FANTASY AUTHORS UNPLUGGED FEATURING NICHOLAS ROSSIS

Unknown's avatarArcher's Aim

This is continuing feature on Archer’s Aim – Fantasy Authors Unplugged. I hope to frequently share an interview with a fantasy author. If you have authors to suggest and/or questions you’d like to see answered then leave a comment or send me an email. If you are a fantasy author and would like an interview please let me know and we’ll plan one that fits your schedule. Today’s featured author is Nicholas Rossis who, in addition to being a fantasy author, is also a finalist in the 2015 International Book Awards for his children’s fiction, Runaway Smile (book link posted below). Congratulations and welcome to Nicholas!!

Q. What’s the plot of your latest fantasy novel?

cover_bundle_700That would be Pearseus: Vigil, the third book of my epic fantasy series, Pearseus (fourth if you count Schism; the prequel to the series). It continues the story from where Mad Water left…

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Posted in Author Spotlights, Interview, Self-Published | Tagged , , , , , | 3 Comments

THE GRIM COMPANY by LUKE SCULL

THE GRIM COMPANY

The Grim Company by Luke Scull

Genre: Fantasy

Series: The Grim Company #1

Publisher: Roc (February 4, 2013)

Author Information:Website | Twitter

Length: 400 pages

My Rating: 4 out of 5 stars.

When I think of a grimdark novel, what comes to mind is an ultra-violent, amoral, uber realistic story where good guys don’t even finish last . . . they get slaughtered before the race even begins! Something along the lines of this.

funny wizard of oz

Okay, maybe, that isn’t completely fair, but we all know the sub-genre is known for those elements I mentioned above. And when I returned to reading fantasy a few years ago, this “new” fantasy didn’t agree with me at all. So much so that I actually wrote a post bemoaning my disillusionment with the whole sub-genre: Why Grimdark Isn’t For Me.

Fast forward a few years. I’ve read more grimdark books. Some I’ve loved. A few I’ve thought were “meh.” Most I’ve thought were entertaining enough. Now, though, I’ve encountered something I never thought possible: A fun grimdark!

explanation

Okay, I know that “fun” term sounded sacrilegious. Please, take a deep breath, put the fist down, and sit back in your chair, I will explain everything.

Now, Luke Scull starts The Grim Company out with a proverbial grimdark middle finger. This takes the shape of a whole city being destroyed by magic while it’s terrified citizens can do nothing but stand there waiting for it to happen. A cataclysm that opens this book in a most shocking and spectacular way.

The pace slows down considerable after this, but instead of a frantic sprint, a reader finds himself in a slow but steady marathon. The world’s delicious history being slowly revealed piece by piece. Characters are introduced, thrown into the mix. Amoral philosophy begins to make its appearance. Fights are bloody, brutal affairs with body parts flying. And the strong aroma of grimdark begins to permeate every page.

As for that world, Scull has dreamed up an epic, grimdark wonderland, fully realized and impeccably unveiled. It is a land mired in the Age of Ruin; a slow death that began five centuries ago when a group of wizards arose during the Age of Strife (An epoch were the world’s religions allied to exterminate all users of magic.) and killed their persecutors and the gods they worshiped.

You heard that right. These sorcerers hunted down and slaughtered every deity known to exist, casting some from heaven itself. All that remains of these divine beings are their slowly decomposing corpses; some of which do not seem to be completely dead yet, but can still be heard moaning as miners tear out their magical flesh and blood to empower the deicidal wizards. For after the Godswar, these “god-like” wizards didn’t go away but carved up the decomposing world into fiefdoms. All humanity shepherded toward the end of everything by the very people who had ushered in the slow death of creation.

evil wizards

While it is implied that many of these deicidal wizards still live, the story here focuses on the struggle between only four of them: Salazar of Dorminia, The White Lady of Thelassa, Marius of Shadowport, and The Shaman of High Fangs. A conflict that revolves more around their need to obtain the last great source of magic in the world rather than any desire to increase their earthly dominions (because, honestly, those are pathetic excuses for the lost civilizations from the past.)

Ensnared in this wizardly conflict is a cast of colorful characters. Davarus Cole is a young man, who has been reared to be a hero in the mold of his deceased father, and into his hands has been placed an ensorcelled weapon that is destined for the heart of Salazar. Plotting beside him at the rebel meetings is an orphan woman named Sasha, who views all men with the disdain that they deserve. Brodar Kayne and Jerek the Wolf enter the tale as highlanders on the run from the minions of the Shaman of High Fangs; men of action who are united together in a strange bond of friendship, even though they are as different as light from day. Far to the north, the sorceress Ylandris dreams and plots to become even greater than the Shaman himself. And in Dorminia, Salazar’s Supreme Augmentor (Augmentors are magically enhanced “super soldiers” of the wizards.) is a man named Barandas; a bastion of goodness and virtue who commits evil, because he believes that “a strong man does what is necessary and not always what is right.” And rounding out this merry cast is Eremul the Halfmage; the last wizard remaining in Salazar’s city, though the price for his escape from the wizard’s magical purge years before were his legs.

With this motley group of people (and a few more minor players) Scull weaves an entertaining grimdark that is two parts amoral, ultra-violent fantasy and one part fun epic adventure. A viciously dark escapade that is somehow fun!

Even the moody, philosophical comments contained in the narrative don’t depress as much as make you laugh at their absurdity, such as when Eremul is counseled “[N]ot to lament the loss of your legs. Instead celebrate the fact they liberated you from the evil you would have otherwise committed — yet by virtue of that simple fact, you possess only half the evil of a man” or will have you nodding along in agreement, as when Eremul observes that “It would seem that men possessing the qualities to serve the city in the highest capacity were difficult to find. Deceitfulness, cowardice, shameless arse-lickery. Why haven’t I been made a magister yet?” Hell, even comments that might offend your sensibilities don’t really irk you . . . too much. For instance, when one character muses that “The difference between a hero and a killer lies only in the ability of the former to justify every dark dead they perform to anyone who cares to listen. Even themselves. Especially themselves” or when another proclaims that the “The longer one lives the more one understands that there is no inherent goodness in the world” they all fit into the overall narrative so snuggly that it doesn’t sound like an author proselytizing but rather the characters coming alive before your eyes and letting you get to know them.

Naturally, there are vicious physical confrontations and dazzling sorcerous displays in The Grim Company. As I mentioned earlier, the beginning of the book begins with a major one. However, it continues from there, albeit at a slower pace, providing enough episodes of blood and guts carelessly scattered across the pages to satisfy even the most ardent grimdark fan. So if that was a major concern of yours, hopefully this news lays such doubts to rest.

By this point, I’m sure you can detect that I really liked this novel. Honestly, it was a nice surprise; one of those times when I was not expecting much and got a lot more than I bargained for — in a good way. Yeah, yeah, I know grimdark isn’t suppose to be labeled “fun,” but I’m just telling the truth here. The Grim Company is a fun grimdark fantasy. Sure, it has all the gory, moody elements of the usual grimdarks out there, but Scull mixed in a wonderfully deep, complex world with a storyline that had enough good, old-fashioned fun to lighten the read, so that it was FUN. Hell, I think even the “Grimdark” Reaper had a smile on his face after finishing this one.

grim reaper

See he is smiling? You don’t see it? Huh, I would have sworn he was smiling.

Purchase the novel at Amazon.

Posted in 4 Stars, Fantasy, Grimdark | Tagged , , , , , , | 11 Comments

READY PLAYER ONE by ERNEST CLINE

READY PLAYER ONE

Ready Player One by Ernest Cline

Genre: Science Fiction

Publisher: Broadway Books (June 5, 2012)

Author Information: Website | Twitter

My Rating: 2 out of 5 stars.

I came into Ready Player One expecting A LOT. It had been described to me as a “genre-busting” novel containing “irresistible nostalgia;” some people even went so far as to repeat the review that describe reading it as a “nerdgasm.” Doc_BrownAll of which means that when I started this book I kept thinking “If my calculations are correct, when this baby hits eighty-eight miles an hour, [I’m] going to see some serious shit.” (Doc Brown in Back to the Future.)

The story begins in the year is 2044. This future is just as ugly as many people had predicted. Global warming, food shortages, mineral depletion, et cetera putting to rest any dreams of a paradise on earth.

Thankfully, humanity can escape the ugly realities of their life by jacking into the OASIS, a massive virtual utopia where they can be anyone and be anywhere in a digital galaxy of thousands upon thousands of worlds. Of course, the more real money they have to invest in their OASIS avatars the more perks they receive, but there is so much free content that even the poor, downtrodden of the world can’t complain too much.

Wade Watts is one of these unprivileged users. He lives in a block of stacked mobile homes with his aunt; a bitter woman who totally hates him and only puts up with him sleeping in her laundry room due to the government credits he brings into the family. Every day, Wade escapes this pathetic existence by sneaking into an abandoned van that he has ferris-buellerturned into his hideout. Once inside he dons his virtual-reality visor and hooks into OASIS, becoming his online persona: Parzival, because “Life moves pretty fast [in a virtual reality world]. You don’t stop and look around once in a while, you could miss it.” (Ferris Bueller in Ferris Bueller’s Day Off.)

Now, part of Wade’s online time is spent attending virtual high school, but he spends a lot of that classroom time and all his “free” time doing what he loves: being a “gunter” and trying to decipher “Anorak’s Invitation.”

What is a gunter and Anorak’s Invitation, you ask?

You see, a child of the 1980s named James Halliday is the genius video-game designer who created OASIS, a massively multi-player online game which evolved into the global virtual-reality network which entertains humanity every day. Naturally, this guy was a billionaire and primary owner of the company that runs OASIS, but he also was bill-and-teds-excellent-adventure-abraham-lincolnan obsessive fan of anything from the ‘80s and a bit of an eccentric recluse. So when he dies, Halliday leaves behind a mischievous legacy dubbed “Anorak’s Invitation.” In this invitation, Halliday’s virtual avatar challenges users to solve a series of ‘80s riddles, clues, and puzzles to win both his fortune and a controlling interest in his company as well as to “Be excellent to each other, and party on dudes!” (Abraham Lincoln in Bill & Ted’s Excellent Adventure.)

The world goes wild at the announcement! Millions of people trying to discover and solve Halliday’s video game Easter egg. Because that is what everyone assumes it must be, since, in “Anorak’s Invitation,” Halliday had spoken of his love for Warren Robinett’s Easter egg in the Atari game Adventure. (An Easter egg is a secret sign, clue, or level embedded into a game poltergeist-remakethat remains hidden unless discovered by users.) Soon, egg hunters, or “gunters”, are declaring “They’re hee-eere!” (Carole Anne Freeling in Poltergeist) as ‘80s trivia (tv, movies, music, arcade games, console games, and everything else) makes a comeback fifty plus years after its demise and takes over the world in its role as educational fodder for gunters everywhere.

But, as Ready Player One begins, no one has been able to solve Anorak’s Invitation. In fact, no one has even discovered the first key out of the three Halliday mentioned in his challenge. The casual egg hunters have long since given up, leaving behind only the hardcore gunters like Wade Watts. People who “. . . don’t want to sell anything, buy anything, or process anything as a career. . . . don’t want to sell say-anythinganything bought or processed, or buy anything sold or processed, or process anything sold, bought, or processed, or repair anything sold, bought, or processed. You know, as a career, [they] don’t want to do that,” (Lloyd Dobler in Say Anything.) but would rather spend all their time memorizing ‘80s trivia, living their life online, and trying to solve what seems to be an unsolvable riddle.

Wade himself has become immersed in the ‘80s. His favorite television show is re-runs of “Family Ties.” Atari games are must play games for him. Hell, even his interaction with online friends seems to rotate around him disparaging them about their lack of ‘80s knowledge, their taste in ‘80s movies, and doing terminatorso with creative use of ’80s-vintage movie quips like “Don’t call me Shirley.” (Airplane!) It really seems that everything in Wade’s life is the Big ‘80s all over again. (Guess the Terminator was right when he said “I’ll be back.”) And that my reading friend is why I found myself not enjoying this book.

Speaking honestly, Ready Player One was a mind numbing trip down memory lane for me. As a pre-teen in 1980 and an early twenty-something when the ‘80s ended, everything Ernest Cline talks about I experienced first hand back-in-the-day. My first video game console was an Atari 2600. My first computer was a Tandy TRS-80 color computer. My favorite video game for my TSR was Dungeons of Daggorath. dungeons of dagorrathThe reason I got the computer in the first place was because I saw the movie WarGames and wanted to be a computer programmer. Dungeon & Dragons was my life in middle school. Star Wars became an addiction. The television episodes, the movies, the music, Rubic’s Cube, and everything else were all part of growing up for me, so none of those tidbits of trivia were new or exciting, which meant I really needed a good story to keep this one interesting.

Alas, the story contained here remained a very straight-forward quest to learn ‘80s trivia, then use it to find a key where more ‘80s trivia was needed to complete a quest before wax-on-wax-offneeding more ‘80s trivia to unlock a gate which then required additional ‘80s trivia to complete a task. It became about as repetitive as Mr. Miyagi’s “Wax on, wax off!” in Karate Kid. Meanwhile, the fairly interesting dystopia real world made briefer and briefer appearances as Wade got richer until anything outside of the game almost ceased to exist. I suppose, Wade really took Alex Keaton’s philosophy to heart and decided “People who have money don’t need people.”

And the ending to Ready Player One? Well, it honestly read more like the conclusion of a video game than a novel to me, which was fitting in a way, I suppose, but not very fulfilling.

B-B-But everyone else seems to love this novel, why are you talking bad about it like this?

Actually, I don’t like criticizing this book. I wanted to like it, but I just didn’t. Even at myspicola age, I still enjoy being part of the “cool group,” which seems to mean the people who think Ready Player One is “Awesome! Totally awesome! All right, [Cline]!” (Jeff Spicola in Fast Times at Ridgemont High.) And I suppose for what it is (A homage to ‘80s culture), this novel is an okay read. I’m sure the novelty of revisiting your childhood or learning about ‘80s pop culture is amazingly entertaining for some. I, however, lived it, loved it, and moved on from it. Not that I mind reminiscing about the ‘80s every now and then, but a little goes a long way, risky businessand Ready Player One was too much of a good thing. So, for better or worse, “Sometimes you just gotta say, ‘What the f*ck.” (Joel Goodson in Risky Business) and tell the truth, and the truth is I must need some “nerdagra,” because I didn’t have a “nerdgasm” when reading this one.

Don’t take my word for it though, buy the book at Amazon.

Posted in 2 Stars, Near-Future, Science Fiction | Tagged , , , | 8 Comments

JUSTICE, INC.

JUSTICE, INC

Justice, Inc. by Michael Ulsan

Genre: Superhero Comics

Series: Justice, Inc.

Publisher: Dynamite (June 16, 2015)

My Rating: 3 out of 5 stars.

This one is a pulp fiction lovers fantasy, starring Doc Savage, The Shadow, and The Avenger. All classic heroes from that bygone era when pulp ruled the magazine stands across America.

For those unfamiliar with each of these guys, let us stop for a moment and take a closer look.

Doc Savage is Clark Savage, Jr., whose father used science doc-savage-man-of-bronze
to train him to have superhuman abilities, such as greater strength, longer endurance and a photographic memory. This tutoring has also resulted in him being gifted at numerous skills; Doc is an accomplished musician, a martial arts master, a speech mimicker, a master of disguise, a physician, a scientist, and an inventor. But at heart, this prodigy’s view of life can be summed up by his oath: “Let me strive every moment of my life to make myself better and better, to the best of my ability, that all may profit by it. Let me think of the right and lend all my assistance to those who need it, with no regard for anything but justice. Let me take what comes with a smile, without loss of courage. Let me be considerate of my country, of my fellow citizens and my associates in everything I say and do. Let me do right to all, and wrong no man.”

THE SHADOWOn the other hand, The Shadow is the mysterious vigilante persona of one Kent Allard, a famous World War I aviator. After the war, Allard decides to fake his own death, then return to New York City to fight underworld criminals by their own means: intimidation and brutality. Thereafter, he uses numerous fake identities, but his most useful is that of Lamont Cranston, a “wealthy man about town” who tends to travel the world. While Cranston is away, The Shadow impersonates him, living Lamont Cranston’s life and using his resources to wage an endless war against those who would do innocent people harm.

The last member of our trio is Richard Henry Benson. This globe-trotting adventurer has spent his life traveling the world, accumulating millions before returning home to America to settle down and have a family. As this comic collection begins, Richard Benson has not yet assumed the mantel of the Avenger.

the avenger

Naturally, it takes a huge crisis to get these guys together. Such an event happens in the present day, where an older Doc Savage cannot keep his greatest scientific experiment from going horribly wrong. Instead of harnessing time itself for the benefit of mankind, a disruption in time occurs, leading to circumstances that place the key to saving time in the hands of Doc Savage’s younger self in 1939.

From this beginning, Michael Uslan presents a fast-paced story that quickly throws the three main characters together. There are brief glimpses of their pasts, quick explorations of their personalities, but this story mainly stays the course as an epic struggle to discover who is trying to destroy time itself and stop them.

One of the things that I really enjoyed about this collection was the artwork. Giovanni Timpanos’ style was crisp, clean, and smooth. He didn’t try to be over-the-top, in-your-face, or any other euphemisms such as that. Nope, he gave this team-up comic an old school feel that fit not only the characters but the story as well, because Uslan’s plot is a classic pulp fiction tale that focused on archetype villains, world-spanning conspiracies, and heroes who are not as flashy as Superman, Batman, Hulk, Wolverine, or any other modern superheroes.

As for the story itself, it is a pulp fiction romp.

Does that mean Justice, Inc. is going to knock your socks off?

Probably not. It is definitely a solid read though. And it does have more than enough fights, drama, historical guest stars, and laughs to keep a reader entertained. But what Justice, Inc. does a brilliant job of, however, is introducing these iconic pulp characters to a new generation, and doing so in such a manner that future creative teams can build upon this solid foundation to craft Doc Savage, The Shadow, and The Avenger stories for years to come. And for that reason, this is a collection I’d recommend to anyone.

Buy the collection at Amazon.

Posted in 3 Stars, Graphic Novels, Pulp Fiction | Tagged , , , , , , , | 3 Comments

THE NEW 52 SUPERMAN VOLUME 1

Superman Vol 1

The New 52 Superman Volume 1: What Price Tomorrow? by George Perez

Genre: Superhero Comics

Series: The New 52 Superman Vol. III

Publisher: DC Comics (November 20, 2012)

My Rating: 3 out of 5 stars.

I know the Man of Steel is a character lots of people are ambivalent towards. Truth be told, Superman comics have always been hit-or-miss with me. There are just so few writers who can find the right balance between Superman’s powers and his enemies without going overboard with apocalyptic crisis after apocalyptic crisis or settling for ridiculous villains to test him. But, in this collection, I thought George Perez did a decent job finding and maintaining that correct balance.

Since this is The New 52 Volume 1 (Yeah, I’ve come late to the party. And, yes, I have heard it’s ending soon.), I expected lots of backstory. Thankfully, Perez skipped all of that, throwing me directly into the action, and filling in the past with brief flashbacks. All of which worked perfectly for me.

superman 1As for the plot, it is basically random attacks on Metropolis by elemental creatures. These beings appear to be alien in origin but might actually be speaking Kryptonian!

Naturally, Superman has to fight off these ever escalating disruptions of metropolitan life; all the while being captured in action by hordes of news reporters – both type and television. Lots of fighting ensues. Some of it is exciting, while some of it becomes a bit repetitive. However, interspersed between these mandatory fisticuffs are more than a few scenes about the interesting stuff: Clark Kent’s life.

Yeah, I did say Clark Kent was the interesting part of this collection. And I actually meant it too.

Now, before I explain, I have to admit it: I like Clark Kent. The guy is so damn nice. How could you not like him? I mean, he has god-like powers, but he has decided that he wants to help those weaker than himself instead of lording over them. He does this not only by being Superman but also by the types of causes he champions in his normal job. And even when people look down on him or portray him as weird or weak, the guy has the intestinal fortitude to control his anger and keep walking the path his conscious tells him he should. Sure, he isn’t messed up in a cool, dangerous way like other superheroes, but for me that is what actually makes him uniquely interesting.

So, anyway, I went into this read already liking Clark, and Perez’s deft handling of Clark’s personal challenges pulled me in.

First, I loved the whole “nice guys finish last” aspect of the story. Clark is a nice guy. He tries to live by the morals and ethics he has chosen for himself. Unfortunately, not everyone else abides by those same values. Thus, Clark doesn’t get ahead perhaps as much as his more driven, less scrupulous counterparts. Maybe, even his infatuation for Lois Lane is doomed for failure, because he acts too much like a modern gentleman. And the interesting part is seeing how Clark handles all this when he knows that he is Superman and that revealing this fact could improve his life on so many levels.
clark kent 1

The other thing I loved was how Perez handled Clark trying to keep his identity secret in a modern world with zero privacy. I mean, it is something I’ve thought about for decades now. Sure, fifty years ago I could see Superman jumping in a phone booth and being able to escape notice, but in the Twenty-first Century, it doesn’t seem practical. And here the creative team actually addresses that issue more realistically. We see G.P.S. tracking; the pinging of Clark’s location via his cellphone connection; video (surveillance and cellphone) capturing Supes travels; and the instantaneous accessing of all this by computer. While Perez didn’t resolve it completely, I really like how he tried to handle that aspect of the Superman mythos.

Now, I always try to mention artwork in my reviews, because without them this wouldn’t be a comic, right? So if you were wondering, the art in this collection is first class, as you’d expect it to be if Perez is even slightly involved in it.

Overall, the New 52 Superman Volume 1 was an enjoyable read. It didn’t make me leap over a tall building in excitement, but it did make me want to read the next volume. Who knows I might even have caught up on all the New 52 Superman action by the time the next reboot happens in a few months.

Purchase the collection at Amazon.

Posted in 3 Stars, DC, Graphic Novels, Superman, The New 52 | Tagged , , , , , , | 3 Comments

THE ROAD TO CIVIL WAR (MARVEL COMICS)

THE ROAD TO CIVIL WAR

The Road to Civil War by Brian Michael Bendis and J. Michael Straczynski

Genre: Superhero Comics

Series: Marvel Civil War

Publisher: Marvel (February 21, 2007)

Author(s) Information:Website | Twitter

My Rating: 4 out of 5 stars.

Marvel Civil War!

When I started back reading comics, I had a lot of people recommend this one. And after finishing The Road to Civil War, I’m beginning to think they were right.

This comic collection grabbed my attention right away with New Avengers: Illuminati. The classic, old school artwork by Alex Maleev really worked for me, setting the eerie mood perfectly for Brian Michael Bendis’ tale of this super secret group of Marvel alpha dogs who take it upon themselves to decide all of Earth’s important superhero issues. These guys interactions and conversations over the years was interesting as well as being very realistic (at least, in my opinion).
illuminati

After such a great beginning, I was expecting a lot from the Fantastic Four issues, but what I got disappointed me. Instead of Civil War stuff, the majority of the issues were standard superhero faire with the FF fighting, profiling, and shooting off one liners. Doctor Doom’s appearance livened things up a bit, just not enough to elevate the story. I suppose, this section of Road was okay, but it was such an abrupt change of pace from the Illuminati section that it didn’t work for me.

Amazing Spiderman 531
Thankfully, this collection ended on a high note with The Amazing Spider-Man: Mr. Parker Goes to Washington. J. Michael Straczynski’s story was highly entertaining, alternating seamlessly between light-hearted fun, adrenaline pulsing combat, and thought provoking drama. When coupled with the excellent artwork, it did a great job capping off this collection.

So if there is anyone else out there wondering whether Marvel Civil War is worth trying, take my word for it, go find this comic collection, and get into the Civil War, because the superhero and politics angle is too cool to miss out on.

Purchase The Road to Civil War at Amazon.

Posted in 4 Stars, Graphic Novels, Marvel | Tagged , , , , , | 2 Comments

WAR OF SHADOWS by GAIL Z. MARTIN

war of shadows

War of Shadows by Gail Z. Martin

Genre: Fantasy

Series: Ascendant Kingdoms #3

Publisher: Orbit (April 21, 2015)

Author Information:Website | Twitter

My Rating: 3 out of 5 stars.

In Ice Forged, Gail Z. Martin introduced a reader to Blaine McFadden; a noble youth banished to prison at the icy edge of civilization for killing his abusive father. Not content with this twisted beginning, Martin then rained down a magical apocalypse upon the world of the Ascendant Kingdoms, destroyed magic, and sent a hardened Blaine back to his homeland on a crusade to try to save that very magic. A journey that captivated in its blending of fantasy and post-apocalyptic themes.

In book two, Reign of Ash, the story picks up with Blaine and his friends (mortal and vampiric) frantically seeking to survive in this world-gone-mad and uncover a way to re-anchor magic. For, since the apocalypse, magic itself is wild, untamed, and beyond human use; its only remaining manifestations in the world the sorcerous storms that ravage the land and the hellish creatures it sometimes spawn to prey on humanities survivors. Naturally, though, there are people who struggle to keep the magic untamed, seeing in the chaos a means for themselves and their kind (vampires!) to assume their rightful place as homo superior. The quest and clashes that ensue see Blaine and his companions encounter ancient mysteries, nihilistic vampires and their mortal minions in a world frantically clinging to civilization.

Now, Martin has returned to the saga of Blaine McFadden in War of Shadows. While magic might have been re-anchored in the world, it is highly unstable and terribly dangerous to use. And Blaine himself finds that his simple quest has quickly evolved into something more: A campaign to unite, or conquer, the warlords who have carved up the land and are fighting over the carcass of the Ascendant Kingdoms!

For me, the single greatest achievement of Gail Z. Martin in Shadows was finding the right balance between the different genres she has been attempting to juggle throughout this series. With the large role vampires have played in the Ascendant Kingdoms series so far, these urban fantasy darlings have sometimes overshadowed the rest of the story (for me anyway), but in this installment, Martin found the perfect proportions for traditional fantasy, medieval urban fantasy, and post-apocalyptic, mixing them together into a near perfect recipe for pure entertainment.

Added to this, Blaine has been gifted in Shadows with several compelling enemies. Human and non-human beings whose motives, struggles, machinations, and rationales are all laid out clearly for readers, so that these characters become real people who grown beyond the “villain” archetype into true competitors for Blaine.

Not only that, but several old (and a few new) secondary characters come into their own here. People whose fresh voices and personality shine through, not only spotlighting themselves but also other portions of the ongoing saga from other than Blaine’s viewpoint. Especially compelling is one character dealing with his growing vampiric traits (You’ll understand once you read the novels.) and another attempting to brave an untenable situation with a madman, whom she once viewed as her mentor. Both of these “side” plot lines were real highlights of the story.

Obviously, nothing is perfect, and War of Shadows isn’t the exception. While it was highly entertaining and filled with more than a few great scenes, there were still times where the narrative slowed to a crawl. It wasn’t as if these sections were filler material or massive info dumps, because they were not. Rather, it felt as if Gail Z. Martin added a few too many unimportant details or allowed a conversations to become a bit too repetitive before it ended. None of this was horribly noticeable, but it did cause me to skim more than a few pages here or there throughout the book.

All in all though, I have no major complaints with War of Shadows or where Martin is taking the Ascendant Kingdoms series. Sure, the vampires get to me sometimes. (There are just so damn many of them it seems.) But if this novel is any precursors to what is to follow, I can put up with the blood suckers, and I would encourage you to as well, because, if you are a lover of genre blending fantasy, this series will not disappoint.

I received this book from Orbit and Netgalley 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.

Purchase the book at Amazon.

Posted in 3 Stars, Fantasy, High, Post-apocalyptic | Tagged , , , , , , | 2 Comments

ERAGON (The Inheritance Cycle #1) by CHRISTOPHER PAOLINI

eragon

Eragon by Christopher Paolini

Genre: Fantasy

Series: The Inheritance Cycle

Publisher: Listening Library (2004)

Author Information:Website | Twitter

My Rating: 2 out of 5 stars.

This review must begin with my admission that I am a middle-aged, white man. My angst ridden teen years a distant memory most days. However, as the proud – and highly stressed, at times – father of several children, I get to relive those dramatic teen days over again through my kids. Something I tend to do by watching their favorite tv shows and movies with them, listening to their music, and reading the younger children (pre-teens and younger) their favorite books at bedtime. And this is how I first was introduced to Eragon several years ago: First at the movies in 2006, then a few years later as a bedtime story read. More recently, I decide to revisit the story via an audio book.

Why am I starting my review this way, you ask?

Mainly, it is to warn everyone that I am definitely not the target audience for Eragon, so please be aware of that and assume that the review to follow will not be highly favorable of it.

Eragon starts out like many old school fantasy books: The focus being on a poor farm boy. His name here is . . . (drum roll please!) Eragon! This solidly built and morally firm youth is out hunting in the dangerous mountains for food to help his “adopted” family get through the winter. It is something he does willingly, since his uncle has loved and raised him as his own son ever since Eragon’s mother disappeared soon after his birth.

After a tiring hunt, our young farm boy is about to kill a deer when a burst of magic disrupts the peace of the land. As the light disappears, Eragon discovers something much more dangerous than any wild beast lying before him. Rather, he observes an unadorned blue stone! A simple thing really. One that Eragon quickly takes, intending to sell it to get his family food for the winter. Little does he know that the stone is priceless beyond imagination. A metamorphosis soon to occur that will change Eragon’s life (and the fate of the world) forever!

The story that follows mixes a dash of Lord of the Rings (everything), a pinch of Star Wars (knights with glowing swords), a smidgen of Pern (dragonriders), and a cup of over-used fantasy tropes (you name one, it is here) to create a fairly generic story. While it isn’t bad, Eragon isn’t anything great either. Honestly, it seems at times that Mr. Paolini was content to cut and paste his favorite parts from other stories, tacking these borrowed elements together to create his own teenage fantasy adventure. (Yes, I know Paolini was a teenager when he wrote this, which is why I believe this assessment is fair.)

Does that mean Eragon is not worth reading?

No, it is a decent fantasy novel. My youngest child adores it. He has had me read it to him once and watches the movie regularly, but he hasn’t even hit double digits in his age yet. My older children (pre-teen and teens) do not like it at all, however. In fact, when I read it to them as a bedtime story several years ago, they totally revolted, demanding that I stop and read something more interesting. When I asked why they felt that way, they said Lord of the Rings was better. Since I couldn’t argue, I moved to the next book.

So my kids are split on the book, but why didn’t I (middle-aged, white guy) like this one?

As I mentioned earlier, I find it generic. The story is just too formulaic, filled with too many tropes, inhabited by too many archetypes, and too unsurprising to be terribly interesting to me. The generic farm-boy-with-mysterious-past-finds-magical-object-and-becomes-the-chosen-one was overdone even when I was a kid, and by the 2000s, it was almost impossible to concoct anything new and exciting out of that type of scenario. Even adding in the Star Wars-like elements, Paolini’s story had already been told before and told better to put it simply.

Even saying all that, I can understand where others would disagree and personally love this book, especially those new to fantasy. (Whether that is kids, young adults, or adults doesn’t really matter.) It is an excellent introduction to traditional fantasy with enough magic, world building, and mystical creatures to keep a reader interested. In that introductory type of role, I can see how Eragon could be great.

On a final note, I must give praise to the narrator of the audio book I listened to. This person did an outstanding job with this story. The voices he created were amazingly well done as were the emotions that he somehow endowed the words with. Many times, I could tell the characters feeling just by the tone of the narrator’s voice. A performance that was especially noteworthy and in need of a spotlight.

Buy the book at Amazon.

Posted in 2 Stars, Audio Books, Epic, Fantasy, High, Young Adult | Tagged , , , , , , , | 8 Comments

FLASH GORDON OMNIBUS by JEFF PARKER, EVAN SHANER and JORDIE BELLAIRE

Anyone else remember the campy-yet-cool Flash Gordon movie from 1980? You know, the one with the really cool Queen music.

flash gordon movie I do, anyway. And it has always had a special place in my childhood memories, because it was the first scifi movie I ever owned and could watch over and over again on my family’s brand new VCR (God, I’m dating myself!) . . . at least until I rewound the damn thing to death.

So, I’m a Flash Gordon fan then?

Probably wouldn’t characterize myself as such, but I enjoy old Flash as much as other action/adventure heroes like Indiana Jones or Han Solo. Sure, they always seem to escape every dangerous situation relatively unscathed, but that is a part of their charm. At least, to me. (I don’t personally watch or read action/adventure tales for their stark realism.)

FLASH GORDONWhen I saw this omnibus collection of the complete 8-issue Flash Gordon comic book series, plus the 2014 Holiday Special and the 2014 Annual, I decided I’d give it a try. Sure, I’d been a bit disappointed by Flash’s reintroduction in the King’s Watch series, but I’d found the story itself fun in a B movie kind of way, so I assumed this one would be at least that entertaining.

And, you know what? I was right. This is a 4 out of 5 star book for me.

Penned by Jeff Parker (Batman ‘66), illustrated by Evan “Doc” Shaner (Deadpool), and colored by Jordie Bellaire (Pretty Deadly), this comic collection really captured the classic feel and fun of Flash Gordon. No, it did not stray far from a traditional action/adventure story, as Flash, Dale Arden, and Dr. Hans Zarkov clash with Ming the Merciless, but our heroes escapades are visually compelling enough and the scenes filled with enough fighting, humor, and drama to keep you turning the pages.

What is the plot, you ask?

Well, if you’d read King’s Watch, you’d already know the setup, but suffice it to say that Flash and his companions go by spaceship to Mongo, run afoul of the main man Ming, and then escape to other worlds where they fight alien humanoids, encounter diabolical technology, are enchanted by sex-starved wraiths, and struggle to find a way home. Naturally, there are fights, space creatures, robots, and Flash Gordon daring-do – though Dale Arden (female lead) saves Flash’s ass more times than he does her. Something you’d never know by looking at the picture below.

FLASH-GORDON-FEATURE

All in all, I really like this one. No, it wasn’t the best comic I’ve ever read. No, it didn’t reinvent the action/adventure genre. But it was a nice visit with this classic scifi hero of yesterday. Obviously, it helped that I already had a soft spot in my heart for Flash Gordon (The 80s movie, remember?), but I still think non-fans might find this one an entertaining diversion from reality.

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.

Purchase this comic collection at Amazon.

Posted in 4 Stars, Graphic Novels, Pulp Fiction | Tagged , , , , , , , , | 6 Comments

THE WORLD OF ICE AND FIRE: THE UNTOLD HISTORY OF WESTEROS AND THE GAME OF THRONES by GEORGE R.R. MARTIN, ELIO M. GARCIA, JR., AND LINDA ANTONSSON

the world of ice and fire

The World of Ice and Fire by George R.R. Martin

Genre: Fantasy

Series: A Song of Ice and Fire

Publisher: Bantam (October 28, 2014)

Author Information:Website | Twitter

My Rating: 3 out of 5 stars.

Does George R.R. Martin’s epic fantasy masterpiece A Song of Ice and Fire even need me to introduce it?

Hell, no. If you aren’t a devoted lover of the book series, then, no doubt, you are a follower of Game of Throne on television. (And if you aren’t, what have you been doing the last decade and a half, huh?) So this guide to Martin’s Westeros will, most likely, be a book that you have been eagerly awaiting or, at least, a little interested in, and you’d probably like to know if it is worth picking up, right?

awkward

Yeah, what I’m about to admit next is a bit awkward, because I am a great lover of SoIF, but the simple fact is I didn’t love this book. It was exactly what I’d always wanted to know about Westeros’ history, but I suppose, it is also a case of “Be careful what you ask for because you might get it.” Or, to put it another way, The World of Ice and Fire: The Untold History of Westeros and the Game of Thrones is a true-to-life history book; an especially boring history book at times, which is painful for me to write since I am actually a history lover.

Okay, now before anyone gets the pitchforks out and starts to light the torches, I want to say that there were some amazing things in this book. The pictures, maps, and illustrations throughout were stunning, capturing the essence of this amazing series beyond my wildest expectations. There really were not any that did not impress, as illustrated below by the stunning image of the Battle of the Trident.

Battle-of-Trident

There were even some sections of The World of Ice and Fire that were good, though not great. The beginning of the book from “Ancient History” through the “Glorious Reign” were as interesting as most well written real world history books that I’ve read, though the chapters became a bit repetitive and dry at times. I also found “Beyond the Sunset Kingdom” a decent overview of the world, just not as much as the beginning chapters of the book. The illustrations were great though!

reignofthedragons

Unfortunately, though, there were some rather boring, or bad, sections of the book; at least, sections that I personally did not find very compelling or moving. The worst culprits to me were the chapters on each of the Seven Kingdoms. These were brutal to read, reminding me of nights in college when I sat up into the depths of the night trying to force myself to finish some dusty history book for class the next day. And I honestly had to do that with the Seven Kingdom chapters. It got so bad that I found myself skimming much of it, which is a pity since these sections were detailed, filled with historical facts and descriptive details that could have been very moving, but quickly, they turned into walls of text for me with similar names and similar stories that were just brain numbing.

Highgarden

Does all this mean I’m recommending people not pick up this book? Not at all, I still believe that many Martin fans will adore it, but anyone diving in should merely be warned that this reads more like a history tome than the forthcoming The Winds of Winter.

Posted in 3 Stars, Epic, Fantasy | Tagged , , , , | 14 Comments