Showing posts with label adventure. Show all posts
Showing posts with label adventure. Show all posts

Saturday, March 15, 2014

Tiernay West, Professional Adventurer by Janni Lee Simner





Title: Tiernay West, Professional Adventurer
Author: Janni Lee Simner
Publisher: Cholla Bear Press (website unavaiable)
Rating: WORTHY!


DISCLOSURE: Unlike the majority of reviews in this blog, I've neither bought this book nor borrowed it from the library. This is a "galley" copy ebook, supplied by Net Galley. I'm not receiving (nor will I expect to receive or accept) remuneration for this review.

This review will be shorter than my usual ones because this is a very short novel, and it's new, so I don't want to give out too many spoilers here. Let's talk about the importance of names and titles! This novel is a classical example of picking the right name for your novel in my opinion. It was originally titled Secret of the Three Treasures, which is very tame. It's almost hard to believe what a quick switcheroo can do, but now we have the magnificent title Tiernay West, Professional Adventurer - can you believe that? I think that's leagues ahead of the original and really catchy. I probably never would have read this had it retained its original name. I'm not one for going on much about covers (unless they really tick me off), because authors typically have little to do with their cover (and all-too-often little to do with their title!), but this cover is also wonderful. It amplifies the title perfectly.

This is yet another novel where I fell so in love with the title that I couldn't not read it! Of course, as I've discovered with other novels, a great title doesn’t guarantee a great read, but I'm always optimistic that a writer who can come up with a title like that can also write a novel like that, and unlike my previous experience with such a title, this novel kept me on-board to the very end.

I did get tripped up by the very first sentence. The author amusingly writes a short paragraph at the start of each chapter in italics, as though Tiernay truly is an adventurer. I loved this, but the very first one confused me. At first I thought it was written badly, but after I’d run it through my mind about four times employing different emphasis, pauses, and speeds, I realized it’s perfectly fine. Maybe it was just me, but I’d be a wee bit worried having a novel, even one with a brilliant title, starting out with a sentence that it takes a reader three or four passes through it before he gets it! Here's the sentence in case you're interested in seeing if you're sharper than I am!

Tiernay west stalked through the forest, silent as the great cats of the African plains, deadly as the fabled Royal Assassins of Arakistan.

Now when I read it, it seems perfectly fine to me. I think it was the juxtaposition of 'forest' and 'plains' which tripped me up initially; then my mind was so focused on that, that I couldn’t grasp the rest of the sentence!

I am so in love with Tiernay Markowitz (from which you know it’s only a short hop to 'West'). She's an admirably feisty and determined young woman. She wants to be an adventurer, and to take after the hero in the novels her dad writes. Not that she sees dad much these days, since he and mom have split up. Now she has to deal with the new man in her mom's life, Greg, who seems like a nice guy, but who doesn’t seem even remotely interested in adventuring; nor does his young son Kevin - at least, not at first. I loved Tiernay's long-suffering mom, too. She was the perfect combination of feistiness herself, and of face-palming patience in the face of her daughter's aggressive self-confidence

Acting on information received (by eavesdropping on a nearby table at the restaurant where they ate lunch), Tiernay learns of treasure! This treasure could even be in her home town. Admirably, she heads to the library and discovers a really interesting book about her ancestors, and what should drop out of the book but a short, handwritten note, which mentions not one, but three treasures! Tiernay is on the job, and next she does some Internet research. Yes! She uses the library and the Internet! She researches. She doesn't have things miraculously drop into her lap (apart from that one note!). She doesn't have magical powers. She isn't 'the chosen one'. She's not part angel, part demon or whatever, she's just a regular ordinary child who refuses to be hobbled by others' perceptions of her age and gender and so becomes extraordinary. In short, she's how every main female character should be. How hard is that? Why can more authors - especially female ones who write about females - not get what Jannie Lee Simner has grasped so firmly in both hands?

Tiernay is the kind of daughter I would have chosen, had I had one to choose. She's smart, fearless, indomitable, and completely adorable. She's not afraid to go out on a limb, even under the derision of others. She's always optimistic, she sticks to her guns (even though she carries none!), and she selflessly plays it out to the end. There's rather more than a handful of YA novelists I could name who could learn how to craft a strong female main character by reading this novel, let me tell you! I recommend this novel without reservation not just for the appropriate age group reader but for anyone who likes a good yarn, and for any writer who wants to know how it should be done.

I'm not a big fan of series, but once in a while there comes along a character who has earned the right to be in a trilogy or series, and Tiernay "West" is definitely such a character. I'd like to see more of her. I'd also like to see an adult fiction about the grown-up Tiernay, perhaps where her life didn't quite turn out to be the adventuring existence she had envisioned as a child, where she's in an interesting but relatively mundane job (maybe she's a tour guide, so at least she gets to travel) and then, quite by chance, something pops up on her radar and leads to a rollicking adventure. Yeah. I want to be a beta reader for those stories!


Friday, March 14, 2014

Le Tour du Monde en Quatre-vingts Jours par Jules Verne





Title: Around the World in Eighty Days
Author: Jules Verne
Publisher: Listening Library
Rating: WORTHY!

Translated from the French by Michael Glencross. You can both listen to and read this novel here.

Normally I'd do a movie-book review, because there is more than one movie/TV show/documentary based on this novel. The problem is that, unlike with novels, I only review movies that I really like. I detested the 1956 movie starring David Niven, Cantinflas, Robert Newton, and Shirley MacLaine. It was bigoted, condescending, and abysmally extravagant, and with the exception of maybe half-a-dozen scenes, this bloated three-hour extravaganza featuring cameos by an utterly absurd number of actors was a shameful disaster which bore no resemblance to the original novel.

Around the World in Eighty Days by Jules Verne, was originally published as Le Tour du Monde en Quatre-vingts Jours, in 1873. This CD to which I listened was read remarkably well by Jim Dale, the same guy who narrates the Harry Potter extra material on the DVDs and also the Potter audio books. His range of characterizations was good, and his rendition of Passepartout was hilarious.

Phileas Fogg and Jean Passepartout (from the French Passé partout, meaning 'master key' - or get out of jail free, if you like!) travel the world in 80 days on a wager which Fogg has with four colleagues at the London Reform Club - a bet which would be valued at well over a million pounds today. Fogg is wealthy yet doesn't flaunt it, and he lives his life with a precision and an efficiency which borders on his having an OCD. This bet pretty much constitutes Fogg's entire fortune, and he stands to lose everything should he fail.

He plans to take steamships and railroad rides, spending a week to get to Egypt, and travel the Suez canal. He will then take almost two weeks by ship to get to Mumbai (then called Bombay) in India and he will cross India in 3 days, leaving Kolkotta on a steamship bound for Hong Kong, China. From there he will take just under a week to reach Yokohama, Japan, and then almost three weeks sailing to San Francisco USA. A further week will see him across that continent by rail, and finally nine days to get to Liverpool on England's North-West coast; then down to London.

Of course, it's nowhere near as easy as that. His entire success depends upon him making connections, one after another, between a steamship arrival and a train departure or vice-versa. He runs into one problem after another, not least of which is his pursuit by a detective named Fix, who has pinned him as the thief in a fifty-thousand pound bank robbery from the Bank of England. In India, Fogg discovers that the railroad, which he had counted on to get him across that sub-continent has, contrary to newspaper reports, not yet been completed, and that would seriously seem to, er, derail his chances, but the imperturbable Fogg merely buys an elephant and continues on his way. Him see, Hindu....

It's in India that a completely unforeseen situation arises as Fogg and Passepartout discover that there's a woman who is purportedly a Sati - a young woman named Aouda who plans on immolating herself on her husband's funeral pyre. Except that unlike some Indian women (including some recent ones), this one is not partaking voluntarily. Passepartout engineers a daring rescue, and in order to prevent her falling into these evil religious men's hands again, Fogg agrees to accompany her to Hong Kong, where she can stay with a relative. The relative, of course, no longer lives in HK, but has moved to Europe, so Aouda continues with them to the USA and thence to England.

Barely on schedule, Fogg, after a horrific trip through the US, finds he has missed the boat - literally. For a small fortune, Fogg buys passage on a ship to Bordeaux. The captain cannot be persuaded to re-route to Liverpool (why Fogg is so obsessed with Liverpool is a mystery - Southampton would be faster, although the soccer team there isn't quite as prestigious...!). Yes, Liverpool is fifty miles closer to Cobh (then, Queenstown, in Éire) than S'hampton is, but S'hampton to London is only 60 miles, whereas Liverpool to London thrice that. Anyway, Fogg bribes the crew to mutiny, but discovers that going at full tilt, they've used up too much coal and cannot complete the journey, not even to Liverpool. Fogg buys the ship from the captain at more than it's worth and promptly begins tearing up the wooden superstructure to burn in the ship's boiler!

Fogg arrives in England in plenty of time to win, but now they're back on English soil, Fix realizes that he has both Fogg and warrant in the same place at the same time, and arrests him! Once it's been discovered that the actual thief was already apprehended, Fogg is free to go, but he's missed the train to London and therefore his deadline - so he believes. I told you he should have headed for S'hampton!

Fogg eventually navigates his way to London five minutes late and depressed, so he gives up every idea of anything, and doesn't even repair to the Reform Club. He goes home where he starts to put his (bankruptcy) affairs in order. In what is remarkable both for its inverse approach to marriage proposals as well as its bi-racial overtones, Aouda, who has been consistently and very formally referred to as Mrs. Aouda, proposes to Fogg, and he accepts. It is this very proposal which saves him, because it forces the redoubtable Passepartout to venture out to set a time for the marriage the next day, and thereby he learns that because of the speed and direction of their journey, their personal calendar is out by a day as compared with those who stayed in England. Fogg rushes to the Reform Club in perfect time to win his bet after all, but his real reward is, of course, finding love with Aouda

Jules Verne has written an interesting, eventful and really quite funny novel here, and it's a pleasure to recommend this as a worthy read (or listen!).


Tuesday, October 22, 2013

Chicago Bound by Sean Vogel





Title: Chicago Bound
Author: Sean Vogel
Publisher: MB Publishing
Rating: WORTHY!


DISCLOSURE: Unlike the majority of reviews in this blog, I've neither bought this book nor borrowed it from the library. This is a "galley" copy ebook, supplied by Net Galley. I'm not receiving (nor will I expect to receive or accept) remuneration of any kind for this review.

This novel is, quite frankly, way too young for me. It’s off the lower end of young-adult, written for an audience even younger than that. If you think of the movie Home Alone, you will be in the right ball-park, especially given that this novel has some large helpings of Home Alone slapstick at the end. But I knew, going into this, that it would be a younger read, so I'm not about to down-grade it for that. This novel is a worthy read for the right age group and I'm sure lots of kids close to, or just venturing into their teens will appreciate it. As I mentioned, it has significant elements of Home Alone in it, and while they're unrealistic, they will no doubt appeal to the target adience. In addition to that, it takes a surprisingly mature approach to the characters, despite what I've just said about the target age range.

Jake Mcgreevy is a fifteen-year-old boy whose mother was killed when he was only two years old. He is bound for Chicago for a two week music camp. The camp is inexplicably set over the Christmas and New Year's holiday period, and I have no idea why. That seems odd to me. If there was an explanation in the novel, I must have missed it. I admit I did skim some parts here and there which were not really very engrossing for me (and then had to track back on more than one occasion to catch up on something important that I’d missed!).

Jake and his best friend Ben play violin, which is a refreshing difference, and the two of them travel to Chicago on a specially arranged bus with ther best friend Julie, who is a gymnast. On the bus they meet Natalie, another violinist. All four children are smart, capable, curious about the world, well-educated, caring, and playful and all have a good sense of right and wrong, even though they don’t always heed it. They bond well, and are very loyal to each other, all of them becoming embroiled in the predictable unravelling of the mystery of Jake's mother's death - ruled a hit and run, but which, predictably, turns out to be anything but that simple.

Jake discovers cryptic clues left in a Chicago museum thirteen years earlier, by his mother. The clues are far too cryptic and unrealistic, but perhaps the target age range will not notice this. I should have my own son read this and comment on it from that PoV, but he's notoriously hard to talk into reading something which doesn't already have an inclination towards! If I do succeed, I'll add his comments to the blog review. Anyway, Jake follows the clues and eventually discovers a forged painting to which his late mother led him (she was evidently too late...), and he traps the bad guys, one of whom killed his mom. In process of slowly tracking down these unlikely clues the foursome goes through all sorts of interesting days at the music camp, getting into issues and scrapes which kids of their age inevitably will, but resolving them with smarts, a willingness to share, a willingness to take responsibility, a desire to resolve problems amicably, and a bit of early teen naughtiness!

I recommend this novel for age-appropriate readers.


Wednesday, August 21, 2013

Gideon Smith and the Mechanical Girl By David Barnett





Title: Gideon Smith and the Mechanical Girl
Author: David Barnett
Publisher: Tor
Rating: worthy


DISCLOSURE: Unlike the majority of reviews in this blog, I've neither bought this book nor borrowed it from the library. This is a "galley" copy ebook, supplied by Net Galley. I'm not receiving (nor will I expect to receive or accept) remuneration of any kind for this review. Since this is a new novel, this review is less detailed so as not to rob the writer of their story, but even so, it will probably still be more in-depth than you'll typically find elsewhere!

Erratum in galley ebook
P23 "glitterving" should be "glittering"

The male protagonist of this steam-punk novel is Gideon Smith, a 24-year-old who lives with his father in a small fishing village near Whitby, Yorkshire. Both of my parents hailed from Yorkshire, and I've actually been to Whitby, a seaside town which is featured in Bram Stoker's Dracula, so it’s no surprise that Barnett has Gideon meet Bram Stoker there.

I have to say up front that I'm not a fan of Victorian dramas which seem obligated to drag historical people unnecessarily into the fiction. I find that boring and uninventive, and all-too-often patronizing of, and insulting to the persons so press-ganged. In fact, I made the mistake of reading the prologue to this novel and I found that even more boring and uninventive since it parades out the discredited story that Eddy, the son of Queen Victoria's son Edward (the Edward who gave his name to the Edwardian period of English history) was somehow entangled with the Jack the Ripper murders. This myth was the basis of the Johnny Depp movie From Hell and is patent nonsense. Having said that, Barnett has added a twist to this one which makes his "crime" forgivable, in my book at least!

So, it was not an auspicious start to this novel, but I have to say that Barnett started to win me over with chapter one, where Gideon enters the picture. His father is a struggling trawler captain, and Gideon often helps him on his fishing trips, but the one morning when his father decides to let Gideon sleep in, is the day that the entire crew of the trawler disappears without explanation, and Gideon is left alone in the world, his mother and two brothers having already died some time before.

Well there is an explanation, of course, but that's for you to read, and at that point in the story it was more of a mystery than an explanation (but it clarifies nicely as the novel progresses)! The local fishing community just accepts these disappearances as the sea's dividend for allowing humans to sample its bounty. Gideon is a big fan of Captain Lucian Trigger, a story-book hero who, if not completely fictional, is, I guessed, not remotely like his fictional portrayal. Gideon doesn't quite grasp this, and so he endeavors to contact the man in hopes that he can help with another local mystery that has hold of Gideon's imagination.

It’s in process of pursuing this plan that he encounters Bram Stoker, right before a Russian sailboat runs aground with the all the crew save one, missing. The captain is discovered lashed to the wheel and drained of blood, and a large black dog runs ashore and disappears. The only cargo on the ship is three coffins with soil from Transylvania. Anyone who has read Stoker's Dracula will know where that's headed (but don't be too confident: Barnett has added a twist!). The original Dracula novel is excellently reproduced on film in Francis Ford Coppola's 1992 epic, a movie I highly recommend.

Back to this novel! I do like that Barnett has divorced himself from trope with Gideon. He doesn’t have Gideon go haring off into the heart of the mystery like an idiot. He portrays Gideon as a thoughtful, courageous, and smart young man who realizes that he's going to need help to figure out if smugglers might be connected to his father's disappearance and are operating near his village, but when he talks to a friend of his father's, and also to the village constable, he's dismissed and not taken at all seriously. That's when he resorts to calling Captain Trigger and ends up in the company of Bram Stoker. Stoker learned of vampires from his fellow Irish friend Sheridan le Fanu, but he cannot get Gideon interested. Instead, Gideon resolves to set off for London to personally seek Captain Trigger's assistance. That's when he meets the mechanical girl called Maria who. I guessed. is actually modeled after a real person.

But she isn’t just any old clockwork toy. Nope. She has a body made to look as realistic as possible, and although she's clockwork inside her body, inside her head is a different story. Her creator is Hermann Einstein (which coincidentally happens to be the name of Albert Einstein's father...), but he's gone missing. He fitted her empty head with something that he discovered in a most unlikely location. Her head is no longer empty. Far from it.

Gideon learns how abused Maria is by her keeper, a grungy old man with disgusting tastes, who is in charge of the house in Einstein's absence. Gideon invites her to travel to London with him to find her maker, and she agrees, so they take some spare cash which Maria has access to, and borrow another invention of Einstein's: a motorized bike. This prepared, they set off again for London town, home of Queen Victoria.

Meanwhile Bram is poking around Whitby in pursuit of a vampire, and he discovers one of the very last people he might have expected to find - and she is the very antithesis of what he expected a vampire to be! Little does he know that his investigations will bring him right back into contact with Gideon.

And that's all the detail you get for this one! The story continues apace, and continues to be engrossing, as Gideon and his growing ensemble of acquired friends begin pursing seemingly disparate threads that I felt, even before I knew one way or the other, would all lead back to the same source. There are airships (one piloted by a very adventurous woman), there is a trip to a ancient and exotic location where trouble is stirring big time, there's air piracy, there's a threat to the empire over which the sun never sets, and there are truly evil creatures (and that's just those working for the government!). All the threads lead to a fine yarn, and a taut fabric, and though I was less than thrilled with the ending (the novel is evidently the start of a series), the quality of the writing and the plotting merits this story as a worthy read. I recommend it.


Thursday, February 7, 2013

My Side of the Mountain by Jean Craighead George




Title: My Side of the Mountain
Author: Jean Craighead George
Pages: 177
Publisher: Puffin Modern Classics
Rating: Worthy!
Perspective: first person past

Review of My Side of the Mountain by Jean Craighead George
by Mac Wood

This is a unique book. It shows in a fictional way what a teenage kid can do in the wild. Bringing only a few items, Sam Gribley lives off the land in the Catskill Mountains. Sam decides to leave his boring life in New York City and experience the mountains first-hand. He soon finds a nice tree to live in, and a peregrine falcon as his BFF. He learns how to fish, to make a door for his tree house from an animal skin, to use a fireplace, and much more.

I got interested in this book because my art teacher read it to my class once. I found it on a bookshelf and decided to read it. I think I learned a lot about survival from this book, too. Even though it's only fiction, it still has some truth in it. My favorite part was when Sam caught his falcon, named Frightful. I recommend this book to young adults who plan on camping out for a week or two. Adventure lovers should read this novel, too!