ellen_datlow: (Default)
ellen_datlow ([personal profile] ellen_datlow) wrote2007-10-16 05:51 pm
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one novel from 2006 and two from 07 (one tangentially related to horror)

I didn't receive this till 07 but it was published in 06. M Press is the offshoot of Dark Horse Comics and Rob Simpson, the editor there has been publishing a series of novels that are related to classic novels. So far, I know that Paul Witcover, Paul Di Filippo, and Elizabeth Hand have written novels for him. Bottom Feeder by B.H. Fingerman (M Press) is a debut novel by a writer better known for his graphic novel writing. A reluctant vampire from Queens, New York is turned at age twenty –seven by an unknown attacker and loses his wife, his home, and his job and forced to make it on his own in his strange new world. His only friend is a total loser he’s known since high school who just won’t let go. Funny, ironic, and ultimately even moving as the guy meets other vampires and see the possible lifestyles he could be “living.”

Remainder by Tom McCarthy (Vintage) is a first novel about a man who received an 8 ½ million pound sterling settlement for an accident in which he almost died. The reader never finds out what actually happened but upon the guy’s recovery, he becomes convinced that he has lost his connection to the world and that the only way he can recover is to recreate a specific living condition that he remembers. Hiring a facilitator, he does this by buying up property and peopling it with hirelings who will follow a specific script that he supplies—on call to his every whim. The pianist upstairs must practice a specific piece of music and when he makes mistakes, he has to practice over and over again. The concierge must stand by the door all day –in a mask—as the employer doesn’t remember the actual face of the original concierge. Black cats must roam the red slate roof across the way. His fraying mind demands that he re-enact scenes that he has viewed in life and his wealth makes it possible to do so. The end result is inevitable—monstrous, terrifying, and in a way funny.

Deadstock by Jeffrey Thomas (Solaris) is a “Punktown” novel, and like all of Thomas’s fiction in his world, is absorbing and well told. I love his world building…I was a bit put off at first by some clunkiness in the writing, but ultimately the story carried me along. A private eye is hired by a rich man to find the missing, very expensive and unique doll that he has bioengineered for his daughter. In the meantime, an abandoned apartment building defends itself by bloodily slaughtering all intruders and a young girl has disappeared.

Stalin’s Ghost by Martin Cruz Smith (Simon & Schuster) brings back Arkady Renko, the Moscow detective first introduced by Smith in Gorky Park. Since then, Renko has returned in novels several times since, including the Chernobyl novel Wolves Eat Dogs. In the new book, the ghost of Stalin appears to a subway car full of Muscovites, starting a chain of events that lead to political chicanery, death, revisiting past atrocities in Chechnya, and some nicely done plot twists.

[identity profile] sclerotic-rings.livejournal.com 2007-10-16 10:28 pm (UTC)(link)
Completely unrelated, have you any interest in humor involving carnivorous plants (http://txtriffidranch.livejournal.com/50799.html)? I only ask because I'm in a serious mood to share.

[identity profile] ellen-datlow.livejournal.com 2007-10-17 12:13 am (UTC)(link)
I tried to raise a venus fly trap but it died on me so I'm not sure I'm the best person :-)

[identity profile] sclerotic-rings.livejournal.com 2007-10-17 01:28 pm (UTC)(link)
You know, only with a Venus flytrap can you get away with saying "It's not dead. It's pining for the fijords." (Seriously: even though they tend to fill the garden centers and hardware stores this time of the year, this is just before they go dormant for the winter. Half of the time, if you just put the whole plant, pot and all, in a plastic bag and then put the bag in a good dark and cold-but-not-freezing locale, they come back and even bloom.)

[identity profile] ellen-datlow.livejournal.com 2007-10-17 02:18 pm (UTC)(link)
I figured I'd either over-or under fed it. Happened with my goldfish as a kid!

YBFH

[identity profile] alaneer.livejournal.com 2007-10-18 04:03 pm (UTC)(link)
This is not related to the post, but I'd just recently received the "Year's Best Fantasy & Horror". Nice fat book. :) Flipped through it last night and found so much info at the beginning. Looking forward to reading.

Re: YBFH

[identity profile] ellen-datlow.livejournal.com 2007-10-18 04:27 pm (UTC)(link)
Yes, it keeps getting fatter and fatter (but lighter and lighter somehow) .
Enjoy!

Re: YBFH

[identity profile] alaneer.livejournal.com 2007-10-18 05:29 pm (UTC)(link)
I love fat tomes, so I know I'll enjoy it.

You mean lighter in Horror?

Re: YBFH

[identity profile] ellen-datlow.livejournal.com 2007-10-18 05:30 pm (UTC)(link)
Nope, the weight of the book--dealers have complained that the paper seems lighter (in weight)

Re: YBFH

[identity profile] alaneer.livejournal.com 2007-10-18 05:41 pm (UTC)(link)
So why is that a problem? I have books that are made of very thin sheets.

Please don't be offended, but it's funny. Looking at your cat avatar and mine, it just occured to me that we look like our cats. Aside from the color of eyes in your case. Excpt Tiggy is not my kitty, he's my sister's, and he doesn't even look like that any more. He had gotten so chubby. If I take after him, I wonder if that's my fate too.

Re: YBFH

[identity profile] ellen-datlow.livejournal.com 2007-10-18 05:59 pm (UTC)(link)
I guess for the price they think it should have more heft...


Not offended at all--flattered, as I think Bella is very lovely :-)

Re: YBFH

[identity profile] alaneer.livejournal.com 2007-10-18 06:27 pm (UTC)(link)
There's enough heft. I was frankly surprised by how many stories it contains.

Bella is lovely, and what a fitting name.