Tiste Simeon, on 13 June 2019 - 04:23 AM, said:
Abyss, on 13 June 2019 - 12:43 AM, said:
pat5150, on 12 June 2019 - 11:21 PM, said:
Go get yourself The Obelisk Gate and The Stone Sky, which are both even better reads!
Seconded.
Thirdeded
Fourth'd?
Been a while since I last posted here. I think I followed Simeon's suggestion/imperative and read First Fifteen Lives of Harry August.
Still not sure what to make of it, though. I mean, I really enjoyed it for a number of reasons. For one thing, I just love books that are so singlemindedly dedicated to a single premise/concept. From what I can gather, Claire North regularly writes books around certain 'gimmicks', and at least in this book, it really pays off. Now while Harry did indeed get fleshed out rather nicely as a character - after all, we spend the entire novel and centuries of his lifetimes with him, I couldn't help but feel some distance towards him. The humour is probably part of the reason why: this sober/dark British kind of humour is not exactly my cup of tea. The melancholy, though, was beautifully integrated. As were the moral dilemmas that Harry has to face over the course of his lives. If there's one thing I would arguably fault the novel for, it would have to be a lack of suspense. partly due to the way Harry narrates his story, it isn't really 'exciting' because there is always this implicit assurance that Harry will figure stuff out eventually, and so the story becomes moreso about experience
how he does it rather
if he will pull through. That said, these are minor complaints in an otherwise pretty good book.
After reading Mt. Char, maybe I was a little spoiled.
Right now, I'm at the halfway point in Perdido Street Station and it's pretty great. Prose as rich as Mieville's is the kind of thing that belongs in a museum.