Lightreads's Reviews > The Cold Commands
The Cold Commands (A Land Fit for Heroes, #2)
by Richard K. Morgan
by Richard K. Morgan
So it's weird, but I don't really get fantasy-scifi. I like fantasy, and I like scifi, and I love cool genre-bendy remixy mashuppy things. So you'd think putting scifi in my fantasy would be like putting peanut butter in my chocolate, but it's actually more like putting cottage cheese in my chocolate. Just because someone on Top Chef thinks it's a good idea doesn't mean we plebes actually want to eat it, amiright?
I dunno, I've also seen this as a bit of a personal failing, a weakness of imagination, maybe. It's just, you start mixing scifi elements -- aliens and tech -- into an epic fantasy story, and it doesn't feel like a cool J.Z. Vs. Vivaldi mashup to me, it just feels discordant and sloppy and untidy.
Any recommendations on this, btw? Scifi-fantasy blending that feels organic or cool instead of weird and rule breaking?
Aaanyway, so this book. I don't actually have much to say about it, obviously. Middle book of what was marketed as epic fantasy, but what is growing subtle scifi underpinnings. It's funny, because this book is tighter and more controlled than The Steel Remains, but I actually liked Steel better. There was something raw about it, like its messiness might end in your guts spilling out on the floor. There was less of a goring thrust to this one, and more fancy swordplay, if you follow me.
But you know, I just like his stuff. Always have, suspect I mostly will.
I dunno, I've also seen this as a bit of a personal failing, a weakness of imagination, maybe. It's just, you start mixing scifi elements -- aliens and tech -- into an epic fantasy story, and it doesn't feel like a cool J.Z. Vs. Vivaldi mashup to me, it just feels discordant and sloppy and untidy.
Any recommendations on this, btw? Scifi-fantasy blending that feels organic or cool instead of weird and rule breaking?
Aaanyway, so this book. I don't actually have much to say about it, obviously. Middle book of what was marketed as epic fantasy, but what is growing subtle scifi underpinnings. It's funny, because this book is tighter and more controlled than The Steel Remains, but I actually liked Steel better. There was something raw about it, like its messiness might end in your guts spilling out on the floor. There was less of a goring thrust to this one, and more fancy swordplay, if you follow me.
But you know, I just like his stuff. Always have, suspect I mostly will.
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Christine (AR)
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rated it 5 stars
Jan 02, 2012 06:51pm
Have you read Prince of Thorns by Mark Laurence? I think it fits the scifi-fantasy criteria. I loved it. Then again, I gave this book 5 stars, so ymmv. :)
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I have no idea why, but I rated this higher than the first, even though the first has a better guts spilling factor, as you say. Have you read the Long Price Quartet by Ohshitiveforgottenhisname? It isn't really fantasy/scifi, but the fantasy elements seem to talk about technology in a way that's really interesting.
Seriously, why can't I remember his name?
Daniel Abraham, which I only know because I recently read his new book. I should try that quartet again. I liked the first one, but not quite enough to get me moving fast through the rest. And now of course the likelyhood of finding them in an audio form rather than a crappy scanned ebook are near zero.
