Most Helpful Customer Reviews
|
|
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
A superior debut novel, 25 May 2009
When I read Nights of Villjamur a few weeks back, I noted that the book was being marketed as the author's debut. However, I had noticed Mark Newton's name on another book in my local Waterstones. Some research quickly revealed that Nights is actually the author's second novel. The first, The Reef, was published last year by small UK publisher Pendragon. Having enjoyed Nights, I decided to give it a whirl.
In the city of Escha, a scientist named Manolin is trapped in a difficult marriage with a demanding and paranoid wife. When his mentor and friend Santiago DeBrelt suggests an ocean trip to investigate distressing news from a scientist on the island of Arya, Manolin leaps at the chance and soon a disparate crew of researchers are on their way to the distant island. Meanwhile, in the city of Rhoam, a rumel woman named Jella is putting into operation a plan years in the making, a plan to avenge herself on Escha, the city which destroyed her life and that of her people. Her mission takes her and her companions to the coast, and to a ship bound for Arya...
The Reef is an intriguing novel. Although the events that unfold have potentially huge ramifications for the continent of Has-jahn and the rest of the world, it's largely a small-scale story focusing on the island of Arya and those who visit it. Whilst the novel is apparently about a mystery - who is behind a spate of murders on the island - it's actually much more of a character study, particularly looking at the dynamics of relationships and desire. The book succeeds admirably at both tasks, with the mystery unfolding satisfyingly and the book's comments on relationships interesting and thought-provoking. Manolin is a sympathetic but flawed protagonist, and his companions are also well-drawn, as are Jella's crew of terrorists (although I'd like to have learned more about the enigmatic and lethal Allocen). Whilst Newton's prose has improved since The Reef, it's still nicely different to a lot of fantasy books out there, with its poised manners and stylistic speech inflections reminiscent of Victorian fiction. The worldbuilding is also top-notch. As far as I can tell, The Reef is set on the same world as Nights of Villjamur (they share the non-human race of the rumel), but in a more distant location, maybe the other side of the world, since none of the locations in either book is mentioned in the other. The 'Dying Earth' feel Newton is looking for with this world of ancient, forgotten technology is again successfully achieved here.
The biggest drawback to the book is that the ending is somewhat abrupt. It feels like the plot is building to something quite big, and whilst the events of the end of the book are undeniably large in scale, they also feel a lot more perfunctory than they should. In particular, the meeting of the two sets of characters is brief and somewhat unsatisfying (although with a nice twist). That said, the final chapter is quite well-written and leaves the reader feeling somewhat uneasy.
The Reef (****) is a very solid and enjoyable fantasy which achieves the enviable task of not actually feeling like an overt fantasy despite the near-constant presence of nonhuman species and fantastical concepts. It is available now from Pendragon Press in the UK, but not as far as I can tell in the USA.
|
|
|
1 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Recommended, 7 Jun 2008
A friend gave me this to read and I really enjoyed it. Contains some beautiful writing, and a contemporary ecological theme: almost a hymn to the environment at times. The plot is fantastical without being laboured -- no orcs, goblins or other Tolkienesque cliches -- and the book as a whole is an intelligent, well-written fantasy with a unique and interesting focus. I could write more about how it investigates mans' inhumanity to himself and to nature, but I don't want to get too pretentious! Recommended.
|
|
|
1 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Genius, 3 Jun 2008
Terrifyingly good new writer. Manages to combine real world marine biology with mythical/fantastical creatures, making vampir and sirens as believable as rocks and molluscs. The descriptions are vibrant, with detailed passages alternating with fast, one sentence paragraphs. You could read this book simply as an adventure, with two main threads taking turns to get you hooked, plenty of mystery and unpredictability, with an intelligent backstory of war, massacre. But it is MUCH more than that, as it's really a study of human nature, sex, relationships, psychology. Yet its reflections are always grounded, thoughts on gender differences and animal VS humanity, science versus spirituality are contained, we get different viewpoints; the book is eco-aware but wants to explore, ask questions rather than preach or moralise. Every character is sympathetic, even the unfaithful young wife at the start. The diverse cast contains so many relationships, tensions, motivations, from inter-specific homosexuality to father-young son and the young understudy turning away from his ageing teacher. Everyone is flawed, it all gets messy but it's never one-sided and there's often comedy to alleviate the darker moments such as childhood bereavment and miscarriage. And the Santiago character is genius, so many of the ideas come from him but he's also self-aware of his own excesses and ageing perversion.
Not just for fantasy fans then - it will appeal to devotees of Mieville (and the late, great Michael G. Coney!) but its marine travels and dynamic, descriptive prose put it (almost) on a par with Conrad and Hemingway, which isn't bad for a debut. Support the new authors and independent publishers! And roll on next year for the next book coming out on Macmillan where everyone will hear about it. Forget "The Beach", this is "The Reef"!
|
|
|
|