by Prince Michael of Greece ‧ RELEASE DATE: Oct. 31, 1996
In time for Halloween, Prince Michael of Greece (Sultana, 1983) presents the dilettantish findings of his spirit-hunting. As a storyteller, Prince Michael is frankly out of his league, at least when compared to such writers as M.R. James and Sheridan LeFanu, or even such true believers as Sir Arthur Conan Doyle. Accompanied by a photographer friend (whose work provides an atmospheric backdrop for the narrative), Prince Michael does some amateur psychic research in a stately home in England, a castle in Spain, a Russian palace, a chÉteau in France, and a manor in Ireland, among other ostensibly ghostly sites. While he hears tales of transparent women, lost treasures, evil presences, and things going bump in the night, the paranormal vibrations he invariably picks up tell different stories. Unfortunately, those stories—all told in the first person by female spirits, with Prince Michael as the medium/amanuensis—usually involving forbidden love affairs, smack of the historical romance with traces of New Age religiosity. The most eminent of these narrators is Czarina Maria Feodorovna, the dyspeptic daughter-in-law of Catherine the Great, whose spirit hovers about the restored Palace of Pavlovsk, brooding over her assassinated husband. Most of the spirits Prince Michael contacts are noblewomen, such as the sadistic medieval figure who inhabited the sinister ChÉteau de Niedzica, or the Irish Lady Claire of Doneraile Court. All the stories fall flat after the eerie backdrop is parted. Without a trace of irony, the author observes, ``Of course ghosts are real, but those who believe in them too passionately, and imagine they sense their presence everywhere end up by creating them from scratch.'' Prince Michael quickly spoils the spooky atmosphere with genre novel scenarios and New Age effects. (Author tour)
Pub Date: Oct. 31, 1996
ISBN: 0-393-03952-8
Page Count: 192
Publisher: Norton
Review Posted Online: May 19, 2010
Kirkus Reviews Issue: Sept. 1, 1996
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by Kevin Hearne ‧ RELEASE DATE: Feb. 4, 2020
A charming and persuasive entry that will leave readers impatiently awaiting the concluding volume.
Book 2 of Hearne's latest fantasy trilogy, The Seven Kennings (A Plague of Giants, 2017), set in a multiracial world thrust into turmoil by an invasion of peculiar giants.
In this world, most races have their own particular magical endowment, or “kenning,” though there are downsides to trying to gain the magic (an excellent chance of being killed instead) and using it (rapid aging and death). Most recently discovered is the sixth kenning, whose beneficiaries can talk to and command animals. The story canters along, although with multiple first-person narrators, it's confusing at times. Some characters are familiar, others are new, most of them with their own problems to solve, all somehow caught up in the grand design. To escape her overbearing father and the unreasoning violence his kind represents, fire-giant Olet Kanek leads her followers into the far north, hoping to found a new city where the races and kennings can peacefully coexist. Joining Olet are young Abhinava Khose, discoverer of the sixth kenning, and, later, Koesha Gansu (kenning: air), captain of an all-female crew shipwrecked by deep-sea monsters. Elsewhere, Hanima, who commands hive insects, struggles to free her city from the iron grip of wealthy, callous merchant monarchists. Other threads focus on the Bone Giants, relentless invaders seeking the still-unknown seventh kenning, whose confidence that this can defeat the other six is deeply disturbing. Under Hearne's light touch, these elements mesh perfectly, presenting an inventive, eye-filling panorama; satisfying (and, where appropriate, well-resolved) plotlines; and tensions between the races and their kennings to supply much of the drama.
A charming and persuasive entry that will leave readers impatiently awaiting the concluding volume.Pub Date: Feb. 4, 2020
ISBN: 978-0-345-54857-3
Page Count: 592
Publisher: Del Rey/Ballantine
Review Posted Online: Nov. 24, 2019
Kirkus Reviews Issue: Dec. 15, 2019
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by Stephen King ‧ RELEASE DATE: Sept. 10, 2019
King fans won’t be disappointed, though most will likely prefer the scarier likes of The Shining and It.
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New York Times Bestseller
The master of modern horror returns with a loose-knit parapsychological thriller that touches on territory previously explored in Firestarter and Carrie.
Tim Jamieson is a man emphatically not in a hurry. As King’s (The Outsider, 2018, etc.) latest opens, he’s bargaining with a flight attendant to sell his seat on an overbooked run from Tampa to New York. His pockets full, he sticks out his thumb and winds up in the backwater South Carolina town of DuPray (should we hear echoes of “pray”? Or “depraved”?). Turns out he’s a decorated cop, good at his job and at reading others (“You ought to go see Doc Roper,” he tells a local. “There are pills that will brighten your attitude”). Shift the scene to Minneapolis, where young Luke Ellis, precociously brilliant, has been kidnapped by a crack extraction team, his parents brutally murdered so that it looks as if he did it. Luke is spirited off to Maine—this is King, so it’s got to be Maine—and a secret shadow-government lab where similarly conscripted paranormally blessed kids, psychokinetic and telepathic, are made to endure the Skinnerian pain-and-reward methods of the evil Mrs. Sigsby. How to bring the stories of Tim and Luke together? King has never minded detours into the unlikely, but for this one, disbelief must be extra-willingly suspended. In the end, their forces joined, the two and their redneck allies battle the sophisticated secret agents of The Institute in a bloodbath of flying bullets and beams of mental energy (“You’re in the south now, Annie had told these gunned-up interlopers. She had an idea they were about to find out just how true that was"). It’s not King at his best, but he plays on current themes of conspiracy theory, child abuse, the occult, and Deep State malevolence while getting in digs at the current occupant of the White House, to say nothing of shadowy evil masterminds with lisps.
King fans won’t be disappointed, though most will likely prefer the scarier likes of The Shining and It.Pub Date: Sept. 10, 2019
ISBN: 978-1-9821-1056-7
Page Count: 576
Publisher: Scribner
Review Posted Online: Aug. 3, 2019
Kirkus Reviews Issue: Aug. 15, 2019
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