One Thing I Love Today: 'The Rook' is smart contemporary spy fantasy, and wildly ambitious
For a first novel, 'The Rook' is awfully confident
- Critic's Rating B+
- Readers' Rating A+
'On Her Majesty's Supernatural Secret Service' pretty adequately sums up the general vibe of Daniel O'Malley's debut novel, 'The Rook'
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Daniel O'Malley's debut novel covers some familiar ground, but the reason I'm picking it as today's OTILT is because it manages to wring something new from that familiar ground, and the result is an exciting fantasy thriller that mixes the modern espionage genre with the sort of magical world posited by the "Harry Potter" books. It's an intriguing collision of genre, and it works far better than I would have guessed just from reading the synopsis.
From the very beginning, the book takes a fresh perspective to tell the story, with Myfanwy Thomas "waking up" inside her body, completely unaware of who she is or how she's gotten into the situation where she finds herself, surrounded by dead bodies in a park in London. It's not quite a "Bourne Identity" situation, since the Myfanwy that wakes up is not the same person who was attacked, and she has to figure out how she ended up in this body. Thankfully, the old Myfanwy (pronounced "Miffany," according to the narrator) knew that something cataclysmic was coming, and so she wrote herself a series of notes so her new inhabitant could pretend to be her and solve the mystery of how this identity exchange took place.
What she learns is that she is a Rook, and she works for an organization that handles any and all supernatural invasions or disturbances in England. There are two Rooks in the organization, and a handful of other positions, and as many agendas in play as there are other employees. The other Rook is a four-bodied identity named Gestalt, for example, and Myfanwy finds herself hard-pressed to maintain the illusion that she is this person who she never met.
The book is exciting, but more than that, it's engrossing. The details of the world that O'Malley creates are dense and interesting, and even without the mystery that Myfanwy is trying to solve, it would be involving. Eventually, though, all of the threads that O'Malley introduces manage to come together, and the strength of this story is how carefully constructed it all ends up being. I've read other books that try to create this type of world, and some of them are even entertaining, but few of them build a credible alternate government and a secret world that hides just at the edge of our perception, mixing a Lovecraftian horror with some Cronenberg body phobia and a strange, disturbing view of what magic might be used for in the wrongest of wrong hands.
O'Malley's not just good with plot, though. He is smart enough as a writer to digress and enjoy the details of the world he's building, and he also seems to genuinely like Myfanwy, both the original version that's been erased and this new bolder version that has taken over the body. The contrast between the two of them adds real tension to the story, and by the time the book wraps up, O'Malley has told a complete story, but he's also set the stage for what I hope will be an ongoing series.
"The Rook" is in stores now, and if you're into spy novels, fantasy, or smartly-structured thrillers, this combination of things might convince you to join me in eagerly awaiting whatever it is that Myfanwy and O'Malley get up to next.
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About This Blog
Los Angeles has changed since 1990, and Drew McWeeny, all-around Chauncey Gardner of movie fandom, has seen it all as an industry insider and screenwriter who wrote for 12 years as "Moriarty" for Ain't It Cool News.
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Login or create a HitFix account Login SignupFranklynStreet
February 24, 2012 at 12:41AM EST Reply to CommentSounds good, and it's something I hadn't heard of-- I'll pick it up & check it out!
February 24, 2012 at 4:12AM EST Reply to CommentIf you liked this, I'd highly recommend Rivers of London by Ben Aaronovitch (think it was called Midnight Riot in the US). It's a rather similar blend of genres, being a cross between a London police procedural and a fantasy novel. Shades of Gaiman's Neverwhere in its treatment of London, too.
BdubU
February 24, 2012 at 9:01AM EST Reply to CommentHe's going to upset the Welsh with that pronunciation of Myfanwy.
First 4 chapters are online, will check it. Seems to be on a similar sort of tip to China Miéville's Kraken.
KlarkKent
February 24, 2012 at 2:59PM EST Reply to CommentInteresting. I'm throwing it in my Amazon cart for my next order based on the recommendation.
Last thing I read was Holmes on the Range by Steve Hockensmith. As you can probably guess, it's about a detective cowboy and I'm surprised nobody has tried to make a TV series out of it. Seems perfect for one.
Chrissy
February 24, 2012 at 5:22PM EST Reply to CommentThis sounds quite interesting. Thanks for the rec!
Big D
February 28, 2012 at 1:08AM EST Reply to CommentGreat review. I ordered the book right after reading it. (Strange coincidence, I have both Midnight Riot and Holmes on the Range in my to be read pile.) By the way Drew, whatever happened to the Travis McGee Book Club?
dumbricht
February 28, 2012 at 10:53AM EST Reply to CommentDrew - I didn't read your entire review because I wanted to avoid too many details. Just picked it up and 30 pages or so in - very heavy on the exposition. Please tell me that it lightens up eventually and just tells a story.
Michael Swartwout
March 20, 2012 at 12:01AM EST Reply to CommentGreat recommendation! I devoured it in a weekend, gave it to my wife, and she loves it, too. I'm still laughing about the oracular duck.
If you want to start a book club with Alan Sepinwall (with his "Queen and Country" recommendation, among others), sign me up!