I was sufficiently intrigued by Jan Mark's `The Ennead' when I read it as a child to return again as an adult. Unfortunately, having since read a couple of the author's more recent works, Eclipse of the Century and Useful Idiots, I have to conclude that Ms Mark had a problem - one that can affect the entire male sex (if the adverts are to be believed) as well as writers. There's no easy or polite way to put it. It's the premature climax.
Jan Mark's books are different, interesting, long enough to flesh out characters and environment. In Useful Idiots we have the skeleton of a man discovered on a beach in the RDI - Rhinish Delta Islands (or what's left of GB after Global Warming, civil war and the great virus have had their way with it - no wonder the Flemings liked her books). A conspiracy is unearthed along with the body, and the book's protagonist, archaeologist Merrick Korda, experiences various life-threatening trials to keep us interested until we get to the ending and then it's as if Ms Mark couldn't care. She got bored, contracted writers block, or maybe the tax man was hammering at the door and her publisher was demanding the final copy. Either way, this book does not justify the time invested in reaching its conclusion. Read it, if you must, just don't read the final chapter. It's not about comfort - as any regular re-reader of the Silmarillion will tell you - only I find little point to reading this book considering the brief, shallow ending tacked on the back.
Eclipse of the Century is another case in point. It ambles about for a while, draws us in, fools us about the Sturyat, then peters out like a damp squib. There's a quotation from Philip Pullman on the front cover: `Read it and be amazed'. At what? I suspect Mr Pullman was reading a different book. Perhaps one of his own tiresome progeny.
As to the reading audience these two books are aimed at, I can't imagine a teenager picking one up nowadays. After all, it's not written by a reality TV-star so why bother ...