[personal profile] tamaranth
Whoosh!

I've been waiting for this book since I finished its predecessor (Bold as Love) for the first time last September. I think I probably read Bold as Love about five times. I'm an immersive reader when I find a world I like, and when I find characters I love, and this matched on both counts.

Castles Made of Sand is a weirder and darker novel, more explicitly fantasy (magic works) while at the same time being rooted in the wider world around newly-isolated England (clinics in Finland where brain surgery can remove a person's memories, and a United States full of, well, Americans).

Those who enjoyed the first novel for the setting, and merely tolerated the weirdo hippie protagonists, will probably hate Castles Made of Sand. Those who fell for Sage, Ax and Fiorinda will find themselves fascinated and appalled and unwilling to stop reading.

I wouldn't recommend this to anyone who didn't read the first novel: I don't think it's a spoiler to say that it carries straight on from the last page of Bold as Love. But it's a very different book: almost claustrophobic in places, marvellously evocative and mockingly referential in others.

...Featuring, among other things:
  • a 21st-century Glass Castle
  • two of the last hundred Bengal tigers (and an intriguing moral dilemma)
  • a very Guineverian scene at Westminster for Fiorinda
  • and a working definition of Rock'n'Roll Culture which includes Polly Harvey as Virginia Woolf.


Oh, and apropos of my previous discussion about The Fairy Queen:

"Hey, where did you get to the other night, Fio?"
"I think she knows a bank where the wild thyme blows," decided Verlaine. "And she met there with Oberon and Robin Goodfellow --"
"You know, Sage would make a *great* Puck!"
(Castles Made of Sand, p 131)

Date: Tuesday, June 25th, 2002 06:56 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] ajshepherd.livejournal.com
Hardback or large format paperback?
I've been looking for it since I heard it was out, but the bookshops round here don't seem to have it yet. Mind you, the bookshops round here don't have Bold as Love either so a trip to a decent bookshop is called for ASAP.

Date: Tuesday, June 25th, 2002 08:21 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] tamaranth.livejournal.com
Large-format pb, £10.99 I think. Forbidden Planet had it - and there's a signing there this Saturday lunchtime.

Date: Wednesday, June 26th, 2002 12:02 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] gummitch.livejournal.com
Amazon lists a hardback edition, too rrp £17.99

Just started reading it myself this morning, and it's amazing how quickly it sucks you in.

Date: Wednesday, June 26th, 2002 03:36 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] groliffe.livejournal.com
Hardback edition seems to be rare, it took me three bookshops to find one this morning. It's now sitting next to Bold as Love until either Gwyneth finishes the series, or tamaranth convinces me I don't won't need to be able to remember one book to enjoy the next...

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