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Friday, July 15, 2016

Ghosts of Karnak by George Mann book review


http://www.fantasybookreview.co.uk/George-Mann/Ghosts-of-Karnak.html

Ghosts of Karnak by George Mann

Rating 7.5/10
The universe Mann has created is great fun and there are going to be more Ghost adventures

Things are quiet in New York. Unusually quiet. Gabriel – the Ghost – knows that something’s wrong. There’s a heat wave building for a start, and it feels as if the pressure’s getting unbearable. Something’s going to give.

When an expedition returns from Cairo to exhibit their finds at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, Gabriel takes a keen interest. An old friend and lover – a girl called Ginny, who he hasn’t seen for over a year – was part of the expedition. 

Something’s not right with Ginny, however, and not just the fact she’s still drinking… something happened to her in Cairo, out on the dig. Something that’s related to a strange cult known as The Circle of Thoth, a baboon with a clockwork eye, dust devils on Fifth Avenue, robed assassins, sacrificial rites, a ‘resurrection machine’ and a ghostly figure clad in trailing bandages, seen floating over the rooftops of the city.

Ancient forces are stirring, and the Ghost, Ginny and Gabriel’s friend Donovan are caught right in the middle…
 
The Ghost is back and, as usual, in the thick of it! Playboy Gabriel Cross takes to his alter ego, the crime-fighting vigilante with gusto. We get the sense that this is starting to take its toll on him as he spends most of this entry in poor physical condition with very little chance to recover from injury. It's no wonder he drinks and smokes heavily when off duty! This is of course set in an alternate Steampunk 1920s universe, so health, safety and longevity are not chief concerns.
 
Newbury and Hobbes author George Mann is clearly having a great time with his other creation here. Right from the start we are thrust into the mayhem of a rooftop battle in NYC. You can not accuse the Ghost novels of being dull. I thoroughly enjoyed the mixture of 1920s gangsters meeting the ancient mysticism of Egypt.
 
What I enjoy the most are the rich characters found within this story: Donovan, the tough, world-weary, rumpled city detective, his eager partner Mullins; Ginny, the icy blonde girlfriend of Cross. Astrid the stylish, beautiful, self-styled occult detective is great fun, and it was a shame that there was not more of her in this entry. Amaury, a mysterious and driven French archaeologist and Abbadeli, a dapper, charming, yet menacing mob boss round out the cast.
 
I thoroughly enjoyed the dialogue and the nuances the characters exhibit. Particularly a scene involving Donovan, Mullins and Abbadeli is intriguing as it delves into how the characters are feeling and just how important it is to 'put up a front' when living in this dangerous, unpredictable world. Touches like this make this more than just a formulaic hero romp. If the character interaction is a strong selling point for this latest adventure; its main flaw is that after setting all the Egyptian occultism up so well, the novel gets resolved a little too swiftly.
 
The universe Mann has created is great fun and there are going to be more Ghost adventures, I just hope we get more depth and detective work thrown into the mix of monsters and science fiction next time.

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