Apr 102009
 
Share

Chen #1Snake Agent by Liz Williams
Publication: Night Shade Books , ebook / ISBN 1597801072
Genre: Sci-Fi, Fantasy, Mystery
Rating:
Find @ WebScriptions
First sentence: Hanging by his heels and twisting slowly in the draught that slipped beneath the crimson door, Detective Inspector Chen tried desperately to attract the demon’s attention.

One of my favorite kind of books to read are ones that mix genres, especially when those genres are sci-fi and fantasy. It allows me to keep my computer while still letting me do magic and battle ogres (or whatever), so how could I not love it? I first heard about the Detective Inspector Chen series from a thread on Mobileread, and I immediately wanted to check it out. Not only does the series mix sci-fi and fantasy, but there’s also a bit of mystery and police drama thrown in as well. Fantastic!

Summary from Amazon:

You were supposed to go to Heaven, but ended up in one of the many Chinese hells instead. Who you gonna call? Nobody, you’re dead. Luckily, in future Singapore, Detective Chen is on the case. Specializing in supernatural crimes, Chen finds himself in hell teaming up with a demon cop to solve the mystery, return a lost soul to its rightful reward, and restore harmony between Heaven and Earth.

Snake Agent is the first book in the series, and it’s a whopper. We’re introduced to a lot of new ideas and people, though never in an overwhelming or confusing way. In fact, I sometimes felt that some things were left out or dropped too early, like it was forgotten somewhere earlier in the plot. Normally that sort of thing annoys me, but I honestly didn’t notice until after I finished reading, and I’m reasonably sure at least half of those things will be addressed in the next few books.

Anyway, a lot of interesting things are in this book– besides the demons and gods and detectives, of course. There’s interesting futuristic technology, like a liquid computer whose system is run by, um, plugging everything into humans and pumping it through them (gross). Also franchise cities, one of which Chen works in (called Singapore Three!), a cure for AIDS, and various other rather vague technological advancements. I especially liked that technology and supernatural were often paired together: the demons in hell could get email from humans on Earth just as easily as I can get emails from Nigerian spammers.

The writing is beautiful, the mystery is just on the edge of shocking without being disgusting, and the characters are vibrant, if slightly lacking in depth. Actually, I take that back; I think Chen, Sergeant Ma (his reluctant accomplice), and Seneschal Zhu Irzh (the demon cop) had a lot of depth to them. Everyone else, including Chen’s wife, didn’t. Maybe they’ll get their turn in another book.

I liked the interaction between the “real” world and the supernatural world, especially how Chen doesn’t automatically categorize demons as evil, no-good beings, nor does he automatically categorize gods as being all good. He’s a shades of grey kind of person, and I appreciate that in a character– especially when that character is a detective! Gives him depth, and so on.

The supernatural/paranormal parts were especially well done, though it’s hard to talk about them without wanting to quote the entire book or simply squealing like a fangirl all over this post. Simply put, it was fantastic. Like the Dresden Files but less complicated and with more moral implications/god involvement. Magic (and gods) are very heavily intertwined with the world of D.I. Chen, and even people who don’t believe in it are affected, as in the case of Mrs. Tang here, after she dies and is waiting in the Chinese equivalent of Limbo:

Chen could believe this, thinking of chic Mrs Tang as she had been in life. Now, stripped of her designer clothes and her status and social position, she was nothing more than just another shade. It had often occurred to Chen how shattering it must be for someone who had devoted their whole life to material possessions to suddenly find themselves in a world where status depended on entirely more intangible matters.

So, in short: awesome fantasy/sci-fi futuristic mystery with an interesting plot and lot of potential in future books.

Other reviews: Bookslut | Graeme’s Fantasy Book Review | Deep Thought

Bookmark and Share

Share

links for 2009-4-9

 Posted by Anastasia on April 9, 2009  No Responses »
Apr 092009
 
Share
Share

Thursday Tea: April 9

 Posted by Anastasia on April 9, 2009  No Responses »
Apr 092009
 
Share

Thursday Tea Thursday Tea is a weekly meme hosted by yours truly. To play along, all you need is some tea, a book, and the will to answer some very simple questions: what tea are you drinking (and do you like it)? What book are you reading (and do you like it)? Tell us a little about your tea and your book, and whether or not the two go together.

The tea: For this week’s Tuesday Tea, I went back into my little Stash Tea collection and tried out their Chai Spice. Even just the leaves have a strong aroma to them, very cinnamon-y and nearly on the edge of potpourri. Heh. The brewed tea had the same smell, but more muted and delicious.

Here’s how it’s described:
Chai Spice

For our interpretation of this classic Indian drink, we blend rich, flavorful Indian black teas and cinnamon, clove, ginger and cardamom. The brewed tea is very aromatic with a flavor that is slightly sweet, strong and penetrating, with rich, full bodied lingering flavor notes. This tea is very pleasant plain, or with milk (regular or evaporated) and sugar added. It is exceptional any time of day, as a rich morning cup, enjoyable dessert tea or as a special taste treat.

As recommended, I put in sugar and milk. It was so good. So flavorful! And lovely! The smell was much less intrusive once the tea was brewed, and the combination of flavors was wonderful. Really, really recommended.

I had a little extra tea left over and so I made a cup for my parents to share. They loved it, too!

The book: I’ve been giddily looking around at all the free books Baen (and WebScriptions) provide, and now I’ve actually started reading them. The covers are nearly always hideous, like bad 90′s TV shows or 80′s pulp sci-fi/fantasy books (even if they were written in the 2000s!), but the insides are quite good.

Doc Sidhe The book I was reading whilst drinking my tea was Doc Sidhe, an urban fantasy/adventure book and kind of a tribute to the Doc Savage books. It’s got elves and faeries and other things, but it’s done a little differently than most fantasy books and is quite a lot of fun. It reminds me of an earlier The Last Hot Time. They both have a alternative, faerie-riddled version of the 1930′s/1940′s thing going on, with a few important differences which I’ll talk about more in my review. I’m enjoying it!

Do they go together? I think they do! I’m not sure why, exactly, but they just did. The flavor and scent of the tea is forever linked with an alternate faerie version of Manhattan, now.

What are you drinking/reading this Thursday? Leave a comment with a link to your post!

Share

links for 2009-4-8

 Posted by Anastasia on April 9, 2009  No Responses »
Apr 092009
 
Share
  • “I’m going to try to get some of you “I only read fantasy” readers to stick your proverbial toe into those science fiction waters of wonder. In particular, I’m talking to you lovers of secondary fantasy worlds. I know, I know. You prefer dragons to rockets, magic to science, and someone wielding a sword is way cooler than someone firing a laser gun. I get that, I do. While I’ve enjoyed plenty of science fiction, I feel the same way. So trust me when I say that if there was ever a science fiction novel for you, the secondary world fantasy fan set in his/her ways, Dune is it.” I’ve read Dune before, but I think I’ve blocked it frm ym memory as a self-preservation tactic. So, I don’t necessarily agree, but it’s an interesting post!
  • “In effect, I now have a $359 brick, not covered under any warranty, not able to be used the way it was meant to be, not able to be returned (not that I even want to, I just want to keep reading!) …” Ouch!
    (tags: books ebooks drm)
Share
Apr 082009
 
Share

Final Frontier Becky has done it to me again! This time she’s brought out the Final Frontier Reading Challenge, where sci-fi books rule. I want to be as familiar wih sci-fi as I am with fantasy, so obviously I can’t resist.

There’s four levels of participation you can lock onto; I’m doing the fourth one, where I read seven or more books. I downloaded a buttload of free books from Baen, so I might as well put them to use!

More info:

All dedicated to a certain sub-genre of science fiction.
Challenge is from April 6th through October 6th 2009.

Those books dealing with space travel, exploration, colonization, etc.
(Also anything with aliens is allowed either on our world or theirs.)
(Think Ray Bradbury’s Martian Chronicles or Isaac Asimov’s Foundation trilogy.)

I don’t have a set list yet, but whenever I start reading appropriate books they’ll go below.

1. Interstellar Patrol – Christopher Anvil
2. Earthseed – Pamela Sargent
3. March Upcountry – David Weber & John Ringo
4. Foundation – Isaac Asimov
5. Foundation and Empire – Isaac Asimov
6. Second Foundation – Isaac Asimov
7. Foundation’s Edge – Isaac Asimov

Completed 10/7/09! Wrap-up post is here.

Share

2009 BIP Week 7: Comments

 Posted by Anastasia on April 8, 2009  2 Responses »
Apr 082009
 
Share

New BIP I’ve, er, missed the last two Blog Improvement Project assignments but I’ve latched on to this one! Here’s what’s up this week:

Week #7 is going to be all about making your blog more comment friendly. During the goal setting project (Week #1), a lot of people made it a goal to leave more blog comments. This is important, but I think it’s also vital that once you get a new reader at your blog it’s easy for them to engage with you by commenting on your posts.

* Take an inventory of your blog comments. Write down how many comments you have as of today, then track how many comments you get per day over the next two weeks (I’m curious how well all of this is going to work).

* Pick 3-4 of the techniques from the articles to implement over the next two weeks (or more, if you’re ambitious). Print out the posts or write down a list of techniques to leave by your computer so you’re always reminded of them while you post.

So yeah, this’ll be a lot of fun! I’ll post more about this challenge once I actually read the articles.

Two things:
1. Thank you to everyone who comments on my blog; you really make me happy to check my email every day and I adore all of you. <3

2. How do you keep track of comments you leave on other people’s blogs? Do you bookmark posts that you want to check back on? Do you use something like BackType? Do you sign up for email notifications when new comments are posted? Or something else entirely?

Bookmark and Share

Share
Apr 082009
 
Share

Hal Spacejock #1 Hal Spacejock by Simon Haynes
Publication: Fremantle Press (2008), ebook / ISBN 978-19213-6168-5
Genre: Sci-fi
Rating:
Find free ebook @ Spacejock.com.au
First sentence: Hal Spacejock was sitting at the Black Gull’s flight console, his attention riveted to a small chessboard balanced amongst the toggle switches, flashing lights and status displays.

I’ve known about Hal Spacejock for about two years, and I think I even downloaded it before. Obviously I hadn’t read it ’til now, mostly because I was under the assumption that it’d be one of those annoying parodies that made fun of everything in a genre without bringing anything new to it. I know, I make assumptions a little too often! But in my defense, I did try it out, after reading some reviews, and SURPRISE! I loved it. It wasn’t annoying at all!

Summary from Spacejock.com.au:

An incompetent, accident-prone pilot is given one last chance to save his ship. An ageing robot is trusted with a midnight landing in a deserted field. And a desperate businessman is prepared to sacrifice both of them to get what he wants…

Combining relentless action with non-stop laughs, Hal Spacejock explodes onto the science fiction scene with the subtlety of a meteor strike and the hushed reverence of a used car salesman.

On Simon Haynes’ website, it says

People who like intelligent humour avoid the Hal Spacejock books because they sound silly, and people who like silly books get hold of these and go WTF?

Which is precisely why I avoided reading this book even though it was free. Stupid me! I would have read it ages ago if I had known how good it was! It’s a little bit of a riff off of space opera books, but it’s a kind parody that doesn’t rip everything to shreds. Think Galaxy Quest in book form.

I really had a lot of fun with this book. It’s got wordplay, puns (some of which are so cheesy they made me groan in horror), genuinely funny bits, wonderful characters, good writing, slightly confusing technology, and SPACESHIPS! I love spaceships. Almost as much as I love seaships. It was just what I needed to cheer me up after reading so many books with downer endings lately.

The characters, as I said, are wonderful, with a lot of depth and enough likability to gloss over any flaws they might have. Hal is a fool, but he’s kind. Clunk, the ageing robot, is super intelligent but terribly naive. I even liked the Navcom, the thing that controls the ship and who’s snarky and sarcastic and adorable. The humor is constant and for the most part subtle, though sometimes the puns were a little too much for me. An example:

Hal glanced round at the fugitives, then jerked his thumb at the taller, bronze robot. ‘You can be Clyde, and he can be Albion.’
‘I think that’s Bonnie,’ said the shorter robot, in a deep voice.
Hal looked pleased. ‘I’m glad you like it. My name’s Hal, by the way. Hal Spacejock.’

Good gravy. It’s so groan-worthy it’s nearly silly, but it never got annoying, luckily. The good jokes were balanced out by the bad, and the absurdity of the world of Hal Spacejock had me laughing out loud several times throughout. That’s pretty rare for me, actually, so I really appreciated it. I needed some laughter!

The only thing I didn’t like was how simple and almost boring the plot was. If the characters hadn’t been so good I think I would have given up on the book, as without them it’d be, well, bland. I’ve heard that the next book(s) in the series is much more interesting in that regard, so I’m looking forward to checking them out for myself.

The entire thing is very Discworldian, actually, just set in space instead of on a Disc. The humor is very similar, too, so if you like Terry Pratchett you’ll probably like Hal Spacejock. Or Douglas Adams– the snarkiness of the inanimate objects, like doors, is very Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy.

Okay, enough comparing. It’s free, it’s fun, and it’s recommended by me! No reason not to get it, right? Right!

Look, here’s a fancy button in case you missed my link above:
Spacejock button

Other reviews: Contrariwise | We Read Science Fiction | No Krakana

Bookmark and Share

Share