George V. Reilly

Review: A Coffin for Two

Title: A Coffin for Two
Author: Quintin Jardine
Rating: ★ ★ ★ ★
Publisher: Headline
Copyright: 1997
Pages: 310
Keywords: crime
Reading period: 16–20 August, 2009

When we were in Spain in July, we visited the Dalí museum in Figueres. The museum is Salvador Dalí's monument to himself; he spent his latter years building it. The guided tour was well worth the money. I came away believing that Dalí was both enormously talented and full of shit.

The next day, purely by chance, we passed a sign for Gala's castle at Pubol while driving around in the coun­try­side. We spent half the morning looking around the castle that Dalí had bought for Gala, his continue.

Review: You Suck: A Love Story

Title: You Suck: A Love Story
Author: Christo­pher Moore
Rating: ★ ★ ★ ★
Publisher: Harper Collins
Copyright: 2007
Pages: 328
Keywords: humor
Reading period: 15–16 August, 2009

Tommy Flood is another of Chris Moore's Beta Males. He's also a brand-new 19-year-old vampire, newly turned by his girlfriend Jody—her­self only a vampire for a few months. He's not too keen about his new state, but he's trying to cope. It doesn't help that his former crew of shelf stockers at Safeway are trying to hunt his vampire ass. And he has a 16-year-old Goth chick for a minion who thinks the Lord Flood is like OMG totally hot.

Funny but not mean-spirited.

Review: Layer Cake (book)

Title: Layer Cake
Author: J.J. Connolly
Rating: ★ ★ ★ ★ ½
Publisher: Black Cat
Copyright: 2000
Pages: 309
Keywords: fiction
Reading period: 11–14 August, 2009

The unnamed nar­ra­tor—My name? If I told you that you'd be as clever as me—is an up-and-coming London drug dealer who wants to retire by his thirtieth birthday. He's pro­fes­sion­al, low-key, and a little bit cocky, and he has every chance of pulling it off. He re­luc­tant­ly does a favor for the crime boss Jimmy Price and suddenly his plans are derailed. Double-crosses, snitches, betrayals, murders, hold ups, and stings ensue. There's little honor among thieves, save for our hero's immediate circle.

It's easy to see why Layer continue.

Review: The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo

Title: The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo
Author: Stieg Larsson
Rating: ★ ★ ★ ★
Publisher: Vintage Crime
Copyright: 2005
Pages: 590
Keywords: mystery
Reading period: 8–9 August, 2009

After crusading financial journalist Mikael Blomkvist is convicted of libel, he re­luc­tant­ly agrees to in­ves­ti­gate the 40-year-old dis­ap­pear­ance of the teenaged Harriet Vanger for her great-uncle Henrik, a rich in­dus­tri­al­ist. He is aided by the antisocial hacker Lisabeth Salander, the eponymous tattooed girl.

The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo was published shortly before Larsson's untimely death, and later became an in­ter­na­tion­al bestseller. It's a classic locked-room mys­tery—Har­ri­et dis­ap­peared from a sealed-off island full of the extended, ugly Vanger clan. It's an indictment of the Nazism buried continue.

Review: Shadowfall

Title: Shadowfall
Author: James Clemens
Rating: ★ ★ ★
Publisher: Roc
Copyright: 2005
Pages: 507
Keywords: fantasy
Reading period: 4–8 August, 2009

For four thousand years, the gods have dwelt in human form amongst the people of Myrillia, rooted to the very land. When the goddess Meeryn is found murdered and the disgraced Shad­owknight Tylar de Noche is found at her side, mirac­u­lous­ly healed of his maiming, he is accused of being the godslayer. He escapes and uncovers a dark conspiracy of corruption and evil.

As an exercise in world building, this book succeeds. For example, the gods' humors—blood, seed, menses, sweat, tears, saliva, phlegm, and yellow bile and black bile (“piss and shite”)—are collected continue.

Review: Winterbirth

Title: Win­ter­birth
Author: Brian Ruckley
Rating: ★ ★ ★ ★
Publisher: Orbit
Copyright: 2006
Pages: 654
Keywords: fantasy
Reading period: 3–4 August, 2009

A century and a half ago, the believers in the Black Road were forced into exile. Now, in some bloody surprise attacks, they've conquered the Glas Valley. The story is largely told from the viewpoints of three brother-sister pairs: the young leaders of the Black Road attackers; the adolescent nephew and niece of the thane of the Lannis-Haig Blood; and a warrior of the Kyrinin race and his sister. Each side believes that it is in the right: the clash between two human cultures was inevitable, as is the war between the continue.

Review: Thunderer

Title: Thunderer
Author: Felix Gilman
Rating: ★ ★ ★ ½
Publisher: Bantam Spectra
Copyright: 2008
Pages: 527
Keywords: fantasy
Reading period: 27 July–2 August, 2009

Ararat is vast, unknowable, unmappable, home to many living gods who make their presence felt. Arjun comes from his far-distant home, seeking the Voice, the god that abandoned his people. He arrives as the Bird sweeps through the great city, trans­form­ing it by its passage, only to be captured in the warship Thunderer. A boy, Jack, also captures part of the Bird's power as he flees the workhouse.

Gilman has created a city rem­i­nis­cent of China Miéville's New Crubuzon, a vast baroque tapestry of neigh­bor­hoods, ruled by heavy-handed oligarchs squabbling to enlarge their continue.

Review: Careless in Red

Title: Careless in Red
Author: Elizabeth George
Rating: ★ ★ ★ ★
Publisher: Harper
Copyright: 2008
Pages: 725
Keywords: fiction, mystery
Reading period: 26–27 July, 2009

Out of his mind with grief after the senseless murder of his wife Helen in What Came Before He Shot Her, Detective Su­per­in­ten­dent Tommy Lynley has been walking along the Cornish coastline for weeks when he stumbles across a dead body. Re­luc­tant­ly, he becomes part of the police in­ves­ti­ga­tion. Half the village seems to have a motive for killing the victim. Old slights and recent fights have festered, pitting family members against each other.

Elizabeth George is noted for the depth of her char­ac­ter­i­za­tion. Even the supporting characters are well-drawn, complex continue.

Review: Ink and Steel

Title: Ink and Steel
Author: Elizabeth Bear
Rating: ★ ★ ★ ★
Publisher: Roc
Copyright: 2008
Pages: 441
Keywords: fantasy
Reading period: 20–25 July, 2009

The Prometheans are a secret society sworn to protect England and Elizabeth I. Kit Marley (Christo­pher Marlowe), playmaker, poet, and in­tel­li­gencer, has been killed by a dagger in the eye, at the behest of a rogue faction in the Prometheans. Another talented polemicist is required and Will Shake­speare is recruited. But Kit is not dead. He has been spirited to Faerie, where now he must serve their two queens. He becomes the lover of one, Morgan le Fay, and her son, Murchaud. Kit can return to the land of the continue.

Review: Barcelona the Great Enchantress

Title: Barcelona the Great En­chantress
Author: Robert Hughes
Rating: ★ ★ ★ ½
Publisher: National Geographic Directions
Copyright: 2004
Pages: 169
Keywords: history, au­to­bi­og­ra­phy
Reading period: 15–24 July, 2009

Robert Hughes has been in love with Barcelona and its people for four decades. This book—part selective history, part memoir—is adapted from a much larger, earlier book about Barcelona. Hughes is a partisan of Catalan culture and food. He brings us from its Roman origins as Barcino, Catalun­ya's founding as an in­de­pen­dent nation a thousand years ago by the Visigoth Wilfred the Hairy, up through the Olympics in 1992. This is no com­pre­hen­sive survey: he spends more time on submarine inventor Monturiol than on the Spanish Civil continue.

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