
Ellen Steiber
Author of Darkness Falls
About the Author
Works by Ellen Steiber
"X" Files: Five novelizations based on classic episodes from the compelling TV series (1997) 31 copies
Susi sind söögu... : Ellen Steiberi romaan põhineb Chris Carteri teleseriaalil ["Salatoimikud"] ja Marylin Osborni telenäidendil (1998) 3 copies
Argentine {short story} 2 copies
Vingerdis : romaan põhineb Chris Carteri teleseriaalil ja Glen Morgan ning James Wongi telenäidendil (1998) 2 copies
In the Season of Rains 1 copy
Screaming For Faeries 1 copy
The X Files:Shapes 1 copy
Associated Works
Sirens and Other Daemon Lovers: Magical Tales of Love and Seduction (1998) — Contributor — 372 copies, 7 reviews
The Year's Best Fantasy and Horror: Fourteenth Annual Collection (2001) — Contributor — 258 copies, 2 reviews
The Armless Maiden: And Other Tales for Childhood's Survivors (1995) — Contributor — 256 copies, 4 reviews
Nyx in the House of Night: Mythology, Folklore and Religion in the PC and Kristin Cast Vampyre Series (2011) — Contributor — 221 copies
A New Dawn: Your Favorite Authors on Stephenie Meyer's Twilight Series (2008) — Contributor — 122 copies, 8 reviews
The World of the Golden Compass: The Otherworldly Ride Continues (2007) — Contributor — 70 copies, 2 reviews
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Canonical name
- Steiber, Ellen
- Birthdate
- 1955
- Gender
- female
- Education
- Carnegie Mellon University
- Occupations
- novelist
children's book author
editor - Nationality
- USA
- Birthplace
- Newark, New Jersey, USA
- Places of residence
- Tucson, Arizona, USA
Newark, New Jersey, USA
West Orange, New Jersey, USA
New York, New York, USA - Associated Place (for map)
- USA
Members
Reviews
Darkness Falls is a juvenile (age 10up) adaptation of an early X-Files episode. For an adult reader the writing is as one might expect - rather simple and run of the mill. However, the story is well told and I think if there are still such things as young fans of the X-Files series this would be an enjoyable read for them. Maybe enjoyable is the wrong world. If I were ten years old and reading this for the first time I could see myself getting scared in the second half. I remember this show more episode and enjoyed reading this short novel. The story is set in one of those creepy northwest rainforest settings where Mulder and Sculley are investigating the disappearance of some loggers. There is an eco-terrorist group on the scene, but we soon learn that they are in severe danger as well, although their spikes left behind cause danger and death to the surviving people in the story. I'm not sure how well this book tracks the episode, which my memory tells me was one of the very good early ones, but this is suitably creepy as "Nature fights back" just as those TV shows were.
The story ends with several events from the book unresolved. Sculley appears near death and the menace in the forest has not been contained. This was fairly scary and also fun reading. It reminded me how good those X-Files shows were sometimes. show less
The story ends with several events from the book unresolved. Sculley appears near death and the menace in the forest has not been contained. This was fairly scary and also fun reading. It reminded me how good those X-Files shows were sometimes. show less
I bought this as a bargain book from Amazon during one of my periodic quests to find new authors. It had great reviews.
Heroine Lucinda lives in a world like ours, except that gods are real and all the various gemstone lore is literally true. Her boss and friend Tyrone dresses up like one of those gods, incurring the god's wrath, and endangering his life. She meets Sebastian, a shapeshifter, who enlists Eros's aid in seducing her.
Meanwhile, there's Alasdair, who has such an affinity for show more gemstones that they follow him around and are always falling out of his pockets, etc. He's there because something evil is loose in the world and he's trying to stop it. It's already affected the young boy Michael, and Alasdair is trying to rescue him.
Oh, yes. In addition to gemstone magic, gods, and shapeshifters, there's also a bit of time travel.
I'd complain about stuffing so many disparate fantasy elements into one story, but I've seen it done elsewhere to good effect, and I was intrigued by the various concepts, though I'd really have liked there to be some sort of connection between them. The gemstones had nothing to do with the gods, which had nothing to do with shapeshifters, which had nothing to do with time travel. It was almost like a few separate stories mashed together.
Unfortunately, and this is a problem with a lot of fantasy novels, the worldbuilding took the form of long discourses, mostly in this case about the properties of various gemstones. I got the disconcerting feeling that I was in a gemstone infomercial, because every time I'd start getting involved in the story, it would stop and I'd get another lecture on another gemstone.
Even the time period seemed confused. I know from the book jacket that it's supposed to be a contemporary fantasy, but the feel of the story is more like a swords-and-sorcery kind of fantasy, except that characters do have a few modern conveniences like telephones. They don't seem to have cars, though. And when Lucinda goes into the past, there's almost no difference at all. Certainly, nobody notices anything unusual about her.
But even that I could have tolerated if I'd liked the characters. Lucinda is distinctly unlikeable. She's a bitchy, promiscuous man-hater. Promiscuity I can handle, but not when it's as mean-spirited as it was with Lucinda. Also, if you look around here, you know I read plenty of erotica and sex-scene-filled romances. But Lucinda was just crude.
Worst of all, though, was that there was no change. She learns some things, but nothing that changes her. She warms up to one or two individuals, but that's not even close to being the same thing as learning not to be such a bitch in general.
And what really, really made me want to throw the book against the wall, especially because I kept reading until the end hoping it wasn't true, is the book's message of intolerance, bitterness, unforgivingness. This is a bit of a spoiler, but I'm going to include it anyway, because I think it's a good point to know ahead of time: ****spoiler**** Lucinda never forgives Sebastian for going to Eros, even though he apologizes and admits it was a mistake and it's understandable why he did it. So let's add hypocrisy to the book's message, because Lucinda's character requires a lot of forgiveness from the people around her. **** show less
Heroine Lucinda lives in a world like ours, except that gods are real and all the various gemstone lore is literally true. Her boss and friend Tyrone dresses up like one of those gods, incurring the god's wrath, and endangering his life. She meets Sebastian, a shapeshifter, who enlists Eros's aid in seducing her.
Meanwhile, there's Alasdair, who has such an affinity for show more gemstones that they follow him around and are always falling out of his pockets, etc. He's there because something evil is loose in the world and he's trying to stop it. It's already affected the young boy Michael, and Alasdair is trying to rescue him.
Oh, yes. In addition to gemstone magic, gods, and shapeshifters, there's also a bit of time travel.
I'd complain about stuffing so many disparate fantasy elements into one story, but I've seen it done elsewhere to good effect, and I was intrigued by the various concepts, though I'd really have liked there to be some sort of connection between them. The gemstones had nothing to do with the gods, which had nothing to do with shapeshifters, which had nothing to do with time travel. It was almost like a few separate stories mashed together.
Unfortunately, and this is a problem with a lot of fantasy novels, the worldbuilding took the form of long discourses, mostly in this case about the properties of various gemstones. I got the disconcerting feeling that I was in a gemstone infomercial, because every time I'd start getting involved in the story, it would stop and I'd get another lecture on another gemstone.
Even the time period seemed confused. I know from the book jacket that it's supposed to be a contemporary fantasy, but the feel of the story is more like a swords-and-sorcery kind of fantasy, except that characters do have a few modern conveniences like telephones. They don't seem to have cars, though. And when Lucinda goes into the past, there's almost no difference at all. Certainly, nobody notices anything unusual about her.
But even that I could have tolerated if I'd liked the characters. Lucinda is distinctly unlikeable. She's a bitchy, promiscuous man-hater. Promiscuity I can handle, but not when it's as mean-spirited as it was with Lucinda. Also, if you look around here, you know I read plenty of erotica and sex-scene-filled romances. But Lucinda was just crude.
Worst of all, though, was that there was no change. She learns some things, but nothing that changes her. She warms up to one or two individuals, but that's not even close to being the same thing as learning not to be such a bitch in general.
And what really, really made me want to throw the book against the wall, especially because I kept reading until the end hoping it wasn't true, is the book's message of intolerance, bitterness, unforgivingness. This is a bit of a spoiler, but I'm going to include it anyway, because I think it's a good point to know ahead of time: ****spoiler**** Lucinda never forgives Sebastian for going to Eros, even though he apologizes and admits it was a mistake and it's understandable why he did it. So let's add hypocrisy to the book's message, because Lucinda's character requires a lot of forgiveness from the people around her. **** show less
I haven't read a book I liked this completely in a long time. Everything was beautiful and all the characters were wonderful and the story was amazing. She really did well with this book. It left me feeling satisfied but I would totally devour a sequel. It's a little predictable at times like most books are but that didn't take anything away from the experience and there were still a lot of things that surprised me.
When I was getting close to the end, I was so sad because I just wanted it show more to go on forever. All of the descriptions are really breathtaking. It really placed me in the world and I could see everything. I even dreamt about it after I read it. Haha. But, just read it. It's a great combo of magic and action and romance and life. show less
When I was getting close to the end, I was so sad because I just wanted it show more to go on forever. All of the descriptions are really breathtaking. It really placed me in the world and I could see everything. I even dreamt about it after I read it. Haha. But, just read it. It's a great combo of magic and action and romance and life. show less
Very formulaic and predictable story without any of the great tension (attraction) between the two main characters that we've seen during the TV series. The liver-eating alien who oozes greenish yellow through the ventilation system is not my particular cup of tea. And be ready for an even more predictable ending - - -.
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Statistics
- Works
- 39
- Also by
- 12
- Members
- 1,060
- Popularity
- #24,289
- Rating
- 3.8
- Reviews
- 12
- ISBNs
- 109
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