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Hugh Likes Fiction: Radiance

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Radiance
Written by Cathryne M. Valente
Published by Tor
Radiance
Where does cinema end and the real world begin?  Can a camera really film the truth?  And which is more real?  Life, or the film that captures it?  These are the questions that overshadow the life of documentary filmmaker Severin Unck.  Filmed from the moment she appeared as a baby in a basket on the doorstep of Gothic director Percival Unck, she has constantly rejected his brand of fantasy in favor of the truth.  Living in an alternate reality where movies never advanced past black-and-white silent films and every planet and moon in the solar system is both habitable and welcoming, she documents food riots on Mars, end of the world parties on Neptune, and of course, her own larger than life childhood.  But when Severin disappears on an ill-fated voyage to document the destruction of a Venusian settlement, the truth may be the one thing that is indistinguishable.
Compiled from witness interviews, abandoned film treatments, and radio transcripts, Radiance is an ambitious and strange epistolary novel about the life of a realist documentarian in a fabulist universe.  The novel rarely follows a conventional prose format, and when it does, the authenticity of these sections is explicitly suspect.  But the fascinating worlds that Valente creates make sifting through the story puzzle she creates a sheer delight.  The walls between the events of Severin and her associates’ lives, and that of their film counterparts jumble together in an epic spanning a night flower-carpeted Pluto to a tropical Venus that is home to the Callowhales, island-sized aquatic creatures whose milk is essential for long-term survival in space.  But of course, they aren’t really whales, and their milk isn’t really milk.
In this novel, Valente invites us into an editing booth and lays out all these pieces in a lush, fantastic sci-fi mystery.  Like Vonnegut’s Slaughterhouse Five, It leaves the challenge of constructing a linear narrative to the reader, and leaves the reader not with the satisfaction of a completed story, but the wonder of a messy, complicated, and beautiful life.  This novel is not to be missed.

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Hugh Likes Fiction: Lustlocked

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Lustlocked
Written by Matt Wallace
Published by Tor
Lustlocked
The second novella in Wallace’s “Sin du Jour” series, Lustlocked delivers with more of the hijinks, magic, and profanity that are his stock in trade.
Having survived their first gig, newbies Lena and Darren are brought on as provisional chefs, just in time for the next big job.  Sin du Jour has been contracted for the wedding of wedding of the Goblin King’s son to a mortal woman, and it is going to be a party to remember.
But before you go picturing little green men in tuxes, Goblins are, in fact, the opposite.  The most beautiful of God’s creatures, they secretly rule the entertainment industry, and eat only the finest gold.  Their ruler is exactly who you think, tight pants and all.
When Sin du Jour’s resident crone meddles to encourage goblin society to be more accepting of their new princess, the results quickly get out of control.
In spite of the unfortunate timing of the books release, this is another rollicking, messy adventure, and fans of Envy of Angels will find plenty to love in this worthy sequel.  All of the colorful characters return, and are in the same over-the-top form.  We get a bit more character depth as they content with lust spirits, homicidal spells incarnated as Hanna-Barbera characters, and panicked starlets.  It is a skewering of Hollywood that only Matt Wallace could come up with, and it is well worth the time this short-course will take to devour.
One of the things I really enjoyed about this entry is that he focuses the action at the company headquarters and the wedding.  “Envy of Angels” split time between the chefs and the procurement team, and felt a little spread out.  This time, Ritter and company’s adventure is split off into a separate short story, “Small Wars,” which is included with the ebook.  It’s a poignant little tale, and serves as a nice counterpoint to the glitz and wackiness of the novella.
Lustlocked is another course of dark, hilarious epicurean urban fantasy.  I’ll be eagerly awaiting the next Sin du Jour entree in June.

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Hugh Likes Fiction: Envy of Angels

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Envy of Angels
Written by Matt Wallace
Published by Tor
EoA
What would you do for your dream job?  Two struggling line chefs are forced to grapple with that question when they are hired by Sin Du Jour, a very exclusive catering company with a most unusual clientele.
Sin Du Jour caters for demons.  And goblins, and a host of other supernatural creatures that the rest of the world thinks are myths.  But when Sin Du Jour is contracted to serve a post-treaty signing banquet for warring demon tribes, the menu might be more than they can stomach.
Filled with quirky characters, shocking twists, and clever high concepts, Matt Wallace’s Envy of Angels is a delightfully weird novella.  He has a wonderful talent of pulling out a new reveal just when you think the story has gone as far as it can.  It’s not an adventure so much as it is a magic show.  You keep turning the page less to see if the heroes will make it than to see what kind of three-headed fire-breathing rabbit Wallace will pull out of his hat next.
He mixes this with an ability to draw out sympathy for his characters in remarkably efficient language.  He can make you hate a character and then deliver a get-punch you never saw coming in the space of a single paragraph.  It makes for a fast read that is difficult to put down.
This brief and blustery novella might not be for everyone, however.  The short length and large cast means that as much as I was rooting for these characters, I didn’t get to know them quite as well as I’d have liked to.  We get one or two details, then the book barrels onward.  Much of the second act is also set away from the kitchen, which puts supposed main characters Lena and Darren out of the reader’s eye to follow another team of Sin Du Jour employees.  It still makes for an interesting read, but it isn’t a traditional narrative by any stretch.  The ending also feels a bit abrupt.
Even though it doesn’t quite fill the belly as much as a novel, Envy of Angels is a satisfying first course in Matt Wallace’s “Sin Du Jour” series.  Check it out in print or ebook!

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Hugh Likes Fiction: Star Wars Aftermath

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Hugh Likes Fiction: Star Wars Aftermath

Written by Chuck Wendig

Published by Del Ray Books

aftermath

“Star Wars” isn’t about war.  The movies are adventures, with thrilling chases, dazzling special effects, and last-minute rescues.  Throw in a few cute aliens and droids for comic relief, and cinema history is born.

This isn’t to say I don’t like Star Wars. They are (at least three) of my favorite films.  But there was always a feeling of slight-of-hand about the consequences.  We watch the destruction of Alderaan from the bridge of the Death Star, not the surface.  We hear a lot about Jabba’s grip on the Outer Rim, but what we see is the pleasure barge.  There is a lot of grungy corners in the Star Wars universe, but the movies focus on the brightness of the lightsabers.  Valuing plot over character, and spectacle over consequence, the films, particularly the prequels, are fun, but never quite mature.

With Star Wars Aftermath, the first novel set after “Return of the Jedi” since Disney did away with the previous ‘extended universe,’ Chuck Wendig has certainly pushed the property towards adulthood.  That isn’t to say the book is ‘mature’ in the sense of gore and sex, although both skirt the edges.  Like the title implies, this is a novel about what happens when the battle ends, and examines whether they ever really do.

Wendig takes the bold step of delivering a Star Wars tie-in that has almost no beloved characters in it.  Luke is nowhere to be seen, and Han and Chewy show up for a brief two-page interlude.  Instead, our heroine is Norra Wexley, Rebel pilot and survivor of the Battle of Endor.  After following Wedge Antilles through the second Death Star, she’s returned to her home planet of Akiva to collect her teenaged son and start a new life for themselves.  But their reunion is complicated.  The remnants of the Empire are gathering on Akiva for a summit.  Her remote, Outer Rim world is blockaded.  She evades it, but Wedge, in the area on a routine scouting mission, isn’t so lucky.  And then there is the fact that her son Temmen, a technical genius and junker, has gotten himself in deep trouble with a local crime lord.  He’d rather stay and fight it out with the criminals than leave the planet with his absentee mother.

While Wendig’s present tense style is a bit to get used to, and this particular entry could have used another editing pass in parts, he does a great job of delivering these characters and fleshing them out.  Also excellent are the interludes, which take the reader across the galaxy and into the lives of anyone from newly named Chancellor Mon Mothma to a back-world farmer trying to keep his sons, each having chosen a faction, from killing each other.  These feel like the complex, emotional scenes George Lucas left out.  The characters are not just a monolithic band of evil facing off against a team of scrappy yet hopeful rag-tag heroes.  Wendig shows us once-idealistic people  on both sides, ground down by years of violence.  It’s a brave and striking move, but I think it pays off, while still delivering a solid adventure story.

Speaking of brave moves and what Lucas left out, this next bit will be a bit spoilery, but needs to be addressed.  Wendig has included not one, but three queer characters in the story, and has been getting a lot of flack for it.  This is unwarranted, and the reveal for one of them is certainly something I had spoiled for me.  The other two are minor characters mostly uninvolved with the action, Norra’s sister and her wife.  That’s right, Wendig also brought gay marriage to the Galaxy, and good for him.

Often, telling a story with diverse characters isn’t lauded, but greeted as something that simply should be done.  And the disincentive to include these characters is strong.  The novel has come under a hail of one star Amazon reviews for forcing the issue ‘down our throats,’ as one reviewer so eloquently put it.

I think this is a big deal, and we should be noting it.  And then continuing to support Wendig’s approach, in which diversity is not something to be overcome or avoided, but a facet of his deeply rich and interesting characters.  Our fantasy worlds are reflections of our own ideals, the landscapes of our collective imaginations.  The original trilogy had a handful of women, only three of whom had speaking roles.  It had a few aliens, Lando Calrissian, and an entire cast of young, white, and canonically speaking, straight men.  Chuck Wendig’s view of the Galaxy is a bit more complicated, but it’s the Star Wars I’d rather see going forward.  If this is the face of the new Expanded Universe, I’m ready for a lot more stories in a galaxy far, far away.

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