Tadiana ✩Night Owl☽'s Reviews > Roadmarks

Roadmarks by Roger Zelazny
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3.5 stars. Full review first posted on Fantasy Literature:

Roadmarks is a fragmented, experimental type of SF novel, tied together by a Road (with a capital R) that leads to all times and places and alternative timestreams in our world’s history, for those who know how to navigate it (a certain German named Adolph briefly pops up in an early chapter, eternally searching for the timeline where he won). The other constant is the character of Red Dorakeen, who has been traveling the Road for years, trying to find something, or somewhen. Sometimes he’s in company with Leila, a woman with precognitive talents. He’s also generally accompanied by one of two sentient AIs in the form of books, called Leaves (of Grass) and Flowers (of Evil) (Les Fleurs du Mal).

But life has gotten more complicated for Red since he had a falling out with his old partner Chadwick for some reason. Now Chadwick has paid ten highly skilled assassins ― known as the “black decade” ― to kill Red, hunting him down through space and time. Meanwhile, a young man called Randy Dorakeen is also on the Road, led there by a copy of Leaves of Grass, which introduces itself to him (“I am a microdot computer array”) and lures him onto the Road in search of his unknown father. And then there are the time-traveling dragons of Bel’kwinith, who originally made the Road …

In what frankly struck me as a rather gimmicky move by Roger Zelazny, the chapters of Roadmarks are all titled either One or Two; the first chapter is called “Two” and they alternate from there. The One chapters are linear and relate Red’s ongoing adventures. The Twos, about his would-be assassins and other characters that Red meets up with on the Road, are nonlinear and almost completely random. Zelazny told the story that he put all of the Two chapters on pieces of paper, shuffled them up and simply inserted them into his draft of the book in that order, although he admitted that his publisher eventually convinced him to put at least a few of these chapters in an order that made a little more sense.

Like the other two experimental novels I’ve read by Zelazny in recent months, A Night in the Lonesome October and Doorways in the Sand, Roadmarks is essentially one big mental puzzle, where Zelazny is hiding the ball from the reader on exactly what’s going on until you get quite deep into the novel. To get any real enjoyment out of these quirky and rather humorous novels, you just have to be on board with that approach and roll with it. For Roadmarks I had an entire page of notes that I took on each chapter of the book, just to try to keep all of the players and moving parts straight in my mind. It was definitely a challenging mental exercise!

The concept of the time-traveling Road is very much like that in Peter Clines‘s latest book, Paradox Bound; in fact, I think Clines owes Zelazny a rather large tip of the hat. The kaleidoscopic and non-linear nature of Roadmarks can be fairly confusing, though, and in the end I found it not as intrinsically appealing as A Night in the Lonesome October. But the many colorful characters ― both fictional (some, like Doc Savage, borrowed from pulp novels) and historical ― and Zelazny’s sheer inventiveness are impressive. Roadmarks strikes me as the type of novel that may improve greatly on reread, and at less than 200 pages, I’m sure I’ll be tempted to give it another shot sometime.

Feb. 2018 buddy read with the Zelazny group. Thanks to Evgeny (who formed the Roger Zelazny Newbies group and urges us on) and the buddy read gang!
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Reading Progress

December 29, 2017 – Shelved
December 29, 2017 – Shelved as: to-read
February 6, 2018 – Started Reading
February 6, 2018 – Shelved as: bizarrelandia
February 6, 2018 – Shelved as: classics
February 6, 2018 – Shelved as: science-fiction
February 9, 2018 – Shelved as: gimmick-alert
February 9, 2018 – Shelved as: time-travel
February 9, 2018 – Shelved as: here-there-be-dragons
February 9, 2018 – Finished Reading

Comments Showing 1-16 of 16 (16 new)

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message 1: by Mir (new)

Mir I think I read this in middle school.


Tadiana ✩Night Owl☽ Miriam wrote: "I think I read this in middle school."

Wow, this seems like a lot to take on in middle school! Zelazny's books are like complicated puzzles.


message 3: by Mir (new)

Mir I read all the original first 5 books of Amber the summer before 6th grade and loved them (although I'm sure some stuff went over my head) so then tried to find other Zelazny books, some of which I got and some I didn't.


message 4: by [deleted user] (last edited Feb 09, 2018 04:27PM) (new)

Knowing how fast you write full reviews I better like this partial one now.

:)


message 5: by Tadiana ✩Night Owl☽ (last edited Feb 09, 2018 09:03PM) (new) - rated it 4 stars

Tadiana ✩Night Owl☽ Evgeny wrote: "Knowing how fast you write full reviews I better like this partial one now.

:)"


Well, I was just trying to write up my initial thoughts, but this ended up being more like 2/3 of a full review. I'd better get the full one written and submitted to FanLit before my FanLit editor sees it and gets irked that I'm posting a SFF review here first rather than there. Maybe I'll pull some of this out and save it until that's done. :)

I've been busy today but when I finished this book last night I had a whole bunch of questions. I need to go pull out my notes and throw some of these questions out to the buddy reading group.


message 6: by Joseph (new)

Joseph Sciuto Like always, a wonderfully written review Tadiana ... Even if it is only a partial. Thanks.


Tadiana ✩Night Owl☽ Joseph wrote: "Like always, a wonderfully written review Tadiana ... Even if it is only a partial. Thanks."

Thanks so much, Joseph. I'm working on the full review today. :)


Tadiana ✩Night Owl☽ Hey Evgeny, my full review of Roadmarks is finally posted! ;) Now I just need to go back and do Doorways ...


message 9: by [deleted user] (new)

Great! So what is next, George R.R. Martin finally published the next book of his magnum opus???


Tadiana ✩Night Owl☽ Evgeny wrote: "Great! So what is next, George R.R. Martin finally published the next book of his magnum opus???"

Or perhaps Robin McKinley published Ebon, the sequel to Pegasus ...


message 11: by [deleted user] (new)

Tadiana ✩Night Owl☽ wrote: "Evgeny wrote: "Great! So what is next, George R.R. Martin finally published the next book of his magnum opus???"

Or perhaps Robin McKinley published Ebon, the sequel to Pegasus ..."


Nah, she has nothing on Martin in terms of writing speed (or the absence of such).


Tadiana ✩Night Owl☽ Huh, you're right. Maybe Patrick Rothfuss?


Tadiana ✩Night Owl☽ So a cool thing happened the other day! I also posted this review at FanLit (FantasyLiterature.com) and File 770 noted and linked it! http://file770.com/?p=40939 (#15 at the link). File 770 is a long-running, well respected fanzine/blog site in the SFF field, so I'm tickled!


message 14: by [deleted user] (new)

Tadiana ✩Night Owl☽ wrote: "So a cool thing happened the other day! I also posted this review at FanLit (FantasyLiterature.com) and File 770 noted and linked it! http://file770.com/?p=40939 (#15 at the link). File 770 is a lo..."

Congrats!!! Sounds great. Anything giving Zelazny bigger exposure is excellent as he seems to be forgotten - completely undeservedly.


message 15: by Peter (new) - added it

Peter Tillman Good review as always, Tadiana. I liked this one, a long long time ago. Time for a reread??


Tadiana ✩Night Owl☽ Peter wrote: "Good review as always, Tadiana. I liked this one, a long long time ago. Time for a reread??"

Actually the one I really want to try again first is Doorways in the Sand. I got a little lost the first time through but I think it would probably improve a lot for me on reread.


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