Monday, September 7, 2009

Announcement & Cover art

I look over to a new hectic week. Tomorrow I’ll be leaving for a few days on a business trip, but I believe that I’ll be coming back home on Thursday. But only for a day and a post or two, because on Friday I hit the road again and go to my wife’s best friend wedding. So, until next Monday I’ll be mostly away from home.

But don’t go too far, because as I said I think I’ll be able to make a post or two this week. And to keep you company here is a very hot covert art, just taken from Mark Charan Newton’s blog, the artwork for his second novel in the “Legends of the Red Sun” series, “City of Ruin”. The artist of the cover artwork is Benjamin Carre, the same one who made the cover for “Nights of Villjamur”. Also if you head at Mark's blog you’ll find an attempt for the book blurb.

Enjoy and see you soon :)

In the mailbox

I received a few new titles in the mailbox in the last week, with one of them making me wonder once again when I'll start working on my pile o' shame:

- "Dust of Dreams" by Steven Erikson (through the courtesy of Transworld Books);

On the Letherii continent the exiled Malazan army commanded by Adjunct Tavore begins its march into the eastern Wastelands, to fight for an unknown cause against an enemy it has never seen.
The fate awaiting the Bonehunters is one no soldier can prepare for, and one no mortal soul can withstand – the foe is uncertainty and the only weapon worth wielding is stubborn courage.In war everyone loses, and this brutal truth can be found in the eyes of every soldier in every world.
Destinies are never simple.Truths are neither clear nor sharp.The Tales of the Malazan Book of the Fallen are drawing to a close in a distant place, beneath indifferent skies, as the last great army of the Malazan Empire seeks a final battle in the name of redemption. Final questions remain to be answered: can one's deeds be heroic when no one is there to see it? Can that which is unwitnessed forever change the world? The answers await the Bonehunters, beyond the Wastelands…

- "Dead Souls" edited by Mark S. Deniz (through the courtesy of Morrigan Books);

Before God created light, there was darkness. Even after He illuminated the world, there were shadows — shadows that allowed the darkness to fester and infect the unwary. The tales found within Dead Souls explore the recesses of the soul; those people and creatures that could not escape the shadows. From the inherent cruelness of humanity to malevolent forces, Dead Souls explores the depths of humanity as a lesson to the ignorant, the naive and the unsuspecting. God created light, but it is a temporary grace that will ultimately fail us, for the darkness is stronger and our souls…are truly dead.

- "Grants Pass" edited by Jennifer Brozek & Amanda Pillar (through the courtesy of Morrigan Books);

The apocalypse has arrived.
Humanity was decimated by bio-terrorism; three engineered plagues were let loose on the world. Barely anyone has survived.
Just a year before the collapse, Grants Pass, Oregon, USA, was publicly labelled as a place of sanctuary in a whimsical online, “what if” post. Now, it has become one of the last known refuges, and the hope, of mankind.
Would you go to Grants Pass based on the words of someone you’ve never met?

- "Raven Wakes the World" by John Adcox (through the courtesy of Mercury Retrograde Press);

Christmas means a hundred different things in a hundred lands. But no matter where you travel, winter is a time for storytelling. Raven Wakes the World presents four very different holiday stories sure to touch the heart and wake the wonder of the season for all readers, young and old.

- "There Was a Crooked Man" by Edward Morris (through the courtesy of Mercury Retrograde Press).

Welcome to the world of master fabulist Edward Morris, where History has been pulled down a Hieronymus Bosch rabbit-hole and everything makes far too much sense. In this first volume of Morris’s alternate history tour de force, on an East Coast two centuries after Armageddon, a rogue soldier throws himself back in Time to wreak havoc upon History and feed on the blood in the streets. He lands in the New World with the first white settlers. The Irrakwa try to stop him. And from two centuries ahead, the Law tries to follow him back…
Dare to step inside.History is only one of the things you will never see in quite the same way again.

Thank you all very much!

Saturday, September 5, 2009

My life according to the books I've read this year

I've seen this meme on John's blog, Grasping for the Wind, and I found it to be interesting and challenging. So I picked it up to see how it will turned out for me.

Using only books you have read this year (2009), cleverly answer these questions. Try not to repeat a book title.

Describe yourself: One

How do you feel: Putting the Pieces in Place

Describe where you currently live: Madder Mysteries

If you could go anywhere, where would you go: Avempartha

Your favorite form of transport: The Alchemy of Stone

Your best friend is: The Magic Thief

You and your friends are: The Company

What’s the weather like: Gunpowder

Favorite time of day: Nights of Villjamur

If your life was a: Yellow Blue Tibia

What is life to you: The Angel’s Game

Your fear: The Absence

What is the best advice you have to give: How to Make Monsters

Thought for the Day: The Reach of Children

How I would like to die: Heaven’s Bones

My soul’s present condition: The Devil You Know

Friday, September 4, 2009

"The Angel's Game" by Carlos Ruiz Zafón

Format: Hardcover, 448 pages

In an abandoned mansion at the heart of Barcelona, a young man - David Martin - makes his living by writing sensationalist novels under a pseudonym. The survivor of a troubled childhood, he has taken refuge in the world of books, and spends his nights spinning baroque tales about the city's underworld. But perhaps his dark imaginings are not as strange as they seem, for in a locked room deep within the house are letters hinting at the mysterious death of the previous owner. Like a slow poison, the history of the place seeps into his bones as he struggles with an impossible love. Then David receives a letter from a reclusive French editor, Andreas Corelli, who makes him the offer of a lifetime. He is to write a book with the power to change hearts and minds. In return, he will receive a fortune, perhaps more. But as David begins the work, he realises that there is a connection between this haunting book and the shadows that surround his home. Set in the turbulent 1920s, The Angel's Game takes us back to the gothic universe of the Cemetery of the Forgotten Books, the Sempere and Son bookshop, and the winding streets of Barcelona's old quarter, in a masterful tale about the magic of books and the darkest corners of the human soul.

When it comes to books and reading the best thing that happened to me last year was by far “The Shadow of the Wind” and the discovery of its author Carlos Ruiz Zafón. So, in a predictable course my most anticipated book for this year was another novel of the Spanish author, “The Angel’s Game”.

“The Angel’s Game” is a prequel of “The Shadow of the Wind”, but pretty much can stand on its own too. For those familiar with “The Shadow of the Wind” this novel will present them familiar places, Barcelona as the main setting and the Cemetery of the Forgotten Books, characters such as Sempere, Isabella and Barceló and themes, love and friendship as main courses. But easily the novel sets itself apart too, bringing forth a new themes, confronting the personal demons, that of a personal price and that of the most known pact of all, characters as lovely and powerful as ever and places, like the mysterious and creepy mansion where the main character, David Martin, lives.

For me once again the relationship with the Carlos Ruiz Zafón’s novel became a very personal and selfish one. With the help of the words inscribed in its pages I became indifferent to the outside world, isolating myself from the distractions offered by it and loosing myself completely in the story. Rarely does it happen to me not to be able to put a book down, even for a short while, or going to sleep only thinking of the next morning when I can pick up the reading where I left it. Carlos Ruiz Zafón doesn’t bring anything new in terms of themes, but the way he plays with the known ones may easily make the reader addictive to his works.

The main character of the novel, David Martin, is helping his creator in building a strong story, but not only him. All the characters, major or minor ones, are very lively, making me truly feel their presence in the unfolding events of the story. Although some of them are only penned and have a passing performance still they contribute fully to the atmosphere and are not just cardboard decoration. In the center of all is, naturally, David Martin. A strong character, one of the strongest I’ve read, and with whom I am certain that every reader can find a thing to relate to. His relationships with other characters are wonderful things as well, especially the one with his assistant, Isabella, making me delighted by the resulted dialogues.

Like in the Carlos Ruiz Zafón’s previous novel I read, “The Shadow of the Wind”, the main setting of the novel is the city of Barcelona and once again the author uncovers a city with which it shows a deeper connection. Throughout all the reading moments I felt that if I close my eyes I can see myself walking the streets of Barcelona in the 1920s, almost like a travel through time and space. There is also a connection between the city and the main character and in many occasions it will seem that the setting shifts accordingly to David Martin’s emotions. And all these disposition changes, of the character or city, will help create the atmosphere of the novel. An atmosphere which is darker and grittier than the one in the previous novel I read by Zafón, but which makes its contribution to the mystery of the story.

I can’t honestly say that I enjoyed more “The Angel’s Game” than “The Shadow of the Wind”, but the fact that reading it with high expectations set by “The Shadow of the Wind” and all of them being fulfilled didn’t came as a surprise must have a role in my opinion. For certain though “The Angel’s Game” is the best book I read this year and the way Carlos Ruiz Zafón plays with emotions and the way he crafts his stories made me fall in love with his works. I just wonder what Carlos Ruiz Zafón has in store for me next?

Thursday, September 3, 2009

Cover art

Clarkesworld Magazine, the wonderful monthly e-zine, published the September issue, the 36th of the magazine. And this month once again Clarkesworld Magazine has an amazing cover art made by the Portuguese artist, Andreas Rocha (who I had the pleasure to interview on my Fantasy Art posts). Andreas produced an amazing artwork, as usual, entitled “Repairshop” and which follows proudly the steps taken by the cover art of the issues published by Clarkesworld Magazine.

***
Joe Abercrombie posted on his blog the cover artwork for his novel, “The Blade Itself” the first one in “The First Law” trilogy, for the mass market edition published this year by Gollancz on 1st of October if I am not mistaken. The artwork is made by Chris McGrath, an artist who illustrated many novels especially Urban Fantasy ones. Now, I’ll admit that this cover it is interesting, but I feel more attracted by the original one and I like it more. I find the cover designed by Laura Brett to be simpler, but more powerful and more mysterious, making me pick the book up if I see it in a library.

Wednesday, September 2, 2009

A new blog

Today I want to point you to a new interesting blog. Well, the blog is at the beginning, but the reviewer is not. Rob or Valashain as he is known on the forum of BSC Review reviewed books on the BSC Review and through those reviews I discovered quite a few interesting readings. I say a few because he tends to read more Science Fiction, but still I found his reviews to be interesting and thoughtful. He started on his own now and he is blogging at the Val’s Random Comments, where he already made an impressive start with 15 reviews in two months. I recommend visiting his blog and I hope you’ll find interesting things there. I also want to wish Rob the very best with his new review blog!

Tuesday, September 1, 2009

"Death's Head" by David Gunn

"Death's Head"
by David Gunn
Format: Paperback, 544 pages
Publisher: Bantam Press

Few survive the cage. Fewer still live to face the whipping post. Of those who do, few are in a state to know what is happening to them. One of those who does is ex-Legion Etrangere sergeant Sven Tveskoeg. As this stubborn, insubordinate son-of-a-bitch feels the first lash fall, he hears the desert tribes attack, and watches as they slaughter his comrades before they can execute him.
Rescued from certain death, Sven joins the tribes. Until his ruthless skills come to the attention of the Death's Head, the infamous elite special ops force. They want Sven to sort out a little 'local difficulty'. But it seems all is not as it should be. Sven feels he's a pawn in a deadly game, and pawns have an unfortunate habit of being sacrificed. But Death's Head Second Lieutenant Tveskoeg, Obsidian Cross 3rd Class, is nobody’s sacrifice. And even a pawn can checkmate a king…

“Death’s Head” is the debut novel of David Gunn and also the first novel in the eponymous series.

In my high-school years I spent a summer of reading in the company of Sven Hassel’s novels; 14 pseudo-autobiographical novels of adventures in the World War II. I fell in love with those novels and although they describe many horrors of war one of the words that can easily describe them is fun. Now, it looks like that summer is back once more, because “Death’s Head” very much reminded me of the Sven Hassel’s novels I read in high-school. David Gunn writes a science fiction novel, set in a distant future of our universe, with planet Earth gone and transformed into a myth, and with its main setting the theatre of war. My mind went back to those memories also because “Death’s Head” main character is named Sven and is not matching any criteria of role-model as we know it, maybe with a few minor exceptions.

Like I said, Lieutenant Sven Tveskoeg is not a role-model, but he is a very entertaining character. I become accustomed with him almost immediately and although he is not the best constructed character I’ve seen I still enjoyed following his adventures. He doesn’t show many qualities still his loyalty is to be appreciated and this is shown especially in the second part of the novel, when Sven starts forming a military group, called The Aux, and in which we will meet some of the other characters of the novel. Although I am certain that these characters will appear in the next novels of the series I found them even less developed than Sven Tveskoeg. There is another unusual character, though it is more properly a thing, Sven’s smart gun, the SIG-37. The remarks of the intelligent gun are a delight and offered me very entertaining and hilarious moments.

David Gunn presented me with an intriguing setting in his novel. I liked how he imagined the future of our universe and how he populated it. The political situation is very interesting, the inhabited planets visited in this reading offer captivating images and the alien races met in “Death’s Head” satisfied my imagination. But despite my interest in these elements, I have to say that all of them are only scratched at the surface and all of them lacking the proper depth. But despite of these elements being only hinted the novel overcomes this aspect in terms of adventure, action scenes and adrenaline pumped sequences, because these come in the fullest.

I’ll be totally honest with you, I don’t know how many details of David Gunn’s novel will stick with me for the time being, but as I like to relax occasionally watching movies like “Rambo”, so I need from time to time to relax with books such as “Death’s Head”. It certainly offered me a very fun and entertaining reading.