Archive for the ‘Fantasy’ Category

The Short Second Life of Bree Tanner

Wednesday, June 2nd, 2010

Stephenie Meyer will publish The Short Second Life of Bree Tanner, a 192-page novella centered on a newborn vampire introduced in the third Twilight novel, Eclipse, in June. The story chronicles the journey of villain Victoria’s newborn vampire army as they prepare to close in on Bella and the Cullens. It will be released at 12:01 a.m. on June 5 in hardcover ($13.99, with $1 from each sale going to the American Red Cross International Response Fund). From June 7 to July 5, fans will be able to read the book for free online at www.breetanner.com, which will also provide a link to the American Red Cross website where they can donate to support relief efforts in Haiti, Chile, and around the globe.

Meyer thought the manuscript might work well as part of The Twilight Saga: The Official Guide, a tome still awaiting a pub date, but at nearly 200 pages, it was something her publisher thought worked better on its own. Meyer liked the idea of publishing it before Eclipse hits theaters, to give fans an introduction to Bree. She also considered the novella a gift to devoted Twilight readers, which is why she asked her publisher to make it available for free online.

GENRE: Fantasy

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The Red Pyramid

Wednesday, May 19th, 2010

redpyramidThe first of a planned series called “The Kane Chronicles,” Rick Riordan’s latest novel The Red Pyramid puts a spotlight on ancient Egypt in much the same way he wove Greek mythology into the “Percy Jackson” series.

Also similar is his formula including children suddenly discovering god-like powers, a missing parent who needs to be saved, a battle against evil forces that want to end the world, and a mission that must be completed by a specific deadline.

Riordan tells his story through two narrators — mixed-race siblings Carter and Sadie Kane. The two alternate detailing what happened after their father, Julius Kane, blew up the Rosetta Stone and unleashed five Egyptian gods before disappearing himself.

As the story begins, 14-year-old Carter and 12-year-old Sadie hardly know each other. Since their mother’s unexplained death several years ago, Sadie’s been living with grandparents in England while Carter has traveled the world with his father, an archaeologist.

The text is presented as the transcript of an audio recording done by both children, alternating every two chapters between character perspectives. Early on, Sadie uses her British accent heavily, but as the book progressed it almost completely was lost and it became difficult to differentiate between the two voices.

As the story unfolds, Carter and Sadie discover the secrets of their family heritage and their ability to work magic as they realize that their task will be to save humanity from Set, who is building a destructive red pyramid at Camelback Mountain in Phoenix.

Sadie, it turns out, is a godling for Isis; the goddess of fertility, who is on a quest to locate the god of the lower world, Osiris. Carter is Horus, the son of Osiris, who has to defeat Set, the god who is imprisoning his dad.

Riordan does a masterful job concocting an explanation of why Pharaoh’s in history would have considered themselves actual gods and legitimizing the historical context with scenes readers may be familiar with like Moses showdown in Egypt.

Riordan again does a great job of pulling ancient mythology into the modern world. He really grounds his story and makes it believable. By the end of the book the characters are realistic and engaging and the reader is eagerly anticipating the next adventure.

Riordan is proposing the Kane Chronicles will be at least a trilogy and he’s also working on a second five-book series, this one featuring a mainstay of the Percy series, Camp Half-Blood. The first book will be published in October.

GENRE: Fantasy

Link here to read the first chapter of The Red Pyramid

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The Fire Thief

Wednesday, May 12th, 2010

firethiefSet in Eden city, England in the year 1858, The Fire Thief by Terry Dearly tells the story of Prometheus, a titan from mythology who once chained to a boulder on the Caucaus Mountains by Zeus must find one true human hero if he wants to be forgiven

Prometheus pitied humans and so he stole fire from the gods and gave it to them. Zeus, furious with Prometheus sentenced him to an eternity chained to the mountain. The fury, avenger of the gods, in the form of a hawk would come every morning and eat his liver. Then Prometheus would come to life again every night only to meet the same fate in the morning.

Hercules eventually frees Prometheus from his chains and he and Zeus make their hero wager. Prometheus flies forward into time, and the fury chases after and hunts him.

The story in England that is being told simultaneously (or every other chapter) is that of an orphan named Jim and Uncle Edward who has adopted him to assist in his traveling show which is really just a front for robbery. Prometheus joins their troop unaware of their illegal activities and plays a pivotal role in bringing out the hero in each of them.

The book focuses on themes of friendship, reform, mythology and hope. Throughout it all, Prometheus is disappointed to see what the humans have done with his gift of fire.  The reader does wonder what different outcome the story would have if Zeus and Hera had not meddled and added Pandora and her jar of the world ills to the mix.

Dearly introduces footnotes at the bottom of most of his pages.  Some were humorous anecdotes, others shameless puns, and even adds a few literary references to everyone from Dickens to Poe.  I think quite a bit of it would be lost on the average elementary reader and I found near the end of the book I wanted to disregard their distractions entirely.

The story started slow but climaxed well and rushed to an ending.  This is the first in a trilogy that depicts Prometheus’s hero quest.  I admit I am curious to which hero the temple alluded to in Eden City was built for.

I haven’t had automatic success with navigating Percy Jackson fans to this series in my library.  What I can attest to is that it is an accurate version of well known Greek myths.  Dearly is well known for his Horrible Histories series and brings that flair to this work as well.

GENRE: Fantasy/ Mythology

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