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url 2015-07-30 16:01
The Grand Shattering (from Harper's Magazine)

Another (very good, rather intense) article on motherhood and writing. There is a definite theme in the articles that interest me these days.

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review SPOILER ALERT! 2014-12-10 12:58
Much more intrigue than your standard D&D book
Elfshadow (Forgotten Realms: The Harpers, #2; Songs & Swords, #1) - Elaine Cunningham

After some people pointed out that The Parched Sea was little more than a rip off of Lawrence of Arabia, I was wondering whether the good people at TSR (as it was then) would take the same tact with this book and simply copy some pre-existing story and throw it into the Forgotten Realms. So, as I was reading it my mind was trying to come up with pop-culture equivalents to this book. So, what we have is a half-elf assassin and a magic-using companion who is regularly described as a dandy. It is also about a secret organisation known as the Harpers and they are attempting to track down an assassin who is killing off their members. So, taking the idea of a couple of cops, one straight, and the other rather eccentric, I immediately thought of this movie:

 

Lethal Weapon

 

 

However, the since the Harpers are a secret organisation then equating them with the LAPD sort of didn't work. However, considering that it is about an assassin hunting down and killing members of this organisation, I considered that maybe they were copying this film:

 

Commando

 

Nope, doesn't work either.

Maybe we could go with this:

James Bond

 

It sort of seems to work since the Harpers are a secret organisation, as is MI5, however the Harpers owe allegiance to no one where as MI5 owes allegiance to the Queen, and the Harpers seeks to fight for justice whereas MI5 simply fights for the interests of the British Empire. Still, close enough, especially since this book comes across with a lot more intrigue and mystery than many of the other Forgotten Realms (or even Dungeons & Dragons related books).

To be honest, I actually quite enjoyed it, and while it isn't in the league of Dostoyevski nor is it going to go down as a literary masterpiece in the same way as Madame Bouvery (nor would I suggest that Cunningham took the attitude of Flaubert in making sure that every sentence that she wrote was written to perfection) it is still a rather fun book to while away the time and to give one's mind a rest between the more serious books I tend to read.

To be honest, the mystery itself was pretty good, and it actually had a decent twist in it that I never actually expected. There is also a decent world changing plot (involving a magical gate that connects Faerun with the elven island of Evermeet that if discovered could seriously compromise the security of the later place), so I guess there is that James Bond element in it as well. However, what it doesn't have is the hidden superfortress and the armies of mooks that get mowed down in a machine gun fight at the end, but then again this is a fantasy novel so I guess machine guns probably wouldn't fit.

Source: www.goodreads.com/review/show/1124566325
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review 2014-11-13 02:08
The Mapmaker's Children by Sarah McCoy

The Mapmaker's Children

by Sarah McCoy

Hardcover, 320 pages

publisher Crown Publishing

ISBN 0385348909 (ISBN 13: 978038534804)

EXPECTED PUBLISHING DATE: 5th May 2015

 

The Mapmaker's Children is a definite must read. Sarah Brown, daughter of abolitionist John Brown, has a gift for artwork. After her father is hung, she continues to support the Underground Railroad by making maps for runaway slaves to follow. 150 years later, Eden and her husband move into a historic home and find an antique doll's head. Unable to bear children, Eden takes an interest in the house and tries to get it listed on a historical house registry. Sara McCoy brilliantly weaves the two stories into one, without leaving the reader confused. She took real life characters from the 1860's and realistically gives them life. Her 2014 characters are also well developed and likable. The story flows very well and leaves the reader into wanting to learn more of the history of the Underground Railroad and the Abolitionist Movement.
I would definitely recommend this to adults, young adults, and teachers wanting to spark their students into wanting to learn more about this time in history.

***This book was received through a Goodreads Giveaway offered by the publisher, Crown Publishing.***

 

Source: www.goodreads.com/book/show/18490777-the-mapmaker-s-children
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