Friday, September 13, 2013

The Lies of Locke Lamora by Scott Lynch | Book Review


I'm going back and forth on how on earth to tackle my thoughts of The Lies of Locke Lamora. There are actually many reasons a review like this one is hard to write, but the one I am struggling with the most right now is making sure I don't spoil anything. It can also be hard to put into words why I like something, but a lot of what I love about Locke Lamora is based on the subject matter and the events that take place so you are just going to have to take my word for it.

Book Description

The Thorn of Camorr is said to be an unbeatable swordsman, a master thief, a friend to the poor, a ghost that walks through walls.

Slightly built and barely competent with a sword, Locke Lamora is, much to his annoyance, the fabled Thorn. And while Locke does indeed steal from the rich (who else would be worth stealing from?), the poor never see a penny. All of Locke's gains are strictly for himself and his tight-knit band of thieves. The Gentleman Bastards.

The capricious, colourful underworld of the ancient city of Camorr is the only home they have ever known. But now a clandestine war is threatening to tear it apart. Caught up in a murderous game, Locke and his friends are suddenly struggling just to stay alive...

Review

The Lies of Locke Lamora is the first book in the Gentlemen Bastards series. The Gentlemen Bastards is a group of con artists that steal from the rich simply for the joys of stealing. I want so much to make references to Dirty Rotten Scoundrels. If you loved that movie but also love really dark fantasy, please read The Lies of Locke Lamora. There is a lot of fun thieving going on, but I'm barely scratching the surface with my (undoubtedly awful) reference to Dirty Rotten Scoundrels.

Obviously a group of thieves are going to be flawed and morally questionable, but the Gentlemen Bastards are also fiercely loyal.

As much as there is humor and adventure in The Lies of Locke Lamora, there is also a lot of darkness. There is so much more to Locke Lamora than a band of merry thieves. It's pretty epic and only the beginning. I just started reading the second book in this series, and I'm hard core loving it.

I cannot do this book any justice without giving away any plot points so just know that I really enjoyed it.

My only complaint about The Lies of Locke Lamora was the timeline. After each chapter there was an "Interlude" that took us back in time. These interludes showed a lot of Locke's and the Gentlemen Bastard's past. Something really exciting would happen and a chapter would end on a huge high and gah! Interlude. The Interludes did taper off before the end, but I'm not writing them any love letters.

The moment I finished reading Locke Lamora I googled to see if there were plans for a movie. Apparently Warner Bros. secured the movie rights right away but never produced the film. Seriously, this is probably the #1 book I would turn into a movie if I had the power to do so.

The only other thing I can say about The Lies of Locke Lamora is read it, read it, read it, and then let me know so I can talk about all the things with you.

8/10: Great Read

Jennifer

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Wednesday, September 11, 2013

The Time Machine by H.G. Wells | Book Review


I read The Time Machine as part of my quest to widdle down my reading bucket list. It appears on both Flavorwire's 50 Sci-Fi/Fantasy Novels That Everyone Should Read and NPR's Top 100 Science Fiction And Fantasy Novels.

Book Description

“I’ve had a most amazing time....”

So begins the Time Traveller’s astonishing firsthand account of his journey 800,000 years beyond his own era—and the story that launched H.G. Wells’s successful career and earned him the reputation as the father of science fiction. With a speculative leap that still fires the imagination, Wells sends his brave explorer to face a future burdened with our greatest hopes...and our darkest fears. A pull of the Time Machine’s lever propels him to the age of a slowly dying Earth. There he discovers two bizarre races—the ethereal Eloi and the subterranean Morlocks—who not only symbolize the duality of human nature, but offer a terrifying portrait of the men of tomorrow as well.

Published in 1895, this masterpiece of invention captivated readers on the threshold of a new century. Thanks to Wells’s expert storytelling and provocative insight, The Time Machine will continue to enthrall readers for generations to come.

Review

The Time Machine was a very unexpected read for me. By unexpected, I mean awesome. The Time Machine is not the first book by Wells I have read. I loved The War of the Worlds when I read it. I was actually surprised by how much I loved that one, too, since I had seen the 1953 movie a few times and had an idea of what I would encounter.

I will jump right to the best part of The Time Machine - it was a scary read. I assumed it would be all science fictiony, maybe a little boring at times. No. The Time Machine made me down right giddy as a reader. The time traveler in The Time Machine goes almost a million years into the future, and Wells offers a lot of consideration towards how humans will evolve and why. It's an amazing read for something published in 1895.

I need to quit making assumptions before reading anything by Wells because apparently I'm a huge fan.

Another thing I really loved about The Time Machine was seeing exactly where pop culture gets its representation of time travel today. We see it all of the time in movies - the days and nights and the scenery progressing around the person doing the time travel. Wells describes it so perfectly in The Time Machine, it's become a standard mechanism for displaying time travel on the screen.

There are so many reasons I would recommend The Time Machine so if you are interested in scifi, horror, or simply classics in general, The Time Machine is a quick, surprising read. It's in the public domain so you can download it for free pretty much everywhere. I think The Time Machine and The War of the Worlds are the only two books I have read by Wells, but I have got to change that. The Island of Dr. Moreau is on my bucket list as well so I will be reading that one next.

9/10: Highly Recommended

Jennifer

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Monday, September 9, 2013

September 9 | Currently Reading

Happy Monday! I have a sick kiddo today so I'm writing this post while playing Mario Kart. I hope it turns out coherent

Last week was pitiful for reading and reviewing. I had way too many things sucking my time, and I managed to write zero reviews. The awesome Mark Matthews stepped up and provided a really great guest post on writing dark fiction. If you love horror or have ever wondered why others like horror, it's a fantastic read.

I finally finished reading The Lies of Locke Lamora and properly fangirled my husband to death. Poor guy. But so many things about Locke Lamora were so good. I'm dreading my review because I will have to put these emotions into words! I also read Greg Gifune's House of Rain which kept me up thinking way too late Friday night.


In an effort to silence my brain after House of Rain, I started listening to China Mieville's Kraken. The book is great, and I love the narrator. It's a win so far. I also started reading Red Seas Under Red Skies (the sequel to Locke Lamora). It's awesome so far. I loved the beginning.


I look forward to hearing what everyone is reading this week. Be sure to let me know in the commments or leave a link. For what it's worth, I suck at Mario Kart.


This post is being shared as part of Book Journey's It's Monday! What Are You Reading?

Jennifer

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Friday, September 6, 2013

On Writing Dark Fiction | Post & Giveaway

I have the most amazing group of friends on Goodreads that I refer to as my "horror friends". They are invaluable to me for discovering the latest and greatest in the horror genre. One of the books I've recently discovered is Mark Matthews's On the Lips of Children. I invited Mark to share some thoughts with us here today. I feel very blessed that Mark has provided some wonderful thoughts on my favorite genre. He has also offered to give away an ecopy of On the Lips of Children to one Book Den reader! Be sure to enter the giveaway at the end of the post.



On Writing Dark Fiction by Mark Matthews


“The oldest and strongest emotion of mankind is fear.”
H.P. Lovecraft

China Mieville is perhaps the coolest cat to ever write a sentence, and his goal is to write a novel in every genre.  Not sure if this means horror is on the way, or if he has counted one of his many novels which already include plenty of horror.

Horror appears in so many great pieces of literature, yet it still seems that calling a novel a piece of horror cheapens it in some reader’s eyes.  The more I swim in writer’s circles, I’m discovering some writers embrace the term Horror writer, some prefer ‘dark fiction’, others coin their own terms. All of this with the hope that their work is properly understood.  Well, whatever the term, it is my belief that horror provides perhaps the most powerful, visceral, and deeply moving ways to experience art.  Not only that, but the darkest of horror writers have the finest hearts around

Yes, in Horror, people are threatened. People get hurt. People are killed. There’s evil. There’s blood. You feel threatened by dark forces.  Well, I would argue that something gets cut open in any novel, each story has something that bleeds, (even if it’s just Holden Caulfield’s innocence, for example) and the hinge upon which all fiction swings is escalating conflict and the fear that the protagonist won’t  get what they want.

Fiction is the drama of life with the heat turned up, and when done right, it boils out the insides of characters and reveals who they are, and better yet, transforms them into something stronger, like metal into fire. Or perhaps when the novel ends in tragedy, they aren’t strong enough to handle the flames.  Horror does this wonderfully.

In this way, I think of horror as much as a literary device as a genre.   The term horror is just a marketing tool.   Put a different cover on the novel American Psycho, and it would no longer be read as an illustration of our society of privilege, financial cannibalism and materialism gone mad. Instead, it’d be slasher and torture porn.

Let me set the premise for an epic horror story. One which will be the tome upon which civilizations are built, wars are fought, children are baptized, and bodies are buried:

Imagine a story where the dead are raised, where babies are slaughtered, where plagues destroy cities, and where the main character has spiritual powers but is shunned, eventually betrayed, until the day comes he has to carry the device of his own torture.  A crown of thorns bloodies his head, his flesh is punctured by nails, and his body hangs until he dies. But wait, it’s not over, because then his very soul will have to harrow hell for 3 days, gathering the ravaged souls of those before him, until he finally ascends to a higher plane.

To commemorate this event, we all kneel in front of the same ancient torture device. Then we perform a cannibalistic ritual to honor his sacrifice in Holy Communion as solemn music plays in the background.

Yep, you got it (don’t throw stones, please) put a different cover on it, and you can market the Bible as horror.

The iconic horror writer Stephen King rewrote this story, only it was much more tame, and it stared Jon Coffee, instead of Jesus Christ, both spiritual superior beings put to death, just texts written at different times. Scour great horror and dark fiction, you’ll find great literature.

What makes Stephen King shine is his characters, not just the horror, and when his work is at its best, the macabre highlights the internal strife of the character. Horror works best when it is a metaphor for the dark places the character is already traveling through. It isn’t easy to draw a picture of our dark psychological recesses, so you pull the insides out, put different faces on them, and give them a name. Like It, or Cujo.

The story of Cujo serves as a model for me.  The huge, killer rabid St. Bernard who has trapped a woman and her young child in the tiny pinto of a car.  But it’s not about a dog; it’s about alienation, isolation. I am alone, everybody has abandoned me, and here I am suffocating in this car, alone, trapped, with the jaws of the world trying to kill my most precious child.

This is why I think horror writers have the finest hearts around.  The only way a writer can scare you is to first prove they understand you.  A writer must first be ultra-sensitive to the human predicament, and show they can get into the hearts and heads of humans.  Otherwise, it all falls flat. I would love my daughter to marry a man with the heart of a Stephen King.

To take a step further, it is by destroying your protagonists, after giving him hopes and dreams and struggles, that can make you fully empathize with him. None of our physical lives come to happy endings. No one here gets out alive.

Of course, there are works that exist simply for sake of a bombardment of the senses.  This still takes art, I would argue, even if it is horror just for horror sake. I love the Evil Dead, but I’m not going to say it has the same psychological layers, but it is incredible campfire storytelling.

Horror is seeing resurgence in TV, and not just because it scares us, but because it helps us relate. In Season one of American Horror Story, the real horror was dealing with infidelity, trust, anger, (perpetual anger) and all the shattered lives caused by the ripples of hurt. The horror of all this inner-psyche drama sticks around like ghosts in your basement in a house you can never leave. You can't just kill the past, you have to deal with it, otherwise, the ghosts in your basement remain. They haunt your psychological dark spots, always ready to fragment your spirit, destroy your dreams, and yes hurt your children.

Horror works best when you are watching it and realize that, “hey, that’s me; I’m living a life of fear. A life of quiet desperation - screaming in terror on the inside yet quiet on the outside”. Horror reminds us that We are all infected. Yes, the secret of season 1 and 2 of The Walking Dead, that we are all infected  is what makes horror as a genre thrive. We are all infected with this human experience. It's a virus that lasts approximately 70 years, give or take a few decades, and during that time we look for meaning. And when done right, horror offers us a great peek into this unique affliction, but if not, it at least gives us some riveting drama to enjoy and makes our predicament a little more tolerable.  At least for a few hundred pages or more.


Mark Matthews is a therapist and social worker in Detroit and is the author of STRAY and The Jade Rabbit. “On the Lips of Children” is his third novel and his first with Books of the Dead Press. He is an avid runner, and his non-fiction book, “Chasing the Dragon: Running to Get High” is also now available on amazon.

Follow him on twitter at @matthews_mark or his blog at Running, Writing, and Chasing the Dragon.


On the Lips of Children


Meet Macon. Tattoo artist. Athlete. Family man.

He's planning to run a marathon, but the event becomes something terrible.

During a warm-up run, Macon falls prey to a bizarre man and his wife who dwell in an underground drug-smuggling tunnel. They raise their twin children in a way Macon couldn't imagine: skinning unexpecting victims for food and money.

And Macon, and his family, are next.

Mark Matthews is the author of the newly released novel, “On the Lips of Children” which has received wonderful reviews and has been called “dark fiction at its visceral, chilling best.” This novel is the story of a tattoo artist, his human canvass, and their child who get kidnapped by a bizarre family living in a San Diego to Tijuana Drug tunnel. Read more about this “terrifying page-turner” on Amazon.



Giveaway

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Jennifer

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Monday, September 2, 2013

September 2 | Currently Reading

I hope everyone had a most excellent weekend. Are you off for Labor Day today? I hope you are, but if you are not, I hope your day is fabulous anyway.

Last week I posted my review of The Thirty-Nine Steps by John Buchan as well as my August reading wrap-up and my most anticipated September releases.

I finished reading The Turn of the Screw by Henry James. You know how sometimes you can read an entire page and then wonder what you just read? That was the entire book of The Turn of the Screw for me. I seriously doubt I will be writing a review for that one.

I also listened to Rick Riordan's The Sea of Monsters on audiobook.


I just finished The Sea of Monsters last night so my plan is to finish the end of The Lies of Locke Lamora before starting anything else. I have a strong feeling I will be reading The Fall of Five after that, though!

This week is the second week of US Open Tennis so it will be hard to fit in much reading. Or sleep.

Let me know what you are reading this week in the comments or leave me a link!


This post is being shared as part of Book Journey's It's Monday! What Are You Reading?

Jennifer

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