Thursday, October 28, 2010

OUP Dark Fantasy Event


On the evening of Wednesday 27th October Oxford University Press hosted a Dark Fantasy event in The Drawing Room of the House of St Barnabas in Soho. The purple uplighting, chandeliers, and mirrors of the room were complemented by a liberal scattering of carved pumpkins, not to mention a furry spider and a rather wonderful Venetian mask. Where better to gather for an evening of literary chat and spooky readings?


William Hussey, complete with large and distinctly hirsute spider adorning his left shoulder, opened the readings with an excerpt from Gallows at Twilight, the second book of his Witchfinder trilogy, out on 6th January 2011. His relish in describing the Crowden sisters feasting on children reassured us that the stomach churning gore and shudder fest of the first book will be continuing in the second, right down to something he tantalisingly described as the ‘infamous shopping-bag line’!


Rhiannon Lassiter came next with a reading from Ghost of a Chance, also out on 6th January. Rhiannon came to the event with a large supporting cast, including her august mother, Mary Hoffman, sporting the be-feathered mask previously mentioned.  Rhiannon came to dark teen fantasy via science fiction, magic realism and thrillers and it was clear that all had played a role in shaping this book. There were shudders aplenty in this reading: definitely not one for the faint-hearted.


Joss Stirling completed the evening’s readings, with an excerpt from Finding Sky, her first novel in this persona  and published earlier in October. Dressed in a sparkly black dress she more than looked the part and opened her talk with a brief discussion of her theory that the English are prone to periodic bursts of the gothic (or should that be gothick given the historical nature of the discussion?)  The book was written with a very specific teenage girl audience in mind, and several had come along to the event to vouchsafe their approval.  The reading gave more than a glimpse of the nature of the book: psycho-horror underpinned by the humour inherent in an Anglo-American culture clash. Sadly we didn’t get a glimpse of what Joss described as her deep hatred of Las Vegas in the reading but I am assured that we will find it in the novel!
This was an exhilarating event that gave a suitably murky teaser to some very dark books.

Tuesday, October 12, 2010

Review: Behemoth by Scott Westerfeld


Behemoth is the second in a series that started with Leviathan by Scott Westerfeld of Uglies fame and as you might expect, given that parentage, this is an historical novel with a considerable and thought-provoking twist. So, assume that Darwin not only came up with natural selection but that he also pre-empted Crick and Watson, discovered DNA, or ‘life-threads’ as they are called here, and then set about fabricating all kinds of species to help mankind. Then assume that the new ‘technology’ is only accepted by Britain and her allies, whilst Germany pursues a more historically accurate technological development, albeit, unwittingly influenced by the ‘Darwinist’ fabrications. Now place all that in the historical setting of 1914, and add Alek, the young heir to the Hapsburg throne, and Deryn, a girl pretending to be a (male) midshipman aboard the airship Leviathan.
Leviathan ended with Alek and Deryn, now good friends, baby-sitting a trio of mysterious eggs for the redoubtable Dr Barlow (Darwin’s own descendent) and headed towards ‘Constantinople’.  In Behemoth they reach Constantinople but Dr Barlow’s plans to win over the Sultan, stop the Clanker (the Darwinist term for German) advance eastwards and open up the shipping lanes to supply Russia’s fighters, go catastrophically wrong and it is down to Alek and Deryn to turn things round and keep the Ottomans from becoming another Clanker power.
Historians will be intrigued. Much of the environment of this series is historically accurate, right down the 1914 British Embassy in Istanbul not containing anyone who could speak Turkish! Even the names of some of the characters (Admiral Wilhelm Souchon for example) are accurate. But the means of fighting, the way of living is entirely different because of that mind-bending beastie-fabricating twist.
And this is where the fact that this is an illustrated book becomes so important. In Leviathan Keith Thompson’s monochrome drawings superbly pointed up the difference between the ‘fabs’ and the Clanker monstrosities: one all smooth, sinuous lines, and misty depths; the other sharp profiles and harsh lines. In Behemoth Thompson also gets a chance to depict the Ottoman synthesis of the two technologies, producing haunting images of enormous machines, some with almost human features. There is a delightfully early-twentieth century feel to these drawings, whilst at the same time they are undeniably modern. The attenuated figures and impish faces are reminiscent of Chris Riddell’s Edge Chronicles characters, and some of the battle scenes are pure steampunk, but many of the internal scenes would not be out of place in a Sherlock Holmes story.
Behemoth, likes its predecessor, Leviathan, is chock full of action, mystery, deception, and even the early stirrings of love. It raises fascinating questions about man’s relationship to beasts and the extent to which they should be manipulated for our benefit.  It also probes issues around gender expectations which are still not fully resolved today. 12 year olds would no doubt enjoy the series but the more philosophical and ethical content might be more appropriate to a slightly older audience.

Originally written for writeaway.org.uk