Showing posts with label Alaya Johnson. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Alaya Johnson. Show all posts

Sunday, August 1, 2010

Moonshine review

Moonshine

**** or ***** Seriously - I cannot make up my mind on how to rate this book.

Alaya Johnson


First of all...look at this cover. It's dramatic. The only real color here is the title, the full red lips and those (ouch) two bite marks on her neck. Oh, and that little blurb by Rhys Bowen- there right under her chin. I didn't actually notice the blurb until just now - no kidding. The picture is dramatic - the skin is pearly ...gray. The skyline is New York...were there that many skyscrapers during prohibition? I have no idea. At the time, I thought the empire state building was the tallest in New York, but that doesn't mean that all the other buildings were a lot shorter. Just things that idly passed through my mind.

The main character of Moonshine is Zephyr Hollis, described as "an overzealous, underfed social activist" . She really was, almost to the point of irritation. The only thing that saved her from being a total goody two shoes was her rather instant attraction to Amir (dark-skinned Arabic-looking hot djinn - literally hot - hot to the touch, burning hot...Careful Zephyr!), and the rather intense sense of bloodlust that would come upon her when she had to fight for her life....but she was ashamed of the way she felt then...a bit, not too much. :) (Don't fight it Zephyr - just be yourself and let your freak-flag fly!)

Turns out our little miss goody two shoes used to hunt - that's right, HUNT vampires and others with her father and crew back in good old.....Montana. (how did you end up in New York, Zephyr?). She 's not happy about her past and apparently is trying to atone by teaching night school to the oppressed "Others" (because they ARE oppressed, treated as second-class citizens with NO rights), and sticking up for them when she can, giving them literally the last dime in her pockets...(better than me - I'll give a few bucks away even if I only have $10 or $5, but never my last buck).

Anyway, Zephyr becomes embroiled with a found vampire boy (turned and abandoned), trying to locate a mob boss for pay, teaching a very dangerous young vampire street tough how to read and write, a new dangerous vampire drink, and finds herself in danger and having to fight off vampires and revenant cats.

I started out the book very interested, then found my self feeling a bit ho-hum about it (here I have to admit, I had just started it when Magic Bleeds came out, and there are few books that would have made me happy to read them after THAT!) and then finally seemed to be back into the story. By the end of the book I cared about what was happening to Zephyr, to the vampire boy, to Amir (the towering inferno genie), even to the street tough gangster vampire Nicholas.

One of the interesting and yet frustrating thing for me was the time setting. It's set during the Prohibition, which I really don't know much about. I'm not usually interested in that time period. Moonshine had it all though, the mobsters with the vampire twist, the illegal speakeasies along with the vampire equivalent, and all the accompanying problems. Poverty, bigotry, excess by the rich (nothing's changed there!) and I enjoyed the way Ms Johnson handled the "Others" addition to this. The Vampire mob King had his own territory, with rival vampire gangs. There was a separate Night Mayor that was corrupt. There's a lot happening in this novel and Ms Johnson really thought out the extended world that would have Vampires and Djinns, and Shapeshifters in it. Interesting and well done.

On the other hand, there were just a few teeny tiny things that kept me questioning (and this might be my flaw here) things like Blood Banks. Okay, there are blood banks. I'm sure this was researched, but also, the phrase Bags of Blood was used, I'm pretty sure I saw the word "plastic". Were there bags - plastic? Didn't donated blood at this time come in glass bottles? And Crowbars. This might be my stupidity here - in fact it probably is, after all, there were cars, so there must have been crowbars. It's just that I started wondering when crowbars were invented. (Interestingly, in Pillars of the Earth, the Hollywood version, set in times of Kings and Queens and Serfs, and feudal lords, they used the word crowbar, as in "Get a crowbar". really) But the word usage that really made me question things was....clone. How long has cloning been around, and when did they start using this word. I thought it was a late 20th century type of thing, as in test tube babies - 1980something....but the vampire drink thing is a blood product cloned from pigs blood with a boost in it to make vampires high. Rayon was mentioned, but that one my son looked up for me, and yes, it was around, during one of the world wars, so that one was correct, though it was another instance of me stopping and scratching my head a la Scooby Doo (er...Scooby Dooby Doo?). Someday, I might actually look these things up (I am, I admit it, incredibly lazy when it comes to actually LEARNING something. I hate the process of learning. Things came so easy to me in school that when I was presented with something I didn't know yet, I had a hard time LEARNING it; actually did not know how to learn. weird. Lazy. weird, lazy me)
OH! And Cloche- what the heck is a cloche, some sort of hat, because I think Zephyr put it on her head, but I haven't heard it before.

Ultimately I did like Moonshine. I'm just not sure at this point whether I liked it a little or a lot. I went from "I like this", to "ho-hum", to "I like a lot", but like I said earlier - I did interrupt reading this to read Magic Bleeds and that probably isn't really fair when rating other books. Next time I read a book like Magic Bleeds, I'll have to read in a totally different genre for one or two books after, just to clean the palate. This is where my confusion on how I want to rate this comes from.

Moonshine is a good book, with an interesting take on vampires, djinns, shapeshifters and the prohibition. There is a good plot, and the dialogue was good, no lameness at all. There was some interesting instances of bigotry - even from Zephyr, while she was raging against the bigotry that humans had against skin color and other species, she herself exhibited her own brand of bigotry towards the priviledged upper class (which I think I am also guilty of - sorry rich over-priviledged-know-nothing-about-living-in-the-REAL-world-people....oops, have some work to do there. ahem... )

Reading Challenges
POC Challenge (author)
Speculative Fiction Reading Challenge

***click on cover for excerpt, and on author name for a fun website

Monday, July 26, 2010

Teaser Tuesday, Tuesday Teaser - either way, it's a tease!

Hosted by Miz B at Should Be Reading:
Where we tease each other and you with micro-excerpts of our current reads.
Guidelines are at Should be Reading.


I felt like going back to reading Moonshine, by Alaya Johnson. I hope to finish it this week.
Moonshine is an urban fantasy featuring the first person account of Zephyr Hollis. Zephyr is a former vampire hunter turned over-zealous social activist living sometime during prohibition years in an alternate New York. Alternate, as in vampires and "others" are common knowledge, although in this version they have absolutely NO rights - being treated as worse then second class citizens. There are a few other species mentioned here, but other than vampires and djinn, they are just mentions.

A teaser from page 160:
"..The kids were giggling and giving him sidelong glances, like they expected him to vanish or burst into flames at any moment. Which he very well might."


Received in the mail on Monday - and coming out for sale on Tuesday, July 27th is A Wild Light, the third book in Marjorie M. Liu's Hunter Kiss novels. I am glad now that I pulled Darkness Calls from by TBR shelf to read recently - because now I have A Wild Light to review. (The first novel was Iron Hunt)
In The Hunter Kiss novels, Maxine is a hunter - the last one on earth from a long line of women hunters who inherit five little demons. These demons live on Maxine's skin during the day while they sleep and at night they come off to hunt evils. Their favorite snack (besides evil beings) is metal. They are Hungry.
From the blurb on the back, in A Wild Light, Maxine finds herself covered in blood and beside her grandfather's dead body with "no memory of what happened or of the man she loves".
I'm starting this book tonight, so I'm using the first page for the teaser.
From page 1:
"It was my birthday, the anniversary of my mother's murder, and on the way to the party, I made a special point to stop and kill a zombie.
I did it every year. My secret. Only Zee and the boys knew. Our gift to each other.
Sun had been down for only an hour, but this was Seattle, the skies were black as midnight, and the rain pounded the windshield like each drop was trying to break the glass. Cyndi Lauper played on the radio, softly, because I wanted to hear Dek and Mal sing along. "True Colors," one of my mother's favorites.
The little demons were coiled around my shoulders, heavy and warm, their breath hot against my ears as they hummed the song in their high, sweet voices. Aaz and Raw sat in the backseat, uncharacteristically quiet, their little legs dangling over the floor as they clutched half-eaten teddy bears against their scaled, muscular chests."
Don't the little demons sound sweet and cute? Sweet, cute and deadly. One of the oddly sweet things in this series is the complete love and loyalty between the deadly little demons and Maxine. This is just one part of all the interesting parts that make up these stories by Marjorie M. Liu.


I find it prudent at times, to simply follow a cat's advice.

Really.