The Tzer Island book blog features book reviews written by TChris, the blog's founder.  I hope the blog will help readers discover good books and avoid bad books.  I am a reader, not a book publicist.  This blog does not exist to promote particular books, authors, or publishers.  I therefore do not participate in "virtual book tours" or conduct author interviews.  You will find no contests or giveaways here.

The blog's nonexclusive focus is on literary/mainstream fiction, thriller/crime/spy novels, and science fiction.  While the reviews cover books old and new, in and out of print, the blog does try to direct attention to books that have been recently published.  Reviews of new (or newly reprinted) books generally appear every Monday, Wednesday, and Friday.  Reviews of older books appear on occasional weekends.  Readers are invited and encouraged to comment.  See About Tzer Island for more information about this blog, its categorization of reviews, and its rating system.

Entries in Benjamin Percy (2)

Wednesday
Jun092021

The Ninth Metal by Benjamin Percy

Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt on June 1, 2021

The Ninth Metal reminded me of the television show Jessica Jones (a show that, like many others, I discovered after Jack Taylor praised it in a Ken Bruen novel). The premise, drawn from a Marvel comic book, is that people have suddenly acquired superhuman abilities. The show succeeds because of the characters’ differing reactions to their unexpected (and sometimes unwanted) powers. Benjamin Percy writes in a note at the end of the novel that he grew up reading comic books, as did I. He apparently intended The Ninth Metal as, in some sense, a tribute to the comic book sensibility. If so, the tribute only partially succeeds, in part because he gives too little attention to the things that matter.

The novel imagines that meteors trailing a comet landed on various parts of the Earth as the planet passed through the comet’s orbit. The meteors change people in different ways — in one part of the world, it turns them into glass, while there are rumors of people flying in another country — but most of those changes are only referenced tangentially. The Ninth Metal is apparently the first book in a series. I imagine that other books will explore other results of the comet’s intersection with Earth. There is a suggestion, mostly in dreams that characters have about tentacles, that the comet might be related to aliens.

Some of the meteors fell in Northfall, Minnesota on land owned by Betsy Gunderson. A kid named Hawkin, whose father has just been killed for reasons Hawkin doesn’t understand, survives the comet strike. Five years later, Hawkin is being held captive in a military facility so that a scientist named Victoria Lennon can study him. Victoria shoots bullets at Hawkin to analyze their negligible effect on him. Victoria has some sympathy for Hawkin but keeps doing her job because she fears that others would be more aggressive in their attempt to kill him. It takes some time before she understands that Hawkin is absorbing the energy from the bullets and that the buildup of absorbed energy is something he will need to unleash.

While Victoria is studying Hawkin, John Frontier returns to Northfall for a family wedding. John’s father owns Frontier Mining, a company that competes with Black Dog Energy. John and Hawkin are a lot alike, although John is concealing his power. John’s crazy sister Talia is at odds with her father, who vowed never to help the military. Talia cares about money more than she cares about her father and is happy to do a deal with the military.

Talia commits a murder that adds nothing to a story that scatters in too many directions to remain cohesive. The portions of the novel that follow a police officer’s search for the missing murder victim, aided by her father, seems divorced from the more consequential story that Percy leaves buried.

Most people in Northfall own land on which the meteors fell, leaving behind deposits of “omnimetal.” Landowners made themselves rich by selling their land to Black Dog or Frontier, but Betsy — whose 400 acres has the mother lode of omnimetal — refuses to sell. The meteors altered her land (a rock formation appeared that resembles a crown) and Betsy is regarded as a priestess by pilgrims who view her land as a religious site. Her followers are largely addicts who snort or smoke omnimetal. They’re called “metal eaters” and they like to use the slogan “Metal Is,” which apparently means something to them. All of that is interesting, but Percy fails to develop that aspect of the plot in enough depth to make a story out of it.

The Northern Minnesota that Percy constructs is more intriguing than the superpowers or the murder that get the bulk of his attention. The “omnimetal” absorbs and releases energy in a way that allows a train fashioned from the metal to generate its own power as it moves along the omnimetal tracks. Omnimetal promises to be “the greatest energy source in the world” and has attracted people to Minnesota in the way that the Gold Rush attracted people to California. The impact of a revolutionary change in energy production is worth exploring in some detail, but Percy ignores that story in favor of developing the rivalry between Frontier and Black Dog. In the real world, a much larger company would swoop down and claim all the ore with the government’s national security blessing, concentrating the wealth in the hands of large corporations rather than owners of local mining companies, but that’s another issue that Percy chose not to address.

The story eventually devolves into a battle between a superhero and a supervillain. The villain’s superpower comes from a high tech “wizard sword” fashioned from omnimetal. That part of the story intentionally mimics epic comic book battles, Hawkin having been shaped by all the Batman comics he has read. While Hawkin explains how Batman’s villains represent the dark side of Bruce Wayne’s personality, the clash contains none of the subtlety that Hawkin found in the accumulated Batman stories.

The Ninth Metal is too ambitious for its own good. Unnecessary subplots and tangents prevent a meaningful story from taking root. The stories of Hawkin and John are underdeveloped, as is the background of omnimetal’s impact on, not just their lives, but the entire world. I appreciated Percy’s clear prose and his love of comic books, but a novel should do more with a story than a 32-page comic can manage. The Ninth Metal does too little by trying to do too much. It barely scratches the surface of the story that Percy apparently meant to tell.

RECOMMENDED WITH RESERVATIONS

Wednesday
Jun032015

The Dead Lands by Benjamin Percy

Published by Grand Central Publishing on April 14, 2015

In style and content, The Dead Lands strikes me as something Robert Jackson Bennett might have written. It is a mixture of science fiction and fantasy and steampunk and horror. It combines action and philosophy. It gives attention to character development without sacrificing plot. The prose reaches a level that is a notch or two above typical genre fiction. While the novel is not quite up to Bennett's level, it is considerably better than most of the abysmal writing that characterizes the current craze of post-apocalyptic fiction.

The world has changed since a pandemic combined with nuclear meltdowns to wipe out pretty much everyone before producing mutated species. The Mississippi riverbed is dry. Spiders and bats are even creepier than they used to be. The last human survivors (or so they believe) live in the Sanctuary, formerly known as St. Louis. It is an ordered society, with laws and farms and hospitals. Ordered but despotic; the mayor has made it a capital offense to criticize the mayor. Outside the walls, in the Dead Lands, there are only nightmares. Simon, a young thief who lives in the streets, watches as his father is marched beyond the walls and chained to a stone altar. Simon knows how to leave the walls but he is too late to save his father from the creatures that live in the woods.

In addition to Simon, the residents of the Sanctuary we meet include Lewis Meriwether, a cranky old guy who curates a museum and keeps track of other people's business with his mechanical owl. Mina Clark is among the few residents who thinks it would be better to die free, beyond the walls, than to die in service of the Sanctuary (although voicing that opinion would be to invite chaining to the altar). Her half-brother York is a juggler. When a little girl named Gawea rides up to the gate on a horse, the residents of Sanctuary know they are not alone.

Mysteriously, Gawea is bearing a letter for Lewis, telling him that he is not the only gifted person in the world. His gift is a form of telekinesis. Gawea's power has something to do with the birds and the bees, but not in a romantic sense. Anyway, Lewis and Clark go on a journey across America, chased by a man named Colter, heading toward a man named Aran Burr. Lewis leaves behind a teenage girl named Ella, charging her with taking care of the museum, one of many subversive tasks she undertakes with Simon's help.

Stories within stories unfold as Lewis and Clark make their journey -- their own stories, those of people they meet, and those of the people left behind in Sanctuary. Stories of adventure, enslavement, and survival. Humans are capable of wonderful things, Lewis opines, but more often they excel at ruin. The reader encounters plenty of that in The Dead Lands. Still, the story conveys a message of hope.

The underlying basis for all of this (the pandemic and the effects of untended nuclear plants) is explained only in a cursory fashion, which might be the novel's biggest fault. The cause of the apocalypse and the mutations are not very convincing, but that's common in post-apocalyptic fiction. At least, to my great relief, there are no zombies in this world.

The novel is self-contained but revelations at the end imply that further adventures are forthcoming. I suspect they will be worth reading. The Dead Lands will probably be too slow for readers addicted to zombie fiction, but readers who appreciate literary value should give it a try.

RECOMMENDED