Joshua Palmatier's Blog, page 6
December 9, 2015
Latest Book Discussion!
I've just posted the newest book discussion over at the unofficial DAW Books blog (
dawbooks
)! We're looking at A Play of Shadow, the second book in Julie E. Czerneda's Night's Edge series. Swing on by and check it out!

dawbooks
)! We're looking at A Play of Shadow, the second book in Julie E. Czerneda's Night's Edge series. Swing on by and check it out!
Published on December 09, 2015 14:24
New Releases From DAW!
I've just posted the December new releases from DAW Books over at the unofficial blog (
dawbooks
)! There's new Gini Koch, an new Valdemar anthology, and the paperback release of Dave Bara's debut novel. Swing on by and check them out!

dawbooks
)! There's new Gini Koch, an new Valdemar anthology, and the paperback release of Dave Bara's debut novel. Swing on by and check them out!
Published on December 09, 2015 11:45
November 24, 2015
Help Fight Illiteracy!
Don't forget this Black Friday weekend that you can help out Literacy Volunteers of Broome-Tioga raise funds by saving up your Barnes & Noble purchases and either coming to the Vestal, NY, Barnes & Noble on December 11th and buying it all there OR by ordering those items online between December 11-16th and entering the bookfair code 11572658 at checkout. The advantage of coming to the store in Vestal is that I'll be there signing copies of my books from 3-7pm. However, if you can't visit our own store, and don't want to go online, you should be able to present the code at your own store and have it work as well.
In any case, SAVE UP YOUR B&N PURCHASES and then buy it all on December 11th! Help fight illiteracy! I'll send out reminders as the date draws closer. Here's a link to a flyer for the event with coupons that contain the code. You can print it and pass it around to all of your B&N book-loving friends!
PDF of the Flyer with Coupons.

In any case, SAVE UP YOUR B&N PURCHASES and then buy it all on December 11th! Help fight illiteracy! I'll send out reminders as the date draws closer. Here's a link to a flyer for the event with coupons that contain the code. You can print it and pass it around to all of your B&N book-loving friends!
PDF of the Flyer with Coupons.

Published on November 24, 2015 13:41
New Book Discussion!
I've just posted the newest book discussion over at the DAW Books unofficial blog (
dawbooks
)! We're looking at King of Assassins, the third book in Jenna Rhodes' Elven Ways series. Swing on by and check it out!

dawbooks
)! We're looking at King of Assassins, the third book in Jenna Rhodes' Elven Ways series. Swing on by and check it out!
Published on November 24, 2015 13:21
November 23, 2015
Latest Book Discussion!
I've just posted the latest book discussion at the unofficial DAW Books blog (
dawbooks
)! We're looking at Dreamseeker by C.S. Friedman, the second book in her Dreamwalker Chronicles. Swing on by and check it out!

dawbooks
)! We're looking at Dreamseeker by C.S. Friedman, the second book in her Dreamwalker Chronicles. Swing on by and check it out!
Published on November 23, 2015 11:41
November 19, 2015
Book Review: "The Runelords" by David Farland
The Runelords is the first book in this epic fantasy series from David Farland. I bought this when it first came out in hardcover ages ago--as well as all of the subsequent books--but only just now managed to find time to read it. No real reason for this, just . . . I own a lot of books that I haven't had a chance to read yet. A lot.

Anyway, the premise: Gaborn is a Runelord, traveling the land toward the allied nation of Sylvarresta with the intent to ask the Princess Iome for her hand. But on the way, he discovers assassins, and an army marching toward Sylvarresta led by Raj Ahten, who seeks to destroy all of the northern lands. Gaborn races to warn the king of Sylvarresta and Iome of the threat, but discovers that more is wrong with the world than a simple army marching on a castle. For in this world, traits can be passed from one to another through endowments. Brawn, stamina, beauty, wit--all passed from one to another to make a man or woman more than he or she could ever be alone. And Raj Ahten has been forcing people to give him endowments to the point where he may have become more than merely human. He may have become the Sum of All Men, in effect, a god. How can Gaborn and Iome and their fathers hope to defeat him, especially once they learn that the Earth King is dead? Their only chance is for the Earth King to be reborn. . . .
The most interesting aspect of this world, to me, is the concept of the endowments being passed from one person to another, with men literally having the strength of ten men and women the grace of twenty. That idea all by itself is what prompted me to buy the book in the first place. The possibilities there are intriguing, and David Farland uses many of those possibilities in this book. Some are simply strategic--such as linking person to person to create a chain, or to link many people to a single individual, then link that person to another. What are the advantages and disadvantages of this type of magic system? How can it be used? How can it be abused? All of these are great questions that Farland explores to a great extent in this book. Obviously, Raj Ahten epitomizes the abuse of the magic. The entire book could have dealt with this one magical component and been satisfactory, I believe. I was grateful that the cost of such endowments--how it affected those that gave endowments and those that received them--was made clear, and that these costs had affected the society, creating Dedicate towers and also affecting how wars were fought and battles won. This is what fantasy should be all about--a magical system that changes the world and the people that live in it.
But there were many other magical and epic fantasy components to the book as well. There's the Earth and Fire magic, the two rival factions at odds with each other, woven throughout the story. There were fantastical creatures such as giants and reavers and ferrins, along with hellish elementals and golems. And more mundane magic as well, such as herblore, mixed in with some chemical science. The world itself had multiple layers--varied cultures, richly imagined settings, interesting characters . . . everything that you'd want and expect in an epic fantasy novel.
My only complaint was with the plot. Overall, it was fine. But it felt a little ragged and loose, not as tight as I expect from an epic fantasy. I don't mean that the plot was sprawling--in fact, it was kept down to a manageable number of main characters to follow (there were only two major POV characters to follow, with a couple of jaunts into other POV characters once in while). What I mean is that it felt like some plot threads were started and then left hanging or went nowhere. For example, Gaborn is in the castle, escapes outside it's walls, then returns, then escapes again . . . couldn't this have been cut to just one escape? Especially when I didn't see the point of the first escape? In any event, a few plot threads do similar things, going nowhere and then returning. And in the end, when the book was finished, I didn't feel a sense of completion. It didn't feel like a significant objective had been achieved. It felt more like the story had just started and we had simply finished part one.
So I enjoyed the worldbuilding and the extremely intriguing premise of endowments being passed from person to person and the potential (and cost) of such a magic. I was less impressed with the overall plot of the book, which left me a little unsatisfied at the end. I'll be reading the second book, because the world is so interesting, but I'm hoping that we get a slightly more coherent and satisfactory story in the next one.

Anyway, the premise: Gaborn is a Runelord, traveling the land toward the allied nation of Sylvarresta with the intent to ask the Princess Iome for her hand. But on the way, he discovers assassins, and an army marching toward Sylvarresta led by Raj Ahten, who seeks to destroy all of the northern lands. Gaborn races to warn the king of Sylvarresta and Iome of the threat, but discovers that more is wrong with the world than a simple army marching on a castle. For in this world, traits can be passed from one to another through endowments. Brawn, stamina, beauty, wit--all passed from one to another to make a man or woman more than he or she could ever be alone. And Raj Ahten has been forcing people to give him endowments to the point where he may have become more than merely human. He may have become the Sum of All Men, in effect, a god. How can Gaborn and Iome and their fathers hope to defeat him, especially once they learn that the Earth King is dead? Their only chance is for the Earth King to be reborn. . . .
The most interesting aspect of this world, to me, is the concept of the endowments being passed from one person to another, with men literally having the strength of ten men and women the grace of twenty. That idea all by itself is what prompted me to buy the book in the first place. The possibilities there are intriguing, and David Farland uses many of those possibilities in this book. Some are simply strategic--such as linking person to person to create a chain, or to link many people to a single individual, then link that person to another. What are the advantages and disadvantages of this type of magic system? How can it be used? How can it be abused? All of these are great questions that Farland explores to a great extent in this book. Obviously, Raj Ahten epitomizes the abuse of the magic. The entire book could have dealt with this one magical component and been satisfactory, I believe. I was grateful that the cost of such endowments--how it affected those that gave endowments and those that received them--was made clear, and that these costs had affected the society, creating Dedicate towers and also affecting how wars were fought and battles won. This is what fantasy should be all about--a magical system that changes the world and the people that live in it.
But there were many other magical and epic fantasy components to the book as well. There's the Earth and Fire magic, the two rival factions at odds with each other, woven throughout the story. There were fantastical creatures such as giants and reavers and ferrins, along with hellish elementals and golems. And more mundane magic as well, such as herblore, mixed in with some chemical science. The world itself had multiple layers--varied cultures, richly imagined settings, interesting characters . . . everything that you'd want and expect in an epic fantasy novel.
My only complaint was with the plot. Overall, it was fine. But it felt a little ragged and loose, not as tight as I expect from an epic fantasy. I don't mean that the plot was sprawling--in fact, it was kept down to a manageable number of main characters to follow (there were only two major POV characters to follow, with a couple of jaunts into other POV characters once in while). What I mean is that it felt like some plot threads were started and then left hanging or went nowhere. For example, Gaborn is in the castle, escapes outside it's walls, then returns, then escapes again . . . couldn't this have been cut to just one escape? Especially when I didn't see the point of the first escape? In any event, a few plot threads do similar things, going nowhere and then returning. And in the end, when the book was finished, I didn't feel a sense of completion. It didn't feel like a significant objective had been achieved. It felt more like the story had just started and we had simply finished part one.
So I enjoyed the worldbuilding and the extremely intriguing premise of endowments being passed from person to person and the potential (and cost) of such a magic. I was less impressed with the overall plot of the book, which left me a little unsatisfied at the end. I'll be reading the second book, because the world is so interesting, but I'm hoping that we get a slightly more coherent and satisfactory story in the next one.
Published on November 19, 2015 14:23
November Book Discussion!
I've just posted the first of the November book discussions over at the unofficial DAW Books blog (
dawbooks
)! We're looking at This Gulf of Time and Stars by Julie E. Czerneda, the start of her new Reunification SF series. Swing on by and check it out!

dawbooks
)! We're looking at This Gulf of Time and Stars by Julie E. Czerneda, the start of her new Reunification SF series. Swing on by and check it out!
Published on November 19, 2015 13:18
November 17, 2015
New Book Discussion!
I've posted the last of the October book discussions over at the unofficial DAW Books blog (
dawbooks
)! We're talking about Closer to Home, the first novel in The Herald Spy series from Mercedes Lackey, now out in paperback. Swing on by and check it out!

dawbooks
)! We're talking about Closer to Home, the first novel in The Herald Spy series from Mercedes Lackey, now out in paperback. Swing on by and check it out!
Published on November 17, 2015 13:29
Latest Book Discussion!
I've just posted the next book discussion at the unofficial DAW Books blog (
dawbooks
)! We're looking at the omnibus The Moreau Quartet, Volume 2 by S. Andrew Swann, which includes the two novels Emperors of the Twilight and Specters of the Dawn. Swing on by and check it out!

dawbooks
)! We're looking at the omnibus The Moreau Quartet, Volume 2 by S. Andrew Swann, which includes the two novels Emperors of the Twilight and Specters of the Dawn. Swing on by and check it out!
Published on November 17, 2015 13:17
November 13, 2015
Book Review: "Joyland" by Stephen King
I love Stephen King, but this one . . . not one of his best.

Premise: College student Devin Jones takes a job working at an amusement park after his girlfriend breaks up with him. While there, he discovers that the amusement park is haunted because of an unsolved murder that happened on one of the rides.
This has some of the classic Stephen King elements in it--the real world touched by the paranormal, multiple character plot lines that meld and merge to create an interesting plot, great characterization. However, while I enjoyed the read, it didn't feel quite balanced right. The paranormal elements take a back stage for a significant portion of the book while it focuses on Devin and his breakup and his job at the amusement park. The murder doesn't become a significant element until well into the book, and only get addressed directly toward the very end, almost as an afterthought. I felt that King was perhaps too enamored of the carnie elements and so spent a little too much time on living in that world and not enough time developing and integrating the murder/paranormal elements into the plot.
But it was still a good story.

Premise: College student Devin Jones takes a job working at an amusement park after his girlfriend breaks up with him. While there, he discovers that the amusement park is haunted because of an unsolved murder that happened on one of the rides.
This has some of the classic Stephen King elements in it--the real world touched by the paranormal, multiple character plot lines that meld and merge to create an interesting plot, great characterization. However, while I enjoyed the read, it didn't feel quite balanced right. The paranormal elements take a back stage for a significant portion of the book while it focuses on Devin and his breakup and his job at the amusement park. The murder doesn't become a significant element until well into the book, and only get addressed directly toward the very end, almost as an afterthought. I felt that King was perhaps too enamored of the carnie elements and so spent a little too much time on living in that world and not enough time developing and integrating the murder/paranormal elements into the plot.
But it was still a good story.
Published on November 13, 2015 19:56


