Ri'dance

Apr. 7th, 2007 04:44 pm
library_mama: (Default)
Because Mr. Froggie Pants asks constantly for “Ri’dance” music, but any Celtic music will do…

Their Greatest Hits by the Dubliners The Dubliners (in case you didn’t know) are one of groups that kicked off the revival of Irish and Celtic traditional music, way back when. (I’m too lazy to look it up in Wikipedia just now, but probably the sixties). This CD is a lovely mix of dance tunes and ballads, fast ‘n’ bawdy songs and moving labor songs. And all the songs are sung in a delightfully growly Irish voice. Maybe not for you if you prefer wispy modern stuff like Enya trad rock like Deep Blue Sea. But for straight-up traditional music, it’s fantastic.

Ysabel by Guy Gavriel Kay Another top-reviewed new SF book. Our hero, 15-year-old Ned Marriner, is accompanying his father on a business expedition to photograph Provence, while his mother is working for Doctors without Borders in a dangerous warzone. Ned starts off pretty darn teen petty, but snaps out of it as he and geeky but cute history buff Kate Wenger run into a man with a knife in the cathedral baptistery. He tells them not to get involved, but even without wanting to, they are drawn into an ancient love triangle that mirrors the battle between Roman and Celt for the land. It gets off to a slowish start, but picks up pace rapidly as Ned and Kate try to solve the mystery before someone is permanently out of the picture. It’s got a nice myth under modern reality feel, and the history puzzles and mystery aspect will appeal to fans of The DaVinci Code, albeit with less breathless action and much better writing.
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[livejournal.com profile] fritz_et_al recommended that I read this book a long time ago. And I really wanted to, but I wanted to listen to it, and my library didn’t have the audio version. Yay, [livejournal.com profile] amnachaidh for finding it at our own library, the one I don’t work at.

Anansi Boys by Neil Gaiman. Read by Lenny Henry For those who have read American Gods, Anansi Boys is set in the same world as where the gods of the old world live in America as ordinary people. But this book works just fine without having read the first one. Fat Charlie Nancy hadn’t spoken to his father, who loved humiliating him, in a decade. When flies to his childhood home in Florida from London for the funeral, he finds out that not only was his father Anansi, the ancient African spider god, but that he has a brother he has no memory of. On the spur of a drunken moment, Fat Charlie tells a spider to tell his brother to drop by. Spider, his brother, does. And starts carelessly pulling Fat Charlie’s life apart. At this point, I felt that the book might be veering towards Nanny Diaries land, with our protagonist getting further and further stomped on until he crawls out of the story to bleed to death. Happily, the story turns around as Fat Charlie declares war on his brother, and then takes yet another unexpected turn. There’s some good humor (penguin-shaped black candles for a séance, for example), some classic Gaiman creepy elder-god stuff, and some very sympathetic characters. If you have the option, do listen to this book. Lenny Henry does every character so believably it made my jaw drop, with accents ranging from Caribbean Island to African-American to several stripes of British. I might just have to see if he’s narrated any other books.

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