Wednesday, July 2, 2008

Big love for "Mind the Gap"


Greenman Review liked Christopher Golden and Tim Lebbon's latest:

The book is Jazz' story, starting with her return home from school to find her somewhat mysterious mother murdered and her very mysterious "Uncles" running amuck in her house and looking for her. Sensibly, she flees and winds up in the world of the Underground, off the maps and off the grid, and falls in with the Fagin-esque Harry as a result. Harry and his merry band of underaged thieves take her in, but the mystery of her mother's murder isn't put aside so easily, as the Uncles come looking for Jazz even in the deepest tunnels, and it turns out that the beneficent Harry has perhaps more of a link to them than he originally let on.

And, just to complicate matters, there's a handsome thief, a generations-old conspiracy, a cute boy who's a little too grown up for his own good, and, swirling all around them, the howling memories of London itself, enough to drive the unwary mad.

That's the plot, anyway. The real story is what Jazz chooses to do, as the secrets she uncovers lead her back and forth between worlds. There's temptation in each place, and a life to be made there, but there's also the call of discovering why, and it's that urge to know that keeps Jazz, and the book, moving forward toward an unexpected but deeply satisfying conclusion.

Mind the Gap is not a gentle book, and it is not necessarily kind to the innocent. At the same time, it shies knowingly away from starry-eyed romanticism, and from the neat happily-ever-ending one might expect of this sort of through-the-looking-glass tale. That being said, the heart of the book beats true all the way to the end, and Jazz herself could find no other ending and remain true to herself.


I was hoping to review this one (for my July Bookslut column actually) but there was not a single sign of life at the publisher when I emailed. Sigh. It goes on the holiday list now - I'll report back in the distant New Year after I read it.

1 comment :

Little Willow said...

Thanks for posting this! Mind the Gap is fantastic. I'm really happy that people are taking notice of it.