August 14

Apex Magazine, July 2009

_The renewal of Apex Magazine begins with “She Called Me Sweetie” by Glen Lewis Gillette. Here Gillette spins a wicked tale of clones and loneliness, all from a perfectly-toned child point of view. Readers can suspect what G might find when he jealously creeps into Mommy’s bedroom, but the story will hold their attention to the bitter end.

“…That Has Such People in It” by Jennifer Pelland can be summed up with the phrase “And the meek shall inherit the earth”. In this utopian appearing dystopia, humanity locks away its homeless and its violent in order to make things appear pretty for aliens visiting from a distant land. As the above-grounders flourish those below ground are healed, made sane and forced through starvation into behaving. While heavier-handed than many of Pelland’s stories it ends with an almost trademark finish which readers will find to be a bit of bitter justice.

Jeff Carlson’s “The Frozen Sky” is a halting tale of hard science fiction that pits Vonnie, a woman exploring for Earth, against Europa’s native insect/amphibian things. The tale is long and paralleled with what happened to cause Vonnie to be the Earth last survivor on the planet trying to face down the native species with her attempts at survival. This story will appeal to hard SF lovers, but it didn’t work as well for me, as I felt too distracted by other elements to get properly wrapped up in the dynamics of Vonnie’s fight for her life. This story is a classic example of a story that could be adventure with strong SF elements, or SF with some adventure elements with execution making all the difference between the two.

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August 11

Ulrik by Steven E. Wedel

ISBN: 1-933274-17-4

Ulrik stands somewhere between the traditional horror werewolf and the newer urban fantasy werewolf. This follow up to Murdered by Human Wolves starts firm and fast with Shara, who some believe is the famed Mother, a female werewolf who can birth live young. Except Shara has given it all up, taking a serum to prevent her monthly changes so she can raise Joey, her werewolf son that other werewolves think proves her role, or represents an end to their familiar life style. As three, or more, werewolf factions prepare to fight, Shara must decide who to trust to save her son, not to mention herself.

First a warning, as part of a series Shara’s tale is not complete in this book. Also, I, at times, found Shara to be a wishy-washy characters as her drive to protect her child becomes quite sidelined once she is reunited with him and she promptly chooses to spend all her time with other people.

The pacing is slower than most urban fantasies, giving Ulrik a more epic fantasy/horror feel. Other book elements truer to horror are the multi-person, third person point of view, the way the characters are sympathetic, but the reader is not fully immersed in the characters and a two-step-removed angle to the love story. The werewolves themselves are also closer to traditional horror werewolves than the people with fur more commonly found in urban fantasy.

However like urban fantasy the politics of the pack and personal vendettas are the driving forces of the story, creating a complex plot greatly affected by the characters’ action or in action. The characters may not be immersive, but the werewolf culture and history are very important to the story.

In all Ulrik reminded me, in theme, style and characterization, very much of S.P. Somtow’s Moondance, which while not my traditional favorite style of shape shifter novel is one I find myself reading over and over again with just as much enjoyment every time.

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August 6

Iron Kissed by Patricia Briggs

Reviewed for MonsterLibrian.com’s Werewolf Month

Ace Fantasy, 2008
ISBN:9780441015665
Available: New and Used

Coyote walker Mercy Thompson has faced killer werewolves and has gotten mixed up in vampire feuds, but in Iron Kissed she is roundly told to keep out of fae business. Her friend and mentor, Zee, is being set up for the murder of a cop (who wasn’t exactly innocent), by the local cops, and the Gray Lords are willing to sacrifice Zee to keep fae secrets hidden. But Mercy refuses to abandon her friend, no matter what everyone around her says, or what it might cost her.

This is possibly the darkest Mercy book so far. Still reeling from the events at the end of the last book, Mercy is questioning herself and her actions. This book takes her to terrible places, where the reader might have trouble following her. Briggs expertly portrays the fae in the tradition of Grimm’s fairy tales, complex creatures that despise humans, except as toys, but are strangely dependent on them.

Iron Kissed and the other books in the series are recommended for public libraries, and for private collectors who like dark fiction, but might be tired of the familiar tropes of horror.

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August 4

I am going to cry.

ETA: Thank you so much to those who have donated so far!!

Edited to Add: I’m making this sticky because I will be accepting BOOK donations from those who want to give. So will Shiloh Walker (who has a PO Box, thus prefers books sent to her).  All genres, age levels and fiction/non are being sought.

Please consider donating, even if it’s duplicate copies, or books you bought and didn’t read or your used books trade in pile. Our librarians and community are very grateful.

Edited to Add again (8-7-09): Here’s an update from a local news station. The main branch of the library is going to be closed until sometimes after Labor Day. At this point damage is estimated at $5 million and over 50,000 books not to mention boilers, elevators, computers and three, not two, Bookmobiles.)

This is the main branch of the Louisville Free Public Library: (picture from this site)

Continue reading

August 3

Blood Bound by Patricia Briggs

Reviewed for MonsterLibrarian.com’s Werewolf Month

Ace Fantasy, 2007
ISBN: 9789441914736
Available: New and Used

There’s something almost soothing about Mercy Thompson, mechanic and skinwalker, adopted werewolf and friend to the fae. She’s the kind of urban fantasy heroine who can walk through a door without some sort of power challenge. She keeps a junked out car in the middle of her yard to disturb the local Alpha’s view, “forgets” to tell people things to avoid fights and uses their own training, body language and tempers against them.

In the second book in the series, Mercy’s vampire friend Stefan asks for her help, and ends up dragging her into one of the darkest plots imaginable. Briggs pulls no punches, pitting the almost sweet, barely supernatural Mercy against a demon-possessed vampire whose very presence threatens the emotional control of vampires, humans, werewolves and fae. Mercy has to step up and find the vampire and his maker before more people die, particularly the people she’s come to care about.

Blood Bound is a solid supernatural mystery shot through with veins of true darkness and a collection of odd and intriguing characters. The Mercy Thompson books already have an established audience who should be pleased to find this one included in the library stacks. Recommended to public and private libraries.

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