Beth Tabler's Blog, page 193

April 8, 2022

Review – The Finder of the Lucky Devil by Megan Mackie

Near-future, Humans and Supernaturals Live Openly Among One Another

 

THE FINDER OF THE LUCKY DEVIL by Megan Mackie is one of those rare finds that I stumbled on quite by accident and rapidly became a fan of not just the work but also the author. It’s been a long road to getting this book out again after a fascinating story of dealing with multiple publishers but it’s now out via self-publishing and I hope it’s a success for the author.

The premise is an eclectic one: in the near-future, humans and supernaturals live openly among one another while megacorporations have taken over a large chunk of the United States. If it sounds a bit like Shadow Run, it is and I don’t hold that against the book. I love genre-blending and cyberpunk with urban fantasy is rare enough that I think it is worth giving it a try.

Anna Masterson is a young housewife who is married to a white-collar corporate when her entire life is turned into an absolute horror show by being kidnapped to get to her husband. She is forced into solitary confinement, tortured, and left a wreck of her former self. Except, they only want her to sign divorce papers which indicates that they may well be working for him. Rescued by her witch aunt, Anna must change her name and go into hiding under the assumed name Rune Leveau.

The Lucky Devil is a bar which has an unusual side business: if you come there and give some money to their animatronic devil then Rune will use her unique magical ability to track down missing objects. It’s kind of an interesting twist because it is such a small ability compared to so many other fantasy powers.

I like Rune because she’s a perfect reluctant hero. She’s escapes, survived really, a terrible situation and is entirely devoted to trying to put the past behind her. However, that’s not possible as a handsome cybernetic secret agent named Saint Benedict is out to track down Anna Masterson. Sparks fly between them but he is devoted to his missing wife and she’s determined to leave Anna Masterson dead.

Saint Benedict is an excellent love interest and perfect for these kinds of books, being mysterious and tough but not so dominating as to overshadow the heroine. He also has a reason not to immediately start a romance with the heroine, which is always good for these kinds of stories. I think people who like urban fantasy like Patricia Briggs Mercy Thompson or Kim Harrison’s Hollows series will find a lot to like in The Finder of the Lucky Devil.

This book is more on the urban fantasy side of things than cyberpunk and probably the better for it. It’s a very enjoyable story from beginning and sets up a lot of plot hooks that will, hopefully, be followed up on in sequels. I actually give this a strong recommendation and encourage fans of urban fantasy to pick it up.

Check It Out

The post Review – The Finder of the Lucky Devil by Megan Mackie appeared first on BEFOREWEGOBLOG.

 •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on April 08, 2022 14:00

Book Spotlight – Man Down by James Goodhand

“Will Parks Needs to Man Up.”

 

What is Man Down about?

A man stands. A man fights. A man bleeds.

These are the first lessons you learn in a town where girls are objects, words are weak and fists do the talking.

Will’s more at home in the classroom than the gym, and the most important woman in his life is his gran. So how can a boy who’s always backed away from a fight become the hero who saves the day?

Because a disaster is coming. One that Will can prevent. But only if he learns the most important lesson of all: sometimes to step up, you have to man down.

A searingly powerful exploration of toxic masculinity, perfect for fans of Juno Dawson or  They Both Die at the End .

 

 

What Folks are Saying About Man Down?

‘Staggeringly good . . . had me hanging on every word’ Louisa Reid, author of Wrecked and Lies Like Love

‘Good books make you feel something. Great books change the way you feel about everything. Man Down is a great book. No one is writing about young men’s lives with as much warmth, empathy and humour as James is right now.’ Samuel Pollen, author of The Year I Didn’t Eat

‘Utterly compelling, completely original and will undoubtedly be one of the standout books of 2022. An absolute must read’ – Adam Simcox, author of The Dying Squad

‘An excellent look at what it means to “be a man” amid a culture of peer pressure and toxic masculinity while navigating desire and friendship. Loved it.’ – Anna Stephens, author of Godblind

‘Emotionally complex, dark and clever – a very unexpected, thoughtful and original book. I can honestly think of no other YA quite like it.’ – Gina Blaxill, author of Saving Silence

Where Can You Find Man Down?

About the Author

James lives in Surrey with his wife and newborn son.

He took up writing three years ago. A mechanic by day, much of his work has been written at an oil stained workbench whilst ignoring a queue of broken cars in need of his attention.

James is also a keen musician, regularly gigging as a rhythm & blues pianist.

​James’ debut YA novel, Last Lesson, tackling teen mental illness and toxic masculinity, was published in spring 2020 by Penguin Random House Children’s.

Twitter

 

 

The post Book Spotlight – Man Down by James Goodhand appeared first on BEFOREWEGOBLOG.

 •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on April 08, 2022 10:00

April 7, 2022

Six Elementals Interview – Janny Wurts

Picture

Six Elementals Author Interviews will introduce prospective readers to some of the best writers in their genre you may, or may not, have heard of, via a series of six questions. I encourage you to check out the work of these phenomenal creatives!

 

Links to their websites and purchase links will always appear, accompanying the interview. Check them out!

To have such a legendary writer as the international best-selling author Janny Wurts interview with Six Elementals is an incredible honour. I am so excited about this and wish to thank Janny for joining me! Janny is a writer with such an extensive and impressive breadth of work, that instead of mentioning currently published works merely in terms of individual books, I am compelled to mention her writing largely in terms of series! Janny’s current published works include: The Cycle of Fire TrilogyThe Empire Trilogy (co-written with Raymond E. Feist); The Wars of Light and Shadow Series; stand-alone novels Master of WhitestormSorcerer’s Legacy, and To Ride Hell’s Chasm; novella The Gallant; the story collection That Way Lies Camelot; and numerous short stories including Silverdown’s GoldBlood, Oak, IronChild of ProphecyWatchfireLast of Her KindFinder’s KeeperMoebius TripSundering Star, Reins of Destiny, and The Decoy.

P.L.: I am over the moon to have the chance to speak to you Janny! Thank you so much for joining Six Elementals Interviews! Janny, you are widely acknowledged as an iconic writer. You have been mentioned in the same breath, in many circles, as J.R.R. Tolkien, G.R.R. Martin, Ursula Le Guin, and many of the truly elite fantasy authors that have ever lived. https://www.ranker.com/crowdranked-li… .

Your work has been nominated for The British Fantasy Award. You are also a highly accomplished illustrator, whose illustrations have won prestigious Chelsea Awards (formerly the ASFA awards, given by the Association of Science Fiction and Fantasy Artists to recognize individual artistic works and achievements during a given year).

After reading your books, you have become my personal favourite author of all time, on a list that includes the likes of Bernard Cornwell, N.K. Jemisin, and John Gwynne. Your novels have been international best-sellers, and you have been writing books for decades. Of all your many works, what is the one you are most proud of, and why? Does that differ from your own favourite work?

Janny:  Terribly hard to answer this because each book was written for a different reason, and it’s like comparing apples to oranges – the flavors are distinct but how can one choose a favorite?

Sorcerer’s Legacy  – debut novel – was written for sheer escape entertainment, but it also handled a feisty heroine who was both widowed and pregnant – thrust into the heart of a seriously dangerous palace intrigue. I am proud of Elienne for being a kick your butt survivor, but not with muscle and no weapons. She fights on her merits, and she was the reason Ray Feist asked me to collaborate on the Empire Trilogy.

Master of Whitestorm  pretty much is a novel about trauma and facing the greatest fear and overcoming that. What it means to run, and what it means to stand and face the demons in the closet. Of course it can be read as a simple adventure sword and sorcery, but there are also themes interwoven that go a bit deeper.

Cycle of Fire  trilogy is the only time I wrote a coming-of-age story. But I am pleased to have tried something a little different – all three young protagonists are flawed, and some of them triumph and some will fail totally, destroyed by their flaws, not to recover. But to try to make that story sensitive enough to bring the reader into sympathy with the worst side – there was the challenge.

Empire  series with Ray really stepped out of the usual fantasy mold for the sort of fantasy written at the time. I don’t think either one of us ‘set out’ to do that (the collaboration was totally a 50/50 effort). But my experience visiting a friend in Korea and many world travels impacted the story. The idea that a woman had to change her culture to survive – and change it permanently to spare her family – that’s a strong theme. I was utterly floored, once, when a young lady from Japan met me at a convention with her translator – and I was told the books were considered subversive women’s literature in her culture – that was amazing to hear, and deeply touching.

To Ride Hell’s Chasm  was probably the book that wrote the fastest, it was a nonstop on fire roll and I finished the draft in 8 months, which is very fast for me! I’d set out to write a story about the spirit of the law vs the letter of the law and the moral stance of the warrior: what responsibility does the man who holds the weapon truly wield, and where does his personal choice shoulder the burden of his orders…but as I began the first draft, bingo, in walks the main character and he is POC and that added another very sharp dimension to the story. I faced a choice, and I chose to handle racial prejudice with the gloves off, let the story run. Not only for the human elements involved – but the animals. Part of the inspiration for the story was a long-distance race called the Tevis Cup, where horses cover 100 miles of difficult terrain in 24 hours…I have ridden all my life, and the animals are as much the heroes of this story as any of the characters on two legs.

Wars of Light and Shadow  is the biggie of them all, it has the most depth, the most complexity, the most careful planning as it was always intended to be a long work, a story in five arcs. It is a book that stands on many themes, but it (hopefully) tears down the myth of history as written by the victor. It is a slow burn, carefully laid story that takes you for a ride on your assumptions, then rips the rug out from under what you thought you saw or believed, not just once, but repeatedly. Beliefs get stood upright, flipped, and run through the shredder because each time the viewpoint expands, the scenery changes. It does not extol war as a solution; it does not endorse many of our societal presumptions – but shreds them one after the next, until, in fact, Athera is not anything like the ‘classic’ fantasy scenery we are handed – it is a life work, I am extremely proud of how it has finished out (the final volume is in complete draft right now) – if I had to wish for one thing, it would be that our human society would wake up and stop! making war and killing a noble pursuit, and if we could at last admit the truth that violence solves nothing. There are so many themes tied into this huge series, I cannot begin to scratch the surface, it takes a read to open it all up – but there is also plenty of subversion of capitalism, and no question, plenty of themes shredded with the gloves off, which one can do writing fantasy, that’s one of the sharpening points.

P.L.: Many would consider the last series you mention, your War of Light and Shadow Series, as your signature books, and it is apparent you feel the same. They are a momentous accomplishment, of truly astounding breadth and scope. Having read the first book, The Curse of the Mistwraith, I can attest that it is one of the best books I have ever read. I can’t wait to immerse myself in the rest of the series. Curse of the Mistwraith is approximately 800 pages, and the rest of the novels in your 11-book series are similar in length. How much time and effort went into crafting something of the scale of War of Light and Shadow? How did you conceive the idea for the series?

Janny:  Honestly? Five decades! I had the seed idea in 1972. The planning and first outline written than encompassed a fantasy series where the blond, upright, charismatic HERO maybe wasn’t; and the small, secretive, dark-haired guy maybe wasn’t EVIL. Set on a world that ‘appeared’ to be familiar, but that would, in the end, be nothing of the kind. I started out planning a very deep back history and doing a lot, a whole LOT of research, so the unbelievable bits would synch hard with realistic bulwarks…and also, doing life experience so that you would ‘be there’ for some of the serious action – weapons research, offshore sailing, hands ON sorts of experience to add an edge to the pages – in the course of figuring out the setting and the ‘mix and match’ bits of warfare etc taken from our history (the world Athera has restrictions, so it does not follow our timeline for evolution of tech, etc)…in the course of doing the serious reading to get to the pith – I encountered a documentary of Culloden when the clans were finally broken in Scotland. It showed what Really happened with the gloves ripped OFF – no poetry, no ballads, no Bonnie Prince Charlie – the ugly Actual of what occurred – right as I had just finished doing all the research on wars/tactics/weapons from roughly Roman empire forward to gunpowder – and man, I came out of that theatre ANGRY…because I realized, full stop, our culture ennoblized war – our news, our history, our Entertainment – glorified war and painted such a damnably false picture of might makes right, justifying every sort of atrocity and solving nothing. That film – in stark black and white – reshaped EVERY war and tactic I had just read on paper and showed the falsehood in graphic terms. And: fantasy was about the worst offender – the Great Evil defeated by the Great Good on a bloody noble battlefield got blown to shreds.

Right there, I decided War of Light and Shadow was gonna shred the myth, tear it sideways and leave it dead on the floor. So that shifted the course of a younger me into some sterner stuff – Wars of Light and Shadow is a story in 5 arcs, and it is all about ripping assumed values to pieces and not stopping there, but reassembling them in a different form altogether, and winding that into the lives of very real characters in ways we don’t see too often in Fantasy. Where the ‘hero’ of one scenario might be the villain in another – that any heroic quality has its flip side…and in the different setting, it could be the factor to bring down the roof. You would not want a Patton at a peace talk…so the idea that ‘it takes a village’ of talent to build a society and not any one quality alone.

This is not wish fulfilment fantasy, I can hope it entertains, but there are hard moments of reckoning with idealizations written in. I spent three decades working on the concepts and the world before Vol I ever came out, and fifty years in the actual start to finish accomplishment. There is a lot more to the iceberg underneath than the books themselves ever reveal. If you are just taking a look at this series – it is seriously adult in concept, slow burn, and carefully staged. The hammer always falls – I write for finishes, each volume brought to a finale. It is not a set of books to be digested in a rush. Choose one of my other series for a more simplistic read if you want an easier starting point.

P.L.: Don’t think one can go wrong starting with any of your books. Your incredible stand-alone work, entitled To Ride Hell’s Chasm, is a simply phenomenal book. It is beautifully written, and it also tackles some difficult themes, such as racism. For those who have not read this novel, can you tell us a little about it, what inspired you to tackle these challenging themes, and what kind of research you did to make the book so engrossing?

Janny:  To Ride Hells Chasm  – this book had some fun sparks to start the fire. One was: people were ‘complaining’ I could not ‘finish’ a series – (Light and Shadow was at its mid point volume in publication order). So I wanted to write a book that ran on a very simple threat to a kingdom that was Not straightforward – and it moved start to finish very fast. The plot time for this novel is five and a half days, so it sort of reads like a fantasy 24. I was inspired by the long distance endurance race the Tevis Cup, mentioned above – and ‘what if’ horses were necessary to saving a kingdom? I have been an equestrian most of my life, I ride for a Search and Rescue mounted team – so much is owed to the horses, and yet, they are seldom credited for what they give, and give willingly in trust. So I wanted to write a story where the horses were also heroes as much as any person. Next into the puzzle, I wanted to stand the Missing Princes trope on its head. We’ve read plenty of stories where she was ‘forced into marriage’ and ran off or whatever – well, what if the match seemed made in heaven? and what then if she vanished? I’d written the outline where two warriors were charged to find her by the king, and I wanted two men of opposite backgrounds entangled in two patterns of ethics…what happens when the spirit of the law collides with the letter of the law – which is right, which is wrong – how can you choose the ethical path forward? And who holds the power, truly, the man giving the orders OR the individual holding the lethal weapon with the lethal choice?

That is where the story began, but it all shifted sharp focus when Mykkael stepped up on the page and he is Black. I have had the wonderful and also the wrenching experience of working with people from many walks of life, and seeing at first hand situations in other countries, other cultures, other viewpoints that are very different from the culture I was born to. In walks Mykkael – and with him came all of the frustrations and the pains and the anguishes witnessed – and that instantly became a driving force in this story. It is About racism, pernicious, horrible, endemic, unfair, and so terribly often thoughtlessly based on Assumptions Never Challenged. I put a lot of frustration and rage in these pages – scared to death – because I know I come from a privileged background, no question of it – how do we fight? With all we have. So I pulled off the gloves, had my editor behind me, and let the story tell itself. I can hope the story is a good read; I can also hope that when the pages are done and the cover is closed, maybe a few readers will ask themselves: how much talent do we LOSE WORLDWIDE to our persistent prejudices and our thoughtless assumptions. Hells Chasm was written to throw that into relief. All the characters in it have agency. Every single one plays their part. And not only for Mykkael, but the kingdom relied on other characters stepping up. Even the fat lady sings in the end. And I have been extremely fortunate to have sat at the feet of elders of other cultures entirely different than mine – by the last pages, I can only hope to have slipped a little of my awe and wonder into the pages, that this world is HUGE and humanity has many facets. I tried to step out of a few of the boxes, time and posterity will be the judge.

P.L.: Congratulations on the rights to The Empire Trilogy, which you co-wrote with Raymond E. Feist, being acquired in order to be potentially turned into a major television event!

https://deadline.com/2022/02/the-riftwar-cycle-fantasy-books-television-writers-hannah-friedman-jacob-pinion-nick-bernardone-1234923198/

You must be thrilled! Tell us please, for those writers amongst us who have considered co-authoring a book, how does writing something of that magnitude with another legendary author work? How does the workload get divided? How do you write something that feels entirely cohesive, as if it were composed by a single author, though it’s written by more than one person?
Janny: Ray had this idea he wanted to do, with a first chapter and a finale concept, and he wanted a female lead. So he asked, he begged, he badgered, and I said, I’d beta read, etc, and stood him off until the Day I caved in because the story was just too seriously cool NOT to collaborate with him. I was a nobody with four novels; he was just writing Silverthorn, not yet on the Times list, so we were just authors doing our thing. We had no idea.

We began with a solid contract because Ray had his Riftwar worlds established in his other books, and we wanted to be sure we covered contingencies, if one or another of us dropped out midway, what would happen – so we sat down with the agent (Ray’s at the time) and hammered out the ‘what ifs’ so we each knew where we stood.

Then we blasted out the outline for what became vol I and II, Daughter and Servant, in about 4 hours of gestalt face to face at a convention. Off we went. We wrote chapter one or so together face to face, then, after that, parceled up the outline – he’d write this bit he was interested in, and I’d do that bit – then we ‘swapped’ the files by dial up modem and each OVERWROTE the others’ files, then we swapped again, and again, nobody Looked at what hit the cutting room floor, nobody checked who changed what – we just took what was the latest iteration on the page at the time and kept working it, until – bingo – you had a blend of styles, nobody could tell anymore who wrote what. And any surprises ‘sprung’ into the text just got incorporated seamlessly, until we had a contiguous whole.

We found the page length getting horrific!!! And realized, oh noes, we really had an ‘outline’ covering two books; and when we realized there had to be a split to fit it all in, somebody – who knows who – in gestalt planning figured out that Mara was not going to escape notice by the Assembly of Magicians – and Mistress was born – we had a trilogy. So we went back to contract and expanded to a trilogy and here we are today.

The adaptation is extremely exciting because it has potential elements that can include all the classic fantasy elements of Ray’s Midkemia and the world culture views and female lead of EmpireSix Studios is just incredibly enthusiastic and bent on bringing in the best talent they can and stay true to the original story in the process – so we are on the edge of our seats, thrilled, and excited to see where it will lead. No question the team is serious and in love with the books. It’s exciting that the news is public at last. If we can have a story that melts east and west into a production that brings the love of fantasy together, I will be entirely happy to see a fantasy that can bring all that together in a series. By the talent Six Studios has brought in – they have serious chops – no question this will be an adaptation to watch.

P.L.: We can’t wait to see it come to the screen! Your legacy is already cemented as a famed author, fantastic illustrator, and a wonderful supporter of others in the writing community. Your writing career has already been one that most people could only dream of. What else would you like to accomplish as an artist and member of the writing community in the next few decades?

Janny:   Lord, I really don’t know! The best thing I can say is, I keep my enthusiasm by surprising myself, and who knows where that is going to lead? I have no idea! I have Just completed vol 11 of Wars of Light and Shadow, and really haven’t had time to look down the road from there. I do have a small stand alone novel – a nautical fantasy – four chapters down. I may do some short work just to refresh the page. I may try a thriller bringing in my Search and Rescue experience….as far as the field goes, I’d like to bring attention to really superb works being written that are not well known, or older works that fly under the radar that really deserve a wider audience, and as far as possible passing on what I know to new writers and giving them a boost where I can – paying it forward. The algorithm is so pernicious about burying all but the most popular works, and it is such a wilderness of signal to noise on the internet scene – if I can do my small part with sharing the love and encouragement of new talent and old, forgotten talent that is still striving – there you go. It’s a great satisfaction to recommend and book or an author and seeing a reader connect to another book they can love. That’s huge and a gift in itself.

I’d like to also see more Writer-Illustrators out there! No reason the two skills have to be specialized. I know the row I had to hoe to get my artwork up there and accepted and to do my own cover art – so it is cool when I see others doing the same. Yes, a book can be illustrated by a talent, but truly: you have ONE CHANCE to ‘see’ a work from the author’s eye view. Why not?

P.L.: You are a hard act to follow Janny! There are lots of talented creatives out there, but few can combine your level of writing plus illustrations! Janny this is the biggest highlight of 2022 for me so far, without question, being able to chat with you!  I truly appreciate you joining me on Six Elementals Interviews! Thank you so much! In lieu of a sixth question, I’d like to leave it open for anything else you’d like to add before we finish the interview?

Janny: PL – thank you so much for asking me for this interview! Chatting with you is a huge privilege, so many ideas and serious discussions, it’s a rare mix. I have read your first book, A Drowned Kingdom, and I am in awe of the huge and meaningful concepts you are tackling, and not just that – the world you have drawn, and Atalantyx – wow. It is words that paint a vivid and detailed picture, just made for a tapestry of imagination. The story is bold, it tackles big issues and has vivid characters – heroic and flawed – I wish you well going forward and cannot wait to read volume II. Be bold, be fearless, be you – and for gosh sakes, people, if you have not tried PL’s book, get a copy and read it!

P.L. I am completely humbled by your kind words, Janny. Thank you so much. I am so happy you enjoyed A Drowned Kingdom. I am so looking forward to reading the rest of your incredible books.

Original Interview Appears Here

Buy The War of Light and Shadow Series here

 

Buy To Ride Hell’s Chasm here

 

Buy Master of Whitestorm here

 

Buy Sorcerer’s Legacy here

 

Buy The Cycle of Fire: The Complete Series

 

Buy The Riftwar Cycle here

Website
http://www.paravia.com/JannyWurts

Picture

The post Six Elementals Interview – Janny Wurts appeared first on BEFOREWEGOBLOG.

1 like ·   •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on April 07, 2022 13:23

April 6, 2022

The Books that Made Me: Blade of Tyshalle by Matthew Woodring Stover

Re-ignited my love of the genre

 

I’d hit a wall.

It was 2001, and I could not find books I loved the way I’d loved them just a couple years prior.

blade of tyshalleI had no internet. I had friends who liked fantasy books, but the ones they recommended, I’d already read. When I did try out a new book, I’d finish it out of obligation and a desperate hope that it would get better.

So many of the books built around the same conflicts—the indomitable dark lord, raging barbarians, getting that really nice monarch back on the throne instead of their jerk brother. I lucked out occasionally—(Robin Hobb!)—but I, who had written eight fantasy novels while in high school, was becoming disillusioned with fantasy.

But, drifting through the bookstore one day in 2001, my eye was drawn to a cover. Bless whoever picked Dave McKean of Sandman fame to do the cover of Blade of Tyshalle. The title made me think it was going to be another Magical Sword Adventure, and had that cover not been as incredible as it was, I may have kept drifting. But I read the back cover. And then the prologue and the chapter zero.

Now, it should be noted that Blade of Tyshalle is in fact book two in a four-book series, but I had no idea at the time I picked it up. I thought it was a really fascinating choice to read about the hero after he’d saved the day, and how even in saving it, in getting the girl and having the happy ending, he’d lost an essential part of himself. While Heroes Die, the first book, is an extremely well-done action-adventure, I am extremely grateful I started with Blade of Tyshalle instead.

Again: this book came out in 2001, which means that I was extremely used to heroes being coming of age naifs with snarky sidekicks and wise mentors. Grimdark was not yet on the horizon. But not only was the hero, Hari Michaelson (also known as Caine) significantly darker than I was used to then, a re-read last year reminded me just how much more compelling he was than most of the other grimdark protagonists.

The most obvious, of course, was the duality of Hari Michaelson and Caine. The setting of Blade of Tyshalle is a near-future dystopian Earth in which corporations control everything, and they’ve invented a way to send people to another reality, one filled with all the traditional tropes of fantasy, called Overworld. They send people there with science fictional gizmos that let people watch whatever the Actor’s doing, and part of the fun is that these aren’t movies; the Actors might well get themselves killed on whatever adventure they’re on. Hari Michaelson, at the start of Blade of Tyshalle, is an administrator, doing a ton of bureaucratic work, while Caine had been a celebrity assassin. But Hari can never be Caine again; after all, he’s been paralyzed by the climactic events of the first novel, Heroes Die.

Hari believes he’s Hari forever. His wife believes it. His bosses believe it. The only people who don’t are his mentally ill father, and his nemesis who has become his friend. That nemesis is largely his friend because he’s one of the few people who still treat Hari like a threat, something that part of him needs.

Caine is the threat. He’s direct, he’s cunning, and he will not stop. If you give him a target, he will find it and destroy it. And much of the opening is him unable to do much because he’s still trying to be Hari, and because the villains are hitting him from all sides without showing their hand.

The characters were all compelling and the story ricocheted in wild directions, all due to the characters—not just Caine, and not just the villains, but all the side characters—having agency and competency. Stover writes a better story than most, and a lot of that is because it’s constantly shifting as they act and react.

He also filled the book with discussions on philosophy and ethics and morality, yet did it in a way that it never stuck out. They were simply smart characters trying to persuade each other. Caine stands out from a lot of grimdark heroes because while he is fundamentally violent, he’s also protective of anyone he counts as his family.

The other thing that makes this book important, the reason it’s my inaugural pick in the Books That Made Me, is that it directly led me to other books. As I said at the beginning, I had no one to recommend books to me, but I read interviews with him and picked up some of the authors recommended—from classic authors like Leiber and Zelazny to (at the time) newcomers like China Mieville.

So. Thanks to that book, one that came along at the exact right time to re-ignite my love of the genre.

 

Check Out Blade of Tyshelle

The post The Books that Made Me: Blade of Tyshalle by Matthew Woodring Stover appeared first on BEFOREWEGOBLOG.

 •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on April 06, 2022 10:00

April 5, 2022

Review – Legends & Lattes: A Novel of High Fantasy and Low Stakes by Travis Baldree

LEGENDS AND LATTES: A NOVEL OF HIGH FANTASY AND LOW STAKES by Travis Baldree is one of those rare novels that comes out that I have absolutely nothing but praise for. It fills that Terry Pratchett-shaped hole in my heart. While not to the level of that grandmaster of mirth, his world is evocative of Discworld and tells a cozy story about an orc barbarian who wants to open a coffee shop. The juxtaposition of the modern of the fantastical doesn’t have as much zing but it is still deeply amusing and makes this one of my favorite reads of 2022.

legends & lattesAs mentioned, the premise is an orc barbarian has decided to give up her life of violence and treasure hunting for one of serving coffee. The problem is no one knows what coffee is. In the city of Thune, it’s only known as a gnomish drink no one has tried if anyone has heard of it at all. Spending her life savings on buying a livery, Viv starts hiring a hobgoblin carpenter and a tiefling (excuse me, succubus) waitress to help spruce up the place.

Viv has a secret, though. When she was on her last adventure, she pocketed a magical object called the Scalvert Stone. Supposedly, it will result in whoever possesses it having great fortune. One of Viv’s former adventuring companions, Fennus, has become obsessed with the idea she cheated him out of something illustrious. There’s also a local Thieves Guild in town that is used to collecting protection money but actually doesn’t want to resort to violence. They also don’t want Viv setting an example that other people can’t pay their dues.

A very interesting twist in this book is the fact that it is all about Viv wanting to avoid getting into any violent encounters. So much fantasy fiction is devoted to action and bloodshed, it’s fascinating that Viv’s highest aspiration in life is not to have to kill anyone ever again. It’s not something she’s ashamed of in her past or guilty over. It’s just something she doesn’t want to do anymore and feels like she’ll fall back into old habits if she does.

The book’s low stakes are, indeed, also low stakes. The only thing at stake is the Scalvert Stone, which Viv isn’t sure works, and her coffee shop. There’s no worlds to save, maidens to rescue, monsters to slay, or demons to banish. Thune really seems like a genuinely nice place as compared to most Dungeons and Dragons-esque settings. Much of the typical fantastic racism is not to be found and dwarves work with orcs as well as ratkin or gnome without much in the way of issues. The worst example of it is the sexual harrassment that poor Tandi gets for being a succubus.

There’s not even any real villain in the books, though Fennus comes closest. The Thieves Guild is a lot more practical than most criminals in fantasy. Their leader is actually interested in the idea Viv’s coffee shop could make the area more valuable by attracting new business, which certainly benefits the thieves in the area. Even Tandi’s stalker, Kellin, is someone who is rather easily intimidated by Viv’s presence. This is a novel about following your dreams and figuring out what you will do to achieve them.

It’s just fun.

Check Out Legends & Lattes: A Novel of High Fantasy and Low Stakes by Travis Baldree

The post Review – Legends & Lattes: A Novel of High Fantasy and Low Stakes by Travis Baldree appeared first on BEFOREWEGOBLOG.

2 likes ·   •  1 comment  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on April 05, 2022 10:00

April 4, 2022

REVIEW – Crowbones by Anne Bishop

I have read my fair share of urban fantasy, romantic, tragic, or otherwise. As a reader and reviewer, it has become a challenge for me to seek out series in that elusive “other” category, ones that straddle a line of horror and urban fantasy such as Neil Gaiman’s Neverwhere and American Gods or A Discovery of Witches by Deborah Harkness. These books are different. They excel in bringing something fresh to the reader. The Others series by Anne Bishop has brought life to the tired genre of the supernatural urban fantasy genre with her brilliant take on the relationships between humans and the Terre Indigene in Crowbones.

crowbones“Don’t matter if you caw, Don’t matter if you shout. Crowbones will gitcha If you don’t watch out! —Crowgard rhyme”

Every culture, human or other, has a boogeyman. A creature that will come to getcha if you aren’t a good kid. Bishop explores that idea in Crowbones. Vicki Devine, whom we met in book 6 of The Others series, Lake Silence, is back again as the central figure of Crowbones. Vicki, the owner of the Jumble, a resort that does some light tourism around folks wanting to interact with The Others, is hosting a gathering to celebrate Trickster Night, The Others form of Halloween. There are some funny antics and miscommunication between the humans and the terre indigene. What kind of costume is scary but not too frightening to become other.

We first meet Vickie in a previous novel, Lake Silence. In that novel, she is a woman recovering from a traumatic relationship and divorce and attempting to start a new life in a new town. I find her a compelling character, that while she is broken and worn down from hardship, Vickie manages to have inner strength. Enough that the Others understand that she is special and a cut above other humans.

“He wasn’t sure what disturbed him more—that the Others were able to excavate that much dirt from either side of the road and pile it into a hill that quickly . . . or the smiley face made out of boulders that was pressed into this side of the mound.”

Each of the stories in this series of books revolves around a mystery. This one isn’t an exception. Something rotten affects the terre indigene, and individuals who act as judges have come to bring sentences on humans and terre indigene alike. Office Wayne Grimshaw, Julian Farrow, and Ilya Sanguinati have to work together before judgment is cast on all of them.

The plotting and pacing are tight; it keeps you going. You know from the first few pages that this will be a mystery story. But it lacks the tropey feel of a “who done it” type story. Vickie is someone trying to keep the crows safe, and the three individuals, Wayne, Julian, and Ilya, are trying to do the same. There are certainly some bloody and violent scenes. Bishop has never shied away from the darker side of things, which works for me as a lover of horror and grimdark. Crows are picking at eyeballs, basically doing what crows do.

Crowbones is another exciting addition to the world of The Others that continues to be interesting. We learn that even the strongest and wildest predators of the terre indigene have boogeymen that go bump in the night. Check it out.

The post REVIEW – Crowbones by Anne Bishop appeared first on BEFOREWEGOBLOG.

 •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on April 04, 2022 10:00

April 1, 2022

Five Kindle Unlimited Recommendations For April 2022

Kindle Unlimited is a service that can theoretically provide you with limitless numbers of books for the price of one normal release every month. This is a tremendous blessing for those of us who are fast readers. I pretty much have read every single Red Sonja comic ever written thanks to Dynamite Entertainment putting almost all their comics on the service.

However, what we here at Before We Go want most is good Kindle Unlimited books. As such, here is a recommendation of a bunch of entertaining ones that I’ve enjoyed and can say rise above the dross.

If you wish to see previous recommendations, go here:

1. Five Kindle Unlimited Recommendations for January
https://beforewegoblog.com/five-recommended-kindle-unlimited-books/

2. Five Kindle Unlimited Recommendations for February
https://beforewegoblog.com/five-recommended-kindle-unlimited-books-february-edition/

3. Five Kindle Unlimited Recommendations for March
https://beforewegoblog.com/five-kindle-unlimited-recommendations-for-march-2022/

Now here’s a list of five extremely good Kindle Unlimited books:1I’m Glad You’re Deadby Hunter Blain

I’m a huge fan of the Dresden Files and am always looking forward to something similar. Hunter Blain did a fantastic job with the character of John Cook, vampire. He’s the snarky wisecracking yet tortured sole remaining vampire in the world. He’s got a fairy princess lover, a werewolf best friend, and priest telling him what monsters to hunt. Great character and great series.

What it is about?

After helplessly witnessing the execution of his family, John is approached by a strange man that promises the power of revenge, for a price; his life for the ability to walk the mortal plane for eternity. Fast forward several hundred years where John finds himself with an unlikely ally, Father Thomes Philseep. Together, they have the holy mission of doing God’s will by protecting this plane from the nefarious evil that seeks the end of times. After centuries of feeding on mortal blood, if John’s blackened soul can get a little bleaching at the same time, well, all the better. Too bad the warlock, Nathanial Locke, who is a lackey of Satan himself, has other plans in mind for John. Despite his platinum tongue and razor wit, John might need some help from a supernatural buddy who has a hankering for meat and sheds in the winter. Follow John the vampire as he travels through the centuries learning his powers with his teacher, Ulric, and fighting to control his supernatural predatory side to use his powers for good.

Check it out yourself

 

2Bubbles in Space: Tropical Punchby S.C. Jensen

Bubbles in Space is a book I’ve recommended before and will continue to do so. Bubbles Marlowe is the worst detective in Holo City. She is barely functional, frequently outwitted, and more interested in survival than the truth. So when she accidentally makes a mortal enemy, she decides to flee to the one place she might get away: a space cruise ship.

Review – Tropical Punch by S.C. Jensen

What it is About?

Strippers, Drugs, and Headless Corpses…

All in a day’s work for Bubbles Marlowe, HoloCity’s only cyborg detective.

What do an anti-tech cult, a deadly new street drug, and the corrupt Chief of Police have in common?

It’s a question Bubbles can’t afford to ask. Last time she got curious it cost her job, a limb, and almost her life.

She vows to stay out of police business. But with a newly minted cybernetic enhancement, a semi-legal P.I. license, and a knack for asking the wrong kind of questions… Vows are made to be broken, right?

When a seemingly straightforward contract takes a dark turn, heads literally roll. Unless she wants to take the fall for the murders Bubbles needs to cut town on the double. Too bad she’s flat broke.

And now, she’s being hunted.

In a world where dreams can be made real for the right kind of dough, nothing is as it seems. One thing is clear, though. The dream is becoming a nightmare.

As the body count stacks up, Bubbles realizes she’s made a terrible mistake.

Can she figure out who is behind the murders before she loses her head?

Warning: Don’t read this book if you hate fun, glitter, sassy robotic pigs, or hard-boiled badassery. Raymond Chandler and Dashiell Hammett are rolling in their graves, but this is all their fault.

Get Punched! Buy it now!

Check It Out Yourself

3Legends and Lattes by Travis Baldree

Sometimes you want a very comforting and well-done fantasy with low stakes. Legends and Lattes is about an orc barbarian who decides to open a coffee shop. There is very little violence and the ultimate goal is to get away from adventuring. It has a Pratchett-like quality to it and that makes it all the better.

What it is about?

High Fantasy with a double-shot of self-reinvention

Worn out after decades of packing steel and raising hell, Viv the orc barbarian cashes out of the warrior’s life with one final score. A forgotten legend, a fabled artifact, and an unreasonable amount of hope lead her to the streets of Thune, where she plans to open the first coffee shop the city has ever seen.

However, her dreams of a fresh start pulling shots instead of swinging swords are hardly a sure bet. Old frenemies and Thune’s shady underbelly may just upset her plans. To finally build something that will last, Viv will need some new partners and a different kind of resolve.

A hot cup of fantasy slice-of-life with a dollop of romantic froth.

Check It Out Yourself

 

4Behind Blue Eyes by Anna Mocikat

In the future, the world is ruled by three competing megacorporations. Nephilim is a cyborg super-soldier working for the Guardian Angels secret police force, hunting dissidents and resistance. However, an accident during a mission results in her regaining her free will. It’s a fantastic action thriller and a great sci-fi drama.

What it is about?

They are the perfect hybrid between human and machine. They are the next step in the evolution of mankind. And when they come after you, nothing in the world will save you…

Welcome to the year 2095.
Society has overcome everything that made human life miserable. It has become perfect — so perfect that it needs killer cyborgs to hunt down anyone who disagrees with it.

Nephilim isn’t just any elite death squad member, she is the best. Genetically and cybernetically enhanced, she and others like her strike terror wherever they go. Knowing nothing besides this lifestyle, Nephilim believes that she’s part of a righteous cause.

But everything changes for her after a hostile EMP attack.
She suffers a severe system glitch. Disconnected from the grid, for the first time in her life, she begins doubting the system.
Shortly after the attack, she meets Jake, a 100% biological human, and she falls in love with him. Jake helps her discover that everything she had believed in was a lie.

But there is no walking away from the system. And soon, Nephilim finds herself hunted by members of her own death squad.
In an era of deception, who can she trust? And in this brave new world, is there a place for love between a human and a cyborg?

Behind Blue Eyes is a fast-paced, cinematic action story in a dystopian setting. It’s a modern-day version of 1984 – on steroids.

Check It Out Yourself

 

5Prisoner of the Dead by Megan Mackie

Young Adult dystopianism was something that exploded and then burned out quickly but created some true modern-day classics. I don’t know if Prisoner of the Dead will be listed with them in a decade but it’s a really enjoyable book that stands up with my favorite. It’s a zombie survival novel with a twist: immortals and the fact the zombies can be cured. What is justified in such a world? How will its two protagonists survive in such a place? What will they do to and for each other?

What it is about?

Trapped in an endless cycle of life and death…

When civilization fell generations ago, it seemed to mark the end of humanity… but then the undead inexplicably returned to life. Again and again, the plague rose, the zombies thrived and were then reborn.

Into this horrific apocalypse came Baron, a wild man from nowhere, onto the vestiges of the human world. After his keen survival instincts lead him to kill a strange man, Baron finds himself imprisoned by an even stranger woman, the child of immortals who might hold the key to ending the vicious cycle once and for all.

But only if this unlikely pair can survive the next outbreak…

Check It Out Yourself

The post Five Kindle Unlimited Recommendations For April 2022 appeared first on BEFOREWEGOBLOG.

 •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on April 01, 2022 21:21

Cover reveal!! Duckett & Dyer – The Mystery Of The Murdered Guy by G.M. Nair

The Mystery Of The Murdered Guy Excerpt:

Armitage Pembroke glared out the window of his study. The roiling black clouds hurled rain drops like daggers against the reinforced glass. As the view continued to darken, Pembroke found his aged, gaunt features increasingly reflected back at him as some sort of cruel taunt.

Wrinkling his nose in displeasure, he shuffled away to rest his creaking bones on the wingback chair beneath his looming bookshelves.

In an effort to ignore his aches and pains, he grumbled to himself as he sat down. It had been 30 years since his third wife Mathilda – now long his ex – had dragged him into that den of grift on his 63rd birthday.

“It’ll be fun,” he remembered her saying. “Just for a lark!”

Hah! Pembroke scoffed to himself. Fun.

Mathilda had always been like that. Carefree. Concerned more with enjoying herself than material goods or ambitions of status. Because, of course, she was young – much younger than him – and therefore free of the sort of baggage he’d accumulated over his long life. It was what Pembroke had originally loved about her. It had made him feel young by association. It was also, unfortunately, what made Mathilda such a goddamned idiot.

But that was his opinion now, older and wiser. Armitage Pembroke, three decades prior, had allowed his love for this woman to make him equally as foolish. Though he was at the top of his game when they met, she had softened him, and he was on the verge of giving up his robber-baron lifestyle for an ordinary one with her.

But it was not to be.

And, technically, he had the psychic to thank for that.

Once they were within the psychic’s inner sanctum – little more than a disused storefront disguised as a mystical hovel – a young woman clad in gypsy clothes parted sets of tattered purple and gold cloth and glided into view.

Taking a seat before them, she assured them – through an outrageous accent – her predictions were one-hundred percent accurate. Client testimonials allegedly proved she had never been wrong before, and she never would be. And that she would stake her reputation on it.

Pembroke had rolled his eyes, for which Mathilda elbowed him in the ribs, so he merely nodded at the so-called psychic to proceed.

“Armitage Pembroke,” the woman’s smooth, yet spindly hands hovered over the glass ball in the center of the table, dancing arrhythmically across the surface. “You are a very wealthy man. You believe that through your hard work and gumption you have built one of the largest corporate empires in the world. And it has enabled you expand your reach and eat well. But it has garnered you many rivals. . . and enemies.”

Pembroke had shrugged, with a condescending smirk. All of that had been true, indeed. But nothing one couldn’t garner from a careful reading of the trades – or, for commoners, the Wall Street Journal. But that was the old him. The greedy, acrimonious life he’d led would soon be fading in the rearview. It would just be him and Mathilda. He squeezed her hand softly.

The psychic continued, “Your competitors wish you dead so they can usurp your throne. The laborers you’ve exploited to earn your riches wish you dead so they may be free of your penny-pinching wages. Even members of your family wish you dead so they can reap the rewards of your horded wealth.” The psychic paused and met his grey eyes with her green gaze. “And they will be granted this boon in time.”

Pembroke’s eyes narrowed, and darted quickly to Mathilda at his side, who was drumming her fingers on her knees, nervous. This was no longer a lark. This was out of line.

“Wait a minute,” he started. He felt the weight of her words pushing down on his shoulders. And more worrisome, the truth of them.

“Eventually,” the woman continued, unabated, “you will be all but robbed of your riches and you will die at the hand of the one person who wishes it the most. Be aware of your transgressions, Armitage Pembroke, for no matter how you proceed they will come due, and your debt will be paid in gold and blood.”

“Alright, that’s enough!” Pembroke had shouted, leaping from his seat. He grabbed Mathilda’s wrist and dragged her through the purple drapes and out of the building. “That was idiotic and sadistic.”

“It – it was just a bit of fun, Arm,” she said. “I’m sure she didn’t mean anything by it. It’s all fake, anyway.”

“You’re damn right it’s fake. None of that garbage is going to happen! And I can make sure it doesn’t!” He yelled out of anger or, now with  the benefit of hindsight, fear. Fear that cut into his mind. Fear of losing his life. And, if he was honest – really honest – with himself, his riches. And within him, a sense of low, roiling unease that he had quietly suppressed for years was finally bubbling over, with Mathilda in the firing line. She was trying to get him to give up the only thing that had brought him peace of mind in this world. He was Armitage Pembroke, for God’s sake! He had amassed his fortune through wit and bravery, and now all he felt was powerless. He hated that feeling and promised himself he would do everything he could to prevent this psychic’s prediction from coming to pass.

And now he had.

Over the last three decades, Pembroke had invested heavily in the means to stave off the finality of death, at the expense of his company, his relationship with Mathilda and others, and any other minor annoyance standing in his way. He funneled his money into science and technology, forming and acquiring research corporations whose sole purpose was to explore potential avenues for eternal life – exploring concepts he once thought to be bizarre and impossible, and  branching occasionally into the realm of mysticism. While they were not all successful, the projects proved to be essential building blocks toward a concrete solution.

It was only when one of Pembroke’s early experimental facilities was destroyed during a freak accident over Christmas that Pembroke found his most promising path to cheating death. And what he found was beyond his wildest expectations.

It was something brilliant.

Something powerful.

Something nigh unstoppable.

Now here he was today, smiling to himself as he sized up the rainstorm outside and found it beneath him. Although it had taken a third of his life, Pembroke had finally discovered a way to conquer nature and become more than any man had ever dreamed.

His smile grew wider as he thought about the host of people he had summoned to his manse tonight, milling about in the sitting parlor below. They were his greatest rivals, his fair-weather associates, and his greedy family, and two asinine private detectives. He had lured them all here, allowing them to blissfully sharpen their knives, certain they would get his coveted wealth after he passed.

Only one thing was certain, however. After tonight, Armitage Pembroke would

Never.

Ever.

Die.

Check Out The New CoverBlurb:

After their very public triumph over the sinister machinations of the Future Group, Michael Duckett and Stephanie Dyer’s accidental detective agency has become a household name. Practically overnight, they’ve cemented their place as the city’s go-to sleuths for solving the weird, oddball cases that would confuse and irritate anyone else.

Join them as they tackle the mysteries of a medically licensed vampire, a mysterious mad bomber, a genderfluid reverse werewolf, and the true meaning of Christmas – just to name a few. Meanwhile, an aging billionaire obsesses over his plans to achieve immortality, which could mean dire consequences for the world. But with Duckett & Dyer: Dicks For Hire on the case, what could go wrong?

If you said ‘everything’, you’d be correct.

Buy The Rest of the Series!

 

The post Cover reveal!! Duckett & Dyer – The Mystery Of The Murdered Guy by G.M. Nair appeared first on BEFOREWEGOBLOG.

1 like ·   •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on April 01, 2022 10:00

March 30, 2022

Review – The Sword of Kaigen by M.L. Wang

 

For me, its a masterpiece of fiction.

 

You learn over time that the world isn’t broken. It’s just… got more pieces to it than you thought. They all fit together, just maybe not the way you pictured when you were young.

This review has taken me a few days to write. Please be aware I talk about grief and mental health in this review and it turned into quite a personal piece of writing for me.

I’ve been reading fantasy for a long time. I am in my near-mid 40’s and read Lord of The Rings at the age of 15. I have read fantasy books that have blown me away, taken me to worlds of incredible depth and imagination and introduced me to characters that have had a profound impact on my life.

sword of kaigenThen Sword of Kaigen came along and completely and utterly changed the way I think about the fantasy genre. M. L. Wang grabbed me by the throat and didn’t let go for 600+ pages of intense, emotionally charged, exquisitely constructed storytelling.

I’m a broken man, but a better one because of this book.

I read this as part of Literature and Lo-Fi’s fantastic month long event, ‘February She Wrote’, promoting and celebrating female authors and authors who use the She/Her pronouns and wow, what a book to start this event with.

The book follows the Matsuda family, leaders of a warrior clan who live in the mountain village Takayubi. They are the first and last defence of the Kaiganese Empire and live by a strict moral code in a feudal system. With the rumblings of war in the wind, the once peaceful lives of the Matsuda’s is about to be shaken to its very core. Embedded in Eastern philosophy and mysticism, Japanese social culture and belief, M. L. Wang has created a rich, complex and engrossing world which draws you in to the point where you can feel the snow between your fingers, smell the blacksmiths smelters and breathe in the sea air.

The world building in Sword of Kaigen is astonishing. What can take some authors a trilogy of books to accomplish, M. L. Wang does so in one volume. The attention to social order; Kaiganese society is patriarchal, boys train to be warriors at the school, girls are raised to be obedient wives to provide children that will bring new generations of warriors to protect the mighty empire. The detail in clothing, how it moves in combat, how it feels against the skin adds a realism to this book that I really appreciated. The geography of the world is clearly laid out and the environment that the characters inhabit is essential to their magic system. More on that later.

The historical and political background of this story is also incredibly detailed and layered with such expertise throughout the novel. M. L. Wang allows exposition to be delivered to the reader when the characters are required to know a new bit of information. Again it gives this book a realistic foundation, conversations feel organic, never giving information for the sake of information. Much exposition is given through action and M. L. Wang excels at battle prose.

The action in this book is brutal, visceral and bloody. Be warned if you are not one for violent fantasy this book may not be for you. As well as battle violence, there is also rape and torture, but it is never excessive or exploitative. M. L. Wang makes every word on the page, every violent action, mean something to the characters, to their motivation. No page space or word is wasted. Everything has meaning in The Sword of Kaigen.

Also essential to the action is the magic system and M. L. Wang has developed an almost scientific approach to the magic. The people of Kaigen have the ability to control water, in all its phases, and thus have the ability to control and alter water on a molecular level. What the characters can achieve with this is so imaginative, so different to other magic systems I have encountered. I was really wowed and caught up in the history and culture behind the different magics. Your bloodline and race determines what type of magic you have and interbreeding brings up many intriguing, and sometimes problematic, issues.

Now to characters. I am still struggling to put into words what an impact some of the characters in this book had on me, especially our female lead. Though the book’s POV is primarily through the eyes of two people, Wang makes sure that all the supporting cast are fully rounded, memorable characters. Everyone of them has a unique voice and presence and there is a huge cast of characters. M. L. Wang has a lot to juggle, but at no point does it feel like she’s struggling to give any one of them room to breathe. Like I said earlier, not a page or word is wasted.

Mamoru is the eldest son of the Matsuda’s. Desperate to make his stoic and strict father, Takeru, proud, fully aware of the responsibility on his shoulder to carry on the tradition and power of the clan, he is beyond his years in maturity, yet, his handle on his emotions is his Achilles heel. His character arc is so good, I loved him. His friendship with foreign student and outsider Kwang is a fascinating one with so many layers to think about and thematically it fascinated me. As his awareness of the political and cultural world outside grows, his belief in his culture starts to waver. I can’t tell you how many themes and topical issues you could talk about in this book. It’s primed for an academic paper.

Then we have Misaki, wife of Takeru and mother of Mamoru. Even now, typing this, I have a lump in my throat and goose bumps. No other character and their journey has impacted me as much as she has in the fantasy genre. Married into the Matsuda family by her father, she has had to repress her violent past and be the good mother and the obedient wife. I cannot stress the complexity and conflict within Misaki enough and M. L. Wang conveys this with such ease and such poetry that even though I am a man and I can never truly understand what Misaki is going through, I was on the journey with her. Wang draws you into Misaki’s mind, into her heart and lays it bare on the page. Sometimes it was so raw and painful it was hard to read, but its so beautifully written I couldn’t peel my eyes away from the page.

Takeru, the Patriarch of the Matsuda family is mostly viewed from the outside in. We get to know him, or not get to know him in some cases, through Mamoru and Misaki. His character was the hardest nut to crack, but boy, what he goes through in the later stages of the book is remarkable and all the resentment or negative feelings I had towards him, changed. M. L. Wang expertly constructs Takeru then deconstructs him. It’s wonderful to behold.

The themes that M. L. Wang weaves through the book are on a macro and micro level. From imperialism, nationalism, insularism to brotherhood, parenthood and free thinking. Hope and grief were the two themes that hit me the hardest and Wang absolutely stripped me of my armour. This book deals with the death of loved ones in a brutally honest and empathetic way and M. L. Wang approaches it with an unvarnished and devastating manner. I have had to deal with the death of my father years ago and what Wang writes about hit me in a deeply personal way.

Mental health is also an aspect that Wang weaves into the narrative, not just in dealing with death, but dealing with a young persons pressure to meet a parents expectations, to discovering things that shake the very foundation of your existence. For someone like me, who suffers from depression and anxiety, again, M. L. Wang’s characterisation and words really spoke to me, really affected me. At times it was cathartic and healing for me, even though the situations the characters are in are fantastical and extreme. But the beauty of fantasy, well written and beautifully characterised fantasy, is that the genre can approach subjects that are hard to tackle, are hard to face and isn’t afraid to talk about it.

The Sword of Kaigen was a profound reading experience for me. It may not be for everyone, I think we all bring our own baggage, our own experiences to a book when we read it. But M. L. Wang is a master of her craft and if you are looking for a standalone epic fantasy with beautifully realised characters, breath-taking narrative, exquisite world-building, a wonderfully constructed magic system and incredible action, then you need to put this one on your TBR.

Sword of Kaigen is the easiest 5/5 I have ever given a book and its in my top 5 books of all time…in fact its my favourite book and it will take a lot of knock it off the top spot. For me, its a masterpiece of fiction.

A week later and Mamoru, Misaki and Takeru are still in my thoughts, their stories still linger in my mind and I think they will for a long time.

Wholeness, she had learned, was not the absence of pain but the ability to hold it.

Check Out The Sword of Kaigen by M.L. Wang

The post Review – The Sword of Kaigen by M.L. Wang appeared first on BEFOREWEGOBLOG.

 •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on March 30, 2022 10:00

March 29, 2022

TV Show Review – The Witcher Season 2

 

Destined to protect, Destined to Survive, Destined to fight

 

THE WITCHER SEASON TWO is the second installment of Netflix’s adaptation of the first two books of Andrzej Sapkowski’s THE LAST WISH and THE SWORD OF DESTINY. It also sets up a large number of plots for the latter books in the series. The faithfulness of the series to the books is something fans can debate but, as someone who is familiar with them, sort of exist in a halfway mark between “mostly accurate” to “why did they change this”?”

The premise is that Geralt of Rivia (Henry Cavill) is a Witcher, a monster-hunter and hedge mage who has been empowered by chemical mutagens to fight against the horrors of the Continent. The Witchers have been slowly dying out over the past few centuries due to the secrets for their creation being lost. Last season, Geralt rescued Ciri (Freya Allan), Princess of Cintra, from certain death and is now attempting to find shelter for her from the various forces that would use her. Either as a Princess or her mysterious magical bloodline.

Yennefer (Anya Chalotra) is a prisoner of Fringellia (Mimi Ndiweni). Her powers are lost, having sacrificed them to unleash fire magic on the invading army of Nilfgaard. The event leaves her traumatized and broken as without her magic, she doesn’t feel like she has anything. The elves of the North are currently suffering a mass persecution and end up joining with Nilfgaard to fight the North. The primary focus of their alliance being Francesca Findabair who wishes to be the mother of the first pure-blooded elf in years.

There’s multiple plots running through the storyline ranging from the political situation in the Continent, Ciri’s training as a witcher, and the incorporation of a demon who is basically Baba Yaga of Slavic folklore. The best episode of Season Two is definitely “A Grain of Truth”, which is an adaptation of one of the short stories that parodied Beauty and the Beast. I liked it much better than the majority of episodes because I enjoyed the hefty amount of book content. It’s not that the show is bad but it misses some of Sapkowski’s special touches.

The best parts of Season Two are definitely Henry Cavill and Freya Allan’s performances. Henry Cavill continues to carry the show and pretty much manages to do a combination of both the book as well as video game Geralts. Freya Allan is allowed to show a little more of her age, being twenty, and acts less like the fourteen-year-old she’s supposed to be. We understand she’s trying to cope with her trauma and there’s several really good scenes about her dealing with the aftermath of Cintra’s acking.

Unfortunately, the Yennefer plots are just outright terrible. Anya Chalotra was the central character in many ways of season one but barely has a presence this time around. She also does some things that her book counterpart would never do and makes her look fairly reprehensible. Even more egregious is the fact that there’s a distinct lack of Jaskier (Joey Batey). One of the single most entertaining characters in the franchise is absent for much of the series and the difference between the episodes where he’s not and is present are tremendous.

I have mixed feelings regarding Nilfgaard’s handling in the show as well. I felt the games whitewashed the group considerably when they were a terrifying force representing slavery, imperialism, colonialism, and the embodiment of all of Poland’s conquerors. The show manages to capture its darkness but weirdly acts like they’re less repulsive than they are and we should sympathize with them.

It doesn’t help the show also royally botches the handling of the elven persecution. If you’re going to use Holocaust and pogrom imagery for the destruction of a minority, maybe you shouldn’t try to make it morally ambiguous. At one point, the elves engage in murder of human babies that play into the worst blood libel. Which is just, man what? I don’t even know how to react to that but Nilfgaard and the elves can both go to hell.

In conclusion, this is still a show with excellent production values and a tremendous basis with the Sapkowski novels. However, the show continues to drift away from the book material that hurts its enjoyment factor. Some of the actors are much better than others but its the tryhard-ness in some of its edginess that hurts the overall story. Its ironic but for one of the best grimdark series ever, they keep trying to push the envelope and just induce apathy.

The post TV Show Review – The Witcher Season 2 appeared first on BEFOREWEGOBLOG.

 •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on March 29, 2022 10:00