Lies Sleeping
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Published Reviews
Publisher's Weekly Review
Aaronovitch's seventh Peter Grant urban fantasy (after 2016's The Hanging Tree) is more funny than memorable, with the plot overshadowed by the laugh-out-loud prose. Peter, a London police detective constable assigned to the pursuit of paranormal crime, has magic powers himself, and is also an extreme nerd able to distinguish between the depictions of dwarfish iconography in Tolkien's books and those in filmed adaptations. He's on the trail of Martin Chorley, the wizard known as Faceless Man II, who's viewed as a major security threat to the U.K. Chorley has begun stealing artifacts, apparently as part of a plan to "bring back King Arthur... the one that was totally made up by a bunch of Welsh Nationalists and romantic Frenchmen." Aaronovitch's adeptness at injecting humor into the story outweighs the lessening of suspense that results, and his fans will delight in this outing. Agent: John Berlyne, Zeno Literary. (Nov.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.
Kirkus Book Review
Seventh in the detective/supernatural urban fantasy series (The Hanging Tree, 2016, etc.) in which many of the characters are embodiments of London's riversso that history literally comes alive.Yes indeed, folks, London has more than one rivermost of the others (like the Walbrook, Fleet, and Tyburn) have long been confined belowground in brick tunnels. They're usually female and have supernatural powers. Here, narrator Peter Grant, detective and apprentice wizard, along with his partner, DS Guleed, a swordsman-in-training, and their wizardly boss, DCI Nightingale, must track down the Faceless Man II, now unmasked as Martin Chorley, an evil wizard with a plan. Chorley, mightily dissatisfied with the disorder, insolence, purposelessness and sheer unpleasantness of modern times, intends to dosomething; evidently this involves vampires, a Saxon sword that could pinch-hit for Excalibur, the theft of bulky post-Roman artifacts such as bricks, a huge magical bell, some sort of bloody sacrifice (Chorley's minions have been practicing on goats), and the malevolent, insane spirit known as Mr. Punch. But, given such disparate ingredients, what, exactly, is Chorley up to? Peter has an inside trackhis girlfriend is a river-goddess, while his treacherous former partner (she's now Chorley's sidekick) might not entirely have gone to the dark side. It's all recounted with deadpan British wit and ironyat one point Peter, confined by the bad guys in an oubliette with nothing to read but The Silmarillion, provides a hilarious running critiqueand packed with fascinating historical detail. Newcomers are advised, however, that the frequent references to previous events and episodes may prove confusing even as they enrich the context. The one aspect that lacks real depth is the magic, which is flatly Harry Potter-ish.Lively and amusing and different. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
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Citations
Aaronovitch, B., & Holdbrook-Smith, K. (2018). Lies Sleeping (Unabridged). Astra Publishing House.
Chicago / Turabian - Author Date Citation, 17th Edition (style guide)Aaronovitch, Ben and Kobna Holdbrook-Smith. 2018. Lies Sleeping. Astra Publishing House.
Chicago / Turabian - Humanities (Notes and Bibliography) Citation, 17th Edition (style guide)Aaronovitch, Ben and Kobna Holdbrook-Smith. Lies Sleeping Astra Publishing House, 2018.
Harvard Citation (style guide)Aaronovitch, B. and Holdbrook-Smith, K. (2018). Lies sleeping. Unabridged Astra Publishing House.
MLA Citation, 9th Edition (style guide)Aaronovitch, Ben, and Kobna Holdbrook-Smith. Lies Sleeping Unabridged, Astra Publishing House, 2018.
Copy Details
Collection | Owned | Available | Number of Holds |
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Libby | 2 | 0 | 0 |