julesjones: (Default)
If you like dark urban fantasy, buy this pair of books from the Book View Cafe sale -- Dead of Light, and its sequel Light Errant, by Chaz Brenchley. 50% coupon applied automatically at the checkout until the end of today. My reviews from LibraryThing:

Dead of Light

Benedict Macallan doesn't share his family's talent -- nor their taste for power and violence. He turned his back on them; walked out of the family, if not out of the town that they control. But when a cousin is murdered in a manner that promises danger to the whole family, he's pulled back in against his will. Only for the funeral, only for long enough to say goodbye to a cousin he loved in spite of everything -- but then the body count starts to mount, and whatever Ben may feel about his family, they're his *family*.

The publisher calls it a horror novel, but it's more of a story about a Mafia-like family, seen through the eyes of a dropout member who understands how they look from both the inside and the outside. The horror element comes in the weapon used by the family to maintain control of their territory, one that's only hinted at initially, and gradually revealed during the first half of the book. Power corrupts, and the Macallan clan has held power for a very long time. Now someone is reflecting that power and threat back at them, killing Macallans as casually as they've killed others. Ben's left trying to protect a family he despises and that mostly despises him; and the outside friends who are afraid of him now they've been reminded exactly who he is; and himself. But Ben has no power of his own...

Brenchley deftly interweaves a coming of age story with a murder mystery, gradually building a picture of a strange but only too human family, and Ben's love-hate relationship with them. There's some fine world-building and character development to back up the rising tension as Ben tries to solve the lethal riddle. And the use of language is superb, making the book a joy to read for the pure pleasure of the prose. It's not exactly your traditional whodunnit, but the magic elements are never used to cheat the reader, and the clues are there for those who want to play the game. Dead of Light is both lyrical and a gripping, fast-paced read.

http://bookviewcafe.com/bookstore/book/dead-of-light/

Light Errant

Ben Macallan fled abroad at the end of the first book, away from his gangster family and away from any temptation to use his supernatural abilities. But even so he finds himself in a situation where he has to intervene or watch a friend suffer. His promise to himself broken, he gets on his motorbike and heads for home.

But home isn't what it was. The city has finally found a way to defy the Macallans and their uncanny powers of life and death. Only the Macallan men have power, and their women are now hostages. Ben is sick of death and destruction, but a rescue, never mind a peace deal, may be beyond even his extraordinary talent.

It can be read as a standalone if need be, but I think is much better read in sequence with Dead of Light. That way you get a full appreciation of the growth in Ben, as he not only learns to deal with his own newly discovered talent, but convinces key members of his generation of the family to find another way to use theirs. It doesn't have quite the same impact as the first novel, because you don't have the suspense of wondering just how the Macallan clan control the city, but it's still an intense ride with a book that's well out of the usual run of urban fantasy.

Light Errant is out of print in its original paper editions from NEL, but has been re-released in ebook format by Book View Cafe, along with Dead of Light. You can find samples of both books at the BVC website. And maybe if enough of us buy them, Chaz will write a third...

http://bookviewcafe.com/bookstore/book/light-errant/
julesjones: (Default)
And because I have spent the last week wrestling with laptops old and new, I failed to point out that the Book View Cafe summer sale is on until the end of 28/7/14. Half price on one hundred books, many of which I can personally recommend, or intend to buy now based on reading other books by those authors. I had meant to itemise these, but it will have to wait until tomorrow. :-(

http://bookviewcafe.com/bookstore/category/bvc-sale/
julesjones: (Default)
Earlier this week desperance aka Chaz Brenchley informed his flist that Book View Cafe is holding a sale. Alas, the BVC blog has been updated to say the sale is temporarily on hold courtesy of a software problem, but they expect to resume shortly. I shall be keeping an eye out, and I recommend that the ebook readers amongst you do so as well.

Now, I am not completely unbiased in this matter, for BVC includes some of my friends and acquaintances amongst their number, not least being Chaz himself. But I really am being unbiased when I say that if you like urban fantasy and you have not yet read Chaz'z Dead of Light and Light Errant you should do so. I've also had a number of random offerings from BVC courtesy of LibraryThing Early Reviewers, both sf&f and romance, and while I haven't given them all five stars I haven't regretted the time spent on any of them.

Also, BVC does not believe in using the evil that is DRM...

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