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SFFaudio EDITORS Jesse Willis The Time Traveler Dani Cutler SFFaudio REVIEWERS Kurt Dietz Steen Hansen Mary Robinette Kowal Scott D. Danielson Tony Smith Mike Hinds Cory Myler Scott A. (Star Trek reviews) Akim Bischoff Stephen Uitti Michael Bekemeyer Steven H. Wilson Paul Cole SFFaudio CONTRIBUTORS Moriond Roy PUBLISHERS: Academic MP3 Audiobooks Atlanta Radio Theatre Company Audible.com Audio Realms Audio Renaissance AudioTheater.com BBC Audiobooks America Blackstone Audio Books In Motion Books On Tape Buzzy Multimedia Brilliance Audio CBC Audio Crazy Dog Audio Theatre Deuce Audio Fictionwise Full Cast Audio Great Northern Audio Harper Audio Infinivox Paperback Digital Podiobooks Radio Repertory Company of America Radio Spirits Random House Audio Recorded Books Reagent Press ReQuest Audiobooks Simon & Schuster Audio Tantor Audiobooks Telltale Weekly Twilight Zone Radio Willamette Radio Workshop Wonder Audio ZBS RESOURCES: Prometheus Radio Theatre The OTR Plot Spot eBay Science Fiction Audiobooks eBay Fantasy Audiobooks ARCHIVES -2007- Jul - Aug - Sep Apr - May - Jun Jan - Feb - Mar -2006- Oct - Nov - Dec Jul - Aug - Sep Apr - May - Jun Jan - Feb - Mar -2005- Oct - Nov - Dec Jul - Aug - Sep Apr - May - Jun Jan - Feb - Mar -2004- Oct - Nov - Dec Jul - Aug - Sep Apr - May - Jun Jan - Feb - Mar -2003- Oct - Nov - Dec Jul - Aug - Sep Apr - May - Jun Mar |
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Wednesday, October 27, 2004
![]() Night On Mispec MoorBy Larry Niven, Read by Warren James ARCHIVED ONLINE - Click here to visit Hour 25 and listen 27 Minutes [UNABRIDGED] Publisher: Hour25Online.com Published: 2001 Themes: / Horror / Science Fiction / War / "Now I know that most of you quite rightly associate Larry's writings with hard SF, not horror. But that doesn't mean he can't write a cracking good horror yarn when he sets his mind to it. But being one of the premiere writers of hard SF; when he writes horror it's with his own unique twist. In Night on Mispec Moor Larry tells a tale about a man trapped in a place where the fog lies thick and close to the ground and where the dead really return to life. And though this story is most certainly horror, it is also hard SF. Way cool and highly memorable." -Warren James, Hour 25 For the 2001 Halloween broadcast of Hour 25, Warren James, the show's host, with the kind permission of author Larry Niven, read the short story "Night On Mispec Moor". This excellent tale was first published in Vertex Magazine's August 1974 issue. Thankfully, internet archiving allows us to still listen to this gem of a story! And though Warren James is not a professional audiobook narrator, his reading is a good! One minor issue though - as with any Hour 25 broadcast the volume has to be turned way up and there is some digitization to the sound. James also includes a short introduction to the story, and its well worth hearing. So if your in the mood for a really spooky hard SF horror story check it out. Tuesday, October 26, 2004
ITConversations debuted a new online audio interview show this week called Voices in Your Head. The description: Can you hear it, even as you read this, speaking to you inside your mind? What are those Voices in Your Head? Host Dave Slusher interviews writers, musicians and other creative people about the effect of technology on their art and vice versa. Dave Slusher's first guest is SF author James Patrick Kelly. Click here to go to ITConversations and listen to the show! And while we're on the subject, the best SF interview show online is Hour 25. Their latest interview is with Laurell K. Hamilton. Monday, October 25, 2004
From the Toot Our Own Horn Department... Announcing Deuce Audio!
The first two titles from our very own audiobook company, Deuce Audio, are available as of today for download from Fictionwise! They are: The Retrieval Artist by Kristine Kathryn Rusch, read by Stefan Rudnicki (2 hours, $4.99) and Shed Skin by Robert J. Sawyer, read by Stephen Hoye (45 minutes, $2.99). Our goal is produce great audiobooks using excellent stories, performed by professionals, and at the best possible price. We hope you like them! Though we've taken this baby step into publishing, be assured that SFFAudio will continue. Because we do this for the love of the stories and how they are told, we don't expect our Deuce Audio publications to influence our objectivity when reviewing other titles. We certainly won't review our own titles here (unless we find an independent voice to do so), nor will we fill your screen with "Buy me!" pop-ups. SFFAudio is a site for fans of science fiction and fantasy audio in all its forms, and it will remain just that. All my best, everyone, and thanks for visiting SFFAudio! Thursday, October 21, 2004
![]() Ringworld’s Children
By Larry Niven; Read by Barrett Whitener 8 CDs - Approx. 9.5 Hours [UNABRIDGED] Publisher: Blackstone Audio Published: 2004 ISBN: 0786185384 Themes: / Science Fiction / Hard SF / Physics / Genetics / Aliens / Nanotechnology / Evolution / The Ringworld is a landmark engineering achievement, a flat band three million times the surface of the Earth, encircling a distant star. Home to trillions of inhabitants, not all of whom are human, and host to amazing technological wonders, the Ringworld is unique in all of the universe. The blurb above is a bit of a lie, no longer is Ringworld unique. There is Rama, Arthur C. Clarke’s giant tube shaped alien habitat, Bob Shaw’s Orbitsville, a huge Dyson’s Sphere built by mysterious aliens and the hungry alien construct called Gaea of John Varley’s Titan. Indeed, there have also been three other books in the Ringworld series – admittedly all of them are set on the same Ringworld. But the first Ringworld novel, published in 1970, was the first of this new kind of SF novel; the novel of the big big thoughts, or as David Gerrold calls it, "the enormous big thing". An idea, a ‘what if’ so massive and so imaginative, so rife with unforeseen consequences that the characters must investigate it just as we do. Kind of like science fiction for science fiction characters! Ringworld was such a big idea in fact, that the three sequel novels were published in an effort to examine the impossible gigantitude of the consequences of its existence. In this the fourth, and perhaps final installment of the Ringworld series, we see more of the problems of existence of such a structure fixed, visit with old characters (Louis Wu, Acolyte, The Hindmost and Tunesmith being major players) and meet some new ones too. There are some genuine surprises here, and some edge of your seat excitement, but as with the previous two sequels the biggest surprise is still the same one from the first novel – and that of course is, just how massively huge the Ringworld is! Its size still staggers the imagination… a narrow ring, only 0.997×106 miles wide, with two perimeter walls climbing 1000 miles high, to hold in the air, the ring itself is 93 million miles in radius, a single spinning world shaped like a ribbon around a star - with a habitable area of over 3 million Earths. What couldn’t happen in a place that big? Author Larry Niven cemented himself as the standard barer of Hard Science Fiction, with the publication of Ringworld. If he had done nothing else, he’d still be thought of as a prodigious figure in the field. But he’s not rested upon his laurels; he’s expanded, refined and continued the Ringworld adventure. In a way, that was a mistake. You can’t top an idea this big by telling more adventures about the same world. On the other hand, I personally wouldn’t have had it any other way. I enjoyed nearly every minute of the nine and a half hours of listening in Ringworld’s Children. In fact, I would have been happy with another nine hours! There were a few parts that were dry, sure, but they didn’t last very long and they moved the plot along. I do wish Niven had spent some more time exploring the inhabitants of his creation; we meet only a few new hominid species, and unlike in previous installments, we don’t get a full sense of their ecological niches. But given that much of the action takes place in space around the Ringworld perhaps it couldn’t be helped. Much of this action is necessary though as many threads from the previous two sequels needed tying up, especially if this is indeed the final chapter in the Ringworld series. Barrett Whitener, who seems to be recording nearly every Blackstone science fiction title coming out these days, was actually not a great choice as reader for Ringworld’s Children. It's not that his reading is poor - it wasn’t. In fact, I like the way Whitener read it, I just think that his tone was all wrong for this particular novel. His various alien voices didn’t sound at all alien. Mark Sherman, who did such a terrific job with the alien voices in Larry Niven’s Protector (also recorded for Blackstone Audio) would have been a much better choice to give voice to Ringworld’s Children and its many alien characters. That said, I still enjoyed the heck out of the audiobook, and I can’t fault Whitener’s performance in the least. When the numbers and the physics are coming fast and furious it’s nice to be given the words by a good reader who can handle the text. Ringworld’s Children, all in all, is truly a worthy addition to the Ringworld novels. Long live Larry Niven! Monday, October 18, 2004
![]() Adventures in Time and Space with Max MerriwellBy Pat Murphy; Read by Johanna Ward 7 Cassettes - Approx. 9.5 hours [UNABRIDGED] Publisher: Blackstone Audio ISBN: 0783128577 Date Published: 2004 Themes: / Science Fiction / Quantum Physics / Pseudonyms / Multiple Universes / The Nature of Fiction / In this novel by Pat Murphy, the main character (Susan) and her friend Pat (er... Pat Murphy) take a cruise from New York to Europe. On this cruise is a fiction writer named Max Merriwell who offers a writing class that an uncertain Susan is eager to take. Max Merriwell writes not only under his own name, but also under the pseudonyms Mary Maxwell and Welton Merrimax. Rather quickly, Welton Merrimax starts to appear at various places on the cruise ship, and so does Mary Maxwell, which confuses everyone because, well, they're supposed to be just pseudonyms. Thus begins an entertaining, wild ride of a novel in which alternate realities intersect and events from Max's novels start to become real. I went to Pat Murphy's website and was pleased to find out that the novel is the third book in a wild experiment. Pat Murphy says, "Adventures in Time and Space with Max Merriwell is an adventure story about the nature of fiction." This nugget opened up so much more of the novel for me - enough so that I'm eager to listen again. It turns out that Murphy published three novels: There and Back Again by Max Merriwell (which is described as the story of The Hobbit retold as space opera), Wild Angel (which "borrows its premise from Tarzan of the Apes") by Mary Maxwell (a pseudonym for Max Merriwell), and this novel, Adventures in Time and Space with Max Merriwell by Pat Murphy. All the novels were published as written by Pat Murphy because her publisher felt the confusion would be too great to overcome here in the real world. Click here for some notes on Pat Murphy's (who apparently is real) website to unravel the full story. With all that said, this delightfully quirky novel works stand-alone. I enjoyed it enough to desire the added depth that finding and reading these other two books and re-listening to this one will undoubtedly provide. Listening again will be a pleasure because Johanna Ward performs well, deftly handling the mayhem that must have had her scratching her head a time or two during production. Her voice is pleasant and a very nice match to this material. Saturday, October 16, 2004
![]() Here are this month's new releases: AUDIO RENAISSANCE There and Back Again: An Actor's Tale by Sean Astin with Joe Layden, read by Sean Astin I'm looking forward to this memoir of Astin's experience working on the Lord of the Rings trilogy. I'm one of the folks who watched every extra goodie on the massive Extended LOTR DVD's. ---------------------------- BLACKSTONE AUDIO Callahan's Con by Spider Robinson, read by Barrett Whitener Barrett Whitener read Spider Robinson's The Callahan Chronicals, which we reviewed on SFFAudio a while back. The Callahan stories are among the most empathic high-quality stories you'll find in the world of science fiction, and this title is likely no different. The description says that Death himself walks into the bar this time... Jesse: I just finished listening to Callahan's Key, also read by Barrett Whitener. Where you've described Robinson's work as "empathic high-quality stories" I would describe it as "high-functioning fan-fiction". That isn't a bad thing, I like the stuff myself, but it certainly won't be to everyone's taste. ---------------------------- HARPER AUDIO A Coyote In The House by Elmore Leonard This is a kids book in the tradition of "Call of The Wild" - told from the animal's perspective. Jesse: If nothing else, crime and western writer Elmore Leonard has a great ear for dialogue, so this should be a fun tale with respect to that. But he's never written juvenile fiction before, so its also unknown territory in some respects. ---------------------------- PAPERBACK DIGITAL Cally's War by John Ringo and Julie Cochrane, read by William Dufris and Christine Marshall A novel by military SF writer and Baen author John Ringo and Julie Cochrane. Cally had been fighting for the future of the human race, but now she is in a war for survival: the survival of her soul... Paperback Digital has also released several OTR audio dramas on Fictionwise.com: "The Green Hills of Earth" by Robert A. Heinlein, "Drop Dead" by Clifford D. Simak, "Destination: Moon" by Robert A. Heinlein, and "With Folded Hands" by Jack Williamson. And look for Charlaine Harris' Vampire Mystery novel Dead Until Dark, which will be released on Halloween. Paperback Digital titles can be purchased on their site (http://www.paperbackdigital.com) or on Fictionwise. Jesse: It should also be noted that Paperback Digital has remastered and cleaned up these 1950s era radio dramas. Something which they sorely needed. ---------------------------- RANDOM HOUSE AUDIO Legends II: New Short Novels by the Masters of Modern Fantasy, Volume III, edited by Robert Silverberg This volume of the Legends II series contains stories by two of my favorites: "The Monarch of the Glen" by Neil Gaiman and "The Yazoo Queen" by Orson Scott Card. I'm a fan of the short novel length - there is so much treasure out there in the novella and novelette size. While I'm talking about these, Legends II, Vol. 1 contains "The Sworn Sword" by George R.R. Martin and "Beyond Between" by Anne McCaffrey, and Legends II, Vol 2 contains "Lord John and the Succubus" by Diana Gabaldon and "Indomitable" by Terry Brooks. Jesse: I look forward to hearing these! The first Legends anthologies were released by HarperAudio last time. Hopefully Random House Audio will do as good a job. Star Wars: Jedi Trial by David Sherman and Dan Cragg, read by Jonathan Davis Random House's Star Wars titles rival Simon and Schuster's Star Trek titles in production value and style. If you enjoy Star Wars stories, these books are quite good. Also quite good is Jonathan Davis, who I first heard when he read Neal Stephenson's Snow Crash. ---------------------------- RECORDED BOOKS Raketty Tam by Brian Jacques, read by Brian Jacques A title in the Redwall fantasy series! Another note from Recorded Books - they have a rental program that looks a lot like Netflix. Unlimited audiobook rentals for $29.99/month. Check it out here. ---------------------------- SIMON AND SCHUSTER AUDIO Night of the Living Dead by John Russo and George Romero An audio drama featuring the original cast! Dark Tower VII by Stephen King, read by George Guidall The final volume of Stephen King's epic series. Stephen King read by George Guidall? Yeah, baby. I'm a Stephen King fan, but have not kept up with this series. I've heard "The Gunslinger" and "The Drawing of the Three", and enjoyed them both - time to start on the rest of them. ---------------------------- COMING SOON! Wil Wheaton, of wilwheaton.net, has published a book called Just a Geek (which is excellent) and I'm thrilled to report that he's recording an audio version. Wil says the audiobook has some extra asides, and that it's more like a performance, or director's cut, than a straight-forward reading. Look for it on his website in the coming weeks! In the meantime, ITConversations has posted audio of Wil's recent performance at Gnomedex, where he read excerpts from the book. Jesse: This sounds like a terrific idea! Wheaton experimented a little with audio blogging a while back - posting to his website by telephone. He's also read at least one audiobook short story that I know of. It can be found in Dove Audio's The Greatest Science Fiction Stories of the 20th Century (which is available on Audible.com). The story is called "Why I left Harry's All Night Hamburgers" by Lawrence Watt-Evans. ---------------------------- If you've got something you'd like to show up on our monthly New Releases post, write me and let me know. Enjoy, everybody! Thursday, October 14, 2004
![]() 84.2 Minutes Of Algis BudrysBy Algis Budrys, Read by Algis Budrys 1 Cassette - 84.2 Minutes [UNABRIDGED] Publisher: Unifont Company Published: 1995 ISBN: 1886211019 Themes: Science Fiction / Interstellar Travel / War / Immortality / Post Apocalypse / Fairy Tales / Alternate History / Parallel Worlds / The four stories in this rare collection are densely packed with terrific science fiction ideas and all four share a haunted bittersweet quality. Algis Budrys lets the power of his text completely rule over his performance. Budrys barely distinguishes between the characters; he reads it in an almost conspiratorial style saying, "If you don't like them, there's very little more I can say. But I secretly think you will like them, in which case there's nothing much more I need to say". His philosophy has extended into the production as well, this is a very utilitarian audiobook, pages can be heard turning in the background while he reads, the cover art is completely non-existent and the title is hardly evocative of much at all, but despite it all 84.2 Minutes Of Algis Budrys is a worthy addition to any science fiction audio fan's library. The only hard part may be getting a hold of one! Stories Included: "The Distant Sound Of Engines" Severely maimed in an automotive accident, a patient recovering in hospital listens as his roommate, a dying man spouts formulas for faster than light travel, the alloy specifications for ultra strong spacecraft hulls and everything else necessary to make humans an interstellar species. First published in The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction's March 1959 issue. "Explosions!" On a distant water-world that was long ago colonized by humans, a pirate king comes up with a plan to unify the many islands of his planet, and do it by force. “Explosions!” was written under the pseudonym William Scarff and first appeared in Tomorrow Speculative Fiction's April 1993 issue. "The Price" The Earth's civilizations have been destroyed, fewer than 100 people survive, mankind's last hope is an enigmatic hunchback who's been imprisoned for more than 150 years. He'd been chained in various dungeons or enslaved in forced labour camps, but when Europe was annihilated in a global war, and every person there was destroyed, he alone walked out. First published in The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction's February 1960 issue "Never Meet Again" England surrendered in 1940, by 1941 German U-boats ruled the Atlantic, by 1942 the Russian's had surrendered at Stalingrad. Now fifteen years later a respected researcher in the Greater German Reich has finished his life's work, a machine that can access alternate worlds. “Never Meet Again” was first published in the 1958 anthology The Unexpected Dimension. Monday, October 11, 2004
![]() Soundings
Radio drama by Jeff Green 1 MP3-CD - 7.75 hours [AUDIO DRAMA] ISBN: 0788763334 Date Published: 1998 Themes: / Science Fiction / Fantasy / Radio drama / Private Investigator / Atlantis / Christmas / Vigilante / Psychiatry / Plague / Sound / Jeff Green has really created something special here. Included in Soundings are eleven full cast radio dramas. The stories are very good, and the sound? Fantastic. Green really knows how to tell stories in this medium. Sound is used to excellent effect - it is not there to enhance the story in many cases, it is a vital part of the story itself. In "Somebody Talking To You", voices heard through the media have effects on people. The sound of those voices stays with me. In "Spaxterback", a computer creates an image of a person known only through the machine's memory of past media (comic books, television, etc.). The conversations between computer and Spaxter sound both powerful and intimate. In "Vigilante", a TV obsessed psychic kills people he's sees on the news - the sound of him flipping through the channels in search of a victim is disturbing indeed. And in "Flash", the sound of the characters being shown visions of what might be past lives is mesmerizing. I enjoyed the stories as well. "Plague", the story of the survivors of a plague that forces them to live under domes, was a particularly excellent example, though I would have preferred less exposition in the form of news stories (though they were riveting) and a longer drama to tell the story instead. I enjoyed "Spaxterback" which I mentioned earlier, for its dialogue between creator and created. "Psychotherapy" was a twisted pretzel of a horror story made even more enjoyable if you are a fan of Edgar Allen Poe. "Xmas is Coming to the District of Drudge" is an atypical Christmas story that reminds us all to live a little. The actors did a great job at keeping everything believable, and the music was first-rate. This is some fine storytelling. I really enjoyed it. Check out Jeff Green's Stranger Media website for a rich multimedia experience. Friday, October 08, 2004
![]() Tales From The Crypt
Audio Drama - Performed by Tim Curry, Gina Gershon, Luke Perry, Oliver Platt, John Ritter, Campbell Scott and others 4 CDs - Aprox 3 hrs. [UNABRIDGED] ISBN: 1565116747 Date Published: 2002 Published by Highbridge Audio Themes: Fantasy / Horror / Crime / Murder / Humor / Undead / Music / Produced by the now defunct Sci-Fi Channel's Seeing Ear Theatre, these seven audio plays are based on EC comicbook stories from the 1950s, skillfully updated and masterfully produced its one of the best anthology audio drama series of the last 25 years! Unfortunately, only seven of the eight episodes actually produced are included. And that is the biggest disappointment with this collection. The actors are awesome, the sound effects and music fill the audio landscape without drowning out their performances - but all this would be nothing without good writing, and again we've lucked-out. All seven tales are a whole lot of fun. Each episode is bookended by the Cryptkeeper's introduction and comments on the story. The Cryptkeeper is voiced by John Kassir, the same actor as in the television series. This undead host's obsession with horror is only exceeded with his obsession with frightfully bad puns. It is really good stuff boys and ghouls! "Island of Death" A dot-com millionaire with a penchant for movie trivia crash lands on an isolated tropical island and becomes embroiled in a twisted cross between a reality television show and Odysseus' encounter with the sea-nymph Kalypso. Luke Perry (Jeremiah) is teamed with Gina Gershon (Bound) for the least successful tale in this collection. Gershon and Perry are great, but the action is a might hard to follow. "A Little Stranger" They say politics makes for strange bedfellows, but did they really mean vampires and werewolves? Set in 1968, this is the sole episode without a major Hollywood star in the lead. Randy Maggiore and Lisa Nichole star, and make the horrific crossbreed of terror and comedy. "Tight Grip" Told from a truly bizarre perspective, this is a tale of a young concert violinist is boxed in by a terrible secret stars Tim Curry (The Rocky Horror Picture Show). Original and really scary. "By the Fright of the Silvery Moon" A modern day sheriff in New Mexico faces deadly perils, irate environmentalists and angry ranchers. John Ritter (Three's Company) stars as the sheriff. "Zombie!" The longest tale in the collection. An immigration lawyer who has stolen his client's money retires to mysterious Haiti. What he finds there may just be enough to overcome a powerful zombie curse. Oliver Platt (Funny Bones) stars. An immersive and fascinating tale of horrific Caribbean curse that makes you crave the sweetmeats. "Carrion Death" A truly excellent "horrality" tale. A bookish schoolteacher - disgusted with his inept students - goes on a crime spree and lands himself in prison. When he escapes from custody into the desert the only thing that can stop him are the talking ants. Campbell Scott (The Spanish Prisoner) seems to revel in his character's clear insanity. "Fare Tonight, Followed by Increasing Clottiness!" A vampire hunter takes cab ride to bloody peril during a citywide vampire outbreak. An ingenious pairing of a modern day Van Helsing and an East Indian taxi driver. Keith David (The Chronicles Of Riddick), is awesome in this one, and not just for his iconic maniacal laughter. Aasif Mandvi (Spider-Man 2) is also excellent, playing his meek humor close to the vest! Wednesday, October 06, 2004
![]() Something Wicked This Way Comes
By Ray Bradbury; Read by Paul Hecht 7 CD's - 8 hours [UNABRIDGED] Publisher: Recorded Books ISBN: 0788746375 Date Published: 1999 Themes: / Fantasy / Halloween / Carnival / Magic / Supernatural / Aging / First of all, it was October. A rare month for boys. -- Prologue, Something Wicked This Way Comes As I write this, it's a cool October night. The trees outside are starting to drop autumn leaves. It's not difficult, especially after finishing this novel, to see why October turns my thoughts to Ray Bradbury more than any other author. He can instill the spirit of Halloween in a person the same way that Dickens instills the spirit of Christmas, and Something Wicked This Way Comes is his work that does it best. Paul Hecht, in one of his finest narrating performances, reads this unabridged version of Bradbury's novel, and adds an infectious enthusiasm to the poetic prose. I was captured by his performance. The novel revolves around Will Halloway and Jim Nightshade, who are best friends. They are both nearly thirteen years old, and it's the week before Halloween. Into town comes a lightning rod salesman who warns of an approaching storm. Later that same night a carnival comes to town, full of bizarre people and sinister magic. The boys are immediately drawn to it and, after an unsettling event involving a carousel, know that they are dealing with something dangerous and powerful. The two boys are very different people, so they react to the carnival, its people, and its magic in different ways. Something Wicked This Way Comes is a novel full of images. The carnival, the carousel, the boys themselves running here and there, the lightning rod covered with ancient symbols... those images come through with crystal clarity in this audiobook. Happy Halloween! Monday, October 04, 2004
![]() The Curse Of ChalionBy Lois McMaster Bujold; Read by Lloyd James 15 CDs - Approx 19.5 Hours [UNABRIDGED] Publisher: Blackstone Audio Published: 2004 ISBN: 0786185988 Themes: / Fantasy / High Fantasy / Court Intrigue / Politics / Religion / Magic / Romance / Lord Cazaril has been, in turn, courtier, castle-warder, and captain; now he is but a crippled ex-galley slave seeking nothing more than a menial job in the kitchens of the Dowager Provincara, the noble patroness of his youth. But Cazaril finds himself promoted to the exalted and dangerous position of tutor to Iselle, the beautiful, fiery sister of the heir to Chalion’s throne. Cazaril was a lord and a soldier of Chalion, but that was before he was sold into slavery. Years later, having been freed by chance of war, it is a broken Cazaril, a traumatized shell of his former proud self, who walks away. He’s learned the lessons of a slave, to expect nothing and hope for little. So when this cowed former lord begs for a place in minor noble's household he is surprised to be appointed not to simple kitchen duties but instead as tutor to a young princess of the realm. From the start of The Curse Of Chalion our sympathies are with Lord Cazaril. Not only is he a figure of tremendous suffering, but his situation is made still worse by the fact that he has smarts enough to know just how far he's fallen. But the rub comes more from the fact that his sudden appointment will doubtless draw the attention of those who betrayed him to the life of a slave and who may seek to more permanently dispose of him. Not only must Cazaril educate the young princess, he must also somehow stave off the powerful forces in league against him while breaking an ancient curse placed upon his charge, the heir to Chalion’s throne. His new responsibilities requires nothing less. Lois McMaster Bujold is best known for her Miles Vorkosigan science fiction novels, which if you haven't read them are space opera at their most operatic. What Bujold did there for space opera then, she now does here for fantasy with The Curse Of Chalion, the start of a whole new fantasy series. And what a challenge it is! She’s built an entirely new world with the very best kind of magic – magic with rules and consequences. And this thing has backstory too. Chalion is not just some neo-Tolkien rip off, that uses the tropes you’ve come to expect in order to tell some slight variation on an old and tired tale. Quite the contrary, it is a fully fleshed out fantasy setting with a fascinating and well thought out religion that plays a central role in the unfolding of the story. Also of note is an unexpected mention of one character’s homosexuality – while it plays little role in the plot proper it is a refreshing touch that symbolizes the modern and realistic approach Bujold taken in constructing her world. Chalion is chock full of motivated and interesting characters, classic political machinations, two genuine romances, surprising plot twists and everyone’s favorite theme, betrayal. This is the equivalent of a seven-course meal for any audiobook listener – and it isn’t even too long compared to most fantasy novels published these days. I truly enjoyed this tale. It is really good stuff and that is mostly due, I think, to Bujold working with some really fascinating ideas, not the least of which is one scene which postulates a way to reconcile the idea of both human free will and the will of the gods – determinacy - that pesky problem of fate. Even better is that it isn't one that I'd heard of before – heady cool stuff! The few sins Bujold commits are minor and might be virtues in many listener’s ears – there are a just a few places where the pace flagged and the action sequences were few and brief - though they really are more realistic than we have come to expect with fantasy. The Curse Of Chalion is likely to become one of the most beloved of medieval fantasy novels of the early 21st century. This story has genuine surprises, its own internal logic, and intelligent, thoughtful characters who are genuinely fun to hang out with. I really liked it! Blackstone Audiobooks has made The Curse Of Chalion available in several formats: A 13 cassette, (retail or library packaged) audiobook, a 15 CD (retail or library packaged) audiobook and 2-disc CD-MP3 set. We review here the CD version and this is the first Blackstone Audio CD set I've ever tired. I'd always preferred the cassette format in the past but I'm really pleased with the simplicity of Blackstone's design and track spacing. The library set, pictured above comes in the attractive and durable plastic case, with a full color paper insert cover. The cover art here is inspired by the hardcover's original art, and though they are similar I think the Blackstone’s version is even more attractive! Reader Lloyd James does a marvelous job with the exposition; he gives many regional accents to the numerous characters and plays the three main female characters with three slightly variant falsettos – no small feat. I can honestly say, fans of both Bujold and original fantasy tales can rejoice, The Curse Of Chalion and this Blackstone Audiobook are everything you've been looking for! Friday, October 01, 2004
![]() Twisted Rhymes
Performed by Bob Harper 1 CD - 52 minutes Published by: Bob Harper Productions / Horror / Royalty / Ghosts / Zombies / Medieval / Tavern / Revenge / I played this CD not knowing at all what to expect. I heard some music and some background voices that quickly established the setting of a royal feast. Then the voice of Bob Harper started to perform a poem and I was pulled right in. The poem starts well enough "...it was a marvelous affair..." but I realized that the affair was not so marvelous. The king, not sane, describes his burdens to the lords in attendence... and things get horrifying from there. I immediately played the 5 minute track again. And again. Like a good song, I wanted to keep listening, but I continued on and listened to the rest of the CD in one mesmerized sitting. Harper's resonant tone in combination with the sound effects and music - it just works beautifully. These poems are great scary fun, suitable for family listening; though some scenes are definitely intense, I would not call the horror "graphic". They are more in the Poe tradition - in fact, a few of the tracks are influenced directly enough by Poe to be called homage. The entire CD was a very pleasant surprise. These ten short horror stories left me a nice creepy feeling this season the likes of which I haven't experienced for a long time. Highly recommended! You can buy this at Horrorsound, the website for Bob Harper Productions. -2007- Jul - Aug - Sep Apr - May - Jun Jan - Feb - Mar -2006- Oct - Nov - Dec Jul - Aug - Sep Apr - May - Jun Jan - Feb - Mar -2005- Oct - Nov - Dec Jul - Aug - Sep Apr - May - Jun Jan - Feb - Mar -2004- Oct - Nov - Dec Jul - Aug - Sep Apr - May - Jun Jan - Feb - Mar -2003- Oct - Nov - Dec Jul - Aug - Sep Apr - May - Jun Mar | ||