Monday, July 28, 2014

The Immortals of Meluha

Book:The Immortals of Meluha
Author: Amish Tripathi
Rating:★★★★  
                                                                                                                                                


Set in 1900 BC we meet a young Shiva. He and his tribe leave behind their bloodthirsty lands and journey to Meluha. They find a utopian civilization. Society is ordered and scientifically beyond their time. Shiva's life turns upside down when he is named the people's savior. He alone is suppose to save the people from their evil neighbors.

I love when fantasy author's break the mold and set their novels in unexpected places. With such a rich cultural history, India makes a wonderful location. I thought Tripathi did a great job of educating the reader while entertaining. You learn a lot of new terms as you read.

There were parts of Shiva's journey that I really enjoyed and some that I didn't. I like that he wasn't made into a totally perfect, invincible character. He may be a very important figure, but he is also a man. He is not flawless. In the end he learns of his mistakes and takes personal responsibility for them. I thought that at times the attempts to make him human fell a little flat. A person isn't more human because they smoke marijuana and curse. I felt like he lacked some depth. He was given some personal vulnerabilities from his past- but it just felt a little disconnected. Sita's character as well. It would have been nice to hear about her journey from vikarma to regular society. I did think her character was very interesting though.

Where the book really started to catch my attention was the last quarter. The tension in the scenes of the battle was a great build up. You could feel something wasn't right. I usually hate cliffhanger endings, but this seemed like an almost natural place to end the first book. I don't know that it was a standout book for me, but it was entertaining enough.

*Thanks to Edelweiss for the ARC, all opinions are my own. 

White Rabbit

Book: White Rabbit
Author: K.A. Laity

Rating:★★★★
                                                   

       What do you do when you can hear the undead-- but don't really want to hear them? You take a few snorts of fairy dust and become a "fake" psychic. So here we find our main character, Draygo, when he gets a famous client. Which is going great until she gets shot at his table, courtesy of her husband. This sends Draygo down the White Rabbit hole. He is joined by Saunders, a journalist who wants to get to the bottom of the white rabbit as well.  
         This book drove me crazy. From the moment it began I both loved and hated the main character. This is not the hero you want to sweep you off your feet, this is the one you want to punch in the gut. A fraud and boozer who can hear from the undead but shuts them out. The story is sort of a crazy ride, it does not pause to explain itself, just keeps going ahead. While the story is interesting, it also contains some deep questions. The reader has something to chew on when the book ends. 
         What I found irksome about this book is the thousands of loose ends. If you are looking for a story with a complete ending, where everything is fleshed out, this is not it. This made a little crazy. There were a few key scenes and components that just don't get explained. I still have so many questions. While I can say these things frustrated me, they didn't ruin the book for me. I definitely suggest reading this book with a strong cup of coffee, if you didn't want one when it started, you will by the end. Seriously, send Jinx my way.    
*Thanks to NetGalley for the Arc, all opinions are my own.

Thursday, July 24, 2014

Of Bone and Thunder

Okay, another book for me to read. Chris Evans is the author of this book, out for your reading pleasure October 14th. I am sort of in love with this cover. It's gorgeous. This looks like another refreshingly different book. I can't think of another fantasy novel that is set in the period of the Vietnam War.

"Channeling the turbulent period of the Vietnam War and its ruthless pitting of ideologies, cultures, generations, and races against each other, military historian and acclaimed fantasy writer Chris Evans takes a daring new approach to the traditional world of sword and sorcery by thrusting it into a maelstrom of racial animus, drug use, rebellion, and a growing war that seems at once unwinnable and with no end in sight. In this thrilling epic, right and wrong, country and honor, freedom and sacrifice are all put to the ultimate test in the heart of a dark, bloody, otherworldly jungle.

In this strange, new world deep among the shadows under a triple-canopy jungle and plagued by dangers real and imagined, soldiers strive to fulfill a mission they don’t understand and are ill-equipped to carry out. And high above them, the heavy rush of wings slashing through the humid air herald a coming wave of death and destruction, and just possibly, salvation."

Books to Read

   After a little reading hiatus I have two new book to read. I guess it's time to stop watching old episodes of Heroes and get back to business. I'm pretty excited to read both of these books. Reviews to follow :)

This first book is a little departure from my usual epic fantasy favorites. It looks a little grittier. The book is White Rabbit, By K.A. Laity. Here is the description--
    
"Sometimes the shadows that haunt us are what lead us back to the light.


Disgraced former police detective James Draygo has sunk as low as his habit allows, working as a fake psychic despite his very real talents. When a media mogul’s trashy trophy wife gets gunned down at his tapping table he has to decide whether he can straighten up long enough to save his own skin. He may not have a choice with Essex’s loudest ghost bawling in his ear about cults, conspiracies and cut-rate drugs. Oblivion sounds better all the time…"


The next in queue is The Immortals of Meluha by Amish Tripathi. This one isn't available until December 2nd (thanks Edelweiss for the ARC). This one looks really interesting to me, very different.

"1900 BC in what modern Indians call the Indus Valley Civilization and the inhabitants called the land of Meluha: a near-perfect empire created many centuries earlier by Lord Ram--one of the greatest monarchs that ever lived--faces peril as its primary river, the Saraswati, is slowly drying to exctinction. The Suryavanshi rulers are challenged with devastating terrorist attacks from the east, the land of the Chandravanshis. To make matters worse, the Chandravanshis appear to have allied with the Nagas, an ostracized and sinister race of deformed humans with astonishing martial skills.

The only hope for the Suryavanshis is an ancient legend: When evil reaches epic proportions, when all seems lost, a hero will emerge. Is the unexpected, rough-hewn Tibetan immigrant Shiva that hero? Drawn suddenly to his destiny, duty, and by love, Shiva will attempt to move mountains and lead the Suryavanshi to destroy evil."

Tuesday, July 22, 2014

And Another-

Can't forget this one!


Doctor Who Teaser

   The countdown for Doctor Who has begun! Next month it finally begins. Honestly, I'm a little nervous. Every time a new Doctor comes on the scene, I'm nervous.. But this time the change seems so much bigger. Going from Matt Smith to Peter Capaldi is a huge jump. I guess that's the point of the show though-- what keeps it fresh. It is always changing, developing, showing new sides of the Doctor. They seem to be hinting that Twelve will show us the Doctor's dark side---


 

Thursday, July 17, 2014

The Key to the Realm

    Summer is in full swing in my part of Oregon. I can hear the tractor making hay outside, my grass has turned a hideous shade of brown and I think a trip to the river is in order. Nothing like reading in a nice shady spot at the river! I feel like I have read a few okay books lately. I'm really looking for a standout to fall in love with. I guess I better keep reading.

Book: The Key to the Realm
Author: Roberta Trahan
Rating: ★★★★

                                                            
This is the sequel to The Well of Tears-- which I reviewed a bit ago. I thought this sequel improved upon some of the pitfalls from the first book. I thought both stories were fun, engaging reads. The author switched a few things up with this book a bit. Some of the story-lines that were moving in an obvious direction in the last book changed. Not so much that it was disorienting though. I think Trahan really listened to some of the critiques of her previous book and improved this one.

   I was glad to see the bedroom scenes omitted. It really would have had no place in this book anyways. The book adds even more characters and new story-lines. This only worked because most of the other non-essential characters were not present. It still felt like A LOT of characters. I think that kind of watered down the story she was trying to tell. You just didn't have much of a connection to them. Somebody dies, somebody betrays-- oh well. I thought this was a missed opportunity. Especially when Glain learns who betrayed her.

    I enjoyed the story being told through Glain's eyes. It was a smart choice to let Alwen's perspective go.
I did feel like the villain got neutered at the end. The main thing I dislike about the books is still the same, it just lacks creativity in the magic department. I get that it is suppose to be a historical setting, but the magic she added could have been a little more original. What is it with fantasy writers and enchanted forests??? Instead of creating an interesting magic system it was just a jumbled mix of every magic form. We have shape-shifters, mythical dog-beasts, evil-spirit things the list goes on and on.. I'm guessing she pulled a few of these from myths, since the book has the historical side? When a book contains every magic imaginable, it just loses its potency. What is going to show up next?? Vampires, zombies? I guess at least she hasn't stooped so low :) Maybe I'm just getting too picky.

     I don't regret reading either book. They were entertaining enough. Will I buy them so I can reread them? probably not.

Thursday, July 3, 2014

The Well of Tears-




Book: The Well of Tears
Author: Roberta Trahan 
Rating:★★★★



I stayed up late last night finishing this one! It was an enjoyable read. I thought the author showed a lot of promise and skill.

Unfortunately the book wasn't all that original. It relied heavily on a lot of familiar fantasy tropes. It was like 10 different fantasy books smooshed into one. I wish the author had chosen to set more bounds on her magic system, or even created a magic system. It was just kind of a vague mishmash. Between that and the unimaginative worldbuilding, this book kinda fell flat on that level. There were a lot of characters. I felt like the author could have cut the whole Tribe of t he Wolf King or MacDonagh clan out. While the relationship between Alwen and Bledig was a nice touch it just went too Diana Gabaldon for me. It felt like some dimension should have been cut while other areas developed better. It stretched too thin, more depth was needed. 

BUT that didn't make it a bad book. I still enjoyed reading it. I wanted to know what happened next, I was interested in the characters. The sex scenes I could have done without. Not that sex and fantasy don't mix, I just think it can head into paperback romance territory if an author isn't careful. Sometimes it's more powerful just to close the scene than reveal every detail.

Now perhaps I sound a little critical-- and I don't feel bad about that. Because I think this author has a lot of potential. She could write a really amazing book. I just wish I heard her voice a little more, and less of other authors. I feel like in a few months, I wont even remember what this book was about. It wont stick with me.

Thanks to NetGalley for providing the book in exchange for my review. 

Tuesday, July 1, 2014

Half a King


Book: Half a King
Author: Joe Abercrombie
Rating:★★★★★


                                                                                                                                               


    I was very excited to read this ARC provided by NetGalley. The book will be published July 15th.

    We begin the book in Yarvi's teachers chambers. We are on familiar ground with this fantasy trope. The wizened old woman teaching her student. Things continue in a predictably boring manner. Yarvi, who has no plans to become king, is now elevated to that role. His kind old uncle offers him support and his daughter. His daughter Isriun, just happens to be the perfect woman for Yarvi. I was beginning to wonder if it was Joe Abercrombie I was reading. Was there a mistake? Then Yarvi is thrown off a tower by uncle and left to die.. and I knew I had the right author....
     Now Joe begins to weave a very different type of tale. This is not about a king, but a slave. We follow Yarvi as he rows across the shattered sea. He plots to return home, take the thrown and exact his revenge. On his journey he finds friends and enemies.
    I love how in all Joe's books one can never be quite sure who is an enemy and who is a friend. Often times the character you have picked out as a villain becomes a friend. He has a great strength for showing just how human and complex people are. In life people are rarely as straight-forward as good and evil.
   I think this went a step further in this book. One of the main themes was "the lesser evil and the greater good." This is a concept that changes with each persons perspective. In many instances the villain is acting from this sentiment. So sure that the evil they commit will work towards the greater good. Some characters pay for these choices with their lives.
   There are lots of surprises for the reader in this book. Even when you think you have the book figured out, it twists again. Even to the very end. I did guess the main twist. Even though, it didn't make reading it any less dynamic. The final explanation of what happened took me by surprise.
   Yarvi's character really grew on me. At first he was so self-loathing and sulky I wasn't sure. He is no soldier. It is more than just his crippled hand, it's who he is. He doesn't have the stomach for fighting and killing. I thought the way the author dealt with this was very smart. Yarvi doesn't become the invincible super character. He just is who he is. He doesn't delight in killing, it makes him sick. He does fulfill his vow though. He isn't the same Yarvi as at the start of the book, but he doesn't change into another person.
   In the end the joke was on me. It was a set up after all. Here I thought Joe was losing his touch, instead he was skillfully setting up a great adventure. I think it made the book even more poignant. The book was tied up nicely in the end. After reading a few HUGE books I found it a refreshingly short read. I can see it as a stand alone book or a series. If more are written, I will be reading them.

The Queen of the Tearling

Book: The Queen of the Tearling
Author: Erika Johansen
R
ating:★★★★

                                                           

     My latest read was a fun one! This book will be available to purchase July 8th. I received the ARC through Edelweiss. I wasn't sure what to expect from this novel. I had never hear of Erika Johansen or this book. Now I'm asking myself-- why not? It's was so good.
      We begin the book with Kelsea. For nineteen years she lived in isolation. Raised by foster parents who teach her all they can (except for anything to with her mother). She is the heir to the Tear throne. When her nineteenth birthday comes, it is time to take her crown. With many out to keep that from happening, she is hunted all the way to the throne, and after. She finds many things are not what she expected. Her country is poor, her people starving and her mother was no saint. She has navigate the injustices in her land while trying to keep her head. A formidable evil, the Red Queen threatens to make war on her land. Kelsea has inherited a rather big job.
    The book itself is a classic fantasy setting--- but it's actually a dystopian book as well. This instantly sets it apart. At first the dystopian element seemed lacking. As the book progresses though, your knowledge grows. It was a really interesting addition. I have a feeling that in future books this will become more important.
    Female main characters are something a lot of fantasy writers struggle with. They are often one-note, beautiful, invincible, and stronger than any man. I thought that this author did an amazing job writing this character. She was very real. Plain and just a little tubby. Kelsea had her strengths and her weaknesses. She was guided by a strong sense of justice and was willing to make personal sacrifices to fulfill it. I think writing a strong female character takes a deft hand. I was surprised and pleased by how much I like Kelsea.
     I can actually say I didn't skim any parts of this book. I didn't want to miss a thing. The plot is full of intrigue. It keeps going and it doesn't stop. All the supporting characters were very strong. None seemed unnecessary. The villain is formidable, fear inspiring. But not invincible.
     The romance element was done with a light touch. It is obviously something that is going to be built on. I feel like this was a very balanced book between light and dark. There is obviously a dark element. Instead of overpowering the book these just make the good parts of the book all the better.
    I really hope that the author is writing a sequel to this book! I will buy it. I think a sequel will add a little more depth where this one lacks. There are so many mysteries that I want to know the answers to. These are the sorts of questions that will keep me reading.