perlmonger: (books)perlmonger ([personal profile] perlmonger) wrote,
@ 2010-09-20 10:26 pm UTC
25 years on, I've finally read Walking on Glass and found it actually very good indeed; people may complain about its lack of a linear narrative, but here we get three; Interleaved, intersecting and ultimately connected in as pleasingly ambiguous and open-ended a way as anyone could wish. A narrative structure that Trish Sullivan has used in several of her books (also to very fine results), allowing me to make here a suitably arbitrary connection to mention that she is giving away a copy of her latest novel, Lightborn to a randomly chosen commenter to this post. So get yourself there and post a comment; meet her half way, you might just win the draw.

Now to make a start on Ilario; I may be some time.


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flamewarrior: (banksy, greatness)


[personal profile] flamewarrior
2010-09-25 12:31 pm UTC (link)
I *loved* Walking on Glass - one of Iain's books that actually has sympathetic characters, shock horror! (And what exactly is wrong with lack of linear narrative? Linear narrative is *boring*.)

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perlmonger: (pete)


[personal profile] perlmonger
2010-09-25 09:03 pm UTC (link)
Iain tends to differently sympathetic characters :)

But yes, multi-threaded writing, good. Staying slightly OP-relevant, have you read [livejournal.com profile] triciasullivan's Double Vision and Sound Mind? Recommended, particularly the tail end of the latter, which contains one of my all time favourite slices of writing.

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