish. I started writing just a few days later.

What drew you to this period of American history?

It’s the heyday of the minor leagues and especially of semipro ball, which this book is about. And my parents were young adults during the Depression, so I heard a lot of stories about it growing up.

Other than sheer entertainment, was there any message you were hoping to convey to readers with a story such as The House of David?

Mark Twain said it best in his introduction to HUCKLEBERRY FINN: “Persons attempting to find a motive in this narrative will be prosecuted; persons attempting to find a moral in it will be banished; persons attempting to find a plot in it will be shot.”

guns of the southHaving been publishing beloved novels for over thirty-five years now, is there any historical period you have not written about but desperately wish to?

I have some nineteenth-century ideas I’m playing with right now, maybe turning some Victorian conventions upside down and inside out.

How comfortable are you with the title “the master of alternate history?” Has it ever caused any of your non-historical stories to be more difficult to publish?

You don’t like, or I don’t like, to do the same thing all the damn time. If I do the same thing over and over, might as well drive a truck.

Interestingly, your first published novel was the sword and sorcery Werenight; a book which became the opening chapter in your Gerin the Fox series. Any plans to return to this character or the sword and sorcery genre again in the near future?

Not to Gerin; I’ve said what I have to say about him. I’d love to write sword-and-sorcery if anyone feels like buying it.

Some authors make elaborate outlines of a story, planning out every detail of a novel; some start with an idea and see where the characters take them. Which camp do you fit into?

The latter. I know more or less where I’m going, but I don’t usually know ahead of time how I’m going to get there. Telling myself the story and making things fit together is a big part of the fun for me.

in the balanceUndoubtedly, the science fiction and fantasy genres have evolved and changed over your career. How has your writing or the stories themselves evolved to match the wants and expectations of new generations of readers?

You always want to write the best story you can. What that is will depend on what kind of story it is, on who’s going to buy it (or on who you hope will buy it), and on who’s going to be reading it. You discover after a while that you’re not perfect and that you never will be perfect. You keep trying, though.

Is there any of your series which you viewed as a “can’t miss hit”, but it did not catch on as you envisioned, and, even today, you still don’t understand why?

Not really, because nobody ever knows ahead of time how something will do. You cast your bread upon the waters, and you see who grabs slices off it.

As a self-described “reasonable, rational man”, how difficult is it to write characters who are the antithesis of those qualities?

It’s not easy. You try to understand as best you can, and to show your understanding on the page. If you turn out not to have as much as you’d like, well, as I said, you’ve probably found out by that time that you aren’t perfect.

Having picked up The Misplaced Legion when it was initially published and been a huge fan of everything Videssos since, I have to ask if you ever anticipate returning to that amazing world? If so, what do you have planned?

Thank you very much. Nice to know you’ve been reading me for a while. 😉 I don’t have anything new planned in Videssos. I do wonder if you’ve seen my Forge historical, JUSTINIAN, which is set in the real Byzantine world and not the imagined one of the Videssos books.

werebloodIf you could re-write one of your novels which one would it be and why?

I actually did rewrite WERENIGHT and WEREBLOOD, my first novels (later reprinted together as WERENIGHT–they were intended as one novel and split by my first publisher). The Baen edition differs in a lot of ways from the Belmont-Tower one. I translated the story into English for Baen, having learned a few things along the way. Poul Anderson did the same kind of thing with his early novel, THE BROKEN SWORD.

Just how thick does a writers skin have to be to handle the criticism of your work? Does criticism ever bother you anymore?

You do need a thick hide. The Internet, of course, makes it easier for the trolls to come out from under their bridges. Some people will like you; some won’t. If you can’t live with the idea that part of your audience will always think you’re an idiot who should have been completely illiterate instead of just mostly, you’re in the wrong racket.

What Harry Turtledove projects can your fans look forward to in the near future?

Coming this summer from Del Rey is Fallout, the second HOT WAR book,set in a world where the Korean War went nuclear. I’m about 2/3 of the way through with the third one, whose working title is ALL THE KING’S HORSES. Coming next year from Tor is an alternate history called GOD WILLS IT!, set about now in a world where Islam developed science, technology, and enlightened government and Western Europe became a cultural backwater dominated by fanatical religious obsession. I hope it will raise a hackle or two.

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turtledove picABOUT THE AUTHOR:

Harry Turtledove lives in Los Angeles, California, with his wife, the novelist Laura Frankos. He is a winner of science fiction’s Hugo Award and of the Sidewise Award for alternate history.  Having been dubbed “The Master of Alternate History”, he has been credited with bringing alternate history into the mainstream

 

PURCHASE THE BOOK AT AMAZON.

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TEASER TUESDAY

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Teaser Tuesday is a meme held over at Books and a Beat.

To participate, all you have to do is:

• Grab your current read

• Open to a random page

• Share two (2) “teaser” sentences from somewhere on that page

• BE CAREFUL NOT TO INCLUDE SPOILERS! (make sure that what you share doesn’t give too much away! You don’t want to ruin the book for others!)

• Share the title & author, too, so that other Teaser Tuesday participants can add the book to their TBR Lists if they like your teasers!

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HALF A WARHalf a War by Joe Abercrombie

Genre: Young Adult Grimdark

Series: Shattered Sea #3

Publisher: Harper Voyager (July 16, 2015)

Author Information: Website | Twitter 

Length: 352 pages

“Rejoice in what you have. Power, wealth, fame, they are ghosts! They are like the breeze, impossible to hold. There is no grand destination. Every path ends at the Last Door. Revel in the sparks one person strikes from another.” She huddled into her cloak of rags. “They are the only light in the darkness of time.”

Purchase the book at Amazon.

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THE HOUSE OF DANIEL

the house of danielThe House of Daniel by Harry Turtledove

Genre: Alternate History/Urban Fantasy/Baseball

Serives: Stand Alone

Publisher:  Tor (April 19, 2016)

Length:  336 pages

Rating: 3 stars

Harry Turtledove has been one of my favorite authors since I purchased The Misplaced Legion in 1987.  Since then, he has led me through his Videssos Cycle (Byzantium history played out in a fantasy world), Gerin the Fox (good, old-fashioned sword and sorcery), Tosev (World War II and its aftermath IF aliens had invaded), Darkness (WW II fought in a fantasy world), American Civil War (What If the South had won the Civil War), The Hot War (What If the Korean War turned atomic), and now introduces me to The House of Daniel, where he takes a look at semi-pro baseball in a the Depression Era of an alternate world United States.

This alternate America is a place of magic.  Zombies, werewolves, conjuring men, vampires and earth elementals all call it home.  And before the “Big Bubble” burst in 1929, the world was filled with a lot more magic — and its wonderful benefits.  Not so much now though, because the magic isn’t quite so plentiful, and when it dried up, most of the jobs and most of the prosperity dried up with it.  I mean, who’s going to pay a guy to do a job when “Zombies work for nothing, and you can’t get cheaper than that.

At least in Enid, Oklahoma (where our main character, Jack Spivey, lives) that’s how things are, turning every day life into one big struggle.  A guy has to be willing to do a little of this and a little of that to pay the bills.  Anything that will put a few coins in your pockets. So along with his other activities, Jack is center fielder for the Enid (Oklahoma) Eagles: a semi-pro team.  They travel around the area, play a little ball every week; no real career in it, mind you, but on a good night with a great gate, Jack can make ten bucks or so.  More than enough to help catch up on his back due rent and feed him a few times.

But baseball alone isn’t enough for Jack to get by, so he also does a few jobs here and there for a local underworld boss called Big Stu. (Jack doesn’t like it, but the money is too good to pass up.)  One job he agrees to do for a hundred bucks (A Year’s wages!) is to rough up the kid brother of a guy who hasn’t paid back Big Stu what he owes him.  The boss wants a message sent.  No one has to be put in the ground, but they do have to bleed — a lot actually.

So when the Enid Eagles arrive in a neighboring town for their baseball game, Jack goes to make a visit before opening pitch, determined to get this messy business behind him before he plays ball.  Only problem being when the guy Big Stu wants rough up opens the apartment door he isn’t a guy at all, but the cute younger sister of the guy who won’t pay back Big Stu!

Not able to make himself hurt this innocent girl who is about his own age, Jack advises her to run away.  Far away.  Realizing he is now on the wrong side of Big Stu, Jack decides he can’t go back to Enid and needs to also run away.  Fate then lends a hand as he gets an opportunity to play for the House of Daniel (a barnstorming baseball team). These guys have long hair and bushy beards; most of them come from a religious community of some sort; and, damn, they can play some ball. It is the perfect getaway for Jack, as he is soon swept away from danger and thrown into the wild, wonderful world of semi-pro baseball.

It probably goes without saying that this is a baseball book.  Harry Turtledove has consistently said The House of Daniel was inspired by his love of baseball, and that deep respect certainly shows in Jack Spivey’s story.  The narrative following him from small towns to big metropolises, as he plays the Grand Old Game; each city, its team, and its stadium drawn in loving detail; the individual games broken down into emotional, nail-biting play-by-plays for all sports lovers, highlighting why so many people (even in this fantasy America) view baseball as America’s Pastime.

Interspersed between each game, there are certainly other events transpiring.  Interludes in this barnstorming tour, if you will.  Times when Jack interacts with his teammates, learns about other beliefs and views besides his own.  There are fights, arguments, even a Great Zombie Uprising to live through.  The team worries about earth elementals ruining an away game.  But baseball is intertwined in every one of these things in some shape, form, or fashion, keeping the focus on the game and the men who play it here in this novel.

What I enjoyed most about this story was Mr. Turtledove’s writing style.  To tell this tale, he chose a first person narrative; Jack Spivey basically recounting his time barnstorming with The House of Daniel, recalling all that he went through, all that he learned.  This approach giving the tale an almost Andy Griffith Show quality; Jack’s good, ol’ boy attitude turning the entire adventure into a genuine, feel-good sports story.

My only criticism of The House of Daniel is that it had A LOT of baseball and not much magic.  Honestly, there are detailed accounts of the important parts of most baseball games; Mr. Turtledove bringing a realistic look at how these old time games would have gone; and Jack’s daily life is filled with traveling to a game and playing a game, making baseball the focus of his life.  What readers do not see much of is magic.  Sure, this is an alternate earth where magic is said to exist, definitely magical creatures wander around, but magic isn’t present very much in ordinary life, isn’t mentioned nearly at all, and remains largely an afterthought much of the time.  In fact, for most of the novel, I completely forgot this was a fantasy world, which did bother me a little.

The House of Daniel is novel which all lovers of baseball and sports stories in general will adore.  It has heart, passion, exciting games, and a character who truly loves what he is doing.  To say Mr. Turtledove captured the spirit and essence of Depression Era semi-pro baseball in this book is an understatement, because he didn’t catch it at all he slammed it over the fences and is still trotting around the bases taking a bow to the crowd for this home-run.  While I would have liked magic to be more of a focus in this story, Jack Spivey and his barnstorming baseball team still won me over, turning me into a cheering fan much of the time, but I must warn you that if you’re not a big fan of baseball, this novel might not be for you.

Tor Books provided this book to me for free in return for an honest review. The review above was not paid for or influenced in any way by any person, entity or organization, but is my own personal opinions.

PURCHASE THE BOOK AT AMAZON.

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GIVEAWAY: THE HOUSE OF DANIEL

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the house of danielThe House of Daniel by Harry Turtledove

Genre: Alternate History — Urban Fantasy

Series: Stand Alone

Publisher:  Tor (April 19, 2016)

Length:  336 pages

A picaresque tale of minor league baseball—in an alternate Great Depression America full of wild magic.

Since the Big Bubble popped in 1929, life in the United States hasn’t been the same. Hotshot wizards will tell you nothing’s really changed, but then again, hotshot wizards aren’t looking for honest work in Enid, Oklahoma. No paying jobs at the mill, because zombies will work for nothing. The diner on Main Street is seeing hard times as well, because a lot fewer folks can afford to fly carpets in from miles away.

Jack Spivey’s just another down-and-out trying to stay alive, doing a little of this and a little of that. Sometimes that means making a few bucks playing ball with the Enid Eagles, against teams from as many as two counties away. And sometimes it means roughing up rival thugs for Big Stu, the guy who calls the shots in Enid.

But one day Jack knocks on the door of the person he’s supposed to “deal with”—and realizes that he’s not going to do any such thing to the young lady who answers. This means he needs to get out of the reach of Big Stu, who didn’t get to where he is by letting defiance go unpunished.

Then the House of Daniel comes to town—a brash band of barnstormers who’ll take on any team, and whose antics never fail to entertain. Against the odds Jack secures a berth with them. Now they’re off to tour an America that’s as shot through with magic as it is dead broke. Jack will never be the same—nor will baseball.

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                                                         GIVEAWAY DETAILS

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Tor Books has been nice enough to provide one copy of this novel for the winner of this giveaway.  North American Residents only!

To enter, please leave a comment answering the following question: “What Harry Turtledove novel is your favorite?“, then visit my RAFFLECOPTER GIVEAWAY to pile up the entries!

Congratulations to our winner: DJ over at MyLifeMyBooksMyEscape.  You do read his book blog already, right?  If not, go start now!

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FUN DAY MONDAY, OR THE BOOKS THAT WILL HELP ME SURVIVE THE WEEK AHEAD (APRIL 18, 2016)

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The work week begins. I quickly slip into my business suit and head back into the office to save a few innocent people. But while I try to fool myself into being excited about the grind, deep down, I’m not, so I’m going to escape dreary reality by reading some great books.

As always it seems, I’ll be trying to finish up my novels from last week then turning to a new (or old) book I can’t wait to try — because I’m a completionist, and I want to see how the trilogy, ends even if I haven’t loved the first two installments.  Plus, it’s Abercrombie, and I’m on a quest to find one, just one, novel of his that I love.

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HALF A WARHalf a War by Joe Abercrombie

Genre: Young Adult Grimdark

Series: Shattered Sea #3

Publisher: Harper Voyager (July 16, 2015)

Author Information: Website | Twitter 

Length: 352 pages

Words are weapons

Princess Skara has seen all she loved made blood and ashes. She is left with only words. But the right words can be as deadly as any blade. She must conquer her fears and sharpen her wits to a lethal edge if she is to reclaim her birthright.

Only half a war is fought with swords

The deep-cunning Father Yarvi has walked a long road from crippled slave to king’s minister. He has made allies of old foes and stitched together an uneasy peace. But now the ruthless Grandmother Wexen has raised the greatest army since the elves made war on God, and put Bright Yilling at its head – a man who worships no god but Death.

Sometimes one must fight evil with evil

Some – like Thorn Bathu and the sword-bearer Raith – are born to fight, perhaps to die. Others – like Brand the smith and Koll the wood-carver – would rather stand in the light. But when Mother War spreads her iron wings, she may cast the whole Shattered Sea into darkness.

Purchase the book at Amazon.

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RED SONJA & CONAN: THE BLOOD OF A GOD

red sonjaRed Sonja/Conan: The Blood of a God by Victor Gischler

Genre: Sword and Sorcery – Red Sonja & Conan

Series: Stand Alone

Publisher: Dynamite Comics (February 16, 2016)

Author Information: Website | Twitter

Length: 96 pages

My Rating: 3 stars

Red Sonja and Conan team-up! A can’t miss sword and sorcery extravaganza!

Huh.  No, I’m not talking about that movie.

red sonja movie

What I’m talking about is the most recent comic pairing of these two legendary characters.  Red Sonja and Conan joining forces as the leaders of the king’s army, sent to defeat a vile wizard called Kal’Ang. This sorcerer having usurped power, using Blood Root to mutate his soldiers into hideous monsters who reek havoc on our heroes until an even more fearsome villain from their past emerges to destroy them once and for all!

I can’t really say I’ve ever been a Red Sonja fan until Gail Simone began writing this series a while back.  Simone turning the she-devil with a sword into a fun comic, where Sonja was always portrayed as a brash and crude warrior; she herself making sarcastic remarks about her chainmail bikini and slyly explaining the tactical advantages of her opponents looking at her boobs during a sword fight.

red sonja chainmail bikini

 

So when I picked this one up that Gail Simone-type story was what I was looking for.  But I didn’t get that.  Here the creative team paints Sonja as a straight up sword and sorcery heroine with Conan along for fun.  The two trading sword strokes and sexual innuendo as much as they hack down their enemies.  All of it fun, just not what I was expecting.

red sonja the blood of a god 1

As for the art, I can’t complain.  There were pages where I thought Conan looked more like a Neanderthal than a barbarian and Sonja more like a lingerie model than a woman warrior though, but the former I can overlooked and the latter I can enjoy.  I mean, this is a sword and sorcery fantasy after all, so realism isn’t what I was looking for.

red sonja the blood of a god 2

To sum up, this is a fun, sugarcoated, sword and sorcery tale.  Don’t pick it up expecting serious drama or even Gail Simone-like tongue-in-cheek humor, and you won’t be disappointed in the roller coaster ride it takes you on.

I received this book from Netgalley and Dynamite Entertainment in exchange for a fair and honest review. I’d like to thank both of them for allowing me to receive this review copy and inform everyone that the review you have read is my opinion alone.

Buy the book at Amazon.

Posted in 3 Stars, Graphic Novels, S & S | Tagged , , , , , , | 2 Comments

STACKING THE SHELVES, VOL. 23

sTACKING THE sHELVES

Stacking the Shelves over at Tynga’s Reviews is all about sharing the books you are adding to your shelves, whether it be physically or virtually. This means you can include books you buy in physical store or online, books you borrow from friends or the library, review books, gifts and of course ebooks!

Another great week!

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the emperor's railroadThe Emperor’s Railroad by Guy Haley

Genre: Dystopian

Series: Dreaming Cities #1

Publisher:  Tor (April 19, 2016)

Author Information: Website | Twitter

Author Information:

Length:  176 pages

Global war devastated the environment, a zombie-like plague wiped out much of humanity, and civilization as we once understood it came to a standstill. But that was a thousand years ago, and the world is now a very different place.

Conflict between city states is constant, superstition is rife, and machine relics, mutant creatures and resurrected prehistoric beasts trouble the land. Watching over all are the silent Dreaming Cities. Homes of the angels, bastion outposts of heaven on Earth. Or so the church claims. Very few go in, and nobody ever comes out.

Until now…

Purchase the book at Amazon.

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the ghoul kingThe Ghoul King by Guy Haley

Genre: Dystopian

Series: Dreaming Cities #2

Publisher:  Tor (April 19, 2016)

Author Information: Website | Twitter

Length:  176 pages

The Knight, Quinn, is down on his luck, and he travels to the very edge of the civilized world – whatever that means, any more – to restock his small but essential inventory.

After fighting a series of gladiatorial bouts against the dead, he finds himself in the employ of a woman on a quest to find the secret to repairing her semi-functional robot.

But the technological secret it guards may be one truth too many…

Purchase the book at Amazon.

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spiderlightSpiderlight by Adrian Tchaikovsky

Genre: Fantasy

Series: Stand Alone

Publisher:  Tor (August 2, 2016)

Author Information: Website | Twitter 

Length:  304 pages

The Church of Armes of the Light has battled the forces of Darkness for as long as anyone can remember. The great prophecy has foretold that a band of misfits, led by a high priestess will defeat the Dark Lord Darvezian, armed with their wits, the blessing of the Light and an artifact stolen from the merciless Spider Queen.

Their journey will be long, hard and fraught with danger. Allies will become enemies; enemies will become allies. And the Dark Lord will be waiting, always waiting…

Spiderlight is an exhilarating fantasy quest from Adrian Tchaikovsky, the author of Guns at Dawn and the Shadows of the Apt series.

Purchase the book at Amazon.

Posted in Stacking the Shelves | Tagged , , , , , , , | 6 Comments