Why am I passionate about this?
The things that I am most interested in are books that are deliciously fun to read and books that pick you up out of your comfortable chair and drag you across a fantastic landscape. What does that require? Three Ws for starters. Wit: both on the part of the characters and the author—I like smart characters, biting banter, and clever turns of phrase and story. Weird: in the sense of the unusual and mysterious—good world-building coupled with mysteries meant to be unraveled by the reader as much as by the characters. Wild: fast-paced action filled with sudden turns and unexpected drops and conversations that are three parts well-written words and two parts fencing without a blade.
Kelly's book list on witty, weird, and wild rides fantasy fiction
Why did Kelly love this book?
As a general rule, I don’t like time-travel novels, but I love this one. In Anubis Gates, Tim creates a perfect looping paradox in which our literary historian protagonist finds himself traveling back to the period of his expertise and discovering that every critical beat of his subject matter is both exactly as he learned it and a complete surprise that could only have happened through his own direct intervention.
Talking plot would spoil a beautiful and perfectly constructed puzzle full of mystery and revelation. Tim is a master of interweaving actual historical research with the fantastic, illuminating and personalizing the former while rendering the latter unreasonably plausible. Tim’s writing is always beautiful and clever, and that shows in both the prose and the clockwork precision of the plot.
Weird touches every paragraph of this book from the stilt-walking evil harlequin, Horabin, through the spoon-size boys in their eggshell fleet,…
3 authors picked The Anubis Gates as one of their favorite books, and they share why you should read it.
Brendan Doyle is a twentieth-century English professor who travels back to 1810 London to attend a lecture given by English romantic poet Samuel Taylor Coleridge. This is a London filled with deformed clowns, organised beggar societies, insane homunculi and magic.
When he is kidnapped by gypsies and consequently misses his return trip to 1983, the mild-mannered Doyle is forced to become a street-smart con man, escape artist, and swordsman in order to survive in the dark and treacherous London underworld. He defies bullets, black magic, murderous beggars, freezing waters, imprisonment in mutant-infested dungeons, poisoning, and even a plunge back to…