Read all about it…

Just a quick post to notify you of a readalong of Kushiel’s Justice by Jacqueline Carey.

Kushiel's justice.jpgImriel de la Courcel’s blood parents are history’s most reviled traitors, while his adoptive parents, Phèdre and Joscelin, are Terre d’Ange’s greatest champions. Stolen, tortured, and enslaved as a young boy, Imriel is now a Prince of the Blood, third in line for the throne in a land that revels in beauty, art, and desire.

After a year abroad to study at university, Imriel returns from his adventures a little older and somewhat wiser. But perhaps not wise enough. What was once a mere spark of interest between himself and his cousin Sidonie now ignites into a white-hot blaze. But from commoner to peer, the whole realm would recoil from any alliance between Sidonie, heir to the throne, and Imriel, who bears the stigma of his mother’s misdeeds and betrayals. Praying that their passion will peak and fade, Imriel and Sidonie embark on an intense, secret affair.

Blessed Elua founded Terre d’Ange and bestowed one simple precept to guide his people, love as thou wilt. When duty calls, Imriel honors his role as a member of the royal family by leaving to marry a lovely, if merely sweet, Alban princess. By choosing duty over love, Imriel and Sidonie may have unwittingly trespassed against Elua’s law. But when dark powers in Alba, who fear an invasion by Terre d’Ange, seek to use the lovers’ passion to bind Imriel, the gods themselves take notice.

Before the end, Kushiel’s justice will be felt in heaven and on earth.

The details, schedule and other participants outlined below.  Please feel free to join in with the fun.

Here is the schedule:

Week 1: Chpts. 1-7, Mar 20 – Hosted by Dab of Darkness
Week 2: Chpts. 8-14, Mar 27 – Hosted by Emma Wolf
Week 3: Chpts. 15-22, Apr 3 – Hosted by Lynn’s Book Blog
Week 4: Chpts. 23-29, Apr 10 – Hosted by Tethyan Books
Week 5: Chpts. 30-37, Apr 17 – Hosted by Dab of Darkness
Week 6: Chpts. 38-46, Apr 24 – Hosted by Emma Wolf
Week 7: Chpts. 47-56, May 1 – Hosted by Lynn’s Book Blog
Week 8: Chpts. 57-65, May 8 – Hosted by Tethyan Books
Week 9: Chpts. 66-END, May 15 – Hosted by Dab of Darkness

And here is the current list of participators:
Allie at Tethyan Books
Lynn at Lynn’s Book Blog
Emily at Emma Wolf
Susan (me) at Dab of Darkness
Lisa at Over the Effing Rainbow

February: My Month in Review

Posted On 29 February 2016

Filed under Book Reviews

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February came and went – 1/6th of the year flown by already.  Of course February is a short month and I was away for a few days in Sicily – which was ace.  I hope your February was a good one.  What was your favourite read?  Here’s my month in review:

Books read: (with links to reviews)

  1. The Complete Double Dead by Chuck Wendig
  2. The Tiger and the Wolf by Adrian Tchaikovsky
  3. Nelly Dean by Alison Case
  4. What Remains of Heroes by David Benem
  5. Blood Rush by Ben Galley
  6. Kushiel’s Scion by Jacqueline Carey
  7. The Immortals by Jordanna Max Brodsky
  8. When you Give an Imp a Penny by Henry L Herz
  9. The Silver Tide by Jen Williams
  10. Speak by Louisa Hall
  11. Black City Saint by Richard A Knaak

Backlist books

None this month- March and April – I will catch up!  I can do this.

Unfinished series completed:

None this month – ditto the above.

Books Bought:

  1. The Ballad of Black Tom by Victor LaValle

Review Books (loads to look forward to in March!): (with links to Goodreads synopsis)

  1. The Wolf in the Attic by Paul Kearney
  2. Eleanor by Jason Gurley
  3. Pieces of Hate by Tim Lebbon
  4. The Silent Army by James A Moore
  5. Fellside by M R Carey
  6. Snakewood by Adrian Selby
  7. The Hatching by Ezekiel Boone
  8. Dragon Hunters by Marc Turner

Cover Spotlight (I detect a theme):

US or UK cover: I think both of these are lovely but I prefer the UK version overall:

Events:

Backlist Backburn is an end of month event organised by Lisa at Tenacious Reader. If you’ve caught up on any of your backlist then call over and link up.   I find this a good incentive to dust off some of my books!  I’ve not done very well the past two months but that’s because I overfaced myself a little I think!  I’m trying to be a bit more careful now so hopefully March and April I will catch up – although, the best laid plans, yada yada…

Top Ten Tuesday at The Broke and Bookish (every Tuesday)

Waiting on Wednesday is an event hosted by Breaking the Spine where every week we get to shine the spotlight on a book that we’re looking forward to.

Announced two readalongs for March:

  1. Kushiel’s Justice by Jacqueline Carey, details to follow
  2. A Local Habitation by Seanan McGuide details here.  Hope you join in – I think this is going to be a great UF series to be involved in and this is a great way to get on board.

The SPFBO concluded and it was very close!  The results are here and I will do a wrap up post during the week.

My February Covers

Every month I post a review of my previous months.  A short synopsis of what I’ve read and what events I’ve taken part in.  To preface this I’m going to show my month of reads in book covers:

Looking at the books this past month you’d think I’d almost planned the books to have a colour theme!

Bloodrush by Ben Galley #SPFBO

Posted On 27 February 2016

Filed under Book Reviews
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23956571.jpgBloodrush is my final book for the #SPFBO and coincidentally happens to have scored the highest rating from me.

Bloodrush is a book that takes us from the dark and foggy streets of an alternative Victorian London to the very edge of the frontier.  The story is a strange mash up of fantasy and western that I really enjoyed.

At the start of the story we discover that Tonmerion Hark, having recently become orphaned, is about to be sent overseas to be placed in the care of his remaining relative, Aunt Lilian. Merion is only 13 years old and not only has his father been murdered but he’s about to be sent to the western frontier. So Merion sets off on the long and torturous journey to, what feels like, the very edges of the world, or maybe hell.  Thankfully Merion isn’t alone, he’s accompanied by his friend of the past few years, a 12 inch member of the fae called Rhin.  Rhin has a whole bunch of secrets and unlike Merion is quite happy to find himself being removed to the farmost reaches of the world.

I don’t want to give too much away about the plot.  This is a voyage of discovery story for young Merion. He’s about to learn things about himself that he has until this point been blissfully unaware.  Merion has a strange legacy. Like his father before him him he possesses the ability to bloodrush – a certain type of magick that enables those with the ability to endow themselves with the characteristics of any number of animals, birds, fish, reptiles and insects by drinking their blood.  The premise is interesting, it takes a bit of a leap of faith but it contains a vast number of possibilities for all sorts of weird and wonderful scenarios.

The characters are an interesting bunch.  We have Merion, who, probably with reason, spends a good deal of the book huffing and puffing and basically feeling put upon. He could come across as a bit of a smacked arse sulky so and so but let’s not forget that his father has just been murdered, he’s had his privileges taken away, he’s been sent to a strange, to him, country and placed in the care of somebody he’s never met before and he then finds out he has a magick inheritance that he never dreamed of.  His one wish is to get back home and in focusing on this desire he can sometimes be a little short sighted plus – he’s 13.  In spite of that I liked Merion.  Rhin – he has his very own storyline running throughout the book.  He has a past that he’s trying to escape from but the fae following in his tracks are relentless and stubborn!  Aunt Lilian – she’s turned into the town’s undertaker.  She has her own secrets to keep and I dare say she never expected to find herself the guardian to a 13 year old boy.  Lurker is a great character.  A friend of Lilian’s he has his own blood rushing abilities that come in particularly useful when prospecting and lend him the friendship of a magpie.  Those are the main characters and we of course have the supporting cast of arch baddies and cunning fae.

I loved the western setting.  We have a frontier town where the railroads are forging ahead into new lands where they are frankly not always welcome – not only by the indigenous population but also the strange ghosts who seem to be able to use the very rail tracks themselves to turn into murderous monsters.

There is undoubtedly quite a lot going on here to enjoy.  I think what particularly sold this novel to me was the writing style.  Galley has a very engaging storytelling voice that I really enjoyed.  I thought he set the scene well, his characters were interesting but more than that he managed to bring a really good combination of intrigue, fantasy and horror together whilst also injecting humour and lighter moments into the story.

In terms of criticisms.  Well, this is a bit of a slow burner of a book – not an issue for me personally but may be for others and I admit that it probably could have been sharpened slightly.  I think my main issues could boil down to a slight irritation with finding out that Merion is about to become quite special in terms of bloodrushing (it’s just one of my pet irritations where the young protagonist finds out they’re super special) and the ending was a bit of a stretch.  Okay, I’m reading fantasy here so I’m already suspending belief to a very large extent but (and I’m trying to avoid spoilers here) I think I would have liked the ending to have been more of a team effort.

However, in spite of a few niggles, which were relatively minor, I really enjoyed this story.  The writing is captivating, the story is very entertaining, it’s intriguing and fun and I will certainly continue reading this series.

 

The Silver Tide (The Copper Promise #3) by Jen Williams

thesilvertJust finished reading The Silver Tide by Jen Williams.  This series is so good that it makes me want to cry because it’s now come to an end.  Literally, I could cry right now!  Enough about me though, to the book with a small cautionary note about spoilers for the first two books in the series.

This book is so good, I absolutely loved it.  It’s jam packed with so many goodies that I’m sure I developed an ache in my jaw from just gaping ridiculously whilst reading.  Not only do we get to return to this fantastic world and spend time with, frankly, three of my most favourite characters from fantasy at the moment, but we go on some totally crazy adventures.

Did I mention that there may be gushing – apologies for not forewarning you.

At the start of the story the Black Feather Three are going to be enlisted by none other than Devinia the Red.  Their mission: to delve, boldly I might say, into the heart of the cursed Island of Euriale (otherwise known as the Island of the Gods) where hopefully heaps of treasure lies waiting for their little grabby hands.  Why, you may ask, is this treasure left lying around.  Well, nobody who wanders into the jungles of Euriale has ever returned to tell the tale which does put a bit of a damper on any thoughts of going trekking there.  Of course our little band of sellswords can’t resist the temptation to line their pockets, plus, let’s just be honest, they’re always keen for a little adventure and at the start of the story all three of them could use a bit of a pick-me-up.  Anyway, their latest adventure is going to pick them up in ways they never imagined (not to mention throw them around a good deal and beat the living daylights out of them).  Sooner than they know it they’re going to be in a heap of trouble.

This book is an unadulterated riot of fantasy.  The imagination is just wonderful.  We start the story with a disappearance to whet the appetite and give us a feeling for this creepy little island.  Is it really haunted by the ghosts of it’s past?  Euriale certainly has a long and sad history and it seems that over time the jungle has almost become steeped in bad memories and evil.  The Island of the Gods has seen more than it’s fair share of misery and pain.  It is also home to the many pirates who make port at the Town of Two Birds, a den of iniquity seething mainly with taverns and brothels.  And yet, as rough and tough as these pirates may be, as many brawls as they may boast of and scars they wear with pride – they all know better than to venture over the boundaries of Two Birds.

To the characters.  Well, if you’ve read the previous two books (The Copper Promise and the Iron Ghost) you’ll already be familiar with Wydrin of Crosshaven, Lord Aaron Frith and Sir Sebastian Caverson.  You may also remember Ephemeral who is one of the fearsome brood sisters from the Copper Promise – they’re all going to be making tracks through the jungle.  What I forgot to mention of course is that Devinia the Red, scourge of the high seas, is actually Wydrin’s mum – she’s not the kind to be nurse maiding her children and bringing them milk and cookies but she does defy the pirate image a little by being more of a hoarder of books and knowledge than treasure and trinkets.  We also become re acquainted with a number of other characters from previous stories but I won’t elaborate on those for fear of spoilers.

The plot starts off as a treasure hunt but pretty soon splits into a number of threads as the group become divided.  We continue to follow the pirates on their course to the interior of the island.  Sebastian goes off on a unexpected and personal mission and Wydrin and Frith become entangled with a group of strange inhabitants, a fanatic cult, who are hatching a plot that could undermine the very fabric of this world.

So, what did I love about this book, or for that matter this series. I think Jen Williams has created three characters here that you can really become attached to. It sounds so cliched to say that she brings these characters to life on the page but for me that’s exactly what happens.  I have a vision of each of them in my head, I can picture them, how they move, how they talk and I love it when an author manages to do that.  On top of that the peripheral characters are also highly entertaining.  The writing is great.  Swords and sorcery at its most ingenious and entertaining.  Plenty of action, tempered with captures, escapes, time travel, dragons, Gods, sea monsters and other huge beasts, magic, dragons (did I already mention the dragons!). Did you entertain me?  You most certainly did and you managed to do so consistently over the entire trilogy which is no mean feat.  No middle book syndrome to be found here.

In terms of criticisms – I have nothing.  Although I must say I am sorely disappointed to be leaving this world and these characters behind.  I want more, I’m just greedy like that.

I think that you could probably read each of these books as a standalone book.  I wouldn’t personally suggest you do because I can’t really understand why you would knowingly deny yourself the pleasure of reading the first two books. Just saying.

Would I recommend this series.  Absolutely without doubt.  Do yourself a favour and read them all.

I received a copy of The Silver Tide courtesy of the publisher through Netgalley for which my thanks.  The above is my own opinion.

Now take a look at these lovelies and just imagine them sitting on your shelf!

 

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