Book Description
Joan D. Vinge returns to Tiamat, the world of her Hugo Award-winning novel The Snow Queen and its bestselling sequel The Summer Queen..
Set during the time of The Snow Queen, BZ Gundhalinu is a by-the-book "Blue" on the trail of high corruption within the force. When a police raid goes horribly awry, BZ finds himself teamed up with Nyx LaisTree, a hard-nosed cop with no respect for the rules, and Devony Seaward, a beautiful hooker with a heart of gold. Together these three must fight the corruption of Tiamat and try to expose it before they all end up dead.
This novel marks the exciting return to the much-loved Snow Queen Universe. While taking place during events in The Snow Queen, this novel is a stand-alone masterpiece of noir suspense--taking a story you think you know, and showing you just how deep and vast the waters really run.
About the Author
Joan D. Vinge has won two Hugo Awards, one for her novel The Snow Queen. Author of ten novels and a number of film adaptations, her books have been bestsellers here and abroad. She lives in Madison, Wisconsin.
Tangled up in Blue FROM THE PUBLISHER
They call the city Carbuncle because it is both jewel and fester: the personal playground of the Snow Queen, it's also the place where the high and mighty get their water-of-life youth serum. But it's just become Hell for Hegemonic Police Officer Nyx LaisTree.
Tree lost more than simply a lot of blood on the night he and some other off-duty cops raided a warehouse full of contrabandillegal tech the Snow Queen herself covets. He also lost his partner, his badge, and even his memory of what went wrong. Something terrible happened that night, but nobody's talking since the raid went bad. Now eveyrone Tree trusted is dead, and he's a marked man, wanted by the underworld, by the Snow Queen's agents, by dirty cops...and maybe by others even worse.
His only hope rests with a by-the-book sergeant named Gundhalinu who happens to hate his guts, and a ravishing shape shifter whose loyalties are as elusive as her true face. As the maze of deceit and danger leads them deeper into Carbuncle's twisted heart, they realize that not only their lives are hanging in the balance, but possibly the fate of the Hegemony itself...
FROM THE CRITICS
Catherine Asaro - SF Site
In Tangled Up In Blue, Joan D. Vinge returns to the universe of her Hugo-Award winning novel, The Snow Queen, with another top-notch adventure. Set on the world Tiamat, the book takes place in the city of Carbuncle during the reign of the Snow Queen. Several officers in the police force carry out an unauthorized raid on a warehouse chock full of forbidden smuggled technology. Unexpectedly, two other groups of officers show up -- and what should have been a simple raid goes explosively wrong.
It fast becomes clear that far more is going on here than your garden-variety smuggling. The complications faced by the officers in blue are soon folding one on top the other, all of it tangled up in the machinations of the Snow Queen and the intrigues of enigmatic offworlders.
Tangled Up In Blue is a stand-alone novel, so you don't have to know the other Tiamat books to enjoy this one. New readers may find it a bit hard at first to follow the world-building, but it comes together quickly. The story pulled me in and kept me reading all night. It also made me want to read The Snow Queen again.
However, comparing Tangled Up In Blue to the The Snow Queen is like comparing a sapphire to a diamond. Both are gems, but different. The Snow Queen is a sweeping adventure in the tradition of The Heritage of Hastur by Marion Zimmer Bradley, and Lord Valentine's Castle by Robert Silverberg. Tangled Up In Blue retains the emphasis on character and world-building of those books, but with less of the planetary sweep and more focus on the events unfolding in Carbuncle. It also has an edgier feel, bringing forward the action and mystery aspects of the plot.
This book combines a sensibility of today's science fiction with the best of the qualities that brought many of us to the genre. Vinge's work takes the sense of wonder that defines the top science fiction and blends it with a depth of world-building. At the same time, she has a gift for characterization. She can catch the bittersweet quality of human interaction and make a reader care about the people she creates. Subtly worked into the weave of her stories, those threads offer thoughtful insights into human nature.
If there was anything I wanted to see more of in Tangled Up In Blue, it was, well -- more. The story is complete, but the novel is on the short side. It leaves some tantalizing loose ends, encouraging the reader to hope that more of Vinge's rich Tiamat stories are yet to come.
Tangled Up In Blue has it all: a fast-paced plot that won't let go until its thrilling conclusion; clever ideas drawn from science; romantic interludes; a great cover by Michael Whelan; and a plot with more twists and turns than the exotic alleys of Carbuncle. Vinge has written another winner.
KLIATT
When are the cops the good guys and when are they bad? And how can you tell the difference? Police officers Nyx LaisTree and his brother are set up to take the fall for a failed contraband raid. In this near-future SF tale, the drug-of-pricey-choice is a youth-giving serum, which is connected with the amoral Snow Queen. Keeping the peace are corrupt police and underground young vigilantes, some of whom play both sides of the law. In the midst of this highly flammable society, Tree searches for his own center and values and works at staying alive as both sides try to eradicate him. Category: Science Fiction, Fantasy & Horror. KLIATT Codes: SARecommended for senior high school students, advanced students, and adults. 2000, Tor, 294p., $6.99. Ages 16 to adult. Reviewer: Dr. Lesley S.J. Farmer; Lib. Media/Teacher Svcs., Cal. State Univ., Long B SOURCE: KLIATT, March 2002 (Vol. 36, No. 2)