• Westward Bound
  • About Aaron Brander

The Saulzar Codex

~ and other writing by Aaron Brander

The Saulzar Codex

Tag Archives: 3 stars

Daemons are Forever by Simon R. Green

28 Friday Aug 2009

Posted by Aaron Brander in On Books

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

3 stars, Fantasy, On Books

Has anyone listened to a piece called “Bolero”? It was written in 1875 by Maurice Ravel of France. Bolero is almost an experimental piece of music, in that it exists entirely of one, 17 minute long, crescendo.

I have never heard it myself until it was the question in Final Jeopardy a few days ago. When I heard that, I realized that Daemons are Forever is the fictional equivalent Bolero. The only difference is that Green starts his book on forte already, and it just keeps getting louder until you can almost not bear it anymore.

I don’t know about you, but I have not read too many other books that include a witch, druids with magical armor, elves, fairies, luck vampires, inter-dimensional demon hunters, immortal serial killers, time travel, a ghost and his past self, a future warrior from another series of the author’s own books, TWO higher dimenionsal beings, soul eating demons, half-breed demonspawn, and a button that can wipe out an entire universe in an instant. And that’s just the half of it.

I read Green’s first book in this series, The Man with the Golden Torc, and enjoyed it. There is action on every page, more trouble than you have ever tried to imagine, and a hip, James Bond feel to the whole thing.

If you want to be overloaded with paranormal imagery and cool fights, this book is for you. If you prefer dialog and existential debates, maybe not so much, although the time travel discussion might make your head explode. I know I’ll be going back for The Spy Who Haunted Me soon.

3 out of 5 (explain the ratings to me!)

Share this:

  • Twitter
  • Facebook
  • More
  • Email

Like this:

Like Loading...

Academ’s Fury by Jim Butcher

29 Wednesday Jul 2009

Posted by Aaron Brander in On Books

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

3 stars, Fantasy, Jim Butcher, On Books, Rome

After finishing Furies of Calderon, I made sure to find the second book in the series while at a bookstore in Kalispell, MT. Who knew they’d have a nice Borders there?

The second book picks up two years after the first book ended. Tavi is growing strong, but still without his Fury. He is training to become a Cursor, which is like a messenger and spy rolled into one. Thanks to his heroics a couple of years back, the High Lord is his patron, and Tavi finds himself in the middle of political intrigue and an ancient menace that threatens to destroy their world.

It is like a blend of the political intrigue from Game of Thrones by George R.R. Martin blended with some alien menace that you would expect from the mind of Stephan King.

I liked the introduction of Tavi’s friends at the Academy. They were solid characters that will certainly play a role in the next book. I also thought his love interest was a solid addition to the book.

I did not like the Vord, which turns out to be the main menace. It was alright. I guess it is as good as any hive-brained, shape-shifting, mind-controlling alien menace can be. I get that it was referenced in the first book, so that it was good to wrap up what was a potential question. It just seemed out of place to me. It did setup a few really enjoyable fights, though.

All in all, it was an entertaining and acceptable second book. I liked it enough that I will definitely be reading the third one soon. Butcher keeps on rolling in my book.

Rating 3 out of 5. (ratings)

Share this:

  • Twitter
  • Facebook
  • More
  • Email

Like this:

Like Loading...

Furies of Calderon by Jim Butcher

27 Monday Jul 2009

Posted by Aaron Brander in On Books

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

3 stars, 4 stars, Jim Butcher, On Books, Rome, Tolkien

A two week long sojourn in Glacier National Park has left me woefully behind on my blogs. When you hike for most of the day but are back at camp by three in the afternoon, it leaves a lot of time for reading. So, without further adieu, I will begin firing off four reviews in quick order.

First, let’s talk about Jim Butcher and his Codex Alera series. If you have been paying attention, you may already realize that I have read a lot of Jim Butcher’s books. Actually, I think I have read five of his books just this year alone. When I find a good author, I tend to devour all of their work. Just ask Stephen King, Tom Clancy, Stephan Pressfield, or Stephan Lawhead. Well, don’t do that actually. They probably don’t know that I have read their books.

Furies of Caleron is a fairly standard fantasy series. The way I see it, there are two types. One features really powerful heroes matched up against extremely difficult situations (See Savlatore, R.A.). The other type of fantasy story whisks a seemingly normal yet sort of weak person into events way beyond their control, yet somehow they end up saving the world. Both types can be great entertainment, and every once in a while it becomes great literature. At least if you are Tolkien it does.

Furies of Calderon picks the latter situation. A young boy, picked on for his deficiencies, saves the realm. It is a pretty standard plotline throughout. What makes this book great is the setting, the magic, and the characters.

It is set in a Roman-era world. There are legions, horses, stone buildings, no guns and no technology. I love reading historical fiction in this setting, so I was pretty interested to see what would happen with a fantasy book set in this timeframe. I don’t believe I have read any fantasy with Roman leanings.

The magic is one of a kind as well. And when you are reading fantasy, isn’t that what you are looking for? You want to be awed and inspired by the fantastical things that can happen. In Furies for Calderon, every person in the country has tamed an elemental power, called a Fury. These furies come in water, earth, wind, fire, and a handful of other flavors. They can do the person’s bidding for healing, water, for flying, wind, or for damage, fire. It sounds a bit odd at first, but Butcher really pulls it off.

The lead character is a boy named Tavi. He is the only one that doesn’t have a fury, and yet he is smack in the center of the action, having to use his wits and resourcefulness to get everyone out of a tight jam. There are a handful of other great characters in the book, some interesting twists, and the beginning of a great fantasy realm.

Rating 3.5 out of 5 – really entertaining, just not sure I would reread it any time soon.  (see ratings)

Share this:

  • Twitter
  • Facebook
  • More
  • Email

Like this:

Like Loading...

Sharpe’s Triumph by Bernard Cornwell

15 Friday May 2009

Posted by Aaron Brander in On Books

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

3 stars, Bernard Cornwell, Historical Fiction, On Books, Richard Sharpe

I don’t know if this happens to you, but sometimes I know when I’m going to get in trouble with a series of books. As in, I’ll start it, find out I like it, and then have to keep reading all of the books in the series.  It happened with the Harry Potter series. I told myself I was too old for it. I told myself that it was just a kids book. I told myself that it couldn’t be that great anyway. And then one afternoon I “accidently” read  the first book of the series. And that was the end of my resistance.

I’ve read a lot of Cornwell in the past, but I didn’t want to start the Sharpe series. It was going to be a mammoth undertaking if I started it.  There’s got to be twenty books in the series.  Unfortunately (or fortunately, I’m still not sure which), I read Sharpe’s Tiger last year and really enjoyed it. So, it means I have to start tackling the entire series.

Book two is called Sharpe’s Triumph. It takes place in 1803 and the British, along with soldiers from the East India Company, are fighting against some Indian princes from the north.  Sharpe is a sergeant with an a socially irresponsible wish to become a gentleman and an officer. Or is that officer and a gentleman.

If you like history, this is a good book for you. If you like the history of British battles in India, this is a great book for you. If you like to learn history while reading a pretty exciting story, this is an excellent book.

I won’t call it a great book overall, though. It had a decent plot, one really cool battle, and Cronwell’s historical footnotes at the end of the book are always interesting to read. However, I think it’s enough to keep me reading the Sharpe stories.  At one a year, I should be ready to retire when I finish the last one.

Oh, and if you want to learn more about this particular battle, read this.  It’s almost like cliffnotes for Sharpe’s Triumph.

3 out of 5 – read about the ratings

Share this:

  • Twitter
  • Facebook
  • More
  • Email

Like this:

Like Loading...

The Dark Prince by David Gemmell

10 Friday Apr 2009

Posted by Aaron Brander in On Books

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

3 stars, David Gemmell, Fantasy, Historical Fiction, On Books

 

 (buy at Amazon)

Another Gemmell book, another solid outing.  The Dark Prince follows up on the Lion of Macedon.  In Lion of Macedon, we follow Parmenion as he rises from a mix-blood outcast in Spartan society to become the Death of Nations.  As an unbeatable mercenary general, he eventually comes into the employ of Philip of Macedon.  Teaming with Philip, Macedon soon becomes the power in Greece. At the end of the first book, an unlikely string of events conspire to have Parmenion sire Alexander unbeknownst to Philip.  However, in doing so Parmenion introduces the chaos spirit into the world, with Alexander as the host.

That’s where the Dark Prince picks up. Alexander is a lonely boy fighting the demon within.  People are afraid to touch him because he causes pain and death to those he does touch.  If that sounds strange, don’t worry, because it’s about to get stranger.  Philip from an alternate Greek reality summons Alexander into his world in order to eat his heart and gain immortality.   Strange indeed.  Aristotle, an immortal mage – who knew – helps Parmenion reach that alternate Greece in order to save Alexander.

In bizzaro Greece, the creatures of myth are real.  Minotaurs, centaurs, and nymphs are commonplace.  Parmenion and Alexander reunite and try and save the creatures of the enchantment while fighting off the evil Philip.

You’d think that storyline would be enough for one book, but it’s not. After Alexander and Parmenion make it back, the last quarter of the book follows Alexander’s meteoric rise and fall.  Gemmell basically condenses the entire Alexander story into 150 pages. 

I enjoyed the book, I guess. It stands in stark contrast to his Troy series. In the Troy books, he takes myth and turns it into historical fiction. In the Dark Prince, he takes history and turns it into myth.  It’s an interesting idea, but I think it ultimately falls flat.  The short portion of the book that chronicles Alexander’s conquest of Asia is really a cliff notes version of the Alexander story, with Alexander’s sometimes strange behavior explained by the chaos spirit that lives within him.

I’m not sure why Gemmell rushed through the end of the book instead of making this into the trilogy it seemed to want to become.  Either way, I found it entertaining if a trifle odd.

3 stars

Share this:

  • Twitter
  • Facebook
  • More
  • Email

Like this:

Like Loading...

By the Sword by Richard Cohen

26 Thursday Mar 2009

Posted by Aaron Brander in On Books

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

2 stars, 3 stars, Fencing, Gladiators, History, Non-Fiction, On Books, Samurai

 

The subtitle of this book is A History of Gladiators, Musketeers, Samurai, Swashbucklers and Olympic Champions.  In the time honored tradition of Rocky and Bullwinkle, Cohen could have said Or How I’ll use a Couple of Interesting Chapters in Order to Make You Read a History of Fencing (citing the obscure reference).

This first few chapters of this book were really excellent.  Perhaps I should say that the Prologue was outstanding, and it slowly lost its momentum from there.  Cohen expertly describes one of his fencing meets. I was drawn in and brought the book home from the store.  I soon learned a bevy of interesting facts.

We shake hands to show that we are not reaching for our swords; a gentleman offers a lady his right arm because at one time his sword was at his left hip; a man’s coat buttons left over right, so that a duelist may unbutton it with his left, unarmed hand.

The culture of the sword, its history and evolution follow for the next few chapters.  My favorite was Chapter 7, Where the Soul is the Sword.  The history of the sword in Japan was explored and has always piqued my interest. Japan took it beyond honor, justice, and chivalry and made it a religion and way of life. 

Cohen does an admirable job of tracing the evolution of the sword.  He discusses the changes in technology, in use, in art, and in the settling of disputes through the years.  For the first two hundred pages, it is an expertly researched and written historical account of one of the oldest tools of war.  The change from historical novel to a book about fencing is subtle. As it begins to change, he draws you in to the history of sword play in movies.  For a while, it’s still interesting that it isn’t the sword we’re talking about, but rather what was being done with the sword outside of war and duels.  By the three hundred page mark, I was fully suspicious of what was going on.  I just didn’t care about the French school of fencing and how it differed from the Italians.  Or that the Hungarians became unbeatable in saber, but their top master was an Italian.  Fencing is interesting, but it should have been a chapter, not the second half of the book in my opinion.

I definitely recommend Part 1, From Egypt to Waterloo and Part 2, The Search for Perfection.  Part 3, The Duel’s High Noon and Part 4, Wounded Warriors were still pretty interesting. However, unless you are a true fencing aficionado, stop there.  Part 5, Great Powers, and Part 6, Faustian Pacts (cool name) are duds. I skipped through most of it.

Rating  2.5 out of 5 (Can I do that? I think I can, after all I made up the system.  A two star is wishing I’d given up at page 100. But I wish I had given up at page 300. I found parts of it pretty entertaining, which is close to a three….so 2.5. That just happened.)

By the way, I hope you like the new name of the blog.  Libzig may be a great site I built (shamless plug) for keeping track of your Library, but it doesn’t tell you much about the blog.  I think Judging a Book by its Cover is pretty appropriate.

Share this:

  • Twitter
  • Facebook
  • More
  • Email

Like this:

Like Loading...

Sword Song by Bernard Cornwell

16 Monday Feb 2009

Posted by Aaron Brander in On Books

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

3 stars, Bernard Cornwell, Historical Fiction, King Alfred, On Books, Saxons

This is the third Saxon Chronicles book by Cornwell that I’ve read in a row.  The first one, The Last Kingdom, I read last year.  All four of the books have been enjoyable, but let me throw out a few applicable clichés.

“It’s possible to have too much of a good thing.”

“Everything in moderation.”

“The early bird gets the worm.”

The first two apply to reading three of these books in a row.  The third one does not. Frankly, I was just on a roll and didn’t feel like deleting it.

In this installment, Uhtred fights, he swears oaths, he wishes he could break his oath, he fights some more, he contemplates, he does some more fighting, he comes close to dying, and then he fights a bit more.  I surmise that had I read this book a year after reading the previous one, I would have thoroughly enjoyed it. As it was, it was too much of a good thing.  The plot had too many of the same aspects of the previous books.

That’s not to say the book isn’t good. I enjoyed it. It’s a solid installment for the series, and I’ll definitely read the next book as it looks like there is more to come. However, I warn you Dear Reader, everything in moderation.

3 stars – See our rating system here

Share this:

  • Twitter
  • Facebook
  • More
  • Email

Like this:

Like Loading...

Lords of the North by Bernard Cornwell

13 Friday Feb 2009

Posted by Aaron Brander in On Books

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

3 stars, Bernard Cornwell, Historical Fiction, King Alfred, On Books, Saxons

Lords of the North 

Bernard Cornwell continues his epic tale with Uhtred of Bebbanburg.  After helping Alfred reclaim Wessex in The Pale Horesman, Uhtred is given a small land holding. Taking offense with the meager reward, Uhtred buries his wealth and heads north to reclaim his ancestral home.

Along the way, he unwittingly frees a slave that has been picked to become the king of Northumbria.  Uhtred sees Guthrum as his means to recapturing his own homeland, so they set off together to reclaim Northumbria from the Danes.

What follows is a rousing tale of revenge, treachery and redemption.  Uhtred comes so close to seeing his dreams realized, only to find himself in worse trouble than he could have imagined. Rescued by Alfred, whom he hates, he once again finds himself sworn to him.

The action in the book doesn’t waver from the previous tale.  Great fight scenes, interesting characters, and changing allegiances kept me intrigued throughout. Cornwell treats us once again with a historical note about the characters, what they really did, and which ones were made up.  He also reveals that he is descended from a family with the name Uhtred who ruled in Bebbanburg.  I thought that was an interesting aside to what continues to be a great series.

3 star – see the book rating explanation here

Share this:

  • Twitter
  • Facebook
  • More
  • Email

Like this:

Like Loading...

The Pale Horseman by Bernard Cornwell

07 Saturday Feb 2009

Posted by Aaron Brander in On Books

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

3 stars, Danes, Historical Fiction, King Alfred, On Books, Saxons

If you like historical fiction and haven’t read Bernard Cornwell, then you are doing yourself a disservice.

I picked up my first Cornwell book with the Archers Tale.  And although I wasn’t happy it turned into a Grail quest story (I’ve read enough of those), the action and the historical aspects of the book are great.  I’ve now read eight Cornwell books, and I have four more sitting on my shelf.  

The Pale Horsemen is the second book in the Saxon tales. You’ll want to pick up The Last Kingdom and start with that.  The timeline is in the late ninth century, and the tale centers on a young man who was born a Saxon, raised a Dane, and then fights for the Saxons and King Alfred the Great.  The Pale Horsemen picks up right where the first one leaves off, and follows Uhtred, our young protagonist, as he walks the line between Dane and Saxon.

Alfred thinks he has found peace with the Danes, but they are only gathering their strength. A surprise attacks breaks Alfred’s forces and sends him into hiding in a swamp.  With Uhtred’s help, Alfred begins to fight back, and ultimately win back his kingdom.

The story is well written and has a lot of great action and fighting.  Uhtred is growing in fame, and uses his anger and size to become an even more notorious fighter than he had become in the first book.  

What I enjoy most about Cornwell’s book is his historical notes at the end of the book. He shares what parts of the story are real, and what he created to try and make a better book. He did a remarkable job of sticking to the real story.  Check it out yourself at Wikipedia.

I liked this book enough that when I finished it, I started the next in the series. Lords of the North is going along well, and it should be finished soon. I’m tempted to just keep on going and finish out the whole series!

3 star – see the book rating explanation here

Share this:

  • Twitter
  • Facebook
  • More
  • Email

Like this:

Like Loading...

Soldier of Rome: The Legionary by James Mace

10 Saturday Jan 2009

Posted by Aaron Brander in On Books

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

3 stars, Historical Fiction, On Books, Romans

“Thrice happy is the nation that has a glorious history.  Far better it is to dare mighty things, to win glorious triumphs, even though checkered by failure, than to take rank with those poor spirits who neither enjoy much nor suffer much, because they live in the gray twilight that knows neither victory nor defeat.”

– Theodore Roosevelt, The Strenuous Life

That quote opens Soldier of Rome: The Legionary.  Many authors adorn their books with quotes from people, books, or songs. Typically I skim them and move on, intent instead to read a new story by the author of the book.  This quote struck me though.  I first thought of our country and wondered if still applied to us.  Roosevelt gave the speech in Chicago in 1899. He praised the people of the city for their hard work, for not shirking difficulty, but overcoming them.  With the government stepping in so often to ‘bail out’ companies and people, it seems to me that we no longer embody what Roosevelt sought for himself and for his country.

After ruminating on that idea, I wondered what it meant for the book.  I quickly surmised that it was aimed at the Romans. After all, they built and maintained a glorious nation and empire for a thousand years.  They dared great things, and although they failed from time to time, they had a glorious history.  However, after finishing the book, I’m certain the quote applies to the Germans.  It was Arminius, the German chief who dared to unite the German people as one nation and dared to wipe out three Legions of Roman soldiers.  He won a glorious triumph.  Unfortunately for him, and for the German people, they only woke up the Roman armies, who came back six years later to annihilate them.

My last thought on the Roosevelt quote was that it was the best thing going for the book in the first hundred pages.  I was not initially drawn into the story.  This is Mace’s first book, and I think it showed for a while.  I can’t question his research, or his ability to relay the structure of the Roman Legions.  He did a fine job laying that out. However, his voice early on didn’t fit with his characters.  There were times where his characters would advance the story through dialogue, and to me they were talking well above themselves.  It didn’t fit.

Mace found his voice though.  Once the main characters in the book were trained as Legionnaires and set out to avenge the treachery of Arminius, the story moved along well.  

I’m a bit of a history buff myself, and always enjoy a good Roman book.  Mace did a great job putting the reader into the life of a Roman soldier and I was happy to go there with him.  The portrayal of training, campaigning and going to Rome for a triumphant parade were spot on.  Or so I would imagine, having not been there myself.

The main character, Artorius, grows as a man and a soldier as he campaigns to avenge his brother’s death at hands of the Germans.  I hope Mace keeps Artorius and his comrades and uses them in other stories.  (It looks like he has already done so.)  They were an enjoyable crew.  My favorite was the Sergeant named Vitruvius.  The man was built like a bull, and was the only soldier Artorius saw with no scars.  No one could touch him, let alone beat him in a fight.  There’s a great scene when the soldiers have returned to Rome where Vitruvius fights the greatest gladiator that Rome has.  I won’t spoil the fight for you, but it was rather enjoyable.

I like reading historical fiction because you get a good story, while learning about our world.  You need to be careful in assuming everything is real, but it gives a lot of material to read up on.  I’d recommend reading about the Teutoburg Forest after reading this book to see how closely Mace keeps with accepted historical findings.

I wonder sometimes which is more difficult; writing historical fiction or writing fantasy.  With historical fiction, the story is already there.  The writer just fills in the dialogue.  At the same time, you don’t have a lot of room to maneuver and still keep to the real story.  I’ve seen authors give some notes before or after the story to tell what was and was not real.  

I think that’s a great thing as it gives the author the ability to venture out on his own while not deceiving the reader.  I’m all for the author supplying a full bibliography at the end of the book, while detailing what was real, what wasn’t real, and what was conjecture.  In this case, Mace gives several footnotes for quotes taken directly from the Annals of Tacitus, Book III.  He also took at least one detour from history.  Pontius Pilate shows up as an artillery commander.  I’m assuming Mace was referring to the Pontius Pilate of biblical fame. If so, Pilate’s history is unknown before he shows up in the Gospels.  I thought it was great to drop him into the story.

With fantasy, the author must imagine the entire world. Descriptions of economics, science, magic, and politics must all seem plausible and at the same time relevant to the story.  There’s definitely an art to world building.  But, on the other hand, they can take their story wherever and however they want to.  No one can question how something happens because it’s in a different reality all together. The author has complete control.

Soldier of Rome: The Legionary was an enjoyable read. It’s not my favorite historical fiction, but I’d definitely give another Mace book a read.

3 stars – see the book rating explanation here

Here are a few other books that I’ve read along the same lines:

  

Yes, its not a Roman novel, but its GREAT.
Yes, it’s not a Roman novel, but it’s GREAT.

 


Share this:

  • Twitter
  • Facebook
  • More
  • Email

Like this:

Like Loading...
← Older posts
Newer posts →

Categories

  • On Books
  • On Miscellany
  • On Technology
  • On Travel
  • On Writing

Get Social


My Links

  • Brander Photography
  • Libzig.com
  • Mike July.com
  • Mindscape @ Hanon McKendry
  • Picture Perfect
  • Westward Bound

.NET 1 star 2 stars 3 stars 4 stars 5 stars 90 day challenge African Mythology Alexander the Great Basketball Bernard Cornwell Bob Lee Swagger China Coming Soon Dan Brown Danes David Gemmell diet Dresden Files Fantasy Fencing Fiction Final Four fitness Gladiators golf books golf practice Google Halo Hiking Historical Fiction History HTML James Clavell Japan Jim Butcher Kindle King Alfred Last of the Mohicans Lord of the Rings Magic Michigan State Spartans Microsoft Mindscape Neil Gaiman Non-Fiction Norse Mythology On Books programming Project Management Putting R.A. Salvatore ratings Richard Sharpe Roman Empire Roman History Romans Rome Samurai Saulzar Saulzar Codex Saxons Science Fiction Shattered Sports Books Stalin Stephen King technology Tolkien Travel Washington D.C. Wizards work Work in Progress Writing

Blog at WordPress.com.

Privacy & Cookies: This site uses cookies. By continuing to use this website, you agree to their use.
To find out more, including how to control cookies, see here: Cookie Policy
  • Follow Following
    • The Saulzar Codex
    • Join 33 other followers
    • Already have a WordPress.com account? Log in now.
    • The Saulzar Codex
    • Customize
    • Follow Following
    • Sign up
    • Log in
    • Report this content
    • View site in Reader
    • Manage subscriptions
    • Collapse this bar
%d bloggers like this: