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47 Reviews
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38 of 42 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Into something rich and strange,
By frumiousb "frumiousb" (Amsterdam, the Netherlands) - See all my reviews (VINE VOICE) (TOP 500 REVIEWER)
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Last Call (Paperback)
I'm really a T.S. Eliot [fan], and I knew I was going to like this book when the discarded bodies of the evil Fisher King murmured lines from the Wasteland to each other. Powers takes the real world that we live in, and paints a ghost world behind it, full of the things that we both hope and fear are true. The smoke in a casino eddies to show the flow of fate. Ghosts are real, and they want you, but you shouldn't go with them. The center of the book is the cyclical battle to become the spiritual Fisher King-- he who (together with his queen) can interact directly with the archetypes. Every twenty years, all the possible candidates (Jacks) converge on Las Vegas to see who will hold the crown. The contest rules are a mish-mash of superstition, gambling, violence, mythic lore, and poetry. The year that the book begins, the Jack who presents the most serious threat to the ruling King is the son he tried to destroy while still a child. Scott Crane is a one-eyed gambler and reluctant heir to the throne who is thrown back into the ring by the death of his wife Susan and the knowledge that seizing the throne is the only possible way to reclaim the rights to his body-- something he gambled away while still a teenager. I read this book obsessively, and I can't imagine reading it any other way. It deserves and command close attention.
26 of 29 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
The Spiritual Underbelly of Las Vegas,
By
This review is from: Last Call (Paperback)
Last Call isn't the kind of book that would usually jump out at me when browsing in my local bookstore. I don't have much interest in gambling and the noir genres associated with it, and I would probably set this book down after reading the dust jacket. But a good friend of mine, who has the uncanny ability to know exactly what would be to my taste in fiction, lent me the book assuring me that I would love it. And once again, she knows my taste better than I do. This book is a masterful tale that weaves elements from crime noir, fantasy, the Tarot and TS Eliot into a magical realist stew that is suspenseful and highly entertaining. Think Umberto Eco without the pretention and the obscure Latin phrases and you get an idea of what this book is.
Scott Crane is a marked man. Saved from a fate worse than death as a child he is rasied by an old superstitious gambler named Ozzie. Ozzie has irrational fears. He never plays cards on water and is always using the billowy patterns of smoke to sense the "feel" of the cards. He also takes unusual percautions to protect his anonymity and instill this in his fosterson. Scott and his sister think Ozzie crazy until one day when Scott dares to play in a mysterious poker game on Lake Mead that uses a real Tarot deck. Subsequent to that Scott finds himself locked in a deadly struggle with The Fisher King, who has the power of immortality through assuming new bodies from his gambling victims. It all comes to a head during one unholy Holy week in which Scott and his sister must outthink the King and many other potential rivals to the "Throne" of Las Vegas. Powers writing is excellent in this novel. He is a master at mapping complex and interweaving plots and injecting them with the right amount of symbolism. Knowing a bit about the Tarot and the medieval Grail legends can help one to enjoy the rich symbolic texture of the novel, but Powers' gifts make the meanings clear even without a background in this material. He also has a gift for vivid characterization, even of the more peripheral characters. One character is destined to play the Fool card in the drama and manifests as a homeless man who lives in special "boxes" all throughout Vegas. Another peripheral character is a homicidal hit man with a pathological need to be friends with his victims first. These characters all have the veneer of reality over them but resonate deeply with the archetypes that Powers is using as the generating symbols of the novel. This book is a fast read, but a thoroughly enjoyable one. It is rich, darkly comic in places and always suspenseful. Though considered by some to be a fantasy writer, or a science fiction writer, these categories are too small for a writer of Powers ambition. If you enjoy the novels of Eco and Kundera and are looking for something with a similar atmosphere but less burdened with "meaning" this is a wonderful book for you. It's engrossing, but not too heavy and wonderfully written. Chris Forbes - RIP Bob Z
19 of 21 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
An Amazing Tale,
This review is from: Last Call (Paperback)
Whenever I read a novel I can tell from the first few sentences whether or not I will enjoy the book by judging the author's writing style. From the first few words of Tim Powers' "Last Call" I was drawn in to this captivating story. Tim Powers is a fantasy author but what makes Mr. Powers' novels different from others is that his fantasy novels take place in our world and seem that what goes on really could happen.Scott Crane was involved in a dangerous card game called Assumption many years ago and he is dreaming of the game. In this game his soul was stolen by the man that started the game. 20 years from when the game took place Scott decides that he wants to get back into playing Poker and Crane has no clue for what is going to happen to him. Scott is biologically the next Fisher King, the mythological king of the tarot card world. When Scott enter Las Vegas the cards are showing that he is in the city and people want him dead. From Vegas to Los Angeles to the Hoover Dam this novel is a tour de force that will keep you riveted from page one. Tim Powers is a very different type of fantasy author. His fantasies take place in our world and deal with real people just like you and me. The whole fantasy premise of "Last Call" is based on tarot cards and Powers makes you believe that these cards really have meaning and are much more than bogus. Other myths are also used in this book such as some things from King Arthur. Powers is an amazing author. From the first page of this novel you are grabbed and you will read and read and read until you have come to the ending. All of the characters are three dimensional people that you will care for and will either love or hate. There was just one thing about this novel that I didn't like. In fact, another reviewer brought something up along the lines of what I am going to say. I felt that the book's ending was a bit rushed and that Powers didn't let the ending work itself out. This minor wualm, however, did not make my reading of this book bad and therefore the book will keep five stars despite this. This is my first Tim Powers novel and it defintely will not be my last. I will never look at tarot cards or regular playing cards the same way since I have read this book. This is the perfect fantasy for somebody that wants an original read. Happy Reading!
7 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Tim Powers at the height of his...,
By
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Last Call (Paperback)
Last Call is a spellbinding, spine-tingling tale. To read the synopsis of the book here or read other reviews, you may be thinking: Powers can't pull this off. He's got too many themes, too many things going on. But somehow from the Fisher King and Bugsy Segal and tarot cards and chaos theory and TS Eliot and so much more he fashions something new, something whole.
Here the realistic, dark, somewhat noir feel, not quite Raymond Chandler, gets mixed up with the urban fantasy feel of, say, Charles de Lint. Unlike de Lint's work, though, Powers doesn't run off to fairy land. The book stays rooted in its modern American West setting. His characters are realistic and complex. The events, while filled with that fantastic and that phantasmogoric, flow naturally, building and building the trap in which our anti-hero finds himself trapped, playing poker for his life. Highly recommended.
9 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A Monument to Imagination,
By
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Last Call (Paperback)
"Last Call" is a book about loss, death, redemption, tarot cards and the Fisher King. It plays out in a vast and mythical Las Vegas that only marginally resembles the one that sits in the Nevada desert. Scott Crane is a man who loses. As a child, he lost an eye. As a young man, he lost his soul in a card game. As an adult, is wife dies and he loses his will to survive. Until he is drawn to Las Vegas, where the last Fisher King died, and learns his is one of four Jacks vying for the right to assume the King's place. It sounds wacky and ridiculous and I'm sure it would fall flat in any hands but those of Tim Powers. But Powers is a master of Urban Magic, at finding mystery in the oridinary and in drawing conclusions from history that might only be inferred by a madman. But once he has cast his eye on a subject and explained it to us, it all makes sense. We wonder why we never saw it before. In typical fashion, Powers has selected Eliot's "The Waste Land" as a sort of working illustration of the story, writing elements that make you stop and think "Oh, ho! Eliot was in on it, too!". Powers uses the poem to good effect, as he has with the Romantic poets in "The Stress of Her Regard" and other works. I don't get excited about many books or many authors, but this is one of the best. Powers is an amazing talent, always satisfying, always fresh and always jaw-droppingly unique.
8 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A true mind-bender.,
By
This review is from: Last Call (Paperback)
This book was my introduction to Tim Powers, and since first reading it some years ago I have happily devoured everything of his I can find. A very intense "magical realist" novel, with deeply flawed but believable characters dropped into situations which, despite their magical and surreal nature, grow to be alarmingly believable. You will never look at Las Vegas again, trust me. Chilling, surreal and beautiful, one of my favorite novels of all time.
7 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Surprised nobody's mentioned Charles Williams,
This review is from: Last Call (Paperback)
When I read "Declare" I thought 'Alan Furst meets Charles Williams;' certain of the themes of "Last Call" remind me particularly of "The Greater Trumps." It's difficult to imagine Mr Powers being unacquainted with the 'spiritual thrillers' of friend-of-Tolkien-and-Lewis Williams; those who enjoy Powers are likely to be in for a treat should they give the neglected Williams a try. (The 'other,' pulpier Charles Williams, the American caper writer, is also great fun.)
4 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Fascinating, engaging, and mysterious!,
By Casta Lusoria (Washington, DC area) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Last Call (Paperback)
Not sure where I first picked this up; I have the hardcover edition; the illustration of tarot cards on the dust jacket probably caught my eye. I've read it and re-read it, and pick up new things every time. I've always had an interest in Tarot lore, and incorporating the mythos of tarot, Las Vegas, and the Fisher King made for a fascinating tale.Rich, lush descriptions of settings during the course of the text really made this story come alive for me; it's easy to see how plausible some of the settings are. Magical and mystical elements blend with real life, and follow the story of Scott Crane through his highly-unusual life as the reluctant heir to the throne of the King. Great references to T.S. Eliot, and other literary works. Be forewarned, like many of Powers' books, this one will suck you in-- I stayed up late nights, and didn't want to put it down 'till I was finished.
6 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Fantasy noir?,
This review is from: Last Call (Paperback)
OK, I'll admit that I'm biased. I went to school with Tim: truly! Hey, every celebrity was a kid, once, and went to school and had friends :-) That being said, I've read most of Tim's books, but haven't enjoyed them all. This is one that I *did* like, a lot. It grabbed me almost from the beginning, in much the same way that "On Stranger Tides" did; that's my favorite of Tim's books, BTW. While it definitely helps to know something of the legends of King Arthur and the Fisher King, of Percival/Parsifal and Taliesin, of the Tarot and the Holy Grail, it isn't necessary. This story holds together very well as a modern fantasy-thriller, of something we might call "fantasy noir", perhaps, although not of the same sort that Glen Cook (another favorite author of mine) writes. Still, there is something of a 40s detective story in here: who really *is* the hero, and who the villian? What are their motivations? As with all of Tim's books, though, the layers are much thicker than that, and if you can take the time to re-read some passages, you'll come away with a greater appreciation for how much care he has put into weaving all the threads together. This is *not* a casual "summer read"! If you are not willing or able to take the time to read this book word for word, do yourself a favor and don't buy it! But if you savor well-written stories, whether you like fantasy or not, you should give this, and all of Tim Powers' books, a read; you are not likely to be disappointed.
8 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Another weird and wonderful story.,
By A Customer
This review is from: Last Call (Mass Market Paperback)
"Last Call" tells the story of a professional poker player who lost more than usual while playing a game
with Tarot cards on Lake Powell. What he lost and how he might get it back are the major questions he must
answer before next game is held. "Last Call" is another of Powers wonderful novels which blend interesting bits
of history with wonderful fantasy.
If you enjoy "Last Call", be sure to read "The Stress of her Regard" and any other Powers' book you can
find. I haven't read a bad one yet. BTW: If you like Tim Powers' fiction, you might want to try something
by James P. Blaylock. In particular, "The Digging Levithan", "Homunculus", or "The Last Coin", all of which
are great stories.
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Last Call by Tim Powers (Hardcover - Oct. 2005)
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