Deborah J. Ross
Monday, November 18, 2024
In Troubled Times: Finding an Inner Guide to Political Action
Friday, November 15, 2024
Short Book Reviews: Stealing a Human/Alien Hybrid Ghost
Not of This World, by Simon R. Green (Severn House)
Gideon Sable--master thief, con artist, and self-proclaimed
vigilante--faces a challenge he can't resist: to break into the British Area 51
and steal a ghost. Not just any ghost, but a hybrid between a human astronaut
and an alien utterly bent on destruction. Although Gideon suspects the motives
and veracity of his would-be client, he gathers his crew, lured with the
promise of being able to walk off with whatever ultra-secret, ultra-valuable gadgets
they can lay their hands on. His crew includes The Damned, armored by the
haloes of two dead angels; Switch-It Sally, who can switch out just about
anything; a werewolf; and Annie Anybody, capable of fully embodying an array of
personas (in this case, Melody Mead, Girl Adventurer). Of course, nothing goes
as planned, and this volume is, like its predecessors, jam-packed with plot twists,
treachery, and revelations.
Gideon and his crew have come a long way since he first convinced
them to join up with him, progressing through suspicion and animosity to
grudging respect and, now, the bonds of family. In the last episode, The Damned
and Switch-It Sally not only fell in love but also informally adopted the young
werewolf. Gideon himself has gone from being a nameless man who inherited a
legend to the emotional glue and super-planner brains holding it all together.
In this sense, the book is as much about loyalty and family as it is about the
present adventure. This gives a supernatural spy/con-man romp satisfying depth.
I hope there will be many more books in the series.
Monday, November 11, 2024
In Troubled Times: Antidote to Despair
Friday, November 8, 2024
Short Book Reviews: Puzzles Can't Carry the Plot
The Puzzle Master, by Danielle Trussoni (Random House)
After a traumatic brain injury leaves him with a genius for
constructing and solving puzzles, Mike Brink embarks upon a real-life riddle: novelist
Jess Price, in prison for committing a notorious murder, pleads to see him in
person although they have never met. She slips a baffling cipher to him, the “God
Puzzle.” In trying to figure out what happened the night of the murder, what
present danger has Jess terrified, and what the cipher means, Mike gets drawn
into a twisted, generations-long story of forbidden arcane knowledge with the
power to transform technology and humanity itself.
I loved the beginning of the book, especially the passages
in which Mike sees puzzles as luminous patterns. Other than the occasional
crossword, I’m not much for puzzles, so this “look-inside” was fascinating. As
the story went on, with diaries telling stories-within-stories, I lost
emotional connection with Mike. I distrusted his attraction to Jess as one more
pasted-on artificial element. (It turned out there was a reason for the allure,
but I didn’t see the signals that supernatural forces were at work.) Long
passages that had nothing to do with Mike’s present quest intensified the emotional
detachment. Three-quarters of the book, a series of characters arrived and
proceeded, very much deus ex machina, to solve Mike’s problems for him
while dumping huge, indigestible chunks of exposition. This part read as if two
completely different books had been jammed together. Despite scattered scenes
with action, the remainder of the book proceeded with very little sense that
everything had been building to this point. In the end, Mike did relatively
little to achieve his own goal or solve his own problems. The book was billed
as a “thriller,” but the last part did a good job putting me to sleep. Which is
too bad, really, because the material about puzzles was fascinating.
Thursday, November 7, 2024
[personal] In the Aftermath...
In the days before the election, I tormented myself with worst-case nightmare scenarios. Memories of the shock in 2020, being unable to sleep that night. Even deeper memories of growing up under the cloud of McCarthyism. Now life has created a buffer for me, in small part from anticipating the worst but also just not having the emotional bandwidth. My newly replaced knee is doing really well, but I'm in discomfort most of the time and PT exercises, stretches, icing, and the like eat up a lot of my focus.