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Evening's Empire

por David Herter

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613429,234 (3.83)12
David Herter's first novel, "Ceres Storm, " was recently published to widespread acclaim. "Distinctive and imaginative, Herter's tale moves to its own disconcerting logic: a debut of immense promise," said "Kirkus Reviews." Now Herter moves from SF to contemporary fantasy and to a more literary mode of storytelling. "Evening's Empire" is set on the Oregon coast, in Evening, a small town famous for its cheeses. Russell Kent, an opera composer from Massachusetts, lost his beloved wife there a year ago to a freak accident, and returns now to confront his ghosts. Kent has been commissioned to write an opera based upon Jules Verne's "20,000 Leagues Under the Sea," whose story fills his dreams, and only in Evening does he feel himself able to return to work. There he also discovers many strange things (even beyond the cheese sculptures), finds new love and new friendship, and is initiated into a fantastic secret the whole populace is hiding in a cavern beneath the town. In some ways reminiscent of the Newford stories of Charles de Lint, this is an ambitious fantasy by an important new talent from the Pacific Northwest.… (más)
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I read this years ago, but I can report that the book creates scenes and scenarios and images that stick in your mind. Herter is a gifted dreamweaver.

But I can't remember anything about the book's import, what it was all for. What it had to say.

Perhaps those are the wrong questions. Or I just missed the answers.

But definitely worth a try for those who enjoy urban (in this case isolated small town) fantasy. ( )
  ehines | May 1, 2017 |
This book was very mystical and fascinating, almost utopian yet with a down-home Oregonian quirk.. Being from Oregon I loved it, and could easily envision it.. It was amazing how the story twisted and turned and its easy to think how it was all symbolic.. but not overtly so.. I know I'll be thinking about this one for some time to come! ( )
  Danica.Rice | Apr 29, 2014 |
Russell Kent, composer, is trying to deal with the loss of his wife while also trying to write an opera adaptation of 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea. (And that is an opera I would dearly love to see.) As part of his ongoing recovery from grief, he decides to visit the small coastal town, Evening, where his wife died a year ago, and continue writing his opera there.

The town of Evening is a character all on its own. Set on the wintery coastline of Oregon, it survives through its cheese factory and tourism, and is peopled by some of the most dull, cheese obsessed, small minded small town people it has ever been the misfortune of Kent to meet. Luckily, there are some diamonds amongst the dullards; in particular his landlady Megan Sumner, and Bernard Dreerson, owner of the local bookshop, The Warp and Weft. These diamonds seem to be waging a war of some sorts with the town dullards, but it does take a while for the undercurrents to become clear, and they definitely weren't at all what I was expecting.

Herter has written a fascinating story, peopled with highly believable characters, and has made music come alive in words. A book where the unexpected occurs, and where cheese and music are both strong motifs. And it's not many books you can say that about. ( )
1 vota wookiebender | Mar 14, 2012 |
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David Herter's first novel, "Ceres Storm, " was recently published to widespread acclaim. "Distinctive and imaginative, Herter's tale moves to its own disconcerting logic: a debut of immense promise," said "Kirkus Reviews." Now Herter moves from SF to contemporary fantasy and to a more literary mode of storytelling. "Evening's Empire" is set on the Oregon coast, in Evening, a small town famous for its cheeses. Russell Kent, an opera composer from Massachusetts, lost his beloved wife there a year ago to a freak accident, and returns now to confront his ghosts. Kent has been commissioned to write an opera based upon Jules Verne's "20,000 Leagues Under the Sea," whose story fills his dreams, and only in Evening does he feel himself able to return to work. There he also discovers many strange things (even beyond the cheese sculptures), finds new love and new friendship, and is initiated into a fantastic secret the whole populace is hiding in a cavern beneath the town. In some ways reminiscent of the Newford stories of Charles de Lint, this is an ambitious fantasy by an important new talent from the Pacific Northwest.

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