An Artifical Night by Seanan McGuire, Readalong No.2

artificial nightToday is week two of our readalong of An Artificial Night (October Daye #3) ) by Seanan McGuire) arranged by Lisa from Over the Effing Rainbow.  This week Books by Proxy is hosting the Q&A.  And, woah, this week got very real and super sad not to mention absolutely gripping!

The details are over here on Goodreads – the schedule is below.  If you want to join in or jump in with the comments then please do so.  Without further ado here are the questions and answers with a customary word of warning that spoilers will be lurking below:

Week 1: Saturday 9th April, Chapters 1-7, hosted by Over The Effing Rainbow
Week 2: Saturday 16th April, Chapters 8-17, hosted by Books By Proxy
Week 3: Saturday 23rd April, Chapters 18-24, hosted by Lynn’s Book Blog
Week 4: Saturday 30th April, Chapters 25-End, hosted by Over the Effing Rainbow

1. Toby makes her journey to Blind Michael’s realm with the aid of the Luidaeg – who is back and on form and has, as yet, decided to hold off on killing Toby. What did you think of Toby’s journey by candlelight and her first encounter with the Wild Hunt? What do you think this favour is going to cost her with the Luidaeg?

This story got really dark and sinister didn’t it!  It seems weird to say this was what I was expecting but it was actually what I was expecting and I think it’s spot on.  This isn’t a cute story, it certainly isn’t a children’s fairytale – in fact this just put the Grim into the Brother’s Grimm.  This is downright nasty and twisted.  And, okay, I love what McGuire has come up with.  This dark place where the Hunt lives and the journey there! The whole backstory behind Blind Michael.  This is some scary shit and it really gets to you.  This is about children being stolen from their homes by a massive egomaniac!  No way to wrap it up in tissue paper.  I was expecting nasty and it’s here by the bucketload. We start off with the Luidaeg’s odd behaviour and then that whole candle spell casting!  Then we move into the dark side with Toby travelling to the sort of mindbending place where reality doesn’t exist. I liked that we’re discovering things at the same time as Toby and changing Toby into a small child – woah, way to bring down her odds right there!  Then that first encounter with the Hunt chasing the little girl.  So tense – not to mention such tough choices for Toby.  Ohh, I could go on but I’ll stop!  As to what this will cost with the Luidaeg – I think that if Toby manages to survive this and make a difference – well, I don’t think she’ll owe anything to anybody!  Right about now – I think she’s owed something, particularly some explanations.

2. As a prisoner of Blind Michael, Toby encounters a disturbing number of altered and transformed children and, assisted by Quentin, discovers the children who are yet to be toyed with. What were your thoughts when Toby discovered these child monsters and other detainees? Do you think there is any hope for them? And what did you make of Quentin’s bargain with the Luidaeg?

I was so relieved that Quentin showed up!  Strength in numbers or just that sheer childlike feeling of wanting to hold somebody’s hand – yeah, I wanted to hold hands with somebody!  The children that Toby first encountered – okay, they were pulling the whole intimidation thing but my foremost feeling was so so sad for them.  I may not be stupid enough to get my hand bitten by one of them but even so I felt so desperately unhappy for them. And then such relief when Toby and Quentin snuck in and found the changeling/fae children that had just been taken!  Such relief only to be followed by such despair – McGuire – what are you doing to us! Not to mention mixed feelings about only being able to save so many!  I really hope that there’s hope – I guess I have to come to the reality that some of these children are no longer who they were, they’ve really been transformed but I really hope that there’s some salvation. It’s a question of when does a person become themselves?  I don’t know.  These children have been stolen from their families, been terrified, been changed beyond recognition in a way that is torture until finally they become something else.  Are they now that something else?  They certainly can’t get back what was taken but maybe there is still hope for what comes next? Quentin’s bargain, it’s not really a surprise and I would expect nothing less from the Luidaeg – I know everybody goes on about how scary she is and I don’t doubt that she is but she has a definite connection with Toby and everything that she does just rings of the fact that she’s trying to help or protect her.

3. In spectacular style, Toby swoops in and relieves Blind Michael of his prisoners and vows to put an end to his evil ways. How do you think Blind Michael will react when he discovers Toby and the children are missing? What do you think Toby will do for those she left behind?

Yes, I think Blind Michael is going to be a bit cross to find out that his latest recruits have been taken – he did have a bargain with Toby but that didn’t include all the children did it!  Personally speaking I hope that Toby kicks Michael’s arse!  As to what happens to the others – I seriously don’t know.  Can the transformation really be reversed – well, I kind of wonder whether the land in which they exist has different rules – Toby was a child there and she’s going to change back – I think – I mean, I know that she had a spell on her but part of me thinks she couldn’t have entered the realm if she wasn’t a child, so did the spell change her or something else! – I really don’t know.  I seriously hope that there’s some hope for some of them.  Like I said, some may not want to change back though.  You can’t also help wondering what will happen to the Hunt – if Toby succeeds will that end?  Can she really eliminate Blind Michael.   At the moment it’s a big mess and I can’t see quite how it will be resolved.  Maybe Michael needs to be cured himself??

4. Whilst straying into the forests within Blind Michael’s realm, Toby encounters Acacia whose revelations regarding Blind Michael and her own daughter are nothing short of astounding. Were you expecting this? What were your thoughts and reactions?!! How does this change your view of the characters involved?

Oh dear, Acacia’s is another sad story.  And I’m totally confused – so is Michael Luna’s father?  or is this whole Michael is Acacia’s husband/consort something else?  It certainly sheds some new light on Luna and her very ethereal character (if you can say that about somebody who is actually fae!)  Again, this is a sad theme – this whole thing of Acacia being left behind and then Luna running away – or leaving – I’m not sure.  Is this why Luna and some of the others have never taken action against what was going on??  The fae world does appear to be even smaller than we thought – everybody seems to be related in this plot so far!

5. Toby seems to have escaped Blind Michael’s clutches – for now! – and is currently enjoying the company of her Fetch, May. What do you expect will happen from here? Do you expect her to pursue Blind Michael to the end? And what are your thoughts on Toby’s sentient portent of death and its implications for her future?

Well, yes, Toby does appear to have escaped with all her children.  However, this makes me think there will be repercussions.  If Toby saved 30 children it makes me think that Michael will now go and take twice as many!  I really don’t know but ‘I got a bad feeling about it’.  And, I think that’s why May is still hanging around.  Now, just to be clear – there are a number of books in this series so I don’t think I’m misunderstanding anything or giving much away much by saying I think Toby survives – I just don’t really know how at this point and I also don’t know what the implications are for May.  Presumably May was sent as a result of somebody foreseeing Toby’s death but maybe one of the other key players involved will be able to change fate or bend time or jump in a tardis – I don’t know!  Or maybe a Fetch is sent to you as a warning?  Which means it’s reversible.  Clutching at straws about now…

All will become clear eventually!

‘I found Rome brick, I left it marble..’

Posted On 15 April 2016

Filed under Book Reviews

Comments Dropped 18 responses

 

FFO.jpg

Here we are again with the Friday Face Off meme being hosted by Books by Proxy .   This is a great opportunity to feature some of your favourite books covers.  The rules are fairly simple and can be found here.  Each week, following a predetermined theme choose a book, compare a couple of the different covers available for that particular book and choose your favourite.  Simples.  This week the theme is:

Metropolis

A cover which features a city

This week I’ve gone for the City of Stairs by RJBennett.  An awesome book with two completely different covers today:

UK      :      US

These two covers really couldn’t be more different even if they tried and they both have their merits.  I love the colour in the Uk version and even the way the tower makes up part of the text.  The US is very moody and more modern looking somehow.  However, for me this week the winner is:

CoS

Maybe I’m just indoctrinated into the whole ‘people with hoods’ on fantasy covers but this is the winner for me without doubt.  I like them both and even though this cover has less dramatic colour the whole moody sky and bright city below just pulls me in.

Come join us next week when the theme will be:

Dead Men Tell No Tales

A cover which features something or somewhere relating to death

(between you and I, I have at least three different books that immediately spring to mind with this one!)

The Fall of the House of Usher by Edgar Allan Poe

UsherThe Fall of the House of Usher is one of the books from my classic club list and is also probably one of those books where most people are already more than familiar with the story.

The book is only a short story, probably about 50 pages and originally published in 1839 is considered to be one of Poe’s most famous works and a perfect example of his ability to make every sentence and reference meaningful.

The premise of the story is the failing line of the House of Usher.  The whys and wherefores of this are never discussed but clearly the family seems to be doomed or cursed – or at least they believe themselves to be so!

At the start of the story the narrator is asked to visit his friend Roderick who believes himself to be terminally ill.  Even though the two are best friends they haven’t seen each other for many years and so it comes as a surprise to the narrator to find Roderick in such a poor condition!  It comes as an even greater surprise to find that he has a twin sister who herself seems to be suffering from a severe condition and in fact dies within days of the narrator’s arrival and is placed in a tomb in the cellars of the Usher Mansion.

I won’t go any further in terms of the plot as this is only a short story.

For me this was a reread, and on top of that I have also seen the Vincent Price movie and read a re-imagining of the story called The Fall by Bethany Griffin.  I think having read this in what I like to consider my ‘romantic’ years – in that I now romanticise all of those books and love them unconditionally – it was good to go back and check this out to see how I feel about it now.

I would probably say that whilst I don’t find this as creepy as I did on my first read, and I also don’t imagine many horror readers in this age will find it scary, it still has a fantastically gothic feel.  The tone of the writing, which no doubt appears flowery and excessive compared to modern books, is actually a style that I love to revisit.  I can read a book like this with almost a voice over running inside my head as though I’m being told the tale (like one of those old movies that starts off with a voice over – there’s just something so story time about it!).  It’s just so wonderfully old fashioned and ornate and yet at the same time, being a short novel, incredibly meaningful in what it manages to pack into such a limited space.

A macabre tale, peopled with fragile minds, heightened psychosis and fuelled by massive hypochondria set in a bleak environment in a dark and dilapidated mansion that adds fuel to an already overburdened mind.  Were the Ushers under a curse, is the house sentient or is the mind a powerful instrument that can indeed lead to self fulfilling prophecies of doom.

This is, as I said, only a short story.  The words need to be savoured and it is in no way a slasher type of story.  The horror in this story comes from the mind and the tortures it can create – or does it?

What this has definitely succeeded in doing is making me want to revisit some more of Poe’s work which I will definitely do in the future as I’d like to compare the feelings I now have for the stories.

TCC

 

 

 

Waiting on Wednesday: New Pompeii by Daniel Godfrey

“Waiting On Wednesday” is a weekly meme hosted by Breaking the Spine.  Every Wednesday we get to highlight a book that we’re really looking forward to.  This week I’m highlighting: New Pompeii by Daniel Gordon due out in June this year.  Because – replica Pompeii, hidden in central Asia and filled with Romans!

NewPomp.jpgIn the near future, energy giant Novus Particles develops the technology to transport objects and people from the deep past to the present. Their biggest secret: New Pompeii. A replica of the city hidden deep in central Asia, filled with Romans pulled through time a split second before the volcano erupted.

Historian Nick Houghton doesn’t know why he’s been chosen to be the company’s historical advisor. He’s just excited to be there. Until he starts to wonder what happened to his predecessor. Until he realizes that NovusPart have more secrets than even the conspiracy theorists suspect.

Until he realizes that NovusPart have underestimated their captives…

Epicly epic!

Every Tuesday over at the  The Broke and Bookish we all get to look at a particular topic for discussion and use various (or more to the point ten) examples to demonstrate that particular topic.  The topic this week is:

‘Ten Books Every X Should Read’

And in this case I’ve decided ‘x’ = epic fantasy lover.  So, if you want a series to really sink your teeth into here are my 10 choices for this week (all with links to 1st in series over at Goodreads):

  1. The Stormlight Archive by Brandon Sanderson
  2. The Broken Empire by Mark Lawrence
  3. The Lord of the Rings by JRRTolkien
  4. The Kingkiller Chronicles by Patrick Rothfuss
  5. The Game of Thrones by GRRMartin
  6. The Gentleman Bastards by Scott Lynch
  7. The Farseer Trilogy by Robin Hobb – I confess that I have only read the first but I will be completing this!
  8. The Copper Cat trilogy by Jen Williams
  9. The Red Queen’s War by Mark Lawrence- yet to be completed but the first two books are excellent
  10. The Divine Cities Trilogy by RJBennett – again, to be completed but so far excellent.

 

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