Reviews

Land of Dreams by James P. Blaylock

branch_c's review

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3.0

Although I'm a Blaylock fan, there are a few of his earliest books that I never got around to reading, and this was one of them. It certainly has the trademark Blaylock writing style, and I enjoyed that aspect of it - no one else uses words in such a quirky yet somehow natural-sounding way. The tone is dreamy, atmospheric, surreal and vaguely menacing throughout, which would have been okay, but it's also a bit unfocused. A couple of quotes from near the end exemplify the feeling I got from this story:

"As he ran, Jack couldn't help but wonder what, exactly, they were doing."

"Journeying through magical lands was adventuresome, surely, but he needed a destination of some sort, a purpose..."

Yeah, I'm afraid I felt the same way at times. It wasn't clear just what was driving Jack or Skeezix through this adventure - they didn't seem to have any clear goals, yet neither were they being helplessly and inextricably caught up in the events the way that, say, a Powers protagonist would be.

I saw similarities to Little, Big or maybe The Night Circus but this was less engaging or purposeful than either of those.

So, not bad, but there are a number of Blaylock books I like better: of the "modern" ones, I prefer The Last Coin or The Paper Grail, and I like the classic steampunk ones even more: Homunculus and Lord Kelvin's Machine.

One more thing to note: I read the Kindle edition and it has numerous minor typos of the kind that come from imperfect character scanning, like "c" for "e" and things like that. As I said, just minor stuff, but would it really have taken that much time or money to simply ask someone to read through this version before releasing it?

atrus's review

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adventurous mysterious relaxing fast-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Plot
  • Strong character development? No
  • Loveable characters? Yes
  • Diverse cast of characters? No
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? No

4.0

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