Saturday, December 01, 2007

Electric Velocipede, Issue 10

I can offer no great introduction to Electric Velocipede; this issue was my first time. Initial impressions: it looks pretty unassuming, though the cover is no less attractive and striking for that; using the back cover as a space for the subscriber's address is a nice touch, too. The stories fit broadly into a region that I'm not sure even has a name... "Literary weird"? Don't know if that's a real term, but I trust you get the gist of what I mean. On to the fiction...


The full review is available at SF Site.


Further links:

Electric Velocipede

Tim Akers

Jeffrey Ford

Richard Bowes

Mark Rich

Robert Freeman Wexler


Saturday, November 24, 2007

Under the Sun by Hanne Marie Svendsen

The questions of what we do with life and what we have to show for it reverberate throughout the novel. The particular life we follow is that of Margrethe Thiede, who lives in a small Danish fishing town. As a child, her head is full of fairy tales, and she views the world through that lens...but she also senses (even if not quite conciously) that reality doesn't necessarily work that way...

The full review appears in Issue 3 of The Small Press Review.

Further links:
Norvik Press

Tuesday, November 20, 2007

New Writings in the Fantastic, ed. John Grant

I'm a big fan of John Grant's attitude to fantasy, which is that it should not be funnelled into narrow marketing categories, only to be diluted in the process; but should instead be let free to do whatever it wants and generally be, well, imaginative. I'm all for that, so naturally I was interested in reading a big anthology (41 stories in 360 pages of small, close-set type) edited by Grant and intended to embody those very principles...


The full review is available online at Serendipity.

Further links:
John Grant
Geoffrey Maloney
E. Sedia
Kim Sheard
Naomi Alderman
Gary McMahon
Edd Vick
Vera Nazarian
Derek J. Goodman
Greg Beatty
Andrew Hook
Paul Pinn
Pendragon Press

Saturday, November 17, 2007

Cynnador by Patrick Welch

The first 40 pages comprise a prologue and thirteen "preludes" before the main story starts. These preludes are a series of vignettes introducing Cynnador and its people: some are more directly related to the main story than others; some characters in the vignettes appear later in the book, others don't, and some characters in the main tale are only referred to in the preludes. What emerges is a picture of a mysterious city that somehow looks after itself, a place in which magic is difficult to cast, but that has some magic of its own...


The full review is available online at SF Site.

Further links:
Patrick Welch
Twilight Times Books

Monday, October 15, 2007

Animal's People by Indra Sinha

The novel is set in a city named Khaufpur, which is fictional but has experienced a similar catastrophe [to Bhopal]. It is narrated by a nineteen-year-old boy whose spine was destroyed by the gas, such that he must move around on all fours—he's taken the name 'Animal' to reflect what he sees as his nature. There are demands for the chemical firm (known only as 'the Kampani') to face justice, but it has thus far refused even to send lawyers to Khaupfur. Now Elli Barber, an 'Amrikan doctress', arrives in the city to open free clinic—but is she all that she seems? Could she actually be working for the Kampani?


The full review is available online at Serendipity.



Further links:
Indra Sinha
The city of Khaupfur
Simon & Schuster

Friday, October 12, 2007

On the Overgrown Path by David Herter

Janáček is the protagonist, though the tale itself names him only as J______. He begins on a train, carrying his notebook, in which he transcribes the notation of any interesting sound he hears. During an unscheduled stop at an unfamiliar village, J______ hears a beautiful song and races off to find its singer. He fails, but the distraction causes him to miss the departing train. Staying at the village, he comes across the body of a young woman who was wounded horrifically – and discovers that there may be more going on than meets the eye...


The full review appears in Issue Two of The Small Press Review.

Further links:
PS Publishing

The Man Who Was Loved by Kay MacCauley

We first meet Marin as an infant at the San Barnabo Redentore Shelter for Foundlings. Sister Clara recognises something in him: could he be her own child, the one she abandoned? Believing so, she takes him from the shelter to raise herself.... As Marin grows, he discovers that people see in him who they want to see, which sometimes even leads to his own physical appearance changing in sympathy. This naturally leads to... various adventures.


The full review appears in Issue Two of The Small Press Review.

Further links:
Telegram Books

Tuesday, September 25, 2007

Stealing Magic by Tanya Huff

This short story collection is really two collections, one telling of the wizard Magdalene, the other chronicling the adventures of the thief Terazin. The two "books" are bound back-to-back in a single volume. The telling is bright and breezy (a world away from the stilted, formal prose of so much fantasy of that ilk), the tone generally light; as the author writes in the afterword, "there should always be room for a few laughs."


The full review is available online at SF Site.

Further links:
Tanya Huff
EDGE Publishing

Friday, September 14, 2007

So Far, So Near by Mat Coward

Mat Coward's stories...treat the fantastic as the most natural thing in the world, to the extent that you might not even notice at first; and, when you do, your attitude might be like that of the character who finds a dead ghost sitting on his toilet: 'you shouldn't be surprised. . . at what life chooses to throw at you. One ghost, two divorces, one imminent bankruptcy.' When you put it like that, why should encountering a ghost be so notable?


The complete review is available online -- about halfway down the page -- at Serendipity.



Further links:
Mat Coward
Elastic Press

Wednesday, September 12, 2007

Snow Patrol's Final Straw: A Consideration

DH diversifies into music!

Laura Hird has been inviting contributors to write short articles about music that is significant to them. I've taken up the challenge, and chosen to write about the album that introduced me to Snow Patrol, 2003's Final Straw. You can read my thoughts on it at the New Review.

Further links:
Snow Patrol

Gold by Dan Rhodes

...I can't recall the last time I was so compelled by a book in which ostensibly nothing (and yet so very much) happens. Gold is a quiet and unassuming book but – fittingly enough – it is also, when you look closely enough, a book that gleams and sparkles.


The complete review is available online at Laura Hird's New Review.


Further links:
Dan Rhodes
Canongate

Fired! by Annabelle Gurwitch

Annabelle Gurwitch certainly wasn’t laughing when Woody Allen fired her from one of his productions; but she was buoyed up by hearing friends’ tales of being fired – and now here’s a whole book of them, along with further anecdotes sent to Gurwitch through her website...


The complete review is available online at Laura Hird's New Review.

Further links:

Annabelle Gurwitch

Simon & Schuster


Saturday, September 08, 2007

GUD: Greatest Uncommon Denominator, Issue 1

Here is a magazine that means business. Not only does the very title imply quality, this issue weighs in at almost 200 pages, with no less than thirty contributors listed at the back. One can’t accuse its publishers of skimping on content! (Or on production values, as this is a handsome volume indeed.)

As for what the magazine actually publishes… Well, the postcards enclosed with the review copy say, ‘Greatest Uncommon Denominator encompasses and transcends genre and literary fiction’, a statement that manages to be both hopelessly vague and entirely accurate. There is diversity of approach, be in no doubt, but also a unity of sensibility in the magazine, a sensibility that might be described as taking a step or two away from reality. This results in some wonderful flights of imagination, but it can also make the job of reviewing trickier. An examination of the first two stories will show you what I mean.

Issue 1 of GUD opens with Electroencephalography by Darby Larson, in which Dean stumbles across a box of mechanical components, as you do; and decides to build himself a robot servant, as you do – and the point is that, in Dean’s world, you do, because this is the kind of dream-logic world where a dead body only needs a clockwork energy converter attached for it to return to life, so of course you’d build a robot. Anyway, Dean’s great idea doesn’t work out quite how he anticipated; and, unfortunately, the ending of Larson’s story doesn’t quite live up to the beginning – but I can’t really tell you why I think that; it’s just how it feels. Then you’ve got Arrow by Nadine Darling, whose protagonist wakes up with a very visible indicator of love – namely, an arrow through the heart. Again, the author does an excellent job of convincing us that yes, this could happen in the world of the story; but, this time, the ending works. And I don’t know why I found Darling’s ending satisfying and Larson’s not – I just did. I can’t put a finger on it, any more than I can explain to you how clockwork robot servants or arrow-pierced hearts could ever be accepted features of contemporary life. Whilst that’s fine for the stories (that first imaginative leap being part of the unspoken contract between writer and reader), it’s not acceptable for a reviewer to go, ‘Um, yeah, kind of like that, but dunno why.’ Yet that’s just the kind of reaction I repeatedly found myself having. So you see the problem.

All right, let’s start with some of the stuff I definitely liked. Steven J. Dines contributes Unzipped, the powerful and subtle tale of a soldier returned from Iraq and trying to deal with the death of a child that he witnessed out there and feels he should have prevented. I didn’t realise what Dines meant by the ‘ball’ that wasn’t a ball until I turned the page – and it knocked me for six when I did. A top-notch character study. So is Aliens by Jordan E. Rosenfeld, set at a restaurant out in the desert where people have a tendency to see UFOs. But who needs little green men when, as Rosenfeld shows, the staff and customers of the restaurant are such misfits themselves – and, by extension, any of us could be a metaphorical ‘alien’, given the right circumstances.

Though some tales in GUD depict extraordinary events, others introduce you to characters with odd ways of thinking. Take Mike Procter’s Item 27, whose narrator is working through a list of ambitions and has reached the one about killing someone. When it comes down to it, though, he’d really rather get someone else to do the deed – he just needs to hire them. Procter’s brief tale is quite amusing and, for just a short time, makes the protagonist’s thought processes seem entirely reasonable. Experiment: Love by Brian Conn is less playful in tone and (naturally) about love rather than killing, but it too puts you most effectively in the mind of another – two people, in this case, who have an unusual take on love (they’re splitting up but, one says, if they meet again years later, their cells will remember each other even if they themselves don’t).

So those are some of my personal highlights from this issue. Then there’s the stuff that I like, but belongs more in the second tier for me. An example is Max Velocity by Leslie Claire Walker: giving birth has become a matter of being buried in the ground while our baby eats you, so Fan isn’t too happy about being pregnant, to put it mildly. Fortunately, she is rescued from her fate; unfortunately, she then ends up… This story was a little too odd, even for me, but it’s compelling all the same. Sean Melican’s In the Dark is the similarly well-written tale, told in epistolatory form, of a researcher visiting a moon whose alien inhabitants insisted he allow himself to be blinded beforehand. I loved the way Melican handles the different voices, I loved the particularly mysterious aliens – but I didn’t quite get the ending. A shame, but that’s just the way it goes sometimes.

GUD magazine is not all about fiction; there’s poetry and art in there too, but I have less to say about them, as I don’t have the knowledge to critique them in the same way. Of the poetry, I particularly enjoyed Timothy Gager’s Moving Boxes, which poignantly compares packed-up items to a past relationship; and Cami Park’s Sisyphus of the Staircase, whose title neatly sums up its central idea. I also found the imagery of The Intrigue of Being Watched by Rusty Barnes, comparing sex to the sea, most evocative. I’m afraid I really can’t offer a useful opinion on the artwork, but I do like the way the magazine’s structure encourages you to appreciate the art in its own right, rather than as an adjunct of the fiction – which is not to say that the juxtaposition of art and fiction won’t sometimes make you look again with new eyes.

Of course there are pieces in this magazine that I didn’t really get along with, but I don’t want to dwell on them too much; I think it’s quite clear that this is the sort of publication whose contents really will inspire different reactions from different readers. But there’s enough quantity and variety between the covers to convince me that there’s something here for everyone – and, even if you don’t necessarily like what’s over the page, it will always be interesting. Let me just mention one final contribution: towards the end of the magazine is Mad Dogs by Christian A. Dumais, the only piece labelled as non-fiction. Dumais is an American teaching at a university in Poland; this piece chronicles his night out drinking with some visiting Secret Service and Air Force Two staff, a night which ends with him sitting in the apartment of two Polish lesbians. You’ll have to read the essay to find out how he gets there; but what’s great about this piece is that it makes real life seem just as strange as the fictional realities depicted in the rest of the magazine. So that’s GUD, a magazine that builds its own fantastic aesthetic from a diverse range of building-blocks, even the real world.

GUD Magazine edited by Julia Bernd, Sal Coraccio, Kaolin Fire and Sue Miller. 5x8, 196pp, US$10/print and US$3.50/PDF (see website for other subscription rates and non-US prices). Published by Greatest Uncommon Denominator Publishing, PO Box 1537, Laconia, NH, 03427 USA.



This review first appeared in Whispers of Wickedness.


Further links:
Darby Larson
Nadine Darling
Steven J. Dines
Jordan E. Rosenfeld
Brian Conn
Leslie Claire Walker
Timothy Gager
Cami Park
Rusty Barnes
GUD Magazine

Ugly Stories for Beautiful People by James Burr

Ugly Stories for Beautiful People feels like a book in its own little world. I don’t mean to suggest that its stories never joined the party – a glance at the list of previous publication credits will reveal that they did – but there is a certain sense that this book stands to one side, that it’s doing its own thing, as it were. Part of that sense comes from the cover, which is striking in its minimalism, and quite unlike any recent book cover I’ve seen, from either the independent or mainstream press (not to mention a fine example of how attractive even a home-made cover can be).

More than that, there’s the intent of the collection itself. To quote the covering letter that James Burr sent with the review copy, ‘[t]he stories are generally inter-linked and were conceived of as a whole – hence the lack of contents page… I want people to read them in a certain order; long story after short; humorous after grim.’ Whilst I’m not sure that having a contents page would spoil the way we experience the book, Burr achieves his aim, as the book feels complete in itself: there is a rhythm to the way the tales are arranged, and they are indeed linked – not by setting or characters (except in one instance); but by a general theme, which may be broadly described as people coming (or refusing) to perceive that reality is not as they thought.

Sometimes this happens quite literally, as in Life’s What You Make It, where a woman’s happy, comfortable life is intruded upon by what appear to be experiences from another version of her life, one with much more hardship. Which life is real, and which illusory? I’ve read my fair share of stories in which someone’s life is literally rearranged around them – you probably have, too – but I don’t remember reading one as thrilling or disorientating as this.

At other times, the theme is exhibited in a more mundane (though not necessarily pedestrian!) way. An example is Blue, one of the book’s longer entries. It follows Kate, working as an English language teacher in Barcelona, and her encounters with a mysterious group of tattooed individuals. The story takes a while to get where it’s going; but, when it does, it proves an interesting character study: the tattooed group are frustrated at people whom (they believe) don’t see the suffering in the world, and their aim is to redress that in a rather direct way. Burr’s examination of the morality of this view is pleasingly nuanced.

Sometimes the theme is somewhere in the middle of these two extremes, as in The Dada Relationship Police. The stability of another life is under threat, this time that of Matt, who begins to receive strange phone calls and notes signed by the titular ‘police’, telling him that his partner is cheating on him and his relationship is over. And this is not quite a self-fulfilling prophecy, at least not totally. The ending may raise a smile (as it did with me) but, if it does, the smile will be wry.

Interspersed with the longer pieces are shorter ones, which are generally more humorous. Perhaps the funniest is It, a shaggy dog story in which people literally disappear up their own backsides and the world is saved by Tom Paulin. If this sounds too silly, I can only urge you to give it an even break, because it’s highly amusing. It also has a serious point to make to anyone who has ever strung a sentence together (a point that this reviewer has taken – so he hopes!). Also pulling off that mix of humour and seriousness is Mutton Pie, about a man’s encounter in a pub with an older woman. The tale refers to ‘the self-delusions that we wrap around ourselves to make life more bearable’ – true enough. But it also suggests that those delusions may not be all that bad, not if they work for us – truer still.

The collection begins and ends with a story called BobandJane and its postscript, about a couple who are so very much in love (Burr’s prose conveys this superbly) that, yes, they don’t perceive reality as it is – and, at the very end, their bubble may just be starting to burst. Not just a neat story, it serves as a summation of the whole book, a book which covers a range of human emotion, precarious relationships and equally precarious realities (and there may not be much difference between the two); and whose intriguing constituent parts form a complete, intriguing entity.

Ugly Stories for Beautiful People by James Burr. Paperback, 276 pp, £11.99. Published by Corsega Press.

This review first appeared in Whispers of Wickedness.


Further links:

James Burr


Saturday, July 14, 2007

A lick of virtual paint

Since I hadn't altered the look of this blog since its beginning, over 18 months ago, I thought it was time to spruce it up a bit. So here's a new layout and a large number of links. I've tried to link to every author I could find on the web who is reviewed here (and a few others besides); any additions or corrections are welcome. More links will probably follow, and more reviews will certainly follow.

Welcome to the new DH Reviews; hope you like it.

Sunday, July 01, 2007

Dawn by Tim Lebbon

By the end of Dusk, the Mages Angel and S'Hivez had regained control of magic and brought a permanent twilight down upon the world of Noreela. Can they be defeated? And will the author end his sequence as well as he began it? No prizes for guessing the answer to the former question; you only have to look at this book's title. As for the latter...


Continue reading at SF Site.

Further links:
Tim Lebbon
The world of Noreela
Bantam

Monday, May 21, 2007

Unnatural History by Jonathan Green

Welcome to the Pax Britannia series, set in the latest of Abaddon Books' original shared worlds. It is 1997, and Victoria (kept alive by advanced technology) is about to celebrate her 160th year on the throne; the British Empire still spans the globe; and Magna Britannia remains the 'Workshop of the World'. Jonathan Green co-created Pax Britannia, and Unnatural History is the first novel to be set in the world; so it's natural to expect this book to set the tone of the series.

The world presented within is, however, annoyingly inconsistent. In some ways, it's clearly meant to echo our own (there are mentions of anti-social behaviour and an Anti-Terror Bill, for example); but in others, it could never have been the same world (there are surviving pockets of dinosaurs and early humans). The technology can be more advanced than ours (robot policemen, space colonies) or stuck in the 19th century (factories are still the same). Sometimes this is charming (I love the idea of mobile phones made of teak and brass), but equally it sometimes just doesn't make sense (given a hundred extra years, would the Victorians really not have learned to exploit any more energy sources than coal?). Green's extended Victorian Age feels more like a grab-bag of ideas that sounded interesting than a properly thought-out setting.

One could also be forgiven for thinking that the upper echelons of London society are all that's real in this world. Green comments early on that 'the more shameful aspects of Imperial life had continued to deteriorate' – there's still great poverty, infant mortality, disease, and so on. Wait, though, there's more: 'Great swathes of the British Isles were now nothing but blighted wasteland'. The author mentions these in a few paragraphs, but that's all; the rest of the country might as well be a utopia, for all it matters in the book. Surely these problems deserve addressing in more detail? (And if people think the situation is so bad, why aren't they trying to do something about it? After all, the real 19th century wasn't short of social reformers.) I was also left wondering about the history of this fictional 20th century: there's brief mention of other countries; but I just don't get the impression (however wrong I may be) of a coherent history.

Okay, so we don't think too hard about the setting; doesn't mean the book will be bad, and indeed it's not. Our hero is dashing government agent Ulysses Quicksilver, sent to investigate a crime committed at the Natural History Museum. Throw in a mysterious 'de-evolution' formula, a comely young maiden, and a dastardly plot to overthrow the existing order, and you have all the ingredients of a romp.

And a romp is what we get. It's all jolly good fun. Yes, I suppose the plot is pretty easy to figure out; and sure, the characters are painted in broad strokes rather than fine detail (I know that's the point in a romp, but it's always nice to have three-dimensional characters). But Unnatural History is saved by Green's talent for writing atmosphere and action. There are some wonderful scenes (Quicksilver's discovery of a bomb factory in the abandoned Underground springs immediately to mind) that make the book a compelling read.

Shared worlds tend to work better with the more freedom authors have, so we'll have to wait and see how Pax Britannia develops (though, having read the preview in the back of this volume, I'm optimistic). But they all have to start somewhere, and Unnatural History is a good start. No, it's not everything it could be: I'd like to know more about how this world works and where it came from. It also strikes me that there's a real horror at the heart of the setting, the horror of this period of profound change being reducing to something static and stagnant; Green refers briefly to 'a decaying, outdated system maintained for much longer than was healthy' (and of course the title may be considered a pun, as the alternate 1997 is itself a product of 'unnatural history'), but I wish there had been a greater sense of this horror in the texture of the novel. Still, Unnatural History is an effective romp, and there's no harm in that.

Unnatural History by Jonathan Green. Paperback, 336 pp, £6.99. Published by Abaddon Books and available in all good bookshops.


This review first appeared in Whispers of Wickedness.

Further links:
Abaddon Books

Monday, April 16, 2007

The Solaris Book of New Science Fiction, ed. George Mann

Solaris Books is the new science fiction and fantasy imprint from Games Workshop's publishing arm. This anthology is their "book-sized calling card." It's heartening to see a company with Games Workshop's clout investing, as it were, in the field; so one wants to wish Solaris well -- provided, of course, that they publish good fiction...

Continue reading at SF Site.

Further links:
Stephen Baxter
Mike Resnick
David Gerrold
Eric Brown
Adam Roberts
James Lovegrove
Mary A. Turzillo
Ian Watson
Keith Brooke
Solaris
Solaris editors' blog

Sunday, April 01, 2007

Breakfast with the Ones You Love by Eliot Fintushel

Sixteen-year-old Lea Tillim is a girl with a talent. Well, maybe "talent" isn't the most appropriate word. An ability, let's say. A power. The power to make people ill with a thought, even to kill them if she wants. But there's one boy who considers it a talent: Jack Konar, who says he is one of the God Tetragrammaton's Thrice Chosen, and is building a "spaceship" in a forgotten part of a Sears and Roebuck store, in readiness for the coming of the Meschiach. And he needs Lea's help...



Continue reading at SF Site.


Further links:

Eliot Fintushel

Random House

Wednesday, February 14, 2007

Jupiter XIV: Thebe

Jupiter was an unfamiliar publication to me, though it was clear enough that we would be in SF territory. I did think that two staples rather than one would make the magazine easier to handle; but of course it's the fiction that counts, so let's look at some (I must abstain from reviewing the poetry as I'm not confident about doing so).

First up is The Truth about Watermelon Seeds by Monte Davis (who also provides this issue's cover illustration), the delightfully odd tale of Vardiman Laneer, who lives out of his truck in the hope of finding a meteorite that he can sell on for enough money to patch things up with his beloved Birdie. His sole companion in this is his pet mouse, Gideon, who (unbeknownst to Vardiman) has been eating the seeds from a cosmic watermelon and undergoing a remarkable transformation. Davis writes engagingly and vividly (the atmosphere of Vardiman's truck is all too real!), and the result is a strange concoction that, nevertheless, works.

The Walking Distances by Thomas Lee Joseph Smith takes its protagonist (also a Tom Smith) to Canada, to visit an old writer friend, Kim, who has been hearing mysterious noises. Tom's speciality is writing about sounds that he has recorded; and Kim wants him to help her find out what's going on. What they discover is, naturally, rather unexpected... Actually, the solution to the 'whatdunnit' is probably less interesting than the character of Tom. Smith gives him a distinctive, jokey voice that does sometimes miss the mark ('They melted into the woods, like cheap margarine on hot corn-bread'), but, more often, hits it most effectively (as when Tom grabs something from the kitchen drawer and runs outside, only to find it wasn't a knife, as he was searching for).

Pretty much all the stories in the magazine are very good at creating an atmosphere through the unique viewpoints of their characters. In The Roots of Martian Civilisation, Robert Persons depicts an ancient Mars, where Trong, an archaeologist, is searching for evidence of the long-gone Sea Dogs. The author strikes a fine balance between alienness and familiarity; Trong isn't human, but we comprehend what he's doing well enough that his alien attributes become all the more striking (such as the way his species writes, 'a multimedia collage of up to a dozen sensual clues').

The final two stories in the magazine are also space operas, but more humorous – and, happily, both are genuinely amusing. In Jason Gaskell's Stranded, Jon Simmons is in a hurry to deliver his cargo to a client who doesn't like to be kept waiting; but a jobsworth guard won't let him through the wormhole, and Jon ends up – yes – stranded on a world he dubs 'Crapoid'. Gaskell's piece is daft, good-natured fun.

The title of Manda Benson's The Thirteenth Brigade refers to a bunch of cockroaches that have been engineered to aid humanity; they prove to be the ideal help to the crew of a spaceship who get into difficulties while trying to discover the cause of an earthquake that rocked their ship. Benson's story is perhaps not as consistently funny as Gaskell's; but it still has some good moments, and the ending is especially fine.

As I was coming to the end of this issue of Jupiter, I glanced back at Ian Redman's introduction; and something therein struck me as particularly apposite: 'put the kettle on, light the fire and snuggle into your favourite chair'. That sums up these stories: they may not break much new ground in science fiction, but they are superb entertainment.

Jupiter edited by Ian Redman, 19 Bedford Road, Yeovil, Somerset, BA21 4UG, UK. A5, 48pp, £2.75 or £10/4.


This review first appeared in Whispers of Wickedness.


Further links:

Jason Gaskell

Jupiter


Thursday, February 08, 2007

I am the Bird by T.M. Wright

It is difficult for a straightforward summary to do justice to T.M. Wright's remarkable I am the Bird, a novella in which nothing much happens, no story is told (in the conventional sense) and nothing is resolved as such - yet which is still a complete and satisfying reading experience...

Continue reading at The Zone.

Further links:
T.M. Wright
PS Publishing

Saturday, January 20, 2007

The Turning by Paul J. Newell

Our narrator is Lleyton Quinn, a forecaster of consumer demand by trade, whose help is sought covertly by Detective Sergeant Melissa Keller in investigating a series of cases in which people (more than one of whom is known to Quinn) have run away for no obvious reason. As the novel proceeds, it transpires that the runaways have been "turned" -- they have somehow come to stop caring about anything at all -- as Lleyton discovers first-hand when it happens to Keller. And, when he finds out who (or what) is behind the "turning," the implications for humanity will be...



Continue reading at SF Site.


Further links:

Paul J. Newell

The Virnation puzzle

Appian Publishing

Monday, January 08, 2007

Extended Play, ed. Gary Couzens

Gary Couzens takes to the decks for the third Elastic Press anthology, a set of nine tales at the longer end of the short story bracket, linked by the presence of music...


Read more at The Zone.

Further links:
Tony Richards
Chris T-T
Tall Poppies
Elastic Press

Saturday, January 06, 2007

Remainder by Tom McCarthy

The protagonist...does not reveal his name, and can’t remember much about his accident; but its lasting effects are all too clear to him: intensive physiotherapy has left him conscious of every little movement he makes, and he longs for the days when he could perform action without thinking – the days when he felt real. A settlement has left our man rich to the tune of eight-and-a-half million pounds, and he wonders what to do with it all. Then one night, at a party, he recalls in great detail a flat he used to live in, where he felt real in a way he doesn’t now. He resolves to recreate those surroundings – right down to the sounds, smells, and neighbours – in the hope of capturing that feeling once again. And he doesn’t stop there…


Continue reading at Laura Hird's New Review.

Further links:
INS (Tom McCarthy)
Alma Books

The Raw Shark Texts by Steven Hall

Eric Sanderson...lost his girlfriend in an accident whilst on holiday – and, thanks to a recurring disassociative disorder (according to his psychiatrist, Dr Randle), he keeps losing all memory of his self. When we join Eric, his disorder has recurred for the eleventh time; and, as he tries to make sense of life again, he receives a series of letters signed ‘the First Eric Sanderson’ giving a rather different explanation for his amnesia: that Eric is being hunted by a Ludovician, a ‘conceptual shark’ that feeds on human memories...


Continue reading at Laura Hird's New Review.

Further links:
Steven Hall
Novel website
Canongate

Magnetic North, ed. Claire Malcolm

This book collects together works produced between 2003 and 2005 as part of a live literature programme that took place in Newcastle Gateshead...


Continue reading at Laura Hird's New Review.

Further links:
Andrew Crumey
Fiona Ritchie Walker
Julia Darling
Val McDermid
Chrissie Glazebrook
Charles Fernyhough
New Writing North



Monday, January 01, 2007

The Steam Magnate by Dana Copithorne

Kyra is sent by the Heiress Veridi to the Broken Glass City where she must find a man named Eson and take from him a certain deed. Eson has inherited his family's hot springs in the northern mountains, and is in control of the electricity generated by them -- but more than that, the springs also grant him the power to bind others to himself through deeds like the one Kyra has been instructed to retrieve...

Read more at SF Site.

Further links:
Dana Copithorne (Art Portfolio)
Aio Publishing