First edition, cover artist by Josh Kirby

Flying Dutch (ISBN 0-356-20111-2) is the third humorous-fantasy novel by popular British author Tom Holt. First published in the UK in 1991 by Orbit Books.

Inspired by Wagner's 1843 opera, The Flying Dutchman, the novel asserts that the famous Dutchman and his crew were not, in fact, cursed by the Devil, but were instead the victim of a flawed alchemical experiment which made them immortal, but, as a side effect, gave them a horrible, unbearable stench. Every seven years, the stench wears off, briefly, and the crew can land and reprovision. However, modern technology is catching up with the Dutchman, and compound interest on his ancient life-insurance policy threatens the entire world's economy.

Reception

Publishers Weekly considered it to be "diverting" and "occasionally hilarious", but also "creaky".[1] Kirkus Reviews was far harsher, decrying its "mechanical plotting, predictable doings, and humor too obvious and trite to raise even a glimmer of a smile."[2]

The Los Angeles Times found it to be "ingenious", with a "sardonic, breezy tone", and compared it to the works of Terry Gilliam, but faulted its second half for not living up to the standard set by its first half.[3]

The novel earned 17th place in Locus magazine's annual Best Fantasy Novel of the Year awards in 1992.[4]

References

  1. Flying Dutch, reviewed at Publishers Weekly; published March 2, 1992; retrieved April 14, 2019
  2. Flying Dutch, reviewed at Kirkus Reviews; published January 15, 1992; archived online May 20, 2010; retrieved April 14, 2019
  3. BOOK REVIEW : Ship's Legend Goes on a Romp : FLYING DUTCH by Tom Holt ; St. Martin's Press/Thomas Dunne $18.95; 252 pages, by Chris Goodrich, at the Los Angeles Times; published March 13, 1992; retrieved April 14, 2019
  4. "The Locus Index to SF Awards: 1992 Locus Awards". Archived from the original on 4 July 2012. Retrieved 26 October 2006.


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