Review: Nine Princes in Amber by Roger Zelazny

Nine Princes in Amber (Amber Chronicles, #1)Nine Princes in Amber by Roger Zelazny

My rating: 4 of 5 stars

I discovered Roger Zelazny from Ran Prieur’s recommended books list (scroll all the way to the bottom). Basically, our Earth and reality is one of many, one of countless Shadow worlds. The one true world is Amber, and there are 9 princes who all claim the throne to it. If this smells like Game of Thrones with a hearty dose of The Dark Tower to you, you have an excellent nose.

The story was simple and straightforward, without too many descriptions which would have made me turn the pages in frustration as I had done with The Lord of the Rings. The characters aren’t very well fleshed out, apart from Corwin (the protagoinst), but honestly I didn’t really care: the action and the scope were so grand and the plot development centered around Corwin, with his own very lucid and personalable narration, so engaging from the very first pages to the very last, that I didn’t miss not finding out too much about the rest of the princes. The problem is that the plot isn’t limited to those very last pages. The first book was a good introduction to the world of Amber and Corwin’s story, the internal plot was resolved, a round and bubbly sigh of optimism was left, but the huge events the book basically hints at are barely even put into motion. I suppose that’s a problem with any series in any medium.

Perhaps the thing I liked the most about Zelazny’s writing was his edge, his cheekiness and willingness to play around with expectations. If the rest of the books set in Amber are in a similar style, I’m in for a treat!

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Review: The Waste Lands

The Waste Lands (The Dark Tower, #3)The Waste Lands by Stephen King

My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Finally! I’m done with Dark Tower III: The Waste Lands after more than 3 months of slow reading. Last night, I lay in my bed for more 2 and a half hours straight to finish it, and then I couldn’t go to sleep for another hour because of my mind having gone into overdrive from all the suspense. I pity everyone who had to wait from 1991, when this was published, till 1997 when the sequel was. Mr. King can be as cruel as Blaine if he’s feeling like it. Hah! With one arm tied behind his back!

There’s a lot going on in this book, it starts off from where The Drawing of the Three left us (duh), and it’s a wild ride from there. In the last book we get a good look at two New Yorks of slightly different time frames. Here we see yet another New York, but mostly we see Mid-World, Roland’s world. What happened to this desolate, perverse, stomach-wrenching dimension is slightly less of a mystery by the book’s end, but a lot remains unanswered. If the question “So what happened?” was of a gently curious nature by the end of Book #2, now it’s a worm, eating at my insides! I must know about this world, what happened to it, what it was like before it all, how it connects to our own world. So similar to our own, yet so exotic, destroyed, hopeless and… well, fantastic!

The final 150 pages of the book or so is where it really shines. Not that the rest is bad; Jake’s arc is interesting and very dream-like. But the characters introduced in the final two chapters of the book are intense, dramatic, brilliant, absolutely disgusting, breath-taking. The dialog is captivating, but I must admit, the descriptions of the scenery and backgrounds are sometimes so dense and poetic I have trouble imagining the grandness of the journey.

So whichun of you cullies gonna lend me the nesswan?

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