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Most helpful customer reviews
5.0 out of 5 stars
Classic Vance,
By
This review is from: The Demon Princes, Vol. 2: The Face * The Book of Dreams (Paperback)
I remember waiting, after discovering the first three Demon Princes books in the early 70s (Star King, Palace of Love, and The Killing Machine... all from the 60s) for Vance to complete the series... which he finally did in 1979-1981. Both The Face and The Book of Dreams are a little more elaborate than the three prior books. Vance's wonderful way with atmospheres and strange quirks of culture had grown even more baroque... he'd written the nowadays little known masterpiece Maske: Thaery in the meantime, as well as the Alastor books. Both these books are vintage Vance of the highest order, especially The Face.
5.0 out of 5 stars
One of the greatest Sci-Fi series....ever,
By A Customer
This review is from: The Demon Princes, Vol. 2: The Face * The Book of Dreams (Paperback)
This has to be one of the greatest sci-fi series ever. Shall I name the reasons, let me try to count 'em off:1- Language: Vance's use of language is stilted, strange, peculiar, old-fashioned, even bizarre, surely a cause to complain. No! It is because of this very usage that the language is melodic, the names whimsical, charming, the characters robust, bold, hopping a' skither-and-tither with quirks and mannerisms. 2- Hero: in contrast Vance's 'hero' seems a very cold fish indeed in comparison to his outlandish foes, acquaintances and romantic partners. Yet you are slowly drawn into understanding him, liking him and hoping he succeeds in both his quest and his hope of living a normal life, not that of a hunter-killer. You also end up ever so slightly hating his grandfather, who knowingly cut off his grandson from hope of a normal human existence in his desire to exact revenge from beyond the grave. 3- Redemption: These last two volumes allow the redemption of Kirth Gersen - read 'em and see what I mean. Vance also saves the best villain for last with Howard Alan Treesong, truly a character who gives a new meaning to schizophrenia. 4- Invention: No-one, not one other sci-fi or supposed fantasy author can beat Vance for sheer scope of invention. He creates cultures from sketches and schemes, draws you in, tumbles you about and casts you back out. Yet they have an inherent life to them that makes you suspect they carry on ticking after our attention has moved on. 5- A good 'ol cop with an attitude story - the outsider, the loner, the cop-turned-near criminal - all these are wrapped up in here. It's almost too much but Gersen's character and motivations remain coherent and clear throughout. Look these books are so good that it's they're almost worth buying for the inter-chapter tales of Marmaduke and his companions alone - little skits that make other, more 'serious' sci-fi series scene setters as found in the likes of Dune and Foundation look pompous. Let Vance light up your world, put a smile on your face and thank the Lord that someone else has to deal with Demon Princes.
4.0 out of 5 stars
Jack Vance is a stud....and so is Kirth Gersen,
By
This review is from: The Demon Princes, Vol. 2: The Face * The Book of Dreams (Paperback)
This is some of the best "old school" sci-fi out there. It's fast paced, and Vance does a great job of describing the necessary technologies, political situations, and character motivations.This book is a pretty fast read, even though it contains more than one story. My favorite story is "The Face". If you're like me, you will discover that you are thinking like the main character by the end of the story. That is, before the "suprise" ending, you will know exactly what the surprise is. And because of the way the story is told, the ending is even better!! Jack Vance has written other sci-fi novels, and they all make for great airplane or subway reading. If you are serious about the "sci" part of the sci-fi, you might want to check out Neal Stephenson, or Michael Crichton. But for people who can appreciate the "fi" side, spend a few hours on this--you won't regret it.
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