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Fated
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Fated by Benedict Jacka
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One important point to remember is that people are at different stages in reading the book, since not every participant starts on the first day of the month, and we read at different speeds. So, if to make a point you need to refer to something that might be a spoiler for folks not so far into the book as you are, it's a good idea to hide that part of your post with spoiler tags. For an explanation of how to do that, click on the "some html is okay" link above the box where you type your comment. That will create a "view spoiler" link in your post, which those who want to can click.


I'll wait to link my review to give people time to finish. I can however endorse this book, I really liked it, and I've read the second already.

Without spoiling anything (I hope), I was pleasantly surprised that Jacka chose to use his fantasy as a commentary on reality, which brings it closer to literature. I found Alex's early descriptions of the Council of white mages, who won a Pyrrhic victory over black mages in a past war, relevant to modern politics. In fact, I can't help but think about Neville Chamberlain and appeasing Nazis.


Shakespeare said, "A rose by any other name would smell as sweet," and too much wrangling over literary classification may not be the most practical critical exercise. But taxonomy has its place; classification can be a fruitful way of recognizing similarities and differences among individual works, which helps us to better understand them and their relationships. The term "urban fantasy" suggests that we're dealing here with a sub-species of the same genus as the Narnia tales or LOTR, or the same genus as "swords and sorcery." But is "urban fantasy" the most felicitous term? Or are series like this one, Butcher's Harry Dresden tales, de Lint's Newford stories, etc., really more akin to something like Harry Potter, Twilight, or the older supernatural/ghost story tradition? (Or does the question just occupy nit-picking theorists with nothing practical to do? :-) ) What do you all think?

There are a lot of "sub-genres" of fantasy, high fantasy, low fantasy, sword and sorcery, urban fantasy, paranormal romance, horror, on and on. Urban fantasy is a relatively new genre (as it would be set in the modern world). Personally I'm mostly into UF for the escapist value...There are lots of other books for relevance. :) Though I'm glad you found it.

Well, I didn't stop to think about what kettle of fish I was frying when I wrote "straight fantasy." I appreciate the distinction but when I wrote this, I actually had in mind a fantasy literature course that I took in college that had covered a much broader range of works than I had previously considered as "fantasy" (A Midsummer's Night's Dream and The Mouse that Roared were on the syllabus, for example). So when I wrote "straight fantasy" I was thinking magic and magical beings, whether set in our world or an invented world.
So while I actually like picking nits in order to better understand the range of what constitutes fantasy, I think Harry Potter and The Hobbit are more alike than Harry Potter and The Eyre Affair or The Yiddish Policeman's Union, both set in alternate universes, one fantastic and the other realistic but sans magic.
Does this make sense?


LeAnn, a lot of people, including serious critics (Anthony Boucher was one) use "fantasy" for ANY fiction that involves magic; so your college teacher wasn't way out in left field. :-) (Though I'd say The Mouse That Roared would be a stretch; far-out and improbable humor isn't the same thing as magic!) I draw a distinction, but that's just me.
Whether they're set in this world or an invented one, all fictions that involve the supernatural, as do both the Harry Potter series and LOTR, DO share that basic commonality, which sets them apart from those that don't. If we think of fiction as being like a tree, they grow from the same big branch (I'd say it forks along the way). Something like The Yiddish Policeman's Union (from what I've read about it) grows from a different branch altogether --though they'd both be on the "speculative fiction" side of the tree. Personally, I think of alternate world fiction (if the world doesn't involve magic) as a branch of science fiction. Again, just me!

By the way, The Eyre Affair, although set in an alternate universe, really doesn't feel like science fiction. Although there are DNA clones of extinct animals (Thursday Next has a pet dodo, for example), and the use of discarded technology options (as in steampunk, the method of air travel is by zeppelin), Thursday Next's ability to enter into the narrative of Jane Eyre using her uncle Mycroft's "invention" smacks of magic more than believable science (also, she runs into a Japanese woman who had developed years before the ability to enter into narrative through her own natural abilities). And, in Thursday Next's "alternate universe," characters from books routinely escape their fictional constraints to run around the "real world" much as Greek gods run around in mythology. In fact, the rules of this alternate universe seem to allow for phenomena that would fall into the supernatural or magical in our own real universe. (So, though not exactly Tolkien's Middle Earth, more fantasy than science fiction.)
No wonder Fforde had a terrible time getting published. I don't know where he's shelved in the library or sold in a bookstore.

Well, LeeAnn since Science Fiction and Fantasy are usually shelved together I start there, but you're right. I've seen Fforde shelved with the romance. Often there are bleed overs in the "horror" genre to...book stores seem at a loss as how to shelve a lot of books. That is I suppose a consequence of of having to fit every book into a category.
This book is frankly fantasy much like Jim Butcher's Dresden books or Aaronovith's fantasy. These take place in a version of the world we live in where everything "is as it is" with a deeper reality that goes on out of sight of the "mundane population". This one does it very well to. It's a world we can get involved in with characters that seem like "people" or "folks" if you prefer. Their problems and dangers are of an arcane nature but still have to be dealt with. They know there are things, places and people that are better avoided and so on.

I've got The Eyre Affair in one of my to-read piles. Luckily, I don't shelve novels by genre; and on Goodreads, I can use multiple shelves! :-)

Yes, I remember that comment. Still, there is a place where it's very hard to tell. After all, a magic ring that enables children to "wish" themselves somewhere else in the real world (Half Magic) might just be a device that uses teleportation and speech recognition.


Below, I'm also posting links to a couple of more critical reviews, from outside our group, which I thought raised issues that might spark more discussion. Warning --the first review uses spoiler tags in one place, but both of them (especially the second) have unhidden content that could be a spoiler for some readers, depending on how far you've read or how little you want to know ahead of time!
http://www.goodreads.com/review/show/...
http://www.goodreads.com/review/show/...

Werner, I'll take a look at those reviews when I get a chance.


One thing I'll say, which isn't very helpful for a discussion about Fated, is that I preferred Storm Front a bit over it.
In both cases, there's something appealing to me about the loner who does the right thing even if it gets him in trouble most of the time.


I don't know what to say about the sexism complaint. I guess I don't see it. There are male and female characters who are dark and that seemed about equal in number. (view spoiler)
As for the abilities of a diviner, I thought Jacka handled that pretty well. Alex's limited abilities to see the future make sense if you accept that there are any number of probable futures based on decision points. That seems to explain why he couldn't read minds or predict what someone would say -- those aren't really decision points.
From a pragmatic standpoint, I believe that he wouldn't have enough time to "know" what someone would say anyway in the situation. How someone chooses between options seems more believable than being able to predict the exact words someone would say. It also seems as though Alex's powers of divination are limited to analyzing a single actor in a given situation, probably also because he doesn't have infinite time in which to analyze all the probabilities. Having a mage whose abilities are limited makes for the best storytelling.
(view spoiler)

Jacka was born in London in 1980. He's a graduate of England's prestigious Cambridge Univ. (majoring in philosophy), and writes speculative fiction for both the adult and children's markets.