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Book Review: The Mind Altar: A Novel of Subterranean Terror by Michael Just

 

The Mind Altar: A Novel of Subterranean Terror by Michael Just

Giddings Street Press, 2018

ISBN 13:9781530441297

Available: Paperback, Kindle edition

 

The Mind Altar: A Novel of Subterranean Terror by Michael Just is head and shoulders above most novels in the science fiction, horror and mystery genres. The author describes scenes in just the right amount of detail to place the reader within the story.  He reveals the personalities and motives of the characters gradually, keeping the reader engaged.  His plot has twists and turns that keep the reader continually guessing about the story’s outcome.  The ending is no less complicated and intriguing, seemingly doubling back on itself three times.

Taking place in the near future, the U.S. government sends a team of black-ops mercenaries to the desert in the Four Corners region of the country.  Communications with a secret facility buried in a mountain, called Bright Angel, went dead a few weeks earlier.  Each of the seven-team members has a special skill, and knows only part of their mission.  Our protagonist, Eurydice Wiles, is an expert in resurrecting programs and data from crashed computers.  She is buttoned up, avoids emotional contact and has no memories from the age of seven to eight.

As Eury and her teammates explore the myriad of Bright Angel’s rooms and caverns, they discover hollowed-out, plasticized bodies with no heads, preserved brains cut in-half, and dozens of crisp, burned bodies.  All computer hard drives have been smashed.  Eury intuits that the entire tunneled mountain is a computer and that ghostly visions and voices are part of its programs.  Did the staff and inmates go mad and kill each other?  One-by-one the team members are dying.  What will Eury and the other survivors find when they get to the Mind Altar at the heart of the mountain? Highly recommended.

Contains: Mild sexual situations, moderate gore.

 

Reviewed by Robert D. Yee

Book Review: Faction 9: A Novel of Revolution by James Firelocke

Faction 9: A Novel of Revolution by James Firelocke

James Firelocke, 2018

ISBN-13: 978-0999568293

Available: Paperback, Kindle edition.

 

 

On the surface, it seems like a great plot.  The future United States still operates under our current political system, but has been fully hijacked by evil capitalistic pig warmongers who have made serfs (or slaves) out of most of the population.  Small groups called ‘factions’ are fighting back behind the scenes, trying to take America back for the people, and stopping the enslavement of the population.  If the idea had stopped there and been better written, this could have been a good book.  However, Faction 9 makes for a lackluster reading experience.  The plot is part of the problem: it is cluttered with unneccessary and distracting ideas, such as alien metallic insects and humans with feline DNA. These add nothing to the basic premise, and strain the story’s credibility.It will appeal to a select crowd, but would have been better suited to a comic book or graphic novel format.

The use of elaborate language and cartoonish portrayals of the characters also detract from the story.  One notable example of the language problem is saying that a character ‘strained to achieve colonic climax’ when sitting on the toilet. Character development is minimal at best, and cartoonish in the case of the villains.  The author throws in every cliché when describing the money-loving evildoers.  Gold toilets, eating only steak and lobster, toilet paper with the Constitution printed on it, seeing every female as a sexual target, all people are their slaves, money is God…you get the idea.  You can’t even hate the villains in this: they are so laughable you don’t feel any emotion about them.  The protagonists aren’t much better. There is little backstory on how they became revolutionaries fighting for the people, and you wind up not caring what happens to them.

The author does have skill, but it only comes in flashes.  The time spent describing the foolishness of government hurdles when trying to do something as simple as changing a computer password was excellent, and his description of prisons in the future showed good imagination.  But, those moments were too few, and it’s not enough to save the story. While most readers won’t want to slog through this, the book could find a place among YA readers, or people looking for any story that involves despising conservatives, in terms of politics. It will appeal to a select crowd, but would have been better suited to a comic book or graphic novel format.

 

Contains: mild violence and profanity

Reviewed by Murray Samuelson

 

Book Review: Illuminae (The Illuminae Files: 01) by Amie Kaufman and Jay Kristoff

Illuminae (The Illuminae Files: 01) by Amie Kaufman and Jay Kristoff

Knopf Books for Young Readers, 2015

ISBN-13: 978-0553499117

Available: Hardcover, paperback, Kindle edition, audiobook, audio CD

 

Ezra thought his day had started out badly when his hacker girlfriend Kady dumped him,  but then invading warships from a competing megacorporation destroyed his home, an illegal mining colony on Kerenza IV. Two science ships, the Hypatia and the Copernicus, survived to take on refugees, as did a single warship that happened to be within distance of Kerenza’s SOS, the Alexander.  The Alexander managed to destroy three of the four attacking ships and severely wound the fourth– the ships escaped but were all badly damaged, and are now on the run from the remaining warship, the Lincoln. 

Trapped on separate ships, Ezra and Kady must find a way back to working together and trusting each other as they navigate around fellow colonists who have been infected by a bioweapon that turns them into violent, paranoid cannibals; collaborate with a paranoid AI too damaged to fight off a warship without help; convince station management that they are on the right track; and somehow, save each other and as many other colonists as they can.

The first half of the book feels like miltary science fiction, with some teenage angst in the mix, and an ever-increasing sense of dread… in the second half, the AI, resurrected after it was significantly damaged and deemed dangerous, takes over a chunk of the narrative, and it is terrifying.

The story is not a traditional narrative. Much of it is told through secret IM’s, letters, transcripts of recordings, emails, and company documents. It’s framed as the evidence supporting the secret attack on Kerenza IV, presented to the United Terran Authority by a mystery organization called the Illuminae, incriminating the company responsible.  There are also pages devoted to the thoughts of the AI, who seems to become more reflective as the story continues and it develops a relationship with Kady. The design of the book is incredible. It is worth picking up just to see how the words, illustrations, maps, diagrams, code, and backgrounds fit together. Pages look like you would expect them to if you were actually reading someone’s emails and documents, and pieces of the story that take place outside the ships are designed to tell the story not just in words but visually and actively through what I would describe as word paintings. There are even “countdown” pages that tell you how much time has passed and how much there is left before the Lincoln reaches the Alexander and attacks, creating a strong sense of urgency.

As long as it is, and as oddly as the narrative turns from the story focused mainly on Ezra and Kady and the human side of grief and disaster to Kady’s attempts to convert the paranoid AI from a course of violence against the people remaining in the fleet to using its power to save them from the Lincoln, this is a book I couldn’t put down. The emotions are intense, the settings are vivid, the terrors feel absolutely real. Although I found this in a middle school library, it certainly isn’t limited to the enjoyment of that audience– older teens and adults can also enjoy this book. Highly recommended.