Sunday 26 July 2015

Sheri Tepper

Sheri Tepper is my third favourite writer (and I also collect all of her books).


She mainly writes Fantasy and Sci/Fi books (although she has written other genres, mostly under other names).

She is quite famous as a feminist writer, but she also tackles other worldwide issues such as over population and animal rights. What makes her very good is that she tackles these issues in very subtle ways, promoting her messages just within the great stories and characters (she normally has strong women leads) and not preaching.

Teppers stories are also on the weird/unusual side, which I like. Not massively but just enough to make them a bit more interesting.

I was introduced to Tepper by a work colleague, Dave Ufton, at work when I was in my early twenties. He lent me The True Game trilogy. This is a fantasy series about a world where the privileged people have limited magic like 'talents' which they use to play real life chess like games (with real people). It is still one of my favourite Tepper stories. There are also 2 follow up trilogies Mavin Manyshaped (the 2nd book is also one of my favourites) and Jinian, which are also good.

My favourite Tepper book, and one of my favourite books of all time, is Beauty. This is one of her stand alone novels. It features a lot of the classic fairy tales, linked together in a more real and gritty world (It did this before the current trend in the retelling of fairy stories). It is a sci-fi/fantasy cross and does get quite weird in places, but it is very atmospheric, has great characters and a good story. It has a lot of Teppers usual messages, feminism, over population etc, woven well into the story.

I also really like Plague of Angels. This is a Dystopia/Sci-Fi/Fantasy which has elements of The True Game. It is a very good story which twists and turns. One of Tepper's more recent novels The Waters Rising is a follow up book, but it is not as good (her most recent books are not to the same quality as the earlier books, they are still quite good though). Her latest book Fish Tails is very interesting as it brings together the True Game world with the Plague of Angels with an overarching storyline, again not her best but very interesting and its not bad.

The Gate to Women's Country is perhaps Tepper's most well known novel about a female dominated dystopian world. It was the one which started her feminist reputation as it features a strong woman lead and covers various sexism issues. Normally she does this quite subtlely within a good story, however this book puts forward quite strong messages. This it no tonne of my favourites.


I like the Marjorie Westriding/Arbai set of books Grass, Raising the Stones and Sideshow. These are sci-fi books and, although connected they are quite individually different. They all have strong characters and are atmospheric if not a little weird. Grass received a lot of critical praise.

Another book I really like is The Awakeners (originally published as two books Northshore and Southshore). This story is a sci-fi/fantasy cross and it is typical Tepper, atmospheric and obscure, with great characters and subtle messages.

The Revenants is one of Tepper's earliest books and its messages are subtlely woven into the story. It's fantasy/myth based with a questing story in typical Tepper atmospheric style. It's not bad, not her best but nowhere near the worst. After Long Silence (also published as The Enigma Score) is also within this ok category. It is more sci-fi based and typical Tepper. As is Shadow's End which has an over population, arrogant human message. Also in this mid range group is Gibbon's Decline and Fall, although technically sci-fi it is not a space/alien book, it is set on earth in the near future and features a lot of Teppers messages. It is not a bad story.

The Marianne trilogy are earlier books and are more magical realism stories. They are a bit weird, which I like, but overall in the mid range of the Tepper books. These books are quite rare. I do have all 3 books and also a trilogy copy.

The following are Teppers more recent books. I have to say that they are not quite as good as her early ones, but they are not bad. These tend to be a bit more drawn out and some are a bit overly long. Also also some of her messages are not so subtlely woven into the stories as in her earlier books, they are a bit more bluntly stated.
The Family Tree
Six Moon Dance
Singer from the Sea
The Fresco
The Visitor
The Companions
The Margarets

Tepper has also written other genres of book, under different names. Although I have most of these (I am a collector) I have only read a few of them. They are ok, but I am not a fan of the genre's. 

Horror:
as Sheri Tepper:
Ettison Duo:
Blood Heritage
The Bones

as E. E. Horlak:
Still Life

Mysteries:
as B. J. Oliphant:
Shirley McClintock Mysteries:
Dead in the Scrub
The Unexpected Corpse
Deservedly Dead
Death and the Delinquent
Death Served Up Cold
A Ceremonial Death
Here's to the Newly Dead

as A. J. Orde:
The Jason Lynx Mysteries:
A Little Neighborhood Murder
Death and the Dogwalker
Death for Old Time's Sake
Looking for the Aardvark (also published in paperback as Dead on Sunday)
A Long Time Dead
A Death of Innocents

I also have a few other Tepper rated items:
Lucus Magazine, Sept 1998 - Tepper Interview.
Fantasy & Science Fiction Magazine, Oct 1990 - short story "The Gazebo".
Strange Dreams book - short story "Prince Shadowbow"
Night Visions 6 book - short story "The Gardener"

Here is Teppers official website http://sheri-s-tepper.com


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