Tuesday, April 8, 2008

Cashelmara

By Susan Howatch, published in 1974. Certainly not a new book, but new to me.

This was actually sent to me by my Australian BookCrossing buddy, who told me it was one of her favorites. I liked it, and I do like this type of book, too. It is a style/genre that isn't written much any longer, but was very typical of the 1970s and 1980s -- the family epic novel. They became formulaic after a while, and deteriorated into glittery tomes where everyone was rich, alcoholic, sexually promiscuous, and gorgeous. But Cashelmara, like another favorite novel (To Serve Them All My Days), is more finely and skillfully drawn.

We begin with Edward, an English lord of mature years, a widower with four surviving and mostly adult children. Besides his London home, and his English estate, he also owns the family estate in Ireland known as Cashelmara.

On a trip to America, he meets some distant cousins, and eventually proposes to young Marguerite. When they marry, he is somewhere near sixty and she is seventeen. When she comes to England to marry him, she then has to learn to cope with her new stepchildren - three women older than she is, and the only son, Patrick, who is just a few years younger. Edward doesn't appreciate her attempts to smooth relations between her husband and his children, and Marguerite quickly understands that the marriage is not going to be what she thought.

The next section is from Marguerite's viewpoint, and relates the birth of her and Edward's two sons, and a daughter that lives only a short time. Other section include one from the point of view of Edward's son Patrick, Patrick's wife Sarah, Sarah's lover, the criminal Maxwell Drummond, and finally Patrick and Sarah's son, Ned.

Some of the topics - homosexuality, infidelity, and murder - were probably more scandalous to readers in 1974 than they are today, but Cashelmara is still a good, gossipy read.

Thursday, March 13, 2008

A Game of Thrones

George R.R. Martin launches a new fantasy series with "A Game of Thrones", first in a five-book series. (Book 5 is not yet published.) I usually resist reading series until all the books are available, if I can help it, ever since I got hooked by David Gerrold's War Against the Chtorr series, which the author still has never finished writing. Be that as it may....

Martin's approach to this wide-ranging tale of kingdoms, lords, direwolves, dragons, and war is to write from multiple characters' viewpoints, rotating chapters so we see events as they unfold from different viewpoints. We get to know the characters not only by what they do, but by how they interpret what they witness. It's a good device if used skillfully, and in Martin's case, it is.

Also helpful is a map of the Seven Kingdoms, which helps the reader place the events. It takes a good while to work through the various characters and their alliances, but the method of storytelling allows this to unfold naturally. The reader never feels as if s/he is subjected to what I call "info dump". (Less skillful authors resort to this from time to time, especially in SF/fantasy, where the reader is forced to swallow myriad pages of history or other background information in a huge undigestable lump. Martin, thankfully, spares us this.)

A Game of Thrones is primarily concerned with the Stark family, holders of the northern kingdom of Winterfell. There is Ned Stark, father and lord, friend to the high king. Other chapters introduce us to his wife, Catelyn; bastard son Jon; legitimate son Bran; and daughters Sansa and Arya. In the north, even in summer, it is cold and snowy, and the summer has lasted nearly ten years, but soon real winter will be coming.

The king, Robert, comes to Winterfell to ask Ned to serve as the Hand of the King, the second in command in the Seven Kingdoms. With Robert comes his wife, Cersei; Cersei's twin brother Jaime; and their dwarf brother Tyrion, all from the house of Lannister which is known for its treachery. When Bran Stark, seven years old, sees something he should not, he suffers a fall that is meant to kill him.

A great start to what promises to be an absorbing series.