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Duffbert's Random Musings is a weblog semi/sorta related to IBM/Lotus Notes & Domino software, but I don't let that be a limiting criteria. I'm Thomas Duff, and you can find out more about me here...

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12/29/2008

Book Review - Vengeance by A.J. Scudiere

Category Book Review A.J. Scudiere Vengeance
A picture named M2

Vengeance by A.J. Scudiere was one of two books I got from Scudiere's publisher for review.  I read Resonance first, and really enjoyed it.  I had saved Vengeance for last because it was written after Resonance and I didn't know if it was a follow-up with the same characters.  I quickly found out...  it's not.  It's *completely* different, and *really* good.  I had a harder time putting this one down than the first.  I'd have been perfectly happy had it gone even longer than its 400 pages.

Lee Maxwell was an accountant with a nice happy family.  That is, until he discovered that he was working for a business run by the mafia.  His attempt to contact the authorities and leave his job only led to the gruesome death of his wife and daughter.  He went off the grid, buried his identity, and started working on getting revenge for the killings.  During one of his operations, he runs into another killer, "Sin", who is young, female, dressed in leather, and an expert in knives and slow, painful deaths.  It quickly becomes obvious that they have the same purpose in life...  revenge on the mafia and other assorted lowlifes who need to be stopped one way or another.  Owen Dunham, the FBI agent on the case, has to figure out who the "Grudge Ninja" is, and why "he" is killing all these people.  But should the truth be known, he'd rather allow the killings to continue, as it's a swift and deadly form of frontier justice.  Lee and Sin have to come to some sort of arrangement in order to stay out of each other's way and maximize their efforts.  Why should they both spend time researching the same target, only to find out the other one got there first for the kill?  But Sin has her own dark history that drives her revenge, and opening up to another person is not something she's able to do.  The revenge killings reach a crescendo as the FBI starts to get their first real evidence left behind at the scene.  The question becomes whether Lee and Sin will finish their list before the FBI (or the mafia) gets to them first...

The story starts out from three very different perspectives, that of Sin, Lee, and Owen.  And it's not clear at first why Lee is gunning down scum, and why Sin is leaving dead bodies with multiple cuts and slices, complete with crime documentation, all wrapped up (literally) in a big red bow.  Dunham has his own issues, as he really wants to get out of the business and take time to enjoy his wife and daughter before she tires of his demanding job and leaves him.  But once Sin and Lee start to confront each other, the story and characters really start to jell.  Neither of them want to trust each other, but neither of them wants to eliminate the other, either.  This tentative truce gives way to the beginning of trust, all to seek vengeance against those who have destroyed their lives.  I was also quite satisfied with the ending, as I wasn't looking forward to how I *though* it was going to conclude.  

Very dark, plenty of action, and character interaction that was stellar...  An excellent read.

12/26/2008

Book Review - Resonance by A.J. Scudiere

Category Book Review A.J. Scudiere Resonance
A picture named M2

So the earth has shifted its magnetic poles every 60 million years (give or take a century or two).  It's been 65 million years since the last one.  What will be the signs that another shift is imminent?  That's the ground that A.J. Scudiere covers in the sci-fi novel Resonance.  It's a novel that grabbed my interest early and had me doing the "just one more chapter" routine for a few days.  

David Carter is a geologist who runs by his own rules.  He is handed some rock samples that are from a dinosaur dig, but they appear to be mismarked based on what he knows about the area.  When he finds that they really are correctly marked, it means that he's in a localized spot where the north/south polarity has been reversed.  And he thinks he knows where some other hotspots have occurred, but ignored as they didn't fit the expected patterns.

Becky Sorenson is a scientist at a biodiversity lab, and she's found a location by her home where many of the frogs have six legs.  After further study, they also have a strange tendency to remain aligned on a magnetic path, much like a compass.  She's trying to figure out if this is due to some industrial contamination or perhaps something even more disturbing.

Finally, we have two doctors who have just gone to work for the CDC...  Jordan Abellard and Jillian Brookwood.  As a team, they've been sent out to investigate a series of deaths that are localized to one specific adult care home.  Nothing seems to tie the cases together from a medical standpoint, other than they all wind up dead in a very short period of time after the onset of symptoms.  When the same type of outbreak starts occurring in other areas, Abellard and Brookwood know they are on the edge of something that could be even more deadly than AIDS or avian flu.  But they aren't getting any closer to finding the answers they need.

Scudiere takes these three plotlines and brings the characters together in a way that allows each of their fields of expertise to contribute to solving the puzzle.  When it becomes obvious that each of these locations involves a complete reversal in magnetic polarity, the action picks up in intensity, as the magnetic hotspots are growing at an ever-increasing rate.  The last 200 pages or so of the story take a completely unexpected twist that took awhile to understand.  But in terms of science fiction, I thought it worked pretty well.  Scudiere also does a very nice job with the characters, in terms of making them appear to be real people with real emotions.  Considering the book is nearly 500 pages, the pacing maintains itself well, and I never felt the urge to shift into "scan mode" to get past any slow spots.  

Scudiere definitely goes on my "would read this author again" list.  Which is good, because I'm currently reading Vengeance by the same author right now.  :)