Showing posts with label Torture. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Torture. Show all posts

Tuesday, May 7, 2024

In The House of A Demon: A Memoir Book 1 by Tina Soctoy; Tension and Sense of Immediacy Fill Memoir About Kidnapping Victim

 

In The House of A Demon: A Memoir Book 1 by Tina Soctoy; Tension and Sense of Immediacy Fill Memoir About Kidnapping Victim

By Julie Sara Porter 

Bookworm Reviews 


Spoilers: Tina Soctoy’s Memoir, In the House of a Demon is probably the closest that many Readers will ever get to experiencing Stockholm Syndrome. It tells of a kidnapping through a survivor’s point of view with all of the tension and Immediacy that situation would provide.


When Soctoy was six years old, she was recruited to join a secret Soviet program to create child soldiers and spies. The book is set primarily within the first few months when she was held captive by a soldier named Sasha who molested and isolated her. Despite arguing and trying to escape, Soctoy eventually capitulated to her captors and became their willing pawn.


Throughout the book there is a sense of immediacy that puts us on the same level with Soctoy, the child. We are not given the particulars of her predicament within the text of the book itself, only in the "About the Author" section. In reading the book and not knowing the situation beforehand, the Reader is left uncertain who has Soctoy, for what purpose, what they are going to do to her, and when, if ever she will be free. We only see this situation through her terrified and confused six year old mind. 


She doesn’t know her captor’s names except one is called Sasha. The others are just the Men. We don’t know where she is being held except a few context clues suggest that it’s an isolated and wooded area. This adds to the overall suspense that we are kept in the same ignorance as Soctoy and can almost visualize ourselves looking upward at these larger men who overpower her.


Her captors are master manipulators. They appear nice one minute by giving her food or speaking in an almost tender tone of voice. Then the next minute they threaten her and her mother. This puts her in a false sense of security so she becomes obedient rather than do something that will change their moods. She is raped and then made to feel like she was willing to do it, so she will consider herself fallen and damaged beyond all repair. The sex is humiliating and a sign of dominance that says that Soctoy can’t even feel alone in the comfort of a bed. 


The captors also deceive her by promising that she will be reunited with her mother then put suspicion on her towards her parents. Since we aren’t given much background information, we are put in the same situation as Soctoy where we question her family’s loyalty as well. We wonder if Soctoy returns home, whether she will be put in a similar or worse situation than the one in which she is in.


Many times the dialogue and action between Soctoy and her captors get repetitive but it adds to Soctoy’s mental state. The more her captors repeat the same scenario over to her, the more Soctoy starts to believe it. Time and space are altered so she doesn’t know what day it is or how long that she has been there. Even basic facts like whether it is day or night are unknown to her. She becomes dependent on her captors to tell her anything. 


A few times Soctoy manages to fight her captivity by arguing and escaping but these become hollow victories. They always catch up to her and they use physical and psychological torture to silence her objections. The more that she remains with them, the less likely she is to run away. 

By the end, she is completely broken and is theirs to do whatever they want to her.


Soctoy wrote two more books about her young life. Maybe we will get more concrete answers to what happened to her, what the ultimate goal was, and what resulted from it. For now, we just received her six year old perspective and that was scary enough. The rest of the memoirs are bound to be even more horrifying. 



Saturday, May 28, 2022

New Book Alert: Code Name Jane Doe: A Call to Action by Jane Darrcie; Modern Spy Novel Does Not Skimp on the Training and Education of the Spy

 






New Book Alert: Code Name Jane Doe: A Call to Action by Jane Darrcie; Modern Spy Novel Does Not Skimp on The Training and Education of The Spy

By Julie Sara Porter

Bookworm Reviews


Spoilers: Let's see. My biggest topics this year so far have been: Memoirs and Family Histories, Fantasies in which young women travel to enchanted worlds, and Dark Fantasy vampire romances. Now, we can add a carry over theme from last year: Action novels starring female spies. 

The female spy genre this year includes Kit Sergeant's Women Spies of World War II about the women spies like Didi Nearne, Odette Samsone, Mathilde Lily-Claire, Yvonne Rudellat, Andree Borell, Noor Inayat Khan, and Francine Agazarian who provided information and helped shaped the Allied victory during World War II.

Another spy novel takes a modern approach but is no less suspenseful, nail biting, and character driven. That is Jane Darrcie's Code Name Jane Doe: A Call to Action.

The spy that is called into action is named Jelena Prazich, a Sergeant in the U.S. Marines with a foul mouth and bad temper. She is well decorated and has earned respect in a mostly male dominated branch of the military. Now some high ranking officers have noticed her abilities, her fluency in Russian (thanks to her father who emigrated from there), and her inner strength and resilience, and they have the perfect assignment for her. They would like her to get involved with a certain target and retrieve a thumb drive for them. Oh yes, and she has to sign these forms which means that she won't reveal anything that was said about their meetings and that the organization won't be held responsible if she is seriously injured or killed in action. Also, that if she is killed, then they will tell her parents and brother whatever cause that they make up but not the truth. Well, that sounds pleasant and not at all suspicious! 

Jelena agrees to the terms after signing the forms and writing a letter to her parents to be released in the event of her death. Then she is ready for training and the well, I don't want to say fun but the suspense and terror definitely begins.

Code Name Jane Doe is one of those types of novels that takes the glamor and flash of espionage and leaves the brutal reality. Think less Ian Fleming and more John LeCarre. 

It does not skimp on the hardships that recruits go through. In fact, the book is one novel length training exercise for Jelena in which she gets imprisoned and is tortured in a mock interrogation scenario then is monitored as she and her handler gather information and end up betrayed.

The interrogation scenario is particularly notable because it covers almost a third of the book. Page after page, Jelena is subjected to beatings, water torture, shocks, and constant threats from her interrogator, Bruce. She shows a lot of strength in character and is able to transfer her mind into childhood memories to provide a mental escape. 

Jelena announces that they will never break her and even though they take the challenge, they give up before she does. 

While the interrogation chapters are a turning point for Jelena's character, there is intense graphic violence where she comes close to surrendering and wondering if this job is worth it. 

There were times when the torture transcends the pages and affects the Reader. I have Anxiety Disorder and sometimes the torture was so real and intense that it triggered panic attacks within me. I do not blame Darrcie for this. If anything, it shows what a gifted writer that she is to make someone picture a torture scene so realistically. I blame my own weak nerves for not being able to handle it. 

Even after the interrogation is over, Jelena is always "on." She is given a new name, Jane Doe. Many of her abilities like mentally escaping from imprisonment, resilience to traumatic situations, and withstand punishment longer than most recruits, makes her stand out so the name, Jane Doe, is designed to make her blend in. "It's noone and everyone at the same time," Bruce says.

Jane's time training under her handler, Kate, is an exercise in learning about deception, subterfuge, and sometimes making tough decisions. When Kate and Jelena question a potential double agent, Kate tells her to slip a drug in her drink just so they can sneak out while she is asleep. To Jelena's horror, the drug kills the woman instantly. 

As a military vet, Jelena is used to killing people but from a distance but not up close. She realizes that Kate, who was originally seen as a flighty feminine Southern Belle has a cold and callous side to her personality. Jelena also realizes that to succeed in this line of work, sometimes she has to be cold and callous as everyone else. She has to take lives and not think about the consequences.

Many spy books give the Reader the impression that even though the life of a spy is hard, the training grueling, and the decisions difficult, there is always a sense that they are doing this for the greater good. Their stories are filled with courage and self sacrifice and their training is greater because of that. 

What makes Code Name Jane Doe stand out is because of the emphasis is on the training and early assignments with minimal results, it makes one wonder if the stress, deceit, and decisions that spies go through is even worth it. There is still an admiration for their courage and sacrifice but that is augmented by the reality of their situation. They have to carry suspicion everywhere they go and purposely have to chisel away their humanity. 

There are some drawbacks to this book. Jelena gets into a pointless romance with one of her interrogators. I admit that I get irritated with action novels that have female protagonists that get thrown in a romance subplot and this one is no exception. Sometimes, it's fine but most of the time, it's unnecessary filler. The romance crosses several boundaries and is highly questionable for both Jelena and her potential love interest. They could work just as well as cohorts that work together and have each other's backs and the book wouldn't miss a beat. But as it is, the romance is anticlimactic and ends abruptly. 

More importantly, is the occupational closeness among Jelena, Kate, and Bruce. Bruce and Kate push Jelena through the training because they see the potential agent that she can be. Even though the three push one another to their limits, they see fellow soldiers that will defend and kill for one another if need be. Sometimes in the hardness, you cling to those who share that experience with you, even if they are partly responsible for that hardship. A bond is formed, one that transcends allieship to family.

Speaking of family, there are some possible questions and suspicions about Jelena's family. Her parents are loving wonderful people and she comes from an intriguing background of Native and Russian-American heritage ("You figure it out," she said.) Her parents gave her the right advice to survive her training and move forward. They guided her to transport her mind in times of trouble, how to use weapons, and survive any situation. 

Yes, they are wonderful people and it's the perfect advice. Is it almost too perfect? Could it be coincidence that Jelena's parents told her as a child exactly what she needed as an adult to survive in the espionage world? Were they just simple educators, as their daughter thought, or is Jelena's resilience a family trait? Could her parents have been spies themselves? These are questions that are unanswered by the first volume, concentrating solely on Jelena's training and first assignments, but they are there all the same.

Code Name Jane Doe: A Call to Action is a different female spy novel from Women Spies of World War II, but it is just as suspenseful, filled with tense situations and tough decisions, and is led by a strong independent lead to guide the Reader through this duplicitous dangerous world.










Monday, May 2, 2022

Weekly Reader: The Flames of Resistance: Women Spies of World War II by Kit Sergeant; Sergeant's Darkest and Best True Spy Thriller Yet

 


Weekly Reader: The Flames of Resistance: Women Spies of World War II by Kit Sergeant; Sergeant's Darkest and Best True Spy Thriller Yet

By Julie Sara Porter

Bookworm Reviews


Spoilers: Normally, I don't emphasize spoilers when a historical fiction novel involves real historical people as the protagonists. There's no point when all the Reader has to do is look up the information on the Internet. But Flames of Resistance: Women Spies of World War II is an entirely different beast from Kit Sergeant's other Historical Fiction novels about female spies. It's darker than the others by far and  some of the most compelling things about the book are how those dark aspects are written. So, I am going to repeat this has some  MAJOR HEAVY DUTY SPOILERS!!!


With all of Sergeant's Female Spies novels, there is always a feeling of suspense: a realization that every moment that these women live through could be their last. They work amidst war, violence, and dehumanization of those who are considered "The Enemy." Some are dehumanized themselves or fall into that propaganda mindset. They suffer great hardship, separation from loved ones, deaths of those closest to them, and imprisonment and torture. All of this while they use deception, brilliance, and subterfuge to deliver information to their  allies. 

However, in all of Sergeant's previous novels only one of her selected protagonists is killed in the line of duty: M'greet Gertrude Zeller MacLeod AKA Mara Hari in L'Agent Double: Spies and Martyrs of The Great War. She was executed by firing squad. 

 Not bad considering the series covers so far four books that cover almost 200 years of history and four major wars. However, Sergeant's second World War II era novel and fifth novel total seeks to break that record in the most horrific, disturbing, and heart wrenching of ways. This is the one that reveals the courage and dedication that comes with fighting to defend one's country from invasion and the ultimate sacrifice that is often waiting in the end.



In Sparks of Resistance, Sergeant covered the early years of WWII when the French Resistance was formed by combining several small groups of spies, saboteurs, rebels, and activists into one large supergroup that hides in the shadows and uses intelligence, espionage, and covert activities to fight Hitler's tyranny. Unfortunately, that group suffered a serious setback when Mathilde "La Chatte" Lily-Carre, one of the main organizers, was arrested, forced to turn traitor, and become a double agent to save her own skin. The original group Internationalle fizzled out because of the deception.

This novel is set in the middle of the War when Resistance is at an all time high and many are willing to join, even some who would have looked the other way a couple of years prior. Four women are the focus who take part in the fight against Hitler and his Nazis. As before, they are different, ages, status, lifestyles, races, and outlooks but they are all united for a cause.


Those women are:


Yvonne Rudellat -Yvonne is the first female agent trained by the newly formed  Special Operations Executive to enter France (A predecessor Virginia Hall arrived before but she was American and entered the country as a journalist.) A divorcee and single mother, Yvonne is often older than the other female agents and takes an almost maternal role with them. 

She is also one tough lady that you do not want to mess with. Her first arrival into France is not a pleasure cruise as she and a colleague arrive in a small boat through the rushing water and in the dead of night.

She also reveals much strength and toughness as she studies and prepares explosives for sabotage. Yvonne also is often paired in the field with Pierre Culioli, an agent with whom she has a love-hate relationship that evolves into a mutual respect and admiration for each other, even a potential romance.


Andree Borrel-A young woman who had been recruited as a nurse, Andree is tomboyish and scrappy. She comes from a lower class background and has an earthier sassy attitude as compared to many of her upper class fellow agents. For entrances, she one ups Yvonne. She is the first female agent to parachute into France. 

She works mostly as a courier for the Prosper circuit alongside Francis Suttill and wireless operator Gilbert Norman. The three even become a known trio, with Andree and Gilbert becoming lovers.

Andree has a young, more spirited nature that sometimes gets her in trouble and unfortunately puts right her in the path of treachery and betrayal.


Noor Inayat Khan-Of the agents, Noor had an interesting family background that could have filled its own book. Her father,  Inayat Khan was an Indian Muslim and descendant of hereditary nobles and musicians. His great great grandfather was the ruler of Mysore, making Noor a princess. Her mother was an American who left her family behind and changed her name to wed Inayat who earned a living as a Sufi musician. 

Noor herself has a talent for music, art, and literature.  She was also a Sufi musician and children's books author and illustrator. One of her most popular books was Twenty Jataka Tales, an anthology of stories inspired by Jataka legends from the Buddhist tradition.

Noor left that privileged and cultural life behind to join first the Women's Auxiliary Air Force then the SOE. She begins her espionage career as a wireless operator. Her talent for literature allows her to think of poems and phrases that combine the various codes to communicate with fellow operators (and to make them untraceable to the Nazis).

Later she becomes a courier and field agent because of her desire to be more hands on. She is more reserved than her female colleagues and does not have much in the way of a love interest in this book. However her friendships with the agents are very close and she has to face hardships with quiet stoicism that the others rely on.


Francine Agazarian-The final spy is the only one of the quartet who is happily married. In fact, despite objections, Francine and her husband, Jack are both operatives and couriers for the same Prosper circuit. 

Francine is the most emotional of her colleagues, probably because she has more to lose that is staring her right in the face. By contrast, the other agents are separated from those that they love and face it with toughness, earthiness, and stoicism. At one point, Francine and Jack are reunited after a long separation. Francine has had enough of intrigue, violence, and death so she resigns to live a normal life.


The four operatives are similar to the protagonists of Sergeant's 355: The Women of Washington's Spy Ring. They often work together and are even friends. They have a sisterly relationship in which they share a common goal and work towards it. However, that doesn't stop personalities from clashing and them getting into disagreements about how operations are run. Because their love lives are so different, they don't get involved with the same lovers.

 But the book still shows them as different women with different mindsets and sometimes those mindsets result in heavy disagreement.


As I mentioned this is by far the best book in Sergeant's series but also her darkest. The Prosper Circuit is betrayed and from a person that is not a likely suspect. Unlike in Sparks of Resistance, there is no seeming reluctance on this character's part. They do it and delight in the chess game that they ended up winning.


As a result of the betrayal, three of the protagonists are arrested and subjected to extensive torture. The outlook is grim as they become ill, frightened, and anxious to the point of paranoia, and suffer horrid physical abuse. The only ray of hope lies when one attempts an escape and that ray is squashed when she is caught and returned to prison.

One by one, the women die either by being gassed to death, are shot in the head, or succumb to illness. The lone survivor sees the end of the war but is filled with tremendous survivor's guilt and PTSD that will last for the rest of her life.

Of course the women are awarded, three posthumously for their courage and sacrifice. The defeat of The Nazis and the end of World War II also proved that their heroism was not in vain. It is a disturbing process to that end, one that leaves a lot of sadness, but ultimately it's worth it.


Sergeant has another book set in WWII called Embers of Resistance which one could guess leads to the end of the war. It would be interesting to see whether Sergeant uses her writing to cover female spies in other conflicts. The French Revolution?

The Cold War? Would Vietnam work? The War on Terror? There could be more amazing historical trips led by some brilliant strong dedicated women.



Friday, January 28, 2022

New Book Alert: The Monsoon Ghost Image (Detective Maier Mysteries Book 3) by Tom Vater; Detective Maier Returns In Vater's Best Mystery Thriller Yet

 


New Book Alert: The Monsoon Ghost Image (Detective Maier Mysteries Book 3) by Tom Vater; Detective Maier Returns In Vater's Best Mystery Thriller Yet


By Julie Sara Porter

Bookworm Reviews


Spoilers: Once again Tom Vater is available to give his Readers a guided tour of the world's most dangerous and least scenic spots. After India and Cambodia, this time the author sets his sights on Thailand, mostly Bangkok a city known for its active nightlife and sex trade. 

In what is probably his best work yet, Vater provides an effective merge of setting and character to quite possibly end his Detective Maier Mystery series with The Monsoon Ghost Image.


This book is much better than the previous book, Cambodian Book of The Dead which was very descriptive in setting but lost something in the plot. Dare I say it, I even liked it better than last year's Kalkota Noir which combined Kalkota's setting with tributes to drawing room mysteries, noir literature, and science fiction. The Monsoon Ghost Image has a mesmerizing setting and believable characters inside a plot that is not only well executed with suspense and tension but pushes those characters beyond their endurance.


In this third go round in the adventures of Detective Maier, things have changed considerably. Maier seems to have recovered from the events in The Cambodian Book of The Dead (which I read) only to be left traumatized by the events in The Man with The Golden Mind (which I have not.) In his last mystery set mostly in Laos, Maier slept with his stepsister, was nearly killed by his father, and lost a couple of fingers in a Vietnamese prison camp ambush. On the plus side, he befriended Mikhail, a large Russian man who serves as Maier's bodyguard and sidekick. Well he no sooner is getting some much deserved rest in which he should consider never leaving the house let alone accepting any job that takes him out of the country, then what does his boss want him to do? Accept another job that takes him out of the country.

Emilie Ritter, a former girlfriend of Maier's, reported that her photographer husband, Martin, is missing and presumed dead. Even though his funeral is in Hamburg, Emilie is convinced that Martin is still alive and that he is on the run. She sees sinister unknown figures that seem to scream government ops. Not only that but she receives a letter from someone dubbed "The Wicked WItch of the East." The letter informs her that Martin is alive and well in Bangkok and is "involved in the crime of the century." All of this implies that Martin got involved or uncovered something dangerous and with far reaching implications. It seems to involve a photograph of various prominent individuals. So off Maier and Mikhail go to Bangkok with two sinister agents following close behind.


Vater's gift for setting is definitely at play and is even heightened more in this book than any of his previous works. With Kalkota Noir and The Cambodian Book of the Dead, Vater combined real setting with a sense of unreality. The Cambodian Book of the Dead mixed the reality of a country still living with the scars of the Khmer Rouge dictatorship and the supernatural of traditional ghost stories to create a comparison of disruptions in the physical and spiritual worlds of Cambodia. Kolkata Noir borrowed heavily from various genres like film noir and science fiction to create a three part mystery that reads like a Hollywood film, set in India.


What is particularly sinister about The Monsoon Ghost Image is aside from tropes that could be found in murder mysteries, psychological thrillers, and political suspense novels, there is no sense of fantasy. The setting is very real and somehow made even more dangerous. Some of the more horror elements are a bit over the top, such as the appearance of a surgeon who specializes in torturing people for financial rewards, political gain, and for his self pleasure. However, in this context and as we know in our history books and the news, there were and still are people who are that sadistic and brutal. 


We see the sex trade industry but not as some enticing glittery thing where people can go abroad to fill their deepest desires. Instead, it is seen as something dark and depraved, showing the people who get involved in it were drawn by needing money, feeling devoid of any self worth or validation, or believing the empty promises that sinister adults gave them. They have since grown into hardened individuals who survive this harsh uncaring existence the only way that they can. They do anything for money and inflict the same pain that was given to them, continuing an endless cycle of abuse and human trafficking.


Maier goes through a lot of development and mental stress in this book, surprisingly even more so than in the previous books where his struggles were more personal. Without spoiling too much there are several points where Maier is left alone without contacts, allies, and with multiple enemies after him. Just like many of the victims that he encounters and tries to protect and find justice for, he realizes that he is likely to die because of others' schemes and manipulations. 

In fact it becomes clear that Maier, The Ritters, Mikhail and many other characters are manipulated by outside higher forces. These forces don't care who they are or who has to be hurt or killed. Maier is just simply another person for these forces to step on and remove, no more important to them than a small insect.


There are various chapters in which Maier is held captive. It's very rare in a mystery novel when the detective is left in such a vulnerable position where they are imprisoned during their investigation and subjected to physical and psychological torture for a long time, for a period of months it seems. Considering the physical and mental abuse inflicted on him in the last couple of books, Maier's experience in Thailand during his imprisonment and the realization of him being manipulated could be the final push to send him completely over from the justice seeking law abiding citizen to the tortured empty lawless. The protective light that Maier shines over the innocent could dim forever and never return. 


This may be the final book in The Detective Maier Mystery Series. If it is, Vater definitely saved the best for last.


Sunday, November 7, 2021

New Book Alert: Enemy by Kimberly Amato; Yet Another Dark, Disturbing, and All Too Real Dystopian Science Fiction

 


New Book Alert: Enemy by Kimberly Amato; Yet Another Dark, Disturbing, and All Too Real Dystopian Science Fiction 

By Julie Sara Porter

Bookworm Reviews


Spoilers (BIG HEAVY SPOILERS IMPLIED!!!) Here we go again.

Here we have yet another dystopian science fiction novel that might as well be (to borrow the old Law and Order ad catchphrase) "ripped from the headlines." 

I can't imagine why, but that has become quite a popular genre of late. (End sarcasm). I mean it's not like we are in an environmental catastrophe, been through a worldwide pandemic, have businesses who would rather work with a small workforce than kick in a few bucks so their employees can survive, student loan and housing crisis, inflation and no living wage to counter it, supply chain issues, international crisis with China, and had a former President with tyrannical ambitions encourage his own followers to attack the Capitol building or anything.

(Really, end sarcasm.)


Most people read and write for escapism. This genre is like the Universe saying "Not today, Bookworm! You're going to read it, write it, think about it, and you're going to like it!" 

Not only that but is it just me or do these dystopians get darker and darker? Just when you think you have read the final one, the bleakest one yet that squashes any hope for humanity, along comes another one which tops that. What, do these authors challenge each other to see who can be the most depressing?


Case in point, Kimberly Amato's Enemy which seems to have taken its inspiration from the Jim Henson series, Dinosaurs' final episode "Changing Nature" which seemed to have as its motto "If you want to get viewers talking and watching, then leave them dying and the audience crying."

I thought that Ark of the Apocalypse finally caused me to hit the bottom. Enemy reminded me that there is no bottom, just the big gaping abyss that Nietzsche spoke about. 

Ark of the Apocalypse had a plan of traveling to other worlds. The plan showed that while the characters who conceived it were unlikeable, at least something was salvageable. 

With Enemy, there is no plan. There is no space travel. There is just survival and a slow countdown to extinction. 


There are various subplots in this book which takes place in the near future. The United States is taken over because of an alliance between a former American and Russian President. Obviously, it's part futuristic story and as of right now part alternate universe, because it practically stems from many of the fears over what would happen if a certain someone had won a second term. Though he's barely referred to by name, it's clear that many of the tyrannical 

legislation and requirements on the dystopian government's agenda are based on policies by a certain previous Presidential administration and its cult of followers.


Anyway in Enemy, the President of the United States, James Laskin is a puppet ruler under the true master,  King Valkov, "the one true ruler" of the world. Women, LGBT, and minorities are deprived of their rights. The dying environment has caused many to live underground. Prison employees are permitted to use brainwashing and torture and many are imprisoned for so-called "heinous" crimes like criticizing the government, being disabled, or emigrating into the country. There is no illegal immigration, because immigration is forbidden or rather I should say, that everyone who enters the country is considered an illegal immigrant. Of course the news is nothing more than propaganda and children are educated to fit the world government's definition of "God and Country."


Despite this tight stranglehold on truth and freedom, there are small cells of resistors that communicate with each other virally. 

Most of the protagonists of this story are part of one such cell. One of those members is Agent Ellie Goldman, a former Multinational Security Council Operative, who is now one of the heads of the Resistance. Besides helping people enter the country, she has one other goal in mind: to kill President Laskin.

However, there is dissension within the ranks as many male former military operatives turned rebels don't like being ordered about by a woman. 

Osaka, a Rebel, is undercover working for Laskin but she can't disguise her growing affection for the President's young son, Maxim. Osaka's lover and fellow rebel, Anton, is determined to rescue his captive sister, Nadja.

Riker's Island, a New York prison, is now a central hub or torture and brainwashing. It's run by the militant Col. Macalov and much of the nastiest work is headed by the sadistic Mr. Flannery, who would love to replace Macalov. Also, working at Riker's Island is low level Officer Tim Flynt who takes care of his mentally ill mother and younger brother, Sam, who may be interested in joining the rebels.

Meanwhile, President Laskin has a long list of enemies that he wouldn't mind doing away with and using the Resistance to do so.


The main emotion that runs throughout this book is a certain world weariness, perhaps from the Reader being bombarded with similar scenarios in fiction and probable ones in real life. The world weariness also exists within the framework of the book itself and within the characters. 

The rebels overall plans are to kill Laskin and infiltrate and destroy Riker's Island. They plan this while other cells around the world are destroyed and other rebels are killed, arrested, or converted. Because this dictatorship is worldwide, the odds of Ellie's cell doing any permanent damage is unlikely. There are other Rikers and many people to replace Laskin. The thing is they know it too. Their actions such as they are, are mere pinpricks towards the dictatorship. Ellie can only hope that what they do will inspire others to act.

These are people who have lived their whole lives under this regime and have either grown accustomed or apathetic to it. The ones that fight, have replaced ideals with survival. They have no plans on what to replace the dictatorship with, just live with it, fight against it, and be alive long enough to see it end.

After all with as much damage that has been done to the world, there may not be anything salvageable left to recover.


While weariness is the main emotion, there are some genuine heartfelt moments, particularly by characters who cling to friends and family members because that's all they have. Ellie definitely has tunnel vision in her desire to kill Laskin and is very militant and authoritarian towards her fellow rebels. However, she is grieving over the death of her wife, a woman who was the love of her life. She also connects with an immigrant family consisting of a single mother and her young children. 

Speaking of children, Osaka's bond with Maxim is moving as she sees not an enemy but a small child who is not at fault for what his father does. She becomes more of a parental figure 

to him than his actual parents.


There are some heartbreaking passages which reveal the real price of the war between the oppressors and the oppressed. When Anton learns of his sister's fate, his grief is real and believable showing that there is great loss on all sides. It's like a cry of pain that travels from the words to the Reader's souls.

Tim is an eyewitness to the torture of a rebel and is left traumatized by the experience especially by her calm acquiescence to death. While he remains working at Riker's for some time afterwards, it's clear this experience changed him and is part of why he is reluctant to discover where Sam's allegiances lay. He doesn't want his kid brother to go through that experience of torture with Tim having to helplessly watch and do nothing. Suddenly, these faceless rebels have names and identities to Tim and one of those is the person that he loves the most.


That care for character is also given to many of the antagonistic characters. Some like Flannery delight in cruelty while other like Valkov are far off and remote from the overall action, others are dissected more closely. Laskin is charming, crafty and is distant but concerned for his family. Macalov shows compassion in some of the strangest times such as when he refuses to torture a small child (True, that the child benefits him in his overall plans is a factor, but the fact that he stopped it at all is particularly notable.) They are portrayed as men who might have once been reasonable even idealistic, but like everyone else, made the choice to survive. They just chose to go with the regime rather than fight against it.

 Instead of a straight line between the Evil Empire vs. The Good Rebels, the line is faint and more jagged. Everybody exists in a shade of gray, suggesting there are no direct enemies because the real enemy is inside.


Which leads us to the ending. Because of the previous weariness and emotions of the characters, there is no thought that this book will end in victory for either side. There is some good tension as plans are made and sides attack and counterattack. However, any type of happy victory would ring hollow because of the somber tone that preceded it. Pessimism reigns throughout this book and is definitely present in the final pages.

Because of humanity's self destructive nature, no one comes out a winner. It gets worse in the final pages as at the very end, no one learns anything. This countdown to violence and destruction may continue and once again, we will head for extinction.


It's as though Enemy, literally is the final word on humanity's probable chances for existence. Let's listen to it

But for now, let it be the final word on the dystopian science fiction genre.