Story. Belief. It’s power isn’t it? All belief is, you get people to believe you can get them to do just about anything, history teaches us this. And it is this idea that Jim C. Hines uses in this book. The Libromancers in this book have the power, the magical power, of drawing things from the book into the real world, provided the book has enough readers who believe.
Yet there is something else out there, a devourer and then these other books that the Libromancers can’t quite figure out what is going with them,
And there is the most wonderful bench in the world. I want one.
This installment finds our hero Isaac getting use to his non-traditional threesome (no, not quite that way). Like most urban fantasy, the plot is one of those ends of the world things, but there are no vampire politics. This makes me happy. I am so tired of vampire politics, just stake them already.
Plus Hines has very cool vampires. Even the sparkly ones are interesting.
Ook
I’m getting there, just hold on. I got bananas.
Ook!
So anyway, sparkly vampires. But they are not problem, though who ever would have thought about sparkly vampires and pot.
Ook?>
Not type of part, the other. So there is this plot that involves bugs and Lena Greenwood’s book, and whether or not Guttenberg . . .
Ook?
Yes, that Guttenberg was telling the truth. And to be honest, in many ways some of the plot points have been used before. Like many good authors, Hines inverts or twists them to make them his own and the book special. But the aspect of the book that stands out the most to me is the fact that unlike a great many urban fantasy novels that never show the impact of those end of world battles on the non-magical people – say like the non-Buffy posse residents of Sunnydale. Hines does, and when he does, it is quite a powerful piece of writing.
Ook
My learned friend would like me to point out that the reader finds out much more about Lena Greenwood as well as her struggle to define herself, her very real human desire to tell her own story. How this plot point is woven into the main thrust of the novel and what the purpose of the story is, well it remains us of Pratchett’s Science of Discworld series, to be honest.
Which brings me to this point. If you don’t understand the inclusion of the word Ook in the above, follow the instructions below.
1. Go to a bookstore.
2. Pick up a copy of this book.
3. While in store read the introduction to this book, including the footnotes.
4. Follow the instructions revealed in the introduction.
5. Write a thank you note to Jim C. Hines.