Monday 16 September 2024

Black Sun Rising - Celia Friedman

Black Sun Rising by Celia Friedman (or C.S. Friedman) is book one of her Coldfire trilogy. I thought it would make a good read for early autumn as that's when it begins, and I thought right, as it absolutely did. It 'has' taken me two weeks to read it, I'm not sure why, other than it's 530 pages long and quite densely written. But it was worth taking my time as it was a cracking read. 


The planet of Erna was colonised by humans hundreds of years ago. Already inhabiting this world was a sort of non-sentient species called the Rakh, who were displaced and went to live behind a canopy on a continent of their own. Something has since happened to them though in the way of advancement of the species. But they weren't the only inhabitants. There's a natural force called the Fae which can manipulate and prey on human minds and is deadly unless humans can learn to control it somehow.

Fast forward many centuries and that is what has happened but it's not proper control and living on Erna is a very dangerous business. The priest, Damien Vryce, is one who has learned some control over the Fae. Arriving in the northern city of Jaggonath he meets Adept, Ciani, who is in tune with all things supernatural and Fae. But he hasn't known her more than a couple of days before she is attacked by fiendish creatures and robbed of all of her memories and deep experience in dealing with the Fae.

Damien knows he has to follow the trail of these creatures, back to where they came from, to get Ciani's memories back. Unfortunately, it turns out to be behind the canopy of the Rakhlands. Something there has sent these abominable fiends to pray on humans. Ciani goes with him along with her protegy, Senzei... and someone Damien's powers cannot best, Gerald Tarrant. Damien knows he's not like them, but what is he? He's clearly dangerous but dangerous to whom - their enemies or themselves?

So this is a bit of a mixed genre novel. It's clearly science fiction as it involves humans and space travel. That said, it's described as 'Dark Fantasy', and it is that too. There's also  lot of what would come under the heading of horror in this book, but not gory horror, it's very much a fantasy based horror. And it's definitely a 'quest', 'travelling' themed book, my favourite kind of fantasy, so no wonder it suited me so well. 

The two characters that stuck out for me were Damien Vryce and Gerald Tarrant. Vryce is very much the hero and Tarrant a fascinating anti-hero. It's not long before the reader realises what Tarrant is but Vryce seemed a bit slow on the uptake somehow and doesn't understand why he hates the other man so. It's very interesting to watch their interactions. Oddly enough, the whole reason for their journey was Ciani but I didn't get a strong sense of her at all... possibly because she had lost her memory and thus wasn't that interesting. I rather fancy though that the author was more smitten with her two male protagonists and I can understand why.

The world building in the novel is superb. From the magic system with the Fae, to the bleak Rakhlands, the various species of Rakh, 'winter' and how they survive it, fantastic underground cave sequences, all brilliantly done and so beautifully written. Celia Friedman is right up there with my other favourite fantasy writer, Robin Hobb, and I surprise even myself saying that. This was just 'great', I loved it and gave it 5 stars without even having to think on it. I immediately bought book two, When True Night Falls, because I want to know what happens to Vryce and Tarrant on their next adventure which starts tantalisingly right at the end of Black Sun Rising, and looks to involve a sea journey into the unknown. Perfect.


Monday 2 September 2024

Books read in August

Once again I've been a bit AWOL for a couple of weeks due to visitors and other sundry bits and pieces. But I have been reading and managed seven books in August.

51. The Question Mark - Muriel Jaeger

52. The Girl Beneath the Sea - Andrew Mayne

53. Green for Danger - Christiana Brand

54. Have a Little Faith - Kate Bottley. This autobiography by the TV vicar was quite interesting, written in her chatty style of speaking, it was quite the insight into the ins and outs of becoming a vicar and the sort of thing that happens once you achieve your aim. Also good on how to be good to yourself mentally. 

55. Jane Austen at Home - Lucy Worsley. If you want a good biography of one of the world's most famous classic authors, this one by documentary maker, Lucy Worsley, would fit the bill nicely. (Also recommend Claire Tomalin's book.) It's done by way of all the houses she lived in or were forced upon her, her sister and mother after the father died. An excellent 5 star read.

56. The ABC Murders - Agatha Christie.

This is a Poirot mystery, book number 13 I think, set in the 1930s. Poirot gets a letter, one of those taunting, 'You think you're so clever, but you can't outwit me' types of thing. It indicates that murder is about to take place and that letters of the alphabet are going to be involved. And so it proves to be, a woman with the initials AA killed in Andover, a woman with the initials BB killed in Bexhill and so on. Poirot and Hastings (back from Argentina for a spell) are powerless to do anything about it until the killer kills again and supplies them with more clues. This was Agatha Christie at her best. The idea was definitely to throw the reader off the scent and I fell for it hook, line and sinker. So clever. And beautifully witty as always with lots of verbal sparring between Poirot himself, Hastings and Japp and the addition of another police detective who has no time for Poirot's methods. (I always love the Miss Marples where a detective is dismissive of the old lady in the corner with her knitting.) This got 5 stars from me, no dithering.

57. The Uncanny Gastronomic edited by Zara-Louise Stubbs.  To be reviewed but it's a solid offering of weird stories from the British Library, all of which involve food or eating. Lots of different authors, Shirley Jackson, Christina Rossetti, Saki, Angela Carter, Damon Knight (his sci-fi story, To Serve Man, was my favourite in this collection), Mark Twain and so on. I gave this 3 stars but it was a 3.5 if Goodreads would only do halves. 

So that was my reading for August. Five fiction, two non-fiction. No duds, several stand-outs, The Girl Beneath the Sea, Green for Danger, Jane Austen at Home and The ABC Murders. I call that a pretty good reading month. 

I'm currently reading this:


Black Sun Rising by Celia Friedman is a book I've had on my tbr pile for well over 10 years. It's that rare beast, a mix of science fiction and fantasy and as such is rather interesting. It has a good Goodreads rating so I'm optimistic. Cautiously. 

So, here we are in September, one of my favourite months. As far as I'm concerned it's autumn and thus I shall be indulging in some good creepy fiction as well as lots of crime yarns. I hope you're keeping well and finding lots of good books to read.