Enemy of Entropy

Review: The Mammoth Book of Paranormal Romance, edited by Trisha Telep

22 June 2009, 11:18 pm. 3 Comments. Filed under Reading.

The Mammoth Book of Paranormal Romance The Mam­moth Book of Para­nor­mal Romance by Trisha Telep


My review


rat­ing: 4 of 5 stars
I’m extremely sur­prised by how much I enjoyed this anthol­ogy! I picked it up intend­ing to just read the sto­ries by authors I know I like—Kelley Arm­strong, Ilona Andrews, Car­rie Vaughn, Holly Lisle, Jeaniene Frost, Maria V. Sny­der. I had never heard of some of the other authors. A few names I remem­bered see­ing in other antholo­gies and not enjoy­ing their work.

I did, how­ever, delib­er­ately put myself in a tol­er­ant mind­set: this is a book of romance sto­ries. It wouldn’t be fair to judge them as any­thing else.

That worked rather bet­ter than it has in the past. I still got a lit­tle annoyed at hav­ing so much of each story ded­i­cated to cou­ples (and all het/​mono cou­ples, at that!) rather than some intrigu­ing world ideas, but man­aged to stay on track.

In the end, I only skipped one story—I just don’t like the Weather War­dens stuff at all. I found a cou­ple of oth­ers sub­stan­dard, but all in all, Telep chose very well. I def­i­nitely rec­om­mend this book to any­one who enjoys para­nor­mal romance (maybe even those who usu­ally stick to just romance), and most urban fan­tasy fans.

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Review: Maria V. Snyder’s Study Series

30 August 2008, 6:04 pm. Comments Off. Filed under Reading.

Fire Study (Study, Book 3) Fire Study by Maria V. Snyder


My review

rat­ing: 4 of 5 stars
I strongly rec­om­mend read­ing Poi­son Study, Assas­sin Study, Magic Study, and Power Study all at a go. The two novel­las are optional, but canon­i­cal and fun.

Snyder’s world seems to be made up of just two coun­tries: Ixia and Sitia. Ixia has been ruled by Com­man­der Ambrose and his gen­er­als for about a decade when Poi­son Study starts, after a mil­i­tary coup over­threw the old monar­chy. There are no beg­gars, every child is enti­tled to an edu­ca­tion, nobody has to go hun­gry or home­less, and pro­mo­tions are based solely on skill, with no gen­der or racial discrimination—but every cit­i­zen also has to wear a uni­form declar­ing his or her proper loca­tion and job func­tion, gov­ern­ment approval is required for mar­ry­ing, mov­ing to a new home, or chang­ing jobs, and any­body iden­ti­fied as hav­ing magic tal­ent is killed imme­di­ately. Every­one is sub­ject to the Code of Behav­ior, and there are no excep­tions for any kind of exten­u­at­ing cir­cum­stances. If you kill some­one, you are sen­tenced to death, even if you were defend­ing your­self or another.

Yelena has been in the Commander’s dun­geon for most of a year after killing the son of Gen­eral Brazell. Valek, Ambrose’s spy­mas­ter, gives her a choice: go to the gal­lows, or become the Commander’s food taster. The job doesn’t have a long life expectancy, as poi­son­ing attempts are fairly com­mon, but Yelena sees a chance at life bet­ter than imme­di­ate death, and takes the job.

Yelena man­ages to sur­vive sev­eral attempts to mur­der her. The fact that Brazell wants her dead is under­stand­able, but the other attempts are mys­te­ri­ous. Why would a Sit­ian mas­ter magi­cian try to kill her? Who would slip poi­son into her wine?

Magic Study finds Yelena in Sitia, learn­ing to cope with a very dif­fer­ent way of life. Magic is almost taken for granted, and a strong family/​clan struc­ture forms the back­bone of the gov­ern­ment. But why are there beg­gars in the streets, and why is it that only those who can afford it are edu­cated? Every­one in Sitia believes that life in Ixia must be hor­rific, but look­ing around her, Yelena sees that Ambrose’s rule does have its benefits.

Fire Study moves between Sitia and Ixia, involv­ing the lead­ers of both nations and intriguers who want to bring both of them down by pitch­ing them against each other. Yelena and her friends are try­ing to pre­vent a war and reveal the trai­tors, but they’ve been declared out­law and have to sneak around try­ing to fig­ure out what’s going on.

Another reviewer found Yelena too tal­ented for belief, but I found her fairly real­is­tic. She cer­tainly isn’t good at everything—she could use a lot of help in terms of social skills!—and the skills that she begins with and gains over the course of the tril­ogy do make sense. She trained as an acro­bat when she was a child, so it does make sense that she is able to learn some types of self-​​defense with­out too much trou­ble. Some of her apti­tudes make more sense after she learns more about her fam­ily back­ground. She does find that she has mag­i­cal abil­i­ties, but she isn’t good at every­thing, and indeed, can­not seem to mas­ter some tasks that other magi­cians con­sider rudimentary.

I did find some of the betray­als to be dif­fi­cult to com­pre­hend, as some of the trai­tors would have no defense against men­tal scans. There’s a Sit­ian Eth­i­cal Code of Con­duct that pro­hibits non-​​consensual scans, but it doesn’t apply to crim­i­nals, and in a war sit­u­a­tion, I found it hard to believe that nobody ever did a lit­tle tele­pathic peek­ing at the peo­ple around them.

These were fun books, and they could be use­ful in look­ing at the pros and cons of dif­fer­ent types of gov­ern­ments with teens. There’s some sex in the books, but noth­ing ter­ri­bly explicit. The vio­lence is more trou­ble­some, but the author never dwells on it.

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