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Welcome to Highlander's Book reviews. Here you can read my reviews of Horror, Science Fiction and Fantasy books as I read them. Please feel free to comment on any of the features of this site, thanks.

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17
Nov

Apex Raffle

I recently reviewed Brandy Schwans “Catacombs and Photographs” collection (read the review here). Well I thought you might like to know that the publishers, Apex, are running a raffle at the moment and there are some truly collectible items up for grabs . For further details, or to buy a raffle ticket head over to the Apex site here and good luck.

12
Oct

John Connolly - New Story Online

One of my favourite authors, John Connolly has just had a new short story published by the Irish Times which you can read here.  Hang about though, I hear you cry, he’s not fantasy, he’s not even horror what’s going on!

Well my friends, John Connolly may be a successful writer in the crime genre but he is much more than a simple crime genre writer. His recent collection of short stories “Nocturnes” was a superb introduction to a multi-faceted author with a mixture of horror, fantasy and macabre to match any of the established “genre” writers (you can read a selection online here). This was closely followed by his adult fairy tale/fantasy “The Book Of Lost Things”.

Even Connolly’s so called crime novels are sprinkled with more than a dusting of supernatural horror coming from the depths of the Louisiana swamps, his character “the Travelling man” is truly Kingesque (I’m not sure that’s a real word!).

Anyway, heed my call dear reader and head on over to Mr Connolly’s fine website here to be suitably illuminated and if you have run out of horror authors to devour, try a slice of his work.

16
Sep

The Twilight Hour by Simon Marsden

“The Twilight Hour - Celtic Visions From The Past”

by Simon Marsden

Format: Hardback, 128 pages

Publisher: Little, Brown. 2003

If you are a fan of the horror genre (and if your not you may be on the wrong blog!) then I am sure you will be familiar with the work of Simon Marsden. There is a good chance you may never have heard of him but you will know his work. Sir Simon Marsden is the foremost photographer of gothic, fantastic and supernatural places in the UK (probably the world) and his work has adorned book, magazine and even album (that’s CD kids) covers for the likes of Cormac McCarthy, Phil Rickman and the delightful pop combo Cradle Of Filth.

This collection brings together some of Marsden’s iconic photography with extracts from classic celtic supernatural literature from the likes of Arthur Machen, W.B.Yeats, Bram Stoker and Edgar Allan Poe. What makes Marsden’s style unique is his preference to shoot on black and white infra-red film, followed by hours of post processing in a darkroom. This creates a unique atmosphere in his photography, producing a grainy, black and white image where vegetation is rendered in pale (almost white) tones and the blue sky takes on a dramatic dark and brooding appearance.

Within this collection are some of Marsden’s most famous shots including such magnificent works as Gothic Window, Castle Barnard pg 119, Eccelscreig House pg 69 and Duntulm Castle pg 26. You can see many examples of Simon Marsden’s work at his website here and I would urge everyone to try and get hold of a copy of this book.

The images in this book truly transcend the average illustration and imbue the text with an atmosphere completely in tune with the tone of the stories. Here the Photographs and text work together to create fully formed pieces of art. Marsden’s own experience of the supernatural means he is not purely working at a technical level here but is truly exploring “another dimension - a spirit world”. As an aspiring amateur photographer I can only stare in awe at the technical and aesthetic skill required to create these images, to succeed on page after page is testament to a truly great artist and one I highly recommend you check out.

Rating 5 out of 5

28
Aug

Stephen Kings “N”

“N” is a short story from Stephen Kings new collection “Just After Sunset” (due out 11/11/08), which has been adapted as a video series. Check it out below:-

23
Aug

The Execution Channel by Ken Macleod

The Execution Channel

by Ken MacLeod

Format: Paperback, 370 pages.

Publisher: Orbit 2007.

Ken MacLeod is one of the most popular and respected (at least in my house) writers of science fiction around. His latest novel “The Night Sessions” is pure SF and you can find out more about it here or here. I have always been intrigued by Ken’s politics, which have been the basis for many of his works, and the subject of frequent blogs (see here). I was intrigued, therefore, when Ken published “The Execution Channel” which to all intents is actually a political/techno thriller and a very good one at that.

Set in an alternative now, where Al Gore beat Dubia and consequently the current mess of world politics we find ourselves in is considerably worse. Now that’s enough to get a lot of people’s backs up, the insinuation that anybody could have done things worse than Bush is a strong statement but MacLeod explains the decisions and compromises which Gore would have had to make, and speculates scarily on the potential outcomes. No spoilers here, as usual, but the book is frighteningly real, both in terms of it’s vision of the disasters that befell Gore’s policies but also its relationship to real world events (e.g. Iran) which are still developing now.

So it’s a scary unsettled world into which we are dropped to observe the lives of the Travis family. James is a software engineer, Roisin (his daughter) is a peace activist and Alec (his son) is serving with the British army in Kazakhstan. It soon gets even scarier as Roisin witnesses what appears to be a nuclear explosion at the Rosyth naval base just outside Edinburgh, Scotland. Given surveillance fears and big brother style monitoring, the Travis family are able to keep in contact using some clever spy techniques and along with blogger Mark Dark attempt to find out what is going on. All the time various governments and black ops units are trying to catch the lot of them and the Execution Channel is on screen to remind them of the possible consequences.

Now Its not possible to explain much more of the plot without spoilers, suffice to say this is one of the most complex, clever and spectacularly interwoven plots I have read since I put down Le Carre’s “Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy”. It takes some effort to keep up with the constant movement of information and disinformation but it’s fascinating stuff and written really well. What could have been a dry, political treatise  becomes a cutting edge thriller. MacLeod makes his points forcefully but never at the expense of the story. And so it goes with twist and counter twist, spy v counter spy, nations v nations until we reach a climax (of sorts).

The end of the novel is the final twist and believe me it’s more twisty than a sack full of Chinese gymnasts, you will either love it or hate it, unless you are me (which I hope for your sake you are not) in which case you will read it in full jaw dropped silence thinking “what just happened?” and make occasional wibble noises.

To my mind this is no more Science Fiction than the latest edition of “Hello” but I don’t mind, sure call it speculative fiction but don’t pigeonhole it into a single genre. This book deserves to be read widely by all those with a voting system and expresses political views with the sort of subtlety that Michael Moore could only dream about, you might not agree with these views but you must surely believe that something has to be done to stop this alternative reality becoming an actuality (and it seems like it could still happen).

Well done to Ken MacLeod for having the guts to try something new, whether this will become a regular thing (like his countryman, a certain Mr I. Banks) we will need to wait and see, but I for one, think there is plenty of room for intelligent well written, edgy thrillers, regardless of what genre you pigeonhole them into and there are few thrillers as edgy and well written as this one.

Rating 4 out of 5