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        <title>Phil Rickman in the forum Horror</title>
        <link>http://www.greenmetropolis.com/forum/posts.aspx?t=1573</link>
        <description>See the latest posts on the GreenMetropolis.com Forum about Phil Rickman in Horror</description>
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		        <title>Phil Rickman posted by cathaven</title>
		        <description>Phil Rickman is a fairly recent discovery of mine &amp; I can&amp;#39;t recommend his work highly enough.

As a big music fan (especially English folk-rock), I was bound to be intrigued by the way that music played an important role in his books. The Merrily Watkins series co-stars a singer/songwriter, Lol Robinson, who is heavily influenced by Nick Drake.

So with references to music I loved as an in, I started on the first of the Merrily Watkins books, &amp;#39;The Wine Of Angels&amp;#39;. The novel is set in a fictional town on the Welsh border &amp; Rickman has such a way with dialog that I could clearly hear the accents in my head. He has a major talent for concocting three dimensional characters that endear themselves to you within a couple of paragraphs. I would recommend that you put his name into wikepedia for more details.

Having found out that he often has characters from one book, turn up in another, otherwise unrelated book, I decided I wanted to read his work in published order, so the second book I read was Candlenight, his first novel. It wasn&amp;#39;t as good as &amp;#39;The Wine Of Angels&amp;#39;, in that I felt he tended to build up certain characters, then all but forget about them when he got more involved in what other characters were doing, but it&amp;#39;s still better than most in the supernatural genre &amp; well worth reading. 

I just finished his second book, &amp;#39;Crybbe&amp;#39;, &amp; found he&amp;#39;d worked out any structural problems I detected in the first book. It&amp;#39;s really good, old school scary stuff. By old school, I mean it doesn&amp;#39;t have kung-fu vampires, or flesh-eating zombies &amp; heroes, who face impossible odds, but at least know exactly what they&amp;#39;re dealing with. It has undefined supernatural forces &amp; heroes who really have no idea what they&amp;#39;re up against, or what to do about it. This book also featured the first appearance of Gomer Parry, who I&amp;#39;d already met in the first Merrily Watkins book &amp; Joe Powys, who also appears in &amp;#39;The Chalice, which I have yet to read.

Rickman has also written a couple of books as Will Kingdom, &amp; a couple as Thom Madley, which are just as loosely interconnected as all the others.

It is also worth noting that Phil Rickman got together with a band called Hazey Jane II (after a Nick Drake song of the same name)to produce a CD of Lol Robinson songs, released as by Lol Robinson &amp; Hazey Jane II. It&amp;#39;s very good. Surprisingly so, but be warned, don&amp;#39;t play it before you finish reading &amp;#39;The Wine Of Angels&amp;#39;, because there&amp;#39;s a song which gives away which character dies in the book.</description>
		        <link>http://www.greenmetropolis.com/forum/posts.aspx?t=1573#25564</link>
		        <guid>http://www.greenmetropolis.com/forum/posts.aspx?t=1573#25564</guid>
		        <pubDate>Tue, Dec 29 2009 01:27:15 GMT</pubDate>
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		        <title>Re:Phil Rickman posted by samdexter</title>
		        <description>I have just recently discovered P Rickman. Great. great stories.</description>
		        <link>http://www.greenmetropolis.com/forum/posts.aspx?t=1573#48730</link>
		        <guid>http://www.greenmetropolis.com/forum/posts.aspx?t=1573#48730</guid>
		        <pubDate>Wed, Oct 19 2011 18:06:36 GMT</pubDate>
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		        <title>Re:Phil Rickman posted by cathaven</title>
		        <description>Wow, a response after nearly 2 years. Glad to hear someone else is enjoying Phil Rickman's books. I also recommend John Connolly &amp; Charles DeLint. Connolly's Charlie Harper character is essentially a hard boiled detective &amp; his novels are theoretically crime novels, but it's crime fiction that has been heavily infected by the supernatural. Charlses Delint writes superb urban fantasies &amp; I think his character, Jilly Coppercorn, would get along quite well with Merrily Watkins.</description>
		        <link>http://www.greenmetropolis.com/forum/posts.aspx?t=1573#48740</link>
		        <guid>http://www.greenmetropolis.com/forum/posts.aspx?t=1573#48740</guid>
		        <pubDate>Wed, Oct 19 2011 23:09:55 GMT</pubDate>
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