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Lee Battersby

Auteur de The Corpse-Rat King

48+ oeuvres 281 utilisateurs 12 critiques 2 Favoris

Séries

Œuvres de Lee Battersby

The Corpse-Rat King (2012) 135 exemplaires
The Marching Dead (2013) 50 exemplaires
Magrit (2016) 16 exemplaires
Through Soft Air (2006) 15 exemplaires
Letters to Josie 3 exemplaires
The Hobbyist 3 exemplaires
Ecdysis 2 exemplaires
Tales of Nireym 2 exemplaires
Murder-world 2 exemplaires
Pater Familias 2 exemplaires
The Divergence Tree 2 exemplaires
Gunslinger 1 exemplaire
Dark Ages 1 exemplaire
A Suitable Level of Reward [short story] — Auteur — 1 exemplaire
The Marching Dead (2016) 1 exemplaire
Instinct 1 exemplaire
Fade 1 exemplaire
Europe After The Rain 1 exemplaire
Smuggler's Moon 1 exemplaire
Making Two Fists 1 exemplaire
Alchymical Romance 1 exemplaire
Vortle 1 exemplaire
Father Renoir's Hands 1 exemplaire
Decimated 1 exemplaire
His Calliope 1 exemplaire
Stalag Hollywood 1 exemplaire
Goodfellow 1 exemplaire
A Very Good Lawyer 1 exemplaire
Blake the God 1 exemplaire
Mikal 1 exemplaire
Jaracara's Kiss 1 exemplaire
Elyse 1 exemplaire
Pass the Parcel 1 exemplaire
Carrying the God 1 exemplaire
Silk 1 exemplaire
Brillig 1 exemplaire

Oeuvres associées

The Year's Best Fantasy and Horror 2007: 20th Annual Collection (2007) — Contributeur — 211 exemplaires
All Star Zeppelin Adventure Stories (2004) — Contributeur — 57 exemplaires
Short Trips: Destination Prague (2007) — Contributeur — 50 exemplaires
L. Ron Hubbard Presents Writers of the Future, Volume XVIII (2002) — Contributeur — 39 exemplaires
The Year's Best Australian Science Fiction & Fantasy: Volume 3 (2007) — Contributeur — 19 exemplaires
Encounters : an anthology of Australian Speculative Fiction (2004) — Contributeur — 18 exemplaires
Agog! Terrific Tales (2003) — Contributeur — 17 exemplaires
The Year's Best Australian Fantasy and Horror 2011 (2012) — Contributeur — 16 exemplaires
New Ceres nights (2009) — Contributeur — 14 exemplaires
Australian Dark Fantasy & Horror, 2006 (2006) — Contributeur — 14 exemplaires
The Year's Best Australian Fantasy and Horror 2013 (2014) — Contributeur — 11 exemplaires
Elsewhere : an anthology of incredible places (2003) — Contributeur — 8 exemplaires
The Year's Best Australian Fantasy and Horror 2012 (2013) — Contributeur — 7 exemplaires
Tales of Australia: Great Southern Land (2013) — Contributeur — 6 exemplaires
Australis imaginarium (2010) — Contributeur — 3 exemplaires
The Beast Within (2008) — Contributeur — 3 exemplaires
Antipodean SF : Issue 250 (2019) — Contributeur, quelques éditions1 exemplaire

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Critiques

I wasn't too sure about this story when I picked it up. The plot sounds interesting enough, and the book took off quickly. Around the middle though, I felt it slowed down, and in my original thought, had started events that I saw no connection to what was happening/needed to happen for the story. Once near the end, it all came together, and though it felt sluggish in the middle, it picked back up. Not a bad read for a slow day.
 
Signalé
Ralphd00d | 8 autres critiques | May 4, 2021 |
had a lot of love last fall for the first novel in this series, The Corpse-Rat King. So much love I almost gave it five stars. Really, the only reason I didn't was because I was pretty sure the best was yet to come.

And I was right. With this sequel, The Marching Dead, Battersby kicked up everything I loved about the first novel by a notch or two -- world-building, storytelling, hilarity, and most of all, characters who just made me punch the air over and over again, usually while laughing. Gerd, the trusty dead bumpkin sidekick on whom our hero Marius relied on last novel, comes into his own as a bona fide second hero, for one... but there's more. For instance, Gerd's newly dead Granny, who could go toe to toe with Lady Sybella and the awesome cranky biddy gang of the Lymond Chronicles, but who, ultimately, would shock them speechless with her command of bawdy songs. And Alno the dead bastard cat. And Arnobew, aka Warbone, the crazy cardboard warrior. And Marius' parents, who are both real pieces of work. And...

See what I mean, here? Generally, any book that finds me giving lists of characters in the first paragraph or two of my blog is one that has made me very, very happy.

But wait, there's more. Like plot twists that actually surprised me. Like genuinely grounding the bizarre, over-the-top story in the hero's character, past and present and making it work. Like featuring lines of dialogue like "It's not necrophilia if we're both dead" and having it feel completely natural, tasteless absurdity and all. Like a stupendously badass order of nuns with whom no sane would ever want to tangle. Really, the only way I could have been happier would have been if Battersby had managed to throw in some kind of awesome Busby Berkley cockroach scene or something. My only complaint is that, well, this seems like an awfully small world; Marius do keep running into every (impressively bosomed) woman he's ever slept with and winding up needing something from her years after leaving on messy terms.

Which is to say that, yes, I could have done without the love rhombus.

But that's a small matter, really. And it's the big matters that, well, matter. Because amid the violence and the guffaws, The Marching Dead has a thing or two to say about belief and religion, about life after death (obviously) and about responsibility, which not even Marius can run away from. There are some poignant moments between the scenes of slapstick carnage and smartassery. As there should be when the subject is death.

As soon as things look to be getting too serious, though, Battersby always comes out with a send up. Because ultimately, he seems to want to tell us, death and fear of death are laughing matters, if anything is. It's just that the joke is on us. As is the vomit, blood, other body fluids....

Battersby is one messed up dude. Delightfully so. We should all be so lucky. All the stars.
… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
KateSherrod | 2 autres critiques | Aug 1, 2016 |
Is that a crown in your pocket, or are you just happy to come and rule us?

That's not a quote from this novel, but really? It totally could be.

Marius Helles makes his living robbing the corpses of soldiers who have fallen in battle, a practice he has refined to an art -- until he has no living to make at all. Tee hee. What happens is, he robs the wrong corpse -- that of a fallen king -- and is observed holding a crown by one of the recently dead, who misreads the situation and next thing Marius knows, he's been sucked down to the world of the dead! Whom the gods are ignoring! Because, the dead think, they have no king! So they need a king! Marius has a crown, therefore he must be a king! So he can be their king! But of course, Marius doesn't want to be dead, even if he gets to be KING DEAD!

All of that sounds spoilery, but that's all just the first chapter of The Corpse-Rat King, in which the newly-dead Marius gets his mission: find the dead a king, or else. But like all good Heroes, Marius at first Refuses the Call, and runs away. As excuses for a tour of a funky fantasy world go, this is a highly original one.

Battersby, too, took some time making this more than just a generic fantasy world. There are a lot of nice touches, like a short discourse on a tradition of throwing corn dollies into the water at the beginning of an ocean voyage and the industry of dolly-making that has grown up around it, that, combined with Zombie Marius' antics, make this book a genuine pleasure to read.

There are some disturbingly funny moments, such as when Marius almost "rescues"* a drowned Mad King who is a dig-in-your ribs reference to Caligula (he even named his horse "Littleboot" which is roughly an English translation of "Caligula" -- the nickname bestowed on the beloved toddler son of the Roman commander Germanicus that stuck right on through the kid's rise to the imperial throne) and rides him like a horsey beneath the waves. Or when... but that would be spoilery. Eff off. But oh, how I giggled.

This is another novel that I started and let go by the wayside because of shiny things that came my way. This should not reflect on the book's quality, however. I'm just distractable that way. And though I had read many other things between the putting-aside and the taking-back-up-again (a span of three or four weeks), I did not have to refresh my memory as to what had been going on. And once I was reading it again, I kept on at a giddy pace, carried away by Battersby's wonderful world building (and cathedral building; the Cathedral of Bones licks the Iron Throne hollow as an enduring taunt/symbol of a founding ruler's conquests) and Marius' resourcefulness as he first runs away from and then embraces his quest, like every hero does.

The ending leaves room for a sequel, by the way. Hurrah for Mostly Dead Marius!

*For "rescue" read "spirits away so he can proceed to the land of the dead and become their king."
… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
KateSherrod | 8 autres critiques | Aug 1, 2016 |
Full Review: http://tenaciousreader.wordpress.com/2014/04/07/the-corpse-rat-king-by-lee-batte...

Corpse Rat King by Lee Battersby is full of wonderfully macabre atmosphere and attitude. Marius don Hellespont makes his gory living by wading through battlefields, liberating the dead of their valuables (in other words, he is a corpse rat). Our story begins as Marius and his lackwit assistant Gerd are interrupted as they are making their latest collection.

One thing that I need to make clear about this book, is Battersby writing skills are top notch. He is able to convey the disgusting and absurd in a stunningly grotesque way. I absolutely loved this and it just makes me smile. And Marius has a very dark, acerbic sense of humor. Also love that.

But, while I enjoyed the quips and descriptions, I just never really connected with Marius, and I never felt all that drawn into the story. And since I didn’t connect to Marius, that was a real issue because there are really no other prominent characters.

If I set this book down, I was completely fine not picking it back up again. It was rather strange, because I swear I can open up to almost any page and find some bit that I enjoy reading. I guess it’s a case of enjoying the details, but not really caring about the larger picture. Which is unfortunate because the details are so amusing.

But, for a first novel, I can see some serious potential here. With a bit more character development and plot, this book could be phenomenal because of Battersby’s ability for details. Despite its flaws, Corpse Rat King by is a mire of dead, undead, blood, gore and caustic prose and I am a bit surprised this book didn’t receive more attention when it was released. But I can also recognize it won’t be a book for everyone. It is very dark, but also one of those dark books that is just filled with humorously wrong moments.
… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
tenaciousreader | 8 autres critiques | May 24, 2014 |

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Statistiques

Œuvres
48
Aussi par
18
Membres
281
Popularité
#82,782
Évaluation
½ 3.5
Critiques
12
ISBN
30
Langues
1
Favoris
2

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