Archive for the ‘Fantasy’ Category

The Tangle Box

Wednesday, September 1st, 2010

The Tangle Box is the fourth book in the Magic Kingdom of Landover series.

The Tangle Box, by Terry Brooks

The Tangle Box, by Terry Brooks

I think that this one is my favorite in the series so far. Ben ends up getting trapped in the Tangle Box with Nightshade and Strabo. None of them know who or what exactly they are, and they definitely don’t remember being enemies. They don’t completely get along, but without their “labels,” they actually get along a lot better. The three have to work together to get out of the Tangle Box.

Terry Brooks never fails to write a great adventure. Nightshade is now one of my favorite characters, because of the different side of her I got to see in this one.

The next book in the series is Witches’ Brew, which I’m assuming means I’m going to get more of Nightshade!


Note: Read this one in July, too. I swear I will get better at this!

Wizard At Large

Saturday, May 22nd, 2010
Wizard At Large, by Terry Brooks

Wizard At Large, by Terry Brooks

Wizard At Large is the third book in the Landover series by Terry Brooks (the only fantasy author I read). I started with Brooks’ Shannara series and started reading the Landover series a few months ago when my boss recommended it.

Magic Kingdom for Sale — SOLD! is the first book in the series. Ben Holiday, a Chicago lawyer and widow, buys the magic kingdom of Landover from the evil wizard Meeks, who wants the kingdom for his own. Ben must overcome the challenges of being king to a land which hasn’t had a king in a very, very long time, and he must keep Meeks from taking the medallion that allows him to be king of Landover from him.

In the second book, The Black Unicorn, rumors of a black unicorn begin to spread. Ben, Questor, and Willow each have vivid dreams that are seemingly prophetic. Because of the dreams, Meeks is able to trick Ben into thinking he has lost the medallion to Meeks, and takes over. Ben must reclaim the medallion and defeat Meeks.

In Wizard At Large, Questor Thews — Ben’s Court Wizard — tries to turn Abernathy back into a human from the half man, half dog hybrid Questor accidentally made him years ago. As usual, poor Questor’s magic backfires and sends Abernathy to the U.S. — and into the hands of their enemy, Michel Ard Rhi.

Ben and company have to get Abernathy back before the wish demon Questor accidentally transfers in court scribe Abernathy’s place destroys Landover — and before Michel connives Abernathy into giving him Ben’s medallion, which Questor used while trying to transform Abernathy.

“Wizard” is my favorite in the series so far. I felt so bad for Questor, who always means well but has a hard time mastering the magic his evil half brother Meeks is so good at.

I read most of “Wizard” in one night. I couldn’t access the internet to work, so I spoiled myself and read instead. Terry Brooks has a habit of reviewing everything from the previous books, which worked in my favor this time since it’d been a while since I’d read The Black Unicorn. It would be annoying to someone reading the books back to back, but it’s usually brief and I usually just skim over it.

Brooks also uses a lot of description and does a lot of telling rather than showing, but the stories he writes are always so good that I barely notice.

Wizard At Large is a fantastic read for those who love fantasy and for those who like adventure stories. You can even read it to a child before bed, because Brooks keeps his prose family friendly — even though his main audience is adults. (I started reading his novels when I was ten or eleven, and my mom did, too.)

What did you think of “Wizard”? What is your favorite book so far in the series, and why?


PS: Photo coming soon! Photo is up!

The Things They Left Behind

Monday, April 12th, 2010

9/11 was a punch in the face for everyone here in the States. Whether you believe it was terrorists or a government conspiracy, it still was a horrible event. Everyone remembers where they were and what they were doing when it happened. I was in 8th grade, in history class, and the classroom phone rang and our history teacher turned the news on. My mom raced to the school to pick up my sister and I, because she wanted us close.

Fuck, I will never forget that morning.

I think the event itself has left us all with lots of questions: How did it feel to be the victims? How could someone do something like this? What are we not being told (because I personally believe there is a lot we weren’t told about 9/11)?

Stephen King attempted to answer some of those questions in “The Things They Left Behind,” a short story from his Just After Sunset collection.

Scott Staley becomes haunted by his coworkers’ office belongings when 9/11 destroys his office. He and another coworker are the only two survivors from his company.

This is one of those stories where an object or a group of objects appears in your possession, and even if you try to get rid of them, they will continue to come back until they are put back in their rightful place.

There’s a certain creep factor to this, but because of who the objects belonged to and the circumstances under which their owners died, the story is less creepy and more ethereal — a tribute to the real men and women who lost their lives that day.

“The Things They Left Behind” is one of my favorites from this collection.

Where were you and what were you doing on 9/11?

Flirt (An Anita Blake novel)

Sunday, April 11th, 2010

I used to be a HUGE fan of the Anita Blake series by Laurell K. Hamilton. And by “huge,” I mean, I read the first book and then bought every other book after it. (At the time, there were several books out in paperback, so I really lucked out.)

Flirt + crazy morning hair = Freaking Bookworm!

Flirt + crazy morning hair = Freaking Bookworm!

I became enthralled with Anita; she was a strong lead in a world full of vampires, werewolves, and all kinds of other mythical creatures. She was a necromancer, a vampire hunter, and the object of affection of the Master of the City — the gorgeous Jean Claude.

I most loved watching her work as a necromancer. She’s a consultant at a reanimation firm in St. Louis. It was cool to see the different clients, their reasons for raising their dead, and the things that could go wrong as a result of missing a step or having too much power.

It was also cool watching her relationship with Jean Claude unfold. That is, until the ardeur storyline started.

Basically, Anita is now some sort of living vampire, and is Jean Claude’s human servant. Subsequently, she also began to gain some of his line’s powers. One of those is the ability to feed off of sex. At first, this was cool. My favorite series started to borderline erotica, which is fine with me. But as the series got longer and longer, it seemed that each book was less story and more, well, sex. It got to the point where each sex scene was the most annoying thing ever — and that’s a leap, for me.

I stopped reading Anita Blake, because it just felt pointless. There was a sex scene every five pages, it seemed, and Anita? Became the biggest ho of fantasy fiction EVER. She had over five lovers, five boyfriends.

So when my Nana — who is a huge Anita Blake fan, and the reason I started reading them — lent me Flirt, I was a little skeptical. I hadn’t read any Anita books since The Harlequin, so I’d missed two. Nana said this one was much better than they’ve been lately, so I shrugged and left it sitting in a pile of other stuff for a few days.

I got bored with On the Road, though, and didn’t want to start reading the Batman graphic novels Mike lent me just yet, so I decided to crack open Flirt. Call it morbid curiosity, or an old habit, but I kind of wanted to see if it really was better.

It started off with Anita in her office at Animators, Inc., discussing a possible zombie raising with a client. Immediately, I was excited; I couldn’t remember the last time an Anita Blake book had spent any time on her necromancy. Unfortunately, though, the book had a slow start, and when Anita’s boyfriends were described — “pretty,” “long hair,” “pretty,” — I almost shut the book for good. But I plowed on, determined to see if this time would be different.

Although Flirt isn’t Laurell K. Hamilton’s best, it’s the best she’s written in the series in a while. There was only one sex scene, and it didn’t go on and on like they usually do in this series. The book focused almost entirely on Anita’s necromancy, and explored some more of her powers (which I am not going to tell you about, because if you haven’t read much of the series, this will completely spoil you).

Stationary Bike

Monday, April 5th, 2010

I was enamored by “Stationary Bike,” another short story from Stephen King‘s Just After Sunset collection. In the story, Richard Sifkitz is told by his doctor that his cholesterol is way too high and that he’d better lay off the fast food and donuts. A seemingly innocent analogy that Richard’s doctor gives him becomes much, much more when he paints a mural to entertain him while riding his stationary bike.

This is, hands down, one of the best stories in this collection. I couldn’t stop reading it; even on the nights when I’d taken my medication and my eyelids were far from convincing “Just one more page,” I pushed further and further into it until I literally fell asleep with the book in my hand.

All I can say is, read this story! It’s just way too good to keep to myself.

If you have read it, what did you think?

What Sanya thought of Twilight (Guest Post!)

Saturday, February 6th, 2010

In keeping with the spirit of borrowingcollecting book reviews from around the web, I’d like to introduce you to the lovely Sanya, from Rough Text.

Sanya recently read and reviewed the first of the Twilight Saga. Please click through to the the original post to read all of Sanya’s footnotes, as they totally ROCK this review.

One month ago, I made the strange and awkward decision to read Twilight. I spoke of this decision to my friends and some random strangers, and I got mixed reactions. Some people laughed. Some said, “Well, of course, you still like *NSYNC, why wouldn’t you read Twilight?” Most people just stared at me with a confused look on their faces. “Why?” they’d finally ask, their minds completely void of any reason I could possibly have for reading Twilight. Why? Because I am a writer, friends. And writers have to read. And not only do they have to read, but they have to read both good and bad stuff. Bad stuff teaches us how to not be bad, you know? Plus, bad stuff is usually entertaining.

And boy, was this ever bad.

The book started off tamely enough, relatively speaking. “I’d never given much thought to how I would die”, etc. Even still, I immediately had to stop myself from hurling myself across the room just so that I could stop experiencing this book. I hate people who soliloquize before dying. Just shut up and die. When I die, I am going to say the best final five words ever to whoever is listening, and then shut up and die.

And then it began. Bella Swan moves to Forks, Washington because she is super selfless and wants her mom to have a happy married life with her new husband. So she moves to this teeny town where everyone knows who she is, and she’s all, “My name is Bella, not Isabella, GEEZ! Then, of course, she meets the vampires.

Now, about the vampires. Stephanie Meyer describes the family of vampires as “beautiful”. And that’s it, pretty much. Sure, there is some vague description of hair colour and the chiseled marble that is Edward’s body, but mostly, it’s just, “Oh, Edward was so beautiful. His face was so beautiful. His eyes were so beautiful. His skin was cold and beautiful. His family was beautiful.” I’m all for simplicity, but HOW ABOUT A MORE SPECIFIC DESCRIPTION? I just kept imagining a nondescript Abercrombie and Fitch model and was sorely disappointed when I watched the movie.

My main issue with the plot of this book is that Edward, who had a meltdown after smelling Bella and left school for a week, came back and was all smiley and happy, and introduced himself, and walked with her, and GOT PERSONAL. He got personal! He freaking pushed Mike away and carried Bella in his arms and saved her from dying via sliding truck, and all of that bullshit, and then he’s all, “We can’t be friends.” Bella is like WTF but because she is shy or whatever, she doesn’t approach him again. And then HE approaches HER! He continues to approach her and follow her around, and then he’s all, “We can’t be friends!! I’m dangerous!” Meanwhile, I’m sitting here, dumbfounded. Why is he following her? Why does he continue to chase after her if only to say, “Stay away from me!” Hello? A girl can’t take that many mixed signals, especially not a girl as dumb as Bella.

Ah, Bella. Good ol’ Bella. This girl is as dumb as a stick. First of all, I have no idea why she likes Edward, and I am pretty sure it’s because (1) he’s hot, and (2) he looked at her like she smelled bad for one week while the other boys fawned over her. Can you say “low self-concept, -identity, and -esteem”? (Probably not five times fast.) But then, after that first week, after Edward had calmed the heck down, he also followed her around. Of course, he followed her around saying that she should stay away from him, so maybe this is all some sort of teenage thing where you tell her one thing and she does the exact opposite. I’m pretty sure her IQ is 5.

And Edward. Why does Edward like Bella? Because she smells delicious? That’s a great basis for a romantic relationship, I tell ya. I’m going to start dating ICE CREAM.

It’s just that nowhere in the book does Meyer detail any common interests that Edward and Bella have, unless you count the common interest Edward and Bella have in Edward. This relationship is built on a foundation of a new “vegetarian” craving “meat”, and so he goes around protecting the meat from death because she is the only kind of meat he likes. But he’s also not going to eat the meat. What the hell is the point of this relationship? I am so confused.

Besides the actual plot of the book, which can have me ranting for hours, the writing itself was okay. My main issue with the writing was that I would sometimes fall asleep in the middle of a chapter because Meyer would be going on for five thousand paragraphs about what Bella ate for breakfast, or which pants she put on in the morning, and why she chose those particular pants, or why she made a particular meal for dinner, or why she listened to a particular CD. These details contributed nothing to the plot and did nothing to progress the story. And when was this book written? Apparently, in her room, Bella has a computer so old that she has to wait 20 minutes for it to start and then use dial-up to get to the Internet. I get that Forks is a small town, really, but it’s in freaking Washington, not on Abydos. Get a freaking new computer!

Also, I know I already said that Bella is dumb, but why is she so dumb? The girl almost dies, and then she’s all, “But I don’t care! I love you!” Why? I just… I don’t know. I don’t know what to say. She is in a hospital with zero consciousness for days, and she finally wakes up and asks Edward to turn her into a vampire. Um? Where are your priorities? Don’t you care about insurance?

But I don’t want to end on a bad note. The writing itself had no blatant grammatical errors that made me want to slam my head into a wall, and I did stick it out for the entire book, and the final sentence did have me on the edge of my seat, and now I will read the next book, and the entire series. So, yes. The plot is ridiculous, but Meyer sold it. I am impressed. Good writers are able to sell anything, and Meyer was able to get 13-year-old weirdo girls to suspend disbelief long enough for the book to spend weeks and weeks on the #1 spot on the New York Times Best-Seller List. Wow. Every writer’s dream.

Oh my god, you guys. I just read that Meyer graduated with a degree in English from Brigham Young University. That explains so much, you have no idea.

PS: One of these days, I am going to review Twilight here. Probably. But most likely not, since I’m absolutely nauseated by the fandom at this point in time.

There is nothing like a stack of books waiting to be read

Sunday, January 31st, 2010

Freaking Bookworm Sunday Stack!

I got some new books!

I’m about twenty pages into Cut, and had a really hard time putting it down so that I could get some work done. I’ve read another one of Patricia McCormick’s novels, Sold, which made me fall in love with her writing. Not only does McCormick really research her story, but she also spins very interesting and realistic characters.

Cut is about a young teenage girl who is placed in a residential treatment facility after she begins regularly, compulsively self-harming. I’ve been wanting to read Cut for a while, but every time I visited the bookstore I could only afford one book. Yesterday, I (over)indulged and spent almost $40 on books; in addition to Cut, I also bought The Lovely Bones by Alice Sebold and On the Road by Jack Kerouac. I now have plenty of crackbooks to keep me happy throughout the next couple of weeks. (Of course, now that I spent all that extra money on books, I suddenly have a bunch of doctors’ appointments to keep and prescriptions to fill. But I’d rather have books and be broke than be broke without books!)

On the Road is about two friends who take a road trip. During my first semester of college, I had to read an excerpt from it and fell in love with Jack Kerouac’s writing. The professor who taught that class has been trying to get me to read the full book ever since.

I’ve heard lots of good things about The Lovely Bones, so I decided to give that one a shot, too. I scoured the store for a copy with the original blue cover, as opposed to the motion picture cover; I don’t want to be seen as a bandwagon jumper if I’m reading it out in public. ;)

I’m really excited to have three new books to read. I’m also reading Thunder and Blood by Stacy Voss. I’m finding that I really enjoy reading a couple of books at a time.

So tell me, what’s in your “To Read” stack?