I haven’t been reading many books over
the last few years. I put this down to events of over four years ago when I
ceased to take pleasure in anything. By and by my enjoyment of most things has
returned but with the reading, not so much. Too often in the last few years I’ve
picked up books and then lost interest in them – the whole idea of continuing
to read them seeming a chore. I therefore began to think that maybe this was a
pleasure that would never return and that, after years of reading books and
years of writing the buggers, I’ve become jaded with them.
To a certain extent, this may be the
case. I’ve found that books I used to love quite often annoy me, especially
when I hit continuity errors and other mistakes, and slip into a dispassionate
editing mode. Or when I read others and find myself baffled by my earlier
enjoyment of them, or when I read a writer whose language I loved and now find
just irritating.
However, I do still come across books,
and writers, who do the job. David Gemmell is one such writer, while Peter
Hamilton is another. Recently, while in a bookshop, my girlfriend waved a book
at me that for some time I’d been talking about buying and reading. This was
Red Sister by Mark Lawrence. I took that and, while there, noted Joe
Abercrombie’s short story collection Sharp Ends, and picked that up too.
Incidentally, both of these writers were
introduced to me by way of their publishers hawking them around for nice
comments to put on the covers. In each case, I had no problem with this. I have
ARCs of The Blade Itself by Joe Abercrombie and of Prince of Thorns by Mark
Lawrence, and then went on to buy the ensuing books of, respectively, the First
Law and the Broken Empire trilogies.
Anyway, these two books . . . I polished
them both off in under a week. I guess this is the point where I should wax
lyrical about the hard gritty fantasy of these two writers with its lack of
fluffy elves, and its excellent memorable characters. Perhaps I should mention
how unputdownable was Red Sister, or how just a small bit of dialogue between
characters in one of the Abercrombie short stories had me snorting tea out of
my nose? No, I will not. All I will say is that for this jaded old misery these
two books are the good stuff.
Recommended.
1 comment:
The big take-away from this post: "my girlfriend".
I know this has been for you an extremely painful few years, and it delights me to witness your recovery - both professionally and now, personally.
Post a Comment