When was the last time you heard anyone chuckle?
When was the last time you chuckled?
Long ago, when I reviewed scifi and fantasy for a newspaper that no longer exists, I ran across an author who had characters chuckling right and left, and it finally got to me -- so I devised the Chuckle-O-Meter, which attempted to measure the amount of unrealistic chortling that occurred during a given book. Extra Chuckle-O-Meter points were given for multiple characters emitting a sound rarely heard in real life, but after a while, the Chuckle-O-Meter fell into disuse as editors and authors realized nobody really chuckles that much, even woodchucks (whatever they are).
But as I read "UnArcana Stars," it became clear I was going to have to go out to the garage and dig through old clips and dust off the Chuckle-O-Meter, because Glynn Stewart just couldn't keep his characters from chuckling. Over and over again, sometimes twice on the same page.
Luckily, the Chuckle-O-Meter turned out to be a sturdy machine and survived its encounter with "UnArcana Stars," but as a reader, I soon became annoyed by the constant chuckling, despite the dire straits that Damien Montgomery, the magic-wielding main character of this series, found himself in. Of course, dire straits, and the removal therefrom, are pretty much standard in these kinds of space operas, and I actually like this series, simplistic as it is. Stewart is unabashedly a supporter of the military as good guys, and Montgomery is the goodest of good guys, willing to sacrifice himself to save others.
If you've read any of the previous five Starship's Mage novels, you'll like this one, and if not, of course, you'll need to start with volume one, "Hand of Mars." And despite my issue with the incessant chuckling, I'm on board for volume seven as well -- though I will need to keep the Chuckle-O-Meter close by.