Tuesday, July 30, 2013

The Golem and the Jinni, Helene Wecker

The Golem and the Jinni, Helene Wecker.  ISBN: 9780062110831
Read July 23
 
Magical Realism?  Adult Fairy Tale?

First things first - this book is ATTRACTIVE.  The publishers really deserve mad credit for this gorgeous presentation, and I honestly think I give the insides of the book itself a bit more slack because it is so damn pretty.  The cover is lovely, a moody blue-tone image of a massive arch, with the title in a vaguely Art-Deco style in metallic gold, and more gold filigree around the corners and edges, and a rich hot sliver of a burnt-orange border underneath.  Then, if that wasn't lovely enough on it's own, the page edges themselves are dyed deep midnight blue, with a lovely barely-there bleed into the pages, so each one is trimmed in a rich dark edge.
 
That's presentation for you.  Utterly stunning.
 
Now, on to the book.  I started this book about two weeks ago, put it down for over a good while, then picked it up and finished it Tuesday night.  That is ... fairly uncommon for me, with a new book.  In fact, the last book it happened with (Gail Tsukiyama's Women of the Silk) I actually DIDN'T like that much, and found to be pedestrian, plodding, and frankly boring. 
 
This book was odd.  I was hooked right at the start because I had never considered a female Golem before.  I suppose I'm just not the imaginative type, but that created a nice solid spark of interest, because I was in totally unknown territory.  Then the interest value of an unMastered Golem (another novel idea) and the mental anguish of her wanting to meet everyone's mental needs - how amazing! 
 
Then we get the Jinn, and he was... somehow flat.  I felt for him, and I was curious, but since Jinni are so flighty and unmoored, it was hard to get a sense of the life he lost, especially since he didn't remember how he lost it.  Not even a hint of memory, and that made it really hard for me to develop an interest in him.  I think if he had perhaps remembered just a bit more - expansions like that much later twinge of recognition he had with the prostitute in the Bowery pushing her hair aside - then I would have felt more attuned to him from the start.  He grew on me, but I didn't experience anything like the frisson I had with the Golem, and that was a major disappointment to get past. 
 
Then, it was just slow rolling through local community and history of the community members, and community politics, and the histories of those politics, and while the characters were interesting, here was where I really felt the dispassion of that distant narrator - everything is he said she said they did he thought she wanted...   I would have killed for an I AM or an I WILL in there somewhere.  By the Syrian wedding, I had had it.  That's where I stopped for a good while.  After slogging through all that, I really wasn't interested in picking back up.
 
Of course I had stopped right before the Sophia plotline, and that made the Jinn much more interesting.  Starting from there on Tuesday, the remainder kept my attention much better, and I read through at more my usual pace. 
 
On to specific points:
 
The Sophia and Saleh subplots somehow felt like they were missing something.  Between poor Sophia and poor Saleh (let's not even talk about Fadwa), Jinn interactions are dangerous for people, and I really do wonder if the Jinn never actually learned to care about that.  He didn't seem to.  The Golem would have cared, but I don't think she ever realized what was going on, and she didn't ask (which is odd, given her specifically-created curiousity).
 
And that leads to another point.  The thrust of the novel seems to be that each of these creatures is bound by their natures, created to be a certain way, and it's foolish and naive of them to expect that they'll do anything differently, regardless of their opinions on the matter and their own intellectual desires.  BUT - they do spend the whole novel taking little steps outside their natures, and those are celebrated, until the end where their natures constrain them totally again and they have to be rescued by a "real" person (who, incidentally, was able to be that rescuer by the actions of the very man he then destroyed... natures in conflict again).
 
It's interesting.  The question of the book as I read it is whether to accept as much of your nature as possible, and fight only against the bad parts (the Golem's approach) or to rage against your restrictions and refuse to be placated by your current state in the interests of maintaining your passion to fight for your ideal state (the Jinn's approach).  The funny thing is, with the peculiar "solution" of the climax, neither approach produces the desired results for the characters.
 
Very odd.  Between the slow pacing in the mid-section, and the oddness of the plot culmination, I'm not entirely sure how I feel about it.  A sort of distant fairy-tale or mythological sensibility that I wasn't expecting.

Monday, July 29, 2013

Fool Moon Graphic Novel (hardcover volume 2), Jim Butcher, Chase Conley

Dresden Files: Fool Moon vol 2, Jim Butcher, Chase Conley
ISBN: 9781606903773
July 23, 2013
 
Graphic Novel:
 
Poor Chase.  Umpty-bazillion nekkid people, and he gets to illustrate them all without showing any naughty bits.  Creative lighting, body position, clothing and drapery choices, and scenery are all deployed without hesitation.
 
The good -
 
I know Fool Moon isn't Butcher's best work.  I know it's a bit muddled and the plot isn't the utmost or highest it could have been, but everything is forgiven because of Tera.  LOVE.  Her. Soooo.  Much.  In addition, I just have a real soft-spot for werewolves, and I loved that this story had all different kinds represented as different types of magic and ability.  I also liked the Alphas as a concept (shades of the later Paranet), I liked that Harry FINALLY gets some, and that Marcone actually gets roughed up a little (that doesn't happen nearly enough, to be honest).    
 
As far as condensing and graphicizing, I was also impressed with how well everything flowed.  The noir is really enhanced by the tightening-up - because the beats are spaced so much closer together, you really do feel intensely how badly Harry can't ever get a break.   
 
The bad -
 
Oh God, what did Murph ever do to Chase?  Her mouth is HORRID!  Harry is a little on the angular and craggy side now, and his expressions are occasionally manic, but, well, it's Harry - he's not supposed to be pretty, and frankly, he IS often manic.  Tera came off nicely in most of her panels also.  But Murph... the color and size of her lips compared to her face proportions make her look like a clown slut.  It's just awful. 
 
In general, there was a very odd contrast between more realistic art (like the cover panels and Harry vs the Streetwolves in the rain) and the very odd hyper contrasted exaggerated style of some of the "hero" pages.  A really illustrative contrast is the very end of issue 5 - Murph under MacFinn, contrasted with the cover art for issue 6, Harry under MacFinn.  The first is just not attractive, and the second is.  Not only does this show off the terrible Murphy mouth, it also is just miles different between the faces and the body postures.   
 
Maybe it's just me, but I'm not as fond of this art-style, and I hope that it turns a little back in the direction of the covers, honestly.

Friday, July 26, 2013

The Talking Eggs, Robert D. San Souci, Jerry Pinkney

The Talking Eggs, Robert D. San Souci, illus by Jerry Pinkney.  ISBN: 0803706197
Read July 23, 2013
 
Picture Book: Classic fairy-tale story (Perrault's The Fairies, also known as Diamonds and Toads, and Grimm's Mother Hulda) gets a Creole makeover as this dynamic duo knocks another beautiful book out of the park.
 
Blanche and Rose live a hard-knock life with their single mother (although the life might be a bit less hard-knock if Rose and Mom weren't slackers and harpies) until a chance encounter with a weird old woman at the well leads sweet-tempered and hard-working Blanche into a fortune - after a strange night requiring her to be respectful, gentle, and hard-working.  
 
When Blanche comes back home loaded, Rose is shoved out the door to try her luck, and of course, fails miserably as she is incapable of governing herself.  
 
I would personally have preferred a Gullah rendition rather than Creole, as I grew up in Charleston, but one can't have everything.
 
A really nice touch for me is that Blanche and the old witchwoman share the same (beautiful traditional African) hairstyle, while Rose and Mom have theirs down and loose in imitation of white styles, trying to be "fancy ladies" in the big city.   

Thursday, July 25, 2013

Stone Soup, Jon J. Muth

Stone Soup, Jon J. Muth.  ISBN: 043933909X
Read July 23, 2013
 
Picture Book: Three monks (named for the Chinese deities for health, wealth, and prosperity) visit a town crippled and isolated by bad fortune.  They set up in the town square and begin to cook stone soup, and the peculiar sight draws the townsfolk in to investigate and assist.  By the end of the night, a town-wide party is underway, people are visiting and making merry, and the monks are given a fond send-off the next morning.
 
I love the extra touches in this book (many of them mentioned in the afterword).  The little girl in the sun-yellow coat that first breaks the ice, the gentle but sly expressions on the monks' faces as they trick the townies into being nicer and happier, the omnipresent black cat.
 
I also like that the monks perform shadow puppets for the townies - I love puppetry, and having a puppet-scene illustrated is a nice touch.
 
Muth is the author/illustrator of the Zen Shorts set of books, and I dearly love his illustrations.  His writing is also gentle and clear, which fits the "teaching" style of his moralistic stories. 

Wednesday, July 24, 2013

The Frog Prince, illustrated by Anne Yvonne Gilbert

The Frog Prince
Retold by Kathy-Jo Wargin
Illustrated by Anne Yvonne Gilbert
Read July 22, 2013
ISBN: 9781587262791
 
Beautiful cross-hatching watercolor pencil illustrations, showcasing an epic variety of peevish, tantruming, petulant, unhappy, SPOILT facial expressions.  Oddly enough, none of the illustrations show an eye-color for the princess, which is interesting given how detailed they are otherwise.  Interesting artistic choice.  
 
On the textual side, this is a faithful adaptation, with the bed-sharing request and the resulting temper-tantrum and frog-flinging that entails.  In a slightly offbeat inclusion, Faithful Henry is there at the end, but nowhere else.  
 
Also, super-hot metrosexual prince!  Not many attractive illustrated princes in these books.

Tuesday, July 23, 2013

The Mind Trap, G Clifton Wisler

The Mind Trap, G. Clifton Wisler.  ISBN: 0525673156.  Published 1990
Read July 19, 2013
 
Final book of Antrian Messenger Trilogy (The Antrian Messenger, The Seer) featuring Scott, an alien child with psi abilities trying to survive on earth.  This one has him visiting Earth on his birthday because he's lonely, and getting captured by evil scientists experimenting on kids with psi abilities (all with alien ancestry).  
 
Weirdly flat - nothing bad happens to the kids being studied by the scientists (although other non-character people were discussed having been "studied" to death), Scott and his "guardian" alien have nearly unlimited powers, and the scientists are paper-thin.  
 
Nifty concept, especially contrasted to the recent Man of Steel movie which also focuses on an alien child with nearly unlimited powers trying to do the right thing while growing up on earth.  Sadly, not an excellent rendition of said nifty concept. 

Have not, and most likely will not read the previous two installments.

Monday, July 22, 2013

The Best Little Monkeys in the World

The Best Little Monkeys in the World, Natalie Standiford, illus by Hilary Knight.  ISBN: 978-0394986166  
Read July 17
Published 1987
 
Remembered from childhood and re-read.  "Mischievous" monkeys get up to all sorts of horribly messy trouble while their useless babysitter chats on the phone endlessly, but when the evening draws to a close and the sitter is fast asleep on the couch, the good-natured siblings put equal effort into (unsupervised and un-asked) cleaning up their mess, straightening out the home, and putting themselves to bed.  No one gets into any trouble when the parents return, none the wiser, to a clean house and a clueless but happy babysitter.
 
I was surprised to see this in the library recently - I remembered it fondly from my grandparents' house from my visits there.  I had always liked it because the monkey siblings were very active and imaginative and got into a lot of messes, but not maliciously.  That was a nice unforseen alternative to "bad" mess-making kids, or "good" quiet and wussy uninteresting kids.  I also very much liked that they were proactive (and competent) about cleaning up after themselves in order to keep their fun going.  As an adult, I'm a bit horrified at the message and the idea that these little berserkers were swift enough to bamboozle their parents into continuing to use the same worthless babysitter, but as a kid, I thought it made excellent sense.

Monday, July 15, 2013

Traction Man and the Beach Odyssey, Mini Grey

Traction Man and the Beach Odyssey
Mini Grey
July 15, 2013
ISBN: 978-0375869525 
Oh, My, God.... I love Traction Man!  How did I miss this for over two months!
This one is not as good as Traction Man is Here! (Mini Grey, ISBN: 9780307931115), but better than the second: Traction Man Meets Turbo Dog (ISBN: 9780375855832).  I swear I will re-read or use these for storytime and review them both.  Until then; taken as a collection, Traction Man is AMAZING!!

Now, off to the beach.  I'm easily swayed by beaches and oceans, and I also have to say that the "Brown and Sticky" joke (one of my husband's favorites) popsicle stick did me in.
I also must say that Traction Man(tm)'s creators are clever sorts to make his clothes disintegrate so quickly.  He looked quite the Robinson Crusoe by the time he was "rescued."
Facial expressions are just killer, as always.
Especially liked the ladies roughing it in the borrowed clothes, getting all up into the excavating.  Hell yes! 
Win all around.

Saturday, July 13, 2013

Mother, Mother, I Feel Sick; Send for the Doctor Quick Quick Quick, Remy Charlip & Burton Supree

Mother, Mother, I Feel Sick; Send for the Doctor Quick Quick Quick,
Authors: Remy Charlip & Burton Supree
Illustrator: Remy Charlip
ASIN: B000JG6W5M
1966, Parents' Magazine Press, NY NY

Goodwill find!

This is so cute!

The pages are psychedelically colored, with faux-Victorian woodcuts in white against the multi-hued backgrounds.  Towards the end, the extracted objects appear in color, but they're the only exceptions.

Mother is frantic that her balloon-shaped little boy has a tummy-ache.  Call the doctor to the house!  No good - he's too far gone.  Off to the hospital, where various items (growing more and more outre) are removed, while the little boy deflates visibly.  At the end, he's mostly normal sized again, but the doctor's coat and hat have gone mysteriously missing... 

Friday, July 12, 2013

Throne of Glass, Sarah J. Maas

Throne of Glass, Sarah J. Maas. ISBN: 978-1599906959
July 11, 2013

Meh.
 
Interesting concept, shatteringly unsuitable execution (no pun intended).
 
I really like the plot idea, and the idea for the main character.  I even don't mind the "magic is gone/no it really isn't/oh, there's something DEEPER than magic instead!" switching around.   
 
Instead, I mind (spoilers, lalalala) that a child found sleeping beside two traumatically-murdered parents and then raised by a heartless assassin master for 10 years, then caught with her lover who dies while she's sent to a salt mine for a year and brutalized by the guards while she's there, and then thrown into a life-or-death competition when she's still violently out of condition is presented as the vapid, clothes and beauty-obsessed twit we see on display here.
 
I don't mind the snarking and taunts. I don't even mind the penchant for candy and puppydogs.  I mind that she's not acting like she has been trained at all by anyone, and that she seems way too comfortable with all these nobs around, and much too casual about a killer on the loose.  I mind that other than one instance before the climax, we don't get to see any substantial evidence of her vaunted skills in action. 
 
I mind the writing choices.  If the competition is important to the plotline (it's the macguffin, but still) then for the love of goats, actually focus on it more than twice, and show us some consequences.  When the losers lose, they just vanish, no idea what torments they're going back to or not.  If the contests are continually so easy for our heroine, then there should be more than one scene of her holding herself back.  Likewise, if the gruesome murders are important, then show us them more than once.  If the evil king is evil, show it!  If the mysterious princess is mysterious, then SHOW IT TO US.
 
Also, I'm getting really sick of literal deux-ex-machina (or deus-ex-hallucination).  It takes chutzpah to do it at all, and real talent and writer's craft to do it well.  This one fell with a thud - you even knew it was coming, but it still didn't really seem inspiring or powerful, just inevitable.
 
Sad, because the world and the villains seem really interesting, but not enough to suffer through more court-inspired romantic drivel to see them get their comeuppance. 

Wednesday, July 10, 2013

Soonie and the Dragon, Shirley Rosseau Murphy

Soonie and the Dragon
Shirley Rosseau Murphy
Published 1979
Hardcover "Weekly Reader" book
ISBN: 978-0689307201

Goodwill find!

This is a sweet collection of three tales featuring the intrepid Soonie, orphaned and left all alone at the start with a broken-down cart, and old hound, and an even older mare.  Despite only knowing how to sing and dance and tell stories, she manages to fix and paint the cart in a day, (saving enough time to sing for her supper, of course) and then she's off to adventures!

In the first installment (which I imagine would be what most people remember) Soonie travels to the big city, and tries to sing for her supper, but she's rudely told to stop it, and informed that singing is outlawed, because the Princess of the city was taken and eaten by a dragon.  On to the next city then!  There, she tries dancing, but the reception is similarly chilly for a similar reason.  Onwards again, to a city square where telling tales is verboten; you guessed it - their Princess is gone too.

Thinking about how to avoid being eaten by this apparently talent-seeking dragon, Soonie soon succumbs to curiousity (and the knowledge of the hundreds of gold coins, head of cattle, herds of horses, and acreage of land that comprise the reward) and follows the sounds of singing, dancing, and tale-telling to the dragon's cave, where she rescues the princesses with perfect trickster form.

Rewards acquired, she's onward again to her next adventure.  An ancient crone warns her of the dangers of menfolk to come (and isn't that an allegory in a fairy-tale book for young girls there) and sure enough, the first is an ogre in disguise wishing to eat her, the second a phouka wishing to drown her in the sea, and the third an ancient and cruel Fae king who wishes her to become his bride and loose her immortal soul for eternal life with him.  This one was actually a bit creepy, as the Fae don't play fair, and Soonie is quite obviously out of her depth.  The crone returns, the Fae are vanquished satisfyingly, and Soonie again sets out.

Final adventure has Soonie administering some tough love to a 5-headed griffon and the useless sons of the nearby village alike.  The griffon complains too much, and the sons don't give their parents the respect and help they should.  A mysterious figure with curious changeable animals makes an appearance, and Soonie finds herself a man after her own heart. 

Not bad for a quarter!  :)

Tuesday, July 9, 2013

Star Wars: Darth Vader and the Ghost Prison, Haden Blackman, Agustin Alessio

Star Wars: Darth Vader and the Ghost Prison
Haden Blackman, Agustin Alessio
ISBN: 978-1616550592
Graphic Novel: interstitial between Revenge of the Sith/Clone Wars and A New Hope.

I liked this.  I liked this a LOT.  This is what Star Wars fiction should be like.  The main character is horrid, but you somehow end up feeling for him, as he tries to find meaning in tragedy and betrayal by allying with and serving Vader.  Anyone the least familiar with that character will realize that this is a bad life choice, and you know it from the start, but you still hope for the "best" as the train rumbles inexorably down the tracks.

I loved that it was perfectly self-contained without seeming to try too hard to be so.  I liked that the art was solemn and dark and somehow regal and formal.  I liked that there were good guys and bad guys without even involving the Rebellion (except as inspiration/motivation).  I liked that Vader is a truly terrible person, and knows exactly how to keep himself irreplaceable. I liked that the plot was straightforward and motivated by character, and the character in question was motivated by understandable and universal human emotions.  I especially liked that the Emperor was essentially a deus-ex-machina, as that made for a lovely little meta-pun, and really what the evil bastard is good for after all.

I had been a long time since reading any Star Wars (since the Chewbacca Incident, to be exact) and I am very glad to see more work looking back to the universe before it was despoiled and ruined for me.  These, perhaps I can read and enjoy, and just remember my internal temporal cut-off at the end of the Young Jedi Knights series.  :)   Ghost Prison has been quite enjoyable, and reminded me strongly of what I enjoyed about this universe.  If this is the quality I can expect, I might even try some of the recent call-back novelizations like Scoundrels or Choices of One.   I'll most certainly check out any further Star Wars universe graphic novels by Mr Blackman.



Mrs Queen Takes the Train, William Kuhn

Mrs Queen Takes the Train
William Kuhn
British/Scottish Monarch Fantasy
ISBN: 978-0062208286

If you totally disregard actual real life and the staggeringly minute possibility that anything like this could ever actually happen, this is a fun little romp through the purported mind of the aging figurehead.

The Queen has been feeling a bit down lately.  Her yoga hasn't been helping, neither has her horse Elizabeth (born on Her birthday natch) or her doggies.

So one rainy sleety night, she pops off to the stables and ends up headed off to Scotland to visit the old family yacht, now pulling tourist-attraction duty. 

The narrative splits niftily between The Queen and the people around her - butler par excellence William, novice equerry Luke, the queen's personal dresser Shirley, her somewhat titled (but broke) lady in waiting Anne, the horse-keeper Rebecca (perhaps an Aspie?) and English-Indian Rajiv.  All of them have their own lives, their own goals, and their own problems, and in perfect little cozy fashion, all of their needs are met quite nicely by their coming together during this interesting event.

The sections are labeled by yoga poses, and The Queen references her yoga practice often in her efforts to remain calm and stable, which I thought cute, but maybe a bit twee.  What was most certainly twee was the inclusion of photographs of various subjects based on what was being talked about - a badger, for instance, or various photos of The Queen in the past.  That was actually offputting, to be quite honest.

Again, the premise is laughable, but while you're reading it, you don't want to laugh - you want to pat The Queen on the hand and tell her everything will be all right (wouldn't that cause fits if it were done?). 

The inevitable coupling off was a bit heavy-handed, if sweet, and I especially side-eyed the equerry's very quick decision. 

It would be interesting to have this as the read for a grandmother-mother-granddaughter book-club, to see if the impressions of the story and the characters changes with the stage of life you're in. 

Star Wars Jedi Prince Series, Paul and Hollace Davids

Will post more later, but I ran across these while weeding at the library, and they brought back some powerful memories.

Before I get any further, let me first apologise if anyone involved with creating and publishing this takes offense - it isn't meant that way. 

That said, I do want to thank you all, because this series was what convinced me that I could actually someday be a published writer.  "If this particular example of writing and story-line were flush enough to make it into my beloved Star Wars universe -" went my line of thought (I wasn't aware at the time that many atrocities were approved and included, being innocent of the draw of base lucre) "then surely I, who at my tender young age can already recognize quality and if not create it independently, at least create a shadowed image thereof, will be instantly published as soon as I grow brave enough to submit my works to a publisher!"

I haven't yet developed that bravery, and from a vantage point of over ten years later, this series is still available in print, and I'm still developing my craft.  That ought to take most, if not all, of the sting from my opinions.  :)

But seriously, after starting with the Thrawn books, and then moving on to this?  I was staggered, to say the least.  I grew up reading the classics, and was carefully shielded from anything mass-produced or lacking in literary "quality" by my overprotective parents.  Looking at it now, in comparison with much of the crap out there in the children's paperback market, this is decent.  But at the time, I wasn't expecting decent, I was expecting quality and care and epic tone to match the original.  I did not find it.  However, I was inspired into my first fan-fiction attempts since I began (and quickly abandoned after 8 or 9 pages) a packing list for the Swiss Family Robinson at age 5. 

For that, and for the boost to my writerly self-esteem, I am truly grateful.

Friday, July 5, 2013

A Natural History of Dragons: A Memoir of Lady Trent, Marie Brennan

A Natural History of Dragons: A Memoir of Lady Trent
Marie Brennan
978-0765331960
Alternate-Europe Fantasy of Manners/Exploration

This was an amazing book.  I sincerely hope that "Lady Trent" continues to document her adventures in the pursuit of scientific advances on the subject of dragons (and that she does NOT continue to suffer the same losses *sniffle* in said pursuit).

Absolutely pitch perfect.  The sparklings, the early adventures, the strictures of society, the culture shock, the descriptions and events, the DRAGONS... marvelous.

The ONLY slight objection I have is that the pace picks up ALARMINGLY in the last 5th, moving nearly instantly from businesslike mystery investigation to a disturbingly brisk "chase/resolution/flash-forward/sequel teaser/THE-END" *pant-pant.*  Considering the important events occuring in said time-period, I felt a bit at a loss to absorb and process each event before being rushed along to the next.   

Nemo: Heart of Ice, Alan Moore & Kevin O'Neill

Nemo: Heart of Ice
Alan Moore & Kevin O'Neill
ISBN: 978-0861661831
Graphic Novel

This was a weird one.  I've flipped aimlessly through the previous League graphics, and enjoyed them enough as a diversion.  Not a rabid fan.  This tho, this was odd.

First off, we're not dealing with the "real" Captain Nemo from the book - it's his daughter Janni.  Second, the entire story is a bizarre literary seek-and-find pastiche of just about every major figure and literary creation from the time and related genres they could cram in there.

A totally not exhaustive run-down because it's based on the ones I recognized offhand:
The villianess?  HR Haggard's SHE-who-must-be-obeyed.
The henchman?  Citizen Kane
The hired guns?  Tom Swift (Swyfte here), Jack Wright and Frank Reade Jr (yes, the steam man was mentioned)
The locale?  Lovecraft's Mountains of Madness

King Kong gets a shout-out in the epilogue.  His Girl Friday (Hildy Johnson) is the author of that epilogue, by the bye.  

So, ok, moving past the shout-outs and nudge-nudge-wink-wink "did you see what we did there" bits, what was it like? 

It was odd.  The overall story pits two strong-willed and psychopathic women with toadying henchmen against each other, and as far as I could tell, the idea was that Janni comes out on top for two reasons: because she's really only ambitious and ruthless, rather than sociopathic, and because she's willing to head out and get her hands dirty rather than sit in a bower and kill doves while your henchmen bumble about.

The plot seemed to be a little unsure of itself - the theft was the most obvious McGuffin I've seen recently, and the henchmen were made out to be as nasty and petty and racist and misogynistic as possible, which is odd to me, considering that Tom Swift at least is a fairly well-known and beloved character.  Finally, the decision to head for the Antartic was a spur of the moment lark - "I can do whatever my dad can do" out of nowhere on Janni's part.  None of that seems necessary to the central point of the story (or at least the focus based on page-count and really lush spreads and vistas): the journey/chase through Mountains of Madness.  So - I'm a bit perplexed there.  My best guess is that the oddities of plotting are either hooks from previous or to upcoming installments.

Verdict?  Weird.  However, I very much like the Mountains of Madness section, especially the "space and time" plateau - I would think that would be a difficult concept to render artistically, and it was clear and confusing at the same time (in a good way).  I could see hitting this one up again for that, and for the epilogue, which was frankly hysterical.