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Book Review: A Mighty Rolling Thunder by Kerry Alan Denney

A Mighty Rolling Thunder by Kerry Alan Denney

Burning Willow Press, 2016

ASIN: B01N3JL331

Available: Kindle edition

 

It is called “The Event”.  The skies suddenly darken accompanied by booming thunder, flashing lightning and pounding rain.  World- wide, over half of the human population disappears.  Those remaining are filled with dark spirits or bright spirits, depending on their character.  Is this the Rapture promised in the Bible, or a rupture in the barrier between fairy and human worlds?

Livi is a beautiful, gifted artist who paints prophetic pictures of a fantastic, future world.  She is stripped of her friends and pursued by “shadow-mans”, flawed men possessed by the dark spirits.  Her hopes of escape and asylum rest with others who also have gifts from the bright spirits, the “sparkle-angels”.  One of their gifts is the ability to telepathically hear the thoughts of their loyal dogs. Livi is the key to whether the dark spirits or the bright spirits triumph.

She takes refuge at a farm in rural South Carolina owned by Conor and his wife, and meets children who survived massacres by marauding “shadow-mans”. Conor has lost his memory and the bright and dark spirits are battling for control of him.

Livi’s greatest threat is from Victor, a wealthy art connoisseur, who has bought or stolen paintings of the future world by Livi and another gifted artist.  He derives power from the paintings and women, whom he seduces or rapes.  Victor believes that when he ravishes Livi, he will become a god, controlling the dark power of the fairy world on earth.  He captures Livi and brings her to his fortress. Can Conor and his friends rescue her and save the world from domination by “shadow-mans”?

The author, Kerry Alan Denney, has written other successful novels that combine fantasy, the supernatural, science fiction and horror.  The plot of A Mighty Rolling Thunder is imaginative and is well paced.  Its characters are one-dimensional, but effectively sympathetic or despicable.  However, I am worried that the author went overboard in portraying Victor, whom Livi calls a “misogynistic, paranoid, schizophrenic psychopath”.  The many descriptions of Victor’s stiffening “little god” and desire to spread his “demon seed” when he thinks of his victims will disturb some readers.  Denney also uses offensive, racist language and stereotypes, including the “N_____ word”, several times, which will also be upsetting to readers. Not recommended.

Contains: Violence, gore, and strong sexual and offensive language

 

Reviewed by Robert D. Yee


Book Review: Expiration Date edited by Nancy Kilpatrick

Expiration Date edited by Nancy Kilpatrick

EDGE Science Fiction and Fantasy Publishing, 2015

ISBN: 978-1-77053-062-1

Available: Paperback, Kindle edition

 

We all have an expiration date: we are born and live our lives to whatever inevitable conclusion awaits us.  Each journey is extremely personal, and the journey that one person takes is not necessarily followed by another.   This collection of  twenty-five short stories explores a myriad of personal expiration dates: they are all well-imagined and unique reads, written around the theme of death and dying. The tone varies from one to the next, although many of the stories depend on melancholy, measured pacing.

When I first read the description of Expiration Date I thought it was a very interesting concept that could go lots of different ways.  I was not disappointed.  Favorites were: “Sorry Seems to be the Hardest Word” by Kelley Armstrong, which sets two modern-day vampires in negotiations to resolve past disagreements so they can each get what they want– these were very interesting characters that made me wonder what happens next; “The Death of Jeremiah Colverson”by George Wilhite, which follows a soldier as he dies in several wars; and “The Greyness” by Kathryn Ptacek, a creepy story in which everyone who shakes hands with a recently widowed woman dies within days.  I have not read any of this editor’s or these authors’ works previously. Recommended for adult readers.

 

Contains: Swearing, adult situations

Reviewed by Aaron Fletcher


Book Review: Summer at East End: Double Eclipse by Melissa de la Cruz

Summer at East End: Double Eclipse by Melissa de la Cruz
G.P. Putnam’s Sons Books for Young Readers, 2016
ISBN-13: 978-0399173561
Available: Hardcover, Kindle edition

Double Eclipse is the second book in Summer at East End,  a YA spinoff series of Melissa de la Cruz’s adult urban fantasy series Witches of East End, which was about three sisters who discover they are Norse goddesses with witchy powers. Summer at East End  takes place ten years later and focuses on their teenage nieces, twin daughters of Thor, Mardi and Molly, who are human/goddess hybrids. As background, Norse gods and goddesses live as humans, and when they die they are reincarnated in another human body without memories or powers; these manifest in their teen and young adult years in a process called Reawakening. Mardi and Molly are brand new goddesses in their first lifetime, so they’ve never had to go through this and won’t acquire “grown-up” memories like the other gods do, because they don’t have them.  The premise of this book is that the girls learn their mother is the famous tennis player Janet Steele, who moves to East End after purchasing their family home and throwing their relatives out of the house, on the pretense of developing a relationship with her daughters.

I wasn’t sent Triple Moon, the first book in the series, but Double Eclipse does a fairly good job of standing on its own (although I have read the original Witches of East End books, and without that background I might be lost, so for teens unfamiliar with the previously written adult series or the television show, it might be more important). Unfortunately, even given the background from the previous series (which I enjoyed) I found this book to be disappointing.

I think a large part of the problem is that it’s difficult to relate to the characters. The sweet twin/bad twin trope can work and even be kind of fun, which is what makes the Sweet Valley High books work. It can even work when the girls in question are ridiculously wealthy (like the sisters in Hotlanta) but on some level, the characters have got to be relatable, and have at least a semblance of a believable relationship with each other. Twin Molly is the sweet one interested in fashion, makeup, and boys. She’s also easily bought by Janet, instantly loving her and moving in without a second thought, especially after she’s offered expensive shopping trips and the use of a Maserati. Mardi is the cynical one, suspicious of Janet’s sudden interest, particularly since she’s evicted Mardi’s boyfriend (yes, there’s an ick factor there, in dating one of your relatives who just happens to be reincarnated into a seventeen year old boy’s body). Caught in the middle is cute boy Rocky McLaughlin, who is carried away by Molly’s sweetness (and her Maserati) and baffled when she stops texting him. Due to misunderstandings over said cute boy and a spell cast over everyone’s cell phones, disaster ensues.

Molly, as the “good twin” is supposed to by a sympathetic character, but she was totally insufferable and so superficial and self-centered she almost forgot that her boyfriend was grieving his mother. Mardi was slightly more likable, but her rebelliousness basically consisted of “I don’t wear makeup” and grudgingly working in a sandwich shop while hitting on her sister’s boyfriend, after she spent most of the book moping over her boyfriend breaking up with her when he realized the essential “ick” factor of his dating a teenager. Also, much of the plot hinged on a lack of communication between the two girls. While they weren’t in constant contact through texting, nobody ever suggested they meet face-to-face, although they actually lived on the same small island, interacting with the same people. It also seemed unrealistic that their only same-age peer was the boy they were fighting over. As a side note, these two girls were constantly being offered alcoholic drinks by their relatives, and sucking them down as if this were no big deal. Even in fiction, yes, it totally is. They aren’t in school anyway, so why not just make them 21?

Honestly, having read both her adult fiction and her children’s books, I expect better from de la Cruz. She had a great opportunity here to take advantage of a growing young adult interest in books with mythological settings, thanks to Rick Riordan’s expansion into the world of Norse mythology, the Loki’s Wolves series by K.L. Armstrong and M.A. Marr, and Kate O’Hearn’s Valkyrie, and I feel that she really squandered it by turning it into a series about two material girls who also happen to be goddesses, rather than digging deeper into the mythology and providing a little more action, character growth, and connection to the mythology, or even just exploring more of their family connections. I hope there’s more to the next book than there is to this one. However, with Melissa de la Cruz being as popular as she is, and with the interest in Witches of East End, it probably will be in demand.

Contains: mild sexual situations, violence

Reviewed by Kirsten Kowalewski