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You are here: Home / Archives for review

review

Book Review: Buffy the Vampire Slayer: Afterimage, by Pierce Askegren

27th February 2009 By Julianne Leave a Comment

This is a tie-in novel for the TV series Buffy the Vampire Slayer, published after the series finished but set in early season 2 whilst Cordelia and Xander are just starting to go out.

The Sunnydale Drive-In has been closed for decades but has recently been refurbished and is going to be opened with a special all-night multiple-bill. Xander has got himself a job handing out flyers for this event, but none of his friends are interested in going. He ends up convincing Jonathan to go with him and they have a good night, but Jonathan isn’t able to stay conscious long enough to get home, and Xander ends up half-carrying him to his front door. The next morning, he won’t wake up and many other Sunnydale residents are similarly stricken.

Buffy and Angel are out on patrol when they start getting attacked by demons who won’t stay solid enough to be hit, but who can still fight them. All this has something to do with the mysterious and charismatic new owner of the Drive-In, Mr Balsamo, and the Scoobies need to find out what before everyone ends up asleep.

The one thing that really annoyed me about this novel is that in it, Willow has high-speed optic fibre broadband in her house. This novel is set during season 2 of Buffy, which means it’s supposed to be taking place in 1997. Most people don’t have that kind of broadband now, over ten years later! In 1997 you got mediocre dial-up or nothing.

Technological anachronisms aside, this was an okay read, enjoyable but nothing special and although the concept was pretty original, there just weren’t the twists and turns that you get in a really good plot. The final fight scene seemed too short. Giles and Buffy both kept telling Willow not to use magic when she suggested she could try using magic for something, which makes sense in season 6 and 7 but not in season 2. However, the characters were pretty well depicted, particularly Xander, he’s really the focus of this book which made a nice change.

I’d recommend it to Buffy fans who want a quick read but it’s not unmissable by any means, there have been better Buffy novels written and the graphic novel stories are the best non-tv material in my opinion. I probably won’t read it again. The book is quite small in size so it can fit in your bag easily, which would be good for travelling.

Filed Under: Reviews Tagged With: book review, books, BtVS, Buffy, Buffyverse, joss whedon, review, vampires

Book Review: The Hawk Dancer, by Diana Saville

19th February 2009 By Julianne Leave a Comment

From The British Library

Claire Farley, a calm, professional writer of history articles living in Herefordshire, has tolerated her husband’s many affairs, forgiving him each time, and after the most recent, believing that she was partly to blame because she stays in the countryside most of the time whilst he goes to London to work. She tries to convince herself that he is getting too old to have affairs, but her unhappiness is growing

When a son of a friend wants a pet hawk, she offers to house it and help look after it. She ends up fully participating in its training, and as she learns to train the wild bird, her confidence grows. She also meets a wildlife photographer and begins to build a relationship with him. She’s never been able to tolerate the idea of having an affair herself before, but this time, things might be different.

I did enjoy this book but it didn’t “grab” me and I wasn’t convinced by the characters. They are all very middle-class, nobody in the novel has anything really to worry about beyond their relationships. The writing style was hard for me to get into, there was some lovely description, particularly of the hawk training around which the story of the human relationships is built, but the author just tells us how the characters felt a lot of the time and avoids showing us their thoughts and physical reactions. They are all very reserved people and this annoyed me, I just couldn’t relate to them. The book stays mostly with Claire’s point of view but sometimes switches around, and I felt that the characterisation of the other characters was weak, especially Claire’s daughters.

I received this book through a swap at ReadItSwapIt and I probably never would have bought it myself. It’s unlikely I’ll re-read it or bother picking up anything else from this author, but it may be someone else’s cup of tea.

Filed Under: Reviews Tagged With: alienating middle-class Englishness, book review, books, hawk, personal transformation, review, rural setting, story about a writer, swaps

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