I must admit that the first time i started this book, i found it hard going and stopped. Thankfully i started again, stuck with it, and have found ... (show more)
Vellum: The Book of All Hours
An extraordinary, incendiary debut from a rare new talent, Vellum showcases a complex and sophisticated level of writing coupled with a fecund imagination that defies description.
VELLUM: THE BOOK OF ALL HOURS
It’s 2017 and angels and demons walk the earth. Once they were human; now they are unkin, transformed by the ancient machine-code language of reality itself. They seek The Book of All Hours, the mythical tome within which the blueprint for all reality is transcribed, which h... (show more)
An extraordinary, incendiary debut from a rare new talent, Vellum showcases a complex and sophisticated level of writing coupled with a fecund imagination that defies description.
VELLUM: THE BOOK OF ALL HOURS
It’s 2017 and angels and demons walk the earth. Once they were human; now they are unkin, transformed by the ancient machine-code language of reality itself. They seek The Book of All Hours, the mythical tome within which the blueprint for all reality is transcribed, which has been lost somewhere in the Vellum–the vast realm of eternity upon which our world is a mere scratch.
The Vellum, where the unkin are gathering for war.
The Vellum, where a fallen angel and a renegade devil are about to settle an age-old feud.
The Vellum, where the past, present, and future will collide with ancient worlds and myths.
And the Vellum will burn. . . . (show less)
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This book was actually painful to read. I'm not entirely sure why I didn't just put it down. It was like reading modern art or listening to modern ... (show more)
This book was actually painful to read. I'm not entirely sure why I didn't just put it down. It was like reading modern art or listening to modern music, which, if you're into it, is fine, but if you're not, you just see something meaningless or hear disharmonies, that's only art or music because someone said so. Reading this, I felt like Duncan wrote bits of assorted stories on cards and then shuffled them together and called it a book. Some of the bits are chronological, some of them even make sense. Some involve the same characters, although it's hard to always be sure, since everyone seems to have the same name, or to change names several times. But it's not a narrative. There are bits, no more than a few pages each time that tell a coherent story, and the only reason I give this book even part of a star is because some of these bits are good. If he'd stuck with one of these ideas and fleshed it out, instead of flitting all over the place, Duncan might have had something worth reading. (show less)
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Sadly, I did not finish this book. I came to realize that it was going nowhere, and I still had 250 pages to go. Which is a shame, because there was actually a lot I liked about the book - it's well written, has interesting characters, and takes on some weighty but fascinating subjects like the persistence of archetypes throughout mythology. But overall, the lack of any cohesive plot or storyline made me just wish for it to end. I don't usually have a problem with non-linear books (David ... (show more)
Sadly, I did not finish this book. I came to realize that it was going nowhere, and I still had 250 pages to go. Which is a shame, because there was actually a lot I liked about the book - it's well written, has interesting characters, and takes on some weighty but fascinating subjects like the persistence of archetypes throughout mythology. But overall, the lack of any cohesive plot or storyline made me just wish for it to end. I don't usually have a problem with non-linear books (David Mitchell's Cloud Atlas, for instance, is one of my all-time favorites), but one of the problems here was the neverending *sameness* - the story (what there is of it) is a kind of Moebius strip, constantly doubling back on itself, introducing new but similar incarnations of the same characters, such that, by halfway through the book, almost nothing had actually *happened*. It's a rare occasion when I'm simultaneously fascinated and bored, but that was the effect of Vellum. (show less)
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This is probably one of the best works of "fantasy" or maybe "slipstream fiction" I've read, since I first encountered Dhalgren by Samuel Delany, way back sometime in the 80s. It creates some of the same feelings in me, conjures some of the same pictures in my mind. This novel is like good food, it is to be tasted and experienced, not "understood". It may be a "mess", but it's a beautful mess!
(This book, together with the work of Kelly Link, brough... (show more)This is probably one of the best works of "fantasy" or maybe "slipstream fiction" I've read, since I first encountered Dhalgren by Samuel Delany, way back sometime in the 80s. It creates some of the same feelings in me, conjures some of the same pictures in my mind. This novel is like good food, it is to be tasted and experienced, not "understood". It may be a "mess", but it's a beautful mess!
(This book, together with the work of Kelly Link, brought back my belief in "fantasy", at a point where I was this close to just drop the whole shit down the drain, absolutely fed up with swords and bullshit... ;-)) (show less)Already read
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