From new Thu Jun 16 19:03:47 1994 Path: liuida!sunic!EU.net!howland.reston.ans.net!cs.utexas.edu!convex!news.duke.edu!godot.cc.duq.edu!hudson.lm.com!terrazzo.lm.com!not-for-mail From: dani@terrazzo.lm.com Newsgroups: rec.arts.sf.written Subject: Carolyn Cushman: Witch and Wombat Date: 15 Jun 1994 18:00:12 -0400 Organization: Telerama Public Access Internet, Pittsburgh, PA USA Lines: 43 Message-ID: <2tntlc$bnn@terrazzo.lm.com> NNTP-Posting-Host: terrazzo.lm.com Carolyn Cushman is (imo) the Locus's best reviewer. She also tends to consistently review books in which I'm interested, so her novel, "Witch and Wombat", seemed like a good bet. As it turns out, she does a competent job within an overgrazed subgenre. Two subgenres, in fact, as the-fantasy-game-is-real intersects self-parodying-fantasy-world. Hali is a witch. This means that she lives in a hut, casts curses on rude passers-by, gives useful if cryptic advice to younger sons who remember to share their bread, and specializes in making people's lives miserable for their own good. Now, however, the magic is going away -- or so claims Bentwood, the troll who is Hali's supervisor. (Trolls tend to gravitate to robbery or management.) Hali's world is sustained by ours, and people no longer believe in the right things. Bentwood's plan to turn people's imagination in the right direction in to market his world as a game: Players will be told that they are travelling and interacting through a computer-moderated virtual-reality simulation, whereas in fact their adventures will be real. The only problem is, it'd be very bad for sales if the real adventures result in real fatalities, so he blackmails/bribes Hali (and her familiar, who's turned into a wombat, because studies show that people think wombats are cute) into guiding the first group through. Well, not the *only* problem; there's a more serious one: Bentwood hasn't cleared this plan with the monsters' union. It's competent mind-candy -- a good enough read, but not as good as it might have been if it hadn't been reworking such familiar material. %A Cushman, Carolyn %T Witch and Wombat %I Warner-Questar %D May, 1994 %P 316 pp. %O $5.50 %G ISBN 0-446-60086-5 ----- Dani Zweig dani@netcom.com dani@telerama.lm.com Watership Down: You've read the book. You've seen the movie. Now eat the stew!