Good Fairies of New York by Martin Millar

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(Mass Market Paperback)

  • Pub. Date: June 2008
  • 288pp
  • Sales Rank: 157,403

Reader Rating: (9 ratings)

Detailed Rating: "Offbeat" See All

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    Product Details

    • Pub. Date: June 2008
    • Publisher: Doherty, Tom Associates, LLC
    • Format: Mass Market Paperback, 288pp
    • Sales Rank: 157,403

    Synopsis

    When a pair of Scottish thistle fairies end up in Manhattan by mistake, the Big Apple is in for some unusual times. This is anything but a typical fairy fantasy.

    Publishers Weekly

    British author Millar offers fiercely funny (and often inebriated) Scottish fairies, a poignant love story as well as insights into the gravity of Crohn's disease, cultural conflicts and the plight of the homeless in this fey urban fantasy. Due to the machinations of the obnoxious Tala, Cornwall's fairy king, only a few humans can see the 18-inch-tall fairies who alight in Manhattan: Magenta, a homeless woman who thinks she's the ancient Greek general Xenophon; Dinnie, an overweight slacker; and Kerry, a poor artist/musician who hopes her Ancient Celtic Flower Alphabet will win a local arts prize. Fairies Heather MacKintosh and Morag MacPherson scheme to put Dinnie and Kerry together, rescue fairy artifacts and prove that in love or war, music is essential. Neil Gaiman provides an appreciative introduction. (Dec.) Copyright 2006 Reed Business Information.

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    Biography

    Martin Millar was born in Glasgow, Scotland, but has lived in London, England, for a long time. He has written a lot of things--novels and plays and short stories and articles. Miller has written seven other novels--Lonely Werewolf Girl; Love and Peace with Melody Paradise; Milk Sulphate and Alby Starvation; Lux the Poet; Dreams of Sex and Stage Diving: Suzy, Led Zeppelin and Me, and Ruby & the Stone Age Diet.

    Martin Millar likes Jane Austen novels, and wrote a stage play of Emma. He even wrote the novelization of the Tank Girl movie.

    Last, but not least, as Martin Scott, Millar writes the Thraxas series of books. There are eight so far, and he won the World Fantasy Award for the first one.

    When he’s not writing, Millar likes to watch Buffy the Vampire Slayer and read ancient history.

    Customer Reviews

    Um...what?by BookedUp

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    November 23, 2008: Um... what? This seemed promising in a quirky, imaginative way. I was looking forward to a fantasy adventure that would make me smile and spread the word about what fun this strange little book was. Yeah, not so much.

    This was the first Millar book I picked up and during the first few chapters I held onto hope that somewhere along the line it would pull me in and a wonderful story would emerge. But more than half-way through the characters still mean very little to me, the fairies are immature, self-centered, and rude, and the human characters not much better.

    There are so many different fairies and fairy affiliations (no, really, it's a little fairy world in there) that it would be difficult to keep track of under the best of circumstances, but when the names are not easily pronounced, even in your head, and the characters are not developed enough to even care who they are or why they're doing what they're doing, it just leaves the reader with a lot of jumbled, winged creatures flapping around the brain.

    Millar seems to have a lot of talent, but for some reason it doesn't work in this book. At least not for me. I cannot finish it. Life is too short and my book stack too tall with more promising journeys awaiting.

    Let the record show that I do believe in Millar though - I have his book, Lonely Werewolf Girl and am still looking forward to reading it.

    Gods no more....please!by Anonymous

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    June 16, 2008: Ok, so I read the book. Pushed myself to finish it, thinking it might have gotten better....nope! If Miller would have concentrated more on the bulk of the story, it could have been better. The fairies were interesting, but it was the weird sex commercials and the Chrone's disease descriptions that bored and disgusted me. Basically, I think I should have just put it down and read something better or never bought it in the first place.


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