Photo de l'auteur

Michael Reaves (1) (1950–2023)

Auteur de L'ombre du chasseur

Pour les autres auteurs qui s'appellent Michael Reaves, voyez la page de désambigüisation.

Michael Reaves (1) a été combiné avec J. Michael Reaves.

37+ oeuvres 6,298 utilisateurs 101 critiques 2 Favoris

Séries

Œuvres de Michael Reaves

Les œuvres ont été combinées en J. Michael Reaves.

L'ombre du chasseur (2001) 1,138 exemplaires
Shadows Over Baker Street: New Tales of Terror! (2003) — Directeur de publication — 722 exemplaires
L'étoile noire (2007) 721 exemplaires
Les chirurgiens de l'espace (2004) — Auteur — 580 exemplaires
Guérisseuse Jedi (2004) 537 exemplaires
Crépuscule Jedi (2008) 458 exemplaires
Rue des ombres (2008) 369 exemplaires
Modèles de force (2009) 333 exemplaires
The Last Jedi (2013) 219 exemplaires
The Shattered World (1984) 218 exemplaires
Shadow Games (2011) 207 exemplaires
The Burning Realm (1988) 130 exemplaires
Dome (1987) 122 exemplaires
Street Magic (Tor Fantasy) (1991) 103 exemplaires
Hellstar (1984) 99 exemplaires
Batman: Fear Itself (2007) 66 exemplaires
Mr. Twilight (2006) 49 exemplaires
I, alien : a novel (1978) 35 exemplaires
Hell on Earth (2001) 34 exemplaires
Night Hunter (1995) 32 exemplaires
Voodoo Child (1998) 22 exemplaires
Coruscant Nights Omnibus (2011) 9 exemplaires
Cemetery Dance Issue 44 (2003) 2 exemplaires
Make-believe 1 exemplaire
Blackstar: The Complete Series (2006) 1 exemplaire
Fusion 10 1 exemplaire
Undeadsville 1 exemplaire

Oeuvres associées

Les œuvres ont été combinées en J. Michael Reaves.

Lost on the Darkside: Voices From The Edge of Horror (2005) — Contributeur — 43 exemplaires
Ascents of Wonder (1977) — Contributeur — 27 exemplaires
Hollywood Unreel: Fantasies about Hollywood and the Movies (1982) — Contributeur — 1 exemplaire

Étiqueté

Partage des connaissances

Nom légal
Reaves, James Michael
Autres noms
Reaves, James Michael
Date de naissance
1950
Date de décès
2023-03-20
Sexe
male
Nationalité
États-Unis

Membres

Critiques

This collection of Holmes or Holmesian characters meeting the Lovecraftian-themed horror was interesting. The stories were uneven though, with some lacking the feel of Lovecraftian horror and others barely linked to Sherlock Holmes or Watson. Still, I enjoyed the book overall.

Try this book if you enjoy both Sherlock Holmes and H. P. Lovecraft.
 
Signalé
Jean_Sexton | 20 autres critiques | Mar 17, 2024 |
The novel is not bad, but it's not great, either. The new characters are -- with a decent exception or two -- largely forgettable tropes (the ace fighter pilot, the attractive bartender, the conscripted surgeon, etc.), and the established ones ring slightly off to me. Particularly Tarkin is not quite as I know him from the films and cartoons -- though in fairness, this might be due to established EU personality traits I'm not aware of. Vader is better, though his sections suffer from the bending over backwards to make sense of his actions and dialogue in light of both the prequel films and the vast EU continuity largely grown before those films were made.

I was hoping for a political thriller about the creation of the galaxy's most horrific invention, and instead I got a street-level-view of said invention's launch and demise. But it's decent, and once the novel hit the halfway point, it picked up a lot of steam carrying through to the end, which I enjoy as a reader.
… (plus d'informations)
½
 
Signalé
Lucky-Loki | 17 autres critiques | Jan 4, 2024 |
Pretty average, except for A Study in Emerald, which works as an affectionate tribute to Sherlock Holmes with a decent twist. It plays a bit loose with Lovecraft but in a good way - some of the stories don't seem to get Lovecraftian horror at all.

The big problem is that the Holmes format and Lovecraft format are totally at odds with each other. Lovecraft stories end with a horror ending where people lose their sanity, nothing is understandable and there's no hope for the future. In a Holmes story the ending is (usually) happy, everything is resolved and everything is explained as being entirely logical, while clues throughout the story make the ending satisfying. These stories typically follow a pretty unhappy medium. Even attempts to portray some permanent effect on Holmes' or Watson's mind falls flat when the next story has them yet again baffled and confused about the idea of Lovecraftian cults existing, despite them having just confronted them. Obviously that's somewhat unavoidable in a short story collection like this but it is a little silly. Most of the stories have unpleasant things happen to the characters yet Holmes and Watson escape mostly unscathed. Multiple stories seem to have a very loose handle on Holmes' character and speaking style, which is pretty jarring. One story dedicates pages to a lovingly described firefight in the London sewers, which is neither very Lovecraftian or Sherlockian. One story is based on Moriarty recording his plans to control the world on a wax cylinder, live, while he's doing them. There's a story that featured something from Jewish folklore that almost felt anti-semitic because of the weird way it was handled.

I feel like more stories could have done with trying to break away from some of the Lovecraft mythology while still keeping some of the spirit. Some of them quote Lovecraft stuff but make it incredibly mundane.

I guess I feel most of the stories failed to work as either a Lovecraft story or a Holmes story and ended up not making much of an impact. It was alright enough but just not exciting and too much repetition of basic story premises.
… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
tombomp | 20 autres critiques | Oct 31, 2023 |
Danny has run away from his abusivi father—life on the street is hard but better than home. He has always felt like he hasn’t belonged. The secret is revealed when he joins a most unusual group of street kids. Maybe the magic he feels is real. Good read.
 
Signalé
bgknighton | 1 autre critique | May 22, 2023 |

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Statistiques

Œuvres
37
Aussi par
3
Membres
6,298
Popularité
#3,898
Évaluation
½ 3.5
Critiques
101
ISBN
128
Langues
14
Favoris
2

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