ext_132676 (
delilahkanes.livejournal.com) wrote in
lkh_lashouts2008-09-15 01:42 am
![[identity profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/openid.png)
![[community profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/community.png)
Entry tags:
Merry Gentry Alternatives?
I think it's quite easy to find Anita-like alternative reading material in this day and age (I can't spit without hitting a book about some girl dealing with vampires/werewolves), but I was wondering if anyone has stumbled across some quality urban fantasy material about faeries? I'm almost completely clueless.
The only one that immediately comes to mind is War for the Oaks (highly recommended).
Any suggestions would be appreciated. I'm without any books lined up to read right now and it's kinda freaking me out.
The only one that immediately comes to mind is War for the Oaks (highly recommended).
Any suggestions would be appreciated. I'm without any books lined up to read right now and it's kinda freaking me out.
no subject
Charles DeLint, although he doesn't do too much with faeries, I don't think, he's not vampires and werewolves. Neil Gaiman... Neverwhere for what you're interested in, but I recommend reading basically anything he's ever written. Holly Black's books, even though they're YA, are quite good (Tithe, Valiant, Ironside). C.E. Murphy doesn't do (many) faeries, but she's also not (much) into the vampires and werewolves. I find Tanya Huff hysterically funny, although some people I know have mixed feelings about her, but her "Summoner" books have maybe one vampire in a very minor role. Her other big series should probably be avoided if you don't want fanged and fuzzy things, although Vicki Nelson could wipe the floor with Anita any day. Mercedes Lackey's elves-and-race-cars (SERRAted Edge) books are fun, in the same beach-read sort of way Tanya Huff is fun.
...off the top of my head. :)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
Stealing the Elf-King's Roses
Set in an alternate universe with elves and talking dog-people and stuff. Our heroine is a law-enforcement consultant with the second sight. Murder mystery leading to political intrigue. (http://www.amazon.com/Stealing-Elf-Kings-Roses-Diane-Duane/dp/0446609838/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1221463233&sr=1-1)
Except not that much violence, no gore, no sex, no angst. Everyone is competent and professional. Her ex-boyfriend betrayed her, she still has to work with him, and they both focus on work and don't revisit the past. Poetic and well-written, with subtle world-building and characters described vividly and briefly, with more attention to personality than hair. The plot moves along briskly. Truly it is a paragon.
By Diane Duane. (http://search.barnesandnoble.com/booksearch/results.asp?WRD=stealing+the+elf-king%27s) It came out several years ago; look for it in the library.
Re: Stealing the Elf-King's Roses
Re: Stealing the Elf-King's Roses
no subject
The thistle fairies and fairy wars are just gutsplittingly funny. There's a bit of nonexplicit sexual content, shoplifting, crazy ladies who think they're Greek generals, flowers, and a complete lack of angst and wangst, and Millar doesn't take his characters very seriously at all. It's wonderful, although kind of confusing and scatterbrained.
(no subject)
no subject
no subject
True faries-with-wings, I'm less certain on, sorry...
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
no subject
no subject
Life is anything but real in this entertaining fusion of SF and fantasy spiced with sex, rockin' elves and drunk faeries, the first of a new series, from British author Robson (Mappa Mundi). In 2015, the quantum bomb at Texas's superconducting supercollider blew a hole in spacetime's fabric, revealing "a total of five other realities" unknown to the human inhabitants of Otopia (formerly Earth). One of these is Alfheim, a home to elves. By 2021, Alfheim extremists, who despise Otopian technologies (and Otopians), have targeted Zal, a rebel rocker elf and his band, the No Shows, for thriving in a human realm. Death threats prompt the Otopian security agency to assign Lila Black, a nuclear-powered cyborg still adapting to her AI abilities, to Zal as his undercover guard. After Zal is kidnapped, Black travels to Alfheim, where she meets an old foe and tangles with a wicked necromancer. Deft prose helps the reader accept what in lesser hands would be merely absurd. (Mar.)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
(no subject)
no subject
no subject
Tam Lin, by Pamela Dean.
Blood and Iron, by Elizabeth Bear.
no subject
no subject
Re: Crivens!
Re: Crivens!
no subject
no subject
no subject
The first miniseries sees Kildare trying to solve the murder of the Cottingly Fairies.
During the second series, set during during the Victorian Spiritualist Movement, Kidare finds a real angel being held in a sideshow.
Puck shows up in the third story arch running a black market for supernatural creatures wanting to buy a human soul.
We take another trip back for the fourth miniseries to see Kildare reconnecting with her old bf True Thomas against the backdrop of 1960's London.
The final TB shows what happens when Kildare comes face to face with our 21st century ideas of a fairytale kingdom.
no subject
no subject
Ohhh... Simon Green, Shadows Fall - I can never ever think of fae the same way again. He is most known recently for the Nightside series, which is overall, a great example of some really dark urban supernatural.
For urban supernatural generally, I do recommend some of the above - Mercedes Thompson series, the Dresden Files, even the Hallows series by Kim Harrison is pretty good. I also forgot to mention Rob Thurman books and although its not a series, and set in the victorian age, the Ladies of Grace Adieu by Susanah Clarke was very good.
no subject
no subject
More "faerie-centric": The Faerie Wars books by Herbie Brennan I guess. O__O
no subject
(no subject)
no subject
I also recently found a recently released first book by a really promising author - Nightwalker by Jocelynn Drake.
no subject
(no subject)
no subject