Something from the Nightside 
asked by ragtop on November 4, 2006 1:22 AM
John Taylor is not a private detective per se, but he has a knack for finding lost things. That's why he's been hired to descend into the Nightside, an otherworldly realm in the center of London where fantasy and reality share renting space and the sun never shines.
For John Taylor, there's no place like home...
For John Taylor, there's no place like home...
Reviews
In this novel, Mr. Green creates a world parallel to the beloved city London, but entirely different in itself. "The Nightside" is a darker version of London where pretty much anything goes, and it is always 3 AM. The weather is created by the feeling of the city itself, and a person can slip into the past or future simply by walking in the wrong place. Everything flows in this novel from the fast paced plot to the truly original characters. Finally I encountered a twist that I actually did not see coming. I would defiantly recommend this book to any fellow fantasy heads. The only thing I noticed that irked me was frequent grammatical errors, but they do not disrupt the reading. I will defiantly continue with this series.
reviewed by perfectstorm on November 10, 2006 4:00 AM
This book is a really good starter to a new series. I have just discovered this author. I had to have the rest.
John taylor is somewhat like the old detectives and sometimes the cliches get in the way, but it is real good.
A Wild trip in to the nightside.
LOVE his charactors names
John taylor is somewhat like the old detectives and sometimes the cliches get in the way, but it is real good.
A Wild trip in to the nightside.
LOVE his charactors names
reviewed by perfectstorm on November 12, 2006 6:54 PM
The Nightside books center on John Taylor, a private investigator who has special abilities that help him find things in a dark, magical place called the Nightside.
In the first book, Something From the Nightside, a woman comes to John to ask him to find her daughter. They must travel to the dark and magical world of the Nightside, from where John has fled. The story incorporates dark humor, suspense, and horror, all wrapped up in an eerie mystery. This is my favorite in the series so far, simply because the Nightside is such a mystery and the slow reveal is great because it's such a new and different place.
I love how it's written in a sort of classic pulp fiction detective novel, yet very fresh and fun.
In the first book, Something From the Nightside, a woman comes to John to ask him to find her daughter. They must travel to the dark and magical world of the Nightside, from where John has fled. The story incorporates dark humor, suspense, and horror, all wrapped up in an eerie mystery. This is my favorite in the series so far, simply because the Nightside is such a mystery and the slow reveal is great because it's such a new and different place.
I love how it's written in a sort of classic pulp fiction detective novel, yet very fresh and fun.
reviewed by spiderman on November 18, 2006 6:50 PM
"Something from the Nightside" by Simon R. Green is the first book in his Nightside series about the private eye slash ESP-or-whatever John Taylor who lives in your plain and boring London but he knows that there is a much more colorful world hidden deep in the city, the Nightside.
One day, a client comes to John Taylor. A female client. The rich Joanna who is on search for her missing daughter Cathy. She knows WHERE her daughter is but everybody refuses to help her get Cathy out of there. Why? Cathy ended up in the Nightside. And John Taylor is the only guy who can help Joanna. Because he knows the Nightside better than his own shoes - he was born there and he fled from there five years ago, promising never to return. But John has always been a knight in shining armor and so he reluctantly agrees to fetch Cathy from that dangerous, exciting place... and he also agrees to take Joanna with him - he is a sucker for everything family oriented.
I won't say anything about the search itself or how it ends since I don't want spoil it and the book is really a short one too, but wow, what a ride. This book reminded me a lot of Matrix because in the Nightside, everything is possible. You want to see a fallen angel burning forever in Hell's flames in a circle drawn with child's blood? Why not. Time jumping is nothing unheard of there and there is always 3 AM there, on the Nightside. But even though the Nightside is in London, it's not really in London but IN London. You can stumble there by mistake or you have to know exactly how to get there - the pay phone trick is another Matrix-y thing but really cool too :) And when the wall parts in front of you and you step into a world that's turned upside down and inside out for a good measure too, please, don't behave like a tourist and don't gap.
The characters and not just the main ones are totally engaging. I mean, a talking horse who owns a fiacre, cars that eat passers-by or a café that burned to ground and appeared as a ghost again and where it's always the sixties are not your usual stuff. Not to mention poltergeists and dog-eating female bouncers XP
But I was especially fascinated by the main characters - John Taylor and his two "friends", Shotgun Suzie and Razor Eddie. Why the quotation marks? Because in the Nightside, nobody is anybody's friend. And the ones who appear to be just haven't betrayed you yet.
John Taylor appears to be your average guy but he has a gift - he can find anything in the Nightside. And he can stare you down until you piss your pants. His father drunk himself to death and his mother... well, his mother is something so unnatural that everybody refuses to even talk about it, leaving John, who never knew his own mother, in the dark. Everybody in the Nightside fears John to the point of running away simply hearing his name. But he himself has no idea why. But there are still some shady characters who want to kill him. And nobody knows why. Especially he. And usually when he is in troubles, either Razor Eddie or Shotgun Suzie are there to help him out. Not that they are friends or something. Where Suzie is your simple shoot-first-talk-later girl (kind of like Revy in Black Lagoon), Eddie is much more mysterious and sinister, being also known as Punk God of the Straight Razor, killing bad guys with a razor that nobody can see but everybody can feel.
I think that this book is a great beginning of a great series and I can't wait to read the other books. I'm especially curious about who John's mother is. I see that a lot of people compare this book to Jim Butcher's "Dresden Files" and usually, this one comes out lacking. Not in this review though. Green's series is much more engaging than Butcher's. The books are shorter because he doesn't drag the story out unnecessarily and John Taylor is not as annoying as Harry Dresden (with his hypocrisy that justifies the betrayal of promises made to any non-human being out there). If I should choose, I would definitely go with Green and his John Taylor. 4 stars out of 5!
One day, a client comes to John Taylor. A female client. The rich Joanna who is on search for her missing daughter Cathy. She knows WHERE her daughter is but everybody refuses to help her get Cathy out of there. Why? Cathy ended up in the Nightside. And John Taylor is the only guy who can help Joanna. Because he knows the Nightside better than his own shoes - he was born there and he fled from there five years ago, promising never to return. But John has always been a knight in shining armor and so he reluctantly agrees to fetch Cathy from that dangerous, exciting place... and he also agrees to take Joanna with him - he is a sucker for everything family oriented.
I won't say anything about the search itself or how it ends since I don't want spoil it and the book is really a short one too, but wow, what a ride. This book reminded me a lot of Matrix because in the Nightside, everything is possible. You want to see a fallen angel burning forever in Hell's flames in a circle drawn with child's blood? Why not. Time jumping is nothing unheard of there and there is always 3 AM there, on the Nightside. But even though the Nightside is in London, it's not really in London but IN London. You can stumble there by mistake or you have to know exactly how to get there - the pay phone trick is another Matrix-y thing but really cool too :) And when the wall parts in front of you and you step into a world that's turned upside down and inside out for a good measure too, please, don't behave like a tourist and don't gap.
The characters and not just the main ones are totally engaging. I mean, a talking horse who owns a fiacre, cars that eat passers-by or a café that burned to ground and appeared as a ghost again and where it's always the sixties are not your usual stuff. Not to mention poltergeists and dog-eating female bouncers XP
But I was especially fascinated by the main characters - John Taylor and his two "friends", Shotgun Suzie and Razor Eddie. Why the quotation marks? Because in the Nightside, nobody is anybody's friend. And the ones who appear to be just haven't betrayed you yet.
John Taylor appears to be your average guy but he has a gift - he can find anything in the Nightside. And he can stare you down until you piss your pants. His father drunk himself to death and his mother... well, his mother is something so unnatural that everybody refuses to even talk about it, leaving John, who never knew his own mother, in the dark. Everybody in the Nightside fears John to the point of running away simply hearing his name. But he himself has no idea why. But there are still some shady characters who want to kill him. And nobody knows why. Especially he. And usually when he is in troubles, either Razor Eddie or Shotgun Suzie are there to help him out. Not that they are friends or something. Where Suzie is your simple shoot-first-talk-later girl (kind of like Revy in Black Lagoon), Eddie is much more mysterious and sinister, being also known as Punk God of the Straight Razor, killing bad guys with a razor that nobody can see but everybody can feel.
I think that this book is a great beginning of a great series and I can't wait to read the other books. I'm especially curious about who John's mother is. I see that a lot of people compare this book to Jim Butcher's "Dresden Files" and usually, this one comes out lacking. Not in this review though. Green's series is much more engaging than Butcher's. The books are shorter because he doesn't drag the story out unnecessarily and John Taylor is not as annoying as Harry Dresden (with his hypocrisy that justifies the betrayal of promises made to any non-human being out there). If I should choose, I would definitely go with Green and his John Taylor. 4 stars out of 5!
reviewed by maxwell on November 19, 2006 8:09 PM
This was fun and a great romp, but it's not a terribly complex or deep book.
John Taylor is a detective with the ability to find anything. Unfortunately for him, every time he uses this power, he is attacked by an unkown enemy, sending agents that cow even the minor godlings and powers that inhabit Nightside.
The story is full of action with few pauses, but it's lots of fun. I recommend this unreservedly for readers looking for a fun book that gives them an afternoon.
John Taylor is a detective with the ability to find anything. Unfortunately for him, every time he uses this power, he is attacked by an unkown enemy, sending agents that cow even the minor godlings and powers that inhabit Nightside.
The story is full of action with few pauses, but it's lots of fun. I recommend this unreservedly for readers looking for a fun book that gives them an afternoon.
reviewed by aries on November 27, 2006 12:30 PM
