Selected Product: no picture available | Ghosts of Columbia Paperback Author: L. E. Modesitt Publisher: Tor Books Release Date: June 2005 ISBN-10: B000VYD28W Average Customer Rating: | | Mage-Guard of Hamor (Saga of Recluce) ISBN-10: 0765319276 ISBN-13: 9780765319272 List Price:$27.95 Natural Ordermage (Saga of Recluce) ISBN-10: 0765357755 ISBN-13: 9780765357755 List Price:$7.99 The Hammer of Darkness ISBN-10: 076531567X ISBN-13: 9780765315670 List Price:$13.95 Ghost of the White Nights (Ghost trilogy) ISBN-10: 0765340321 ISBN-13: 9780765340320 List Price:$6.99 |
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Now for the first time in one big volume, two novels of Dr. Johan Eschbach, professor at a small college in the northeast and secret agent for the government of Columbia. This is an alternate history world shaped by the fact that ghosts are not mere superstition but have a literal physical reality--and political implications--because your crimes can haunt you, and the ghosts of your crimes are visible to others.Here are two adventures--Of Tangible Ghosts and Ghost of the Revelator--that bring Johan Eschbach out of his retirement and happy marriage in northern New Bruges and into danger and intrigue. This edition includes a new afterword by the author explaining the history of this fascinating alternate world. Odd book | Customer Rating: | | This is a very odd read. I enjoyed it, but it reads a little slow, and jumps around a bit. Goes on the premise that ghosts are not just myth and instead of only a few that can see them, all can see them. Wars were all shorter or never took place as screaming ghosts are harder to hide than dead bodies. Country now in some type of Gestapo type of state, oil is a dear commodity, and most people use steamers instead of cars. | ReRelease of 1 and 2 | Customer Rating: | | I though we had another in Modesitt's Ghost series, but it's just a re-release of the first and second volumes in one. If you're not familiar with the series, it's wonderful, quite different from his other series, and well worth reading. This would be a pretty good place to start. If you are familiar with the series, you probably already have this. | Remarkably fine alternate history. Don't miss! | Customer Rating: | Johan Eschbach, retired from an eventful career in service to Columbia as a naval aviator, Spazi agent, and cabinet minister, now teaches environmental economics at Vanderbraak State University in New Bruges (New Hampshire in OTL). Doktor Eschbach lost both his wife and daughter in a political murder -- he himself was badly wounded -- and he would like nothing better than a quiet life in this academic backwater. But that would make for a dull book, and he is soon caught up in a murder investigation, love affair, political intrigues, and secret military research into "deghosting".
Doktor Eschbach's solution to the ensuing tangle is "rather appalling and not entirely credible", per reviewer Christina Schulman, whose review is worth googling for. -------- "A land of dirigibles and difference engines, Modesitt's eerily refined world is compelling and coolly original, a place where you still drive to work in a car--albeit steam-powered--but think nothing of waving good morning to the zombies raking leaves off the lawn." -- Paul Hughes, Amazon.com
Ghost of the Revelator picks up Doktor Eschbach and his new wife Llysette Du Boise as her singing career is taking off, and as the messy ending to "Tangible" comes back to haunt Eschbach. The story unfolds slowly, but the same wonderful details of everyday life that enlivened the first book -- lunch at a favorite cafe, icy roads, dense, lazy, occasionally sharp students, petty academic politics, politicians who can "smile and smile and be a villain" -- make the trip worthwhile. This world is slower-paced than ours, and Modesitt's prose has something of the heavy Dutch feel of well-fed burghers, shining-clean windows, tidy lives. Very human. If slow bothers you -- skim.
Modesitt still hasn't smoothed out his jarring exposition of the differences between his alternate world and ours, here usually dumped as interior monologues. Show, don't tell, please!
Llysette sings at a Presidential Arts Awards dinner and is invited to perform at the prestigious Salt Palace in Deseret -- after fleeing the fall of France and an Austrian political prison. Johan comes to the uncomfortable conclusion that he's about to be eclipsed in fame and fortune by his glamorous wife....
....but maybe Deseret is after more than just a performance by the new prima diva. And what about Austria-Hungary? And New France? And the shadowy "Revealed Twelve"?
Minister Eschbach resolves the ensuing international crisis with verve, skill, and a couple of twists that would be unfair to reveal. Suffice it to say that the ending is most satisfactory, and leaves plenty of room for future Eschbach/Du Boise adventures. (There is now a third book, Ghosts of the White Nights, also recommended.)
Doktor Eschbach and the "Ghosts" books have parallels to Mr Modesitt's real life: the author was a naval aviator, spent twenty years in our "Federal District" as a political aide, EPA staffer, and college teacher. He's married to a lyric soprano. He and his family moved from DC to New Hampshire ("New Bruges") and then to Utah: these are the settings for the "Ghosts" books. "Write what you know," the old adage goes -- it certainly works for Modesitt. I presume the spies and ghosts are from the author's imagination.
Review copyright 1998 by Peter D. Tillman First published at SF Site |
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