Tuesday 19 March 2013

Delilah Dusticle by AJ York

Book review: Delilah Dusticle by A.J. York

This is a nice short tale for a child to read before coming into their teens.

We are introduced to rich people, hard-working people, business and love, old times and modern reality. I nearly became uncomfortable in one or two parts where I was thinking about a child reading it but each time my worries were soon dispelled by the next development. It is unusual for a children’s book to contain tension but there are definitely one or two places where this was felt, not that it did the story any harm.

Even in a story for children one often wonders whether there is history in the author’s life that relates to part (or all) of the plot. I can only guess that a teenager’s infatuation found its way into this novel hopefully with the intention of showing that things often turn out ok in the end. There is also an air of the false atmosphere that surrounds many comfortably off people. A type of sadness is portrayed of the many people who live in large cities with few or no friends.

All in all this is a good way to entertain your child and to get them thinking a little of adult issues.

Monday 11 March 2013

Mystical Circles by SC Skillman

Book review: Mystical Circles by SC Skillman

Throw a bunch of youthful eccentrics together in a claustrophobic environment and you have the perfect recipe for paranoia. The better people get to know each other the more suspicious they seem to become. Given that the leader seemed like he was trying to run a cult I feared a dark and nasty end to this one but I was pleasantly surprised at how the author turned things into a feel-good finish.

A female journalist finds that her much younger sister has joined a residential group ‘wheel of love’ and fallen for the leader. She goes there with the leader’s permission (who wants publicity) to write an article but with the ulterior motive of bringing home her sister. It is quite a brave move given the confined environment but she fits in reasonably well and likes several of her new companions.

The closed environment gives the author an opportunity to introduce some unpredictable but interesting characters. The group includes a welsh poet, a cleric in trouble with his boss for writing blasphemy, a potentially nymphomaniac girl (though I was pleased to find out later she wasn’t - one of the advantages of a female author), a shaman and a psychologically damaged young man, Rory, who threatens some very nasty moments. It is probably just as difficult to control this group of characters in a novel as it would be in real life but the author does this really well.

The countryside environment with woodland walks and pleasant views took me out of the city and reminded me a need to get away more often. It was easy to see how this could be a restful place where one could readily fall in love with a stranger.

An accountant property guy (the leader’s father) was also staying to try and persuade his son to give the whole thing up due to financial losses. This was made difficult by their personal history going back to marriage break up many years earlier.

All in all it had many possibilities and every time I worked out what I thought would happen in this mystical mystery I was soon proved wrong. Along with Disconnect this is my favourite read of the year so far.

Friday 1 March 2013

In a Season of Dead Weather by Mark Dillon

In a season of dead weather by Mark Dillon

Good collection of short ghost stories, some very scary and others more though provoking.

For those of us who like reading alone late at night this one regularly sends a tingle down your spine. In some of the stories you wonder if people are just paranoid but in others you feel there probably is somewhere in your city where people go down stairs to a different world.

The best one was when a haunted guy commits suicide and then somebody sees the monster that haunted him rolling on his grave in satisfaction.

Importantly for this genre a good UFO type story is included.