Showing posts with label Lev Grossman. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Lev Grossman. Show all posts

08 July, 2015

eBook Deals - Posey, Gaiman, Abercrombie, Kadrey, Chu, Scalzi, Grossman, Bester, Schwab,

I don't know what's going on lately, but there are a ton of great books on sale right now in the US.


[$0.99] Three (Legends of the Dustwalker #1) by Jay Posey

[$1.99] The Graveyard Book by Neil Gaiman
[$1.99] Half a King (Shattered Sea #1) by Joe Abercrombie
[$1.99] The Getaway God by Richard Kadrey
[$1.99] The Lives of Tao (Lives of Tao #1) by Wesley Chu
[$1.99] Outlander (Outlander #1) by Diana Gabaldon

[$2.99] The Human Division (Old Man's War #5) by John Scalzi
[$2.99] The Magicians (Magicians #1) by Lev Grossman - I can't recommend this enough!
[$2.99] Virtual Unrealities, short fiction by Alfred Bester
[$2.99] Vicious by V.E. Schwab
[$2.99] Agent to the Stars by John Scalzi

03 January, 2015

Only the Best of 2014 - My Best Reads This Year

I had a really slow year this year when it comes to reading. It doesn't help that I moved a couple states away, got a new job that keeps me busier than ever, and I'm trying to keep up with three kids any moment they're awake. My Goodreads goal of 50 books, a decrease from last year because I knew there was a possibility of some changes, was only met by 64% (that's only 31 books).

However, a number of those books were new releases and it was a great year for those. Below you'll find my top 7 new releases for 2014. I was going to narrow it down to five, but I found myself trying to cheat by posting "ties" and I honestly hate that so I gave the actual number even if not so round.

Following that list are some more year-end wrap up awards if you can even call it that. Mostly, I wanted to have a chance to talk about the books I loved this year one extra time.

Top 7 New Releases of 2014


7) Hollow World by Michael J. Sullivan


6) City of Stairs by Robert Jackson Bennett (still need to review this)


5) Breach Zone (Shadow Ops #3) by Myke Cole


4) Prince of Fools (Red Queen's War #1) by Mark Lawrence


4) Half a King (Shattered Sea #1) by Joe Abercrombie


3) Veil of the Deserters (Bloodsounder's Arc #2) by Jeff Salyards


2) The Magician's Land (Magicians #3) by Lev Grossman


1) The Crimson Campaign (Powder Mage #2) by Brian McClellan


Biggest Surprise


Pilo Family Circus by Will Elliott - Seriously, you need to read this if you haven't already. At first glance, it doesn't sound like much, but it was absolutely one of my favorites of the last number of years.

Best Stand-Alones


Tie for Angelmaker by Nick Harkaway and Blackdog by K.V. Johanson. Remember, I said I hate ties in numbered lists. No numbers here, so I can have a tie. Both these were absolutely astounding reads. They are completely different, one a contemporary mystery with a wonderful sense of humor (Angelmaker) and one an epic fantasy set in a non-European medieval times (Blackdog).

Best Audiobooks


Ilium and Olympos by Dan Simmons. This is really just one extended book that blew me away from start to finish. Simmons is a mad genius to combine all the elements he combines here and pulls it off stupendously.

Biggest Disappointment 


Impulse (Jumper #3) by Steven Gould - I had high hopes after the first two excellent installments. Combining the elements that made the first two great with teen angst and holier-than-thou characters made it a bit tough to stomach.

Missing

Blood and Iron by Jon Sprunk (currently reading), Of Bone and Thunder by Chris Evans (currently reading), Words of Radiance by Brandon Sanderson, The Emperor's Blades by Brian Stavely, Assail by Ian Cameron Esslemont (though I did make progress by reading Stonewielder), and tons more. There are plenty of authors I've just gotten behind in keeping up with their new series such as Brent Weeks and Daniel Abraham and tons more I'm dying to begin. I'll have to do better this year I guess.

05 August, 2014

Review - The Magician's Land (Magicians #3) by Lev Grossman

Growing up, we didn't have lots of money and my dad took off with most of what we did have anyway, but I was always told to do well in school, so I did. I was told, "go to college," so I did. (In fact, it was more assumed than outright spoken to be honest). Once I'd made the mistake of majoring in social science (Economics!), the only solution was more school!

So I went on to law school.

After three miserable years in a system that only rewards the "top 10", I graduated ...

And then what? Then the real world hit. After continually excelling for the most part (law school was the only real blow to that thinking), I was tossed out into the cold, cruel world.

I used to have a plan. School! That was about it. I always knew it was a means to an end (work), but that notion gets befuddled somewhere about 15 years in. It's hard to look past the graduation, which for some reason is something to look forward to.


But it's a tough realization. Especially when you graduate, only to have to study for the hardest test of your life (bar exam) and still have zero job prospects.

This is all to say that what I'm comparing is Lewis' Chronicles of Narnia to Grossman's Magicians trilogy. Narnia is the bliss and Magicians is the reality. What happens to those kids after they can no longer go back to the magical land? Depression? Isolation?

What happens when Harry comes to the realization that his parents were killed and a diabolical madman did everything in his power to kill him. What does that do to a person? Does it make them a well-adjusted person? What if that person isn't strong enough to deal with it?

And yet somehow, Grossman doesn't make this trilogy as dark and depressing a slog as I'm making it sound like. I couldn't put any of these books down. I read my eyes out in each one, The Magician's Land no less.

In The Magician's Land, the conclusion to the Magicians trilogy, Quentin has been summarily kicked out of Fillory. His blissful existence has been brought up short and he has to pick up the pieces and face reality.

Grossman plays with the idea of Quentin being something great, but is he really? So he goes back to Brakebills, which only works for a time. he also finds himself involved in a plot to steal a briefcase for some extra cash and now we see what a low point Quentin has found himself in.

The Magician's Land also looks at Fillory, from the perspectives of Eliot and Janet, two of the four kings and queens of Fillory. I fear I'll spoil to much going into their parts, but suffice it to say, they are just as entertaining in their questing as Quentin's part in finding his own place in the world.

I'm not exactly sure why I love this trilogy so much. I remarked the other day that it must say a lot about me, and not much in a good sense. I mean, these are some of the most self-absorbed, pedantic (which after this much schooling I should hate right?), and I couldn't get enough.

But I think I love this series because of the magic along with the realism. I hope I don't spoil too much by saying these characters actually grow quite a bit. They grow leaps and bounds and it's very much in character and I'm so glad they do.

I love this series because I want to go back to Narnia and this was a way to do so once more. Grossman's clever magic is only extended in The Magician's Land as he explains even more magical beasts and the sloths!

Here's a favorite quote about the sloths, very much a spoiler:
From Janet's p.o.v.: "Maybe she should give the dumb ones [animals] this much, a victory in the last battle, the one that didn't count for anything.
Janet thought of the sloths. Probably there was a contingent of sloths like fifty miles from here, a whole fighting regiment of them, and they wouldn't get here for a month, and by then it would all be over.
"/spoiler

I have to say, I thought the ending was both satisfying and a little frustrating. It fit perfectly with the story and I have to admit I had a feeling it would go the way it did, however I'll point you to the spoiler portion of this review on Goodreads.

The Magicians trilogy is quite possibly my favorite series of recent years. I devoured these books like a drug addict and now I'm wanting. I was a little disappointed that the short stories contained in the Dangerous Women and Unfettered anthologies are actually just pulled out of this book, The Magician's Land. I needs my crack!

Grossman has set out to turn tropes on their heads and he has done so in the most entertaining way possible. The hero saves the day, the damsel in distress is rescued, the dark lord is defeated ... your education is over ... but what happens after can be just as captivating.

4.5 out of 5 Stars (very highly recommended)

The Magicians
1) The Magicians
2) The Magician King
3) The Magician's Land (released today - August 5, 2014)

28 May, 2014

Giveaway - The Magician's Kit - In Preparation For The Magician's Land by Lev Grossman

When I read the first two books in Lev Grossman's Magicians trilogy, everything else disappeared from my life. I couldn't get enough, I was drawn in and completely immersed. All I could do was read until I was done. Any given day, all I really want to do is read, but with these books, I had to read them, almost against my will (to be productive in work and life).


It goes without saying then, that I'm pretty much dying to get my hands on Lev Grossman's finale in the Magician's Trilogy, The Magician's Land, which comes out August 5, 2014 from Viking.

I don't have a copy of The Magician's Land to giveaway (sorry), I'm told they aren't available yet anyway, but what I do have is a bit of a teaser giveaway - The Magician's Kit.

From the email I received from the publisher:

"The Magician’s Kit contains: 
- An excerpt booklet containing Chapter 1 of THE MAGICIAN’S LAND 
- Clock-face buttons in 3 different designs [see below] ...
- A set of 4 postcards featuring Magicians fan art by Christopher Shy


 If you would like to enter, please follow the exceedingly simple instructions below:

- Email your name and address to: onlythebestsff@[remove this]gmail.com
- Write "Magician's Don't Kit " in the subject line (or something that lets me know what you're entering)
- Remember, this is NOT the book, The Magician's Land, only a teaser package
- Snarky comments get you extra entries for future giveaways (and make reading entries much more entertaining)
- US only (don't hate the messenger!)
- This giveaway ends a week from today

Also, if you still want to enter, Lev Grossman is hosting a contest for entries into his Book Trailer for The Magician's Land where readers read a quick sentence from the book alongside with some famous writerly types. I'm not a huge proponent of book trailers, but getting the fans involved sounds like a good idea.

04 December, 2013

Giveaway - Dangerous Women, Edited by George R.R. Martin and Gardner Dozois (With Stories from Joe Abercrombie, Brandon Sanderson, Jim Butcher, Martin Himself, and Plenty More!)


I'm very excited to bring this giveaway to you today, this is one of the biggest releases of the year with some of the greats of the fantasy genre and other genres as well. Dangerous Women [US] [UK] is exactly what the title says, it's an anthology with stories about dangerous women across multiple genres with some of the best authors writing today. This is one of the books I've been looking forward to all year and I'm happy to offer it to you, via the nice folks at Tor, as a giveaway.

But first, here's the lineup:
The Dangerous Women anthology contains following stories:
- Introduction by Gardner Dozois
- “Some Desperado” by Joe Abercrombie - A Red Country story
- “My Heart is Either Broken” by Megan Abbott
- “Nora’s Song” by Cecelia Holland
- “The Hands That Are Not There” by Melinda Snodgrass
- “Bombshells” by Jim Butcher - A Harry Dresden story
- “Raisa Stepanova” by Carrie Vaughn
- “Wrestling Jesus” by Joe R. Lansdale
- “Neighbors” by Megan Lindholm
- “I Know How to Pick ’Em” by Lawrence Block
- “Shadows For Silence in the Forests of Hell” by Brandon Sanderson
- “A Queen in Exile” by Sharon Kay Penman
- “The Girl in the Mirror” by Lev Grossman - A Magicians story
- “Second Arabesque, Very Slowly” by Nancy Kress
- “City Lazarus” by Diana Rowland
- “Virgins” by Diana Gabaldon - An Outlander story
- “Hell Hath No Fury” by Sherilynn Kenyon
- “Pronouncing Doom” by S.M. Stirling - An Emberverse story
- “Name the Beast” by Sam Sykes
- “Caretakers” by Pat Cadigan
- “Lies My Mother Told Me” by Caroline Spector - A Wild Cards story
- “The Princess and the Queen” by George R.R. Martin - A Song of Ice and Fire story
As you can see, we get stories from great authors like Brandon Sanderson, Joe Abercrombie, Jim Butcher, and even a George R.R. Martin novella from A Song of Ice and Fire. One of the big ones I've been looking forward to is Lev Grossman's story about Brakebills from his trilogy, The Magicians.

But wait, there's more.

No, actually that was it. Sorry, I started feeling like an infomercial for a sec. My excitement has turned into a sales pitch, doh! Well, suffice it to say, I'm really looking forward to reading just about everything in this anthology, but for now I've already jumped into Martin's The Princess and the Queen, because yeah.

The Giveaway!

If you are interested in getting your hands on Dangerous Women, then follow the exceedingly simple instructions below:

E-mail me your name and address at onlythebestsff@[removethis]gmail.com, with "Definitely Not Femme Fatales" as the subject of the email (or at least something that lets me know what the email is about). This goes without saying, but double emails get you disqualified.

Snarky comments increase your chances of winning by getting you bonus entries for future giveaways. This is US Only (sorry!) as long as delivery doesn't require the mounting of an expedition into remote wilderness.


12 October, 2011

It's News To Me #26 - Brent Weeks Cover and Lev Grossman Talks Magicians on TV

Hope you're week's going well. I've been busy with school and applying for jobs and studying for the MPRE and dreading taking the bar next summer. That last one really takes it out of you.

Lev Grossman gives the story behind The Magicians getting optioned for TV: By interviewing himself. It's great.

Brent Weeks reveals Sub Press cover for Perfect Shadow: Which I really need to read, with which I really need to get an ereader to read. Loving the cover. (Artist Raymond Swanland, Sir Awesome)

11 April, 2011

It's News To Me #10

Some interesting cover art has come out recently:


Tim Marquitz' sequel in his Demon Squad series:
Resurrection is something I've been looking forward to for a while now. I loved Armageddon Bound (Demon Squad 1) and this cover is leaps and bounds better.


Lev Grossman's The Magician King: The sequel to Lev Grossman's successful The Magicians is coming out this year and that means I really need to read the first. I've had a copy for months now and it's been beckoning to me ever since. (Thanks to Mad Hatter for bringing this to my attention)

And some news from Seventh Star Press:

Try a Seventh Star Press Title for Just Two Dollars!

What is your favorite flavor of fantasy? Do you like character-driven YA
Fantasy? Do you like heroic fantasy with loads of action? Do you like
epic fantasy with a wide cast of characters, lands, and lore? How about
epic scale urban fantasy?

To celebrate the launch week of Jackie Gamber's Redheart, we're announcing
a very special sale. The good news is that we've got a title in each of
the above areas of fantasy, so that you can try Seventh Star Press eBooks
out in this special sale that will be running through Mid-June. What are
you waiting for? Just two bucks and you'll be on a grand adventure. Find
out what readers around the world are discovering...there's a growing
constellation of quality titles at Seventh Star Press!


All eBook titles include the Matthew Perry illustrations that are in the
print editions.

Visit the following page for further information and direct links to eBook
titles:

http://www.seventhstarpress.com/documents/ebooks.html

And that's the news...at least to me.

12 September, 2009

Bona Fide: Weekly Roundup #37

Hello and welcome to a new issue of my Weekly Roundup. From a meteorological point of view, we are now in the third season of the year in Europe. Days are getting shorter, temperatures are decreasing, sky is gray. It is a time of melancholy. But not for me. Autumn is a wonderful season to spend time on the sofa with a pot of tea, cookies, and a pile of good books.

Books

I'm somewhat behind with reading book reviews. As you may know I like to read reviews about one book from different reviewers. For three months now I have been reading reviews of The Magicians (2009) [US] [UK], by Lev Grossman. And finally, this week, I ordered a paperback copy. The reasons are simple: First I read Jame's review which finally convinced me that I have to read this book. Second the paperback will be available in Germany soon. I hope I don't expect too much out of the book. On the right you see the UK cover:
Quentin Coldwater is brilliant but miserable. He's a senior in high school, and a certifiable genius, but he's still secretly obsessed with a series of fantasy novels he read as a kid, about the adventures of five children in a magical land called Fillory. Compared to that, anything in his real life just seems gray and colorless. Everything changes when Quentin finds himself unexpectedly admitted to a very secret, very exclusive college of magic in upstate New York, where he receives a thorough and rigorous education in the practice of modern sorcery. He also discovers all the other things people learn in college: friendship, love, sex, booze, and boredom. But something is still missing. Magic doesn't bring Quentin the happiness and adventure he thought it would. Then, after graduation, he and his friends make a stunning discovery: Fillory is real.
Blogosphere

This week I read Waking the Dragon: George R.R. Martin’s A Song of Ice and Fire a wonderful post by Jo Walton. I really appreciate the term “IWantToReadItosity” (I-want-to-read-it) which she explains very well by using A Song of Ice and Fire (ASOIAF) as an example. I know there are people who don't read ASOIAF because it is not finished yet. I tell you that you definitely missing something. I still highly recommend to read ASOAIF. And don't forget to visit the best ASOAIF website: Westeros

Do you know clonehenges? I know Stonehenge and I hope I get the opportunity to go there at some point in my life. Clonehenge is a new artifical word. It is the combination of clone and henge. So you like to see some clonehenges? Then follow this link: Clonehenges: 20 Creative Recreations of Stonehenge. Hope you like it as much as I did.

Outrage of the week

Yes, this is a new section in my Roundup. When you follow several blogs then you know that there are heated discussions from time to time.

This week it all began with an interview over at Temple Library Reviews. Paul Stotts from Blood of the Muse gave the following statement about reviews and book ratings:
I think writing a review, and not giving it some sort of numerical score is a cop out; it’s cowardice—pure and simple—since many online reviewers don’t want to upset publishers or authors. So they write reviews that are open to interpretation, using nebulous terms like good, overemphasizing the positive aspects of the book, trying very hard not to have an opinion. It’s okay, you’re entitled to have an opinion, you’re entitled to take a stand and let people know what you think.

See, words lie; numbers don’t. And I don’t want to lie to my audience. So I score every book on a scale of 100. Like any review, the number is completely subjective; there are no underlying components. I score books by ranking them against other novels I’ve read in the genre. It’s rather simple. But effective.
As you can imagine it didn't take long until the first replies popped up. You will get links to some of the answers later. After reading Paul's statement, I wanted to leave a comment immediately. But then I thought it may be better to calm down first. And finally, I decided to share my thoughts with you in my Roundup.

People tend to categorize and rate nearly everything. It makes life much easier. Easier in the way they have to think and read less. Nobody is free of it; even me. But when it comes to books and book reviews I raise my voice and I say NO. I am well known for reading reviews in order to get more information about a book to support my decision whether to buy and read it, or not. That means I want to read a short summary, an explanation about the likes/dislikes from the reviewer, and appreciate a link to an excerpt. I can't get this information from a numerical rating.

It is definitely wrong that numbers don't lie. Numbers are just a replacement for words in case of book ratings. A 100/100 rating is the replacement for perfect book... So why should this be a lie?

As far as I can see, the main reasons for this outrage is the offense (cowardice) and the insinuation of brown-nosing among reviewers (they lie to their readers and they are submissive to publishers and authors). To be honest you can discuss and share different opinions, but to offend and insult people is poor form and entirely unhelpful.

Finally, it is up to us (blogger are also readers) whether we prefer numerical ratings or not. But you can be sure that I won't use numerical ratings of books on this blog.

Statements from other blogger:
James from Speculative Horizons,
Gav from NextRead,
Larry from OF Blog,
Aidan from A Dribble of Ink,
Dark Wolf from Dark Wolf's Fantasy Reviews,
The whole team from Fantasy Book Critic,
Jeff from Fantasy Book News and Reviews,
Joe from Adventures In Reading

Quotes

A few days ago I finished reading The Loch (2006) [US] [UK] by Steve Alten. It is about Loch Ness in Scotland. I'm sure you read or heard about Nessie. The depiction of the Loch Ness itself and the surroundings is awesome. Look at this picture gallery and you know why I want to visit Loch Ness, as well as Stonehenge. This week, instead of quotes, I decided to delight you with a few Scottish proverbs.

"Twelve highlanders and a bagpipe make a rebellion.

"Money is flat and was meant to be piled up.

"They talk of my drinking but never my thirst.

"Be happy while you're living, for you're a long time dead.

"The day has eyes, the night has ears.

"To marry is to halve your rights and double your duties.

"What may be done at any time will be done at no time.