by Lee Carroll ‧ RELEASE DATE: March 5, 2013
More and more scattershot, as memories of the firmly grounded, tightly knit, charming series opener recede into the murk.
Third entry in Carroll's urban fantasy series, following the somnambulistic The Watchtower (2011).
This time, the pace picks up to a frantic pitch, with so much going on it’s hard to follow, let alone become involved. First-person narrator and Watchtower Garet James, heir to a sort of anti-evil witch coven, succeeded in bringing her love, poet Will Hughes, from 17th-century London to 21st-century Paris. Unfortunately, he’s the wrong version—she really wanted the charismatic vampire that young Will, 400 years later, will become. However, we soon learn, through numerous omniscient narrative threads, that elder Will is also around, having become de-vampired, and now is a well-known and highly proficient currency trader. But with both Wills in the world at the same time, elder Will’s losing his immunity to the sun, while young Will’s in danger of becoming destabilized in time. Throw in some fairies, Johannes Kepler (don’t ask), the Institut Chronologique—whose Knights Temporal can travel through time and whose mission is to preserve the current timeline—and bad guys ranging from evil sorcerer John Dee and his boss, the monstrous vampire and Babylonian ex-god Marduk, to the Malefactors, time travelers intent on changing things around to suit themselves. You can imagine the size and shape of the plot necessary to accommodate all this, let alone the effort needed to determine if it adds up. Swaggering, pill-popping Marduk, twanging his fangs and twirling his mustachio (well, figuratively, anyway), would have been a star on the vaudeville stage. Instead of poetry, we’re served limp doggerel.
More and more scattershot, as memories of the firmly grounded, tightly knit, charming series opener recede into the murk.Pub Date: March 5, 2013
ISBN: 978-0-7653-2599-0
Page Count: 352
Publisher: Tor
Review Posted Online: Jan. 16, 2013
Kirkus Reviews Issue: Feb. 1, 2013
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by John Barnes ‧ RELEASE DATE: April 1, 1996
Following a streak of science fiction successes (Kaleidoscope Century, 1995, etc.), Barnes takes a stab at light fantasy. As a toddler, Prince Amatus somehow grabs a goblet of the superpowerful Wine of the Gods and gulps it down—whereupon the entire left side of his body vanishes! King Boniface is displeased; heads must roll, and do, leaving four critical vacancies in the palace staff. In due course, four new people are appointed: Golias, the Royal Alchemist; Mortis, Royal Witch; the huge, misshapen Twisted Man, now Captain of the Guard; and young Psyche, the Prince's Personal Maid. The four become known as the Prince's Companions. As the years pass, various adventures befall the prince; during an expedition to rescue a young maid from the Goblins, for instance, Golias is killed—and Amatus regains his left foot! Evidently, only with the deaths of all four Companions will Amatus's left side be fully restored. Finally, Amatus must defeat an invasion of Goblins, vampires, and magic led by a usurping neighbor, Waldo. Amusing and fun, if uneven and overlong. Not as compelling as Barnes's superior sf, but his fans shouldn't be too disappointed.
Pub Date: April 1, 1996
ISBN: 0-312-86106-0
Page Count: 320
Publisher: Tor
Review Posted Online: May 19, 2010
Kirkus Reviews Issue: Feb. 1, 1996
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by Glen Cook ‧ RELEASE DATE: April 1, 1996
From the author of Tower of Fear (1989), the first hardcover appearance for an established paperback military fantasy series about the Black Company, a sort of extended family of mercenary warriors. This particular adventure is narrated by their standard- bearer, Murgen, who has a problem: His awareness keeps jumping into the past, where he is forced to relive the siege of the stone city Stormgard by the evil wizard Shadowspinner and his forces. Within the city, the Black Company is split between the Old Crew—Murgen and friends—and the Nar, cannibals and death-goddess worshippers, whose leader, Mogaba, attempts to betray the Old Crew and claim the leadership of the entire Company. Allied with the Old Crew are the Nyueng Bao, a wandering band of pilgrims and expert swordfighters. In the present, meanwhile, the Black Company and the Nyueng Bao must battle the evil wizard Soulcatcher and her hordes of Strangler assassins—and also try to discover what's making Murgen jump about in time. Some good ideas, and intriguingly structured, but theatrical and with far too little action to attract readers unfamiliar with the series.
Pub Date: April 1, 1996
ISBN: 0-312-86105-2
Page Count: 320
Publisher: Tor
Review Posted Online: May 19, 2010
Kirkus Reviews Issue: Feb. 1, 1996
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