lightreads: a partial image of a etymology tree for the Indo-European word 'leuk done in white neon on black'; in the lower left is (Default)
lightreads ([personal profile] lightreads) wrote2007-05-16 01:10 pm

White Night by Jim Butcher (2007)

Ninth Dresden Files book (click author link for the first eight) in which Harry begins investigating the deaths of a number of local small-time magical practitioners and, say it ain’t so!, ends up in the middle of a massive vampire power struggle with wide-ranging implications for the continuing war.

I’m almost tempted to re-skim Storm Front, the first book in the series, just for the purpose of enjoying how much Butcher’s talent has grown. His writing is smoother (if not, you know, particularly beautiful), his dialogue downright sparkling in places, his plots much less contrived, his jokes funny-lame instead of stupid-lame. And he’s discovered subtlety in character work, which is worth a cheer all in and of itself.

All of which sounds a lot more disparaging than it’s intended. Seriously. This series started out as a mildly diverting bunch of adventures with average writing and the occasional irritating element. They’ve morphed into smooth, funny, creative stories which are indulging in the sort of very long-range plotting that really pushes my buttons. There’s a really excellent and diverse supporting cast, and Harry is developing in believable and impressive ways (the apprentice angle is awesome) as both a wizard and a person, and somewhere in the past three books I started being emotionally engaged by him on levels that the first few books didn’t permit (see above re: subtlety in character work).

Harry’s chauvinism is still irritating (nope, sorry, not cute, not funny, and, most damning of all, not illuminating of character in a meaningful way). I was also a bit disappointed by the ending to this book, which returned to the old pattern of lining up the good guys and the bad guys and having them whack at each other with swords and magic and rifles until things go badly for both and the good guys pull a rabbit out of their hats. Ho-hum. This sort of thing can only really be saved for me by the delightful creativity Butcher has demonstrated himself more than capable of (resurrected dinosaur! Plant monster in a garden store!) that simply wasn’t present here. Otherwise, it reads like a description of a tabletop RPG. Which, uh, it well might be.

Anyway. Strong series that I’m glad I stuck with, because the good stuff took a while to hit me. And I have a feeling there’s a lot more of it coming.

Which, by the way, can also be said of the new TV show – I was reasonably entertained by the first few episodes, then something shifted and went click and the last few installments have been nothing short of delightful.

[identity profile] josanpq.livejournal.com 2007-07-07 10:02 pm (UTC)(link)
All right.

Book 7: I loved Mouse the dogosaurus :-)

I loved Sue the Zombie T-Rex.

Butters finding his courage...

The zombies made a nice change from the Vampires.

BTW: at the end of this paperback, there was a message from Butcher about this other series of his: Codex Alera. Have you read any of those? If so, worth investigating?

Book 8:

I agree with Murphy...sadly. They can't pair off. I liked that Molly ends up with Harry. As I teacher, I can only feel for the pain, the frustration and the satisfaction awaiting him in that role. :-)

I had wondered about Charity. She struck me as really strong for a terciary character.

Mouse getting hurt. JB had better NOT kill Mouse off. Besides, Chinese mythological protector dogs live long lives. (Don't they?)

Michael coming to the rescue, with Ebenezer. :-)

The Gatekeeper is getting more interesting and frustrating. Who the hell is he really!

OMG! With JB's long-plotting...is Harry to be the next Merlin? What has Lea promised Margaret LeFay (sister to Morgana, is she?) in relation to Harry? Will the Fallen demon Lasciel have her wicked ways with our Harry? And who the hell is pulling all the strings in the background?

I liked this on. As you said. better than 7. BUT I want more with Thomas. I think JB is underusing Thomas.

Well, that's it for this series. Yes, I know there's a ninth, but I'll wait until it's out in pb.

Many thanks again. I really have had fun with this series.

[identity profile] lightreads.livejournal.com 2007-07-15 03:25 pm (UTC)(link)
Hm. I haven't tried his other series. I've heard it's perfectly fine, but that's it's not really exciting yet. Also, one of the POVs is a woman, and some of his gender weirdness shows up a lot more.

Lasciel: *is not spoiling you*. I found the temporary? resolution of this plotline pretty disappointing in the ninth book. And you're right to wait for the PB, btw. It's a good book, as my review says, but it returns to the vampires yet again, and a few other things that just aren't worth $25.