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You are here: Home / Archives for Reviews

Reviews

Book Review: Acorna’s Children: First Warning, by Anne McCaffrey and Elizabeth Ann Scarborough

9th March 2009 By Julianne Leave a Comment

This book is the first in the continuation series, Acorna’s Children, following on from the original Acorna books, making it the eighth book overall featuring Acorna and the other Linyaari. The original books are a must-read if you are to understand the setting for these books, as very little background information is given in this novel, and events and characters from the previous stories are referred to frequently.

The story of First Warning centres around Khoriilya, Khorii for short, the daughter of Acorna Harakamian-Li and Aari from the original series, and her cat Khiindi. When a plague starts spreading through Federation space, Khorii and Khiindi are left for safety on Maganos Moonbase, but quickly they discover that they are the only ones who can really help. They encounter a diverse range of characters and make many good and useful friends as they battle the deadly new enemy.

I enjoyed the original Acorna series although I found it quite childish because the characterisation is very simple. This book is no better in this respect and the descriptions of the characters are often repeated. Despite this, however, I really got into the plot and devoured the whole of the Acorna’s Children series within a few weeks. I would probably not re-read it, but it was fun. I would recommend this book and the whole of the Acorna series for teenagers most although it can still be enjoyed by adults.

The book is not complete in itself, the ending remains open for the sequel, Second Wave. It is currently available in both hardback and paperback.

Filed Under: Reviews Tagged With: AMC, Anne McCaffrey, book review, books, Elizabeth Ann Scarborough, fantasy, review, science fiction

Book Review: Missing the Midnight, by Jane Gardam

27th February 2009 By Julianne Leave a Comment

From The British Library

Missing the Midnight is a small collection of short stories by English writer Jane Gardam. I have the hardback edition, which has a few more pages than the paperback because of the formatting. It’s physically smaller than most books, it’s a format which suits the writing, and it would make a cute gift. There are twelve stories in this book, grouped under three themes:

1. Five Carols

These are short stories set at Christmas. The first, ‘Missing the Midnight’ is from the point of view of a girl who has just dropped out of university coming home on Christmas Eve. ‘The Zoo At Christmas’ follows a group of animals as they leave the zoo to go to midnight mass. The others are ‘Old Filth’, about a retired lawyer at home alone on Christmas after his wife has passed away – this character was later the focus of a novel of the same name, ‘Miss Misteltoe’, about a woman considered a parasite by the people who always have her to dinner at Christmas, and finally ‘Christmas Island’, a strange story about creatures born to humans who devour the world.

2. Five Grotesques

These are quirky, fairytale-like stories and I enjoyed this section the most. ‘Grace’ is about a man with a diamond in the back of his neck and ‘Light’ is set in the Himalayas and tells the story of a girl with no eyes in the front of her head but one in her throat. ‘The Girl With The Golden Ears’ follows the attempts of fashion editor Eglantine Fosche-Grille to get rid of the golden hair that has started to grow from her ears, whilst ‘The Boy Who Turned Into A Bike’ is about a bike fanatic called Clancy and Nancy, the woman he loves. This section concludes with ‘The Pillow Goose’, about two women who find themselves with a flock of geese prized for their feathers.

3. Two Hauntings

‘Soul Mates’ is a creepy story about a couple who meet another pair just like themselves on a retirement holiday, and ‘The Green Man’ is a short novella about the mythical figure. I didn’t really ‘get’ either of these stories, the first was short enough for it not to matter but ‘The Green Man’ seemed to drag.

Some of these stories are quite strongly religious, and I did not enjoy that element of the collection because I am not religious myself. However, Gardam’s characterisation is excellent and I enjoyed the stories because the characters were all so interesting even if I didn’t like the morals some of them express. The stories I enjoyed the most are ‘Miss Misteltoe’, because it has a clever twist, ‘Grace’, ‘Light’ and ‘The Boy Who Turned Into A Bike’. The middle section ‘Five Grotesques’ was definitely my favourite.

I think this book is best read at Christmas even if you are not a Christian – it can feel strange to read Christmas stories at any other time. It would make a nice Christmas gift for someone who likes books but you don’t know very well – there should be something in here that most people will enjoy.

I probably won’t read this again but it was a interesting and quick seasonal read.

Filed Under: Reviews Tagged With: alienating Christian point of view, alienating middle-class Englishness, book review, books, Christmas

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