CHECK IT OUT
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With Harry Potter mania now in full swing and Hobbit devotees eagerly
awaiting Hollywood’s version of “Lord of the Rings,” fantasy fans might
wonder: Who will be the next J.K. Rowling or J.R.R. Tolkien?
Candidates might include Tim Powers, winner of the best novel award at
the 2001 World Fantasy Convention for “Declare.” With a blend of
supernatural suspense and espionage thrills, the reigning king of
historical fantasy rewrites Cold War history in his eleventh novel.
On center stage is professor Andrew Hale, drawn back into Her
Majesty’s Secret Service in 1963. In resuming a mission to topple the
Communist regime before Moscow marshals otherworldly forces, the retired
Oxford lecturer is driven toward a deadly confrontation on Mt. Ararat.
Sharing World Fantasy Convention 2001 best novel honors with Powers is
Sean Stewart for “Galveston.” Set on an island that was flooded by a
tidal wave of magic during Mardi Gras 2004, Stewart’s seventh saga paints
a vivid picture of a post-apocalyptic world. Twenty years after the
deluge, technology is unreliable, a city is awash in endless carnival
revelry and three eccentric characters are vying for control of the
populace.
On a whimsical par with Tolkien and Rowling is Midori Snyder’s “The
Innamorati,” honored with the 2001 Mythopoeic Fantasy Award for adult
literature. In an allegorical fantasy about the quest for identity and
the masks we present to others, Snyder sends her characters through a
maze said to rid them of personal demons.
The venturing pilgrims include a stuttering actor, a mask maker unable
to make masks, a siren in silent exile from the sea and a poet who lost
his voice when he discovered his wife’s infidelity.
Readers interested in getting in on the ground floor of a new fantasy
series won’t want to miss “To The King A Daughter,” from beloved writer
Andre Norton and coauthor Sasha Miller. In this first volume of “The
Cycle of Oak, Yew, Ash and Rowan,” fans of Norton’s classic “Witch World”
stories will find familiar terrain in a tale of a crumbling kingdom
besieged by dark forces.
Reality’s darkest forces are those that strip us of the powers of
imagination and the ability to believe in what we can’t see, suggests
legendary fantasist Ray Bradbury in “From the Dust Returned: A Family
Remembrance.”
In his first novel of the 21st century, the author of such
masterpieces as “The Martian Chronicles” and “Fahrenheit 451” completes
the story of the Elliotts, a family of strange nocturnal creatures living
in a grand, gabled farmhouse in northern Illinois.
Introduced over a half-century ago in a story called “Homecoming,” the
clan is gathering for a reunion in Bradbury’s newest work. Their maker
will be on hand at 7 p.m.Tuesday at the Newport Beach Central Library to
discuss a genre he has raised to rarefied heights and to sign copies of
his books.
* CHECK IT OUT is written by the staff of the Newport Beach Public
Library. This week’s column is by Melissa Adams, in collaboration with
Claudia Peterman. All titles may be reserved from home or office
computers by accessing the catalog at https://www.newportbeachlibrary.org.
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