James Phelan (3) (1979–)
Author of 13
For other authors named James Phelan, see the disambiguation page.
About the Author
James Phelan is an Australian writer, born in Melbourne, Australia in 1979. He studied architecture at RMIT, received his MA at the University of Melbourne in Creative Writing, and earned his PhD in Young Adult Literature at Swinburne University of Technology. He writes thrillers and young adult show more post-apocalyptic novels. His series include The Jed Walker series, The Last Thirteen series, The Lachlan Fox series, and The Alone series. He wrote a book of nonfiction entitled Literati. (Bowker Author Biography) show less
Series
Works by James Phelan
Literati : Australian contemporary literary figures discuss fear, frustrations and fame (2005) 7 copies, 1 review
Wooklet - Os Últimos Treze 1 copy
Associated Works
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Legal name
- Phelan, James Clancy
- Birthdate
- 1979-05-21
- Gender
- male
- Birthplace
- Melbourne, Victoria, Australia
- Map Location
- Australia
Members
Discussions
Found: Apocalypse Book in Name that Book (April 2022)
Reviews
Background: Jesse is on a UN trip with a bunch of other teens, when all of a sudden there is an explosion and a crash on the subway. He awakes to find that only himself and his friends are alive and have not become infected. Those who are infected are now Chasers, people with an unquenchable thirst, who will strive to get a drink by any means necessary.
Review: Great premise right?! yea, I thought so too. I dove into this book and the plot was very fast paced and entertaining. I must also show more admit with all the zombie books lately my dreams have been a bit nuts too. However the characters in this book are a little odd and there is a twist ending/ cliff hanger that only leaves you asking more questions than when you started. Some people like that I guess, but I was sad, I felt like it was a cop out. I enjoyed the atmosphere the plot created, a depressing, crumbling NYC; and I enjoyed the feeling of needing to escape, but the Chasers had a very limited role and that was upsetting. show less
Review: Great premise right?! yea, I thought so too. I dove into this book and the plot was very fast paced and entertaining. I must also show more admit with all the zombie books lately my dreams have been a bit nuts too. However the characters in this book are a little odd and there is a twist ending/ cliff hanger that only leaves you asking more questions than when you started. Some people like that I guess, but I was sad, I felt like it was a cop out. I enjoyed the atmosphere the plot created, a depressing, crumbling NYC; and I enjoyed the feeling of needing to escape, but the Chasers had a very limited role and that was upsetting. show less
This review was written for LibraryThing Early Reviewers.Book source ~ ARC. My review is voluntary and honest.
Jesse is from Australia and one of four teenagers who crawl out some subway wreckage in NYC when what looks like the apocalypse begins. The city is mostly in ruins. There’s no one in authority around to ask for help. It’s just them. And some kind of infected people who drink anything they can get their mouths on. Especially blood. WTF Jesse dubs them Chasers because they chase anyone they think will make a good meal. They have to find show more a safe place to stay and figure what to do when the world around them has gone to shit. Piece of cake, right?
This isn’t a horrible story. Well, I mean, what happens is horrible and the aftermath is a nightmare, but the story itself is okay. The writing style is totally weird so I was irritated by it, but there’s a reason for it as you’ll see if you stick it out to the end. There are really no answers by books end and I find that most unsatisfactory. This book feels like it’s a set up for the future books. Not a whole lot going on, but the back story is now set to move forward. It’s like eating one of those snack-sized chocolate bars. Nice, but now what you really want is a full-sized one. show less
Jesse is from Australia and one of four teenagers who crawl out some subway wreckage in NYC when what looks like the apocalypse begins. The city is mostly in ruins. There’s no one in authority around to ask for help. It’s just them. And some kind of infected people who drink anything they can get their mouths on. Especially blood. WTF Jesse dubs them Chasers because they chase anyone they think will make a good meal. They have to find show more a safe place to stay and figure what to do when the world around them has gone to shit. Piece of cake, right?
This isn’t a horrible story. Well, I mean, what happens is horrible and the aftermath is a nightmare, but the story itself is okay. The writing style is totally weird so I was irritated by it, but there’s a reason for it as you’ll see if you stick it out to the end. There are really no answers by books end and I find that most unsatisfactory. This book feels like it’s a set up for the future books. Not a whole lot going on, but the back story is now set to move forward. It’s like eating one of those snack-sized chocolate bars. Nice, but now what you really want is a full-sized one. show less
Never having read any of James Phelan's Lachlan Fox series before, RED ICE had to be approached as a standalone, which probably made for a different experience than that of the dedicated fan.
Lachlan Fox is an ex-navy operative turned investigative journalist, and in this book he's in France with friends, at the same time that the Russian Ambassador and his wife are assassinated. Despite being on holidays, Lachlan very quickly finds himself back in the action, in one of the all-time great car show more chase sequences. Followed by a very personal threat, a Russian criminal who escapes from law enforcement (via a plane to plane docking procedure), another great car chase, a lot of rushing around, a trip to Shanghai, and one of those impeding global catastrophe sort of threats.
Now I don't know if Lachlan Fox is always quite such an energiser bunny sort of character, but I'm guessing he probably is. In RED ICE he's beaten, chased, beaten, threatened, beaten, scared, beaten and happily saving the day. Honestly, I've no idea how he was still moving around by the end of the book. It certainly didn't seem to be down to much in the way of medical assistance, yet he absorbs it all, and keeps going, saving the world. Which is part of the whole point of these sorts of thrillers really. The one man against the threat (in this case a very James Bondish Russian villain whose supporters seem to have some seriously impressive gadgetry).
RED ICE is the 5th Lachlan Fox book and it's hard to tell exactly what's going on, but I'm guessing that this book ties up some ends from the rest of the series. There's definitely a lot of history between Fox and the others in the cast in this book - but not having read any of the earlier books made it all a bit difficult to follow. I think that's probably the best argument for not starting with RED ICE as I've done. Obviously this is a series that has a lot of relationship development within it - but it's hard to tell how successful it's been starting at what feels like the end.
In terms of a pure thriller, with a big global conspiracy, a nicely sinister villain and a one man to save the world scenario, RED ICE really tore along. In fact, this conspiracy actually worked well - probably because elements of it were so personalised. I'm definitely going to have to go back to the earlier books - finding out everything there is to know about Lachlan Fox is the least you can do when the man is just trying his hardest to save us all. show less
Lachlan Fox is an ex-navy operative turned investigative journalist, and in this book he's in France with friends, at the same time that the Russian Ambassador and his wife are assassinated. Despite being on holidays, Lachlan very quickly finds himself back in the action, in one of the all-time great car show more chase sequences. Followed by a very personal threat, a Russian criminal who escapes from law enforcement (via a plane to plane docking procedure), another great car chase, a lot of rushing around, a trip to Shanghai, and one of those impeding global catastrophe sort of threats.
Now I don't know if Lachlan Fox is always quite such an energiser bunny sort of character, but I'm guessing he probably is. In RED ICE he's beaten, chased, beaten, threatened, beaten, scared, beaten and happily saving the day. Honestly, I've no idea how he was still moving around by the end of the book. It certainly didn't seem to be down to much in the way of medical assistance, yet he absorbs it all, and keeps going, saving the world. Which is part of the whole point of these sorts of thrillers really. The one man against the threat (in this case a very James Bondish Russian villain whose supporters seem to have some seriously impressive gadgetry).
RED ICE is the 5th Lachlan Fox book and it's hard to tell exactly what's going on, but I'm guessing that this book ties up some ends from the rest of the series. There's definitely a lot of history between Fox and the others in the cast in this book - but not having read any of the earlier books made it all a bit difficult to follow. I think that's probably the best argument for not starting with RED ICE as I've done. Obviously this is a series that has a lot of relationship development within it - but it's hard to tell how successful it's been starting at what feels like the end.
In terms of a pure thriller, with a big global conspiracy, a nicely sinister villain and a one man to save the world scenario, RED ICE really tore along. In fact, this conspiracy actually worked well - probably because elements of it were so personalised. I'm definitely going to have to go back to the earlier books - finding out everything there is to know about Lachlan Fox is the least you can do when the man is just trying his hardest to save us all. show less
I've enjoyed the Lachlan Fox series, but I will admit to having read them way out of order. That doesn't seem to have mattered until LIQUID GOLD, which had me more than a little befuddled, and I'm suspicious it might be because I've missed the book immediately before it in the series.
LIQUID GOLD has a fantastic, and pertinent premise - the idea that water is to the 21st century, what oil was to the 20th. As the book opens, central character, investigative journalist, ex Australian Navy show more Clearance diver, graduate of the Australian Defence Forces Academy, hero of the moment, Lachlan Fox reveals a story at the heart of simmering tensions between India and Pakistan - over access to water. Fascinating, and very realistic idea.
Something happened in the delivery though. I could not, for the life of me, work out who was who. As you'd expect in a thriller, the action is very fast paced, rapid-fire and there are quickly changing points of view. Normally I love that sort of style - but for some reason in LIQUID GOLD, there were so many names being introduced, and then flicked away from, that I was really struggling to work out who was who. Perhaps some of the characters have return parts from the earlier novels, but for some reason, they wouldn't quite gel as people - and I found I had to go back a lot to work out where this person was introduced, how they fitted into the tale, and even with that backtracking, I was still at a loss. I assume there's a lot from the back stories of Fox and, in particular, his romantic interest that informs Fox's behaviour in this book, and it seemed odd, that for the first time in the series, I felt I obviously needed to know a lot of that to get with the program.. so to speak.
There were very nice touches in the book. I particularly liked the way that Fox is starting to feel the effects of all this man of the moment stuff, his body is hurting, he's not quite as bullet-proof as you'd expect from a stereotypical action man. I wasn't quite so convinced by one of the major threads for one of the major female characters - but that's probably more a personal preference. The way that scenario is used is often less than convincing. But overall, the book isn't a bad story, and I'd not be surprised if fans of the Lachlan Fox books, who are up-to-date with the series, find this one just as fast-paced, action-packed and tension filled as the other books. Strangely, I've got so far out of whack with the series that I read the latest one, RED ICE, before I realised I also had this book. RED ICE worked. LIQUID GOLD didn't work as well for me. I was lost for a fair part of the book, and profoundly confused at points. Pity, because I really like this sort of thriller. Maybe I'll return to it when I've caught up with the book in the middle that I've obviously missed.
The series in order is:
Fox Hunt (2006)
Patriot Act (2007)
Blood Oil (2008)
Liquid Gold (2009)
Red Ice (2010) show less
LIQUID GOLD has a fantastic, and pertinent premise - the idea that water is to the 21st century, what oil was to the 20th. As the book opens, central character, investigative journalist, ex Australian Navy show more Clearance diver, graduate of the Australian Defence Forces Academy, hero of the moment, Lachlan Fox reveals a story at the heart of simmering tensions between India and Pakistan - over access to water. Fascinating, and very realistic idea.
Something happened in the delivery though. I could not, for the life of me, work out who was who. As you'd expect in a thriller, the action is very fast paced, rapid-fire and there are quickly changing points of view. Normally I love that sort of style - but for some reason in LIQUID GOLD, there were so many names being introduced, and then flicked away from, that I was really struggling to work out who was who. Perhaps some of the characters have return parts from the earlier novels, but for some reason, they wouldn't quite gel as people - and I found I had to go back a lot to work out where this person was introduced, how they fitted into the tale, and even with that backtracking, I was still at a loss. I assume there's a lot from the back stories of Fox and, in particular, his romantic interest that informs Fox's behaviour in this book, and it seemed odd, that for the first time in the series, I felt I obviously needed to know a lot of that to get with the program.. so to speak.
There were very nice touches in the book. I particularly liked the way that Fox is starting to feel the effects of all this man of the moment stuff, his body is hurting, he's not quite as bullet-proof as you'd expect from a stereotypical action man. I wasn't quite so convinced by one of the major threads for one of the major female characters - but that's probably more a personal preference. The way that scenario is used is often less than convincing. But overall, the book isn't a bad story, and I'd not be surprised if fans of the Lachlan Fox books, who are up-to-date with the series, find this one just as fast-paced, action-packed and tension filled as the other books. Strangely, I've got so far out of whack with the series that I read the latest one, RED ICE, before I realised I also had this book. RED ICE worked. LIQUID GOLD didn't work as well for me. I was lost for a fair part of the book, and profoundly confused at points. Pity, because I really like this sort of thriller. Maybe I'll return to it when I've caught up with the book in the middle that I've obviously missed.
The series in order is:
Fox Hunt (2006)
Patriot Act (2007)
Blood Oil (2008)
Liquid Gold (2009)
Red Ice (2010) show less
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- 29
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- ISBNs
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