Review - Hellraisin 3: Wrath Of Grapes by Marc Richard

Preamble

This is it, people. The one you’ve been raising for. The conclusion to the epic Hellraiser parody trilogy written by Marc Richard. No more raisins – from now on, it’s figs and dates and perhaps even the dreaded dried apricot.

A note about my reviews: I consider myself an appreciator, not a critic. I know first-hand what goes into the creation of art – the blood, the sweat, the tears, the risk. I also know that art appreciation is subjective and lernt good what mama tell’t me – if you don’t have anything nice to say, don’t say anything at all. I’m not a school marm grading a spelling test – I’m a reader who enjoys reading. If a book is entertaining, well-written, and I get absorbed into it, five out of five. It’s either five stars or nothing these days – if I don’t like it, no review. Regardless, I wouldn’t even put a star rating system on my reviews but for the reality of storefronts like Amazon.

Take from that what you will.

Review – 5/5

If you’ve made it through the first two books, you know what to expect with Hellraisin 3: The Wrath Of Grapes. More ridiculousness, more absurdity, more parody of the classic B-horror movie that terrified you when you were a kid at the video store because of all the S&M imagery on the box.

If you haven’t seen the third Hellraiser, you’re not missing a whole lot. It’s alright – schlocky and ridiculous like the rest. Hellraiser 5 will probably surprise you with how it’s actually a damn fine film, and the first one is a classic. And maybe number two gets in there with the first one. But number three was simply not all that great.

This parody, though, is fine. It bounces back and forth between sarcastic smarm, perverse humour, and straight up rando plays on words that are uttered by the characters. You can tell that Tim and Eric have made sweet love to Marc Richard’s sense organs because this is pretty much a Cinco production.

I’ll be honest – I grabbed this because I became somewhat bored with the other book I was reading. Richard has to be commended on the quality of his production here. The editing is pretty top notch, and I’ve read a bunch of self and traditionally published fare that is not quite as pristine as this. I think I might have found a single spelling error among the entire three books, not to mention zero grammatical issues that I picked up (and I’m a bit of a linguistic pedant who ended up doing the law thing for his day job).

I laughed out loud a few times whilst reading this. In my book, there’s hardly higher praise than that.

Check it out on the ‘zon here.

Review - The Lotus Fountain by Nicole Little and JD Ryot

Preamble

I’m slowly making my way through the Slipstreamers series. It’s a series of novellas, published by local-to-me indie genre publisher Engen Books, set in a world where the heroine Cassidy Cane jumps through portals to alternate dimensions, pulling YA Indiana Jones hijinks and capers… and it seems like most of the other worlds are a dystopia of one form or another.

A note about my reviews: I consider myself an appreciator, not a critic. I know first-hand what goes into the creation of art – the blood, the sweat, the tears, the risk. I also know that art appreciation is subjective and lernt good what mama tell’t me – if you don’t have anything nice to say, don’t say anything at all. I’m not a school marm grading a spelling test – I’m a reader who enjoys reading. If a book is entertaining, well-written, and I get absorbed into it, five out of five. It’s either five stars or nothing these days – if I don’t like it, no review. Regardless, I wouldn’t even put a star rating system on my reviews but for the reality of storefronts like Amazon.

Take from that what you will.

Review – 5/5

“Cassidy thought for sure that if Marcella had been wearing a string of pearls around her lying neck, she would have been clutching them, meme style.”

Cassidy Cane is back, and this time she’s heading to gyno-dystopia. I’d be lying if I said that I’ve never seen anything like this before – a matriarchal society where it seems like Utopia at first and then something rotten in the State of Denmark is subsequently perceived feels somewhat familiar from a sci-fi perspective, but Little’s version of this idea is quite excellent in its own right.

Let’s be clear – this is YA, so there is a certain level of verboten territory in terms of sexuality, but it definitely seethes beneath the surface in this one. The sexual element is not quite defined – something about women getting pregnant from a well of water that heals, the eponymous Lotus Fountain. The womyn gave the lads the boot because they were big Ds bearing Ds back in the day (and the allegory to our Rick Jamesian ‘man’s world’ gets somewhat heavy-handed here), making it a female-only society. There are no dudes, anywhere. Again, it’s not well explained and is meant to have a bit of mystery about it, I think.

That, or it flew right over my head.

Cassidy gets charmed by the place and its inhabitants, and even considers moving permanently to the place. But then she finds out where all the little boys who are born from ladies boning the small body of water go, and it’s not back home with their mothers from the hospital. Obviously, this doesn’t go over well with the women what pupped the scamps, which is part of where the dystopian element becomes clear. It becomes sad, and I was genuinely moved to tears at one point, which speaks to Little’s skill as a writer.

Like all of Cassidy Cane’s stories, it’s a quick read, which I definitely appreciate these days. It’s well worth the buck fiddy asking price for the e-book here in Canada. Well written, well paced, easy to digest – what more could you want?

Check it out on the ‘zon here.

Review - Space Academy Rejects by C.T. Phipps and Michael Suttkus (Space Academy Dropouts #2)

Preamble

After I finished the review for Space Academy Dropouts, author C.T. Phipps asked me if I was interested in reading and reviewing the upcoming second book in series. I enjoyed the first one so much that I had no problem saying yes, to hell with my TBR pile. First book reviewed here.

A note about my reviews: I consider myself an appreciator, not a critic. I know first-hand what goes into the creation of art – the blood, the sweat, the tears, the risk. I also know that art appreciation is subjective and lernt good what mama tell’t me – if you don’t have anything nice to say, don’t say anything at all. I’m not a school marm grading a spelling test – I’m a reader who enjoys reading. If a book is entertaining, well-written, and I get absorbed into it, five out of five. It’s either five stars or nothing these days – if I don’t like it, no review. Regardless, I wouldn’t even put a star rating system on my reviews but for the reality of storefronts like Amazon.

Take from that what you will.

Review – 5/5

“Daddy?” I asked. “Do you mean that in the creator sense or older lover?”

Vance Turbo and crew are back for more jinks that are hi and sci that is fi in this space comedy sequel. Like the first book the story is tight and the comedy plays a kind of a sidecar role, like the plot is on the main bike and the comedy is riding shotgun – I’m thinking of Mr. Burns and Smithers right now, with Burns wearing the goggles and scarf and steering the motorcycle with Smithers with his knees in his chin in the sidecar… anyhoo, it’s story first, comedy second.

Not that the book is unfunny – quite the opposite. But it seems to hold itself a little more seriously than the first – as seriously as a book that jumps between the sexual exploits of more likeable Kirk stand-in Vance Turbo with sexbots and subordinates and the universe-destroying plans of Nazi Ewoks can. This book is very much about the characters and their relationships with each other, though.

New to the roster are Vance’s cousin Danny, kind-of dead Ketra’s daughter and Vance’s love interest Shelly, and a couple of others. Back are reptilian Forty-Two, Trish the AI, and a few more as well. It’s also set seven years after the events of the first book, once Vance has settled into his role in Starfleet as a lieutenant or some such. It can’t last though – he’s made captain of yet another ship in the first few pages. Only it’s like a cruise ship or some kind of pleasure craft that has to be refitted into a military vessel.

As before, there is massive scale conflict between the Elder Races and the newbies in the galaxy. Vance and crew are at the forefront, trying to keep things from falling apart. I have to admit that I lost the plot a little bit near the middle of the book, but it was compelling enough that I did not lose interest. In fact, near the end I stayed up a little too long reading it.

It’s a lengthy read, but not so lengthy that it overstays its welcome. You can tell that C.T. Phipps really put his heart and soul into this, though. He described something in the Foreword – a feeling of emptiness after finishing the first book – that felt all to familiar to me as an author. And so, he wrote this one immediately, making a standalone into a series out of sheer love for it. You can feel that devotion here, an unremitting dedication to sci-fi comedy.

If you liked the first, I’m sure you’ll like this one too.

Check it out on the ‘zon here.

Review - Hellraisin 2: The Raisining by Marc Richard

Preamble

Marc Richard made three of these, after the first three Hellraiser movies. Proper thing, because things start to go off the rails after number three – I couldn’t even finish the fourth one. Like most of these things, number one is the best and then the quality starts to take a nosedive.

The same cannot be said for the fantastic parodies written by Marc Richard.

A note about my reviews: I consider myself an appreciator, not a critic. I know first-hand what goes into the creation of art – the blood, the sweat, the tears, the risk. I also know that art appreciation is subjective and lernt good what mama tell’t me – if you don’t have anything nice to say, don’t say anything at all. I’m not a school marm grading a spelling test – I’m a reader who enjoys reading. If a book is entertaining, well-written, and I get absorbed into it, five out of five. I have gone as low as three stars – anything less than that and I will not review a book (chances are I DNFed anyway). Regardless, I wouldn’t even put a star rating system on my reviews but for the reality of storefronts like Amazon.

Take from that what you will.

Review – 5/5

This Hellraisin series is like nothing you’ve read. At least, it’s like nothing I’ve read. It’s hilarious – laugh out loud funny, smirk funny, head shake funny, ‘what the *bleep*’ funny. It’s also basically a scene by scene breakdown of the movie, making fun of all of the cheesy B-horror plot points and characters and bopping between absolutely meta and as granular as Hell(raisin – do you see what I did there?) There are plays on words, plays on taste, plays on film-making.

I’ll tell you what it reminds me of – having a buddy on the couch next to you, both of you blasted out of your minds on the reefer and unable to take the movie seriously, commenting on how ludicrous it is and laughing uproariously. Not because I’ve ever done that, mind you – I’m a good boy, operating purely on pop culture portrayals of cannabis consumption. Kind of like the scenes in Harold & Kumar Go To White Castle where they’re watching television and giggling at the D.A.R.E. commercial.

Richard’s style is absurdist par excellence – he lulls you into a sense of knowing where he is going, and then he throws you a curveball. And another. And another. If you’re at all a fan of the Hellraiser movies (which I am, being a die-hard Clive Barker guy who has yet to read his entire library), you might like this. It’s one of those humour things where you kind of think you’re in on the joke but the comedian does or says something that makes you think like you might not be totally in on it. You’re in a weird limbo where you’re laughing to kill yourself but you’ve gotta keep your guard up, because who knows if he’s making fun of you, too.

But that’s OK, because he’s a big ol’ teddy bear who’s going to take you to Hell and back. And there will be taffy-like skin (the best skin – that also happens to be an artifact of practical special effects from the 80s). There will be demons of pain and pleasure. And there, of course, will be raisins.

Lots of raisins.

Check it out on the ‘zon here.

Review - The Fires Of Heaven by Robert Jordan (The Wheel Of Time #5)

Preamble

Book 5 of The Wheel Of Time, read by Kate Reading and Michael Kramer is in the pipe. I’m listening to these via audiobook as I get my steps in, and averaging about a book a month, depending on the length. They seem to be getting longer as they go on.

A note about my reviews: I consider myself an appreciator, not a critic. I know first-hand what goes into the creation of art – the blood, the sweat, the tears, the risk. I also know that art appreciation is subjective and lernt good what mama tell’t me – if you don’t have anything nice to say, don’t say anything at all. I’m not a school marm grading a spelling test – I’m a reader who enjoys reading. If a book is entertaining, well-written, and I get absorbed into it, five out of five. It’s either five stars or nothing these days – if I don’t like it, no review. Regardless, I wouldn’t even put a star rating system on my reviews but for the reality of storefronts like Amazon.

Take from that what you will.

Review – 5/5

It’s difficult to say new things about this series as time goes on. It’s got a great setting, Jordan does an excellent job of building the feel of an expansive world (notice I didn’t use the word worldbuilding yet used both ‘building’ and ‘world’ in that sentence – I don’t know why, but just notice it). But I have got to say, and I’ve said it in previous reviews, that I’m not sure about the characters.

Full disclaimer: I loved the book, love the series. It's worthy of the 5/5. Nonetheless, the characterization is without a doubt the weakest part. It seems like every single one is as petty and single-minded as they come, and you do need to suspend your disbelief far more for this aspect than all of the fireballs and magic and stuff – at least, that is where I’ve found it. I’ve noticed that others who have read the books have opined about Nynaeve’s childishness, and it does come out in the story a fair bit in earlier books, but really it starts to grate after a while. Aviendha, too, is a bit much. But so are Rand and Perrin and Mat and Egwene and the Aes Sedai and the Wise Ones. Honestly, I cannot see much difference in some of their pettiness and the selfishness that is associated with characters balls deep in the ‘the dark side.’ I’m not sure I would want to spend any time with any of the characters, for how unlikeable they are. For a series that is almost certainly influenced by Taoism, given the yin-yang symbolism, which in some ways is about detachment and going with the flow, the characters are largely as attached as two-year-olds. The word petty comes from the French ‘petit,’ or small, and it’s kind of a weird to see that lack of depth juxtaposed against the enormous scope of the novels.

This book did feel a little more uneven than the previous ones. There’s less of a building to the massive crescendo that happens at the end of Jordan’s novels and simply a ‘suddenly it’s on’ kind of feel to it. I did like that Rand finally shagged someone, because I do enjoy a bit of romance. But there was a lot of ‘dead air’ here – and I know I’m not the only one who has wondered at the pacing with the middle books in the series.

Still, I'm walking the book away so it's not so bad.

Regardless, the effect of the book is greater than the sum of its parts. For all the foregoing complaining, I loved it. Rand’s growing mastery, the relationships between the characters (never mind their personalities), deepening political intrigue, the various different causes and effects that come up – it’s all great stuff. Chances are, if you’re in this deep into the series, you’re going to the end, I would say.

That’s my plan, and this one has not changed it.

Check it out on the ‘zon here.

Review - Legends & Lattés by Travis Baldree

Preamble

A friend of mine read this one, remarking on how much she loved it in an author group in which I find myself. The cover was intriguing, mostly because of how different it was. An orc and a demoness serving coffee. WTF is this s***? Glad I checked it out, because it was one of the most pleasant reads I’ve had in a while (and there have been a few).

A note about my reviews: I consider myself an appreciator, not a critic. I know first-hand what goes into the creation of art – the blood, the sweat, the tears, the risk. I also know that art appreciation is subjective and lernt good what mama tell’t me – if you don’t have anything nice to say, don’t say anything at all. I’m not a school marm grading a spelling test – I’m a reader who enjoys reading. If a book is entertaining, well-written, and I get absorbed into it, five out of five. It’s either five stars or nothing these days – if I don’t like it, no review. Regardless, I wouldn’t even put a star rating system on my reviews but for the reality of storefronts like Amazon.

Take from that what you will.

Review – 5/5

I remember the first time I played Harvest Moon on the SNES… actually, no I don’t. But I remember the era – I was a teenager, raised on a steady diet of literature and video games, though many of those would probably be called ‘gritty.’ Sure, there was Dragonlance and Final Fantasy, Baldur’s Gate and The Lord Of The Rings. But there was also stuff like Naked Lunch by Burroughs, with its perverse mugwumps and psychedelic roach gas. One of my favourite authors, whom I read way too early, is Irvine Welsh. The guy writes about the festering septic wound on the underbelly of society in a darkly comic fashion. Murderous psychopaths, drug use, extreme language, pornographic descriptions – anything and everything is on the table with Welsh.

And there, almost a counter-point to all that nasty wasty stuff, was Harvest Moon. Oh, so innocent, it was almost anime-esque in its leanings, and the entire point of the game was to build a farm (and maybe a bit of focus on romancing and wedding some of those pixelated hotties – come on, I was a teenager). It was like a form of mouthwash to the filth that I would guzzle during most of my misspent youth (and misspent adulthood). It has always been one of my most beloved games, though tribute-giving fare like Stardew Valley has replaced it in modern times.

Legends & Lattes is like the Harvest Moon of fantasy literature. It’s been called cozy fantasy and I suppose that’s accurate. The stakes are low: there is a café to build, customers to woo, a hottie to romance – pretty literally in this demonic case. Like Harvest Moon, the physical stuff is mostly ever implied, whether that’s between orc warrior protagonist Viv and her paramour or Viv and her antagonists. Right at the beginning, the skull-splitting action is at an end. Viv hangs up her murdering axe (called Blackblood, no less) after getting a fancy magical bit of monster gut kit. It’s implied to be a good luck pearl or some such, torn from the gizzard of a fantastic beast, and placed in the heart of the café that Viv starts building for her retirement.

I mean, come on, the similarities are strong – in Harvest Moon it’s your grandfather’s farm, in this one it’s a rundown stable, but the arc of improving the place and making friends is quite familiar. The building itself gets tended and built upon, ‘crops’ are sold to the customers, which gives Viv more money to buy more stuff and hire more people and make new social connections.

Admittedly, Viv does have her enemies. And they do more damage than the storms in Harvest Moon. But there is only really a single real ‘enemy,’ and even he admits he was never really out to hurt Viv when he makes trouble for her. Viv imagines that she was always a difficult-to-like hard-ass, but she is much like the pussycat – or rather, dire cat – that turns out to be the inn’s mascot. Fiercely loyal and protective, but with a soft underbelly.

This book reminded me of why I like fantasy so much. It’s imaginative, it gives ‘the rules’ of narrative a bit of an ‘eff you’ (though not entirely – the classic story beats are still there) and decidedly goes its own way. Again, like Viv, the orc warrior who, like some kind of anti-Walter White, breaks good… and stays good.

As good as a latté and one of those o-face inducing pastries the rat-man chef bakes up for the masses.

Check it out on the ‘zon here.

Review - Space Academy Dropouts by C.T. Phipps and Michael Suttkus

Preamble

I will be perfectly frank about how my encounter with this book came about (my ex-wife probably has a few choice words to say about my unremitting honesty and it will not be remitting today). I saw co-author C.T. Phipps talk about Space Academy Dropouts in a Facebook group I’m in, I looked at it, thought it seemed funny, added it to my TBR list, and then literally moments later C.T. Phipps messaged me to ask me if I’d consider doing a ‘review exchange,’ wherein he’d read my stuff and give it an honest review it and vice versa. He had seen my review of Tropical Punch by S.C. Jensen and liked it, apparently. Bizarre synchronicity aside, C.T. offered to give me a review copy but I was seconds away from purchasing Space Academy Dropouts and did just that.

I am glad I gave him and Michael Suttkus the ducats.

The foregoing has no bearing on my review – I approached it as I do all of the books I read and review.

A note about my reviews: I consider myself an appreciator, not a critic. I know first-hand what goes into the creation of art – the blood, the sweat, the tears, the risk. I also know that art appreciation is subjective and lernt good what mama tell’t me – if you don’t have anything nice to say, don’t say anything at all. I’m not a school marm grading a spelling test – I’m a reader who enjoys reading. If a book is entertaining, well-written, and I get absorbed into it, five out of five. It’s either five stars or nothing these days – if I don’t like it, no review. Regardless, I wouldn’t even put a star rating system on my reviews but for the reality of storefronts like Amazon.

Take from that what you will.

Review – 5/5

“We really should have gone to visit Doctor No and enjoyed the multispecies brothel.”

Douglas Adams has a lot to answer for, particularly where concerns the mixture of literature and sci-fi comedy. He may or may not be the first, and there is a certain Britishness about his work (don’t pretend you don’t know what I’m talking about), but the litmus test for sci-fi comedy books is probably Adams. I read The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy as a teenager and fell in love. It wasn’t ‘laugh out loud’ funny, but the stuff that makes me chortle audibly tends to be the puerile and bawdy and juvenile stuff people like Christopher Moore in his Pocket series or those degenerates who write the Shingles books weave. The Adams school of literary humour is more of a clever, witty, tongue-in-cheek, ‘do you see what I did there?’ type of humour. It might not leave you in stitches but it does put a smile on your face.

Phipps and Suttkus definitely channel a bit of Adams in Space Academy Dropouts, but it’s far more American than the seminal sci-fi humour series. Like the colonies, Space Academy Dropouts is a melting pot: sci-fi, fantasy, pop culture, and gaming references, as well as being a damn fine action novel in its own right.

First, the character of Vance Turbo, who legally gave himself that name rather than Vannevar James Tagawa (that’s what they call a ‘second paragraph of the book joke’), is eminently likeable. A blatant riff on the whole Captain Kirk thang, he is raised up to Captain status almost immediately, in spite of the fact that he gets dumped from the Starfleet Academy in the first couple of pages. He has a strong sense of morality, though it is skewed by some of the shady stuff he has gotten up to.

All of that is in the past, though, because his captaincy comes about after he is shanghaied, pressganged, and otherwise forced onto a mission with a secret black ops branch of the interstellar government to save the universe from the threat of rogue space nukes on the backdrop of a futuristic iron curtain. Everything feels familiar, even though this is a century or so in the future and is filled with murderous aliens who want to kill Vance and AI infatuated with Vance who find perfect replicant sexbot bodies and shag him.

In spite of doing quite well with the lay-dees, Vance is like Rodney Dangerfield, getting no respect from anyone, and somehow managing to ‘fail upward,’ as one of his alien crew members put it in the novel. It’s one big successful gaffe to another, with a plethora of people invading his mind and having telepathic conversations with him and interrupting his thought processes in a cleverly written way. Vance was raised on a diet of old sci-fi and movies from the 20th century, which means that the references to literally anything any nerd worth their salt would be aware of are everywhere (it’s told in first person from Vance’s POV).

Like I said, it would have been easy for the authors to press the ‘silly joke’ button over and over again and call it a day, but you end up caring for Vance and his team of misfits. They’re all a bit strange – a cat human hybrid bounty hunter, the AI who thinks he’s the best because he isn’t whatever word they used for racist against AI in the book, the old flame who is doing an alien Chad who hates Vance, who is arguably himself a nerd Chad of some sort (like Kirk, maybe?), and even some kind of ‘enlightened’ being called an Ethereal, who is some kind of modified human.

It’s light, it’s fun, it’s worth the read if you at all have even a passing interest in sci-fi or nerd culture. Phipps and Suttkus are clearly intelligent dudes, discussing issues of morality and philosophy at times with tongue firmly in cheek throughout, as well as having kick-ass tech and some pretty hot human on sexbot action.

Sweet, sweet, human on sexbot action.

Check it out on the ‘zon here.

Review - Monster Burger by D.M. Guay (24/7 Demon Mart #2)

Preamble

I previously read and loved The Graveyard Shift by D.M. Guay. I was very much looking forward to getting into this, as I laughed quite a bit at the first book in the 24/7 Demon Mart series. This did not disappoint.

A note about my reviews: I consider myself an appreciator, not a critic. I know first-hand what goes into the creation of art – the blood, the sweat, the tears, the risk. I also know that art appreciation is subjective and lernt good what mama tell’t me – if you don’t have anything nice to say, don’t say anything at all. I’m not a school marm grading a spelling test – I’m a reader who enjoys reading. If a book is entertaining, well-written, and I get absorbed into it, five out of five. It’s either five stars or nothing these days – if I don’t like it, no review. Regardless, I wouldn’t even put a star rating system on my reviews but for the reality of storefronts like Amazon.

Take from that what you will.

Review – 5/5

If you’ve ever seen Return Of The Living Dead, the kind-of sequel to Night Of The Living Dead written and directed by Dan O’Bannon, based on a book written by John Russo, one of the co-writers of Night’s script, you’d probably get a kick out of Monster Burger. Aside from the movie having the best opening scene I think I might have seen in any movie, ever, Return Of The Living channels 1980s Americana, hilarious scenarios, excellent jokes, and plenty of zombies.

It didn’t really surprise me to learn through reading D.M. Guay’s notes at the end of the novel that her introduction to the zombie genre came in the form of Return Of The Living Dead. The 24/7 Demon Mart books are mythologically American, with a capital ‘A’. The whole shtick of the series is that it features a fat every-nerd named Lloyd, who somehow manages to bungle himself into saving the world by the end of every book (at least the two I’ve read). This time round, he’s helped along by an angelic magic eight-ball that reads his mind and a supervisor cockroach named Kevin is back for round two. The love of his life, the kick-ass Dee Dee, whose life he manages to save and ingratiate himself towards, is back and is looking past his self-described faults at all times. And maybe even towards loving him?

There are uncooperative heroes, and then there is Lloyd Lamb Wallace. He is such a schlub, it is painful at times to read. But he made a promise to God to get his stuff together. Too bad his mother is sure that he’s on drugs after showing up with mad scrilla after the events of the first book. And too bad he works right next to Monster Burger, the fast-food joint beloved by both Lloyd and Kevin.

I am an avowed buff of zombie fiction, and it was pretty exciting to see all of the references to zombie video games, old movies, new movies. This book is truly a love letter to a genre that is something all of its own. Whereas fare like The Walking Dead is serious business, this is pure horror comedy.

The jokes are funny, largely American culture based, and they come a mile a minute. I feel like Guay really stepped it up a notch with this book, and I loved The Graveyard Shift. The series has a bit of a picaresque feel, in that the plot is not really much beyond ‘save the day’ and it doesn’t really get going until the second half of the book, but I view that as a feature, not a bug. Sure, the eight ball talks about a Hero’s Journey but really, Lloyd doesn’t grow all that much, except to avoid taking a gift from his demonic boss that would have seen him lying to his mother (and to himself).

Self-deception is really the name of Lloyd’s game, which is common among nerds of all stripes. We tend to imagine ourselves lesser than what we are, we are fairly hard on ourselves, and sometimes we are lured by the easy way of burgers and fries and no exercise whilst playing Call of Duty with fellow nerd Big Dan.

I don’t expect Lloyd to grow significantly, as that is part of the charm of these books. It seems he’s not supposed to become the hero who steps perfectly in order to save the world. He’s the schlub like the rest of us, meandering and muddling his way through life, using his heart (or angelic magic eight ball) as a guide to doing what’s right.

And still he bones it up. So much of the plot could have been avoided if he had just read the employee’s handbook he’s been avoiding, or if his boss Kevin (yes, the roach is his supervisor) wasn’t such a dingus himself. But as much as he has to deal with homicidal defecating pixies or demonic plants or giant shrimp eating up the boner pill display and becoming ‘full body boners,’ he still manages to come through alright.

With a traditional hero, with a traditional saviour of the world, we would not have this story. And that would be a shame.

Check it out on the ‘zon here.

Review - Tropical Punch by S.C. Jensen (Bubbles In Space #1)

Preamble

I ‘met’ S.C. Jensen in one of my FB author groups, this one focused on Funny Indie Authors (the name of the group, incidentally). I am a big fan of reading funny stuff, saw she was advertising this one, liked the cover, and so I decided to give her first-in-series a whirl. Extra points when I found out it was inspired by old school detective fiction.

A note about my reviews: I consider myself an appreciator, not a critic. I know first-hand what goes into the creation of art – the blood, the sweat, the tears, the risk. I also know that art appreciation is subjective and lernt good what mama tell’t me – if you don’t have anything nice to say, don’t say anything at all. I’m not a school marm grading a spelling test – I’m a reader who enjoys reading. If a book is entertaining, well-written, and I get absorbed into it, five out of five. It’s either five stars or nothing these days – if I don’t like it, no review. Regardless, I wouldn’t even put a star rating system on my reviews but for the reality of storefronts like Amazon.

Take from that what you will.

Review – 5/5

If you’ve ever seen The Fifth Element, Luc Besson’s wonderful sci-fi myth released a couple of years before The Matrix and one of my favourite movies from my childhood, you might remember Chris Tucker’s character, Ruby Rhod. I was under the impression that he was the most effeminate straight dude ever to grace sci-fi, a foil to Bruce Willis’ hyper-traditionally-masculine Korben Dallas. Rhod was so fabulous, so over-the-top, and yet he was getting adult with chicks constantly, like the super hot flight attendant on the space cruiser. I have to admit it was hard to make sense of to a kid growing up in a society where masculinity was defined by pretending like feelings don’t exist and dudes calling each other the other three letter f word like it was going out of style. It wasn’t until I was in my thirties that I realized masculinity itself was a far more hilarious butt of jokes. Come on, it was the nineties – name me a movie besides this one without at least one joke where the punchline is ‘ha! gay!’ and I’ll give you a stick of gum.

You might be wondering why I bring all of this up, and why I just mentioned gum. Well, the kick-ass gum-chewing heroine of the story is Betty ‘Bubbles’ Marlowe (yes, almost certainly after Raymond Chandler’s Philip Marlowe, private dick star in stories like The Big Sleep), and the new world champion of most effeminate straight sci-fi tritagonist goes to… Cosmo Régale, owner of Cosmo Cosmetics, dude whose description sounds just like Ruby Rhod, self-titled ‘Destroyer Of Masculine Paradigms,’ the guy who names a beauty product after Bubbles… namely, Bubbles In Space, the title of the series. This is after he hits on her and we’re told in no uncertain terms how much of a ladies’ man he is.

It's a funny book, but only every once in a while in a guffaw-y type of way. It’s more of the kind of book that puts a grin on your face. Jensen says in the afterword that she was heavily influenced by Raymond Chandler and Dashiell Hammett, which is a genre I got into after reading Stephen King’s On Writing, where he essentially recommends going through them to learn how to write descriptively. Probably because it’s so over the top. I’m not sure if you’ve ever read some of the similes in a detective novel, but they’re patently ridiculous at times, something that Jensen channels with hilarious grace. To wit, ‘Rays of intense sunlight beat down and burrowed into my exposed flesh like burning worms.’

Yep, that’s a legit line from the book.

Getting back to the whole masculinity thing, these old detective novels feel like you ate a carton of cigarettes and drank a 40-ounce bottle of cheap Scotch just by reading the pages. Bubbles throws that trope on its head by being a woman who is sober and is tempted by her old demon gin from time to time. She’s also super fab herself, not of the whole ‘I have five black suits in my wardrobe’ type of school as the PIs from the old stories. So much of the story is about fashion and glamour to go with the mystery that at times my eyes started to glaze over (I’m no Cosmo Régale in this sense, and only a Lothario in my dreams). But it’s also about kick-ass robot arms and sarcastic and touchy holographic pigs named Hammett after… well, I think you get it.

The mystery itself is pretty fun, though I have to admit I might have lost the plot. I didn’t really get what exactly happened, maybe 85% of it, though it didn’t really detract from my enjoyment at all, which is a strange thing to write. That’s probably my own issue though. These stories always have a kind of domino type of thing at the end, where all these plot threads come together and you realize ‘aha! aha! aha!’ like some kind of a twist hurricane. Near the eye of the storm, I was kind of like, ‘uh, wut?’

Maybe it was the language. You get absolutely dumped on with the slang, a bunch of words that we are left to figure out through context. Normally, I love this. It was a lot though, more than the ush, and I could see it turning someone off. There is a glossary at the end, which you get to read after you pretty much have the whole thing figured out (or maybe if you’re less of a knobhead than me, you press the Kindle’s Table Of Contents button and check it out first). The first half of the book had me feeling like a bit of a twit, but by the end of it I was like ‘oh yes, I know what you are saying,’ and not in a response to an idiomatic ‘knowmsayin’?’ type of way.

In any case, the book was fantabulous, totally extra, and very glitzy and glamorous. It was hilarious in its own way, and though Cosmo and Bubbles never hooked up (hey, it’s not that kind of book), the relationships between the characters were enjoyable. I loved Ham the holo-pig, clearly the scene-stealer whenever he showed up. He also managed to pull some cool stuff to upgrade Bubbles’ kit near the end, to make her near indestructible.

Oh yeah, there’s cyborg-on-robot violence, too, weren’t you paying attention?

Check it out on the ‘zon here.

Review - The Shadow Rising by Robert Jordan (The Wheel Of Time #4)

Preamble

I am listening to all of these through Audible, the readings by Michael Kramer and Kate Reading. Their voices have become all-too familiar at this point, owing to the dozens of hours of their speech that I have heard. It’s strange, how comforting this becomes after a time. Still loving The Wheel Of Time.

A note about my reviews: I consider myself an appreciator, not a critic. I know first-hand what goes into the creation of art – the blood, the sweat, the tears, the risk. I also know that art appreciation is subjective and lernt good what mama tell’t me – if you don’t have anything nice to say, don’t say anything at all. I’m not a school marm grading a spelling test – I’m a reader who enjoys reading. If a book is entertaining, well-written, and I get absorbed into it, five out of five. I have gone as low as three stars – anything less than that and I will not review a book (chances are I DNFed anyway). Regardless, I wouldn’t even put a star rating system on my reviews but for the reality of storefronts like Amazon.

Take from that what you will.

Review – 5/5

I really don’t know what to say about this series except that I am loving it. Truly, it is some of the finest fantasy I’ve enjoyed. I don’t know if I would have said that after book one – and in fact, I did not think book one was this amazing. But slowly, inexorably, Robert Jordan has displayed himself as a writer of tremendous skill.

On its face, this story split between a few different settings. There is Rand and Mat in the Aiel waste, there is Perrin and Faile in the Two Rivers, there is Nynaeve and Elaine in Tanchico, there is Min and the Amyrlin Seat in the White Tower. There are other characters, of course, a whole host of them, all with stories of their own. The sheer scope and immensity of the story is part of what makes it interesting, but I would be lying if I said I did not find that there is a serious emotional investment here. I actually was moved to tears at a few point in the book, blubbering at a wedding and the indomitable spirit of characters I cared about who seemed to be an unwinnable battle in equal measure.

There’s no real way of speaking about this story without spoiling too much of it, but suffice it to say that the magnitude of the magic is another part that was enjoyable. It’s hard to describe magic – I mean, really, what do you say except “dang, man, this stuff be strong, yo.” Jordan chooses other words, like saying that flows of magic that were being exchanged in a wizard battle could destroy mountains, but I did ponder on that piece a while.

There’s magic everywhere, and it has touched everyone. Except those from whom it has been torn, ripped out after they’re stilled or gentled. There is a genuine sense of loss for the characters to whom this happens, and one can understand why, based on the description of their experience of the One Power as addicting. Rand in particular seems to have a troubled relationship with the power, given that he knows it will eventually drive him mad. But he’s also able to do things that go beyond all reckoning, like step through alternate dimensions and explode stuff good.

But all of that is secondary to the emotional impact. When I was younger and, quite frankly, cut off from some of my emotions, I used to think that the cool shit was what a story was about. But the cool shit is just window dressing. It doesn’t really matter, not for me, not anymore. The stuff I care about is the intensity of feeling that I connect with. Robert Jordan wields the One Power with his writing, making your hackles rise and you feel something beyond what you would expect with the written word. That, to me, is a real sign of mastery. His flow is graceful and deliberate, with none of the bull-in-china-shop type of maneuvering that you’d expect from a writer of different skill.

If you’re in this deep, chances are you’ve already made up your mind about The Wheel Of Time. Perhaps you’re working through it out of a sense of duty, since you’ve already sunk so much into the series to get this far. More likely, you’re this far because you like the story and it connects with you. This, to me, is the promise of art. I’ve heard Jordan described as the American Tolkien and I think that’s as apt a description as any.

Let that shadow rise.

Check it out on Amazon here.

Review - Galaxy Cruise: The Maiden Voyage By Your Old Pal Marcus Alexander Hart

Preamble

An ad for the Galaxy Cruise books has popped up on my Facebook feed more than once over the past little while. And then the author, my (and your) old pal, Marcus Alexander Hart, popped up in on a Facebook group I’ve been in for a while, Funny Indie Authors. He mentioned his book, I had a look, and burned through it rather quickly.

A note about my reviews: I consider myself an appreciator, not a critic. I know first-hand what goes into the creation of art – the blood, the sweat, the tears, the risk. I also know that art appreciation is subjective and lernt good what mama tell’t me – if you don’t have anything nice to say, don’t say anything at all. I’m not a school marm grading a spelling test – I’m a reader who enjoys reading. If a book is entertaining, well-written, and I get absorbed into it, five out of five. I have gone as low as three stars – anything less than that and I will not review a book (chances are I DNFed anyway). Regardless, I wouldn’t even put a star rating system on my reviews but for the reality of storefronts like Amazon.

Take from that what you will.

Review – 5/5

Sci-fi comedy has been a thing for a while. Growing up, the likes of Red Dwarf and Galaxy Quest were popular, though I only experienced the first one a little bit and the second one never. I adored Spaceballs, going through a phase where I kept renting it on VHS over and over again when I was eleven or twelve. But my first taste of this very particular genre came in the guise of an old PC game called Space Quest: The Sarien Encounter. We (read: me and my brother, and to a lesser degree my sisters) had it, along with King’s Quest and a host of the old brutally and unfairly difficult old text parser-based Sierra Games on ye olde Tandy 1000, which had no hard drive and we liked it that way. Space Quest starred a loser space janitor named Roger Wilco (yes, a reference to walkie talkie… stuff) who managed to survive his space station getting blown up by aliens by dint of sheer luck alone. Then he goes on to save the universe in the same manner.

If I’m being honest, most of the humour went over my five-year-old head. Most of it, though there was a scene, after the nigh-impossible speeder run that made me want to throw the floppy disks out, that sticks with me to this day. You wind up in a bar in the desert of an alien planet, wandering into some sort of parody of the Star Wars cantina scene and there’s a crappy space band populated with aliens with cheesy one-liners, replete with the pop culture references that filled the rest of the game. And there was more than one game – several sequels, even. They leaned into the cheeseball humour element harder as time went on, though they never really got rid of the action-adventure elements entirely.

But I digress.

If you know Space Quest, you have a general idea of what Galaxy Cruise: The Maiden Voyage is going to be like, at least in terms of vibe. It stars a loser hero with zilch in terms of self-confidence who gets hit on by a rich alien heiress in the first few pages, only to be offered command of a massive space-based cruise ship. She basically throws herself at him with a bit of the old wink wink, nudge nudge, time for the old in and out, he wets his pants because she’s a hideous alien, some near death happens, he magically saves the day by accident, then he gets thrown into the next situation where he puts his foot in his mouth as a speciesist, or tells his crew to do something that’s dumb as hell, or something else. And comes out smelling like roses.

The jokes are a mile a minute and they usually involve some pop-culture reference. The cruise ship is called the WTF Americano Grande, for instance. But it’s not one note - it’s a rich tapestry of ridiculous situations as well. The hospitality chief, a cat lady (literal cat alien humanoid) has to deal with the insufferable old rich folk who complain about everything and threaten to report everything to the manager. The aliens use plenty of American English idioms for reasons that are as contrived as they are absurd.

But there is a plot here, a reason to care for our extremely socially awkward hero, Leo MacGavin. He needs to save his planet, the last bastion of humans who everyone thinks are called Americans and are treated as pets or worse by the rest of the aliens. He is on a mission to prevent his planet from getting turned into a sewage dump – the alien who threatens him basically shows him a poo emoji engulfing the place. To save it, he must be a decent captain of a cruise ship in space. No, really, that’s basically the driving force, which is appropriately silly for the book.

The characters are likeable, too. There’s the cat lady hospitality chief, a punk rock lesbian mechanic tree woman, an arsehole gruff lieutenant who gives Leo the gears but for whom he develops a grudging respect, there’s the hideous alien President of the cruise liner who is all wide-eyed batty eyelashes and a one-lady hype train for whom Leo develops those oh-so-sexy feelings, a dastardly villain who is little more than a puffed up rich kid mama’s boy… and Leo is the only one of these who is human. I was well impressed with the cast, how, in spite of the comedy setting, they were compelling.

That, to me, is a real test of someone’s comedic chops. To make something that’s not just a farce. Don’t get me wrong, it’s pure space adventure – we’re not talking the new Hermann Hesse or next Great American Novel here. But it’s fun and compelling and makes for an easy breezy chortly read. It’s also filled with euphemisms with one letter differences between the curse word and the ‘space swear.’ It’s explained in the story as part of the whole contrived reason why English idioms are part of standard alien language, which was, again, pretty funny.

Beam this one up (your arze).

You can check it out on Marcus’s website here.

Review - Plague Of The Dreamless by JD Ryot and Jennifer Shelby

Preamble

I’ve read a few of the other Slipstreamers books, AKA the Ballad of Cassidy Cane. OK, maybe that’s not a real AKA and one I just made up, but regardless – heroine Cassidy Cane returns in Plague Of The Dreamless, the fifth book in the Slipstreamers series, the portal hopping adventure novella series that cheesy yet addictive old sci-fi television series Sliders wishes it was.

A note about my reviews: I consider myself an appreciator, not a critic. I know first-hand what goes into the creation of art – the blood, the sweat, the tears, the risk. I also know that art appreciation is subjective and lernt good what mama tell’t me – if you don’t have anything nice to say, don’t say anything at all. I’m not a school marm grading a spelling test – I’m a reader who enjoys reading. If a book is entertaining, well-written, and I get absorbed into it, five out of five. I have gone as low as three stars – anything less than that and I will not review a book (chances are I DNFed anyway). Regardless, I wouldn’t even put a star rating system on my reviews but for the reality of storefronts like Amazon.

Take from that what you will.

Review – 5/5

What do you get when you cross a psychedelic fever dream of enormous floating cephalod proportions with a capitalistic nightmare featuring a dastardly evil CEO who is a thinly-veiled reference to Jeff Bezos and the Amazon behemoth? Oh yeah, since it’s Slipstreamers, throw in some Indiana Jones and MacGyver-esque quick thinking action and adventure. And maybe a dash of heartrending junkie aunt-based tragedy. Whatever this thick mind-melting gumbo is, enigmatic JD Ryot and Jennifer Shelby are the cooks and they let this one stew.

For those who ain’t in the know, Slipstreamers features heroine Cassidy Cane as she fearlessly jumps into holes in reality to end up in crazy places and solve mysteries and do action-y stuff in an episodic format that feels like classic sci-fi television like Stargate SG-1 or Sliders. The books are novella length, so they stay a bit longer than your typical short story and allow for a more fleshed-out modicum of character development, but, like the aforementioned sci-fi TV, they primarily deal with various political, social, and philosophical issues, albeit with a focus on younger audiences.

I was impressed with the authors’ style – it was very vivid in its description and I felt a few frissons of recognition in the consumerist hellscape into which they brought me. Leaning heavy on what seems to me to be psychedelic undertones, adults in the world where cephalopods float above are stripped of their dreams as soon as they are old enough to work. In exchange, they can buy the goods needed to survive, including powder that lets them dream. Starved of the substance, they wither away and die. Cassidy Cane arrives just in time to help a young lad escape from getting his creativity sucked out and together they band together to save the world…

Does modern life strip us of our individuality, our personhood, our humanity? Are we all destined to become automata who must comply with authority or die? Are the floating octopi/squid up there in the purple sky really our benefactors?

Some heady themes are traversed here, though I admit it does feel familiar. You can only consume so much dystopian fiction until the messages seem as well-known as any other trope. We can – and must – rebel against the authority that seeks to bind us.

Here is where Shelby does something I really appreciated. She created two characters who were symbols of the duality of the universe, a living Yin and Yang, a couple who are in love and whose love meets a tragic end. A bizarro Romeo and Juliet in alien dreamscape, except Romeo survives and…

Wait, I’m not going to spoil anything for you. The limitations of the novella length were felt here, though. There were parts that I wished were longer and more fulsomely explored, but the story is just plain excellent, as it is.

Cassidy Cane even gets her Babelfish from Hitchhiker’s Guide-type level up, something to carry her through the next stories in the universe. And for a YA novel, there is one hell of an addictive drug allegory in the context of the dream dust here, complete with the appropriate language.

Go ahead and ‘dose’ yourself with this one.

Check it out on Amazon here.

Review - Beast Be Gone by A.L. Billington

Preamble

The author of Beast Be Gone, A.L. Billington, approached me on reader magnet / universal book link / all kinds of good author management tools StoryOrigin. He was looking to swap book mentions in our newsletters – he would advertise The Bawdy Bard to his mailing list, I would do the same for Beast Be Gone. I have a bit of a moral issue with recommending stuff I have not read, so I read a couple of chapters, decided it was funny, and decided to finish and write this review before April 1, 2022 so I could tell my readers what I actually thought of the book.

A note about my reviews: I consider myself an appreciator, not a critic. I know first-hand what goes into the creation of art – the blood, the sweat, the tears, the risk. I also know that art appreciation is subjective and lernt good what mama tell’t me – if you don’t have anything nice to say, don’t say anything at all. I’m not a school marm grading a spelling test – I’m a reader who enjoys reading. If a book is entertaining, well-written, and I get absorbed into it, five out of five. I have gone as low as three stars – anything less than that and I will not review a book (chances are I DNFed anyway). Regardless, I wouldn’t even put a star rating system on my reviews but for the reality of storefronts like Amazon.

Take from that what you will.

Review – 5/5

One of my earliest memories of fantasy comes not from reading The Hobbit, or even watching the old Rankin Bass animated version of the story, both encounters that were formative for me. No, what I am talking about here are games like King’s Quest and Quest For Glory, old text-parsed games that came out in the 80s and 90s when video games could be made by a single person or two or a very small team. They were crude, punishing (King’s Quest was particularly difficult) and set in a fantasy world. In the first King’s Quest, you’d write stuff like ‘get egg,’ and you’d get the golden egg out of the robin’s nest you spent a few moments climbing after writing ‘climb tree’ not a moment before.

Things became more complex of course. A game like Elden Ring, the early 2022 game of the year fantasy RPG contender, would have made five-year-old me fall over with cardiac arrest, yet they are now seen as ‘par for the course.’ They involve small villages of people in order to get made, massive piles of cash infused by enormous corporations. And there is an enormous glut of them today, more RPGs and fantasy video games than one can even rationally contemplate playing, particularly with the responsibilities of adulthood nipping at one’s heels. Like evolution from a unicellular organism to a hulking behemoth of sapience and subtlety, video games have grown up from humble origins and into something altogether different. And I grew up along with them.

Beast Be Gone is a nod to people like me, the types who had fantasy video games hooked up to the IV from the moment they could use a keyboard on up to present. There are references to all kinds of tropes and ridiculous stuff that we take for granted as just part of the game. One of my favourites was the notion that guards, with their limited AI, would ‘investigate’ the disappearance of a fellow guard and blame the commotion on the wind, in spite of treading on the dead body of their friend in order to make the pronouncement that the noise of violent murder was ‘probably just the wind.’ That kind of thing has happened in video games – I have lived through it.

But Beast Be Gone is not just about RPG video games. It’s about a guy named Eric, a middle-aged pest control guy who hates the fact that adventurers are ruining the world. Like myself, he knew the times before the complexity of the present. He prefers the good old days, when he would use simple turn undead scrolls to kill liches and various other tricks to clear crypts and dungeons in exchange for enough cash to buy warm beer at the inn. Because dude is most definitely British, as I have come to suspect A.L. Billington to be.

There is all kinds of referential humour in here, from the fact that Americans like the fizzy cold stuff to the insanity of RPG mechanics to ridiculous tropes like that of the Dark Lord and the Chosen One. It’s got the telltale British humour stank of making fun of the stupidity of bureaucracy at length. But it’s not just that. There were several points where I laughed out loud at the cleverness of the writing, and this is a writer who does not allow his characters to utter a single f-bomb.

I was reminded of the discussions of stand up from my younger years, when ‘clean’ comedians (at least one of whom ended up as a cancelled sex offender, no less) would say that if you needed to swear, you weren’t funny, since you were just eliciting some form of Pavlovian response to the naughty. I think that idea is a pile of fucking bullshit, but I do have more than a little respect for what A.L. Billington has done. Sure, sex is referenced, though it’s not done gratuitously. He made a genuinely funny book that I could recommend to someone under the age of majority.

The story itself is a parody, a satire of a genre that is filled with self-seriousness. After all, fantasy quests are all serious business. The hero has to save the world from evil, after all, and none may laugh at the intensity of his or her devotion to the good. Except for dudes like A.L. Billington and Eric the pest control guy, who just wants to live in peace, be a kind dude to goblins, and drink his good warm beer in a bad dingy pub.

Highly recommended.

You can get your copy of Beast Be Gone here.

Review - Fluke by Christopher Moore

Preamble

I listened to the audiobook version of Fluke narrated by Bill Irwin. It was on sale on Chirp Audiobooks, and let it be known that Irwin loves to pronounce his ‘h’s when it comes to words that start with ‘wh.’ Like ‘whale,’ which occurs repeatedly throughout the novel. I felt like my Grade Three teacher who inculcated the ‘proper’ consonant-flipping pronunciation was reading the book to me.

A note about my reviews: I consider myself an appreciator, not a critic. I know first-hand what goes into the creation of art – the blood, the sweat, the tears, the risk. I also know that art appreciation is subjective and lernt good what mama tell’t me – if you don’t have anything nice to say, don’t say anything at all. I’m not a school marm grading a spelling test – I’m a reader who enjoys reading. If a book is entertaining, well-written, and I get absorbed into it, five out of five. I have gone as low as three stars – anything less than that and I will not review a book (chances are I DNFed anyway). Regardless, I wouldn’t even put a star rating system on my reviews but for the reality of storefronts like Amazon.

Take from that what you will.

Review – 5/5

Shoes off in the whale! And don't try and make a break for the anus.

Fluke is one of the most effed up books I have ever read. I don’t even need to think twice about it – it’s so bizarre and hilarious and well-done that I was actually a little bit surprised. Though I haven’t read all of Moore’s work, my favourite Christopher Moore book is Fool – the whole Pocket series gets me – and, as a bawdy tale, it’s filled with puerile and juvenile sex jokes to go along as a refreshing counterpoint to Moore’s considerable wit. There are fewer dick jokes (though plenty) in Fluke, but it was incredibly laugh out loud funny, almost as much so as Fool.

The story of Fluke itself starts out rather unassumingly, with a marine biologist catching sight of a display on a humpback whale’s fluke (tail) that leaves him wondering whether he’s losing it. It says ‘BITE ME’ in big block lettering, which is only the start of the mystery that unfolds over the course of the book.

I like books that read like this – mysterious, with plenty of twists and turns. Every time you think you’ve kind of got something figured out, Moore upends it by upping the ante. The intrigue leans more towards sci-fi than it does towards fantastical, though the scope of what happens in the story is somewhat suggestive of the second. One of the frequently riffed-upon ideas is the Arthur C. Clarke thing: sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic.

Or maybe it’s sufficiently ancient technology in this context?

But it’s more than that. If you read between the lines, Moore gets at some of the real thrust of magic. It’s even in the title itself, which is defined at the beginning of the story – it’s not just defined as a whale tail, it’s the improbable stroke of luck. Is reality random noise? Or is it something more… ordered? There is some discussion of God and of theories of evolution, but the lines get so blurred that one begins to question things.

Moore definitely skates the existential question line with a fair bit of precision, not letting it detract from the plot nor from the laughs. The characters themselves are ridiculous, with the straight man protagonist Quinn as the most staid of the lot. Everyone is a caricature, yet Moore has this fantastic habit of humanizing all of his weirdos. I particularly liked Kona, the white guy from Jersey pretending to be a mix of Hawaiian and Rastafarian that seems somewhat prophetic of the rise of the Island Boys. Speaking of boys, there was also the whaley boys, human whale hybrid creatures who wave around their retractable dongs like they’re fencing masters. The antagonistic science community, the ‘old broad’ benefactrix, even Amy, Quinn’s aged-slang-talking love interest – they’re all hilarious and zany set pieces for this absolutely bonkers tale.

Yes, zany. I think zany is a good way to describe Moore’s Fluke. It’s not nearly as linguistically as over the top as Fool, but the situations and the conversations are just too good. Moore is a master of his craft, an author idol of mine, and he has written a marvelous story with Fluke. It makes me want to finish off reading the rest of his library, to be perfectly honest. And I think I’ll get right on it.

Review - Molting Of A Queen by Peter Foote

Preamble

I picked up Peter Foote’s Molting Of A Queen when it was on sale a few weeks ago. Foote is a member of Genre Writers of Atlantic Canada, a kickass writer’s group from my neck of the woods. I previously read one of his novellas, Boulders Over The Bermuda Triangle, and find him to be quite a delightful author.

A note about my reviews: I consider myself an appreciator, not a critic. I know first-hand what goes into the creation of art – the blood, the sweat, the tears, the risk. I also know that art appreciation is subjective and lernt good what mama tell’t me – if you don’t have anything nice to say, don’t say anything at all. I’m not a school marm grading a spelling test – I’m a reader who enjoys reading. If a book is entertaining, well-written, and I get absorbed into it, five out of five. I have gone as low as three stars – anything less than that and I will not review a book (chances are I DNFed anyway). Regardless, I wouldn’t even put a star rating system on my reviews but for the reality of storefronts like Amazon.

Take from that what you will.

Review – 5/5

I had a discussion with a writer on my podcast recently about the difference between literary and genre fiction. The line is a bit blurred, but part of me feels like its kind of a ‘you know it when you see it,’ which is an antiquated notion of fairness that I came across when reading some rather aged legal decisions in law school. Molting Of A Queen is decidedly genre fiction, and yet it deals with themes of what makes us human and atonement and forgiving one’s self, the ‘artistic’ stuff that people usually ascribe to literary fiction.

On its face, the story is kind of well-trodden in sci-fi: the protagonists accidentally enter a portal to an alien world, survive, and have to get back home before the portal closes, locking them forever on said alien world (because portals be like dat). It has a bit of a pulpy feel to it, like you’ve been here and seen this before. The setting is intriguing – a honeycomb tropical paradise with bee ant fellers what seems to be pulled out of the world of Elden Ring (maybe I’ve just recently logged too many hours of that addicting masterpiece of game design).

One of the differences between literary and genre fiction is how experimental literary tends to be. Genre fiction tends to be similarly structured – the build-up of tension and action and slight pressure release until the climax. Foote adheres closely to a plotting formula, following the story beats in perfect time. You can tell he’s done this more than once before. It’s very tight and well-crafted. From a technical perspective – I’ve gotta hand it to him.

And yet, the normal ending – the encounter with the ‘big bad’ – doesn’t occur. Instead, apart from the internal struggle with the protagonist’s past, it’s a rather heartwarming and cozy meeting between a likeable woman and the queen bee of an insectile alien world. Where I was expecting there to be the evil alien ‘boss,’ instead it’s more like our hero has tea with a friend, who asks her to stay for a sleepover, with zero of the adult connotations of a sleepover.

But no one can stay for a chaste sleepover in an alien world – ha! People have to go do human stuff, because they grow as a result of the intrigue of the story. Ain’t you never read a story before? Don’t you know the protagonists learn things about themselves and become more self-actualized as a result of their trials?

In many ways, it is genre fiction. And in some ways, it is not. It defies classification, like all stories. We like to do that – put labels on things and tuck them safely away on the shelf. Ram Dass once said that most of human life is spent reassuring each other that our clothing of identity is on straight, and perhaps that applies. Here’s a label: Molting Of A Queen is a story in its own right, and a damn fine one at that.

You can find it on Amazon here.

Review - The Left Hand Of Darkness by Ursula K. Le Guin

Preamble

I picked up the audio version of The Left Hand Of Darkness on Chirp Audiobooks when it was available. I had heard it mentioned several times on /r/Fantasy along with the rest of Le Guin’s stuff.

A note about my reviews: I consider myself an appreciator, not a critic. I know first-hand what goes into the creation of art – the blood, the sweat, the tears, the risk. I also know that art appreciation is subjective and lernt good what mama tell’t me – if you don’t have anything nice to say, don’t say anything at all. I’m not a school marm grading a spelling test – I’m a reader who enjoys reading. If a book is entertaining, well-written, and I get absorbed into it, five out of five. I have gone as low as three stars – anything less than that and I will not review a book (chances are I DNFed anyway). Regardless, I wouldn’t even put a star rating system on my reviews but for the reality of storefronts like Amazon.

Take from that what you will.

Review – 5/5

If someone were interested in what the process of writing looks like before they actually wrote anything, I would point them to the preface that Ursula K. Le Guin wrote for The Left Hand Of Darkness. I was in awe when I listened to it, how she masterfully gave voice to things that I myself have thought and felt about what it is we do when we write. In sum, we point to a book, which is a pack of lies, and say ‘there is the truth.’ I was reminded strongly of a quote by Jean Erdman Campbell, who is a dancer and whose entrance into my life came because of a deep and abiding interest in the work of her husband, Joseph Campbell. Ms. Erdman Campbell said, ‘The way of the mystic and the way of the artist are related, except that the mystic doesn't have a craft.’

It's funny, though, to refer to someone as the ‘wife’ of someone. I’ve never seen Ms. Campbell, who has been dead for some time now, dance, nor do I know much about her beyond some apocryphal items related to my research of all things Joseph Campbell. My knowledge of her is chiefly in relation to a man, which is unfortunately a large component of how our society is structured, particularly during the days when they were alive. When this book was written, even. It’s getting better, but the way gender shapes one’s experience is still largely entrenched and systematic.

It’s also a large theme of the book – the difference in gender and, in some ways, a reminder of how the more things change, the more they stay the same. I’m not talking about differences in social structure or how we deal with gender roles in society. I’m talking about the fabric and nature of reality, which is exactly what Le Guin brings up with unerring deftness and intelligence. She says that she is an atheist in the preface and also speaks about gods and truth in that same preface and recognizes how that might sound crazy. At one point in her books, one of the characters ponders the paradoxical nature of reality, and how two things might be true at the same time.

The title itself is about the interrelated duality of things. The left hand of darkness is the light and the right hand of the light is darkness. They cannot and will not be separated. And yet the story takes place on Gethen, a world where sexual dimorphism has been eliminated in human beings, likely the result an experiment by ancient planet-exploring forebears. All people have the ability to act as male and as female during a rutting period known as kemmer. In the result, many of the social structures seem changed. There is no war… but there is also an extremely labyrinthine and exclusionary social structure known as shifgrethor and a country that is essentially communistic with forced labour camps and more.

On a surface level, the question of what might happen if gender were eliminated as a social issue is answered. Things shift and yet strife and problems remain. There is no total conquest of the darkness by the light, which is the assumption that progressiveness seems to have ingrained in its way of viewing the world. That one day we might achieve a utopia of sorts. And yet there is nothing really lost in terms of the underlying theme of the novel, at least to my mind. I was assuming that the relationship between Genly Ai, the male alien protagonist whose parts work like ours, and local androgynous person Estraven would eventually lead to sex, but it never does. It’s addressed briefly, but not discussed further.

Sexuality, as a social issue, seems always there, bubbling beneath the surface. Generations of majoritarian puritanical tradition still resonates with us today, though we seem to be getting through it. Slowly, but surely. Genly Ai becoming alright with his relationship with Estraven came through his recognition that 'he' was half man and half woman and recognizing that there was a sexual pull there, precipitated by that feminine side. Admittedly heteronormative, it's not worked out to its ultimate expression, but it is acknowledged.

Which brings me to another point, this one made by Joseph Campbell in his Power of Myth talks from PBS. That though light and darkness need the light, we can still hope to bend towards the light. Though this book ends with a suicide, the ending is indeed hopeful. Genly Ai loses his friend, a person swallowed up by the darkness which is the right hand of the light, but contact has been made with the greater galactic federation of humans. The world of Gethen becomes a part of the Ekumen, said interplanetary trade federation, which was Genly Ai’s mission as envoy in the first place.

I don’t use this term lightly, but this book is a masterpiece. I had reason to consider the differences between genre and literary fiction recently, and though I have my personal qualms with the distinction, there is no question in my mind that this is both science fiction and literary fiction. It is the art of writing elevated to its highest expression.

Available on Amazon here.

Review - The Worth Of Gold (Gold & Steel #2) by Christopher Walsh

Preamble

I read Chris Walsh’s As Fierce As Steel back in 2020, when the pandemic was in full swing. I met him at a local book market event and we exchanged some of our wares, happy enough to meet fellows in the battle that is self-publishing. He gave me a copy of The Worth Of Gold as well as As Fierce As Steel, and am I ever glad he did.

At writing, there is not a single review of The Worth Of Gold. To me, that’s a bit of a tragedy, given how good it is. It’s been out for a year and a half. That said, it does offer me the opportunity to set the stage to some degree.

Full disclosure: I received a copy from the author, however the opinion is mine and is uninfluenced by this.

A note about my reviews: I consider myself an appreciator, not a critic. I know first-hand what goes into the creation of art – the blood, the sweat, the tears, the risk. I also know that art appreciation is subjective and lernt good what mama tell’t me – if you don’t have anything nice to say, don’t say anything at all. I’m not a school marm grading a spelling test – I’m a reader who enjoys reading. If a book is entertaining, well-written, and I get absorbed into it, five out of five. I have gone as low as three stars – anything less than that and I will not review a book (chances are I DNFed anyway). Regardless, I wouldn’t even put a star rating system on my reviews but for the reality of storefronts like Amazon.

Take from that what you will.

Review – 5/5

The Worth Of Gold is Chris Walsh’s second book in the Gold & Steel saga. Temporally, it is set around the main events of the first book, albeit from the point of view of other characters, principally Lady Marigold Tullivan, heiress to one of the main political dynasties in Illiastria, the main country setting of the novels. It also features her sister Serephanie and a few other characters who flesh out the story a bit, but mainly it’s about Marigold and her political tribulations.

We get a taste of the good Lady in As Fierce As Steel, as she makes an attempt to curry some sort of deal with Tryst Reine before he springs Orangecloak and sets into motion the main events of that other narrative arc. However, after that, all references to what has happened with Marigold and her rise to significant power are only mentioned obliquely in the first novel. We get to see what really happens in The Worth of Gold.

As mentioned, it’s chiefly a political novel, though if you want to learn the behind the scenes of the wrestling world, I think you could do worse than read The Worth Of Gold. The author, a fellow writer hailing from Newfoundland, mentioned to me at one point that he was involved in the local wrestling scene prior to picking up the pen and weaving the Gold & Steel saga. Serephanie Tullivan and her man (whose name escapes me) get pulled in deep into that world in the mirror arc, which is also heavily involved in an underground railroad for women trapped in a society that treats them like chattel.

I think Walsh even uses that word, chattel, which I only came into significant usage in my life when I was reviewing somewhat archaic legal rules in law school. His use of language demonstrates a breadth of vocabulary and usage that is, quite frankly, impressive. Perhaps because I myself am a language nerd and game recognizes game, but man do I love the way he writes his prose. I’ll admit some of the dialogue was just a little bit over the top in terms of how… proper, some of the speech was, but it’s part of the story. I did think that the characters of rougher provenance could have used some kind of dialectical indicators of same (they all get on like Lord effing Byron it seems), but overall I quite enjoyed it.

Like I mentioned, this is about politics, and if Chris Walsh ain’t a man with deep convictions about social justice, someone else must have ghostwritten this novel. It’s strongly feminist, anti-racist, anarchic, anti-class – Hell, at times I thought that it might have been a Communist textbook. I’m kidding, but there is a liberalism that is evident throughout. However, it is not total and there are some key differences in his characters and a clash in their approaches to how they want to reshape the world after the Dark Lord Sauron, in this case the beyond backwards Elite Merchant Party that rules Illiastra, is deposed. Maybe Orangecloak is the communist (with anarchist leanings), and Marigold is more about democratic self-actualization of the people who live under her, while maintaining certain social structures.

There is foreshadowing of the coming philosophical clash between these leaders of the revolution, and I suspect there is far more intrigue that is going to come up in the rest of the novels. And there’s also a nice little romance, a very muted battle between Marigold and one of the local lords who opposes her actions and… well, I don’t really want to spoil it.

It’s a great book, though admittedly a very long book. I probably will do a little rinse-bouche with a novella or something shorter for a few reads after this. But I suppose the real question is, ‘what’s the worth of art?’ In Christopher Walsh’s case, it seems very close to his oft-referenced gold. Highly recommended.

Check it out on Amazon here.

Review - The Dragon Reborn (Wheel of Time #3) by Robert Jordan

Preamble

I don’t think I would have gotten this far into The Wheel Of Time if not for the Amazon Prime show. It seems that Jordan’s skill improved tremendously over the course of the first three books. The first one had me somewhat impressed, the second was more of an appreciative nod. The Dragon Reborn has made this into one of my favourite fantasy series.

A note about my reviews: I consider myself an appreciator, not a critic. I know first-hand what goes into the creation of art – the blood, the sweat, the tears, the risk. I also know that art appreciation is subjective and lernt good what mama tell’t me – if you don’t have anything nice to say, don’t say anything at all. I’m not a school marm grading a spelling test – I’m a reader who enjoys reading. If a book is entertaining, well-written, and I get absorbed into it, five out of five. I have gone as low as three stars – anything less than that and I will not review a book (chances are I DNFed anyway). Regardless, I wouldn’t even put a star rating system on my reviews but for the reality of storefronts like Amazon.

Take from that what you will.

Review – 5/5

The Amyrlin Seat loves her a fishing metaphor. At one point in the novel, after some mention of how something is like a fish or getting a hand caught in a trap or something so cheesily over the top I thought, ‘Man, Robert Jordan just can’t help himself.’

And then one of the other characters referenced this character’s propensity to say stuff like that near the end of the book.

In a way, that’s a large part of how some of the threads of the story came together in this, the third book. Some of the nonsensical behaviour of the characters in the previous books got an explanation, and not a hamfisted one, either. I found myself rather impressed with the way Robert Jordan upended some of the characterization criticisms I had in the earlier books. The characters’ motivations began to make more sense.

And it barely had Rand in it at all.

I liked hanging with Perrin and Mat. Perrin’s character had a nice little wrestle with fate and destiny, thanks to another character’s foretellings. Philosophical questions about prophecy abounded, and Perrin liked being told what was going to happen to him about as much as Rand did in the previous books. None of these Two Rivers folk like being led down the garden path, it seems, whether that was by Moraine or any of the other characters with whom they became involved with. And hell yeah, Perrin becomes involved with a pretty cool female lead who just shows up out of the blue while he’s on his journey.

Mat, who was largely a dark-touched invalid in the second book, takes center stage in this one. He thinks himself a rogue – and he is, to a degree – but he’s also a protagonist who can’t help but do the right thing. He dreams of escaping his destiny, but it’s always after he does what he can to look out for his friends. In his quest for lonely escape, he finds himself charging into the belly of the beast to save the women he loves.

Women who give him a whole raft of unearned s-word for his trouble.

And speaking of swords, Rand does play a pivotal role. He gets the Wheel of Time equivalent of the Vorpal Blade of Doom +8 when he’s like, I dunno, a level five knight, and uses it to ‘defeat’ the big bad. Except this win over the dark is the same as every other one he’s had now (he’s on number three now). I feel like there’s a pattern here, and I would not be surprised if Rand kills Satan yet again at the end of book four, only to realize that the princess is in another castle.

Robert Jordan weaves a form of slow magic, a deliberately paced machination that gently gets up to speed near the end. People talk about the Sanderlanche in terms of Brandon Sanderson’s propensity to turn the action up to 11 in the final pages of the novel, and I am definitely noticing something similar in Jordan’s work. Each book has been the same in this regard.

There is plenty that can be said about the series: the gorgeous setting, the likeable (and detestable) characters, the scale of the conflict and the build up of power. I was only sort of joking when I said Rand was like a level five knight who gets the fantasy equivalent of a nuclear bomb. He’s been progressing as the avatar of good to fight the embodiment of evil, except that his use of the One Power is not without its problems.

Is he going to go nuts due to the tainted Power and kill everyone he loves, as he did in a past life? Guess I'll find out next time in The Shadow Rising.

Review - The Eye Of The World by Robert Jordan

Preamble

The Wheel Of Time has been one of those epics that I normally avoid for the sheer time commitment involved with reading them. The longest series I’ve ever read was The Dark Tower. At seven books in length, Stephen King's opus does remain one of the more satisfying reads I’ve experienced. Robert Jordan’s story is twice that length, at least in term of the number of books. The philosophical implications of the story had always intrigued me, though – reincarnation, the nature of reality, more mythological symbolism than you can shake a stick at. I had previously tried to listen to the original audiobook a few years ago, but distractions pulled me away from it. The new fantastic Amazon series coupled with a serious new walking habit saw me burn through the new audiobook version narrated by Rosamund Pike (Moraine from the show) in less than a month.

A note about my reviews: I consider myself an appreciator, not a critic. I know first-hand what goes into the creation of art – the blood, the sweat, the tears, the risk. I also know that art appreciation is subjective and lernt good what mama tell’t me – if you don’t have anything nice to say, don’t say anything at all. I’m not a school marm grading a spelling test – I’m a reader who enjoys reading. If a book is entertaining, well-written, and I get absorbed into it, five out of five. I have gone as low as three stars – anything less than that and I will not review a book (chances are I DNFed anyway). Regardless, I wouldn’t even put a star rating system on my reviews but for the reality of storefronts like Amazon.

Take from that what you will.

Review – 5/5

There’s a character who enters the story about halfway through the book, perhaps more. His name is Loial, he’s an ogier (housebroken ogre?), which is to say he’s a plodding nerd with a sense of time that’s completely alien to human beings. He is around 90 years old and he’s still considered an adolescent in ogier society. He takes his time in the grand tradition of the Ents from The Lord Of The Rings, and makes an untold number of references to how he doesn’t like to be hurried. Loial is considered hot-blooded for an ogier, which is an ongoing joke, given how bloody turgid and slow he is about doing things.

I have a feeling that Robert Jordan drew on his own artistic sensibilities when he created Loial.

One of the criticisms that is leveled at The Wheel Of Time is that the prose is dense and long-winded, and it gets worse as the series goes on. I’m still listening to the second book, so I can’t say to what degree it’s warranted overall in the series, but I think there’s a level of charm to that that I can appreciate now, and probably would not have been able to stand when I was younger. Especially on audiobook, during my hour to hour and a half walks that I try to work in each day. Sometimes you can lose focus thinking about other things, and you come back to find out that Jordan is still describing the masonry work on some castle that was destroyed centuries before in the world of the story.

To some extent, I’m kidding. From a personal level, I know that I do not have the patience to write in the way that Jordan does. The pacing is glacial, and I sometimes think on the heavy Eastern influence on the writing. It starts as a classic Western battle of good vs. evil vibe, but it seems to me that there are Taoist themes that influence the book, and not just because there is a yin yang element to much of the magic system and beyond. Even the name of the series, The Wheel Of Time, evokes something circular, and it turns out all of these folks are reincarnating over and over again. In the show, a climactic battle takes place over a yin yang symbol, and I believe the story itself has the symbol on the spine of some of the paperbacks or on the pages (one of the drawbacks of listening to the book is that I miss this kind of thing, as well as the way any of these fantasy words are spelled).

Maybe it’s because my own experience entering into these philosophical realms was coupled with a meditation practice that I picked up seven years ago or so. But it seems that even the writing itself is paced at a steady in and out breathing pace that would fit as one sits in zazen meditation (Zen being a blended offshoot of Taoism and Buddhism, to simplify it to a degree).

That’s a bit heady, so to break it down a bit: the first book is well plotted, the characterization is extremely rich (some of the best I’ve encountered), and you end up caring a great deal for the people in the book. I admit that this might be because of the involvement that the show induced in me – I restarted this book around the same time I started watching the drip feed of the show from Amazon. When I first encountered it, I felt like the big bad might be too Sauron-y for my taste, and it does wear its Tolkien influence on its sleeve. But if you’re going to crib from anyone, might as well lift from the best.

Tolkien’s work is mythological in structure, more so than most modern fantasy, and The Wheel Of Time gets full points here. Only where Tolkien was influenced by Christian and Norse and Celtic mythologies, Jordan’s goes a bit more global in scope. I think I saw something where Jordan was called the ‘American Tolkien,’ and having read this book, I think I get why. Like the country, it is a melting pot of influences, and there are some clear call outs to Arthurian legend as well as the Eastern ideas of the unified duality of the world. And a whole bunch besides.

When I was listening to the book, I was concerned as to whether there was going to be any real pay off at the end of The Eye Of The World, or if it would feel more like ‘Chapter One’ of the story. But I shouldn’t have worried – the ending is satisfying and full, but it does leave you wanting more. I’m invested at this point and have already clocked through several hours of The Great Hunt, book two in the series.

I can recommend this to anyone who is ogier in nature. If you’re more the quicksilver type, it might prove a bore. I don’t consider myself an ogier, but I think the grey hairs on my head are starting to denote a sea change in my own sensibility.

You can check out The Eye Of The World on the 'zon here.

Review - Midnight Mass (2021)

I tried recommending Mike Flanagan’s Midnight Mass to a friend yesterday. His response, after I told him vampires were involved, that I had lost him at horror. It’s funny, how we like to lump things into genres, to pre-judge things based on categorization. I am guilty of it too, from time to time. I would say horror is my favourite genre of film, but if I have to pick what’s next, I would rarely select a biopic, for example. Nonetheless, I think horror might be a secondary genre to what this show is.

Christian mythology is almost a term of abuse in the modern world I inhabit. Most people I know are not religious. Secular is how I was raised and it is a way of being that I view as being opposed to what I might term ‘orthodox zealotry.’ Basically, the taking of the Bible as a literal historical account is ‘the norm,’ if one identifies as religious. But as Joseph Campbell once put it,

“Half the people in the world think that the metaphors of their religious traditions, for example, are facts. And the other half contends that they are not facts at all. As a result we have people who consider themselves believers because they accept metaphors as facts, and we have others who classify themselves as atheists because they think religious metaphors are lies.”

Midnight Mass is a mythological attempt to reconcile these two opposing views, that of the atheist and the theist, to find something human and transcendent within the muck of religious tradition and the existential questions that lead us to seek them out in the first place. It is done in a masterful way, a slow build up of circumstance and strange miracles and occurrences that reach a fever pitch. It all ends with a wonderful bang.

The vampire, as a metaphor, can be seen as a clinging to the life of the body. In itself, it represents a lack of faith in reality - in death - as being anything but a horrendous, God-awful thing. In my view, the reason that the vampire is so effective in this movie is that it gives a backdrop for the people of the sleepy little village of Crockett Island, is that it brings to the fore all of the shadows that hide beneath our veneers of propriety. It is the shadow of the psyche manifest, almost like a ‘bad trip’ come to life.

The most obvious example of this is Bev Keane, the ‘officious intermeddler,’ as legal language would describe her. She is the lady who does all the ‘right’ things, is the priest’s number one helper, and yet is harbouring so much judgment and self-righteousness it is clear that there is no one more deluded about the nature of God in the entire community than her. She gets right on board with the vampire, as her unexamined shadow finds a perfect way of manifesting with the help of the creature of the night.

The vampire itself doesn’t say a word. It has great leathery wings and, though Father Paul, his first ‘convert,’ does mention that the creature is speaking with him, he is mostly a mute animal. He calls it an angel, and in a metaphorical sense, he is absolutely right. He is the avenging angel, come to quite metaphorically burn out the rot at the heart of the small community of Crockett Island.

Flanagan has plenty to say about the various assumptions that we make about death while we cling to life. Riley, the prodigal son who comes home from prison after serving his sentence for drunkenly killing a woman with his car, finds that his experience has robbed him of any faith. In spite of studying all of the religious traditions of the world while he is inside, he believes that there is nothing. Every night he is haunted by the corpse of the girl that he killed. He tells Erin, his confidant in a town that shuns him, that he as lost all faith, in spite of having been a good little altar boy as a child. Erin, at least halfway through the show, is a bog-standard ‘good Christian,’ who believes in the ‘standard’ literal interpretation of Heaven. She thinks that she’ll be reunited with the ‘body-based’ version of all of her loved ones, that the trappings of their identity and egos will be in this ‘good place’ where none of the evil of the world can touch.

The true climax of the story might seem at first blush to be all of the people who were not swayed by the promise of everlasting life from the vampire, the ones who decided to burn the whole place down and force all of the ghouls to face the sunrise. But to me, that is not really it. The real triumph is Erin’s experience of enlightenment, the recollection of her true self as she lies dying. This is foreshadowed by the priest himself, when he talks about how Good Friday was indeed a good thing, how the death of Jesus, though it seemed to be this moment of great suffering, was a triumph. But he was reading it literally. In her final moments, Erin sees the metaphor for what it is… and gives us all a taste.

A truly wonderful mini-series, and definitely worth a watch.