Spies Among Us (An Alex Boyd Thriller) by Mel Harrison; The Warrior Strong Manifesto: The Path to Power Based on The Ancient Shamanic Strategy of Life Energy Conservation by Karen Bentley
By Julie Sara Porter
Bookworm Reviews
Spies Among Us (An Alex Boyd Thriller) by Mel Harrison; The Warrior Strong Manifesto: The Path to Power Based on The Ancient Shamanic Strategy of Life Energy Conservation by Karen Bentley
By Julie Sara Porter
Bookworm Reviews
By Julie Sara Porter
Bookworm Reviews
Spoilers: Illusion of Time by Omar Hamoud is a beautiful transformative philosophical novel that touches on various subjects like time, memory, death, fatalism, destiny, spirituality, and whether we are truly in charge of our lives or a part of someone else's design.
The book covers two lives who are connected on the same day in 1967. As restaurateur William Van Dyck dies of natural causes in Charlotte, North Carolina, Andrian Davis is born in New York City. Throughout the book, we are treated to the lives of both men and they seem to be linked. It's never stated why specifically but they seem to share minds, souls, memories, and experiences.
My copy of the book has no transition between William and Andrian's stories. No long white space, no separation of paragraphs, no subheads. Nothing that separates one story from another. Just jumps from Andrian to William and back again.
Now that could be a mistake in formatting or just found in the Advanced Review Copy but it could be intentional. It might be a way of forcing the reader to pay attention to the transitions through time and William and Andrian’s individual accounts. It tells us that even though they have different experiences and separate beliefs and perspectives, they are essentially the same soul living the same story. Each man is just taking half of it.
This is a book that captures both the real and the abstract. Ordinary lives intersect with esoteric discussions about what connections might mean in the deuteragonist’s lives, what their lives mean, or what anyone's life means for that matter.
Mostly these facets are found in William and Andrian who represent the split between the physical and the metaphysical, the material and the spirit, the body and the mind, what we can see and experience with our five senses, and what we think and believe with our extra senses. William represents one side and Andrian represents the other.
William’s life from his birth in 1893 Belgium to his death is one of poverty, abandonment, and desperate financial need.His mother abandoned him and his father lost himself to alcohol and self pity.
William was raised with a brother who resorted to theft to earn a living and a sister who was the closest thing to a mother figure that he ever had. This exposure to loss and poverty propelled him to pursue financial earthly gain at any cost.
Andrian was also shaped by his upbringing but to follow a different path. His parents were baffled by his genius intellect, vivid dreams, and questions about Biblical characters and teachings that challenged their Christian faith. He isn't isolated by circumstances around him but more by people who don't know what to do with this brilliant but baffling child.
His primary source of encouragement is from his uncle who follows the boy's education and career development for his own personal avaricious interests. This exposure to intellectual curiosity and human weakness propels him to pursue scientific knowledge and clear answers at any cost.
Their chosen professional lives are also indicative of their life paths. William's work in farming, meat preparation, and the restaurant business are about keeping people fed, providing sustenance, and attending to people's basic needs. It's the type of professional life for someone whose focus is on the things of the physical world that can be seen, heard, smelled, touched, and tasted.
His work in physics and psychology are about studying the deep philosophical questions, providing knowledge and wisdom through learning and research, finding out why people live the lives that they did, what dreams and the higher consciousness are telling us. It's the type of professional life for someone whose focus is on the mental and spiritual worlds that can be learned, studied, thought, and believed.
Both men have circles of friends, lovers, siblings, and others who are drawn by their character. William’s wife and friends are drawn to his strength, determination, and earthiness. Andrian's friends and wife are drawn by his acceptance and intuitive intelligence.
If they ever met, William would probably see a stuffy egghead that he wouldn't understand half the things that he was saying but would appreciate his understanding and the long interesting talks they would have. Andrian would probably see a blunt instrument who operates on emotion but would be touched by his devotion to those around him.
They don't meet in life or death nor do they know about each other but their lives connect in various ways. They share similar problems like conflicts with an older sibling and betrayal from an older mentor or parental figure. They marry similar women who are supportive but aren't afraid to disagree with or call them out. Deaths of loved ones cause them to spiral into Depression for a time.
They also share much deeper connections that aren't shared in the mortal world but through the metaphysical. Andrian has dreams of various moments in William's life that could be past life regression or evidence of reincarnation. However, what muddies this interpretation is that William has flash forward dreams and thoughts of Andrian!
Even though William was mostly a practical man of the physical world, higher curious thoughts entered his head. As Andrian experienced many similar earthly experiences of family, friends, and work William experienced some of Andrian's intellectual curiosity and academic research. His dreams of Andrian confuse him and he questions his life path and higher consciousness.
Since William lacks the education and scholastic research, they are mostly stagnant thoughts pushed aside for reality. Towards the end of his life, William wonders if someone will have the answers. Little did he know but might have imagined that someone would be born on his death day.
There is an interesting theory that Andrian poses towards the end about what this connection means. In the book's universe anyway, it seems to be the right one but up to a point which sends the book spiraling to another direction. It pushes the book’s themes of interconnectivity and the split between mind and body to a higher level.
Most of the book suggests that we are made by memories, dreams, time, social circles, choices, education, and experiences. This theory suggests that our paths are not made by us but by a greater design and higher power. It is disconcerting for this theme to be thrown in the last couple of chapters without time to dwell on it further into the novel. Though it is suggested that's why William and Andrian's lives are so parallel in some ways and so divided in others.
However, it is left open ended whether this theory is correct even within the narrative. Like many great philosophical novels, Illusion of Time invites the readers to inquire, discover their own views, provide their own answers, and ask questions about their own lives. We ask who made us the people that we are, some outside force or ourselves?
Where The Sweet Vines Grow by Sadie Sloan; Ominous and Plutonian Psychological Thriller Features Teen Victims and Their Perpetrators
By Julie Sara Porter
Bookworm Reviews
Spoilers: There is something more genuinely threatening in a Psychological Thriller when the victims are kids and teenagers than when they are adults.
There is always a terrifying edge when such a book goes into the mind of an assailant and their traumatized victim. Many characters and readers wonder why this happened and what in their youth could have happened that created this situation. Somehow the wondering becomes sharper when this situation happens to a young character who hasn't even reached their twenties.
That is what happens in Where The Sweet Vines Grow, Sadie Sloan’s ominous and plutonian psychological thriller about a series of kidnapped teen girls, the perpetrators behind the abductions, and the trauma that is inflicted.
Willow Alves moves from her mother's home to her father's dairy farm in Modesto. She is introduced to Julian and Roman Sullivan, heirs to the Sweet Vine Winery and the wealthiest family in the area. She is attracted to the charming Roman Sullivan who has had an active love life. While out on a date with Roman, Willow becomes the victim of a serious crime.
The book pulls no punches in describing how a young girl can be made vulnerable by the manipulations and intentions of those around her. The conflict between Willow and her perpetrators are that of appearance and reality, deception and truth, maturity and innocence, predator and victim. It's also a metaphor of the conflicts between men and women and how they are shaped by the society around them.
The teen years are a time of experimentation and raw emotions because brains haven't fully developed. That doesn't occur until they reach their early twenties. This is among the many reasons that 18 and 21 are considered the legal adult age.
They are hormonal, emotional, argumentative, surly, vulnerable, arrogant, self-centered, immature and hopelessly naive. This age span makes them easily susceptible to manipulative tactics that predators use. The tactics could be used to turn them into predators, prey, or both.
Willow is an example of such a teen. She has had a difficult home life: divorced parents, an alcoholic mother abdicating responsibility, and a loving but distant and overwhelmed father. She also had a previous relationship with a 22 year old at age 16, so her history of toxic relationships is apparent. She is the type of kid who is stressed and looking to belong and be accepted.
Willow makes some new friends like Craig, a nice guy who flirts with her but accepts the friend zone and Tangy, a saucy mouthy girl who has her own reasons for disliking the Sullivans. Willow feels safe around them but she is drawn to Roman Sullivan.
Roman is charming, charismatic, and the typical popular rich athletic kid. He is somewhat full of himself but is the type of guy that girls can't resist. He has had several girlfriends in the past and while that is a source of gossip, no one pays much attention to his love life.
There is the difference between Willow and Roman that is found all over the book. Willow had one previous relationship when she was certainly too young to weigh options to give serious informed consent. This aftermath leads to a rupture in her family and separation. It becomes part of her identity and is the source of gossip at her new home and school.
Roman however has had several romances, some with girls who no longer live in Modesto. Something serious must have happened to them since they are no longer here to defend themselves. While he is considered suspicious particularly by Tangie and Willow's father, nothing happens to him except the occasional rumor and gossip.
In fact, Roman’s reputation makes him more alluring while Willow’s wards people off. Willow and Roman’s reputations are microcosms of how men can get away with being open about their sexuality but women are held under scrutiny if they are not as pure as the driven snow.
One of the eeriest things that occur throughout the book is that Willow is left unprepared when she is a victim of a serious crime. She is told what to wear, how to behave, not to drink too much, not to be too open, not to reveal too much, and who to stay away from. The type of advice that many women are told and then victim blamed for if they are attacked.
What this advice fails to recognize is that many perpetrators don't need or require such patterns to attack. If they want someone, they will take them. It won't matter what their victims wear or how they behave. If the perpetrator is skilled just like in this book, they will find a way in. Also as long as the victim is blamed for their behavior, the perpetrator or perpetrators will find other means to capture them and probably get away with it too.
The book has some interesting twists that challenge the perceptions in this book over who is guilty and who is innocent, how involved people are in crime, what is often condemned and what is ignored. The final chapters make some chilling observations.
If these crimes continue with other faces and other names without condemnation is the whole system corrupt and complicit in allowing them to continue? Are our perceptions of males and females to blame in creating predators and prey and are they shaped by the exposure towards those perceptions in our youth?
Noise Floor by Camilo Gomez
Camilo Gomez’s anthology Noise Floor explores human curiosity, learning, innovation, progress, and knowledge in all of its many forms.
Sometimes the results are for the betterment of the individual and society and sometimes the stories end on a sour, pessimistic, or bittersweet note. But the situations often involve a protagonist discovering a problem, a discrepancy in the usual flow, or just a simple idle question of what if something happens, why it happens, and how it could be changed. In a way the stories are the scientific method told in narrative form.
Full disclosure: Gomez's introduction reveals that the book was partially inspired by and with conversational assistance from an AI program. Yes, there are some serious real concerns about AI’s involvement in the arts. It's a controversial issue and it is disconcerting towards human writers, artists, musicians, and other creators over where it will lead.
These are not unreasonable concerns and I myself share them, especially the fear that one day I may not be able to tell the difference between a human and an AI author. I also share them even though I confess that I have used AI when it comes to writing unpublished fanfiction back stories and additional scenarios.
However, I will say that in this particular situation with this particular anthology and this particular theme, it kind of works. This is an anthology about innovation, invention, scientific curiosity, and fears and anxieties about technology and progress. It makes sense to use it to comment on, criticize, and at times satirize the tools that simultaneously move us forward but also hold us back.
The best stories are:
“Thermopylae Time”
Nathan Carey, a dying chronobiologist, is interested in how time moves differently for those who are at the point of death.
It's an interesting theory and Nathan asks some provocative questions. How can someone with a brain tumor feel like they have had an entire afternoon of thought and observations in only eleven minutes? Does time work differently when faced with one's own mortality? Is it different if the death is sudden (like in an accident or in wartime) or long-term (like after an illness)?
Nathan searches through case studies, historical accounts, and his own memory and observations to come up with his conclusions. The experiences themselves are very revealing.
A composer uses this expanded time to complete her magnum opus. King Leonidas foresaw his own death with his 300 man Spartan Army but still managed to put up a resolute force against Xerxes’ Persian Army.
Despite or because of their physical decline, they transcended their thoughts, emotions, and mindsets into the work that outlived them. Nathan is faced with that situation as well.
What will outlive him? What will his final moments be like? What will his legacy be? How will he face that uncertain time when he thinks in days,the clock on the wall shows only minutes, and his body stops for good? These are questions that haunt him as he reaches the end.
“Noise Floor”
The Narrator studies the behavior, thoughts, and emotions of a test subject to determine and evaluate his progress and potential life trajectory.
This story is dense in scientific terminology and analysis. It can be discombobulating for many readers, especially those who don't have a scientific background. However, what makes this narration work is that it is intentionally technical and mechanical.
The subheads such as “Threat Assessment,” “Approach Vector Selection” give the appearance that we are reading a peer reviewed article from an academic scientific journal. It gives the impression that the Narrator is clinical and almost robotic in studying their subject.
Also we don't learn either the Narrator or the Subject’s names (or even whether the Narrator is human or AI). This shows the detachment between researcher and subject. During most of the studies, the Subject could be a cell of clustered bacteria for all that their observer cares about.
However, there are times when emotions and human frailty are called into question. The subject acts in unpredictable ways. The researcher notices miscalculations in their analysis. They even start to express concern, confusion, and anxiety over his welfare. It seems that the one thing that the researcher could not account for was the human factor.
“In This One”
Erik, an actuary, discusses numbers and mathematical equations with his curious daughter, Sophie. She reminds him of his late mother, a math teacher.
This short story demonstrates that sometimes a child's best teacher can be found within their own family. Sophie asks her father plenty of questions about the thickness of pennies, breaths in a year, steps to the moon, or seconds she has been alive. Erik activates her curiosity by encouraging her to figure these problems out for herself.
Numbers become a shared language between the three generations. In his job, Erik has to itemize how much time one has left. A number which is a literal prediction of life and death is later reinterpreted as a game and communication source between father and daughter.
The presence of numbers also becomes a calming source in Erik’s life. After Sophie was born and had trouble breathing, Erik counted the seconds between the beeps on the heart monitor and her breathing.This moment let him hold onto something tangible and connected him to Sophie in infancy.
The numerical connection between Erik, Sophie, and Erik’s mother is manifested through imprinting and pattern recognition. Erik’s mother used her educational experience and mathematical studies to instill that numerical learning style in her son. He used his interest in quantifying risk and social situations into life assessments so Sophie could create an interest in problem solving and using math in everyday applications.
These three generations show how that passage of knowledge can change from academic book learning, to theoretical concepts, to practical applications, to everyday use.
“Proof of Work”
The Narrator tries to weigh their life in numbers while trying to find a way out of their pressing financial situation.
Like Erik and Sophie, The Narrator is obsessed with numbers. But where numbers were previously seen as a means of connection, shared language, and an important legacy passed from parent to child, in this story they have darker connotations of reduced status and systemic dehumanization.
The Narrator often thinks in terms of half-lives. The American Dream has a half-life which has met the sixty-hour mark. The dollar has a half-life as money is deposited, transferred, saved, and spent. The Narrator’s meds are half-used as they take them to cope with pain and anxiety.
The constant references to halves contain a feeling of ambivalence. There isn’t enough to feel completely negative about, but there isn’t enough to be hopeful about either. The halves minimize the Narrator into someone who can’t aspire for more because he is always waiting for the bottom to drop out. One can’t plan for the future if they can’t see or imagine anything differently.
The Narrator also uses the word “nonce,” often. A nonce is a number used once, has no value, and no identity. The Narrator sees the nonce everywhere but particularly in terms of money and finance. It’s highly significant that this story keeps going back to money and the impact that Bitcoins have on the financial sector.
Finance is one of the factors that determine status: how hard a person works, how they present themselves, how they face cost of living pressures, and how they can plan and determine their future. In the Narrator’s life, finance is another number that challenges their sense of self and dehumanizes not only them but all of society. They are simply reduced to a number, a nonce.
“All The Time There Was”
Curtis, a musician, and his former band mates are cursed after they play a strange musical composition.
This story recognizes the mathematical process that can be found in music by creating patterns, establishing a tonal rhythm, measuring a beat, and keeping time. In fact Curtis’ contribution as a bassist is to “keep good time and not get in the way.” He knows that even though he isn’t as flashy or innovative as a performer, he is an important member for being the steady rhythm for the others to stand out.
The conflict begins when Eric, the bass clarinetist, plays a section that is jagged, angular, out of place, and filled with deep emotion and unpredictability. The other musicians follow suit and play in a different manner than they are used to. The composition puts them into darker head spaces to keep up.
Curtis becomes a more creative player. He is able to hold down a root note that makes him stand out instead of fade into the background. He also experiences slower time feeling 45 minutes to an hour have gone by while the composition lasts only twelve minutes. This is similar to Nathan’s studies in “Thermopylae Time” with some slight differences.
While Nathan looked into the time expansion at the point of death, Curtis looked into it during a time of creation and birth. Instead of an awareness of the mind and body coming to a close, the band is awakened to a deeper energy and awareness.
A change occurs within the musicians in the decades afterwards. It veers the story into horror as each member suffers a traumatic fate. They engaged in musical careers before dying. It doesn’t say whether they were affected by the music though Curtis believes it to be so.
It’s worth noting that while a couple died at young ages, some of them lived to be older and had medical issues beforehand. In some cases correlation may not necessarily equal causation, but there could be something else at play.
Perhaps the price of reaching such creative heights where the music or art envelops you so much is that you will forever live outside of real time. Once you have seen boundless creative energy sources, it is impossible to return to the real world and known society. The band’s souls are captured within that composition.
It also explains why so many musicians and artists lived troubled lives and died young. They access an inner world that cannot exist through natural means. It has to be experienced fully through exploration and inspiration. The natural world seems slow and mundane to a creative brain that can no longer access or process it.
“The Marginalia of Brother Lukas”
In the Middle Ages, Brother Lukas, is ordered to remove some volumes from his collection. He weighs which books can be sacrificed.
This story is the best in the anthology even if it contains the loosest connection to the overall main theme. Unlike the others which put a scientific or mathematical concept at the forefront, this book celebrates the history of the act of passing knowledge itself.
Like other characters in this anthology, Brother Lukas decides to go through this tough book weeding scientifically and analytically. He researches each volume in terms of frequent use, number of copies, how long monks spent to work on it, and other factors to determine the book’s value and necessity to the collection.
While he loves each volume, he knows that some have to leave the safety and comfort of the library and be cast aside. Each must be evaluated for their contribution to the library as a whole, the monks reading it, and eventually the community in which that information will be shared.
Unfortunately, it can be difficult to separate the whole from the individual parts. Like many librarians, Brother Lukas loves his library as a complete collection. He gives it his own personal style and system. He gives the shelves names like Silence, Hunger, Breath, and Contrition offering some hints about the book’s contents and their usage.
He knows which books are favorites among the monks and which have never been opened or read. If someone requires a specific source of information, he knows which shelf that it sits on, what the book’s main topics and subjects are, and what page and line number the information is on.
Brother Lukas treats each volume like a beloved child to be cared for, protected, leant out into the world, and returned safe and sound where it belongs. That’s why this task is so difficult for him. He appreciates the library as a whole and treats breaking it up like breaking up a family. He understands not only the weight of the volume that contains the information but the work that went into creating them.
He also understands the labor that it took to create them. This is back when monks transcribed such works by hand and created beautiful illuminated pages. There were true works of art and some spent years even decades working on them. There also were very few copies so if Brother Lukas selects one to be removed, it doesn’t get rid of just the physical copy of the book but the information that it provides. Whatever those pages tell will be gone forever and never remembered because there wasn’t enough shelf space for them.
While other stories in this anthology touch on the process and results of what can be learned, this story honors the vessels in which that knowledge is contained. It demonstrates how important it is to hold onto it, when to decide to bring that knowledge out into the open, and what can be lost when that knowledge is forever silenced.
Echoes by Matthias Meinhardt
This review is also available on Reedsy Discovery.
Echoes is a powerful anthology that lives up to the title. It details the conflicts that echo throughout history between the individual and the society in which they live.
The settings are often fractured and the characters are given close views of the cracks and fissure. The main characters are often faced with moral, ethical, or legal challenges that define the world in which they live and their own placement within it.
“The Law Ur, 2080 BCE”
Akkadu, a potter, and other people are affected by the laws and rampant bureaucracy that surrounds them.
Akkadu becomes an eyewitness to various trials. A woman is found guilty of adultery and sentenced to death. He is ordered to pay a fine for knocking over a priest's offering table. To settle a dispute, two men are ordered to be servants to each other.
These situations recognize the order and system which exists in Ur. It's a system that creates rules, laws, and standards and punishments when those standards are violated. Like the ziggurats that surround the city, the laws are the structure of their civilization. However, it's a very flawed structure.
As many know, laws can be standard (Don't steal. Don't murder etc ), but they are subjected to interpretation by those who wield them. The interpretations often are skewed in favor of the interpreter and are not as fair or as equal as they should be.
The woman is charged in a male dominated society and is subjected to a harsher penalty than the man that she had the affair with. Even when her husband wants to forgive her, the judges are adamant.
Akkadu is also marginalized because of his economic status. A priest has more value than a potter so he has to pay more money than expected. The two men are given an arbitrary sentence that is decided on paper instead of the judge treating it as a different unique case that requires a different answer.
The laws favor the wealthy, male, and entitled. Everyone else is forced to accept it as part of the community’s social contract. As long as they are part of the community, they have to resign to the laws.
Akkadu fears the price of rejection would be isolation. He has chosen the community over the individual.
“The Empire Rome, 130 AD”
During the Roman Empire, a prideful senator holds onto the delusion that the Empire will last as he is challenged by Belial, a mysterious man who knows about empires falling.
The two men differ in their views of history and the longevity of a power structure. The senator is in an elevated position in a society that considers itself the corner of the so-called civilized world. He sees the infrastructure, the military regiments, and the conquests of various countries.
He is convinced that the Empire is too big to fail. He is guilty of hubris, pride in his city. His pride blinds him to the approaching enemies surrounding him. The Senator encapsulates the arrogance surrounding a society that believed that it was infallible and impenetrable.
Belial offers an alternative viewpoint. There are implications that he is immortal, or has been reincarnated. At the very least, he is very old and learned. He knows that other empires rose and fell like the Assyrians and the Greeks.
Like Rome, they believed that they were indestructible. Like Rome will be, they eventually ended by natural disasters, conquering armies, or were defeated from within.
The Senator sees eternity but Belial sees an inevitable end. The Senator shows that Roman arrogance was its own undoing. They believed that its enormous size, tight structure, vast citizenship and regimented military would protect it.
They ignored the gathering armies at the door, the dissatisfaction from the people especially those far from the central power seat, the economic disparity, the increase in corruption, decline in values, and the changing standards until it was too late. Like those before and since, Rome fell.
It's very easy to read this short story and compare it to subsequent governments, empires, and countries trapped by their own egocentric narrative. It's a warning that the moment that the leaders believe that their society could last forever is often the moment that collapse begins.
A society that is too large and too arrogant to care about the people within it should not be surprised when people seek to challenge, change, or destroy it.
“The Printer Lubeck,1543”
Hans Keller, a printer, and his customers welcome the change that the Protestant Reformation brings, unaware of the huge consequences that will befall them.
Instead of characters that respect the status quo like in “The Law” and “The Emperor,” the next two stories feature characters that rebelled and changed things, but still found their upended world worked against them.
This story is set after Martin Luther nails his anti-Catholic thesis that led to the creation of the Protestant religion. Hans and the others see a new way of thinking that dismantles or changes the infallibility of priests, the offering of indulgences, the requirement of confessions, and other concerns that many had with Catholicism.
They see a way of thinking that concentrates more on a personal relationship with the spirit than requiring an intermediary. They seek a religious path that encourages individual experiences rather than organized ritual.
For people like Hans’ friends, Katharina and Samuel, individual experiences are important. Katharina wants the Protestant Reformation to focus on women's roles in the church instead of being viewed as bearers of sin.
Samuel, a Jewish man, believes that his people will no longer be seen as an enemy and will gain acceptance in a world free of priests. They feel that they are finally given voices and representation.
Unfortunately, they find a system that is as corrupt and authoritarian as the one they left behind. Katharina finds that she is still suppressed in a male dominated society. Samuel finds that Protestant fanaticism has led many to attack him and his synagogue.
The system that they thought would be different is now proven to be more of the same with slightly different means of prayer as a way to distinguish the two. They got rid of one authoritarian church for another.
Hans also has to bear responsibility in his role in spreading Protestant propaganda. He was commissioned to print pamphlets decrying Jews and women, words that he knew weren't true but published them anyway.
His hands created the copies that spread hatred, suspicion, and individual action that led to violence, witch trials, pogroms, and death.
“The Executioner Paris 1793”
Etienne, an executioner, is challenged by Louise, an outspoken prisoner, about his loyalties and allegiances during the Reign of Terror.
This story takes an opposite approach to “The Printer.” Instead of surrendering one system for another that brings a more rigid and structured order, this story features characters surrendering one system for another that creates more chaos.
Etienne and Louise represent different perspectives of France after the Revolution. Both were probably rebels against the monarchy or at least recognized the flaws in a system that favors the wealthy elite over the people and promoted the divine right of kings. They recognized the flaws in the system and hoped to change it through ideals, revolution, and actions.
They differ in where the Revolution has gone. Louise recognizes the evil that is inherent when the revolutionaries ignores their former values in the name of escalating violence.
She sees the tyranny that comes when mob rule stands in the way of justice. Rampant emotion rules instead of reason. When those who were once oppressed become the oppressors.
Louise wasn't afraid to fight for her values before and isn't afraid to fight now. She acts as Etienne’s conscience by questioning his actions and wondering if he is serving a darker master than the one who left.
Etienne is steeped in the blood of Revolution and now in the blood of Reign of Terror. He tries to justify it the way others do when faced with an authoritarian system that they helped create. “(He) is just following orders.” “(He) isn't the one making the rules.” “They will come after (him) if (he) refuses.”
Most importantly, he refuses to see the flaws in the system because he is on the same side. He can't recognize the evil outside because he doesn't want to recognize the evil that exists within himself.
Etienne shows what happens when a political following takes the place of morals, ethics, self-respect, and individual responsibility. The State becomes Etienne's reason for being and even if he recognizes the cracks, he won't acknowledge them.
Acknowledging that the system is wrong would make him admit that he was wrong in supporting how far it has gone. Etienne would rather behead hundreds and take his own life instead of acknowledging that he willingly let tyrants through the door and continues to hold it open for them.
“The Movie Star Berlin 1926”
Clara Bode, an American actress accepts a role from German director Felix Keller during the Weimar Republic as hints of Fascism cloud the horizon.
The previous four stories show how society affects the individual by forcing conformity or by rebelling but finding tyranny in the remaining ashes. This and the next story show how individuals are shaped by the society around them. They weren't a part of making, upholding, reporting, or blindly following the system. They just survive within it.
This story is more subtle in depicting the Weimar Republic and Hollywood through Clara’s eyes. She recognizes the illusion in filmmaking. She knows that in American cinema, she is mostly admired for her looks. In the era of silent films, she doesn't have to say anything.
She just has to look good and represent the free spirited bubbly flapper. She represents the shallow excess of the Jazz Age of living fast, opulent, and wild without weighing the consequences.
In Germany, she sees directors and filmmakers treat cinema like an art form. Felix encourages her to use her face and expressions to act and uses lighting, set design, writing, and other components to create a new artistic medium.
Unlike the US which treats film like a business and uses the face to bring more filmgoers, Germany treats cinema as a form of expression and uses the parts to tell a visual story.
The turn that German history takes is not outright revealed but there are hints of Nazism in reference to violent groups, disgust with the ineffective Republic, and anger at the economic downturn. Some have even said that the darkness found in German Expressionism foreshadowed the rise in Nazism.
These films depicted human psychology, rage at the System, and acceptance of the existence of evil and insanity. This is what Felix directs and Clara portrays but it is also what they will live in less than ten years.
“The Fixer Athens 1961”
Eleni plays multiple sides as an agent, informant, and courier during the Cold War leaving allies and enemies in constant states of confusion.
Like Clara before her, Eleni is affected by her society. She doesn't need a pretty face or acting talent to survive the system, she just needs to survive.
Eleni lives in Greece which is a center for Cold War intrigue. It is right where the East and West collided so there were many people who represent one side, both, or neither.
Agents can pass messages then return to sympathetic countries for shelter. This is a world of strict “if you're not with us, you're against us” mentality. They separate the world into good guys and bad guys so someone like Eleni is a threat to that shallow outlook.
Eleni stands on the outside of both governments. She does not support the Soviet Union nor the United States’ allies and instead uses them both for financial gain and to stay alive. She has no loyalties. Her only allegiance is to herself and this single mindedness threatens loyal agents on either side.
It's no coincidence that this is the last story in the anthology. We have seen people questioning, fighting against, defending, and living in various systems.
Eleni is someone who is outside of those societies. Her country begins and ends with her body and mind. She has her own code and is answerable only to herself. She is the individual with no society of her own.
Tom Ryan's Shoes: Legend of The Banshee's Castle by T.A. Keenan
This review is also on Reedsy Discovery.
T.A. Keenan’s Tom Ryan's Shoes: Legend of The Banshee Castle is a gentle slice of life, a dramatic account of life at the beginning of the Irish Potato Famine, and an engaging folktale involving witches, curses, and finding true love. Most importantly, it is a masterful example of storytelling by Keenan writing the book the way someone would verbally relate their family history.
In 1933, brother and sister, Tommy and Molly find a steamer trunk full of papers that belonged to their mother, Lizzie. Most of them consist of Lizzie's handwritten accounts of their family history, stories that she told her children out loud. Molly’s thoughts wander to a specific story that Lizzie told in 1897.
Lizzie's story focuses on her father, Tommy and Molly's grandfather, Tom Ryan in 1846 during the Potato Famine. After being rejected by his girlfriend’s parents, Tom goes to work on his family farm, mostly walking the family pig to market. Along the way, he is accompanied by his cousin, Frank. During this day, the cousins encounter various people and situations.
The most fascinating person that the Ryan Cousins meet is the Bean Feasa or the Hag, a woman of knowledge, witch, healer, and midwife who crosses their path many times. As they are going about their business, she is going about hers blessing or cursing various people and requesting that they leave specific offerings as a reward, bribe, or a peace offering.
The story of the Ryan Cousins and the Bean Feasa conveys various situations that run the gamut from commonplace, humorous, romantic, tragic, disturbing, eerie, bizarre, uncanny, and magical. Keenan weaves the ordinary and mundane with the ethereal and otherworldly rather well. He depicts the voice of Ireland in a specific point and time by interacting the natural physical world with the unseen and invisible world.
Keenan captures the Irish milieu well by making each character unique. We see the peaceful farmlands, rolling hills, the recognizable accents and colloquialisms. Above all, there are the quirky characters.
There is a crotchety taciturn neighbor who makes his opinions about everything known. A couple carry on an extramarital affair under the clueless husband's nose.There is a snobbish nun who can't believe that she is stuck in this backwater area. She is from France for crying out loud! Trouble making twins plan bullying shenanigans for the lulz.There is a lot of humor and charm in these looks at everyday life.
However this is not a book about fluffy nostalgia with only a postcard look at rural Ireland. All of the charm and humor is used as a front for the darker edges that appear because of the trying times of English oppression, crippling famine, and religious dominance. Sometimes the humorous moments are intertwined with the tragic.
Tom and Frank see the various struggles that their friends, neighbors, and others are going through. Many characters are facing unemployment, starvation, and are considering leaving Ireland forever. While alcoholism is prevalent throughout, the historical context suggests that it is used for people to sedate their troubles away when they can't move up, out, or forward.
There is an ongoing English presence of upper class land owners who look down on the locals with disdain and ownership that they can do whatever they want to these people and face no repercussions (at least until 1916 but that's another story entirely).
The cousins see lads and lasses kept from each other by income, religion, or their own personalities perhaps in desperate attempts to either move up a social status that doesn't include hunger and poverty or to hold onto a family legacy and culture before it's forced into extinction.
A Magdalene Laundry is an important scene as we encounter young unwed isolated expectant mothers. A pharmacist sells abortifacients and other medicines on the side for those who don't want to bring children into such an uncertain world. A single mother is resorted to begging for food with her children.
By far one of the most heartbreaking moments occurs when Tom and Frank see the bodies of an elderly couple floating down the river. It is implied that they committed suicide. Besides this image, the most disturbing aspect is the indifference displayed from Tom, Frank, and everyone else.
Aside from the usual duties that come with fishing the corpses and planning for the burial, there's no grief, no mourning, no investigation. Just talk about whether the burial will be a church burial. It's a weariness that accepts that things are bad and are only going to get worse.
Thankfully the darkness is only a part of the story and is tempered by the quirky charm mentioned earlier and the fantastic aspects. There is talk about ghosts and spirits in the atmosphere. A little man appears in various pages and dispenses uncanny advice and might be a leprechaun. A beautiful woman is compared to a leannain sidhe, a beautiful fairy that takes a human lover. There are references to a castle that might be haunted by the banshee, the wailing female spirits that predict the death.
By far the most enchanting character of the story is the Bean Feasa. She is able to see what people are really worth, recognizing their virtues and vices by sight and a few words of dialogue. She knows secrets that many hypocritical authority figures hide and calls them out on their promiscuity, crimes, corruption, and abuse of power.
She acts as the words of vengeance, perhaps the voice of a people who have had enough. She curses them then offers to remove them in exchange for food and other items. She uses her own fierce reputation as leverage.
However, the Bean Feasa is not unkind. She also rewards good behavior and foreseeable fortune such as when she tells Tom that he will find true love. As before, she does this in exchange for food and other goods. While they probably are for her (even witches have to eat after all), we learn that there are more heartwarming reasons. They reveal that this stern, baffling, eccentric crone is probably the most moral ethical character in the entire cast and the real heart of the book.
This book uses the power of Lizzie’s storytelling to ensure that these people, their real world, their legends, their world will never be gone. Not as long as there is another generation to hear and read it.
Whispers of Blue Ridge by Nina Purtee
This is a summary. The whole review is on Reader's Views
Nina Purtee’s novel Whispers of Blue Ridge has a beautiful rural Southern small town setting. It has a charming romance between a couple that goes from meet cute and flirtation, to making love, to making long term plans, to potential soulmates. It's a nice trajectory but underneath all of the light surface sweetness, there is a dark undercurrent of actions that are results of secrets, affairs, the failures of maintaining perfection, and death.
Vintner Savannah Gray runs Graystone Winery in Blue Ridge, Georgia after the deaths of her parents and grandmother. The upcoming wine tasting festival is an important event and coincides with the arrival of rodeo champion Jake Rollins who is looking for sponsorship from Graystone. Jake’s arrival opens family rivalries and long buried secrets that resulted in a serious car accident that took lives and left many physically and emotionally destroyed. The memories force Jake, Savannah, and other characters to come to terms with the revelations that could change their lives forever.
Jake and Savannah are a fairly decent couple. Savannah struggles to hold onto her family business and care for her aging grandfather. She also has her own personal goals that put her in conflict with her family responsibilities. She is torn between her loyalty to her family and pursuing her own happiness.
Jake fits the rugged outdoorsy cowboy and love interest without much depth beyond that type of character. He doesn't come into his own until he reveals that he was involved in the accident that left him scarred, traumatized, and amnesiac.
The accident forces the characters to come to terms with the difference between the reality and the image that they tried to convey. The setting of Blue Ridge is one of those idyllic small towns that live off of maintaining an image of beauty and perfection. . It is a small town where status quo must be maintained at all costs and serious issues are brushed aside unless forced to face them.
When the true events that led to the accident and the subsequent aftermath are revealed, the characters have to weigh the consequences of earlier lies and secrets. Jake, Savannah, and the others have to confront the truth of what happened and how the subsequent years of artifice, pretense, and maintaining a perfect idyllic facade contributed to this catastrophe.
June-July Reading List
Echoes by Matthias Meinhardt
Noise Floor by Camillo Gomez
Spies Among Us (An Alex Boyd Thriller) by Mel Harrison*
Flamingo Express (A Nick and Norm Gay Detective Series) by Kenneth D. Michaels*
Where The Sweet Vines Grow by Sadie Sloan
The Warrior Strong Manifesto: The Path to Power Based on The Ancient Shamanic Strategy of Life Energy Conservation by Karen Bentley
Illusion of Time by Omar Hamoud
A Maid for Murder (The Sinclair Mysteries) by Bethany Swafford
Made in Blood by Alex Redford
Saffron by Justin Hughes
What The Mirrors Knew by Linda Annas Ferguson*
The Dark Side of Dreams by Marjorie Kay Noble*
I'm Glad My Mom Died by Jeannette McCurdy
The Midnight Library by Matthew Haig
Red Mars (The Mars Trilogy Book 1) by Kim Stanley Robinson
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*These are books reviewed for LitPick or Reader's Views and will only feature a summary and a few paragraphs with links to the full reviews on their sites. Some may not be featured at all.
**Exceptions are books provided by Henry Roi PR, LitPick, Reedsy Discovery, Hidden Gems, Reader's Views, and DP Books. Payments of short Nonfiction reviews are already facilitated through Real Book Review, Amazon Book Groups, Michael Cheng, Five Stars Books, Eureka Publishing, Vanguard Publishing, and Book Square Publishing.
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Well that's it. Thanks and as always, Happy Reading.
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