Showing posts with label Conspiracy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Conspiracy. Show all posts

Sunday, April 5, 2026

We Spread by Iain Reid; Delicate Symbolic Open Ended Look at Old Age and Senior Care

 

We Spread by Iain Reid; Delicate Symbolic Open Ended Look at Old Age and Senior Care

By Julie Sara Porter 

Bookworm Reviews 

Spoilers: This is the second book in a row, after Delusions of Madness by Kimberly K. Taylor, in which institutional care is an important focus. Delusions of Madness was a dark disturbing Historical Fiction about the institutional abuse found in a 19th century mental asylum and the stranglehold of the patriarchy that controls it.

We Spread by Iain Reid, the second book, focuses on Senior care in modern day. The setting and plot aren't the only things that are different about it. Where Delusions of Madness is more direct and honest about the mistreatment suffered by the patients, We Spread is more hidden, subtle, and delicate with how Senior care is portrayed. It is surrounded with potential metaphor, allegory, and open ended questions that are left for interpretation. 

Penny, a Surrealist painter, has just lost her partner who passed away. After an incident where she collapses, her landlord authorizes her commitment to a long term care residence which both he and the center’s staff insist was arranged by her partner. She doesn't recall such a conversation and is very reluctant to go. However the three other residents, Pete,Ruth, Hilbert, and the only two staff members, Jack and Shelly, seem very nice and she's well taken care of so maybe it will work out. 

That is before strange things start happening. She and other residents start to forget things that they always used to remember. There are moments of missing time where they may have slept for several hours or days due to medication. Some of the residents’ personalities are different. Objects keep appearing and disappearing. There are whispered conversations and warnings about the residence’s founder, Shelley whose behavior is utterly bizarre.  

Six Cedars seems like a pleasant setting that perhaps might be just a bit too pleasant. Penny's first description of the residence is a stone house surrounded by trees. It's big, old, plain, and the only sounds are songbirds and natural silence. The foyer is clean and immaculate with fresh roses, two leather chairs, and the sound of a violin coming from one of the rooms. 

Penny's room has a queen bed, a thick duvet, a recliner chair, lamp, dresser, desk, and a grand window facing the forest. There are common rooms, a hair salon, a dining room, and even though residents are not permitted to go outside alone, they can be accompanied plus every room has a scenic natural view. 

It's safe, comfortable, welcoming, clean, sterile with no clutter, dust, or personal items. It's the kind of place that relaxes one because they don't have to think about duties, responsibilities, stuff, mental clutter. 

Penny can get her needs met and everyday she sees new brushes, paint, and other supplies encouraging her process that appear as if by magic. Who wouldn't want to live in such a nice, comfortable, quiet place that allows you to create to your heart's content?

 Penny bonds with the other residents who have their own interests as much as Penny has with her art. Pete was a concert violinist and plays in his room. Ruth is a polyglot and often peppers her conversations with French phrases. Hilbert is a mathematician and often speaks in complex puzzles and equations. Each one has a special means of communication and self-expression and uses it to create a shared language of words, music, numbers, and pictures among them.

Though the staff is small, they are also memorable. Shelley is a beautiful woman who seems to genuinely want to give the residents the proper care that they need and allow their minds to flourish and grow. She also has an interest in biology so often speaks in terms of environment, plant cycles, and growth. Jack is probably the least developed of the main characters, but he alternates between being a helpful guide and a fountain of frantic exposition especially when the weird things start happening.

The sinister happenings don't occur until halfway through the book so the Readers fall into the same subtle complacency and detachment that Penny first does. Things are strange here but this place is too nice. Everything is so routine. You don't have to think about the strange things or the world outside. Everyone here will take care of you. Now lie down and relax. Oh you can't remember your partner's name whom you have been with for decades? Well perhaps that's a sign of dementia. We'll have a doctor look you over in the morning. Now take this drug, lie down, and sleep for a couple of days.

It works because it puts the residents in a stagnant comfortable routine. They can't and won't question anything because there doesn't seem to be anything to question. There's just a general unease when memories become fragmented, items are missing, and Penny can't recall details like whether or not she and her partner ever did talk about this place or their future end of life plans. When Penny starts questioning them, she can't get anyone to act in meaningful ways beyond talking. She isn't sure if she wants to either.

What is particularly compelling about this set up is because it is so subtle it remains uncertain if anything sinister really is happening. After all, absent mindedness and forgetting details are signs of dementia. The languid tired feelings could just be that their minds are becoming numb from routine and the appearing art supplies and other things could be gifts from Jack and Shelly to keep their minds active.

Even some of the stranger events like odd discoloration on one characters' skin, Jack's frantic late night warnings, and a crucial overheard conversation could just be nightmares or delusions from Penny since she is the only person who experiences them. 

A metaphor that is spread throughout is Penny's connection to art. She laments that when she was with her partner, some of her more complex Surrealist paintings were unfinished while he often flourished creatively. 

Since she has all the time in the world in Six Cedars, she can finally work on them. But she is always finding something incorrect, flawed, or wrong with them so she has to start all over again. It's almost like she doesn't want to finish them.

This conflict could be symbolic of her feelings towards Six Cedars. She is curious but uncertain. She thinks that her life might be in danger or she's paranoid and imagining it. She wants to find out but doesn't want to. Because finishing the painting is like finishing a story. If she asks questions and gets answers that she doesn't want to hear, then her story is finished. She is moving closer to the edge of her life and while she sees the view, she is afraid of jumping off. Her life is in her art and now her art and life are here in Six Cedars. Is she really ready to put her signature on the painting and read the final end page?




Wednesday, July 3, 2024

Conduit to Murder (A Belfast Murder Mystery Book 6) by Brian O'Hare; Conduit to an Excellent Mystery

Conduit to Murder (A Belfast Murder Mystery Book 6) by Brian O'Hare; Conduit to an Excellent Mystery

By Julie Sara Porter 

Bookworm Reviews 

Spoilers: A conduit is someone or something that conveys, protects, and sends things like information, goods, money, and ideas. When it comes to crime, a conduit could send information, order, or bribery money to various criminals and can be beneficial in creating an organized network of such individuals.

Brian O'Hare’s latest Belfast Murder Mystery, Conduit to Murder is a thrilling murder mystery in which Inspector Thomas Sheehan and Co. have to find a conduit to a large criminal network.

Sheehan and his team investigates the murder of an antiques dealer/politician found bludgeoned to death and who is part of a sinister criminal network. They discover someone has been leaking information about the case to the press. They receive alarming death threats that escalate into violent attacks and kidnapping. There appears to be a spy on the police force but who? How large is this network anyway and who are they? Above all, who is the conduit who is conveying information and payments to the various members and bringing all of these people together? 

This is a solid mystery all around. Many of the frequent tropes found in O’Hare's series like corrupt rich people, conflict within the team, suspenseful moments when one or several of Sheehan's team are in danger, are dialed up in this volume. This makes it a winning installment in the Belfast Murder Mystery series.

Many of the best moments are those that concern Sheehan's team and their close proximity towards danger. In one chapter, Sheehan and his wife, Margaret, are almost run off the road by a violent driver who is not only expressing road rage but is tied to their investigation. The incident causes Sheehan to put Margaret into hiding and their separation is heartfelt.

In another chapter, Sheehan's partner Denise Stewart and her boyfriend, Sergeant Tom Allen go undercover as a vacationing couple while chasing a lead to the South of France. Unfortunately, their targets are aware of their presence and people are killed. It's a very violent graphic trap and shows the long reaches that their antagonists possess.

The mole in the police force subplot is well played and dips into suspicion almost to the point of paranoia. It's tense reading about every word that the team says even in confidence, every lead that they investigate even if they are red herrings, and their homes and loved ones used as collateral. It really brings home the thought of constant surveillance and what happens when you can't even trust those you see every day.

Also the mole reminds the characters and Readers how wide this crime ring is and how their power and influence surrounds everyone and everything. In fact, this is only one of many crime ring conspiracy groups in the entire series. These groups are made of rich influential people who believe that they are above the law and feel entitled to do anything that they want including theft, rape, assault, forced prostitution, human trafficking, and murder without repercussion. They are insulated in their own worlds and think that those under them are theirs to play with, ethics, laws, or basic human decency be damned. 

It seriously makes one wonder if these various groups in each volume are connected as one large supergroup and there is some mysterious head pulling all of the strings that has yet to be revealed. 

Conduit to Murder is tightly put together with its clues, investigation, witness questioning, suspect interrogation, and resolution. It's not the type that relies on twists except for the mole reveal. Mostly it focuses on this war between the crime ring and Sheehan's team. This is a conduit into an excellent mystery.