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"Save Yourself The Time and Read A Californian Almanac" | 2007-12-21 |
| - Reviewed By User: A1HPLTIU3RVCBK | |
| I enjoyed the Anubis Gates and saw another Tim Powers novel and decided to give it a try. I read a lot. Everything from Milton and Dante to Douglas Adams and Robert L. Forward.
This book is full of cruft. There's no better way to describe it. It tries to be a character piece on mid 90's California as seen through the eyes of Tim Powers and... Wow, it sucks. Holy cow, does it ever suck. Filled with billions of details about the places the characters are in, and almost as many details about the characters themselves, it overwhelms you with a tide of minutiae. Unfortunately, all of these details serve no higher purpose. I don't mind a book being a chore to read, if it's worth it. The level of entertainment should outweigh the level of effort needed to finish the book. It doesn't even come close on this one. I've stopped reading pulp sci-fi by forgettable authors halfway through before, but this is the first time I've ever done the same to a book by a skilled author. It's that bad. I tried, I really did. But it sucks. When I want a billion tiresome details about a particular era in Californian history, I'll grab an almanac. When I want a good book, I certainly won't grab this one. If there were high-minded intellectual themes behind it, that'd be one thing. If there were a solid story behind it, that'd be another. But it's simply dreck and apparently only got published on name power alone. For shame. | |
"exciting paranormal thriller" | 2007-03-28 |
| - Reviewed By harrietklausner@worldnet.att.net | |
| Los Angeles is a city filled with beings not pumping gas or parking cars. Instead L.A. is a ghost town loaded with otherworldly spirits, some souls with a foot in the grave and the other on the freeway, and humans seeking to extend their LAST CALL on earth. Life and after life are competitors to obtain immortality.
In this weird 1990s Los Angeles, eleven years old Koot Parganas is raised by parents who worship dead Mahatmas and has been warned not to touch certain artifacts. However, the preadolescent ignores his parental warning to stay away from sacred items and breaks the bust of Dante. Inside is a glass vial that contains the preserved ghost of Thomas Alva Edison; Koot steals the container and the spirit inside. However, ghosthunters and ghost addicts can "see" the bright lit spirit of the late inventor. They want it and are inspired because for no perspiration on their part they can gain incredible power. Sensing dangerous Hurricane Weather in which he is the eye of the storm, Koot flees with mortals, semi paranormals, and a canine chasing after him. This is an exciting paranormal thriller that grips the audience once Koot disobeys his parents and never slows down as he finds many of the residents (not all living) want what he holds. The story line is fast-paced with many eccentric characters but Koot owns the plot. Readers will appreciate his L.A. "joy ride". Harriet Klausner | |
"Ride Metro" | 2006-07-02 |
| - Reviewed By User: A1WUL5GYJ80WN0 | |
| I have to say this is the first Tim Powers book I have ever read. I bought it because the plot outline made so little sense that I figured the author must have done a hell of a job to get his story straight. He did. I especially enjoyed the mixture of the fantastic and surreal ghost-ridden society smoothly blended with present day Los Angeles. I have to say, I rode the LA public buses for a year, so that may explain part of my fascination for the novel. Using an accurate description of LA as a sober backdrop of this fantasy story works wonders in my opinion. It made me believe and go along with all of the novel's twists and turns. Young boy swallows the ghost of Edison which used to be kept on the mantlepiece? Sure! | |
"Past its Freshness" | 2006-02-23 |
| - Reviewed By penngos | |
| What I am about to write hurts me more than it's going to hurt you.
Reason one: I am a huge Tim Powers fan. I love nearly everything he has written and thrust his books into the hands of as many readers as I can find. Reason two: Powers fans are a rabid and bloodthirsty bunch and they will make me pay for this review by racking up "unhelpful" votes at a blurring rate. But I feel I have to, as I have just finished reading "Expiration Date" for the third time. The first time I found it incomprehensible. The second time I found it tiresome. This time I am simply perplexed as to why it was written. On the surface, the plot is typically Powersian - there are ghosts in the world, discorporate lives that drift near the places they died or places to which they have an emotional connection. There are other people who gain a sort of "high" by snorting or smoking these souls. When a big ghost is revealed in the first few pages, all the ghost-smokers want a piece of the action, but the ghost himself isn't particularly interested in being consumed. Madcap hi-jinx ensue. Tim Powers is a master of research, his scenes and historical facts are above reproach. But sometimes he falls down on the emotion quotient and motivations seem arbitrary. This is especially true of "Expiration Date". Powers splinters his focus by having three "main" characters and expecting us to bond with the many secondary characters. There are two villains, one semi-villain and a host of ghosts who have more brainpower than all the living characters combined. Koot Hootie Parganas is an 11-year-old Indian who is being groomed by his parents to be a holy man, but he sneaks burgers when they aren't looking and is frustrated by his unusual life. He knows there is something very special about the bust of Dante on the mantle and, in frustration, smashed the bust, steals the contents (which happen to be the ghost of Thomas Edison, captured with his last breath) and heads for the hills. Edison's ghost is so "big" (presumably, "tasty" or providing a better "high") that all the ghost suckers in LA are alerted to his presence and set off to eat him up. But Powers is never clear on what, exactly, eating a big ghost would do for the ghost eater. I can see if it gave one power over all others, but if it's really just an exceptionally calorie-laden meal, I just don't see why anyone would kill for it. Pete Sullivan, returned to LA after years on the road, is a twin. His sister, Sukie, aware that Loretta de Larava (about which more later) is on her trail, kills herself, but not before alerting Pete to the chase. The pair used to work for Loretta, who hired them because ghosts are attracted to twins. They are fascinated that there are two of the same thing and so come out to look. Kootie accidentally snorts Edison, then hooks up with Pete so they can face down Loretta and free Edison and Pete's dad before Halloween. Similarly, the reader is accidentally confused, then bored out of his mind before the end of the book. Powers leaves too many questions in his quest for cool. Much of this book's story is infused with "wouldn't it be cool if" ideas that, on the surface, are indeed cool. But once you try to make sense of them within the context of the story it all breaks down. For example, why is Edison's ghost so delicious that people are willing to kill in order to eat it? Powers never tells us; we are expected to go along for the ride. Also, ghosts who are consumed do not go away; rather, they live beneath the surface of the consumer's mind, hollering when stressed or confused or hungry. Well. I enjoy a good chicken McNugget now and again, but if they all started cock-a-doodle-dooing when I hadn't had one in a while, I think I'd just say no. Just Say No. That's it, I think. "Expiration Date" is Powers's meditation on drug addiction. All these people running around, hungry for the next ghost, the next fix. He even has Kootie run into a crack addict to underscore the point. In this context, I suppose, even the yowling gullet-ghosts make a certain degree of sense, but the overall concept of the book does not. Any addict would be happy with a series of small highs and would forego the big one, especially if getting the big one meant expenditure of energy. Much of what happens in the ghost world is just silly Beeetlejuice stuff. For example, when Loretta's hair bands snap around her forehead and the top of her head gets pulled to a teeny point and her arm, which is holding a heavy gun, gets stretched and pulled to the floor. It's not scary, it's not poignant, and it's just kind of ridiculous. A bad Tim Powers book is better than about 90% of all the fantasy out there, so the reader should not take this review as a complete shutout. As I said, I have read it three times. But if I were trying to get a new reader hooked on Powers, I would not give them this book or "Earthquake Weather". | |
"Ghostly Thin Entertainment" | 2002-07-29 |
| - Reviewed By hyperpat | |
| I normally can read a novel of this length in a couple of days. This one took me ten to finish. When this happens, it indicates one of two things: either the book is an extremely complex, difficult read or it simply did not engage me as a reader, did not make me want to hurry back to its pages. And for this book, both reasons apply. The story line itself is a very convoluted mating of urban ghosts, two rather well known historical figures, and a large set of major characters who are apparently unrelated to each other at the beginning but who eventually are all intertwined. The driving force behind the plot is the idea that ghosts can be captured, bottled, and inhaled by the living, imparting their memories and life essence to the inhaler. Certain people have become addicted to this habit, and will do anything to capture a really strong ghost, murder being almost the least of that 'anything'. Into this idea Powers drops the ghost of Thomas Edison, a man almost reverentially talked about in schools for his multitudinous inventions, but not exactly the nicest man in the world, as a really powerful ghost that everyone who is capable of sensing his presence wants to get. The set of ideas that Powers introduces here is impressive: inhaleable ghosts, 'rotten' ghosts that once inhaled make it impossible to inhale more ghosts, the possibility of a freshly dead person's ghost continuing to use his body, ghosts who slowly obtain a substantial physical form by ingesting trash, an ingested ghost's personality may take over the consciousness of the inhaler, and many more. None of these ideas are directly laid out at the beginning of the book, but slowly become obvious as you proceed through the story - but while you are learning Powers' ghost rules, you are likely to feel somewhat confused. Also impressive are the portraits Powers paints of Edison and Houdini, combining known historical facts and foibles of their characters with his story line in an almost seamless mix. His descriptions of Los Angeles, both past and present, add to the sense of realism that is so necessary for a book of this nature to succeed. The large set of characters, though, is the major problem with this book. While Pete Sullivan, Angelica Elizalde, and Koot Hoomie Parganas, the three major point-of-view characters, are each described with enough detail about their past and their current thought patterns to enable me to recognize them as real people. What they failed to do was emotionally engage me. And this same problem applied to Solomon Shadroe, Sherman Oaks, Neal Obstadt and all the other characters here - I could not find myself caring what happened to all of them. Perhaps this is because for a large portion of the book, there does not seem to be any definite goal that these characters are trying to reach - a real plot direction doesn't emerge until almost two thirds of the way through the book. While this is certainly a common trait in the modern 'life realistic' novel, where things 'just happen' and people bounce from one experience to another with no goal or direction, here it hurts, as the point is not to paint reality but to present the fantastic as commonplace. This also points up the fact that there is almost no deeper level of meaning to this book. The actions and events portrayed do not have any relevance to everyday living, nor are the character's reactions explored in enough depth to provide new insight into the human condition. This leaves the book as an 'entertainment' only type story, which is perfectly fine as an objective for a novel, but without strong reader engagement with the characters or a strong plot, the entertainment level does not tip the meter very far into the 'enjoyable' range. Some great ideas, some impressive historical research, but stretched across too nebulous a plot from too many viewpoints to be a real page-turning grabber. | |
""You got your Last Call in my Expiration Date!"" | 2001-02-01 |
| - Reviewed By puppybrother | |
| I read Last Call, and thought it was wonderful; if I ever go to Las Vegas, I'll be sure to watch the patterns the smoke makes around the poker table. The Tarot imagery was great, and the entire book was just one big cool concept. I read Expiration Date, and thought the ghost-chasing and eating plots were wonderful, especially since so much of it derived from known eccentricities. And then, comes Earthquake Weather, where the protagonists from each novel meet and work together to raise the King of the West from the dead, along with a host of new characters. It's not a bad novel at all; that's why it gets four stars. As usual, Powers writes very well, with good characterization and intelligent plotting. My issue with it is...it's a team-up book, like Spiderman Vs. Superman. Part of the fun is the learning experience of the main characters, as they figure out what the heck is going on and how to survive. We see that from the main character, but then we have the characters of the previous two novels, who should know what to do...but don't. Somehow, that aspect bothered me far more than I'd've thought. It's still a good novel, but I'm pretty sure it could've been better. | |
"A bit too long and complex, but original and fun" | 2000-10-30 |
| - Reviewed By mike_christie | |
| "Expiration Date" opens with Koot Hoomie Parganas, running away from home and into trouble, in L.A. in the early 90's. After a couple of chapters the viewpoint switches to Pete Sullivan, a "ghost-sensitive" (we slowly find out what this means) electrician in Arizona, soon to return to L.A. when he gets a panic-struck phone call from his sister. Then we get more viewpoints: Angelica Elizalde, a psychiatrist who had a disastrous seance a few years ago; Sherman Oaks, who seems at first just to be a crazy homeless person; Solomon Shadroe, a strange L.A. landlord who has some long ago connection to Sullivan's boss, Loretta deLarava; Neal Obstadt, who still works with deLarava. It's a little too much. The stories eventually entwine, but to start with almost all these threads are separate, and it's difficult to keep track. It may be more of a problem if you read the book in twenty or thirty page chunks, as I did, instead of sitting down for a couple of hours at a time and absorbing large parts of it. Having said that, the story is strong and interesting, with well-drawn characters and a helter-skelter ghostly denouement on the moored luxury liner, Queen Mary. The internal logic of "Expiration Date", where ghosts are visible to some people, is perfectly done. In this world some people have become addicted to absorbing--"eating"--ghosts; snorting them up like powdered cocaine, swallowing up their essences. This unpleasant habit drives much of the book, though you're halfway through before you start to piece all the information together. As a result the first half of the book is a little dream-like, with so many disconnected storylines, and so much unexplained weirdness. The book works, in the end, and is a fun read. But it really doesn't need to be over 500 pages. | |
"The long and winding road" | 2000-04-11 |
| - Reviewed By dhalgren99 | |
| I love Tim Powers but I was initially hesitant about this book, mostly because of its length and the fact that I had heard several mixed reviews about it, generally a new Tim Powers book is a cause for celebration of his writing genius. This time folks seemed unsure. I can see why, this is his longest book by this point as far as I know (Earthquake Weather, the sequel, might be longer, I can't remember, not having it) and I think his typical ultracomplicated plotting can wear thin over the course of five hundred pages when maybe four hundred isn't so bad. But with a premise like this I just couldn't resist: Los Angeles in the present day (1995) is home to ghosts and ghost hunters and people addicted to ghosts and basically the plot centers around a boy who has accidentally inhaled the last breath of Thomas Edison and now everyone is looking for him because Edison was such a powerful figure in life that his ghost hasn't diminished a bit. The twists and turns of the plot are left for the reader to discover but rest assured this is a book that commands patience. For those who like instant thrills, there are those here, Powers still has his ability with words and he strings along a bunch of cool moments together enough time to make this into a near page turner. But it's not totally addictive as his other books are, you finish it because you want to know what's going to happen and he has you really interested but it's not "bring your flashlight under the pillow to read it after bedtime" material. Indeed, this is probably not for the Tim Powers novice, those would probably be better off cutting their teeth on the Anubis Gates or Last Call (both highly recommended) but when they're done with those and want more they should come here for more of his utterly unique take on fantasy. No elves and forests here, this is urban fantasy. | |
"I keep thinking that Tim Powers is a very complicated man." | |
| - Reviewed By Anonymous | |
| I've read my Powers all out of order so far. I began with _Earthquake Weather_, moved into _Last Call_, went on to _The Anubis Gates_ and have now finished _Expiration Date_. I guess of all of them, I like EW the least. Which is not to say that I didn't enjoy it. I think that Powers is one of the most (if not *the* most) creative, inventive and possibly mad fantasy writers working today. It's rarely that I read a writer who really makes me say "How on earth did he think of *that*?" Powers creates a plot centering around the ghost of Thomas Edison, the idea that ghosts can be inhaled for their essence, and complicated ideas about magic and superstition. Somehow he makes this plot feel almost inevitable-- it never feels odd for the sake of odd. So why is it my least favorite? I think that it's largely an issue of comparison. For all that the premise in this book is highly believable, it's not quite as real to me as the Last Call world. There are a few too many characters and there are almost places where some of them feel as though they're driving the plot. But largely it's because I don't quite believe the motivation where deLarava is concerned-- I find her one of the weakest of the Powers characters and I have trouble buying her eventual character arc. Still, any Powers is more worth reading more than the best book by almost anyone else. | |
"The best entertainment money can buy!" | |
| - Reviewed By Anonymous | |
| Tim Powers is one of the reasons that I had so much trouble in college. It was his ON STRANGER TIDES that distracted me from at least a complete day of classes. I remember reading ON STRANGER TIDES quite vividly, spending an 8 hour stretch curled up in a chair in the graduate library of the University of Texas, vicariously living the life of a pirate. Most of Powers' other novels have had the same hold on me, with the possible exception of THE STRESS OF HER REGARD, which I found somewhat slow and dull. I'm happy to say that EXPIRATION DATE is much more like ON STRANGER TIDES and THE ANUBIS GATES. Powers' trick of the trade is the incorporation of historical figures in wildly fantastical yet internally plausible plots. When this works, the reader learns something about the period and personalities while also being entertained. When Powers is at his best, the reader may think some of the fantastic parts *are* history. What if ghosts lingered on, and could be "attracted" by conundrums and disorder, could be absorbed by the living who are then "revitalized"? What if certain people's ghosts were stronger--people like Harry Houdini and Thomas Edison, who knew that their ghosts would be desired by the greedy living? These are Powers' concepts and he plays them perfectly, establishing the rules as he establishes the characters, always remaining consistent within his world. What Powers has done here is invent his own system of magic, as if he were writing a new role-playing system, then working within those rules as he role plays the characters toward the plot conclusion. Aside from the mechanics, Powers' strength also lies within his character portraits. In this long novel he handles at least five major protagonists and a dozen supporting cast, each a well-drawn individual. If there is anything of fault in EXPIRATION DATE, it is the lack of anything more than an incredibly entertaining, fun story. But is that a lack or just Powers' entire intention? In any case, if you want a piece of entertainment that doesn't treat you like a seven-year-old, you can't do any better than Powers or EXPIRATION DATE. | |
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