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Reincarnated trickster: Michael Bergey's New Coyote

Furry Book Reviews - Tue 1 Apr 2008 - 21:24
I would describe Michael Bergey's 2005 book New Coyote (Five Star, $25.95, ISBN 1594143226) as a must read for science fiction and furry fans alike. The Plains Indians and many of the southwestern tribes as well had an archetypal legend of Coyote, the Trickster. He was a demigod who had mystical powers of self-reincarnation and recreation and he loved to catch others in tricks that could be very nasty indeed for the victim. Of course, in our modern age, hardly anyone believes in the ancient spirits, and consequently they have declined in power until they are nearly forgotten.

Coyote doesn't accept this state of affairs, however. He always has a plan, and his new plan requires that he be born again into physical flesh, without memory or knowledge of who he is, so that he can study modern society and culture and perhaps find a way to restore himself and his fellow gods to their rightful places. His avatar, if we may borrow a term from Asian thought, looks like an ordinary coyote, but we quickly learn that he is both smarter than the average human, and can both understand and speak human language when he chooses.

So where does he set himself down to begin his study of human society? Why, in the middle of an illegal marijuana plantation in the western US, where he acts like an ordinary dog, herding goats for the human owner, Mooney. When Mooney narrowly escapes capture by narcotics agents and has to run, Coyote goes too. This is where the adventure really begins. He manages (mostly) to keep humans from trying to kill him, and pries into everything that is going on with a little help from some of his fellow demigods.

Unfortunately, Fox seems to have it in for him and begins to campaign for Coyote's death, claiming that it would be best all around, and Coyote must find a way to foil the Fox as well as the human villains. The story is largely told in first person, as seen through Coyote's own eyes. The author, a veterinarian by profession, has an excellent feel for the heightened awareness of the canine, and reminds us frequently of the things he smells or hears that mere humans would miss. He also has a magnificent feeling for the trickster tradition of the Native American demigod, which manifests itself repeatedly as Coyote evades capture and turns the schemes of humans back on themselves. I won't give away the outcome, other than to say you'll be hoping for more. As it happens, there is more to be had, as Bergey's second book, Coyote Season, was released in 2007.

As far as I know, these books have not been offered in paperback format. The hardcover editions are in print and available from online booksellers as well as large bookstores, but if the price seems too steep, try your library. Five Star is an imprint of Thorndike/Gale, a publisher that sells primarily to libraries so even if your local library doesn't have the book, they should be able to borrow it for you from somewhere else.

Rating: 5 of 5 possible apples

Quozl by Alan Dean Foster

Furry Book Reviews - Mon 31 Mar 2008 - 21:29
well, today i am going to review a quaint book by the name of Quozl. when i first read this book, i had no idea about the furry community, i just enjoyed the storyline and rather unique viewpoints it gives. i recently reread it, and i'm as enamored of it as ever. this book is about a race of spacefaring, anthropomorphic aliens that are somewhat like a squirrel crossed with a rabbit. they cannot swim, and they have sublimated their violent instincts through art and dance, though they breed like rabbits (pun intended) without strict scientific intervention. they come to earth during world war two, as a colony ship from an overpopulated planet, in the hopes of finding a new home, and with no way to return if they cannot find one. unfortunately, the planet they planned to colonize is already occupied by a violent, unpredictable race...us. the elders and leaders determine that it is too dangerous to make contact, so they colonize in secret. but can the colony stay secret? read and fallow the lives of these oddly peaceful, violent, and very sexual creatures.

five out of five silver dragon scales, with a rating of pg-13.

Quozl by Alan Dean Foster

Furry Book Reviews - Mon 31 Mar 2008 - 21:29
well, today i am going to review a quaint book by the name of Quozl. when i first read this book, i had no idea about the furry community, i just enjoyed the storyline and rather unique viewpoints it gives. i recently reread it, and i'm as enamored of it as ever. this book is about a race of spacefaring, anthropomorphic aliens that are somewhat like a squirrel crossed with a rabbit. they cannot swim, and they have sublimated their violent instincts through art and dance, though they breed like rabbits (pun intended) without strict scientific intervention. they come to earth during world war two, as a colony ship from an overpopulated planet, in the hopes of finding a new home, and with no way to return if they cannot find one. unfortunately, the planet they planned to colonize is already occupied by a violent, unpredictable race...us. the elders and leaders determine that it is too dangerous to make contact, so they colonize in secret. but can the colony stay secret? read and fallow the lives of these oddly peaceful, violent, and very sexual creatures.

five out of five silver dragon scales, with a rating of pg-13.

N'duk the Hunter - Volume One: The White Towers

Furry Book Reviews - Mon 31 Mar 2008 - 18:59
Mitch de la Guardia's N'duk the Hunter stories are reminscent of those of Conan the Barbarian, and if I had to guess, I'd say that they're intentionally so. The stoytelling hearkens back to a simpler, more straightforward narrative, similar to the heroic epic, but not bogged down in the poetics; at the same time, the stories also don't follow a very modern literary structure, either, which can be both a benefit and a detractor.

The titular N'duk is a mongoose, presented herein as a mytho-historical figure whose tales are told as legend and as lore, which almost impels the reader to assume that the more outlanding parts of the stories can either be taken at face value or as natural embellishment of what "really" happened. He is a wanderer and a warrior, carrying out heroic deeds as both a mercenary and as a man of honor. With no place to call home, he goes from one place to the next, dealing with problems as they arise.

The stories within The White Towers are, as stated in the introduction, presented in no particular order, and there is no narrative thread that connects them. On the one hand, this does help the heroic epic feel of the stories, but on the other hand, it sort of forces the stories to short-change themselves by preventing much of anything in the way of character development for N'duk himself. He's got his personality, but it's not exactly a fully three-dimensional one, and it doesn't change at all throughout the course of the stories presented here (there are, apparently, Volumes Two and Three also available, but I don't know whether that changes anything or not).

Another major drawback to the storytelling style is that none of the stories has any real dénouement to speak of. The typical structure of the stories themselves is something like: N'duk undertakes (or is forced into) a quest, N'duk confronts what needs to be confronted, climax, The End. Again, this does sort of back up the 'feel' that I think the stories are going for, but for some of the stories (particularly the volume's centerpiece, the novella-length "The White Towers" itself), the endings come across as too abrupt, which robs some satisfaction from them.

From a technical competence standpoint, de la Guardia's writing and grammar are certainly much better than you'll come across on 98% of what's written on the Internet, but the volume doesn't appear to have been checked by a professional editor. For the most part, the writing is fine, but when it comes to the more advanced and obscure points of grammar (the ones most people don't need to heed every day, like comma splices and dangling modifiers), there are some frequent slip ups. Perhaps this sort of thing is invisible to the average reader, I'll admit, but as a writer myself, it's something that I notice.

That being said, there is some simple charm in being able to pick up a story that's not overly complicated and that doesn't get bogged down in its own attempts at literary cleverness. It's clear that de la Guardia at least knows what it is that he wants his stories to do, and they do that pretty well. My chief complaint, I guess, would be that I wish that the stories themselves had a little 'more' to them: more characterization, more tension, more conflict and the like.

Still, if you are looking for something of a furry adventure bent, you could do worse than N'duk the Hunter. The simplicity never quite reaches 'elegance,' as they say, but the stories are at least fun, the world itself is well-realized on the whole, and hey, sometimes you just want to read about a mongoose who kicks ass and takes names.

I think stories could use more of those in general, really.

Victorian anthropomorphics: The Island of Doctor Moreau

Furry Book Reviews - Tue 18 Mar 2008 - 13:21
H. G. Wells published The Island of Doctor Moreau in 1896, and though it isn't as well known as The War of the Worlds it has been in print almost continuously since its first appearance. This brief novel is readily available from libraries and new or used bookstores. Several audiobook versions have been released, and it has been adapted to film several times. The most recent film was released in 1996 and featured Marlon Brando as Moreau, though for a darker feeling you might prefer the 1932 release with Charles Laughton, entitled The Island of Lost Souls.

Film and television adaptations notwithstanding, I really suggest that anyone involved in furry fandom read the original. The book is not long, and can be finished in an evening or two. You will come away with an understanding of the peculiar revulsion that some people feel about furries and anthropomorphics, based on its roots in the morality and religious attitudes of Western culture.

Edward Prendick survives a shipwreck only to end up in a dingy on the South Pacific, without food or water, and doomed to an unpleasant death. At the end of his endurance, he is picked up by a mysterious ship that carries a cargo of live animals under the supervision of a medical man named Montgomery. Montgomery cares for and revives Prendick, but when the ship arrives at an island port of call to discharge the cargo, its drunken captain also dumps Prendick into his dingy again and abandons him. Eventually the dingy and Prendick arrive on the island, where he is decidedly unwelcome to the master of the tiny dwelling there, the mysterious Dr. Moreau.

Moreau, we learn, was exiled from civilized society (meaning England) for his experimental abominations. Soon he is explaining himself to Prendick in an effort to win the Englishman over to his side, and the protagonist views those experiments in surgical modification of animals to make them more "human" as utterly blasphemous. This is of course the view taken by most of Judeo-Christian tradition: the animals were created for the service and convenience of humans, and only humans were made "in God's image." This makes Moreau's attempts to construct humanity from animal flesh utterly horrifying, even without the concerns Prendick seems to feel about the pain inflicted on the animals in the process.

When he ventures out into the wilds of the island, Prendick observes and becomes entangled with many of Moreau's experimental subjects, some of whom are nearly successful, while others are dismal failures. The story draws to a rapid and suitably moralistic conclusion in which the guilty parties receive their deserved end, though there seems to be no happy ending for the many experimental subjects.

Wells spins an entertaining tale, as always, and will hold the reader's attention readily enough. I suspect that most furries will not agree with the attitudes expressed by Edward Prendick or the author, but will find themselves rooting for the various underdogs, undercats, and so forth. This is a novel that might well be retold from a different viewpoint by a modern, furry-sensitive writer. It will also give you second thoughts if you've ever considered whether you'd allow medical science to "make a real furry" of you.

Rating: 3 of 5 possible apples

Hello all, so this will my first review

Furry Book Reviews - Fri 14 Mar 2008 - 16:56
Hello all, so this will my first review so let me know if it's okay or not. heh I've been outta school to long so I'm a bit rusty.

Okay It's actually a series and not just one book that I'll be reviewing. It's called the Spellsinger series by Alan Dean Foster and i'm fairly certain that most the fluffs out there would love it but may not have heard of it because it's a bit older. Theres 8 novels in the series total dating between 1983-1994.

A human from basically our world gets teleported mysteriously to another alternate universe thats mostly inhabited by anthro animals. This world is also a few generations back from ours so magic and the sword are the main weapons of choice just to give ya a time frame. The main character is named Jon Tom and has to figure out why this happened to him and has to learn how to adapt to this new world. Luckily he quickly made a friend of an otter named Mudge. Together they travel across this weird world encountering one adventure after another.

I've re-read the entire series at least 3 times now. I highly recommend this series to any and everyone... if you can find it. because of it's age your best choice is to scout out local used book stores. It gets a 5/5 easily from me. hehe okay i hope that wasn't to bad. Happy Hunting fluffs

A Crusade is a Crusade is a Jihad: White Crusade

Furry Book Reviews - Mon 18 Feb 2008 - 12:24

"Those who do not learn from history are doomed to repeat it."
–George Santayana


Much of substantial furry literature falls most easily into the science fiction genre, or occasionally fantasy if heavy duty magic is involved. Ben Goodridge's White Crusade (Bad Dog Books, 2007, ISBN: 9789079082025, $19.95) is no exception, set five centuries after the collapse of human civilization in a time when the Animal-People are the dominant intelligent races. Human remnants still survive, but most seem to be pitiful and helpless dependents. The exact origin of the animal folk is not clear, but they are at least partly descended from humans and divided into multiple Tribes by both geography and genetics. Most strive to live in harmony with the earth and to avoid the destructive behaviors of their human ancestors. This is the realm of apocalyptic (or sometimes post-apocalyptic) fiction, in which the author tells of events that come to pass after the destruction of civilization as we know it.

Goodridge primarily follows the experiences of Tay of the Wolf-Clan, shaman, healer, and Alpha of his tribe of mixed races, as he learns of the threat posed by the White Crusade and brings all his resources to bear on thwarting the Crusade's goal: the ultimate return of humankind to dominance in the world, and a return to the paradigms of human civilization. Peaceful and gentle Tay finds his world badly shaken on the day that the dying Kaim of the Tiger-Clan crashes into his village in a stolen car, carrying a slow but fatal poison in his veins and a purloined talisman of unknown power stolen from the Crusade's Alpha. While he tries unsuccessfully to save Kaim's life, Tay hands the mysterious Cube over to Zack the trader and Sonac (who can only be described as a geek, I think) and delegates them to determine its power and purpose.

Only when the intelligences trapped inside the Cube speak through Sonac's collection of broken human toys and computers do the three begin to understand the significance of the object and the depth of the threat it poses if returned to the hands of the Crusade. Fleeing the wrath of the approaching and increasingly violent Crusaders, the three animal folk set out on a journey eastward, leaving their home in the Pacific Northwest and heading to the old Midwest, where the Cube's resident voices tell them they will find the other pieces of the puzzle. The arm of the White Crusade is long, and its power great. The three pilgrims encounter many obstacles, most of them the result of direct interference by the Crusade or its sympathizers. The ultimate confrontation on the shore of Lake Michigan at the site of Chicago (now known as Kaago) is one of gigantic power and import. The world is saved of course, but individual destinies are not always what we might wish.

Ben Goodridge has crafted his story believably and in great detail. The mad fury of the Crusade's supporters and their suicidal dedication is clearly demonstrated, and all too believable. In an age in which we see similar events on a smaller scale appearing in the news almost daily, it isn't hard to understand the genuine threat posed by the kind of mob psychology that propels such a movement. While I'm disappointed to see the Animal-People (who all ought in my own mind to be as noble and pure-hearted as Tay himself) caught up in such a violent and hysterical hatred, I suppose I should not be surprised. They are after all, as several of Goodridge's characters remind us, descended from humans and liable to the weaknesses of humanity in the end.

I don't hesitate to admit that I'm squeamish about scenes of graphic violence. This book has several such scenes, but I can't say that they were gratuitous. All contribute to the development of the story and characters, and I couldn't in good conscience say they should be trimmed or omitted. I found them particularly painful, probably because I find them too easily believable. My own belief about the inherent cruelty and lack of empathy on the part of many seems to coincide all too well with the author's assessment. There were also a few points where I felt that the action was a bit rushed, leaving out details that might have better supported the conclusions. Overall, though, White Crusade is a fine work, a captivating tale with characters we can both love and hate and a satisfying if somewhat melancholy conclusion.

The realm of apocalyptic fiction is a rich one that includes such masterful works as Dhalgren by Samuel R. Delany, Davy by Edgar Pangborn, and A Canticle for Leibowitz by Walter M. Miller. I recommend all three of those to you, but I place Goodridge's White Crusade right among them in both quality and depth.

Rating: 5 of 5 possible apples