Jon Courtenay Grimwood
Author of Pashazade
About the Author
Image credit: Photograph by Sam Baker, provided by the author
Series
Works by Jon Courtenay Grimwood
Empereur de L'Ouest 2 copies
Duke's Blade, The 1 copy
Axl Against the Immortals 1 copy
Chicago 1 copy
The Spy's Retirement 1 copy
Takeover 1 copy
Associated Works
Celebration: Commemorating the 50th Anniversary of the British Science Fiction Association (2008) — Contributor — 34 copies, 1 review
Last Drink Bird Head : A Flash Fiction Anthology for Charity (2009) — Contributor — 30 copies, 1 review
Stories of Hope and Wonder: In Support of the UK's Healthcare Workers (2020) — Contributor — 11 copies, 1 review
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Legal name
- Grimwood, Jon David Giles Courtenay
- Other names
- Grimwood, Jonathan
Grimwood, Jack - Birthdate
- 1953
- Gender
- male
- Nationality
- UK
- Birthplace
- Valletta, Malta
- Places of residence
- Valletta, Malta
Southeast Asia
Norway
England, UK
Jahore, Malaysia
Spain - Occupations
- columnist
- Relationships
- Baker, Sam (spouse)
- Organizations
- The Guardian
- Awards and honors
- Guest of Honour, Eastercon, UK (2009)
- Agent
- Mic Cheetham
Members
Reviews
Lists
Awards
You May Also Like
Associated Authors
Statistics
- Works
- 33
- Also by
- 15
- Members
- 4,217
- Popularity
- #5,959
- Rating
- 3.6
- Reviews
- 120
- ISBNs
- 150
- Languages
- 8
- Favorited
- 18
Beyond the characters, the Fallen Blade's prose is rough. While it has some flow, it is also boring and lifeless, serving only to build ubiquitously colorless scenes for its colorless characters which sapped other life it might have had. More than that, there was moments were the prose is confusing, switches scenes, characters, and focus without warning, and is so weighed down by the authors attempts at style that the flow almost stops. Speaking of style and scene building, the author has too much of the former and far too little of the latter. In the Fallen Blade Venice, one of the most interesting cities a writer could explore, is barely touched by the author and throughout the entire books remains a vague notion of how it should like, and this notion is derived from the reader's own experience with Venice. Much like everything else, the city and culture is utterly sapped of life.
Finally we have the plot, only the Fallen Blade barely has one. The characters flail around uselessly for the first half of the book, getting pulled this way and that by whichever tide happens to be in motion. In the next quarter one of the characters is given a direction for his story, not purpose mind you, but the author then skips most of that character's journey and instead shows you more meaningless flailing. Then, finally, you reach the last quarter of a book, meet a enjoyable character, and receive an actual plot, no matter that said plot is just a vast army invading and the protagonists have to heroically deffest it. Much self-sacrifice ensues, including the death the one protagonist you actually like, and then book ends and the reader is left wondering why he bothered to finish it.
So in summary, I did not like the Fallen Blade, and have no intention of reading its sequel.… (more)