The Amulet of Smarkand demonstrated that it’s a book with the wherewithal to totally sidestep my critical sensibilities on its very first page. It opens with a description of a magician summoning a supernatural entity that is nicely atmospheric, but that will feel comfortable, even familiar, to readers familiar with the genre tropes — and [...]
Entries Tagged as 'alphabetical-title'
Jonathan Stroud: The Amulet of Samarkand
26 Feb 2012 · No Comments
Tags: a-title · fantasy · s-author · young adult
Bill Loehfelm: The Devil She Knows
20 Feb 2012 · No Comments
Loehfelm’s noirish suspense novel revolves around a memorable trio of characters. Maureen Coughlin is tough, canny, and proud. She’s in a dead-end waitressing job, struggling mightily to make ends meet. She’s a little hard to like and makes some poor choices, but Loehfelm gets the reader well inside her head, so even her worst behavior [...]
Tags: d-title · l-author · suspense
Debbie Millman: Brand Thinking and Other Noble Pursuits
01 Feb 2012 · No Comments
Brand Thinking offers 22 short interviews with an astounding array of heavy hitters in branding, identity design, and related disciplines. It’s a fascinating and invigorating read. Millman coaxes the likes of Tom Peters and Karim Rashid into moments of almost shocking candor; Dori Tunstall and Alex Bogusky unflinchingly address issues of social and environmental [...]
Tags: b-title · business · m-author
Rick Riordan: The Lightning Thief
24 Jan 2012 · No Comments
It took a while for The Lightning Thief to win me over. For much of its length, it felt too nakedly calculated to appeal to Harry Potter fans (with the interesting, but hardly unique, added dimension of a basis in Greek mythology). The character dynamic between Percy Jackson and his pals seemed a bit too [...]
Tags: children's · fantasy · l-title · r-author
Eva Ibbotson: The Secret of Platform 13
19 Jan 2012 · No Comments
This past Christmas afforded me the happy opportunity of researching what-next-after-Potter? books for a young relation, and of course I’m reading a bunch myself. This book shares the plot detail of a mysterious train platform leading to another world*, but what it reminded me of most was Roald Dahl, perhaps because cute, quirky, and creepy [...]
Tags: children's · fantasy · i-author · s-title
John Warner: The Funny Man
16 Jan 2012 · No Comments
There’s a lot of craft I admire in The Funny Man. Initially, chapters alternate between the titular character’s first-person narration of his manslaughter trial in the present, and third-person narration of the funny man’s career arc. (For a while I was mildly irritated by the funny man’s namelessness, but it’s eventually justified; the novel is [...]
Tags: f-title · satire · w-author
Tanith Lee: Wolf Tower
12 Jan 2012 · No Comments
This young adult novel, told in the protagonist’s diary entries, mostly detailing a flight across a hostile land in the company of a handsome prince, offers many opportunities for Lee to play with and subvert assorted fairy tale conventions. This ranges from minor details — female characters who are overweight, old, and/or bald are described [...]
Tags: fantasy · l-author · w-title · young adult
Stephen M. Irwin: The Dead Path
08 Jan 2012 · No Comments
I can’t say The Dead Path didn’t get its hooks into me: I finished the final hundred pages at a single sitting, anxious for one of its characters, in particular, to escape the morass. There are some clever aspects to how it works an old religion into a modern tale; Irwin’ prose is reliably serviceable [...]
Tags: d-title · fantasy · horror · i-author
Patricia C. Wrede: Dealing with Dragons
02 Jan 2012 · No Comments
Dealing with Dragons shares several traits with the fantasies of Dianna Wynne Jones. It assumes familiarity with fairytale conventions and tropes, and reworks and subverts them, with a particular focus on excising sexism and adding subtle metatextual humor. Princess Cimorene is the sort of strong, quick-witted, and self-reliant protagonist who could easily be at home [...]
Tags: d-title · fantasy · w-author · young adult
Sara Levine: Treasure Island!!!
31 Dec 2011 · No Comments
Real journalists have to turn in their year’s best lists to be published in the month of December, a practice which invariably makes me cringe. “What,” I always think to myself, “if in the dregs of the year* you hear/see/read something amazing that demands you re-order the list?” And it happens from time to time. [...]