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Jan. 16th, 2006 12:12 pm
bryant: (Default)
[personal profile] bryant

You can do worse than the lurid fantasy worlds of Games Workshop when it comes to novels. I blame it on Britain; like 2000 AD comics, Games Workshop's Black Library seems happy to allow authors to indulge their hallucinogenic whimseys as long as the canon is consistent. And the canon is a fever-dream to start with, so you've got a rather fertile base for excess. What more can one ask of RPG novels?

Start with The Vampire Genevieve, by the estimable Jack Yeovil. At home, he's Kim Newman. This weighy paperback is a compliation of all his Genevieve novels, and they're grim gloomy romps with a wicked sense of humor. In the introduction, he notes that he wanted to write a book about what happened to the heroes of a fantasy epic afterwards. Tasty and moody and even a little wistful in the descriptions of the decrepit assassin-dancer and the fat old bandit king.

You could also check out his Dark Future books; I believe only Demon Download is in print. It's not as good, but wow, that's a post-apocalypse United States to be reckoned with. GW released Dark Future as a competitor to Car Wars, back in the day, so it's a ruined US in the Warhammer timeline. Expect spiky crawly Chaos. Also expect mad Mormons, Vatican black ops, and very fast heavily armed cars. The later books also have Elvis. Like I said, not as well-written, but palpably insane.

Stuart Moore has a new Dark Future book out: American Meat. I'm only halfway through, but it's lovable. You know Stuart Moore as the chief editor of Vertigo Comics for a number of years. It's hard to tell if someone's a great writer from one of these; I can say I'm enjoying it. Who doesn't like robot monkeys and vegetarian biker gangs? I dunno why GW is putting out more Dark Future books but I'm kinda guiltily glad they are.

Final nod goes to Honour of the Grave, by Robin Laws. Not at all bad, and it's the first of a series, which is a plus for me when it comes to popcorn reading. There's always something really measured and intellectual about his prose, which is an odd framework for a pulp dark fantasy novel, but it's Warhammer so it works pretty well all in all. And hey, cool heroine. Not enough fantasy novels about graverobbers.

Date: 2006-01-16 07:01 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] righteousfist.livejournal.com
Was Kim the only one who used the the Jack Yeovil name? I had heard it was a house name that GW used in the late 80s and early 90s...whoops, a quick net-search seems to confirm it. :)

I love the Dark Future books....but to hell with Demon Download, buddy. Comeback Tour is awesome.

"The King is still alive. Elvis Presley might not be a Colonel in the US Army anymore, but he's got a reputation as being one of the toughest independent Sanctioned Ops in the South. Yet, can he prevent the world being destroyed (further) while fighting off the KKK, swamp mutants and voodoo priests?"

Date: 2006-01-16 08:00 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] princejvstin.livejournal.com
I remember that Genevieve makes a cameo appearance in Kim Newman's ANNO DRACULA.

Date: 2006-01-16 09:05 pm (UTC)
incandescens: (Default)
From: [personal profile] incandescens
Not exactly a cameo: an alternate that-universe version of herself is one of the protagonists of the novel, and a subsidiary character in The Bloody Red Baron and Dracula Cha Cha Cha.

Date: 2006-01-16 09:31 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] jeregenest.livejournal.com
She also shows up in his Diogenes stuff. Newman is mostly a recycler, of his own as well as other folks work.

Date: 2006-01-16 09:36 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] death-by-monkey.livejournal.com
Although it's taken me far too long to get myself off the crack that was Games Workshop games, I'm still a big fan of some of the Black Libraries novels. While there are quite a few of them that are pretty crap, I enjoyed the Orfeo Trilogy by Brian Craig. And although the "Insert-Monster-Name-Here" Slayer books got kind of old after a while, the Gotrek and Felix novels are some good, dark, pulp fantasy that are an easy and fun read.

My favorite author out of the Black Library, though, is Dan Abnett. I didn't really want to get into his stuff, but after I read one of his Eisenhorn novels, it lead me into reading the rest of the Eisenhorn Trilogy, then some of his Gaunt's Ghost Novels. Good pulpy sci-fi war novels.

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