Electronic OtherRealms #27 Spring, 1990 Part 4 of 11 Copyright 1990 by Chuq Von Rospach All Rights Reserved. OtherRealms may be distributed electronically only in the original form and with copyrights, credits and return addresses intact. OtherRealms may be reproduced in printed form only for your personal use. No part of OtherRealms may be reprinted or used in any other publication without permission of the author. All rights to material published in OtherRealms hereby revert to the author. Mark of the Werewolf Jeffrey Sackett Bantam Horror; 0-553-28450-9; 323 pages; Feb. 1990; $3.95 This latest novel from Sackett is a highly innovative variation of the werewolf theme, almost like 'The Werewolf Meets Dr. Mengele'. A white supremacist group, The White Homeland Party, headed by Frederick Bracher is devoted to eliminating all non-white trash that does not conform to the Aryan standards of purity. After his 'storm-troopers' are murdered by a werewolf, Bracher comes up with a brilliant idea, to try and reproduce the invincibility of the werewolf. Laying a trap, Bracher kidnaps Janos Kaldy, a werewolf who for the past 3000 years has been trying to find peace in death. Bracher hopes to isolate the virus or enzyme that causes lycanthropy and thus create his 'lycanvolk'. He then will turn these manufactured werewolves into a conquering army that he can use as a weapon in the race war. Sackett's use of flashbacks to explain Kaldy's 3000 year old search for death is exceptionally well done. During this time-travel we meet such notable personna as: Nostradamus, Merlin the Magician, Jesus Christ and the Wallachian Prince. The ending is simply superb. Mark of the Werewolf is filled with plenty of action and adventure. It is well-written thriller with characters that are rich, varied and totally believable. Sackett's greatest skill here is his ability to create a sense of empathy for Kolady's helplessness and sensitivity for what he's about to 'father'. I strongly recommend Mark of the Werewolf as I do his previous novel Blood of the Impaler. His new novel about goblins will be out this summer from Bantam -- look for it. -- Richard Weilgosh A Mask for the General [***] Lisa Goldstein Bantam, 1987, $3.95, 224pp 2021: A delapidated, computerless America is ruled under martial law by "the General". In Berkeley, one source of passive resistance to the dictatorial regime is the "tribes", young people who wear animal masks and defy curfew to meet and dance. Layla, a prestigious maskmaker, believes her totem, the heron, guides her through dreams; she plans to make a mask for the General to help him rediscover his "soul". Mary, a young runaway, wishes only to survive; but the price of that may be higher than she plans. This book's basically mystical theme is at odds with a prosaic, reportorial style. It reminds me most of LeGuin's The Eye of The Heron -- presumably a compliment, though I don't see Eye as LeGuin's best work. In both novels there is a superficially Sixties look, but the dispassionate feel of the Eighties. Perhaps this is where the literary perspective of the 1960's is going: a minimalist portrait of a maximal age. -- David Shea The Mathematical Tourist: Snapshots of Modern Mathematics [***-] Ivars Peterson As the title implies, this is a fast tour through some of the more interesting research in mathematics today. The individual topics are covered from a basic, general viewpoint (this is, after all, intended for nonmathematicians) and are very up-to-date (an entry in one table was made in 1988, the same year the book was published). Some of the topics covered are prime factorization of large numbers, four-dimensional (and higher-dimensional) geometry, topological manifolds, Penrose tilings, and fractals. For all of these, the author also includes some explanation of why the problems are interesting, at least to mathematicians. The explanations are surprisingly non-technical; I don't think anything beyond high-school geometry is needed to understand most of the book. While that will probably get the book a wider audience, I thought that assuming a little more background (say, trigonometry or experience with personal computers) might have made some sections much more interesting. There is a bibliography for readers who want to go deeper into some topic, but it only seems to point to other popularizations. If you get seriously interested in fractals, you'll have to look them up on your own. The only reason I didn't rate this book higher was that I had seen all of the material already, either in class or in science magazines; I guess I wanted something I hadn't seen before. -- Chuck Koelbel Mona Lisa Overdrive [*****] William Gibson, Bantam The sequel to Neuromancer and Count Zero is finally out in paperback. Quick review: It's great! The series started with an excellent book in Neuromancer and got better with each volume. Mona Lisa Overdrive ties up all the loose ends from the first two books (some ends are tied tighter than others, but they're all there) and ends Gibson's exploration of cyberspace and the sprawl. The plot involves four parallel threads revolving around the daughter of a Yakuza, an artist, a stim star (Angie Mitchell, from Count Zero), and a prostitute (Mona Lisa). Molly and the Finn (two of Gibson's favorite characters from Neuromancer and other stories) also appear, along with many other characters from the first two books. The plot is complex enough that it can't be summarized here; suffice it to say that there is a lot of action before the four threads finally wind together at the end of the book. Highly recommended, along with Neuromancer and Count Zero. -- Chuck Koelbel Only Begotten Daughter James Morrow William Morrow, 1990, 321 pages, $19.95 cloth) The startling jacket copy for Only Begotten Daughter promises "a novel that has something to offend everyone!" -- a boast one wouldn't ordinarily expect to see outside of the horror racks. But considering the startling story between the covers of James Morrow's new book, that notice can only be considered fair warning. Only Begotten Daughter is not a horror novel, but it is often a novel of horrors -- a discomfiting, chaotic, brutally cynical, rub-your-nose-in-the-dirt story of the Messiah's Second Coming. But this isn't quite the Second Coming the revelationists have been expecting: the Messiah's name is Julie Katz, and she doesn't know why she's here, or what to do with her divine power. It's probably an insurmountable challenge for a reviewer to try to capture in a few hundred words the captivating delirium of this careening runaway carousel of a book. Only Begotten Daughter is full of jarring, radical images -- the devil smoking Pall Malls and plotting his moves on a portable computer, a bizarre Last Supper of pizza, public executions with hedge clippers, Jesus in Hell and wholly ignorant of his impact on history. In some respects, Morrow seems to have written a manic Satanic Verses for the Judeo-Christian world. Yet, at the same time, Morrow's novel is suffused with a peculiar innocence, an earnest inquiry into the nature of godhood, and an enduring if battered optimism about the importance of love. These three elements of the tale are embodied most clearly in Morrow's endearing, bewildered heroine, who faces not only the ordinary trials of human existance, but temptation from Satan, persecution as the Antichrist, and a poignant, frustrating search for her Mother's sign and guidance. Juxtaposing lyrical interludes which could be outtakes from Disney's Little Mermaid with hellish spectacles worthy of de Sade, Only Begotten Daughter defies ready categorization -- neither fantasy nor black comedy, parable nor prophecy. But it is clearly no mere exercise in idol-toppling and totem-skewering. If the narrative makes us flinch, it's only because it is itself so unflinching in its dissection of human foibles and cruelty. Ultimately, Morrow has given us a frank and fascinating novel which provokes, rather than offends -- a remarkable work of fiction with the power to disturb our complacency, and challenge us to consider anew the thorny questions of life and faith. -- Michael P. Kube-McDowell The Paladin [****} C. J. Cherryh Baen, $3.95, 383pp, 0-671-65417-9 This is fiction at its best. Cherryh, best know for characterization, raises the art to new heights. While The Paladin is labeled a fantasy, there's no magic, no mythical beasts, no cute elves or dwarves. What there is, is actually a quite simple story of a youth and a teacher -- but told with all the art and skill of a master story teller. The story is oriental in flavor and revolves around Shoka, former swordmaster to the old emperor. Vowing to fight no more, Shoka takes exile on a mountain top far from the political upheaval surrounding the installment of the old emperor's son. One day a youth seeks Shoka out and demands justice. From here the story grows as Shoka is forced to deal with issues he thought long forgotten. Their relationship is real -- it grows, it flounders, it is fraught with hidden meanings and hidden emotion. Page after page, Cherryh will amaze you with the way she sets scenes, revealing inner depths to characters that are deep to begin with. It's a story of secrets and revelations, of growth and needs, of revenge, justice and dealing with the hand life deals. The ending is powerful and somewhat surprising. A fitting conclusion to a powerful work. -- Steven Sawicki Pavane [*****] Keith Roberts Ace, 1966, 285pp, 441-65430-095 Welcome to England in the Twentieth Century. Cargo is hauled by great coal-burning road locomotives, because the Pope has banned internal combustion. Messages are relayed by chains of giant semaphore stations, since Mother Church forbids electricity. To tame defiant England, the Inquisition is coming, with damnation for"heretics" and indescribable brutality even for the faithful; blocking its path are only a mad monk and a defiant young countess. And here and there, the last remnant of the People of the Hills engrave their mysterious symbol ... Out of print for too long, Roberts' haunting novel transcends easy categorization. To tag it with a facile label such as "alternate history" would be to define Niagara Falls as a movement of water. Compellingly human at every level, Pavane has a malevolent beauty comparable only to the first volume of Gormenghast. As C S Lewis wrote of Lord of the Rings: "Here is a book that will break your heart." One caution: this intense book is not for the timid reader. -- David Shea Pool of Radiance [*] James M. Ward and Jane Cooper Hong TSR Inc. $3.95 316 pg. This novel has an interesting background. It is based on an AD&D game module that was made into a very popular computer role playing game by SSI. This novel appears to be effort to capitalize on the popularity of the computer game (note the ad in the back of the book.) The game was a long, rich and detailed adventure. This book is an abbreviated digest of some of the highlights of the game. It does not even maintain the premise of the game very well. Having demolished the novel as a very poor imitation of the game, how does the story stand as a novel? The answer is still very poorly. There are two villains in the story, Lord Cadorna and Tyranthraxus. Cadorna is so transparently a villain that he is not creditable. You know he will not succeed in any of his schemes to kill the main characters and will be killed himself. Tyranthraxus, who is supposed to be the main villain, is a minor character. This is fatal as the climax of the book is the battle with him. The computer game, a medium not noted for good characterization, does a better job of developing the character of Tyranthraxus. The game is a series of missions that are tied to together by a theme, the reconquest of Phlan from Tyranthraxus. The theme provides rationales for the missions and ties many of them together in a coherent story. There is strong potential for an epic novel in the game. Unfortunately this novel does not exploit that potential. The story emphasis is shifted to the personal problems of the three main characters (Shal, Ren and Tarl.) The reconquest of Phlan is something they do as a side effect of solving their personal problems. The result is a sense that something is missing from the story. This is not a book worth reading even for the hard core AD&D fan. -- Danny Low Sailing to Byzantium/Seven American Nights [****]/[*****] Robert Silverberg / Gene Wolfe In this Tor Double, the theme is "fantastic travels". Silverberg's protagonist is a twentieth-century man traveling in a far-future world where anything is possible for the inhabitants. Wolfe's hero is an Arab in a post-holocaust Washington, DC. I liked both stories, despite their very different treatments. Wolfe's story gets a higher rating for a more "real" atmosphere and slightly better characters. Highly recommended for both stories. -- Chuck Koelbel Sassinak [****] Anne McCaffrey and Elizabeth Moon Baen Books $4.95 333 pg. This is a competently done book but suffers from several serious problems. The first is continuity. There are three distinct stories in this book. There is the origins story, an early career episode and the beginning of the main story. Any of these stories is worthy of a full novel. Cramming all three into one book makes each story sketchy and makes this book a collection of incomplete novelettes rather than a novel. The main story does not end in this book but stops rather abruptly. The biggest problem is the origins story is rather tame. The horrors are glossed over and Sassinak really does not suffer as much as she could have. The result is her passionate hatred of piracy is not as believable as it could be. This hatred is also not emphasized enough in the rest of the book. The book is the first in a series and is clearly intended to be a female Horatio Hornblower in space epic. Just as Hornblower had Napoleon, Sassinak has her pirate conspiracy. The book reads like a rather sanitized juvenile despite the sex. This is not a bad book but it is no more than average in quality. -- Danny Low Silent Moon William Relling Jr. TOR; 0-812-50708-8; 309 pages; March 1990; $4.95 This new novel by William Relling is a sequel to New Moon and essentially is a mystery story mixed with political treachery and dark fantasy. Not having read New Moon, I thought it wise to start there to gain history in case the stories overlapped. Over a six month period there has been a 40% increase in the number of missing persons in San Francisco. Television reporter Gillian Woodbury and her boyfriend, reporter Bud Friendly accidently discover that his investigation of political murder and her missing persons study have more in common than they both realized. Apparently these bodies are being taken by a mysterious cult that worships the Dark Gods and in return for these 'offerings' the cultists are promised immortality. The only carry-over from the first story is ex-police Sgt. Len Malecke, who has resigned from the police force and made it his goal to defeat the Dark Gods. I've been a fan of Relling's short stories for a couple of years now and I thoroughly enjoy the first novel in this series. Silent Moon was an entertaining, fast paced novel but I found it lacking in a couple of areas. First the characters were rather shallow; they didn't make me care what happened to them. The second point is that Relling explains too much, he doesn't let the reader think for himself. This probably will be corrected as he becomes more proficient with his writing. Relling did however make me squirm in my chair with his vivid depictions of the brutal murders. I like this mans' writing and will be out there awaiting his next book. -- Richard Weilgosh Tales from the Planet Earth Arthur C. Clarke Bantam Spectra; 0- 553-34883-3; 320 pages; June 1990; $9.95 Ever since I started reading SF way back in the mid 50's, there have been only four writers for whom I would read everything that they wrote. Asimov, Bradbury, Heinlein and this gentleman, Arthur C. Clarke. It's always a joy to read and reread his work knowing that I'd be treated to mellifluous prose, fascinating and realistic glimpses into the future and superb characterizations. Clarke's latest collection Tales from the Planet Earth is no exception. It contains fourteen reprints two of which are collected here for the first time: The Next Tennants and On Golden Sea. Also included is the classic novella: The Lion of Comarre and the equally entertaining The Road to the Sea. Prefacing each story are introductions by Clarke detailing the history of each tale thus adding a nice touch to this collection. This book is also lavishly illustrated by the Hugo winning artist Michael Whelan. Clarkes' stories are always highly entertaining and totally convincing, mixed with crisp. wry dialogue. This is one collection that will not disappoint his legions of fans. -- Richard Weilgosh The World of Crystal Walls: The Sea Hag [*] David Drake Baen Fantasy, 0-671-65424-1, 334pp, August 1988, $3.95 Drake, best known for his militaristic fiction, ventures here into a fantasy world complete with dragons, knights, robot companions, damsels in need of saving, corrupt and inept rulers and insane magician's apprentices. Yet, where Drake's style succeeds in such books as his Hammer's Slammers Series and his Roman based novels, here it fails. Perhaps it's his selection of the young boy as protagonist, perhaps it's the short, choppy chapters (one of which is only two sentences long), perhaps it's the inclusion of the all-knowing companion. Perhaps it's all of the above. Blurbed as a "great new series to rival Xanth," this book is little more than a fleshed-in outline. We follow Dennis, heir prince to Emath on his journeys across the land. Well, not exactly journeys since he really only goes to one other place. Encounters sometimes seem contrived and pointless, thrown in during a rewrite of what probably should have been a novella. It's not Drake at his best, and yet I did find myself drawn in enough to finish the book. It's light entertainment and Drake can do better. Unless you're a Drake fanatic or extremely desperate, pass on this one. -- Steven Sawicki Wrath of Ashar [****] Angus Wells Bantam Books $4.50 404 pg. This book looks like yet another high fantasy about a prophecy of a child who will save the world from Evil. However the quality of the writing raises this book above the crowd. This is a book that even some one who normally does not like this type of story might enjoy. The one element that makes this book so superior is characterization. In a story of this type, there are certain characters whose sole purpose is to be killed early and horribly to show the reader the depth and breathe of the villain's evilness. Most authors would spend no effort on the characterization of these red shirts (as they are known in Star Trek circles.) Wells spends several paragraphs on his unfortunate character so that when he dies, the reader feels a sense of loss. The only flaw in Wells' characterization is that the best developed characters are the minor ones. The main villain, Taws, is totally undeveloped. The hero, Kedryn, is a rather bland character. The best developed character is Borsus who is clearly fated to die and does by the end of the book. Indeed, all the better developed characters are the ones who die in this book. Another element that makes this book superior is the subtle plotting. Kedryn does not develop superhuman powers nor does it look like he ever will. His role is one that could be accomplished by any normal human being who is in the right place at the right time. Everything that Kedryn does to thwart Taws is logical and the situations are well supported by background material scattered throughout the book. Kedryn's duel with Niloc and the consequences follow naturally from the culture that Wells has presented. The circumstances leading to the duel are logical. The coincidence needed for the two to meet is improbable without the intervention of the gods; but then that is the purpose of Kedryn being the Chosen One. The gods are intervening to place him in the right place at the right time. Kedryn's reaction to the knowledge he is the chosen one is realistic. As a noble raised in noblesse oblige, his reaction is exactly what one would expect. He only wonders "Why me?" very briefly and accepts the obligation as one that someone of his position should take. The story does have its share of incongruities. One character is clearly a samurai in basically a European culture. Wells had to spent some words explaining that away since there is nothing in Tepshen Lahl's character that requires he be a samurai. The flaws are minor compare to the strengths. This book is highly recommended. -- Danny Low The Wyvern's Spur [****] Kate Novak and Jeff Grubb TSR Inc. $4.95 313 pg. This is one of those rare sequels that are better than their prequels. This book is the sequel to Azure Bonds. However it is not necessary to have read Azure Bonds to read this book. The events in that book only set the background for Wyvern's Spur. Necessary background information is presented to the reader as needed in small doses throughout the book. The two main characters are Olive Rustkettle and Giogi Wyvernspur. Both were minor and unsympathetic characters in Azure Bonds. Rustkettle was immature, whining and irresponsible in that book. Wyvernspur was a pathetic incompetent. In this book, the two have clearly matured as a result of their experiences. Rustkettle is more responsible and competent but still retains her roguish personality. Wyvernspur is no longer pathetic. He is reasonably competent. His main problem is a childlike naivete. Wyvernspur returns home after his misadventures in Azure Bonds and discovers that the family heirloom, the Wyvern's Spur, has been stolen. The book is his quest to recover the spur and his discovery of the true nature of the heirloom and his heritage. Rustkettle becomes involved when her protege is murdered by someone who might be a Wyvernspur. Eventually certain loose ends in Azure Bonds are tied up as a result of the quest for the stolen spur. TSR books tend to be adapted from AD&D games or are written to be source material for an AD&D game. This book is written as a novel. The magic and combat is de-emphasized in favor of story and characterization. The characterization in this book is much better than in Azure Bonds. The plotting is tight. The developments are logical. The author's bio implies that Kate Novak is the principle writer of this series. The improvements are strongly indicative of someone who will turn into a major author. This book is highly recommended. -- Danny Low ------ End ------