Litany
Active Member
This was a pressie from RaVeN if anyone remembers him at all. Maybe not, but his scent still lingers on the air. I recommend a powerful disinfectant.
Well, what a good book it was. Locke is an orphan who grows up to be a 'gentleman' thief conning nobles out of their ill-gotten gains. But there's a secret peace that all the criminals agreed to stick to which was to not rob the nobles. So he's a bit norty really. Also there is some other norty chap sneaking about and bumping off criminal gang members. And of course their lives are set to collide with consequences of whatever description.
It's set on a planet that was long ago occupied by aliens, so it gets put in the sci-fi/fantasy sections, but it's really more like a comedy crime caper set in Venice. Overall the feel of the city was as if China Mieville kicked all the aliens out and lightened up a bit, but the story is a lot more cheery and there's none of the long rambling descriptive passages. He manages to convey the atmosphere of the city with a very light hand.
For a debut novel it's fantastic. Some of the characters are a little one-dimensional, and the dialogue can be trite in places, but overall it's a ripping good read. It won't make you think too hard and it has the George R.R. Martin seal of approval. It's apparently going to be a series (7 books. Ooer), but this reads as a stand alone novel and doesn't leave you on any sort of cliff hanger.
It's that particular sort of book that reads like a film but not in a bad way.
Well, what a good book it was. Locke is an orphan who grows up to be a 'gentleman' thief conning nobles out of their ill-gotten gains. But there's a secret peace that all the criminals agreed to stick to which was to not rob the nobles. So he's a bit norty really. Also there is some other norty chap sneaking about and bumping off criminal gang members. And of course their lives are set to collide with consequences of whatever description.
It's set on a planet that was long ago occupied by aliens, so it gets put in the sci-fi/fantasy sections, but it's really more like a comedy crime caper set in Venice. Overall the feel of the city was as if China Mieville kicked all the aliens out and lightened up a bit, but the story is a lot more cheery and there's none of the long rambling descriptive passages. He manages to convey the atmosphere of the city with a very light hand.
For a debut novel it's fantastic. Some of the characters are a little one-dimensional, and the dialogue can be trite in places, but overall it's a ripping good read. It won't make you think too hard and it has the George R.R. Martin seal of approval. It's apparently going to be a series (7 books. Ooer), but this reads as a stand alone novel and doesn't leave you on any sort of cliff hanger.
It's that particular sort of book that reads like a film but not in a bad way.