inulro: (Default)
53. The Violent Century by Lavie Tidhar

Lavie was on a panel I attended at Nine Worlds. He is an Israeli writer who lives in London and writes in English. I added him to my "to read" list in an effort to read more books by non-European people. This is the first one I was able to randomly pick up from the library.

This is a story of a parallel 20th century in which there are superheroes following some sort of scientific experiment by a German scientist in the 1930s. They are involved in their countries' efforts through WWII, the Cold War, Vietnam, etc but (I don't think this is too much of a spoiler) don't affect the material outcomes.

I had trouble getting into it because the style was a bit odd - it is more literary than I was expecting, which is not a bad thing, it just required more effort than I'd anticipated. However, it soon picked up and I quite enjoyed it. I felt slightly uncomfortable about reading the passages about the Holocaust knowing they were written by an Israeli. You don't really warm to the characters (except one, near the end), but I think that that is the point.

As alternate histories go, it was a really interesting take on the 20th century, and I'll definitely be looking out for more of his books.
inulro: (Default)
50 Jago and other Stories by Kim Newman

Massively long novel that Newman first published in 1991, repackaged together with three short stories he's since written using characters from the novel.

There setting is a village called Alder in Somerset, where the old Manor House is now inhabited by a wingnut cult led by an ex priest called Anthony Jago. Except that its leader has major psychic powers. And even before he came along, Weird Shit happened in the area regularly.

The cult host a big festival on their land every summer. This summer it's the middle of a drought and heat wave, and weird and unpleasant things start to happen as soon as the outsiders start to gather for the festival.

While I enjoyed the novel quite a lot, I liked the last two short stories even better - they feature characters from Jago but are set in an alternate England where serfdom persisted up till the 20th century and there has been a recent civil war, Somerset is the Wild West and puritans are in charge. The second, The Man on the Clapham Omnibus also features The Diogenes Club, which is a regular feature in Newman's work. This is an entirely unpleasant alternate reality, but extremely interesting.

Profile

inulro: (Default)
inulro

May 2022

S M T W T F S
1234567
89101112 1314
15161718192021
22232425262728
293031    

Syndicate

RSS Atom

Most Popular Tags

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
Page generated Jul. 12th, 2025 11:27 am
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios