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Get in Touch with Your Inner Troll

Graeme’s Fantasy Review reaches back to our very first season with a review of Charles Coleman Finlay’s fantasy, The Prodigal Troll,a tale of a human troll lost in the wild as a baby and raised by a band of the reclusive fantasy creatures. Graeme gives the book seven out of ten and says, “The story itself is a good blend of worldbuilding and plot, balanced just right so you don’t get too much of either one or the other. …an engaging read both in style and content and really got me into the ‘troll mindset’ that the author was aiming for. It ends on a cliffhanger and I for one want to know what happens next.”

Meanwhile, Grasping for the Wind has this to say: “Finlay’s exploration of the way humans interact with each other and the effect of war, love and the exotic on the human psyche is fun to read. Written in epic fantasy style, Finlay proves that epics do not have to take twelve volumes, or even a trilogy, to delve into the enigma that is humanity. Finlay writes with a wonderful cadence, inserting action at just the right moments, but allowing his characters time for introspection as well, but never so much has to slow the pace. The ebb and flow of the plot makes The Prodigal Troll a stay up all night read.”

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A Trio of Pyr Positives

Pat’s Fantasy Hotlist calls Kay Kenyon’s Bright of the Sky,“another quality read courtesy of Pyr,” and suggests, as others have done, that the book will appeal to readers of both science fiction and fantasy. He further say, “High stakes, skilled worldbuilding, good characterization, adroit pacing: Bright of the Sky is a superior read.

Tomas L. Martin’s Darrkeworld posts two Pyr reviews originally destined for SFCrowsnest.

Of The Blade Itself, by Joe Abercrombie, he says, “Many have compared his work to that of Tad Williams and George R. R. Martin and the comparisons are not reaching. The books have a strong sense of plot, that there is an intricate plan behind the events of the book, something rare in a first novel. The main characters are a huge draw…The dark characterisation brings new life to the fantasy genre and the complex moralities of the protagonists is a real joy. Even the minor characters seem colourful and realised, with strong dialogue and difficult choices for all involved.”

Meanwhile, turning to David Louis Edelman’s Infoquake,Tomas says, “although at first I doubted his choice of protagonist, the ambitious and ruthless business figure of Natch becomes a hero rather than antihero through clever use of flashback and other characters’ point of view. The story is developed well and the business side of this biotech based future is astonishingly believable. It’s remarkable to have a novel that’s packed with action, excitement and tension when the action itself is more what you’d see in the Financial Times or Wall Street Journal. With the sequel, MultiRealout later in 2008 you’d be well advised to pick this one up and refresh your memory on one of 2006’s great debuts. Pyr continue to release excellent and above all fresh content. Long may it continue.”

Thanks, guys!

Update: Jeff Vandermeer comments on his Locus Best of the Year recommendations on Amazon’s Omnivoracious blog. Speaking of Bright of the Sky: “This one’s for readers who loved Ringworld by Larry Niven but also for fantasy readers who love great fantasy quests. How can that be, you might ask? It’s set primarily in a strange alternative universe but also in the future of our universe. I think the cover, in this case, says it all: the book is exotic, beautiful, and daring.”

See?

Update Update: Graeme’s Fantasy Review also chimes in on Bright of the Sky, calling out the Pat’s Fantasy Hotlist review above, and calling the work, “a remarkable beginning to a series that I am looking forward to seeing more of. Great stuff!”

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Metatemporal Detective: Best of 2007

Claude Lalumière has posted his SF, Fantasy, and Horror in 2007: Recommended Reading list for LocusOnline.

One of ours pops up under Collections:

“Michael Moorcock’s The Metatemporal Detective(Pyr) is good pulp-fuelled fun, filled with stories that deftly pastiche many modes of popular fiction, though these tales might be somewhat arcane for readers not overly familiar with Moorcock’s multiverse and his recurring cast of dimension-hopping characters and doppelgangers.”

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Locus Online: Best of 2007

Jeff Vandermeer has posted his 2007: The Best of the Year list over on LocusOnline. I’m thrilled to see a few Pyr mentions.

From the Best Novels list:

“On the science fiction side, Ian McDonald reaffirmed his excellence with Brasyl,which contains three separate narrative strands describing the Brazil of past, present, and future. The novel is a tour de force of storytelling momentum, with a level of invention that represents a master at the top of his form. McDonald is an amazing stylist, yes, but here it’s all about motion. He does a wonderful job of including his trademark detailed and inventive description while making sure nothing in this complex, often beautiful novel is static.”

and

“Kay Kenyon’s Bright of the Sky,after a slow first seventy pages, knocked my socks off with its brilliant evocation of a quest through a parallel universe that has a strange river running through it. Unique in conception, like Larry Niven’s Ringworld, this is the beginning to what should be an amazing SF-Fantasy series.”

From the Best Anthologies list:

” Another first volume of a new original series, the Lou Anders-edited Fast Forward 1 featured thought-provoking speculative takes on making sense of our (post)modern world by, among others, Ken MacLeod, Gene Wolfe, and Nancy Kress. Consistently interesting, this SF anthology fills a gap, as most of the current spate of anthologies seems skewed toward the fantasy side of things.”

And from Notable Reprints:

“…The Blade Itselfby Joe Abercrombie, a rough-and-tumble, bold new voice in the heroic fantasy ranks.”

All good to read!

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Kay’s New Website

Kay Kenyon has a totally revamped website, rebuilt around her Entire and the Rose series. Check it out here. And if you like what you see, drop by her livejournal and let her know. As she says, the new site features:

  • Inside views of the Universe Entire (Universe Extras)
  • How to get signed copies of Bright of the Sky in trade paper.
  • Full color artwork of the series covers by the phenomenal Stephan Martiniere.
  • Where Kay will be showing up around the country.
  • Sample of Kay’s e-newsletter.

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