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The Tzer Island book blog features book reviews written by TChris, the blog's founder.  I hope the blog will help readers discover good books and avoid bad books.  I am a reader, not a book publicist.  This blog does not exist to promote particular books, authors, or publishers.  I therefore do not participate in "virtual book tours" or conduct author interviews.  You will find no contests or giveaways here.

The blog's nonexclusive focus is on literary/mainstream fiction, thriller/crime/spy novels, and science fiction.  While the reviews cover books old and new, in and out of print, the blog does try to direct attention to books that have been recently published.  Reviews of new (or newly reprinted) books generally appear every Monday, Wednesday, and Friday.  Reviews of older books appear on occasional weekends.  Readers are invited and encouraged to comment.  See About Tzer Island for more information about this blog, its categorization of reviews, and its rating system.

Friday
Nov012019

Galway Girl by Ken Bruen

Published by Grove Atlantic/Mysterious Press on November 5, 2019

Ken Bruen always packs a lot of story into his novels, while using a bare minimum of well-chosen and artfully arranged words surrounded by quite a bit of white space. Some of those words nod at current political realities or popular culture, including music and crime novels, while others illuminate the complexity of Galway, where snooty fern bars compete with grimy pubs that leave hardcore drinkers like Jack Taylor largely undisturbed. (Speaking of pop culture, two songs called “Galway Girl,” one by Ed Sheeran and one by Steve Earle, have been hits in Ireland. Bruen tips his hat to both songs during the course of the novel.)

Jack is mourning his latest tragedy (no spoiler here, but read In the Galway Silence to find the most recent explanation for Taylor’s heavy drinking) while a fellow named Scott, son of a recently deceased Guard (an Irish cop), is commencing a killing spree that targets Guards. Jack, a former Guard turned private investigator, witnesses one of the killings.

The same killing is filmed by a person who calls herself Jericho. Recent novels featured a woman named Emerald who tormented Jack; Jericho is her replacement. Jack, as he laments, seems to be a magnet for “crazies, lunatics, dispossessed, neurotics.” Most of them are homicidal.

A subplot involves a woman who wants to hire Jack because the mayor’s eleven-year-old son drowned her ten-year-old daughter. The woman thinks Jack might make Jimmy confess. What she means is, Jack might get revenge on her behalf, but even Jack won’t murder a child. The woman turns out to be more Machiavellian than Jack suspects.

Another subplot involves the sudden appearance of the son of Jack’s former best friend — a bestie until Jack killed him. With good reason, Jack is running low on friends. His dead friend’s son wants to even the score, but he’ll need to stand in line. That storyline is likely to stretch into future novels, as will Jack’s relationship with a falconer — a relationship that will only last until Bruen decides to kill him off.

One of Jack’s friends (but only when he wants something from Jack) is a priest. The priest wants Jack to get rid of his sister’s lesbian lover because a relative’s lesbian relationship isn’t good for the priest’s image. That storyline ties into another. In fact, the storylines generally weave together, suggesting that each bit of evil in Galway is part of a larger whole. Another of his friends is a nun, perhaps the only character in the series who sees something besides darkness in Jack’s heart. She features prominently in the plot before the novel ends.

I always enjoy and recommend Bruen’s novels, and this one is no exception. The story has less power, however, than some other Taylor novels, if only because of its familiarity. Crazy female killers is a theme that should have been put to rest with Emerald. Reprising it with Jericho has a “same old” feeling while making me wonder just how many crazy female killers Galway can support. Still, for Ken Bruen fans, even a lesser Jack Taylor novel is better than living through another year with no new Jack Taylor novel at all.

RECOMMENDED

Wednesday
Oct302019

The Adventure of the Peculiar Protocols by Nicholas Meyer

Published by Minotaur Books on October 15, 2019

In 1905, just after Sherlock Holmes’ 50th birthday, Sherlock’s brother Mycroft gives him several pages copied from a document. The document is the notorious Protocols of the Learned Elders of Zion, which purported to discuss a Jewish plot to subvert Christendom. Russian scholars revealed the document’s fraudulent nature in the 1920s, well after the British government, via Mycroft, asked Sherlock to take a look at it.

The sister-in-law of Watson’s wife is fluent in French and Russian. She translates the document from French, observing its similarity to a document produced 30 years earlier. With the help of Sherlock’s deductive reasoning, they conclude that key differences in the two documents can be attributed to the original’s translation from French to Russian and back to French.

That should be enough to discredit the document, but Sherlock nonetheless sets off for Russia, Watson in tow, on a mission of ill-defined purpose. Sherlock apparently wants to find the document’s creator and induce a confession that the document is fraudulent.

Nicholas Meyer introduces actual people from history into his Sherlock novels (Freud most memorably in The Seven Percent Solution), and he does so here by making NAACP co-founder Anna Strunsky Walling a character. With Walling’s help, Sherlock finds the publisher of the Protocols, then gets himself into hot water that endangers Walling’s life. Such action as the novel offers unfolds near the end as Sherlock and Watson share a perilous moment with Anna on a funicular in Hungary.

Compared to The Seven Percent Solution, The Adventure of the Peculiar Protocol is disappointing. The novel is constrained by history, so there is little that Sherlock can do to change the public perception that the Protocols were genuine. The novel’s greater disappointment lies in the absence of significant detection. Sherlock’s deductive skills, apart from an occasional “elementary” followed by an obvious observation, play almost no role in the story. The novel has the advantage of brevity; any longer and I would have condemned it as boring.

Perhaps Meyer wrote the novel to make a point about the dusty Protocols, a document that is occasionally resurrected by anti-Semites of the far right despite being discredited for nearly a century. If so, an essay would have done the job. As a Sherlock Holmes story, the novel falls flat. It is always good to see Sherlock and Watson and Meyer’s prose is lucid, but the lackluster story is unworthy of Conon Doyle’s iconic creation.

RECOMMENDED WITH RESERVATIONS

Monday
Oct282019

Pursuit by Joyce Carol Oates

Published by Grove Atlantic/Mysterious Press on October 1, 2019

Joyce Carol Oates writes horror stories with a literary sensibility, at least when she’s not writing literary stories that are informed by horror. Her horror stories do not depend on zombies or slasher-killers. Her characters suffer from the horrors of abuse and neglect and the awful things that people do to each other, particularly spouses and parents. A horrifying childhood and its impact on a young woman are at the heart of Pursuit.

Abby Hayman (her real name is Miriam, but she prefers Gabriela, the name she invented for herself) has been married to Willem Zengler for less than a day. She was a virgin when they married because Willem is very religious. Willem “identifies strongly as a Christian but not the kind of somber-faced Christians who take themselves too seriously.” Yet taking himself too seriously is the exact definition of Willem, even if his face might not always be somber.

Early in the novel, Abby steps in front of a bus and is in a coma for a few weeks before she is treated, rehabilitated, and sent home with Willem. Why did newlywed Abby step in front of the bus? The answer is not immediately clear.

Abby’s father, Lew, was an angry veteran, blaming the world for his misfortune. Like many angry vets, it is not obvious whether he was scarred by war or whether he went to war because it suited his scarred personality. In any event, Abby’s mother, Nicola, eventually kicked Lew out of the house. A section of the novel tells us that story from Lew’s self-interested perspective. Another section tells the same story from Nicola’s very different perspective. Oates paints Nicola as a vulnerable woman, easily manipulated by a manipulative man, who gains strength from her experience. Lew is considerably less sympathetic. By the end of Nicola’s story, after Lew has left and returned, her life has become tragic and grotesque.

Abby’s perspective, on the other hand, is that of a child who does not understand her parents and who blames herself for everything that happens, including her apparent abandonment by them both. One big event occurs when Abby is only six, an event for which both of her parents are to blame, neither having given much of a thought about how their conduct will affect their child. A later event, while Abby is spending a summer with her aunt, leads to a life-shaping discovery that Abby does not fully understand and that she tries to block from her mind.

Back in the present, Abby is haunted by nightmares and memories of skeletons, making Pursuit a good Halloween read. Once out of the hospital, Abby decides to visit her aunt, an aunt she feels guilty for abandoning, who does not know of her marriage to Willem. The trip with Willem is necessary to complete Abby’s journey, to exorcise at least some of her demons, to help her overcome fears — not just fears of horrifying events, but the ordinary fear of being alone, even in marriage.

Pursuit ends on a more hopeful note than some of Oates’ work. Nicola’s story is more powerful than Abby’s, but the two stories work together to explain Abby’s timidity, a characteristic that makes her an unremarkable ghost of a character, devoid of personality. Willem turns out to be a surprising character, in that he is capable of growth and is not shaped entirely by his crabbed religious upbringing.

Oates’ signature style is less dependent on quotation marks and parentheticals than some of her other work, which is fine with me — I think she’s been there and done that. Otherwise, she displays her characteristic economy of language, shading scenes with just the right amount of detail while leaving room for readers to fill in the color. Pursuit isn’t Oates’ best work, but it is recognizable as the kind of horror story that only Oates can tell.

RECOMMENDED

Friday
Oct252019

Knight by Timothy Zahn

Published by Tor Books on April 16, 2019

Knight is subtitled A Chronicle of the Sybil’s War. It is the second book of a trilogy, following Pawn and preceding Queen. The ending isn’t quite a cliffhanger, but it doesn’t resolve much of anything.

Timothy Zahn’s premise is that several humans and various aliens are enslaved on a two-mile long ship. Sometimes the Shipmasters have different species fight each othe using relatively harmless weapons (like paintballl guns) in different kinds of arenas. When aliens fight well, the Shipmasters sell the location of their planet to other aliens, who can capture slaves from that planet for use as fodder in combat.

The ship is having problems, probably because enslaving people wasn't its original mission, although what that mission might have been has yet to be revealed. A human named Nicole Lee is tasked with watching over the ship. She was promoted from Sybil to Protector, a position that requires the ship (but not the Shipmasters) to give her commands some deference. To maximize her communication with the ship, she has to ingest chemicals through an inhaler that will shorten her lifespan.

The ship is divided into quadrants. The Shipmasters seem to be in control of one quadrant but less in control of the others. Nicole’s assigned task is to maintain and protect the ship, but her self-assigned task is to convince the Shipmasters that humans are lousy fighters and therefore not worth kidnapping as warrior-slaves. That plan doesn’t work out quite the way Nicole intends.

Aliens enslaving humans is standard space opera fare. The story is moderately interesting but probably not worthy of a trilogy. Some of Nicole’s adventures as she wanders through the ship, trying to figure out what’s what and intervening in arena battles, come across as filler. The alien races she encounters are not particularly imaginative, but the humans don’t have much personality beyond the pluckiness that we expect from sf human as they outsmart their alien captors, so it all evens out.

As an action-adventure story, Knight has modest entertainment value. Zahn keeps the action moving even when it seems to be moving in circles, biding time until the story gets around to advancing. The middle novels of trilogies often come across as bridges between two better novels, and that is probably the case with Knight. It might be more fair to review the trilogy as a whole, but the third novel isn’t out yet, so I have to give the second one, standing on its own, a thumbs sideways.

RECOMMENDED WITH RESERVATIONS

Wednesday
Oct232019

The Warehouse by Rob Hart

Published by Crown on August 20, 2019

Many books, both fiction and nonfiction, have condemned the corporatization of America, the loss of worker’s rights, or the concentration of wealth and power into the hands of a shrinking few. Presidential candidates who have a chance to get elected are even talking about those issues (only to be condemned as radical by those who depend on the shrinking few for financial support). The Warehouse is an entertaining, near-future look at the consequences of allowing the top 1% to make policies that govern the rest of us.

The Warehouse is based on a company called Cloud, because Rob Hart would have been sued if he called it Amazon. It was founded by Gibson Wells, who might be even wealthier than Jeff Bezos, and is certainly older and (I assume) more devious. In an era of budget–tightening in industry and government, the unemployed are flocking to Cloud for monotonous, tiring, underpaid jobs (the kind of jobs that Amazon warehouse workers perform). Some of them worked for companies that were put out of business by Cloud’s predatory practices. In fact, Cloud is pretty much the only retail store that matters, the box stores having been run out of town by the convenience of online ordering and drone shipping.

The Warehouse is set a few years in the future, when global warming is having its predicted impact on the planet. Cloud is a throwback to corporate towns; employees live in dorm rooms provided by Cloud so they can focus on working rather than commuting. In exchange for discounted housing and healthcare, they earn less than minimum wage thanks to a business–friendly Congress. Deductions from meager wages are made for a variety of reasons, including the failure to make quotas. Workers wear watches that track their location and production. In fact, they can’t leave their dorm rooms without wearing the watch, even on their own time.

Gibson is an old-fashioned robber baron who relies on bromides to mask his self-interest. “Regulations are bad” because they keep him from doing all the awful things he wants to do. “Hard work is good” if the hard workers are filling his pockets with profits. “Privatization is efficient” because his control of newly privatized services efficiently increases his wealth. He views himself as “exceptional” so customary standards of human behavior, not to mention laws, cannot be expected to stand in the way of his achievements.

Gibson is dying of cancer and is blogging his final year of life, during which he intends to visit all 100 MotherClouds (fulfillment centers) so he can say hello to all his employees before he dies. He also blogs his self-aggrandizing ideas. He pats himself on the back for creating jobs when the jobs are crappy and employees are treated like slaves. He is virulently opposed to unions and thinks his “rating” system to overwork his underpaid employees is brilliant. Ebenezer Scrooge might agree.

The two key characters, Zinnia and Paxton, both make the hiring cut. They both have ulterior motives for taking the job. Zinnia is a corporate spy. Cloud claims to be energy independent but its wind farms and solar panels seem incapable of generating the necessary power. Zinnia has been hired to find the source of the power that Cloud doesn’t want to disclose for fear of losing its green tax breaks. What she actually finds, on several different fronts, casts Cloud in an even less favorable light.

Paxton tried to patent his own idea but was screwed over by Cloud. After working as a prison guard, he views a job at Cloud as temporary but essential to his survival. He hated being a prison guard so he is, of course, assigned to security. Naturally, his life intersects with Zinnia’s. He is smitten, while she is happy to develop an unwitting source for information about Cloud security. A reader will see where that plotline is going and will be either pleased or disappointed to learn that it does not deviate from expectations. The predictability didn’t bother me because I enjoyed the novel less for its plot than for its detailed imagining of the future of retail that Amazon might soon inspire.

The Warehouse argues that free people don’t have to accept the lives that are assigned to them by corporate masters. “At least I have a job” doesn’t justify being treated like garbage. Free people can fight for something better. Whether Zinnia’s way of fighting is the best way might be a question that readers debate, but she at least opens minds to the possibility of change. The novel’s underlying lesson is that compassion and fairness are more important than security and comfort. As important as security and comfort might be, they should not be achieved by sacrificing the security and comfort of others.

The Warehouse is also an indictment of:  big businesses that use their economic might to drive small businesses out of the marketplace; big businesses that use their economic might to patent and control ideas developed by small businesses; and big businesses that use their economic might to convince people that big businesses act in the best interests of their employees and customers when they are only acting to further the interests of controlling shareholders. The story targets Amazon but it could just as easily target Purdue Pharma or Wal Mart or Johnson & Johnson or Wells Fargo or Ford Motors.

Readers who disagree with those propositions won’t like the book. Most other readers should enjoy it. Despite its predictable moments, the plot is lively and Paxton is a sympathetic protagonist who confronts a personal crisis in a way that readers can admire. It is the future that Hart builds, however, that makes The Warehouse memorable.

RECOMMENDED