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This is the first of the "Secret Histories" novels about Eddie Drood, protector of the world against supernatural threats. In this story, Eddie finds himself declared rogue while trying to track down a traitor within the Drood family, and must root out the deepest secrets of his family's origin while on the run from family and foe alike. Action-packed and exciting from beginning to end! Eddie is a very appealing character, charming and fast-talking, funny but not obnoxious, as many wise-cracking spy/detective tend to be. ( )Excellent! Simon Green did not disappoint. This is written with his usual humorous bent, fast paced and well plotted. I'll be looking for the second book in the series. A Rip-snorting pastiche of fantasy and James Bond that is ridiculously easy to read. It's like hot buttered popcorn, simply sublime. This was sort of a supernatural James Bond book. Very much like the old James Bond books, and the Sean Connery movies. It was fun and a good read. I've not been in the mood for much serious stuff lately. Summer has taken over my brain and I'm not up for much serious thinking. There’s no way getting around it. You’re going to see this as James Bond with Daemons, which is probably the point, especially if the cover and the pun-riddled title are anything to go by. That isn’t to say that is a pale pastiche. Green has created a hero and an adventure in its own right. Bond, Shaman Bond is in fact Eddie Drood a protector, along with the rest of the Drood family, of humanity from the forces of darkness and through him Green shows an alternative world where all the things that you thought were just myth and mystery are in fact real. Green does takes this idea slightly too far in places but overall he gets the tone and mix and reality about right. So that the creatures he introduces fit quite well. Ironically it was the aliens that didn’t quite fit in as they seemed, well alien, and out of place. What at first annoyed me about Eddie Drood turned out to be his greatest weakness - his golden armour. It makes him, super-strong, invincible and arrogant. That is until he’s shown that he isn’t as invincible as he’s always thought. It’s also a lesson he teaches a few others along the way. Green keeps the pressure on Eddie and the reader and doesn’t stop for breath as the action takes us from a Harvey Street Hospital, to a devastating chase along the M4 and the hidden areas of London amongst many other places. It isn’t just the solving of a mystery. It’s the journey of Eddie as he learns more about himself and gets closer to someone he’s tried to kill on more than one occasion. Green keeps up the laughs so it’s closer to Austin Powers than 007. The ideas flow from an imagination that seems far from running dry. I’m looking forward to where Green takes Eddie Drood after he’s built up and destroyed so much in The Man with the Golden Torc. Simon Green starts out what is sure to be another series with a bang. The world seems to be related to the Nightside (there's a hint that the main character, Eddie Drood, out-cheated John Taylor at poker, which is how he ended up living in his office) but takes place in the "real world". Eddie is part of an ancient family who, with the help of their golden armor, send agents into the world to save it. Or so they are told. Eddie has always been the black sheep of his family, but he never sees it coming when they declare him rogue. Eddie goes on the run, looking for answers and finds far more than he expects, as well as winning the heart of a wild witch. Once again, Green is the master of fantastic settings and bizarre characters. He manages a worthwhile tribute to James Bond and yet something that is quite original. SPOILERS in the end, Eddie brings down the corruption at the heart of his family and finds himself in charge of rebuilding, now with the help of silver armor and an alien creature. Because someone needs to keep saving the world. The Man With the Golden Torc - Simon R. Green Yes, an obvious Ian Fleming reference, and, in fact, the secret identity of the main character is actually Bond, Shaman Bond. Certainly a better name than his real one, Edwin Drood. This is the start of what appears to be another series of Green doing what Green does bet, which is making up all sorts of bizarre and outre characters, even when you thing he can't possibly come up with any more. There are hints here of things that happened in the Nightside, too, so linking this to that particular universe. Shaman Bond is a similar sort of character to John Taylor, an outsider, a loner, and someone with a hate/love relationship that develops with the main female character, and not so much getting along with his own family, or what is left of it. Eddie Drood is a fair bit more Captain Britain than 007, however, as the title reference is to a device that give shim a suit of golden power armour, super strength, speed, invulnerability, all that sort of super power stuff, without the flag on the chest. There are many such Droods, acting as supernatural enforcers, taking out the bad guys, supported by their own family fortress, research teams and other staff. However, something in rotten in Droodmark. Arsekicker Eddie, minding his own business is declared rogue by his own mob and slated for termination. Cue Green craziness and conflict from thereon in and he goes hunting for what is actually going on, and other rogues, while trying to avoid being killed by his own family, elf lords, mercenaries, Manifest Destiny cults, trolls, other weird Green characters, and more. With more than a few pop culture jokes of various badness thrown in, of course. http://superprose.blogspot.com/2008/0... An outstanding contemporary fantasy thriller, complete with clever twists and literary in-jokes, from the protagonist's name onward. The jokes are not so common as to be annoying or jarring, but enjoyable when they show up. The title, of course, is a takeoff on the Bond novel, as is the title of the sequel due out in 2008. The protagonist is a member of a secret family who protect The Rest Of Us from all manner of unnamed and unknown horrors that would freeze our minds did we but see them. The family has mighty equipment, both magickal and technological, that they wield in pursuit of this noble aim. But is there something else going on? When our narrator is set up, in the fashion of countless contemporary heroes, he must find allies and information that will bring out the final, horrifying truth. Wonderful. Just simply wonderful Two parts James Bond and one part Harry Potter. Leave your brains at the door and let the sheet sense of fun carry you along. It's not exactly original but when a book is this enjoyable who cares? Highly recommended!!! I've always found Simon R. Green's work entertaining. Admittedly, it's puply. His books are uniformly violent and gory, but there's a dark humor that underlines those qualities. Pop culture references sneak in and make you chuckle. The Man With the Golden TOrc is no exception; there's a new battle or horror awaiting you every few pages, and each adversary is more diabolical than the last, but overall it's a fast paced fun read. In short, it won't change your life, but it'll keep you interested and amused. |
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