by Myke Cole ‧ RELEASE DATE: Jan. 29, 2013
A propulsive, acronym-riddled fantasy. A long ramble in a Lord of the Rings vein decelerates the middle third, but the rest...
When a U.S. Army paper-pusher manifests his considerable power as a sorcerer of the highest degree, he is drafted into a war he may not be fully prepared to fight.
Genre mashups are a tricky business. When they’re done well, they can be a welcome diversion and a breath of fresh air—see Charlie Huston’s vampire-noir novels or Laurell K. Hamilton’s sexy paranormal detectives for examples. But dancing between two worlds can be a messy business, and it’s not for readers who are purists or faint of heart. For the second book in a trilogy, Cole (Control Point, 2012, etc.) goes full gonzo on his carefully constructed world, where the military is augmented by myriad forms of magic. The universe he’s constructed continues to fascinate, but a sprawling narrative and thin characterizations hamper the experience. Cole frames the story through the eyes of Col. Alan Bookbinder, a novice to the operations of the Supernatural Operations Corps. Unfortunately for him, Bookbinder’s latent magical abilities have started to reveal themselves and are unlike any powers that have been seen before. After a harsh orientation, Bookbinder is sent to the Forward Operating Base Frontier, deep in the heart of “The Source,” an uncontrolled magical realm in the Northeastern United States. To make his way, Bookbinder must join forces with the disgraced officer from the first book, Oscar Britton, to battle the witch Scylla, leading to barky orders like this: “Remember, she’s just one Sorcerer and we’re four. We do this by the numbers. I’ll run Suppression. Truelove and Downer should swamp her with elementals and zombies, and Therese will run defense.”
A propulsive, acronym-riddled fantasy. A long ramble in a Lord of the Rings vein decelerates the middle third, but the rest is highly entertaining and reads like an intense game of Dungeons & Dragons.Pub Date: Jan. 29, 2013
ISBN: 978-0-425-25636-7
Page Count: 368
Publisher: Ace/Berkley
Review Posted Online: Dec. 12, 2012
Kirkus Reviews Issue: Jan. 1, 2013
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by Ta-Nehisi Coates ‧ RELEASE DATE: Sept. 24, 2019
An almost-but-not-quite-great slavery novel.
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The celebrated author of Between the World and Me (2015) and We Were Eight Years in Power (2017) merges magic, adventure, and antebellum intrigue in his first novel.
In pre–Civil War Virginia, people who are white, whatever their degree of refinement, are considered “the Quality” while those who are black, whatever their degree of dignity, are regarded as “the Tasked.” Whether such euphemisms for slavery actually existed in the 19th century, they are evocatively deployed in this account of the Underground Railroad and one of its conductors: Hiram Walker, one of the Tasked who’s barely out of his teens when he’s recruited to help guide escapees from bondage in the South to freedom in the North. “Conduction” has more than one meaning for Hiram. It's also the name for a mysterious force that transports certain gifted individuals from one place to another by way of a blue light that lifts and carries them along or across bodies of water. Hiram knows he has this gift after it saves him from drowning in a carriage mishap that kills his master’s oafish son (who’s Hiram’s biological brother). Whatever the source of this power, it galvanizes Hiram to leave behind not only his chains, but also the two Tasked people he loves most: Thena, a truculent older woman who practically raised him as a surrogate mother, and Sophia, a vivacious young friend from childhood whose attempt to accompany Hiram on his escape is thwarted practically at the start when they’re caught and jailed by slave catchers. Hiram directly confronts the most pernicious abuses of slavery before he is once again conducted away from danger and into sanctuary with the Underground, whose members convey him to the freer, if funkier environs of Philadelphia, where he continues to test his power and prepare to return to Virginia to emancipate the women he left behind—and to confront the mysteries of his past. Coates’ imaginative spin on the Underground Railroad’s history is as audacious as Colson Whitehead’s, if less intensely realized. Coates’ narrative flourishes and magic-powered protagonist are reminiscent of his work on Marvel’s Black Panther superhero comic book, but even his most melodramatic effects are deepened by historical facts and contemporary urgency.
An almost-but-not-quite-great slavery novel.Pub Date: Sept. 24, 2019
ISBN: 978-0-399-59059-7
Page Count: 432
Publisher: One World/Random House
Review Posted Online: June 30, 2019
Kirkus Reviews Issue: July 15, 2019
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by Katherine Arden ‧ RELEASE DATE: Jan. 8, 2019
A striking literary fantasy informed by Arden's deep knowledge of and affection for this time and place.
A satisfying conclusion to a trilogy set in medieval times in the area on the verge of becoming Russia.
In a luxuriously detailed yet briskly suspenseful follow-up to The Bear and the Nightingale (2017) and The Girl in the Tower (2018), Arden's historically based fantasy follows heroic Vasya—a young woman with a strong connection to the spirits of the place where she lives—as she attempts to save her family and her country from evil forces. Because the novel starts with a bang where the preceding volume left off, with Moscow nearly burned to a crisp by a Firebird imperfectly controlled by Vasya, readers are advised to backtrack to the two earlier books rather than attempt to sort out all the characters and backstory on the fly. Among the humans are Vasya's sister, Olga, compromised by her desire for wealth and position; her brother, Sasha, a monk with a taste for the military life; Grand Prince Dmitrii; and corrupt priest Konstantin. Among the inhuman are the warring brothers Morozko, the winter-king with whom Vasya conducts a conflicted romance, and Medved, a demon addicted to chaos. Arden keeps the narrative fresh by sending Vasya questing into fantastic realms, each with its own demanding set of rules and its own alluring or forbidding geography, and by introducing new “chyerti,” demons or spirits, including an officious little mushroom spirit who indiscriminately plies Vasya with fungi, some edible and some distinctly not. Fans of Russian mythology will be pleased to find that Baba Yaga puts in a cameo appearance to straighten out some of the complicated genealogy. The trilogy leads up to the Battle of Kulikovo, which many consider the beginning of a united Russia. Arden neatly establishes parallels between Vasya's internal struggles, between attachment and freedom or the human world and the spiritual one, for example, and those taking place in the world around her.
A striking literary fantasy informed by Arden's deep knowledge of and affection for this time and place.Pub Date: Jan. 8, 2019
ISBN: 978-1-101-88599-4
Page Count: 384
Publisher: Del Rey
Review Posted Online: Oct. 1, 2018
Kirkus Reviews Issue: Oct. 15, 2018
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