Thursday, July 29, 2021

Weekly Reader: Demons of Time: Race to the 7th Sunset (Time Travelers Book #1) by Varun Sayal; Time Travel Adventures Offers Unique Society of Travelers

 


Weekly Reader: Demons of Time: Race to the 7th Sunset (Time Travelers Book #1) by Varun Sayal; Time Travel Adventures Offers Unique Society of Travelers

By Julie Sara Porter

Bookworm Reviews


Spoilers: Varun Sayal's Demons of Time: Race to the 7th Sunset is unique among books about time travel. It presents an interesting organization and world of time travelers.


While the time travel missions in the book are amazing, what is particularly fascinating is the organization and world in which the time travelers live (that is when they are not hopping through time.). They are not observing time from some future date but in the distant past. The book begins in 3077 BCE and is set at the University of Time Readers. From this vantage point, time readers see signs and premonitions, research information, and read documents from and  of the future. Since the future is not linear, they see possibilities. They can see what could happen if things are unchanged and the probability rates of potential destruction. To fix any problems in the time stream, they send for time travelers to a certain point in time to fix the problem. Then the readers scan the information to see what if anything changed.


In this assignment, Time reader Rigu is on the trail of a pair of time demons, Kumbh and Vetri. While fighting the demons, Rigu encounters mother and son, Dhara and Tej. Tej helps Rigu to defeat the demons. Rigu is impressed with the young boy's skill so twenty years later, Rigu reunites with Tej to give him a very interesting and exciting job offer. 

Kumbh has escaped from his time prison and traveled into the future. Rigu and the other time readers have seen the potential futures and have seen that a chain of events will result in humanity's destruction by 2076. The first link in the chain is set to occur in 2024 when Kumbh merges with someone's body. Tej has to merge with the body of Ravi Kumar Cheri, former illegal arms dealer turned businessman, find out who Kumbh is hiding inside, and stop his plan. Oh yes and he only has seven days. No pressure there.


Rigu and Tej have a close mentor student relationship. Rigu shows the younger man around the university and the difficulties of being a time traveler. Tej's first trip through time is somewhat stomach churning and sickening as he lands into the lair of a necromancer, three hundred years in the past to give him instructions on how to share consciousness with someone's body after they have been restored to life. Tej also travels through blackness and a long murky river which represents the River of Time. This journey is magnificent to read about and picture in one's head.

 Rigu realizes the difficulties that such a journey could produce and gives him some advice and recommends sandalwood and other oils to soothe his body and focus his mind so he can go to the right destination. Rigu also teaches Tej on how to live inside the host body and to return to his original timeline as a sanctuary. 

Rigu is also on hand to talk to Tej about other matters. Even though Tej is married to a woman and a father, he confides that he has thoughts about a male friend and has always had erotic feelings towards men. Rigu tells him that it is no sin for men to love other men and the only real sin is to hurt others. Rigu is practically the father that Tej lacks and has always longed for.


When Tej is on his own in 2024, this exciting original Science Fiction concept takes a back seat to Mystery as Tej-in-Ravi has to discern which of Ravi's colleagues or enemies Kumbh is hiding inside. He has to do some detective work as he scans Ravi's files to find the potential recipient of Kumbh's not so charitable donation of his spirit.

The kind hearted naive Tej's transformation into the ruthless avaricious Ravi is difficult for him to handle. He has to act like Ravi on the outside without anyone acting suspicious while still remembering that he is Tej, the time traveler with a fast approaching deadline, on the inside.


There are some twists towards the end, some that are rather unfortunate because they cause the Reader to question everything that had gone before. However, Demons of Time Race to the 7th Sunset is a brilliant first look at a unique world that will be great to explore in some future, or past, date.




 


Weekly Reader: Hades Forest by Simon Elson; Dystopian Science Fiction Marries 1984 and Lord of the Flies and Creates A Very Dark Weird Baby

 


Weekly Reader: Hades Forest by Simon Elson; Dystopian Science Fiction Marries 1984 and Lord of the Flies and Creates A Very Dark Weird Baby

By Julie Sara Porter

Bookworm Reviews


Spoilers: The usual trajectory of dystopian science fiction is when the protagonist leaves their oppressive regime and joins the Resistance Movement, the Resistance consists of better characters that intend to speak and fight against the dictators and create a newer and better society. It's rare that the protagonist discovers that the rebels are just as bad or worse than the people that they left behind. Sometimes if the rebels don't have a decent society and structure planned, they can turn the dystopia into further chaos.

Simon Elson's Hades Forest is just such a science fiction novel. It begins as a dystopia describing a world right out of 1984, Fahrenheit 451, Brave New World, or The Handmaid's Tale. Then halfway through the novel, the book seems to get lost on its way to Lord of the Flies, featuring characters struggling to survive within various tribes that attack and kill each other.



The style of the book is similar to Reality Testing by Grant Price in that the book is separated in two distinct sections: the one set in the dystopia and the other with the resistance. However, unlike Reality Testing which shows better characterization and a distinct goal from the rebels on how to improve their society, neither side looks particularly good and both have their share of problems


Perry Benson lives in futuristic Tambamba, in the country formerly known as South Africa, now called the Holy States of Borea. In the future, governments and countries have collapsed. Perry lives in a society where he has a voice recorder on his neck and a tracking device on his foot. Everyone gives thanks to Borea as part of a greeting and parting much to Perry's chagrin. 

Borea's government controls every aspect of its citizens' lives including that they are assigned a partner after thirty and are only permitted one child. Eradicts like Perry are ordered to destroy any item that is considered evil i.e. things of the past: things like tinsel, rugby balls, DVD players, and a copy of Alice's Adventures in Wonderland (the last from my cold dead hand!). Citizens like Perry and his wife, Mabel are required to attend public events which talk about Borea's history and how "wonderful" their society is. 


Perry and Mabel's marriage is similar to that of Guy and Mildred Montag in Fahrenheit 451. Mabel is the loyal card carrying member of Borean society. There is nothing that she does or says that isn't approved of by Borean's Codes and Society. She even schedules her and Perry's copulations when Borea says that they need to procreate. Mabel is practically a robot created only to please the state.

Perry on the other hand has to play the role on the outside while challenging the standards on the inside. The way that Borea is structured makes someone who questions it believe that there is something wrong with them and not the society. In fact they have a term for that (similar to how psychiatrists in Soviet society actually created mental disorders for people who denounced Soviet politics.)

People with physical and mental disorders are considered Crolax and are exiled. Anyone who denounces the state is considered Crolax. Perry discovers for himself what being a Crolax is like when he denounces Borea in public and ends up in prison.


Borea is terrible no doubt about it but when you think Perry is going to become a hero, things take an even more disturbing turn.

Perry breaks out of prison with the help of a man named Dolphin who leads him to Hades Forest. If Borea represents too much order and control in which every move and every aspect is micromanaged and planned, then the world of Hades Forest represents too much chaos. The only laws involve survival of the fittest. People are separated into five tribes which use cutthroat means to attack the others.

 Left alone in the forest, Perry encounters The Leagros, a tribe of survivalists who steal from other tribes to survive. The Leagros battle against other tribes that specialize in rape, slavery, murder, and torture. Each tribe feels that it is their right to strike back at those who oppose them in any means possible with no laws, no ethics, and no compassion. The tribes use the methods that they learned from the Boreans who hurt them.  However, they fight amongst themselves rather than against Borea which puts them in this mess in the first place.


Perry and the other tribe members stand out as interesting characters despite the bleak circumstances. There's the excitable Kirito who constantly talks in third person and once he befriends Perry, becomes a loyal staunch friend. Chintu is a hard edged veteran of the Tribal Wars and has no time for Perry's ethical arguments. Crank is the shifty leader of Leagros who has cunning means of stealing from other tribes and a grudging respect for those in his tribe. Then there's Miist, an enigmatic member of another tribe who mysteriously saves Perry and the others on occasion.


Some plot twists get introduced towards the end that are genuinely surprising and cause Readers to question the characters' behavior. One revelation caused this Reader to go back and reread some passages to follow the leads to this revelation. Upon second reading it made sense and added a bit more to the Boreans and the Hades Forest residents than originally perceived.


There have been many dystopian fiction novels written in the past year. Sometimes a writer can still add a new twist to what could be a tired subgenre. Luckily, Elson is that writer.


New Book Alert: Accidentally Engaged To The Billionaire (Accidental Engagement Series Book 1) by Bridget Taylor; Predictable But Charming Romance Between Different Social Classes

 


New Book Alert: Accidentally Engaged To The Billionaire (Accidental Engagement Series Book 1) by Bridget Taylor; Predictable But Charming Romance Between Different Social Classes

By Julie Sara Porter

Bookworm Reviews


Spoilers: Bridget Taylor's Accidentally Engaged to the Billionaire is the example of Modern Romance Wish Fulfillment: The lovers of different social classes meet and arrange an alleged romance. They have to act like a happy couple in front of tongue clicking disapproving friends and relatives. After revealing their differences and arguments, usually an Act 3 Break Up, the duo decide that they love each other for real. Expect a lot of parties inside swank wealthy estates, maybe a vacation to an exotic location or a formal dance at the country club, expensive gifts, and a shopping spree.

There isn't anything in Accidentally Engaged to the Billionaire that hasn't been read or seen before and in some ways, in dark times, that's what makes it comforting.

Romances like this are the literary equivalent of a candy bar or a second can of soda. It's not healthy or stimulating but it's comforting, fun, and entertaining. It's a charming book that gives us pure wish fulfillment and makes for a good escape.


Charles Bentley, the eponymous billionaire, is in a bind. He is due to Inherit his father's money but the will stipulates that he has to be married before his 35th birthday and the big day is looming. There are some family members, such as his avaricious uncle and his much younger trophy wife, who would love to see him not get it. Rather than hit the singles bars, go on speed dates, or check out Match.com, Charles proposes to the woman who just delivered his pizza. 

Jane is confused about this odd proposal, but intrigued by his offer to pay her college tuition and to get her family out of their financial hole, so she accepts. Of course they go through the usual hurdles of faking their engagement, meeting disapproving friends and family, etc, before falling in love for real.


Charles and Jane are a study in contrasts. Charles is a smooth confident man about town, born with money. He is so insulated in his wealth that he thinks money can buy anything, even a potential fiancee. He doesn't want it to be sordid. In fact, sex and emotion aren't even factors. They are to be engaged in name only as though it were a business transaction. 

Charles lacks some of the depth of rich suitors found in books like Courage Jonathan or The Artist and His Billionaire. He is disgusted by the behavior of some of his family members and has enough awareness to be appalled by the money grubbing snobbish antics of his Uncle Jack, Aunt Rosemary, and the family lawyer, Wyatt Tucker. Unfortunately, he doesn't want to leave the family and attempt to make it on his own without his family or to do some charitable philanthropic good with his money. I suppose that he feels that paying off the tuition and debts of one college student is his good deed and teaching a person to fish blah blah blah. 

Charles shows kindness in some of the most unlikely of places. He lets Jane spend the night when a fight with her older sister causes her to get kicked out. He also begins to shed some of his earlier snobbishness and sees more than his wealthy corner of the universe.


Jane is of course the poor woman made good with this peculiar offer. In her story, we get some realism with discussions of poverty and income inequality. By contrast to Charles' world, Jane's is pretty bleak. She is working her way through college but still has student loans looming in her future. Her mother died recently so it's just Jane and her sister, Helena, who works as a bartender in a strip club. Jane appreciates the generous financial offer that Charles is offering and she can't afford to say no. However, she wonders what accepting means to her. She has visions of herself in fancy dress, sitting in a mansion, and turning her nose up at the things and people that she used to like. 

Unfortunately, the bleaker and more realistic that Taylor writes Jane's predicament, the less likely the fantastic aspects of the Romance are. Jane has to agree to Charles' proposal because she is written without any options. She has no choice but to say yes.

Like Charles, Jane also goes through a transformation. She doesn't become the snob that she fears, but she does learn to use that money to change her and Helena's lives and maybe get a better future.


Actually, Taylor writes a better potential couple that almost steals the spotlight from Charles and Jane: Helena and Charles' cousin, James.

James is Charles' closest companion. He is the only one who is in on the Proposal Scheme and speaks for a lot of Readers who probably think "Hey, isn't this idea a little weird?" 

However, he is incredibly loyal to Charles and grows to like and accept Jane. He is usually quick with a wry comment or one liner that sometimes puts him at odds with others, particularly Charles. He is also completely on Charles' side because he can't stand Jack and wants to see him go down.


Helena is also a brilliant contrast to the romance between Charles and Jane. Helena is more cynical about this proposal. She loves her sister and doesn't want to see her get hurt but she also thinks that this scheme amounts to prostitution. She is furious not only that her family has to be put into such a situation where Jane has to accept it but also has a grudge against the Bentleys in particular. It takes a while for her to reveal the reason for the grudge but it shows that sometimes when the wealthy act, the poor suffer and they may not be aware of who is suffering.

Helena and James' exchanges are minimal, but they carry a lot of wit, sarcasm, and repartee that you can see a possible couple emerging from them. Also since they are written to be more experienced than Charles and Jane, their romance won't necessarily begin with a contrived fairy tale like beginning. It would begin with the more gradual "getting to know each other" scenario that many regular couples go through. If Taylor isn't planning on it, she should write a spin off series about James and Helena.


Accidentally Engaged to the Billionaire is the kind of Romance that reality invites a scoff but the Escapist side longing for a dream will enjoy. 


Wednesday, July 28, 2021

Weekly Reader: Miss Mabel's School For Girls (Book One in The Network School) by Katie Cross; Dark Fantasy About Magical Girl's School is Spooky and Spectacular

 


Weekly Reader: Miss Mabel's School For Girls (Book One in The Network School) by Katie Cross; Dark Fantasy About Magical Girl's School is Spooky and Spectacular

By Julie Sara Porter

Bookworm Reviews


Spoilers: Okay, I admit it. As much as I love most books and other works about witches and other magic users, I am not nor have I ever been a big fan of the Harry Potter Series. I recognize J.K. Rowling's attention to world building, the influence on getting kids to enjoy reading, and the impact that it had and continues to have on Children's Literature and the Fantasy Genre. 

However, personally I never cared that much for the series itself. I find Harry Potter himself the worst kind of Chosen One insufferable lead, a Gary Stu. The other characters are mostly flat and the dimensions that they possess happen too late for me to really care. The series falls to the standard good vs. evil conflict without much gray area interest. It calls back to the late 19th early 20th century of the so-called Golden Age of English Literature in terms of structure and subtle themes of classicism, racism, and adherence to traditional gender roles.

Many of the plot points are predictable and even some of the twists were obvious. Even the idea of a school of witches and wizards had been used before in works like The Worst Witch by Jill Murphy. When it comes down to it, the Harry Potter series wasn't any better written than the OZ series.

Not only that, but I found the publicity and media attention to be overblown, making what I found to be an average series at best overrated. (I'm the contrary sort that the more you tell me that I am supposed to like something the more I will dislike it to the point of hating it.) Worst of all, the single minded attention to Harry Potter overshadowed other books that were also about witches, wizards, and magic users that were better in quality that came out around the time but not near as well known and certainly deserved even some of the publicity that Potter got. Books like Jonathan Strange and Mr. Norrell by Susanna Clarke which was one of my favorite fantasy books during the Aughts.


Another of the books which has similar ideas to Harry Potter but is also better written is Katie Cross' Miss Mabel's School For Girls. It has a better plot, characters, and is less defined in its themes of recognizing darkness in others and recognizing power and darkness in oneself.


16 year old, Bianca Monroe gets accepted to the prestigious Miss Mabel's School For Girls, a boarding school for young witches. It is one of the most notable schools in The Network, a sockety of witches and other magic users with their own government, schools, society, economic structure and so on. 

Bianca makes friends with fellow first years, Camille and Leda and gets the attention of instructors like Miss Bernadette, Miss Scarlet and Miss Celia. When a competition comes for third years only, Bianca raises her hand. She doesn't want to show off her abilities, though they are impressive. She wants to face Miss Mabel, the headmistress. Mabel put a curse on Bianca's family years ago and she wants the curse either removed by Mabel voluntarily or by her death.


Bianca is no Harry Potter. She is not stunned and amazed by this new world where she is propped up as a prophecized hero since she was a baby simply by surviving. She knows about The Network. She is experienced and even cynical about the way the magical world works. 

For lack of a better world, Bianca was home schooled by her father to practice magic. He also teaches her to suppress her thoughts and knowledge so the treacherous Miss Mabel doesn't catch on. She is even told to suppress the magic that she learned outside of school so she can act like the average student and no one knows where or from whom she learned her powers. During her education, Bianca behaves like a spy in enemy territory being a good student but always knowing that the enemy is within.


While the Harry Potter series gets progressively darker, the older the kids get and the more the series continues, the darkness in Miss Mabel's School For Girls is present from the beginning. Many characters pay a terrible price for using and specializing in magic. Leda, Bianca's friend, has precognitive abilities but they make her so physically ill that she prefers to be alone rather than inadvertently reveal a future that someone doesn't want to know.

Many of the tests in the competition are meant to bring out the more sinister side to the characters. Even the smallest assignments like finding the student's individual butterfly comes with the caveat not to trust anyone or anything. The participants have to face their deepest fears and go through psychological torture to move ahead in the competition. 

One of the final tests puts the young witches through a personal physical and mental pain that will only be recalled if the witch withdraws from the competition. The test and results reveal a lot about Bianca and the other participants, what's most important to them, and what drives them to succeed.

Instead of Hogwarts which appears to be a kid's wish fulfillment where Readers long to visit,Miss Mabel's School For Girls should come with a warning: Enter at Your Own Risk. Warning: Physical and Mental Side Effects May Occur.


When Bianca finally gets some alone time with Miss Mabel, it becomes a one on one battle. Bianca has to use all of her self taught magic, love of her family, and desire to end this painful and destructive curse to face Mabel who has power, influence, and a strong ambition to be at the top of the Network. 

Mabel gives off this impression of being a stern but loving leader and headmistress to young witches. However, she has a ruthless cunning nature that destroys anyone who dares oppose or disagree with her. 

To fight against her, Bianca has to be ruthless, cunning, and duplicitous and hide that nature. To face that darkness in Miss Mabel, Bianca has to find that darkness in herself. It takes her one book to learn what it took Harry seven (and eight movies). 


While some could call Miss Mabel's School For Girls, a Harry Potter knockoff, it is less concrete, deals less with absolutes of black and white, and contains less of the old school Golden Age of Literature structure disguised as a new experience. Miss Mabel's has the nuances in character and plot development and shades of gray that Rowling's franchise lacks.







Monday, July 26, 2021

Weekly Reader: Mystic Guests (A Mystic's End Mystery Book One) by Leanne Leeds; Magical Mystery is Memorably Marvelous

 


Weekly Reader: Mystic Guests (A Mystic's End Mystery Book One) by Leanne Leeds; Magical Mystery is Memorably Marvelous

By Julie Sara Porter

Bookworm Reviews


Spoilers: Earlier this year, I discussed the Cozy Mystery subgenre in Mysteries. The cozy mystery has a sub-sub genre in the Paranormal Cozy. It is similar to a traditional cozy in that it is set mostly a rural community, stars an amateur detective usually female with an occupation or hobby which puts them in close proximity to murder, and a close group of friends or family who aid them during their investigation.

What makes a Paranormal Cozy stand out is the magical aspects present. Sometimes said amateur detective has intuitive abilities, psychic powers, or has visions of the murders or their victims. Other times, the supernatural aspects are more overt with witches, ghosts, vampires, fairies, and other paranormal creatures along for the ride and taking part in the small town crime wave shenanigans. 

Such examples include Bewitching Mysteries by Madelyn Alt, Aunt Dimity Series by Nancy Atherton, The Faerie Apothecary Series by Astoria Wright, Ghost Dusters by Wendy Roberts, Karma Crime Series by Claire Daniels, Ophelia and Abby Mysteries by Shirley Damsagaard, and Sookie Stackhouse Southern Mystery (better known by the TV series name True Blood) by Charlaine Harris. I would be remiss if I did not shout out the Harry Dresden Files by Jim Butcher but the supernatural is less gentle and darker, the murders are more violent, and the character of Dresden is more reminiscent of a hard boiled professional detective than a cozy amateur detective. 


A great example of the Paranormal Cozy is The Mystic End Mysteries by Leanne Leeds. It has a bewitching brilliant lead in Fortuna Delphi, witch,artist, former carnival performer, and amateur detective. It captivates with a memorable setting in Mystic's End, Arkansas, a small town with a magical past leading to its paranormal present. There is a great first volume with Mystic Guests which combines ghostly premonitions with human murder.


Fortuna has left her life behind as a painter and fortune teller at the Magical Midway to get some answers. As a child, she was abandoned in the small town of Mystic's End and she wants to know why and where she came from. However, she gets more questions than answers.

When Fortuna moves into her new apartment, she encounters Spike, the ghost of a murdered young man. She helps reveal the location of Spike's body behind the walls of her apartment and art studio, which used to be a record store. So she is driven to discover who killed Spike despite the stonewalling and suspicious threats from townspeople that would rather not find out.


This is a great mystery within both the paranormal and cozy genre. In fact, the paranormal aspects make the cozy ones much better. 

Mystic's End is a typical picture postcard of a seemingly perfect small town found in such books but what makes it stand out is its mystical history. According to legend, a coven of witches fled the trials in the early part of American history and moved to a town that they called Mystic. When other wealthier families moved in, they forced the witches to conform to the new church or else. Some did, but others practiced in secret leaving a long train of magic users and a magical energy surrounding Mystic's End. 

Unfortunately, modern day so far reveals only two practitioners living in Mystic's End these days. One of them is of course Fortuna. The other is Miss Bessie, an elderly woman who can also communicate with Spike and who gives off the impression of being just a befuddled eccentric to disguise her real abilities.


Fortuna herself is an interesting lead character with a very unique backstory. Her life at the Magical Midway is very colorfully described as she recalls her friends like the ringmaster, Charlotte and the shapeshifters that transform into animals for the animal acts. She also recalls a time when she faced the Witches Council which suggests that she has some very powerful magic coursing through her veins. (Leeds also wrote a series about Fortuna's time in the Magical Midway. It should be quite an interesting read.) 

Besides showing a strong aptitude for magic, Fortuna displays a lot of courage and kindness just like any normal protagonist in a mystery. She becomes a close friend to Spike when she realizes that she is one of the few people in town who developed a genuine connection with him in life or afterlife. 

She uses a more human form of persuasion to save the life of a greyhound who becomes a loyal pet. She also attracts the attention of two men, Officer Gabriel Wilcox and the wealthy and flirtatious, Martin Salvi during her investigation.


Unfortunately, it will take Fortuna's normal and paranormal abilities to see through the corruption and conspiracies that cover Mystic's End. With the help of Gabe and newspaper reporter Pepper Stanford, Fortuna learns that some of Mystic's End's most prominent citizens are extremely reluctant to have people poking around and asking questions. People like Rev. Dexter Kane, who takes the opportunity to use Spike's funeral as a means to shout his HellFire and Brimstone opinions about the rest of the townspeople (excluding himself of course), Evangeline Laroux, a former cheerleader who left her small-town for stardom and came back with a wealthy husband and an interest in gold digging, and The Abernathys, a wealthy and connected family that own various properties including the music store where Spike's body was discovered and is now Fortuna's apartment and shop.


Mystic Guests is an excellent addition to the Paranormal Cozy Mystery subgenre. It is memorably magical and marvelously mysterious.








Weekly Reader: A Spell in The Country by Heide Goody and Iain Grant; Wonderful Witty Web of Witches Weighs The Terms "Good" and "Wicked"

 


Weekly Reader: A Spell in The Country by Heide Goody and Iain Grant; Wonderful Witty Web of Witches Weighs The Terms "Good" and "Wicked"

By Julie Sara Porter

Bookworm Reviews


Spoilers: For obvious reasons, I have always been drawn to witches both real and fictional. Once I got over my childhood fear of Halloween, images and stories of witches fascinated me such as the arrival of Glinda The Good Witch of the North and Elphaba The Wicked Witch of the West in the Wizard of OZ, the animated sequence when The Wicked Queen turns into the elderly peddler in Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs, and the various fairy tale collections filled with memorably magical female characters. I collect Halloween witch figures and memorabilia and keep them in my room all year round. When I read fantasies, my favorite characters are always the magic users: fairies, sorcerers, sorceresses, witches, wizards, mages, clerics, Jedi etc. Many times if a book is about a witch or a magic user, I will give it a read. (Oddly enough, even though I love novels about witches, I am not a fan of  Harry Potter. I will explain why in a future review.) 

The Witch has been an archetype that has been a huge part of my life and since 2002 (wow almost 20 years!) I have walked that path as a Solitary Wiccan. 

Right now I am paying tribute to this archetype by reviewing six books about witches. Three reviews have been completed: The Mind Witch by Nicole Demery, Mother: A Mother Gothel Tale Witches of Grimm by C.M. Adler, and Tales From The Hinterland by Melissa Albert. There are three more on my list that pay tribute to these wonderful magical characters.


The latest of my witchy reviews is A Spell in The Country by Heide Goody and Iain Grant. It's a strange combination of fantasy about a coven of witches learning about their history and power and workplace/friend sitcom about different types of women living and working together while tolerating each other's personalities and oddities. A Spell in the Country also plays on the concepts of "good" and "wicked" and finds that the terms are mere constructs and are fuzzier than many think that they are.


The main three witches that we are introduced sit on different sides of the good vs. evil fence. Dee Finch considers herself not only a morally good witch but good at what she does. She works at the Shelter for Unloved Animals and is always ready to help others both human and animal. She uses her magic to transform potions and repair things, adding a magical touch to the ordinary.

Caroline Black hovers on neutral but in her words "(she) is an awesome witch!" A server, she has the gift of glamour both in attractiveness and manipulation. She is able to control others' thoughts to get them to do anything she wants. (However, as she notes, being a hedge witch cannot necessarily make you a hedge trader and being an awesome witch does not pay the bills, hence working at a cafe.) 

Jenny Knott, who is between jobs, is a wicked witch but as she notes, not by choice. She resists all wicked traits, such as suppressing her urge to use spells for hexes and curses. She however has Jizzimus, an annoying sex crazed imp who serves as her familiar. 

The three women are invited to go to the country for a series of courses in which they will become acquainted with other women of their kind and learn how to use their abilities on a larger scale.

In the country, the trio encounter other witches including: Effie, the former Flower Child turned course leader whose wardrobe choices reveals that she is still stuck in the '60's, Norma, the crotchety older member of the group, Shazam, a dizzy younger member who gets all of her information from the Internet and social media, Sabrina, the latest in a magic using family, Kay, a runaway teen rescued by Jenny and Dee, and Natasha, the course founder who spends more time running her spa and beauty product empire than being a witch.


The motley crew of witches are a fascinating bunch as they navigate their way through their lessons and learn to get along with each other. The structure of the book is similar to Neil Gaiman's The Graveyard Book in which there are various subplots spread throughout the book but each chapter reads like a short story with separate assignments that lead to a beginning, middle, and end. 

The adventures are exciting and humorous as the gang use their powers in various tasks and assignments. These assignments make the characters stand out in wonderfully witty and wickedly funny ways.


Their first assignment, to locate a hidden magical amulet, gives Jenny the advantage by finding it. But she also earns Effie's dislike for finding it by herself since part of the assignment was to work with her teammates, Dee and Caroline, to locate it.

Another assignment involves the witches creating a product to sell by using magic, so witchcraft can benefit the women financially. (After all, as Effie points out, witches are often called on to help sell products. Silicon Valley has its own tech savvy coven and what about that "Secret" blend of eleven herbs and spices?) Many of their products go humorously awry. Shazam's hair tonic has very hairy animalistic results and gets in the way of a love triangle between Caroline, Jenny, and a handsome handyman, George.


Even a day off produces some interesting trouble. In her desire to discover wicked witches, Dee practices with Norma, a seasoned veteran in the battle against such witches. They create and bring to life a dummy with the "heart stopping and chilling" name of Lesley-Ann Faulkner. ("It's a name," Dee diplomatically says after Norma eschews traditional names like Elphaba or Bellatrix and favors the Faulkner moniker. "It's definitely a name.").

 Lesley-Ann gets loose and interferes with Jenny and Jizzimus trying to exorcise a ghostly presence in the water and Caroline trying to show Kay how to win friends and manipulate people.


Despite the spell casting shenanigans, the plot veers towards the dark and disturbing as we get to the heart of a conspiracy involving some of the characters. It comes to light that Kay, who up until then was just an innocent bystander playing along with her new older friends' witchly ways, is more involved with the magical arts than many of them suspected. 

Various characters' motives and true characters are revealed and called into question. We find that characters who were thought to be good are the worst kind of wicked and those believed to be wicked are the most morally upstanding. Each character turns out to be more than originally perceived and much deeper and richer through the writing.


A Spell in the Country is a wonderful witch of a book. It is definitely worth sitting down for a spell and becoming enchanted by the great writing and bewitching characters.







Saturday, July 24, 2021

Weekly Reader: Victorian Adventure Stories by Jon Stephen Jones; Nostalgic Adventurous Fun Set In The Victorian Era

 


Weekly Reader: Victorian Adventure Stories by Jon Stephen Jones; Nostalgic Adventurous Fun Set In The Victorian Era

By Julie Sara Porter

Bookworm Reviews


Spoilers: Question: Are you a fan of the old 19th century Adventure Novels written by Jules Verne, Robert Louis Stevenson, and H.G. Wells? Do you like the mysteries featuring characters like Sherlock Holmes, A.J. Raffles, Arsene Lupin, and Fantomas? Do you dream in Steampunk? Does your preferred style of reading end in the 20th century before Realism and psychological motivation became the thing? Do you read just to embrace a good adventurous escape? Then look no further than Jon Stephen Jones' Victorian Adventure Stories. 

This anthology is exactly what it says on the tin and in some ways that's what makes it good. The stories are predictable, but exciting. They are entertaining and fun. When a Reader is under stress sometimes it's good to kick back with an old fashioned adventure yarn and Jones provides that.


The best stories are:


"Henchman"

Most of the stories stand on their own but there are some plots that carry over into multiple stories. "Henchman" is the first of three stories that feature The Medics, a ruthless gang that rules London's Underworld and are headed by the mysterious Dreaded Doctor, an unidentified figure who has had some medical training which they put to good use when taking apart an enemy or a stool pigeon (and might be that other frightening unidentified Victorian medico, Jack the Ripper.).

The trouble starts when John Felmersham, a Medic operative, has decided that he has had enough of gang life and wants to resign. Unfortunately, the Medics don't exactly take rejection well. As John struggles to escape from his former employers, they use various intimidation tactics such as death threats on windows and stalkers following him from train station to train station.

The story has its share of tension since John never knows who is in the Medics, so much of the suspense lies in the fact that anyone that he meets could be a potential threat. One of the more interesting twists is the revelation of the Dreaded Doctor's true identity. While in the context of the story, the twist is obvious, the implications and back story behind this character and how they became the Dreaded Doctor are rather fascinating to imagine. The Dreaded Doctor takes an older story and gives it a more modern outlook.


"A Hebridean Adventure"

If "Henchman" is a tribute to the crime stories for Arthur Conan Doyle, then this story is a tribute to Doyle's other well known work, The Lost World with a lot of Jules Verne thrown in. It is also the other plot that carries over into multiple stories in this anthology.

Professor James Bedford accompanies his colleague, Giles, and several others to a mysterious island near the Outer Hebrides.  Of course the island is filled with prehistoric creatures that scare the daylights out of our plucky scientists and adventurers.

"A Hebridean Adventure" is one of the definite tributes to the old adventure novels in writing style and characterization. The band of scientists are the typical characters that would be found in such an adventure of the time period. There is the cynical first person narrator, the enthusiastic science expert who cares more about exploration than the cost of human life, the assistants that provide their expertise to the expedition, and the working class muscle. We even have the bratty kid whose involvement causes more harm than good (and in this case whose actions carry over into another story, "The Great Exhibit." I told you the Outer Hebrides Island carries over into other stories.) Characterization takes a back side to action and adventure just like in the real life books and stories of the era.

In fact the only real modern touch in this story is that the dinosaurs have feathers, keeping with modern paleontological research that has shown that dinosaurs may have had them as potential evidence of their subsequent evolution into birds. 

The reason that this one is one of my favorites is because it is such a pastiche of the writing of the era, that it could have been written then. While "Henchman" takes centuries old ideas and gives them unique modern twists, "A Hebridean Adventure" is firmly stuck in the past and that is part of the antiquated fun.

 

"The Magic Circle"

You know the fairy stories where some poor mortal gets invited to share a drink or a dance with the Fair Folk only to return from the party to find that centuries have passed? "The Magic Circle" takes these old fairy legends and transports them to the Victorian Era. Geoffrey and Edward, two drunken Victorian gents, take a spooky ride on the London Underground. No one else is on the train nor is anyone driving. Things get weirder when they encounter a very short man who politely offers them a drink.

Jones clearly has a lot of fun visualizing a fairy land that has gone Industrial like its human counterparts. The legendary creatures have their own station in which they dub the "real London Underground," a station where they lure unwary travelers. The drinks are now offered in pubs and stands rather than in a court setting. The Little Man that speaks to Geoffrey and Edward could be mistaken for the average London train goer of the day. It's an interesting twist when most fantasies write Faeries as still living in an agrarian Medieval in appearance society, that some author modernize them.. Jones writes the magical creatures as capable of modernizing their culture and using human's styles and inventions against them. 

The other interesting aspect to this story is that it's a tribute to the London Underground System and was meant to correspond with the 150th anniversary. Jones reveals how much the system has changed over the centuries and how it's still a part of London daily life.


"The Box"

Let's see we have criminal gangs, dinosaurs, and fairies. Why not a story that pays tribute to the con artist and Gentleman Thief, that charming lying conniving bane of law enforcement's existence as popularized by characters such as Maurice Leblanc's Arsene Lupin and E.W. Hornung's A.J. Raffles (the latter of whom was created by none other than Doyle's brother in law)? "The Box" is a clever game of one-upship as the various characters seek to outdo and outsmart each other.

Gordon is upset because his box containing a precious treasure is missing. He recruits various people including Bill, the station attendant, Arthur, a gentleman, and Marcus and Wayne, a pair of rough Cockney men go on the search for the box. Each one hopes to hoard the treasure for himself or at least for a financial reward.

The story is brilliant as the characters attempt to outdo each other and find the box. Bill and Co's seemingly altruistic desire to help Gordon is definitely put aside for financial gain. 

However the thieves are themselves outsmarted when Gordon reveals himself to be much smarter and more cunning than they are. Two plot twists come into play revealing a clear winner in this battle of wits.


"Next of Kin"

Who doesn't love a good ghost story? The Victorians certainly did as evidenced by works like A Christmas Carol, The Woman in White, and many short stories such as the ones that I reviewed in the anthology Women's Weird.

Terrence storms into the home of his friend, John terrified. He has been haunted by a poltergeist. Concerned for his friend's health and sanity, John goes to Terrence's house to confront the ghost. An apparition threatens to frighten Terrence to death.

John tries various means to get rid of the ghost from engaging in friendly conversation, finding out why it's still on Earth, to physically fighting him. As a last resort, John has to call in a relief player: another ghost with a familiar tie to the duo.

The resolution is sweet compared to the creepy actions previously that shows that even death can't stop true friendship and loyalty.


"To Stay or Not To Tay"

This story mixes fact with fiction by using a real life tragedy as a backdrop for the fictional happenings. The Tay Bridge Disaster happened on December 28, 1879 during a violent storm. The first Tay Rail Bridge collapsed as a train passed over it, killing all aboard.

This disaster is graphically described as a married couple take a fateful ride on the train to flee for their lives.

"To Stay or Not To Tay" calls back in many ways to the first story, "Henchman." Once again we find someone escaping via train from the dastardly Medics and their leader, the Dreaded Doctor. (Unfortunately, even though we now know the identity of the Doc, they don't make a personal appearance in this story and are only name dropped a couple of times. It's rather disappointing since in the first story, the Doctor made a very effective and brilliant antagonist.) 

This time married couple, Lionel and Anne Spadwick are the unfortunate targets for an umm unscheduled surgery after Lionel steals from the gang.

While the story is similar to "Henchman" in the increased paranoia that they are being followed, the biggest issues aren't from the Medics themselves but from the elements and faulty construction. This story shows that no matter how people act, there will always be events that are completely out of their control. Sometimes, Fate doesn't care what you have done or are planning to do when it has other ideas.

Despite the gravitas of Jones' writing in depicting the disaster and the enormous loss of life, there is a clever line that actually draws on some of the other stories suggesting that all of the stories in the anthology are tied together.


Sometimes you want a book that is deep in thought and analysis. Sometimes you want a book that is pure escapist adventure. Victorian Adventure Stories is the latter and that's what makes it fun.



Friday, July 23, 2021

New Book Alert: The Road Ahead Love is Eternal by Stacy Keenan; The One Where They All Became Vampires



 New Book Alert: The Road Ahead Love is Eternal by Stacy Keenan; The One Where They All Became Vampires

By Julie Sara Porter

Bookworm Reviews


Spoilers: In The Road Between , the previous volume of Stacy Keenan's Love is Eternal movie monster memorabilia designer, Abby Wickes meets and falls in love with luthier, Nathaniel Davenport. Nathan is handsome and mysterious and is of course revealed to be a vampire. The duo's romance hits a huge snag when Abby is attacked by a fellow vampire and becomes one herself.

Surprisingly, despite the dark fantasy horror turn that the Road Between takes towards the end, the emphasis of the book is on romantic comedy as though Stacy and Nathan were the traditional meet cute couple with intimate conflicts. One of them just so happens to be a vampire.


While Keenan ups the dark fantasy horror aspects in this volume by giving us more information on vampire lore (or her interpretation of vampire lore) and new frightening characters, humor and characterization is still very present. This is especially prevalent when Abby and Nathan host a Christmas and New Years gathering of Nathan's old friends (and I do mean "old friends"). Abby clicks with Nathan's four friends, Lachlann, Ailith, Karsten, and Ava and becomes accepted into their circle. With six friends and three couples, the gathering seems overall like an extended supernatural episode of Friends ("Could we be any more Goth and vampiric?"). The emphasis in this novel is on friendship and forming an extended family of true companions.


Just like its predecessor, The Road Ahead plays with the idea of combining dark fantasy in an almost comedy situation such as when Ava and Ailith chat with Abby about the men in their lives after Abby and Nathan get engaged. They give sexual advice and what to expect for the future when a couple could stay together literally until the end of time.

 

There are some interesting revelations about the sextets's lives as vampires and how they adjusted to the changing times. Lachlann remembers his time taking part in the American Revolutionary War and he and Ailith take a trip to Ft. Ticonderoga to honor his fallen comrades. Karsten also shares war stories about his time as a Goth warrior against the Roman Empire. 

The vampire characters also talk about how they adjust to the changing times particularly in their careers. Ava started out making dresses for noblewomen. In the 21st century, she has transformed into a fashion blogger. Nathan still is a luthier and his violins are often specially made for orchestras and musicians. He is also a dedicated musician himself as he reveals when he takes part in a performance of The Nutcracker. Abby wonders how her future as a graphic designer and memorabilia maker will change over the coming centuries.


The darker aspects are also increased in this volume as well. Abby, Nathan, and their friends find themselves fighting the revenants, an undead army created by evil vampires. Later, another creature is revealed. I won't go into many details but let's just say it is familiar to anyone who has ever seen many European cathedrals and castles or were fans of a certain Disney animated dark series from the '90's.

There are also hints that Abby's family has previous involvement with vampires and her Aunt Sarah (who has been out of town since the previous volume) may know more about her niece's condition than she is letting on.


The Road Ahead expands upon the characterization and the dark fantasy and does what a good second volume does. It improves the series and entices the Reader to read the next one.