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Bezig met laden... Eccentric Circles (2001)door Rebecca Lickiss
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Meld je aan bij LibraryThing om erachter te komen of je dit boek goed zult vinden. Op dit moment geen Discussie gesprekken over dit boek. Unassuming, friendly. Literally about patching the holes in the fairy-verse by writing a Mary-Sue story. Reasonably entertaining if you know to expect a Twilight-style silhouette of a protagonist. The rest of the (human) characters were interesting enough that I almost wished the book was longer. If you're writing small-town contemporary fantasy, don't crib in an epic plot, that's what I say. From the summary, sounds like the sort of thing I should like: the intersection of Faery and the real world. But it didn't do much for me. Picture of Faery too simplistic to be interesting. Writing clumsy. Characters don't develop. But my main problem was with the idea that the Faery characters take on the characteristics given them by real-world story, yet were still real people themselves. Something seemed wrong there - something about the question of how that affects free will. It wasn't really looked at, just glossed over. If she'd actually delved into it a little, it could have made the novel. I adore urban fantasy and read tons of it. This book is not a very good example of the genre. It recycles many tropes from other books and doesn't deal with them in interesting or unusual ways. Our heroine inherits a library from her grandmother, discovers a gateway into faery, it turns out her grandmother was murdered and our heroine must solve the mystery in order to prevent untold chaos and crappiness. This has been done way better by other authors. This book was not offensive, but it wasn't great. geen besprekingen | voeg een bespreking toe
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Google Books — Bezig met laden... GenresDewey Decimale Classificatie (DDC)813.6Literature English (North America) American fiction 21st CenturyLC-classificatieWaarderingGemiddelde:
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Eccentric is what it says on the front cover, and eccentric is what Lickiss makes every effort to provide. However, the full extent of the characters' unconventionality is dressing oddly and giving children twee names – oh, and collecting and reading books of more than two genres and to what onlookers consider excess. The main character, Piper Pied (who spends a considerable amount of first-person narrative space complaining about her and her brother's and cousins' god-awful name and musing about why none of them change them), is not very eccentric – she is the black sheep of normalcy in a peculiar family, which can be a great angle, done well. (It's fairly obvious, I think, what the next sentence might be, if I wanted to write it.) True eccentricity, either in the characters or the writing or the plot, would have been a major asset.
My assumption (geometry class having been a long time ago) was that the title, besides referring to the so-eccentric Pied/Dickerson family, was a play on "concentric circles". But it apparently isn't; the actual definition makes some sense, I think, given the conception of how the mundane world and Fairy converge, but given that not a soul in the book is indicated as having the least mathematical aptitude, the title is another grafted-on oddity.
Added to the mild frustration existing with the idea and the plot and the characters is a mild frustration with the editing. There are random, commas all throughout, and some odd and awkward moments in which a character answers a question that was never asked. And, finally, it's a terrible shame when a publisher pays so little attention to the manuscript that the main character's name is gotten wrong on the book's back cover. "Piper Dickerson" is how she appears there. But Grandma was a Dickerson. Piper is a Pied. How very sad.
(Longer version on my blog: http://agoldoffish.wordpress.com/) ( )