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Old December 30th, 2002, 05:28 PM   #1
Rob B
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THE BARBED COIL by JV JONES - January BOTM

Let the discussions...BEGIN!!!!!!!!
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Old January 1st, 2003, 04:37 PM   #2
Mears
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I have enjoyed this book from the moment I picked it up. The characters grew on me very quickly. The plot develops steadily with the information being revealed adding to your knowledge without allowing you to predict too much . I haven't finished it yet I have about a hundred pages to go. I like the plot mechanisms and the character development.
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Old January 1st, 2003, 06:53 PM   #3
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I am very enthralled with this book, with this writer, in fact. I've finished the Coil, but don't want to give anything away...this is the first time I participate in the book club...is it normally expected for most folks to have finished the book?

What I do want to say at this point is that I cared about several of the characters very early on, and if a writer wants to hook me, that's the way to do it.
One of the things I found interesting was the great detail about the mixing and production of the various pigments for the illuminations. The whole scribe thing was fascinating to me.
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Old January 1st, 2003, 07:33 PM   #4
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Thumbs up

I finished the book a month or so ago, and liked it very much too. It was my first book by J.V. Jones, bought on an impulse without having too great expectations. But I was positively surprised and shall definitely read more of her work in the future.

I don't know the rules of this discussion, but I'll try not to give too much away in case not all of you have read the whole book yet. This bookclub thing must be a somwhat new addition to the SFF forums... I don't remember it being here the last time i frequented this place. But it's a good idea.

On of the things I really liked about the book was the very vivid and detalied description of Tessa's tinitus. And especially the way it became a part of the larger story, and the way it conrtrasted her growth in the rest of the book, and her new self towards the end.

Like Thomas Covenant, the sickness added an extra layer to the main character. But unlike Covenant, Tessa was very quick to accept her entry into the new fantasy world, along with her sudden healing. The book just stated "she new it was real..." or something like that. That, probably, was one of the weakest spots of the book. At least it was the only weak spot I remember just now

Regards

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Old January 1st, 2003, 10:10 PM   #5
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I finished the book a week ago or so and I found it pretty good too. The tinnitus thing made me think of Thomas Covenant as well. Actually, I found it much nicer the way Jones handled her character. Tess did not believe she healed immediately, but after she was a couple of times in situations where tinnitus would have shown itself and it didn't, I think it was natural for her to believe it is gone especially since her life changed in so many ways then why not this too? Maybe she got used to it a little to quickly, but I find it way more pleasant than the way Covenant handled his illness. Plus, it didn't take Tess too long to find out that Deveric controlled her tinnitus in order to affect her life.
I thought this was a pretty good book. I've read The Book of Words series before and I was pleasantly surprised that Jones is not one of those authors who do all their books in the same pattern. I enjoyed all the books I've read by her, but they were not the same. I think she has a really nice way to show characters and though her plot is not especially intricate, I found the story interesting.
I also think the way Jones handled magic was very interesting and unlike typical wand shaking and curse shouting. I found the idea quite unique and the characters seemed pretty well suited for their role. I really think characters is the strongest point of Jones' writing.
I was wondering how you would classify this novel. It has some points taken from so-called high fantasy and there are some indicators that it would fall into 'swords and sorcery' or heroic fantasy category. What do you think?
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Old January 4th, 2003, 07:40 PM   #6
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I last read this book several years ago and for me it was JV Jones best novel at the time and still is. One of my enduring memories of this book is the scene with Snowy near the end of the book and the subsequent events. Overall I believe that JV Jones successfully weaved a number of different issues into a very good story.
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Old January 4th, 2003, 07:51 PM   #7
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I generally like the way Jones handles the romantic element of her plot. As I said to a friend earlier, she chooses the high ground rather than becoming tawdry. I find that a little written skillfully goes much farther than a lot done in cliched poor taste.

Ravis is an entrancing hero, just the kind I prefer.....dark and dangerous, full of surprises.
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Old January 4th, 2003, 09:46 PM   #8
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Quote:
Originally posted by Eldanuumea
I generally like the way Jones handles the romantic element of her plot. As I said to a friend earlier, she chooses the high ground rather than becoming tawdry. I find that a little written skillfully goes much farther than a lot done in cliched poor taste.
I definitely enjoyed the subtle way that she handled the romantic element. I thought about this quite a bit as I was reading the book. I am new to the fantasy genre and I wondered how this came across to the male readers of the book. I have read some of the discussions on this board about the differences between male and female authors, but haven't read enough different authors to really form an opinion yet. I wonder if the way she handled it resonanted with me because she is a woman or because it was skillfully done (which it was) and it doesn't really matter that she's a woman. I'll have to come back to that question for myself after I have added more items on my "Books that I've Read" list.

By the way... I'm so glad that I found this Book Club and this whole forum for that matter. I was looking for somewhere to get recommendations on what I should read next and my internet search led me here. I'm so grateful... although it is a little overwhelming. I now have pages of recommendations that I've written down! Pages... and pages... Good thing I got a bookstore gift card for Christmas.
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Old January 4th, 2003, 10:07 PM   #9
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I really enjoyed the romance part of the book as well. Somehow I feel though that it was targeted more towards the women audience and Jones knows how to make it because she is a woman herself and in a way she understands how to make a scene interesting for a woman. Though on the other hand I read some male authors who could handle the romantic part of the story just as well, so I would think its Jones' talent that made it this well rather than gender though that helps too.
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Old January 4th, 2003, 11:18 PM   #10
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Shalimar and Lani, your posts are intriguing because they echo a comment from a male friend; when I asked for his reaction to a particular scene, he said I especially liked it because I was a woman. But he also liked it, just thought it was written more from the feminine point of view.
I was wondering about the ease with which Tessa adjusted to being in a totally alien place and time. Would it really be that possible to so immediately become part of a different world?

Shalimar, I too will miss these two weeks of luxurious reading time, and I know what you mean about having a new list of great books to find.
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Old January 5th, 2003, 04:30 AM   #11
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As a male reader I thought Jones handled the romance very well indeed, it's subtle and sensitive and is firmly embedded in the story rather than a side issue. I also like the way she built the relationships between the male characters, they came across as very credible. Not just the principal characters, I really felt for Broc and Pax. I also thought Angeline, Gerta and Snowy added immensely to the Izgard elements.

Her descriptions of the horror and violence of the Harras and the effect of the main plot (don't want to give too much away here). Are equally well done, bringing a lot of balance to the book.
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Old January 6th, 2003, 01:14 PM   #12
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I haven't read the book and I just happened to be browsing through, but if I can make one small technical point -- you guys should really not be concerned about giving away spoilers in a book club discussion. The whole idea behind this kind of discussion is that everyone who participates has read the entire book, so that you can an honest, full-fledged debate. People who haven't finished the book probably should not participate until they do (not that they should be barred from doing so, but if they participate they should just be aware that there will be spoilers.)
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Old January 6th, 2003, 02:17 PM   #13
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I'm male too, and I also thought that the romance was skillfuly done. As Mears said, it was intergrated part of the story, rather than an amusing sideline. And it was not too heavy-handed, as seen in for example Joanne Bertin's 'Last Dragonlord' series (which is still a somewhat enjoyable read, though).

Quote:
I was wondering about the ease with which Tessa adjusted to being in a totally alien place and time. Would it really be that possible to so immediately become part of a different world?
Yeah, as I said in my first post, that was my one and probably only complaint with this book. Not precisly the speed at which she became part of the world, nor the way she accepted the cure of her tinitus. More, it was the way her quick acceptance of the 'interdimensional-travel' or whatever it was, was described.

I would have thought that anyone would experience at least a brief moment of disorientation, of fear of hallucinations and fear of madness. Suspect trickery or some such thing. At least for a short period of time.

If only such a short period of doubt had passed and been overcome, I would have had no qualms accepting a brief recovery and a quck acceptance of the new reality. After all, J.V. Jones does tell us repeatedly that Tessa had nothing to tie her to her old world. The new world is dark and primitive and dangerous in many ways, but it also gives Tessa a lot of the things she missed in her previous life. So in a way I can understand how she came to fit in there.

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I was wondering how you would classify this novel. It has some points taken from so-called high fantasy and there are some indicators that it would fall into 'swords and sorcery' or heroic fantasy category. What do you think?
I don't really know about that, I'm not good at classifying things. If I should choose, I think I would lean more towards the ''swords and sorcery' category than the high-fantasy one. High-fantasy, I think, is often more magical and mythological than the world of the Coil. There's no typical high-fantasy races in the Coil, no elfs or dwarfs. There's only men. Even the 'wizards' are only humans and their magic more based on knowledge and skill than on mystic forces, I feel. But then again, I'm not sure I know what really differentiates the sub-categories of fantasy.
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Old January 7th, 2003, 12:34 AM   #14
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I guess I am the lone voice in the wilderness. I hated this book, and if it had been the only fantasy I had ever read, I would not have tried another. I usually read books in 2-3 days and this thing took me three weeks because I kept looking for excuses to put it down.

This is a modern-day meets alternate world medieval fantasy. It is long at over 600 pages, dense, and badly in need of both originality and an editor.

I have read her trilogy the Book of Words (Baker’s Boy, Master and Fool, A Man Betrayed), and enjoyed it very much. Those books were dark, meaty, fast-paced, gripping, and even had a touch of black humor.

In BC the action doesn’t start until after page 400. The previous pages all serve to set up the story, the history of the imaginary realm, and the characters. So you can’t say they should all be loped off, but the first 400 should have been edited better and condensed down.

The one interesting and original item in the book was the use of scribes and the art of illumination. She takes illumination and makes it a magic art, which is used for both good and evil. Along the way she has one of the characters explain the details and the mechanics of the process – which I am assuming is from research into the past, rather than all made up, because her details are that good.

The story starts in the modern day world with the heroine, Tessa, a limp dishrag of a non-person, finding a golden ring which takes her into the imaginary world. I must confess that I like modern fantasy, and medieval fantasy, but not a combination of the two. Further her POV character and the first part of story remind of nothing so much as bright, bland, featureless Mercedes Lackey drivel (sorry, there may be people who like her stuff, but I loathe it). Then with her modern woman in the past JVJ takes on tones of Diana Gabaldon’s Outlander series. Not as well done of course. Her limp dishrag suddenly becomes a feisty woman.

Her male counterpart, Ravis, is of course the handsome, dark, dangerous wounded man who is always an outsider and the standard male cliché for this type of recycled story. They of course become secretly attracted to each other. Ick

There is an evil king, Izegard, who is using black magic to fuel his war effort, as he plans to conquer the whole world. Ravis, a disgraced nobleman kicked out of his home, has become a mercenary and until recently was recruiting, training and equipping Izegard’s army. He rescues Tessa, and the two join forces (for no good reason). They become hunted and race to find a way to stop Izegard before he takes the key city in his plans of domination and destruction. The country the king comes from, Garizon, is portrayed as the breeding ground of all evil, and the people are all evil, just because that’s the way it is. I hate books that have simplistic formulas: I really like shades of gray.

The story switches back and forth between the good camp, and the bad camp. In Izegard’s camp we see how he works, and what he does. We also meet those who help him, and those caught in his web and powerless to escape. While there we meet who I consider the best character in the book: Snowy, a no-good dog; a small mutt who is emotionally and psychically linked to his young mistress, Angeline. She is Izegard’s virtually kidnapped, timid, sweet-natured, clueless wife. Izegard’s scribe is responsible for changing his men into horrible monsters who will fight until they die, caring for nothing but blood and terror.

The good camp includes Tessa, Ravis, and a spoiled young nobleman, Cameron, who instantly sees the light after meeting Izegard’s monsters in battle. Tessa is a proto-scribe, she sees patterns everywhere. They hook up with Emith, the assistant to a recently deceased scribe, and he trains Tessa. Tessa hides out with Emith and his mother – two well done and interesting characters.

There is a lot of traveling, an attempt to bring the grittiness of life in the past into the story; though our feckless heroine doesn’t miss anything in her old world, not her family, or even modern plumbing – right. There are many battles, lots of blood, and male bonding – the women folk only get fought over or for.

Tessa’s characterization flip flops from dishrag to feisty – each time thinking that the other state is who she is. We meet many interesting minor characters, and the story does take off after page 400. The men fight, and Tessa paints so that together they form a team to combat the evil. The ending is canned and predictable. The whole thing is derivative and tired. I would rate this book a 3.5 out of 10. I am really disappointed in JVJ, because she can do so much better.
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Old January 8th, 2003, 03:18 PM   #15
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Talking

Wow, FicusFan. Good reply!

It almost, but not quite, got me to revise my high opinion of the book. I think you made many good points in your review and it certainly got me thinking.

Quote:
In BC the action doesn’t start until after page 400. The previous pages all serve to set up the story, the history of the imaginary realm, and the characters. So you can’t say they should all be loped off, but the first 400 should have been edited better and condensed down.
That's a little extreme I think. Page 400 could perhaps be called the beginning of the end, i.e. the place where first begin to see our way towards a resolution, and starts to learn the true cause of the problems. Sure, the story might start a bit slow, with a gradual build-up, taking its own time to introduce the main characters.

But I actually thought of that as a strength, rather than a weakness. Instead of just having the wizard who 'summoned' Tessa meet her upon arrival and have him explain her quest at once, Tessa is left for herself to discover her own purpose. The traditional 'wise old wizard' is dead and the quest, to release the coil, is not revealed straight away but only discoverd later, gradually. I thought that was a good move on the part of the author. A bit original, even.


Quote:
The one interesting and original item in the book was the use of scribes and the art of illumination. She takes illumination and makes it a magic art, which is used for both good and evil. Along the way she has one of the characters explain the details and the mechanics of the process – which I am assuming is from research into the past, rather than all made up, because her details are that good.
In that we agree. I too found the art of illumination a really interesting approach to magic.


Quote:
Her male counterpart, Ravis, is of course the handsome, dark, dangerous wounded man who is always an outsider and the standard male cliché for this type of recycled story. They of course become secretly attracted to each other. Ick
He And everyone else just agreed that the love afair was subtle and well-done. OK, maybe it wasn't that subtle after all. In that light the characters sure sounds a bit cardboard-cut. Still, for me it worked and didn't sound so contrived when I actually read the book.

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There is an evil king, Izegard, who is using black magic to fuel his war effort, as he plans to conquer the whole world. Ravis, a disgraced nobleman kicked out of his home, has become a mercenary and until recently was recruiting, training and equipping Izegard’s army. He rescues Tessa, and the two join forces (for no good reason)...
Well, Tessa do have a very good reason. One that's also pointed out in the book. She's in a very strange and probably dangerous place, and has already been attacker once. Only natural that she tries to stick to her rescuer. As for Ravis, I'll admit that his motive is a bit more murky

Quote:
...They become hunted and race to find a way to stop Izegard before he takes the key city in his plans of domination and destruction. The country the king comes from, Garizon, is portrayed as the breeding ground of all evil, and the people are all evil, just because that’s the way it is. I hate books that have simplistic formulas: I really like shades of gray.
In the first part of the story that did indeed seem to be the case. But, to the defense of J.V. Jones, I have to point out that it was later revealed that this wasn't true. It wasn't the kingdom of Garizon, nor even the kings of that kingdom, which were evil and which caused the wars. It was all the cause of the Coil. And even the coil wasn't evil, it was just 'doing its job,' namely creating wars.

Quote:
The story switches back and forth between the good camp, and the bad camp. In Izegard’s camp we see how he works, and what he does. We also meet those who help him, and those caught in his web and powerless to escape. While there we meet who I consider the best character in the book: Snowy, a no-good dog; a small mutt who is emotionally and psychically linked to his young mistress, Angeline.
Yuck, I hated that dog! I really think that J.V. Jones over-did that 'no-good' dog thing. That was just a little bit too much for my taste. But otherwise I agree that Angeline was a good, unconventional character. So was the 'evil scribe,' which really wasn't that evil after all, but caught by his own greed for power and his emotional, if somewhat twisted, bond to his king. Wasn't the scribe one of the gray characters you asked for?

Quote:
The good camp includes Tessa, Ravis, and a spoiled young nobleman, Cameron, who instantly sees the light after meeting Izegard’s monsters in battle. Tessa is a proto-scribe, she sees patterns everywhere. They hook up with Emith, the assistant to a recently deceased scribe, and he trains Tessa. Tessa hides out with Emith and his mother – two well done and interesting characters.
I agree here too. Emith and his mother was perhaps some of the best suporting characters I've read about yet. In fact I think that all the 'secondary characters' of this book are excellent, and easily outweight any cheesy-ness the main characters may suffer from.

Quote:
There is a lot of traveling, an attempt to bring the grittiness of life in the past into the story; though our feckless heroine doesn’t miss anything in her old world, not her family, or even modern plumbing – right. There are many battles, lots of blood, and male bonding – the women folk only get fought over or for.
Well, I think I would have missed plumbing too . But regarding what you said about the women only being fought over, I think that was a little unfair. Tessa fights her own battle against the enemy scribe. In a way she is really fighting the 'real' battle, the one that wins the day in the end. And Angeline, the poor witless woman, really stands up for herself and her baby in the end, when she poisons Izegard.

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...The ending is canned and predictable. The whole thing is derivative and tired. I would rate this book a 3.5 out of 10...
As to the final rating of the book, it must of course remain a matter of taste. I personally have a high tolerance for what is often called unoriginality by others. As long as it is well written, I mostly don't care. I found The Barbed Coil to be just that, a well written tale. For me, a whole bunch of high-quality 'secondary characters' and a very interesting magic system was more than enough to earn this book a place on the list of 'books to be recomended.'
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