Re: [Glencook-fans] Angry Lead Skies
I thought I read an interview (I can't remember where) that confirmed my own suspicion, which was that the pending contract was the only reason Glen wrote the book--i.e., that he thought the character and the situation had run its course. He's written dozens of fantastic, energetic, and thoughtful books--ALS just isn't one of them, IMO. The Tyranny books, written around the same time, are so much denser and more intensely felt that I'm guessing that's where his heart was. ---- Marc Rikmenspoel <marcrik@gmail.com> wrote:
I finished Faded Steel Heat, and found it to be one of the best Garrett books, and one of Cook's better books overall. I've now started Angry Lead Skies, a book that is widely criticized, especially on Amazon, for not being up to the standard of the rest of the series. Some have speculated that it was ghost written, or is partially the work of another author.
It DOES feel like Glen Cook's work to me, it just doesn't feel like typical Garrett. I've come up with some speculation on what might have happened to cause this.
To begin with, the first nine Garrett books were released over a 12 year span, between 1987 and 1999. Published books are usually written between six months and several years ahead of their first publication date. Faded Steel Heat, published in 1999, was released four years after Petty Pewter Gods. It may have been written as early as 1996 or so. I'm guessing that the Garrett books were written continuously. Based on comments Cook has made in interviews, he may well have written a Garrett book over the course of several months (or even more than a year), and then immediately started the next one, with again a possible gestation time of many months. But the character and milieu were always close at hand in his mind.
For whatever reason, probably due to his changing lifestyle when he retired from GM, Cook's output dropped just after the millennium. Faded Steel Heat and Water Sleeps were released in 1999. Soldiers Live came out the next year, but was written sooner, of course. In 2005 Whispering Nickel Idols and The Tyranny of the Night were released. Between 2000 and 2005, Angry Lead Skies was the only book Cook published, and was the only one written so far as I know (that is, between circa 1999 and circa 2003 when he started his next releases, a span of roughly four years, Cook only wrote one book).
What I speculate from all this is that the character of Garrett had gotten away from Cook a bit when he wrote Angry Lead Skies. So, some of the continuity slipped. Katie appears from nowhere, the Grolls speak Karantine, and so on. Perhaps enough readers at the time pointed this out to Cook that he put a little more effort into the continuity in the following volumes. After finishing Angry Lead Skies and starting Whispering Nickel Idols, Cook was back in full time Garrett mode, the character and setting were close-by, mentally. I know that Cruel Zinc Melodies was already at least partially written when Whispering Nickel Idols was released in 2005, and since the 13 th Garrett book is under contract (the deal that covered Whispering Nickel Idols was for two Garrett books), it probably already exists to some degree.
I haven't read Whispering Nickel Idols and Cruel Zinc Melodies yet, but I understand that they are much more in line with the rest of the series. I could be wrong with all my guessing, since I only know what I pick up as clues in interviews and such. But my best guess is that Cook lost his handle on Garrett while not doing much writing for a few years around the turn of the millennium, but has since regained his contact with the Garrett muse. I've seen comments that Cook might be winding the series down, and preparing Garrett for a more peaceful life, married to Tinnie and working full time for Weider. Could Blissful Platinum Nuptials be the title of the next volume ;-)
On Oct 24, 2008, at 6:42 AM, Lawrence Jenab wrote:
I thought I read an interview (I can't remember where) that confirmed my own suspicion, which was that the pending contract was the only reason Glen wrote the book--i.e., that he thought the character and the situation had run its course. He's written dozens of fantastic, energetic, and thoughtful books--ALS just isn't one of them, IMO. The Tyranny books, written around the same time, are so much denser and more intensely felt that I'm guessing that's where his heart was.
I gotta go with this. ALS just doesn't "fit" with the rest of the series, although in the sense of being a more juvenile sex comedy it does follow Petty Pewter Gods (which is otherwise a much better book than ALS). Fortunately for us, he's back on track and looking set to wrap the series with a happy ending in the next book or two. I'm just hoping the omnibus Dread Empire reprints do well enough to justify more books in the series. No, I'm not taking my medication, why do you ask ? -- Michael Llaneza maserati@speakeasy.net
Woo hoo! Amazon finally has the trade paperback of A Fortress in Shadow in stock! My order is placed, for that, A Cruel Wind trade paperback (I already own the original 3 books, I wrote the first review of them on Amazon 11 years ago) and The Tower of Fear mass market paperback.With free shipping and my gift card, I should have them in a week or so, and for only $5.37! I still hold out hope that the release of An Empire Unacquainted With Defeat ahead of Wrath of Kings is a sign that the missing Dread Empire manuscript either surfaced or has been recreated. I'm looking forward to what Glen has to say in his "detailed" (according to Nightshade) introduction to An Empire Unacquainted With Defeat. Maybe he'll shed some light on this issue! As to Angry Lead Skies, I'm about halfway done. It seems like around page 125 or so the "real" voice of Garrett takes over, and now, at page 175, it feels more like the rest of the series. That could still change, of course! I'm hoping it stays the path and remaind good from here on out. On Fri, Oct 24, 2008 at 10:06 AM, Michael Llaneza <maserati@speakeasy.net>wrote:
On Oct 24, 2008, at 6:42 AM, Lawrence Jenab wrote:
I thought I read an interview (I can't remember where) that confirmed my own suspicion, which was that the pending contract was the only reason Glen wrote the book--i.e., that he thought the character and the situation had run its course. He's written dozens of fantastic, energetic, and thoughtful books--ALS just isn't one of them, IMO. The Tyranny books, written around the same time, are so much denser and more intensely felt that I'm guessing that's where his heart was.
I gotta go with this. ALS just doesn't "fit" with the rest of the series, although in the sense of being a more juvenile sex comedy it does follow Petty Pewter Gods (which is otherwise a much better book than ALS). Fortunately for us, he's back on track and looking set to wrap the series with a happy ending in the next book or two.
I'm just hoping the omnibus Dread Empire reprints do well enough to justify more books in the series.
No, I'm not taking my medication, why do you ask ?
-- Michael Llaneza maserati@speakeasy.net
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participants (3)
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Lawrence Jenab -
Marc Rikmenspoel -
Michael Llaneza