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Well done noir with supernatural elements, strong lead and supporting characters, executed extremely well in the audio book.
I really like hard-boiled detective novels and film noir.
I also really like fantasy novels and morally gray protaganists.
This was an excellent combination of many of those elements.
I also really like fantasy novels and morally gray protaganists.
This was an excellent combination of many of those elements.
Almost all the other reviews are going to tell you this book is a mix of noir and fantasy. Ok, fine, though I don't think the genre talk is all that illuminating. "Low Town," is a fantasy that looks to me like book one of a series, and is so good I hope there will be a series. Plot, character, language, and milieu are right on the mark, and it's a quick, humorous, and exciting read that doesn't take itself more seriously than necessary
The Warden was a street urchin saved from the streets by a master sorcerer. He's now all growed up to a life of crime after a horrendous stint in the army and an immersion in the intelligence service. He's a wise cracking addict, dealer, and hustler with a heart of gold who plies his trade in the streets of Low Town, the slums of Rigus. He knows just about everybody worth knowing, and quite a few characters who aren't. He's got partners who run his front business, and he's picked up on his very own urchin for pedagogy and profit, and that's his family unit.
Mayhem is an operating and organizing principle in Low Town, and it's pretty much eye-ball to eye-ball except when the sorcerers get involved and conjure spectral assassins to do their bloody business.
Daniel Polansky has done quite a job of conjuring himself. Like the best fantasy, "Low Town" creates a world with a class and power strata at all levels, customs, rituals, religion, argot, architecture, dress, and even a pharmacopeia of street drugs that seem quite familiar . He's written a hell of a first novel, visual in its own right, and ripe for a movie adaptation.
The Warden was a street urchin saved from the streets by a master sorcerer. He's now all growed up to a life of crime after a horrendous stint in the army and an immersion in the intelligence service. He's a wise cracking addict, dealer, and hustler with a heart of gold who plies his trade in the streets of Low Town, the slums of Rigus. He knows just about everybody worth knowing, and quite a few characters who aren't. He's got partners who run his front business, and he's picked up on his very own urchin for pedagogy and profit, and that's his family unit.
Mayhem is an operating and organizing principle in Low Town, and it's pretty much eye-ball to eye-ball except when the sorcerers get involved and conjure spectral assassins to do their bloody business.
Daniel Polansky has done quite a job of conjuring himself. Like the best fantasy, "Low Town" creates a world with a class and power strata at all levels, customs, rituals, religion, argot, architecture, dress, and even a pharmacopeia of street drugs that seem quite familiar . He's written a hell of a first novel, visual in its own right, and ripe for a movie adaptation.
If you’re looking for a crime-fighting, supernatural-investigating PI with an elf sidekick, fairy friends, and a doomed vampire boyfriend, Low Town is not for you. If on the other hand you’re looking for a noirish fantasy novel featuring plenty of crime, murders, and drug use, not to mention an addict for a main character who used to be a cop, you’ve come to the right place. Low Town, the debut novel from Daniel Polansky, who counts Dashiel Hammett and Raymond Chandler as well as George R.R. Martin among his influences, is a different kind of supernatural noir tale sans the supernatural baddies or the romantic subplots.
To read my full review, go here: http://thedarkeva.com/2011/08/book-review-low-town-by-daniel-polanksy/
To read my full review, go here: http://thedarkeva.com/2011/08/book-review-low-town-by-daniel-polanksy/
This book was fine, fairly enjoyable. It's basically a mystery set in a fantasy setting, and since I'm not a huge mystery fan, the plot didn't engage me as much as it might have otherwise. But I have no other complaints, really, just not my cup of tea.
Gritty AF
I would’ve thought I’ve read ‘gritty’ fantasy before, but after reading Low Town i realize I really hadn’t.
The main character is an ugly drug dealing drug addict who makes a lot of mistakes and can be a real dick. But you like him, which makes it upsetting when he does shitty stuff.
Interesting world, the mystery not totally mysterious but I stayed up late to finish it.
I would’ve thought I’ve read ‘gritty’ fantasy before, but after reading Low Town i realize I really hadn’t.
The main character is an ugly drug dealing drug addict who makes a lot of mistakes and can be a real dick. But you like him, which makes it upsetting when he does shitty stuff.
Interesting world, the mystery not totally mysterious but I stayed up late to finish it.
This book was excellent and i really enjoyed it, fast paced and easy to read. It is dark and twisted at times and funny aswell. The main character is really interesting and not at all like your typical hero. I will be reading the next book soon, because i cant wait to delve back into the sordid place that is low town.
Interesting setting and characters, but simply too much was left out (right down to a "this is too horrible to write about so I'll let you imagine it" ending) and the way that race in the story was covered felt... icky, for clear lack of a better word. 2.5