needs more demons?

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Entries Tagged as 'h-author'

Charlie Huston: Six Bad Things

09 May 2009 · No Comments

I liked Six Bad Things, but not nearly as much as its predecessor Caught Stealing. In first novel Hank Thompson is a basically ordinary guy abruptly thrust into an over-the-top noir situation; by the time the second novel opens, Thompson isn’t so much a regular Joe anymore, so the book lacks the charm of the [...]

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Tags: h-author · s-title · thriller

Charlie Huston: Caught Stealing

01 May 2009 · No Comments

What if somebody had a heart attack reading an exciting novel, and the Surgeon General determined that some novels ought to have medical warnings, and an MPAA-like board — the Literary Medical Review Committee, say — was formed to review and rate books? Then Caught Stealing would have a banner on the front cover that [...]

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Tags: c-title · h-author · suspense

Charlaine Harris: Dead Until Dark

20 Feb 2009 · No Comments

I’m embarassed about it, but over the past few years I’ve read several books in the burgeoning “paranormal romance” sub-genre (and returned several more to the library when I decided they really weren’t worth my time). I’m perversely intrigued by the extent to which the genre has calcifyied around a single template, Laurell Hamilton’s “Anita [...]

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Tags: d-title · fantasy · h-author · mystery

Steven Hall: The Raw Shark Texts

28 Sep 2008 · No Comments

The Raw Shark Texts is an out-of-the-park homerun of a book for me, soaring over the Monster, bound for who knows where. My friend Marty convinced me to read it with enigmatic remarks about how he didn’t want to tell me anything about it, but thought I’d like it. That seems like a wise strategy. [...]

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Tags: fiction · h-author · r-title

Roger Highfield: The Science of Harry Potter

17 Aug 2008 · No Comments

I read this book in a continual state of bemusement about the audience for which it was written, wondering if, in fact, it exists. Presumably, people in the “buy anything that says Harry Potter” camp are supposed to pick it up. I was mildly intrigued because my biggest gripe with Rowling’s series is that the [...]

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Tags: h-author · s-title · science

Lauren Henderson: Freeze My Margarita

08 May 2008 · No Comments

It may partly be “too many books in the same series back-to-back” syndrome, but Freeze My Margarita felt much more tired and formulaic than the previous book in the Sam Jones series, Black Rubber Dress, and several particulars bugged me:

The opening scene is set in a D/s club. It seems to be set there purely [...]

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Tags: f-title · h-author · mystery

Lauren Henderson: Black Rubber Dress

21 Apr 2008 · No Comments

I liked Black Rubber Dress quite well right up to the final chapters. Sculptress and amateur-sleuth-by-virtue-of-nosiness Sam Jones (don’t call her Samantha) sells a piece of artwork to a London investment bank, which — along with the titular garment she wears to the unveiling — gives her an entrée to, and a pleasantly outside perspective [...]

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Tags: b-title · h-author · mystery

John Harwood: The Ghost Writer

11 Oct 2007 · No Comments

Harwood’s The Ghost Writer is a tour-de-force of the “is it a haint, or ain’t it” style of ghost(?) story, and simultaneously an impressive feat of post-modern multi-level narrative construction. Gerard Freeman keeps finding ghost stories — both whole and as tantalizing fragments — written by a mysterious relative, which the reader gets to absorb [...]

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Tags: g-title · h-author · horror

Martin H. Greenberg and John Helfers (eds); Slipstreams

14 Sep 2007 · 11 Comments

Pretty much ever since the genres science fiction, fantasy, and horror have existed as distinct marketing categories, there have been periodic movements seeking to un-define them as such. In the 60’s there was “The New Wave.” In the 80’s some bruited about the awkward, demi-hemispherist phrase “North American magical realism.” And more recently, an unruly [...]

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Tags: fantasy · g-author · h-author · historical · mystery · s-title · science fiction

Barbara Hambly: Children of the Jedi

10 Mar 2007 · No Comments

I liked Timothy Zahn’s Star Wars novels a lot, even if they were a somewhat guilty pleasure. Many other people apparently liked them too, because LucasFilm and Bantam Spectra cooked up a chronology spanning some fifteen years after Return of the Jedi and found writers to fill it in with dozens of novels. The back [...]

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Tags: c-title · h-author · science fiction