Apr. 18th, 2012

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This is the first book in a new series from Seanan McGuire, best known for her October Daye urban fantasy novels featuring Toby Daye and the fae living among us. Those novels are rather dark in tone and nature, with nearly all of the fae creatures tending toward their more wicked and tricksy original roots.





Not so with the new Incriptid series. The premise is that Verity Price, a member of a family intent on saving the crytids of the world from destruction by the fanatical group called the Covenant, is in New York City to decide whether she wants to continue with the family business she's been trained for since birth . . . or to become a professional dancer. Between dance competitions and her job at a stripper bar, she hunts down cryptids who are preying on humans, while helping to keep the rest of the less deadly cryptids hidden. Everything's fine until a new member of the Covenant shows up to determine if NYC needs a purge . . . and cryptids begin disappearing. It doesn't help that Verity is attracted to the enemy. Only far too many cryptids are disappearing--too many to lay at the Covenant's doorstep anyway. Something else is going on, and it might just take both Verity, the cryptids she's protecting, and the Covenant member to find out who and what is going on.

As you can guess from the description, the tone of this series is much lighter than that of the October Daye books. Oh, there are dark moments--people die, there's fighting, etc--but overall the atmosphere is much less dreary and a lot more fun. And that's how I'd describe this book: fun. There are a slew of new cryptids, including talking mice that celebrate . . . well, everything, and a bunch of creatures from other lands and folklore. It runs across cultures, which is appropriate for a melting pot like NYC. Verity is a strong character and is totally believable as a cryptid hunter (when necessary) and protector. And she's supported by a whole crew of individual and interesting characters, both human and non-human. There's also a much stronger streak of romance in this series.

I did have a few complaints, mostly dealing with the Covenant agent. It's emphasized over and over again that the Covenant is huge and powerful and deadly . . . and yet the agent sent to NYC to determine if the cryptid population there has grown so large that it needs to be purged comes across constantly as weak, uninformed, and honestly, not all that intelligent. After the buildup of the Covenant's reputation, I expect their agent to be just as powerful and deadly as Verity can be, but he doesn't come across that way. Sure, he kills some cryptids, but he doesn't seem to know much about anything regarding the cryptids overall. I wanted him to be a more competent and stronger individual, so that what happens between him and Verity is that much more powerful. You can still have a strong character with certain beliefs waver over the course of a book.

My other issue was with Verity herself: perhaps she's too strong. She has weak moments, gets hurt, and can be vulnerable, but overall her conviction is so strong that moments of doubt are just that--moments. She doubts herself for perhaps a breath or two, and then she's back storming away. I didn't get the sense that Verity changed herself during the course of the book. In fact, I felt that the story was really the Covenant agent's story, since he's the one that changed the most. Which is probably why I wanted him to be a stronger character.

In any case, that doesn't matter. The book is thoroughly enjoyable regardless and, as I said, a ton of fun. If you liked the October Daye books, I'd say you'll also love Verity Price and this new Incryptid series.
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Thought I'd let everyone know that there's a giveaway contest going on up at GoodReads for Barbara Ashford's book Spellcrossed, the sequel to Spellcast. Click on through this link to see what the book is all about and to enter the contest! And if you haven't checked out Spellcast yet, do so!



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My life is finally calming down enough that I can catch up on a few things. Like this interview with A.M. Dellamonica, an author with Tor Books who has a new book called Blue Magic on the shelf right now. I asked her a few questions about writing and the book and here's how she answered. Take a moment to check it out, and then go order the book!





Bio: A.M. Dellamonica lives in Vancouver, B.C., where she's been writing fantasy and SF for over twenty years. She teaches creative writing through the UCLA Extension Writers' Program, and in workshops at conventions and conferences like Norwescon, Orycon, and the Surrey International Writers' Conference. When she's not writing, reading, teaching or thinking about books, she takes photographs and sometimes sings in a choir.

Alyx blogs for Tor.com, and is currently writing a series of highly popular 'rewatch' reviews of Buffy the Vampire Slayer, which will celebrate its fifteenth birthday this March.

Her newest book, Blue Magic is the sequel to the Sunburst Award-winning Indigo Spring.

Interview:

1. First off, why don't you introduce yourself and your new book. Tell us
what makes this book special!


BLUE MAGIC completes the story of the magical spill begun by Astrid Lethewood in INDIGO SPRINGS. Astrid is the last known chanter on earth, which means she alone can take the dangerous magical source material, vitagua, and transfer it into objects which express various magical abilities that people can safely use.

In its raw state, vitagua is essentially a contaminant, and in the first book gallons upon gallons of it escape into the Oregon woods not far from Portland. As a result, the forest itself has overgrown to the point where it's an impassable thicket, destroying Astrid's hometown and driving magically mutated wildlife into the Western U.S. and the Pacific Ocean. Now the U.S. government is trying to contain the disaster as it continues to unfold... and Astrid is seeking a safe way to bring the world's magical ecosystems into some kind of balance before matters get even worse.

2. Where did that idea come from? Do you have a "genesis story" for the
novel?


I wrote a number of stories about the mystical objects, chantments, before embarking on INDIGO SPRINGS. The best-known of these was probably "Nevada," which Ellen Datlow bought for the old Scifi.com site. It was set at my grandparents' old ranch house in Yerington, Nevada, and a good proportion of the magical objects there were things from the toybox my grandmother kept for any kids who came to visit.

In "Nevada", I focused on the corrupting effects of magical power on people, and there was a glancing mention of the chantments having been made by one of the two mad sisters in the story. Some time after that, I was playing around with a separate idea, this almost-toxic magical fluid, of a magical/chemical spill worsened by another power-mad individual, in this case Sahara Knax. It occurred to me that the two elements, the chantments and the vitagua, could be married to each other quite nicely.

3. What did you find was the most challenging aspect of writing in the fantasy genre?

Fantasy is home for me. I write SF and mysteries and literary fiction and alternate history, but the fluidity of magic, and the ability to set aside the rules of the real world--I'm always really comfortable there. But I do tend to fall back on trying to make a bit of science fiction-type sense of my magical systems, so with the Books of Chantment, there was a bit of a challenge in harmonizing the stuff from "Nevada" with the vitagua itself. But like most writers I have a community of other writers to fall back on, so I got advice and perspective from a number of readers. Ultimately I just had to wrestle with it until it made sense.

4. Magic is typically integral to fantasy. What makes your magic unique?

The magic in this series has a long backstory. It always had a physical component--it began as a type of cell, actually, neither animal nor vegetable but with qualities of both. In the Middle Ages an organization allied with the Roman Catholic church tried to establish a monopoly over enchantment, and instead ended up driving the cells into a sort of remission. Time, lack of space and a prolonged struggle for control over magic ended up altering its nature, so that the resulting fluid, vitagua, was both off-the-scale powerful and extremely dangerous. This is why it has the effect of mutating any living tissue it happens to contact.

Chantments, meanwhile, are more like the little magical objects that populate a million fantasy stories: they can make you pretty, extend your life, mesmerize other people... they're safer to use, but some of them are quite powerful too.

5. If you had to do the "Hollywood Mashup" for you book, what would it be? (Like, "This novel is like Harry Potter combined with Silence of the Lambs with a little Hangover thrown in on the side!")

Think Chernobyl disaster in Narnia and you're getting pretty close.

6. How would you classify your novel? Dark fantasy? Epic fantasy? Urban fantasy? Or do you just let the readers decide for themselves?

The classification you'll see among bookstore professionals, reviewers, and librarians would be urban fantasy--it has magic set in the here and now. The other term I've heard, which I like a lot, is ecofantasy. A lot of people think True Blood when they think of urban fantasy, but this is 100% vampire-free. It has monsters, but they're products of an eco-magical disaster.

7. Where can we find out more information about you and your books?

I am all over the web. My official site is http://alyxdellamonica.com and I can be found on Twitter, Facebook, Tumbler, and Google Plus, usually as AlyxDellamonica. I do a lot of blogging and writing for Tor.com - in fact, there's going to be an Indigo Springs tie-in story up there soon. It's called "Wild Things", and it takes place between the events of the two books. In the meantime, I have two other stories there, "The Cage" (which is traditional urban fantasy, my tag line for it being 'Baby Werewolf has Two Mommies') and an other-world fantasy called "Among the Silvering Herd."


The Links


My Site: http://alyxdellamonica.com
LJ: http://planetalyx.livejournal.com
Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/AlyxDellamonica
Twitter: https://twitter.com/#!/AlyxDellamonica
G+: https://plus.google.com/106086459950640246872/posts
Tumbler (mostly Instagram Photos): http://alyxdellamonica.tumblr.com/
The UCLA Extension Writers' Program: https://www.uclaextension.edu/
All my TOR articles: http://www.tor.com/Alyx%20Dellamonica#filter
TOR Stories: "The Cage" - http://www.tor.com/stories/2010/07/the-cage
"Among the Silvering Herd" - http://www.tor.com/stories/2012/02/among-the-silvering-herd

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Joshua Palmatier

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