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John Lambshead

Autor von Lucy's Blade

19+ Werke 273 Mitglieder 7 Rezensionen

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Dr John Lambshead designed the award-winning computer game, Frederick Forsythe's Fourth Protocol, which was the first icon-driven game, was editor of Games Puzzles and Wargames News, and has written a number of wargaming rules supplements for Games Workshop. He also wrote the officially licensed Dr mehr anzeigen Who gaming rules for Warlord Games. He was co-author, with Rick Priestley, of Tablelop Wargames, A Designer and Writers Handbook (Pen Sword Books, 2016). When not designing games he is a novelist writing SFF for Bane Books. He lives in Rainham, Kent. weniger anzeigen

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The two Lambshead stories are pretty good but are much less than half of this slim book. The Flint story is not bad either BUT it has been printed twice before. Once in a collection of his own stories, Worlds Two, and once in the anthology The Aethers of Mars. I might have purchased this book anyway if I had known (I'm fond of Lambshead's writing and he hasn't published much) but I think that this should have been disclosed.
 
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bw42 | Aug 2, 2019 |
Pretty good. The way they travelled in hyperspace on bikes was pretty cool! The seductive female character was irritating, and I don't know that I got all the rationales for things happening in a particular way. It wasn't until the end that I learned this is based somewhat on George Washington's life, so it may just be a case of fictionalized truth being stranger than actual fiction. I'm looking forward to the next one.
 
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4hounds | Oct 27, 2014 |
ORIGINALLY POSTED AT Fantasy Literature.

Sir Francis Walsingham, Queen Elizabeth’s spymaster, has asked Dr. John Dee to summon a demon so he can ask it questions about who is threatening the queen. Just as the demon arrives, though, something goes wrong and the demon jumps into the body of Lady Lucy Dennys, Walsingham’s pretty ward. The demon, who calls herself Lilith, endows Lucy with superpowers, so when England is threatened by malevolent forces, Lucy starts kicking ass in her petticoats.

I like the premise and plot of John Lambshead’s Lucy’s Blade and its science-fantasy twist on where demons come from (Lilith is a future being who comes to Earth to study her ancestors). I also like the Elizabethan setting. The characters were mostly well done, especially Queen Elizabeth (I wish we had spent more time with her — she was a great character), Walsingham’s secretary Simon Tunstall, and the pirate William Hawkins.

Lucy’s Blade was unique and diverting, but it didn’t meet its potential, mostly because it simply lacked style. Lambshead’s sentences are short, choppy, mostly of similar structure (usually with the subject at the beginning of the sentence), and lacking creativity in word choice and figurative language. These are two consecutive paragraphs on pages 129-130 of the hardback:

"Simon sat down beside Lucy. Gwilym leaned against the wall by the door where he could watch anyone entering. A servant came in with glasses of hypocras. This expensive sweet liqueur, imported by Venetians from Smyrna, was a rare treat. The servant passed around plates of sugared pastries and pears.

The theatre was a hexagon open to the sky in the centre. The stage was a raised area against the front wall. Two highly decorated pillars held up a canopy that protected the actors from the elements. The Underside of the roof was painted deep blue and decorated with stars."

This sing-song cadence could have been fixed by a more conscientious editor. The editor should also have fixed the suddenly shifting character viewpoints, the inconsistency in the narrative voice, the misspelling of Lady Dennys’ name at one point, and the many missing commas. Also, the editor should have noticed that as the pirate ship was being piloted up the Thames, Simon asked the pilot a question... but Simon wasn’t on the ship.

A related issue is the constant interruption of the plot and dialog with expository statements. At some points, nearly every line of dialog and every sentence that advances the plot is followed by a sentence of explanation:

* “Very good, Master Smethwick.” The master could be safely left to organise such details with his usual competence.
* “I believe I will take a turn down the long gallery to catch the sun.” The Queen slipped from the royal pronoun “we,” indicating that she was now expressing the personal opinion of Elizabeth, rather than a royal view as head of the English state.

In their dialog, characters often tell each other information that is clearly only for the reader’s benefit, such as when the Englishman Walsingham tells his English secretary (more than once) that Queen Mary is Queen Elizabeth’s sister and that Mary’s husband is Philip of Spain. Not only is it unlikely that Walsingham the spymaster needed to mention that to his educated trusty secretary, but it makes for clumsy dialog and it slows the action.

If you can read beyond these issues, then you may very well enjoy Lucy’s Blade because it’s a unique story with engaging characters and bright spots of humor. However, so much of my own enjoyment of reading comes from the appreciation of the author’s use of language and style and Lucy’s Blade didn’t fulfill my expectations in that domain.
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Kat_Hooper | 4 weitere Rezensionen | Apr 6, 2014 |
This could have been an outstanding book; the main story is engaging, and the concept (a time-traveling machine intelligence fuses with the mind of a young woman in Elizabethan England and ends up fighting an evil magician/demon-summoner) is guaranteed to hold my interest; I love first-contact and alien-culture stories, and this has elements of both. Unfortunately, it's got some fairly major flaws as well. The modern-day framing story is extremely weak, and frankly, I don't know why the author thought it was needed at all. Also, the author succumbs to David Weber Syndrome in chapters 6 and 7, with eye-rollingly minutely-detailed descriptions of a couple of sea battles. The primary villain also seems rather lacking in motivation; "because I can" just isn't believable as a driving force in a work of fiction, no matter how often it seems to occur in real-life petty bureaucrats. On the good side, nobody gets raped either onscreen or as a motivation, and the author avoids the tired old trope of "love triangle resolved by the death of one of the suitors."

Normally a story with this many problems would get a 2-star rating from me; however, I enjoyed the characters of Lucy and Lilith, and their gradual evolution from uneasy allies to solid friends, enough that I'm going to bump it up to 3 stars. But really, it's closer to a 2.5.
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stardreamer | 4 weitere Rezensionen | May 4, 2013 |

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19
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10
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273
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#84,854
Bewertung
3.1
Rezensionen
7
ISBNs
26

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