Saturday, October 12, 2013

Cinnamon Rolls, Vampires, and Sunshine


Sunshine –by Robin McKinley

Fiction
405 pages
Footnotes/Endnotes: No
Illustrations: No
Suitable for eReaders: Yes
4 Stars

This was a gift, and the kind of a gift with strings attached – I had to read it, and review it. Glad the strings were there ;-)

I'm not sure what genre Sunshine is – it's dark, it's funny, it's about vampires, and mundanes. It takes place after the Voodoo Wars, which really hand nothing to do with Vodou, the religion, but a lot to do with people who handle magic, who are vampires, and in general who dislike one another.

Our heroine, Rae "Sunshine" Seddon is the daughter of the Magician Onyx Blaise whom her mother divorced when Rae was young and she never saw him again. She did see his mother, her Gran, who taught her a bit of magic before the wars came and her dad and gran disappeared. Her mother remarried, Charlie Seddon, who raised Sunshine as his. Charlie also runs a coffee house, where Sunshine works as the chief baker, make of cinnamon rolls extraordinaire, and other calorie laden goodies. (WARNING: I gained weight just reading this book!)

Sunshine wants only to bake, and to a degree, to be left alone. She goes out to the lake, to her Gran's old house, and is captured by vampires. She is shackled in a mostly sunny room with another vampire, Constantine, who is also shackled, and starved, and is supposed to kill Sunshine.

They sort of become friends (as much as two sworn enemies can ever become friends) and she remembers the little bit of magic she was taught several years earlier, and transmutes her pocket knife to a key to unlock the shackles. The problem: Her feet are cut and bleeding and will leave a trail and Connie, as he's called, cannot go out in the sunshine. The solution: As long as he maintains contact with Sunshine, her magic will protect him, so he carries her home (vampires move very fast) before their captors arise after dark and discover they have, uh, flown the coup.

Sunshine is a bit whiny at times, but to be honest, if I found myself in her shoes, I'd probably be a whole lot whiny. It took me a while to get into the book, but mostly because it just seemed soooo long (and I like long books), which is why only 4 stars. The further into it I got, the faster it seemed to read.

The whole story is from Sunshine's point of view, which was no easy feat of writing, and of necessity, required some long passages of exposition at time. However, I enjoyed reading it because it was well done, and different from most books I read. I think the author stayed in voice, or if she didn't, I didn't notice.

If you like vampire books, comedic horror (horrifying comedy?), and want something a tad different from your usual read, give Sunshine a try. And let me know how you like the ending ;-).

Saturday, October 5, 2013

Companions Make Good Reads


Companions On The Road – Wondrous Tales of Adventure and Quest –by Tanith Lee

Fiction
183 pages
Footnotes/Endnotes: No
Illustrations: No
Suitable for eReaders: Yes
5 Stars

The first of two novellas, Companions On The Road, is the story of Havor, a mercenary and officer, who befriends a lowly soldier who is sure he will die in the upcoming battle and leaves his small savings and asks Havor to deliver it to his family. Havor agrees. The boy dies, Havor resigns his commission, robs the now-dead Mage of the fallen city of his magic chalice, and sets out to deliver the money of Lukon, the boy.

Of course, in a fantasy that includes a Mage, dead or otherwise, nothing can ever be simple or straightforward, and Havor must pay for his thievery. And the evil Mage must pay for his evilness. And Havor has companions upon his road he'd really rather not have, until he reaches the house of Lukon, where he finds only Lukon's sister, Silsi. Lukon's mother and younger sister having died.

Not wanting to bring misery to Silsi, Havor leaves, and goes to bury the chalice far away, and to await his fate, his death. Unbeknownst to him, Silsi is also a witch and the final battle between good and evil comes to a satisfying conclusion, thanks to Silsi and her family.

The shorter novella, The Winter Players, is also about magery and shape shifting and the stealing of holy relics so old, and so powerful, none alive including the Priestess in charge of them, know what they mean or from whence they came.

Three relics – the ring, the jewel, and the bone – are kept in the shrine that Oaive cares for and guards. She speaks the ritual at dawn and sundown to keep the village and fisher folk safe, she makes the medicines they need, and is happy and content. And then Grey comes, a young man with and old man's grey hair, a shape shifter who knows about the bone, who finds it in its secret place, and who steals it.

Oaive must retrieve the bone, and leaves her village to follow Grey across the unknown, and learns of her magic powers. She, too, must face great evil, for Grey is merely the slave of the evil Mage Niwus. When she retrieves the Sacred Relic, she travels back through time to her village before the relics existed. Grey and Niwus follow, the battle is fought, of course Good triumphs over Evil, and balance is restored. And history changed.

If you enjoy fantasy, you will like these stories. Tanith Lee spins marvelous tales, of which these are only two. She has over 70 novels and 250 short stories to her much deserved credit. 

Tuesday, September 24, 2013

Some Dragons Create Hell -- Others Make it Bearable


Dragon Lady –by Gary Alexander

Fiction
320 pages, 443 KB
Footnotes/Endnotes: No
Illustrations: No
Suitable for eReaders: Yes
5 Stars


Any book that sends me to the dictionary, either hard copy or online, or better yet, the encyclopedia, is bound to become a favorite of mine. And Dragon Lady did just that. I was sure Ton Son Nhat was the wrong spelling, that it should have been Ton Son Nhut. Guess what? I learned something!

This novel is by a Viet Nam Vet, and the flashbacks take place back when it was still two words, Viet Nam. The first thing Mr. Alexander did that I enjoyed, was have the narrator living (is that the right word for a dead man?) in The Land Beyond vs. The Land of the Living. Our narrator, Joe, is wonderful as he looks back on his life in Saigon, and his love, the Dragon Lady, the beautiful Mai.

In the first place, I'm not one hundred percent sure Joe is a fictional character (though how he writes from They Land Beyond is, well, beyond me) as I'm sure I met him when I was in the WAC. Or at least a reasonable facsimile thereof.  Or was that me? Well, never mind.

Joe, and his pal Ziggy, were wonderful, and though I might not want to invite them home for dinner, I'd probably love to know them. Joe is sarcastic, a screw off who actually gets more done than Radar O'Reilly (M*A*S*H) and has a great time doing it. He loves Terry and the Pirates, and his mother faithfully sends him the Sunday funnies every week so he can read about Terry and the real Dragon Lady.

And then he meets Mai, and falls head over heels in love with his own Dragon Lady. But who is Mai? Which story she tells is true?

This is a war story more on the lines of Catch-22 than All's Quiet on the Western Front. If you're a 'Nam vet, or know one, and want to know what it was like behind the lines, so to speak, read this book. Lots of humor (back to M*A*S*H and Catch 22) and not a lot of violence and bloodshed.

Joe and Ziggy were guys I liked, and pulled for, and I'm still sure I knew them. I think they were at Smiley Barracks, Karlsruhe when I was stationed there. Or was it Fort McClellan? Or, maybe....

Tuesday, September 3, 2013

Between --by Kerry Schafer


Fiction, Fantasy
295 pages (mass paperback)
Footnotes / Endnotes: No
Illustrations: No
Suitable for eReaders: Yes
4 Stars

This is a debut novel, and I believe this writer has a great future ahead of her. She took on an ambitious subject and turned it into a great story. There are three worlds our heroine, Dr. Vivian Maylor, lives in: Wakeworld, where she is a no-nonsense ER doctor, deals in facts and figures, is used to controlling her world and all in it. There is Dreamworld, which comes when she sleeps, where she has little if any control, and in fact isn't even sure of the rules. And there is Between, that world where one is between the other two.

That between world is one of my most favorite worlds. Not so our intrepid heroine. I spend almost an hour every night, and if I'm lucky, an hour every morning in that between world. I would not necessarily want to spend any time in Vivian Maylor's Between!

Between is an adult novel. I think I'd call it modern high fantasy, complete with swords, sorcerers, and dragons. And a penguin. In fact, Poe (the penguin) is probably my favorite character. (Never compete with small children or animals, they win every time! ;-) Rape happens, death happens, dragons happen. What is real? What is dream? Where is Between?

Ms. Schafer has done a great job of world building; her dragons are more closely related to those of fairy tales than those of Anne McCaffrey. Perhaps this should be called a modern fairy tale. It has all the elements of an old one, just brought up to date.