Cassandra Khaw writes like no one else about eldritch horrors. They're at their best when writing inhuman central characters. Their prose has an unworldly quality that suits the bizarre and extreme.
Marc's books wot I read
Thorough, unbiased, mostly spoiler free reviews of the books I happen to read. Strangely popular in Czechia on Tuesdays...
Friday 1 November 2024
Number 84- The Dead Take the A Train- Cassandra Khaw and Richard Kadrey
Saturday 26 October 2024
Number 83- Ghostwritten- Ronald Malfi
My second Ronald Malfi book is this collection of 4 vaguely linked novellas, each on the theme of dangerous books, and set in the same universe, with cameos from recurring supporting characters.
Tuesday 22 October 2024
Number 82- Baal Robert R McCammon
I was warned before I started this one that I probably wouldn't like it. It's McCammon's first novel after all and he wasn't up to his later standards.
Wednesday 16 October 2024
Number 81- Not Quite White- Simon Thirsk
This is my first DNF since I started this blog. I struggled through 300 pages so I don't feel guilty about classing this as a full book in my count for the year. God knows it felt like 10.
Thursday 3 October 2024
Number 80- The Great Troll War- Jasper Fforde
The conclusion of the Last Dragonslayer tetralogy. I brought this many spots up the TBR after the cliffhanger at the end of book 3.
Number 79- Where Sleeping Girls Lie- Faridah Abike-Iyimide
Another book with pretty red spredges.
Saturday 28 September 2024
Number 78- Sweet Tooth- Jeff Lemire
For the first two thirds of this, there is only the one storyline, Gus being found in the woods by Big Man and led to safety. When Singh appears in this volume, he is far from the sympathetic character we know in the TV show.
There are other marked differences between the stories, whether the extra characters in the TV show will be introduced in Book 2 remains to be seen.
I wasn't a fan of the artwork initially but it definitely grew on me, especially when it started incorporating the weird tricks with layout that characterize Lemire's comics. The style looks rough and quite ugly but it's consistent and the emotions are clear on character faces, even the animals. The panels where Sweet Tooth is hypnotized are particularly effective. the story is deeply personal and emotional at the same time as wildly apocalyptic. Lemire does seem to pull this trick off nicely, and here it's particularly well done. I felt genuinely sorry for all the central cast by the end of this compendium.
Book 2 is on my shopping list for when i pop into town tomorrow.
Thursday 19 September 2024
Number 78- Scattered all over the Earth- Yoko Tawada
URGH!
I could almost leave this review there. But I do try to give detailed write ups.
I don't know if it's a poor translation, but I really did not get on with this book in the slightest. It took me nearly a week to read it and its only 217 pages.
I spent the whole book wondering if it's supposed to be a comedy. If it is supposed to be a comedy it fails entirely. If it's supposed to be serious, it hits all the wrong notes.
Each chapter is narrated by a different character but you'd never guess by the narrative voices. Considering that there are 6 narrators over the 10 chapters, they all sound exactly the same. If you're doing multiple narrators, make them sound different. You should be able to identify a character from their voice- especially if they're all supposed to be from such disparate backgrounds as this bunch. The fact that this is supposed to be all about language and how it shapes people, that makes this sin of bad writing all the more egregious. This might be down to the translator, but since I don't speak Japanese. I have to rely on her skills in expressing the book accurately in English.
I read one of Tawada's books a few years ago and was quite meh about that one. this one is a step below meh. I actively disliked it and the whole experience of reading it. Despite the occasional nice image, it sometimes feels like it was translated by Bing translate and not a human.
The characters are uniformly unconvincing. The worldbuilding is poor at best. The forced coincidences are farcical without ever reaching the level of actual humour. The plot is almost non-existent. A bunch of people who sound the same, despite being from Greenland, Norway, Denmark, India and Japan, wander around a few countries in a "near future" that does not feel even slightly authentic, talking about language and looking for a sushi chef so he can talk Japanese to one of the identikit characters.
Maybe I'm missing some cultural references. Maybe it's a bad translation. Maybe it's just a badly conceived and executed idea for a book. Whichever it is, I will not be reading any further Yoko Tawada novels.
Number 76- Reprisal- F Paul Wilson
The second from last book in the Adversary cycle until relatively recently. Also the last one published with this style of cover by NEL. That's a great shame because I love these covers.
Tuesday 10 September 2024
Number 75- Recall NIght- Alan Baxter
Book 2 of the Eli Carver trilogy that began with Manifest Recall which I read a few months ago.
Number 74- The Outlaw Varjak Paw- SF Said
My second children's book in as many months, but this one I really enjoyed.
This is the follow up to Varjak Paw which I read last year after I picked up both books in a second hand shop discount bin. It's about cats and it's illustrated by Dave McKean so it started with two huge plus points.
Since the events of the first book, Sally Bones and her gang have spread their territory and now rule the whole city (the cat population thereof) with an iron paw.
Can Varjak find her weakness? Can he free the cats of the city from her tyranny? Can he regain his powers?
It's as good as the first book. Once more we have Varjak learning everything he needs to complete his quest in convent dream sequences where he communes with an ancient ancestor.
Once more, it's all very predictable. But it's not written for adults who read as much as me, of course it's going to have a basic plot with no diversions or big twists.
Once more Dave McKean's illustrations add a whole new level to the book.
It's surprisingly gruesome for a children's book. When we find out what Sally Bones's punishment to traitor cats is, it's really rather unpleasant and I can see people who can't read cruelty to animals not being able to read this. No animals are harmed by typing words on a page, so I personally have no issues. It adds a real tension to the book to think that his friends (or even he) might have such cruelty inflicted on them.
It was a quick read and I finished it in a day. If you can handle reading about cats fighting to the death, and don't mind dipping into young people's fiction, I recommend this. Read the first book first though.
Number 73- English Pastoral - James Rebanks
This one fills my annual quota of at least one biography/autobiography. It was my book group read for the group I've been in the last 15 years.
The point of being in a book group is to read things you normally wouldn't look at twice, and this is a perfect example.
In this book James Rebanks tells us about his childhood on a small Cumbrian farm, and how he fell in love with farming. He also tells us about how farming changed and industrialised over the decades and details exactly what the reasons are that this is not a good thing.
He finishes the book with glimmers of hope that the damage that's been done could be reversed with the right impetus.
It's a book of three parts. Part one is his childhood memories as a 10 year old working the farm with his grandfather. This part I found to be exceedingly dull unfortunately. He's trying to be poetic and paint pictures with his words, but it doesn't quite work and comes off as a try hard attempt.
The second part follows the changes in the literal farming landscape that happened between the 60s and 90s, and lays out in clear, uncomplicated terms exactly how much damage industrial farming has done. This part develops an urgency and drops the overly flowery prose that slowed part one down to the dullness that it was.
Part three comes right up to date and Rebanks explains how he is working to improve the landscape and the soil with traditional methods. He offers glimmers of hope that I mentioned earlier. The urgency recedes from part two but fortunately it doesn't turn quite as flowery and purple as part one.
It's a bit of a curates egg. I found it compulsive after the dull opening section. It opened my eyes to the damage that industrial farming for profit is doing to the land. Whether his measures will help, and his methods will spread is yet to be seen. But we can hope.
An important, if not always interesting book.
Thursday 5 September 2024
Number 72- Morace's Story- Kaaron Warren
Tuesday 3 September 2024
Number 71 - Yellowface - Rebecca F Kuang
My first RF Kuang book. Apparently this made a big splash in the last couple of years but it passed under my radar until the end of last month when I found out my local Waterstones has its own book group and this was their choice.
Sunday 25 August 2024
Number 70- Strange gardens- Michel Quint
A short but sweet cheat read. this killed half an hour in the pub last night while I was waiting to go to the cinema and having a quick bite to eat.
The young narrator is embarrassed about his dad's clowning hobby. his uncle fills him in on the reasons for it. A surprisingly dramatic story about sabotage and capture whilst they were in the French resistance opposing the Nazi regime.
The translation is nice and smooth. It held my interest. It's very slight- as witnessed by me reading it in about half an hour. There really isn't much more to say about it.
Number 69- Shoebox Train Wreck- John Mantooth
I've read two Mantooth novels so far and loved both of them. This is my first try at his short fiction, and straight off the bat I'm going to pay this the highest compliment I can give a short story collection by saying it is easily as good as any Ray Bradbury collection I've ever read.
There isn't a single weak story in the collection. It's difficult to choose a standout tale because they are all great stories.
The longest of the stories is only 20 pages, but in each one he manages to build a distinct cast of characters and makes this particular reader at least care about them.
School buses must have been important to Mantooth since three of the stories centre around them. They're very different stories though. Guilt is another common theme in the collection, and the title story in particular is quietly heartbreaking.
It's difficult to pin this collection to any particular genre. there are shades of the supernatural, ghosts, crime, occasional science fiction adjacent ideas, and the fantastic.
What they all have in common is that they drag you in from the first sentence and don't let go. If I was forced to pick a favourite, I'd probably go for This Is Where The Road Ends. The moment I clocked onto where the story was going it felt like my heart dropped out of my chest.
Or maybe I'd go for Walk The Wheat, which is almost a zombie story about the bonds of love and family. Or maybe Saving Doll, where a young track star is blackmailed by her brother in a most horrific way. Or maybe any of the other stories. James is a beautifully sad story about outsiders. Chicken is about teen rebellion leading to tragedy.
They're all great. This is just a great book. I'm almost tempted to go back the start and read them all all over again.
If you like your southern gothic to be southern and gothic, and apparently I really do, this is an exemplary example that will be hard to top.
Wednesday 21 August 2024
Number 68- the Silence- Tim Lebbon
My second apocalyptic horror of the year.
This time around, the danger comes from inside the earth. When a cave system is opened for the first time in centuries, creatures escape to wreak havoc on the world. they kill their victims and lay eggs in the corpses, spreading exponentially across the planet. Being completely blind, they hunt through sound, the only way to avoid them is silence.
This sounds similar to a particular movie currently on its threequel (prequel) but predates the first film in the franchise by a good few years so all similarities can be safely ignored.
Also, these flying creatures, known as Vesps, are small, the size of cats and overpower their prey through weight of numbers, rather than giant things that fly off with their victims.
Our lead characters are a very normal family with a deaf daughter, teenaged Ally (although she's annoyingly called Ali on the back cover- I wish blurb writers would get the details correct). 10 year old Jude, and the parents Huw and Kelly.
When they see the stories about the spreading swarm on the news, they decide to take the dog and run from the city to an old family home in Scotland. Of course, things are not going to go easily for them.
The vesps are certainly the stuff of absolute nightmare. Once they reach mainland Britain, the tension raises and never drops.
I really like that the book just follows a completely normal family. There's no scientist or soldier to work out the cure and to save the world. These are regular Joes in an extreme situation, just trying to survive. They follow what's happening in the world through increasingly unreliable social media for as long as Ally can keep her iPad charged. Every chapter opens with a quote from someone online, on twitter or Facebook etc, with an increasingly hopeless viewpoint.
The family are easily relatable and their relationships are completely believable. These are people we want to see get through this somehow. Lebbon has created a great central cast of characters. I hope that there is a follow up because I need to know what happened next.
This is my second Tim Lebbon book and I'm kicking myself that I haven't read him earlier, because now I've got a lot of catching up to do.
Number 67- A Writer's Diary - Toby Litt
This has been on my TBR for at least 18 months so I really needed to read it.
All through 2022, Toby Litt posted diary entries on a daily basis on his substack. He still does, and has over 1000 entries now.
The first year though was prewritten for the whole year, and published online daily, and then in book form on the first of January 2023.
It's an interesting experiment.
The story of this first year includes a birth and a death in the family. Otherwise it's lots of rumination about life, death, the art of writing, his desk, dust and pencil sharpeners; among other topics including the correct use of semi-colons.
Whilst it works relatively well on a one page a day basis, I'm not so sure about as a book.
There is some beautiful writing in here. Litt is a great writer of prose. he really knows how to craft a good sentence.
As a book though, it comes across as more a selection of essays than a novel. Some of them are more interesting than others. the two weeks spent discussing Keats for example, I only skim read, to make sure there were no notifications regarding the pregnancy or his mother's ill health hidden in there.
There are also days where he rambles quite incoherently.
I was hoping to hear more about his writing workshops which were a highlight in the early part of the book. Unfortunately, they kind of faded out after I'd gotten interested in their interrelationships in the class. They provided a continuity in the first half of the book that I feel was necessary. The second half of the year moves a lot faster because more of a narrative arc forms, with the later stages of the pregnancy and the declining health of his mother.
In those sequences, I could really get involved emotionally.
Overall I enjoyed reading it, but I definitely think it needed more of a narrative arc and less essays about dust. Even though the essays could be interesting (even the ones about dust), there were just too many of them which detracted from making this feel like a novel.
Number 66- the twisted ones- T Kingfisher
Melissa (aka Mouse) is sent by her elderly father to clear out her recently deceased grandmother's house. In addition to being an all round not nice person, her gran was also an extreme hoarder, so it could be a long job.
In her grandad's old room, she finds a journal which seems like gibberish. Unfortunately, after she takes the dog a=on an eventful walk, where she finds geographical features that shouldn't exist, his writings begin to make a lot more sense.
I was hoping for something dark, twisted and scary. instead this is actually more of a comedy. The cover mis-sells this book entirely.
Mouse is a very funny narrator. Her descriptions of living with her coon-hound almost make me (a devoted cat-person) want a dog.
Looking at it as a light-hearted horror with a comic edge, this really works very well. Once I adjusted my expectations I found a lot to like in this book.
The ramblings in the Granddad's journals are actually taken from a 1904 Arthur Machen story- The White people. I'd never heard of it until the writer's afterword, but prior knowledge of the story will probably not affect enjoyment overmuch.
Despite never being particularly scary because of the light tone of the narration, Kingfisher still generates some decent tension in places. As a reader I liked her and the dog, and didn't want to see them come to any harm. I particularly liked the fact that, when things took an unambiguous turn for the nasty, Mouse's first instinct was to get the hell out of there. She's certainly one of the most believable central characters in a horror novel in that regard.
The supporting cast are nicely drawn and good comic support. The monsters when they appear are imaginatively nasty.
I thoroughly enjoyed reading this and will definitely be buying more of her work in the near future.
Monday 19 August 2024
Number 65- the Book of Elsewhere - Keanu Reeves & China Mieville
An angled photo to try to show off the spredges (sprayed edges) which are the same colour as the writing on the cover.
Back in 2021, Boom comics released BRZRKR, a series of comics by Keanu Reeves about an immortal warrior with a tendency for ultra violence, who just happens to look a lot like one Mr Reeves. (He's slated to play the role in an upcoming live action version too.)
The comics did rather well and apparently broke records for the sales figures.
Now there's a novel set in the BRZRKR world, with Keanu's name above that of the actual author of the novel. And here it is,
Reeves has been completely honest about his level of input into the writing process of this (I believe his quote was along the lines of "China Mieville wrote a novel").
The immortal warrior Unute aka 'B' is almost as old as homo sapiens. He's immensely strong and prone to berzerking, where he basically kills anything in range, including friends and family if they're too close. Even on the odd occasion when he dies, a magic egg will form and rebirth him, full size and ready to kill all over again. He longs for mortality. he doesn't want to die, he just wants to be able to. In the modern day, he's working with a top secret government agency. When a very dead young soldier mysteriously resurrects, it looks like forces from his past may be coming back to face him all over again.
I will admit that I struggled to get into this book. However, after about 70 pages or so it became a lot easier. I'm not sure if that's because the style of writing settled down, or whether I just tuned into the style, or maybe just because I understood what was actually happening at that point... Regardless of why, it became a much easier read and quite compelling in its own way.
He alternates chapters between modern day and relevant flashbacks to his past which serve to explain what's actually going on (although some of the relevance is not clear for a long while= you have to take him on trust that it's going to mean something and he does repay that trust).
It's probably the least good book of his that I've read, but I still thoroughly enjoyed it. It's a serious literary take on a very basic and pulpy plotline. It's a mix that probably shouldn't work as well as it does (and I could sympathise with people who might claim that it doesn't work) but I would give this a clear 7/10.