Author Archive

Book Review: Flashback by Dan Simmons

Flashback by Dan Simmons. © 2011 Little, Brown & Company. ISBN 9780316006965. Hardback. Science Fiction / Dystopian / Noir. 550 pages. Source: ARC provided by the publishers.

Synopsis: The near future. The United States isn’t so much. There are forty-four states remaining and that number is tenuous. The country is in economic collapse. And a good portion of the population is addicted to a drug called Flashback. With the world in such chaos, who would want to live in it when it’s possible to relive the earlier, better times? You can be with your loved ones who have died, you can once again experience the life that was before The Day It All Hit The Fan. Or, in the case of the flash gangs who run rampant, you can relive the crimes you commit, getting that “rush” without the risk. (Though really there is no risk for the flash gangs because law enforcement is so overrun that frankly the gangs are not a priority.)

It’s in this world that Nick Bottom lives. He didn’t always. He remembers a time before entitlement programs and other outrageous government spending bankrupted his country. A time when serving on the Denver police force meant something. A time when his wife was alive and his son lived with him. And it’s in this life he chooses to exist. Fired from the Denver PD because of his addiction, Nick doesn’t care about much except how to get the money for his next vial of Flashback. So he’s a bit confused when he’s hired to find the killer of Keigo Nakamura, son of the Japanese adviser to Denver. He’s especially confused because the murder happened six years earlier, back when he was a cop, and he was one of the cops on the case. Confused because not only did the case go cold, but because every high-ranking government agency had been called in to find the killer and none were successful. So why in the world would a former cop, current detective, and flashback addict be asked to solve a seemingly impossible case?

Review: Flashback was a difficult novel for me in some ways. The dystopian future is terrifying both because it seemed so real, seemed as if it could easily happen, and also because it was caused by political ideas I strongly believe in. I know the politics have thrown some people off. But there’s a very important thing to remember here: this is fiction. The world represented does not necessarily reflect what the author believes and I think a lot of readers have forgotten that.  Read more

Jennifer

Jennifer works as a production editor for a major publishing company in NYC but will not review any books put out by the company (under any imprint) on this site since that can be considered a conflict of interest. Areas of interest include Robin Hood, pirates, zombies (and horror in general), Beowulf (and other early English literature, though Beowulf has a soft spot in her heart), medieval history, Celtic history and literature, history of diseases, and some odd subjects like bog bodies. She lives in New Jersey with a husband and a cat. You can find her on LibraryThing, Twitter, and Goodreads.

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31 Days of Halloween { book review } The Stolen Child by Keith Donohue

The Stolen Child by Keith Donohue. © 2006 Nan A. Talese. ISBN 9780385516167. Hardcover. Dark Fantasy/Sci-Fi. 327 pages.

Synopsis: On a summer night, Henry Day runs away from home and hides in a hollow tree. There he is taken by the changelings—an unaging tribe of wild children who live in darkness and in secret. They spirit him away, name him Aniday, and make him one of their own. Stuck forever as a child, Aniday grows in spirit, struggling to remember the life and family he left behind. He also seeks to understand and fit in this shadow land, as modern life encroaches upon both myth and nature.

In his place, the changelings leave a double, a boy who steals Henry’s life in the world. This new Henry Day must adjust to a modern culture while hiding his true identity from the Day family. But he can’t hide his extraordinary talent for the piano (a skill the true Henry never displayed), and his dazzling performances prompt his father to suspect that the son he has raised is an imposter. As he ages the new Henry Day becomes haunted by vague but persistent memories of life in another time and place, of a German piano teacher and his prodigy. Of a time when he, too, had been a stolen child. Both Henry and Aniday obsessively search for who they once were before they changed places in the world.

Review: Anything with the title of my favorite Yeats poem will grab my attention, especially if it is indeed a novel about changelings. And I did indeed love the way Donohue wove phrases from the poem into the novel. Hell, I loved the whole novel. Let me say first off I understand how the changeling theme can be seen as a metaphor for growing up, etc., but I don’t care at all about that part. That’s not what held me spellbound. What grabbed me was the updating of the changeling myth. The story of Henry Day and Aniday. The wild children in the woods, never growing, never aging until they replace a child as they were replaced. Is it the fact that Aniday was taken so recently that he is the only changeling who wants to return to his family? Or were the others from worse families? They said they tended to take children who were neglected, abused, sad, bratty–the ones who weren’t so noticed in case the change wasn’t perfect. Sure, the changelings are able to contort and change themselves to look exactly like the stolen child, but sometimes behaviors aren’t exactly right.  Read more

Jennifer

Jennifer works as a production editor for a major publishing company in NYC but will not review any books put out by the company (under any imprint) on this site since that can be considered a conflict of interest. Areas of interest include Robin Hood, pirates, zombies (and horror in general), Beowulf (and other early English literature, though Beowulf has a soft spot in her heart), medieval history, Celtic history and literature, history of diseases, and some odd subjects like bog bodies. She lives in New Jersey with a husband and a cat. You can find her on LibraryThing, Twitter, and Goodreads.

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Book Review: The Undertakers: Rise of the Corpses by Ty Drago

The Undertakers: Rise of the Corpses by Ty Drago. © 2011 Sourcebooks Jabberwocky. ISBN 978-1402247859. Hardback. Horror / Young Adult. 480 pages. Source: ARC provided by the publishers.

Synopsis: Will Ritter is just an average twelve-year-old. He’s annoyed by his little sister and mom, though not very worried about his math test, since he actually studied. Then he walks outside and has to deal with his grumpy neighbor Old Man Pratt. Except Old Man Pratt is dead. Or looks dead anyway–he’s still walking and talking, just like a zombie. And things only get worse when Will finally gets to school–and the worse has nothing to do with the math test.

Review: I’ll say right now that I’m not a huge reader of YA books. Heck, I wasn’t even when I was one. Of course, that was pre-Goosebumps and basically all I had was Judy Blume and Nancy Drew. So I was kind of surprised at how much I enjoyed this book. Sure, it’s a bunch of kids who have to stop the Corpses (not zombies–they’re not zombies, though they certainly look like them), but there’s a reason for that. And though Will falls into the “special preteen who must save things” role, he’s not annoying. He voices a lot of things that normal people would think, which basically boils down to “How are a bunch of kids going to fix this? We’re just kids!” It’s sly, the way Drago lets us know that even Will realizes how crazy the world has become.  Read more

Jennifer

Jennifer works as a production editor for a major publishing company in NYC but will not review any books put out by the company (under any imprint) on this site since that can be considered a conflict of interest. Areas of interest include Robin Hood, pirates, zombies (and horror in general), Beowulf (and other early English literature, though Beowulf has a soft spot in her heart), medieval history, Celtic history and literature, history of diseases, and some odd subjects like bog bodies. She lives in New Jersey with a husband and a cat. You can find her on LibraryThing, Twitter, and Goodreads.

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Book Review: Alice in Zombieland by Lewis Carroll and Nickolas Cooke

Alice in Zombieland by Lewis Carroll and Nickolas Cooke. © 2011 Sourcebooks. ISBN 9781402256219. Paperback. Humor/Horror/Fantasy. 288 pages. Source: ARC furnished by the publisher.

Review: A mashup of Alice and zombies! Oh, she thought, life can’t get better than this! Especially since the Tenniel illustrations have been so lovingly adapted to zombification.

On the whole, I loved this. There’s not much that lends itself to twistedness better than Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland. At first I was worried that it might just be turning everything into zombies and Corpse Turtles and such. But no, there were characters still living (or else, I imagine, it would have been terribly dull, she thought). I did find there were a few continuity errors near the end, at the Knave of Hearts’ trial. I know, I know, you wonder how Alice can have continuity errors. It all had to do with the Red Queen’s metal box. Alice is told earlier what it does; she even sees the Red Queen with it during the croquet game (and what a visual that was!). But she doesn’t seem to know what it does or why the queen has it during the trial. Okay, nobody knows exactly how it works, but they do know what it does. Read more

Jennifer

Jennifer works as a production editor for a major publishing company in NYC but will not review any books put out by the company (under any imprint) on this site since that can be considered a conflict of interest. Areas of interest include Robin Hood, pirates, zombies (and horror in general), Beowulf (and other early English literature, though Beowulf has a soft spot in her heart), medieval history, Celtic history and literature, history of diseases, and some odd subjects like bog bodies. She lives in New Jersey with a husband and a cat. You can find her on LibraryThing, Twitter, and Goodreads.

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Book Review: The Pirate Devlin by Mark Keating

The Pirate Devlin by Mark Keating. © 2010 Grand Central Publishing. ISBN 9780446563901. Hardback. Adventure/Historical Fiction. 352 pages. Source: ARC furnished by the publishers.

Synopsis: An injured French officer struggles along a desolate stretch of West African coastline, desperate to hold on to his secret. Alas for him, his tale is soon ended, and violently, but a young pirate recruit, Patrick Devlin, who happens to speak fluent French, comes away from their encounter with a new pair of boots and a treasure map. From there the adventures of the pirate Devlin, his shipmates, and those who wish them dead move forward without restraint, through broadside barrages and subterfuge and brutal encounters on land and at sea, where nothing is as it appears to be at first glance. In these pages readers will meet Blackbeard and his cohorts, Portuguese colonial governors and French commandants, officials of the East India Company and Royal Naval officers, fresh-faced midshipmen and gnarly, scarred, and drunken pirate crewmen. But none of these is as impressive and memorable as the former servant and newly minted pirate captain Patrick Devlin, unless it’s the man he once served on board a British man-of-war, a man now sworn to kill him!

Review: I was disappointed by this. On the whole, it’s a perfectly competent story, though set up for sequels. Patrick Devlin is an interesting character and showed some promise. But the promise isn’t fulfilled.  Read more

Jennifer

Jennifer works as a production editor for a major publishing company in NYC but will not review any books put out by the company (under any imprint) on this site since that can be considered a conflict of interest. Areas of interest include Robin Hood, pirates, zombies (and horror in general), Beowulf (and other early English literature, though Beowulf has a soft spot in her heart), medieval history, Celtic history and literature, history of diseases, and some odd subjects like bog bodies. She lives in New Jersey with a husband and a cat. You can find her on LibraryThing, Twitter, and Goodreads.

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31 Days of Halloween { review } Deliver Us From Evil by Tom Holland

Deliver Us From Evil by Tom Holland. © 2000 Little Brown UK. ISBN 9780751518610. Paperback. Historical Fiction / Horror. 579 pages. Source: purchased from Amazon UK

Synopsis: Wiltshire, during the dying days of Oliver Cromwell’s Republic. Robert Vaughn is the son of a Parliamentary officer, investigating a series of grisly murders which suggest a link with Satanic rituals. Led along a dark path to vampirism and beyond, he attempts to fight an evil killer.

Review: Robert Foxe is witness to a number of horrible, ritualist killings during the mid-1600s, near the village of Woodton, where his father is sheriff. He witnesses something even more horrible during the fourth killing at Stonehenge, and what the killing summons.

Robert is found by two travlers, Milady and Lightborn, the next day, and taken into their care. His quest for vengeance leads him from England to Prague to the New World.

I wasn’t sure for a bit if this was a vampire novel, or just horror. There are certainly zombielike creatures (yay)! But yes, Milady and Lightborn are vampires (and I figured out who Lightborn really is, but then the clues were there if you know the history) and Robert, well, he’s something else. We even learn of the beginnings of Vakel Pasha, who has a much larger part to play in Lord of the Dead, which I very highly recommend. The fact there are vampires, though, is nearly incidental since this is Robert’s story. I was highly amused by the full story of Milady’s tranformation though–should have seen that coming!

Excellent book.

Jennifer

Jennifer works as a production editor for a major publishing company in NYC but will not review any books put out by the company (under any imprint) on this site since that can be considered a conflict of interest. Areas of interest include Robin Hood, pirates, zombies (and horror in general), Beowulf (and other early English literature, though Beowulf has a soft spot in her heart), medieval history, Celtic history and literature, history of diseases, and some odd subjects like bog bodies. She lives in New Jersey with a husband and a cat. You can find her on LibraryThing, Twitter, and Goodreads.

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31 Days of Halloween { review } Winterwood by Patrick McCabe

Winterwood by Patrick McCabe. © 2008 Bloomsbury Publishing. ISBN 9781596915138. Paperback. Horror. 256 pages. $14.95 US. Source: purchased

Synopsis: In this chilling and unforgettable novel, Patrick McCabe shows us that nothing—and no one—is ever quite what they seem. Shortlisted for the Irish Book Award for Novel of the Year, Winterwood is a disturbing tale of love, death, and identity.

Review: One (professional) reviewer said he felt like he needed to take a bath after reading this book. I really have to agree with him. This was a wonderfully written book, the words just rolled off the page with the lyricism of a poet. But dear god it creeped me out, and not in a good way. Mind you, I *like* being creeped out. I love ghost stories. But the ghost of Ned Strange just inhabits the book the way he inhabits Redmond and it might leave you up at night.

So while I give this book high marks for the writing and for getting inside the head of someone possessed by the horrors of a dead man and driven to, well, things, I’m not entirely sure I can actually recommend this book to many people. It depends on what the reader can take.

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Jennifer

Jennifer works as a production editor for a major publishing company in NYC but will not review any books put out by the company (under any imprint) on this site since that can be considered a conflict of interest. Areas of interest include Robin Hood, pirates, zombies (and horror in general), Beowulf (and other early English literature, though Beowulf has a soft spot in her heart), medieval history, Celtic history and literature, history of diseases, and some odd subjects like bog bodies. She lives in New Jersey with a husband and a cat. You can find her on LibraryThing, Twitter, and Goodreads.

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31 Days of Halloween { list } Best Zombie Films

I’m a bit of a zombie aficionado. It happened in college, many many years ago. Freshman year, we had an all-night horror movie marathon on Halloween. During that I saw Evil Dead and the original Dawn of the Dead. Junior year I transferred to a new college and met my best friend. And although I’d been intrigued by zombies before that, he was the one who really opened my eyes to the awesomeness of zombies (he’s also the person who started my interest in cannibalism–theory, not practice–so it’s no wonder we’re still friends).

So here’s a list of my favorite zombie movies. (Note: I have not yet been able to see Dead Snow, which is about zombie Nazis. From that description alone, I suspect it would be on this list. I’m going to have to do VOD to see it, I think.)

1. The original Night of the Living Dead trilogy (Night of the Living Dead, Dawn of the Dead, Day of the Dead). It’s hard to separate these movies. The first is obviously the best, and it made George Romero the father of the zombie flick. Sure, it looks a bit dated these days, but it still delivers a good chill down the spine when you hear “They’re coming to get you, Barbara.” I prefer the original Dawn of the Dead to the remake because it says so much about consumerism. And Day of the Dead gives a hint of possible zombie evolution.

2. The Evil Dead trilogy (Evil Dead, Evil Dead II, Army of Darkness). Who doesn’t love Bruce Campbell? Or chainsaws? Or chainsaws applied to Deadites? Of course, Evil Dead II is more or less a remake, but that doesn’t make a marathon of these any less fun. And Army of Darkness has some of the most quotable movie lines in a zombie movie ever: “Gimme some sugar, baby!”

3. 28 Days Later. There is some bit of disagreement as to whether this is a zombie movie. I don’t care whether it’s radiation from outer space or a virus that causes people intense rage, if someone doesn’t stay dead, you’ve got a zombie. It’s one of the first movies I remember that used a virus as the cause of zombies (though the novel I Am Legend used a virus as a cause of a disease somewhere between vampirism and zombiism). It’s also the first movie that used fast zombies. Fast zombies are a lot scarier. Cause really, those slow zombies? Unless they gang up on you (which eventually does happen of course), you can pretty much get away from them. (Simon Pegg, of Shaun of the Dead, doesn’t like these newfangled fast zombies.) Given the plans of some of the survivors, I might have taken my chance with the infected instead.

4. I Sell the Dead. Black comedy about eighteenth-century grave robbers who discover a whole new side of the business with supernatural “corpses.” Starring Dominic Monaghan, who relates the story to a priest on the eve of his execution. The first time I saw it, I wasn’t aware that it was a comedy as well as a horror film. I was greatly pleased. I can’t recommend this one highly enough.

5. Shaun of the Dead. I remember the movie poster read “A Romantic Comedy. With Zombies.” That’s pretty much the only way you can get me to watch a rom-com–add zombies. (I do think the phrase “gimme some sugar, baby” is romantic, so perhaps I’m not the rom-com target audience.) I never would have thought of taking zombies out with a cricket bat before this. Also a movie that shows you the true meaning of friendship (I can never hear Queen’s “You’re My Best Friend” without thinking of this movie).

6. Zombieland. Sure it’s new. Sure it’s more of a coming-of-age story. But it has The Rules. The Rules are very important for surviving a zompocalypse. It also has that Bill Murray cameo. And if you end up craving Twinkies, let me tell you they’re not nearly as good as you remember from your childhood.

7. Fido. If you think keeping a zombie as a pet is a good, fun idea, you really need to watch this.

8. Return of the Living Dead. This has nothing to do with any of Romero’s movies. It’s utterly tongue-in-cheek. But it’s a very important movie in the zombie genre. This is the movie where zombies first call for braiiinnnnsssss!!!! (Before this, they just moaned and groaned and were satisfied with any body part they could get into their mouths.)

9. Re-Animator. Again, if it used to be dead and it’s not anymore, I say it’s a zombie. And when you base a movie on an H. P. Lovecraft story, fun ensues. Yes, this is one of the more cheesy movies on my list (be surprised they’re not all bad cheese-filled made for SciFi movies) but it has its creepy moments.

10. The Resident Evil series. Yes, the series has been going downhill, but Milla, er, Alice kicks ass through all of them. And that’s pretty much what you see these movies for. The first definitely had a few creepy moments.

Jennifer

Jennifer works as a production editor for a major publishing company in NYC but will not review any books put out by the company (under any imprint) on this site since that can be considered a conflict of interest. Areas of interest include Robin Hood, pirates, zombies (and horror in general), Beowulf (and other early English literature, though Beowulf has a soft spot in her heart), medieval history, Celtic history and literature, history of diseases, and some odd subjects like bog bodies. She lives in New Jersey with a husband and a cat. You can find her on LibraryThing, Twitter, and Goodreads.

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