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Rating:  Summary: Lia's Books Crack Me Up...This is No Exception Review: It helps to be an old leftie and a bit on the fringe, culturally, to enjoy Lia Matera's books. I can see where conservatives might not 'get' her, but I even wonder about that. I discovered Lia Matera just last week at the library. I picked up, "Star Witness," off the paperback mystery rack, a section I never usually glance at. I was on my way out having picked up the books I wanted. Sometimes I have my best luck, though, discovering new authors when I swipe a few books off the shelves without thinking. The primary colors of the cover of the Star Witness book looked stupid to me, but I thought, hey, trust your intuition and grabbed the paperback. What a find! (I read it, and skipped the other books I'd chosen, so I could go back the next day and get more of Lia's books!) I have read two of her other novels since then (note the dark circles under my eyes)...both Willa Jansson mysteries. I've had no problem following characters that were developed in her other novels, but that's probably because Matera's writing style is what I'm most interested in-she knows how to surprise her readers with metaphors and comments that hit the funny bone and ring true. She keeps her characters fresh and true to life in the most unlikely, whacked-out or scary circumstances. In 'Last Chants', Lia did her reseach in some detail (as she did about UFOs, in "Star Witness") about the Pan mythology. She provides a kind of lazy-woman's quicktime education for her smart,but laid back readers, augmented by her outlandish humor. You won't believe the plot twists and the kinds of things she forces her characters to do. I haven't found an author I felt addicted to this much since I was introduced to Alice Hoffman, years ago, when depression and fantasy were, in retrospect, my thing. Now I'm happy that I can barely keep up with Lia's high energy, spaced-out realism and lawyerly precision of plot. In "Last Chants" there was, for me, not a moment of unnecessary description...the story consistently moved forward with every page. Compact flashes of Willa's inner states kept her character sensitive, smart and smart alec, to my pleasure. Highly recommended. I spent another night reading "Havana Twist," a cutting romp through taudy, tourismo, politico Cuba. A memorable line I still recall was Willa's description of Havana's low ceiling airport, built "in the architectural style of a campground bathroom." I cracked up at that comparison and couldn't read for a few minutes. It could have been that a dose of my semi-narcotic prescription cough syrup for this damn winter hacking was kicking in for the night, but I laughed 'til I wept. I love this author-and I've never been a mystery fan before-but I GOTTA get some sleep! I'm just as happy I didn't discover Lia Matera earlier in life. I have many hours of mystery and fun ahead. If I burn out, I'll take a break and read some Margaret Atwood to bring me down, then back dive in for more.
Rating:  Summary: Lia's Books Crack Me Up...This is No Exception Review: It helps to be an old leftie and a bit on the fringe, culturally, to enjoy Lia Matera's books. I can see where conservatives might not 'get' her, but I even wonder about that. I discovered Lia Matera just last week at the library. I picked up, "Star Witness," off the paperback mystery rack, a section I never usually glance at. I was on my way out having picked up the books I wanted. Sometimes I have my best luck, though, discovering new authors when I swipe a few books off the shelves without thinking. The primary colors of the cover of the Star Witness book looked stupid to me, but I thought, hey, trust your intuition and grabbed the paperback. What a find! (I read it, and skipped the other books I'd chosen, so I could go back the next day and get more of Lia's books!) I have read two of her other novels since then (note the dark circles under my eyes)...both Willa Jansson mysteries. I've had no problem following characters that were developed in her other novels, but that's probably because Matera's writing style is what I'm most interested in-she knows how to surprise her readers with metaphors and comments that hit the funny bone and ring true. She keeps her characters fresh and true to life in the most unlikely, whacked-out or scary circumstances. In 'Last Chants', Lia did her reseach in some detail (as she did about UFOs, in "Star Witness") about the Pan mythology. She provides a kind of lazy-woman's quicktime education for her smart,but laid back readers, augmented by her outlandish humor. You won't believe the plot twists and the kinds of things she forces her characters to do. I haven't found an author I felt addicted to this much since I was introduced to Alice Hoffman, years ago, when depression and fantasy were, in retrospect, my thing. Now I'm happy that I can barely keep up with Lia's high energy, spaced-out realism and lawyerly precision of plot. In "Last Chants" there was, for me, not a moment of unnecessary description...the story consistently moved forward with every page. Compact flashes of Willa's inner states kept her character sensitive, smart and smart alec, to my pleasure. Highly recommended. I spent another night reading "Havana Twist," a cutting romp through taudy, tourismo, politico Cuba. A memorable line I still recall was Willa's description of Havana's low ceiling airport, built "in the architectural style of a campground bathroom." I cracked up at that comparison and couldn't read for a few minutes. It could have been that a dose of my semi-narcotic prescription cough syrup for this damn winter hacking was kicking in for the night, but I laughed 'til I wept. I love this author-and I've never been a mystery fan before-but I GOTTA get some sleep! I'm just as happy I didn't discover Lia Matera earlier in life. I have many hours of mystery and fun ahead. If I burn out, I'll take a break and read some Margaret Atwood to bring me down, then back dive in for more.
Rating:  Summary: Shows promise Review: It is always difficult to do justice to a book and author when you start in the middle of an established series. (On the other hand, shouldn't each book in a series be able to stand on its own?) This intallment obviously draws on characters and situations more thoroughly developed in earlier stories. So I really didn't feel I knew enough about the characters, just from this book alone, to empathise with their predicament and understand their motivations. Also, the shamanic/Pan theme was quite over-emphasised and distracting and not too well juxtaposed with the other techno theme. However, the Willa Jansson character has intrigued me sufficiently to want to explore at least one more of the books in this series.
Rating:  Summary: Shows promise Review: It is always difficult to do justice to a book and author when you start in the middle of an established series. (On the other hand, shouldn't each book in a series be able to stand on its own?) This intallment obviously draws on characters and situations more thoroughly developed in earlier stories. So I really didn't feel I knew enough about the characters, just from this book alone, to empathise with their predicament and understand their motivations. Also, the shamanic/Pan theme was quite over-emphasised and distracting and not too well juxtaposed with the other techno theme. However, the Willa Jansson character has intrigued me sufficiently to want to explore at least one more of the books in this series.
Rating:  Summary: altered states Review: reluctant lawyer, willa jansson, is diverted from her first day at her new job when she spots one of her parents' septuagenarian friends weilding a gun on a busy downtown sidewalk. as usual the theme is off-beat:mysticism meets cybernetics. more detective than legal fiction.
Rating:  Summary: altered states Review: reluctant lawyer, willa jansson, is diverted from her first day at her new job when she spots one of her parents' septuagenarian friends weilding a gun on a busy downtown sidewalk. as usual the theme is off-beat:mysticism meets cybernetics. more detective than legal fiction.
Rating:  Summary: New Age Murder Mystery Review: This is a Willa Jansson mystery. On a crowded street, Willa meets a family friend named Arthur Kenna holding a gun on someone in front of a policeman. Willa manages to get the Kenna away with her, and together they escape into the mountains, only to find out that the friend's assistant was murdered near their mountain retreat, just before Willa met Kenna on the street. Indeed, the village where their mountain hideout is located is filled with interesting characters, including a firm called Cyber-Delics, which is working on a project called Cyber-Shaman. It seems everyone Willa meets has a secret mystical history. It's up to her to sort out the characters and figure out who the killer was before he - or she - strikes again.
The story is filled with many New Age themes, such as shamanism, mysticism, and mythology. Unfortunately, Matera doesn't quite have a firm understanding of computer technology. At one point, she has Willa pondering how vastly different the world would have been if Apple had managed to kill off Bill Gates before he founded Microsoft-we would never have had Windows, she concludes. True, we might not have had an operating system called Microsoft Windows, but the Windows interface borrowed (stole?) so much from Apple that our computer screens might not have looked that different at all, with or without Bill Gates.
The choice of Alexa Bauer as a narrator for this book was quite inappropriate. Willa tells this story from her point of view, and she is a Californian. Bauer, on the other hand, has a British accent. This difference in accents could possibly be overlooked, except at one point Willa relates a conversation with a person with a British accent, and complains that she couldn't identify which part of the UK the person is from because she doesn't know her British accents. To hear this coming from the mouth of a Brit with a strong British accent is odd, indeed. Bauer uses British rather than American pronunciations of certain words, such as chamois as "sham-wa" (accent on second syllable). She also has very little knowledge of computer technology, at one point saying that someone's computer had Ad-dob (accent on first syllable) Premier loaded on it.
Overall, the story left me with marginal interest, at best. The material about technology was inaccurate and preposterous, and the New Age elements were rather puerile. The narration was bad, but at least the story was mostly coherent.
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