Tag: technology

  • Review: The Platinum Receiver

    Review: The Platinum Receiver

    Kyle Robertson, The Platinum Receiver (‎PIMI eBooks, 2017)

    https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/36290808-the-platinum-retriever

    Orphaned before his parents even had a chance to give him a name, Daedalus Platinum is a Retriever, chasing the deadbeat parents of the world. Parents should be obligated, he believes, and when he finds them he makes them pay, with their lives. But he has people chasing him, too—the Obliterators. They just cancel you from the planet, remove your existence.

    The Obliterators are aliens, but ‘not from a different planet, they just have a mixture of otherworldly DNA in their system’—in other words, ‘mutts’. Daedalus’ mother’s undead body has been used for xenomorphic procreation. The monsters are his half-siblings. He has some strange power; he’s the only one on Earth who can obliterate them.

    Loved: ‘Nature was my mother’s executioner; I was just nature’s axe’, ‘they came at us like cheetahs on the Serengeti’. I loved the fighting in the finale using moves from the various different martial arts schools.

    This novel’s Concept is highly innovative. The voice is colloquial, almost gangster, short, sharp sentences, cop-talk-like clichés. The narrator addresses the audience as ‘you’, in daily journal entries, full of sassy 4th wall asides like ‘That was cathartic. All right, back to the story’.

    Verb tenses are all over the place, which is distracting, though it lends a feel of breathlessness. It either needs the grammar sorted out or crafted into a deliberate style choice.

  • Review: Voices from the Dead

    Review: Voices from the Dead

    Tony Bassett, Voices from the Dead (‎The Book Folks crime thrillers, 2025)

    https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/244102463-voices-from-the-dead-an-unputdownable-british-crime-thriller-packed-with

    DS Sunita Roy and her boyfriend and colleague DI Tom Vickers happen to be attending a wedding at a Queensbridge hotel, when a guest reports witnessing a murder from her balcony, through one of the windows in the opposite building. The victim is successful beauty expert Candy Goodhope.

    Who could have murdered her in her hotel room? The boyfriend? The husband? The business rival?

    In another case, Miranda Higley is waiting for her ex-husband to lay a new floor for her when she is brutally attacked.

    It helps that there is an eyewitness, and the police also have CCTV evidence and numerous people to interview who were with Candy on the day. These characters, as we meet them, are interesting and colourful. Even the perps are sympathetic. Sunita is often accompanied by Tom or DC Brett Dawson, so we hear her thought processes though dialogue.

    The Plot is exciting, with enough surprises to keep us hooked, and the Pace is just right. We learn the clues at just the same time that the police do, so there’s plenty of time to assimilate it all.

    Bassett’s crime novels feature very realistic (it seems to me) police procedures, meaning we get right down into the story. He takes us through the investigation process, as day by day new clues are discovered. It never turns out to be who you suspect, and the boss always gets it wrong at first. Sunita’s uncanny ability for lateral thinking saves the day. And though we get all the clues, it always takes a bit of a stretch of Sunita’s ingenuity to solve the crime.

    I loved how we didn’t understand the rationale behind the title until the very end, making it a kind of punchline.

    I received an advance review copy for free, and I leave this review voluntarily.

  • Review: Timeline Dissonance

    Review: Timeline Dissonance

    Vicki Regan, Timeline Dissonance (2025)

    https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/234118263-timeline-dissonance

    We left Sarah and Eleanor from Book 2 in a world of truly nightmarish ‘temporal dysphoria’, people and objects popping in and out of different timelines. Now, they are captive under fascistic martial law, labelled as ‘Primary Dissonants’ by baddie time bandits still bent on destroying all free will. ‘Temporal alignment’ has become outright thought control and even ‘total reality manipulation’. The confused population accepts the new regime as better than the chaos that went before.

    Sarah, her voice across the airwaves, is a constant throughout all timelines, but she still sees the nightmares of disastrous futures she lived. She reads a forbidden book, which teaches strategy to the resistance. Eleanor secretly develops new technology to disrupt the system. She and Sarah know that ‘consciousness itself resists determinism’. It’s ‘quantum resonance feedback’, and Eleanor knows how to exploit it.

    The end is no utopia; democracy is messy, but human, full of the possibilities of all the timelines.

    The ‘optimised society’ of New Philadelphia is described chillingly. The techy stuff is great, highly detailed and sounds plausible. The techy workarounds the resistance fighters come up with to thwart the techy oppression are ingenious.

    The excellent writing of Books 1 and 2 continues. Fantastic suspense and pace, but interspersed with enough human relationship stuff to give us a breather from all the sci-fi jargon. We would have benefited from some layman’s explanation of the real science—quantum, entanglement, dissonance.

  • Review: Quantum Entanglement

    Review: Quantum Entanglement

    Vicki Regan, Quantum Entanglement (2025)

    https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/232441758-quantum-entanglement

    We left Sarah Collins in Book 1 sitting on a park bench, having time-travelled to a new timeline, one where her ally Dr Eleanor Hastings, doesn’t recognise her. She doesn’t even know whether this timeline’s Eleanor is one she can trust. Nevertheless, she takes a job with her at her Quantum Temporal Institute. Sarah studies ‘atmospheric anomalies’.

    Eleanor doesn’t know whether to trust Sarah, either, but she’s been seeing her in her dreams.

    As in Book 1, the action begins right away; by Chapter 2 we’re already swept up, as Sarah is arrested for ‘temporal espionage’, and the two women are on the run again, trying to save the world from shadowy bad guys intent on seizing control of time. They find allies.

    Sharp and pacey writing. The style is colourful, yet fresh, avoiding too many clichés. I was impressed by the way Regan weaves the backstory of Book 1 into the new plot. The ticking timebomb is great. Eleanor says, ‘we have three weeks to ensure they never find me—or better yet, to dismantle their entire operation.’ It’s bigger than that, Sarah realises. They just might ‘lose more than our lives’; they might ‘lose all possible futures’.

    It’s not a victory—we need to read Book 3—but we know that the quantum entanglement of love is eternal, across all realities.

    I thought the explanation of the ‘science bits’ was great. It didn’t even matter if such technology is not really possible, Regan makes it all sound so plausible. Phrases occur and recur—‘chronological inconsistencies’, ‘temporal dissonance’, ‘quantum dampening’—which we don’t quite understand the meaning of, but that’s OK. It sounds cool.

    I loved the concept of ‘Aberration Type-3s’, retained memories from erased timelines, ‘timeline bleed’, and ‘chronological stress points’. I loved ‘triangulating your chronological signature’. Loved the mathematical equation of Sarah’s and Eleanor’s relationship.

  • Review: Seven Rivers: The Darkness

    Review: Seven Rivers: The Darkness

    B. Luiciano Barsuglia, Seven Rivers: The Darkness (Koa Aloha Media 2025)

    https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/235105617-seven-rivers

    A supernatural journey of redemption

    Cora and Gabe are fighting. She has a baseball bat; he has a gun.

    It ends badly in a devastating car accident, and she ends up at the Seven Rivers Recovery Clinic in bandages. But this is no pristine hospital, no wholesome rehab facility. It starts with the tea–they’re giving her some kind of hallucinogen–then the pain and the terror, the savage bandage changes. The place operates according to an unfamiliar set of rules, which Cora now has to work out. The other residents aren’t welcoming, either. But at least they seem to know why they are there.

    ‘Some are here for recovery; others for redemption. Why are you here?’ Lady asks.

    ‘I’m hiding out, I guess,’ says Cora.

    I liked the parallels between pain and terror, but the horror begins too soon. We need to build up to it. And there’s too little action. We start hearing about ‘the ragged pulse of her fear’ before we even see anything to be afraid of. There’s no explanation as to why she’s ended up in this place and no explanation as to why Gabe is threatening her life.

    The chapter headings read like a ‘Pilgrim’s Progress’–Integrity, Acceptance, Humility. Cora is on a journey of self-discovery and redemption about which we get no clues until page 109. She witnesses horrors. Ex-robbers in a heist gone wrong. Each room, each interaction with the other guests confronts her with the consequences of her guilty past.

    A few too many clichés for me, coupled with some phrases we don’t really know the meaning of–‘an unease that lingered like a shadow’. I liked ‘tremors that shook her very atoms’.

    I liked the Concept–a surreal environment (Purgatory?) forcing someone to accept the consequences of their past behaviour, but Cora’s psychology doesn’t really come through. The unexplainedness contributes a surreal, spooky Kafka-esque atmosphere, yet I didn’t get the sense that Cora was trying to figure it out, which was frustrating. We can’t empathise with Cora’s suffering if we don’t understand why.

    In the end, she confronts the fear of death, something I don’t see treated in many novels, surprising considering that it’s probably the biggest fear humans face.

  • Review: Detectives Roy & Roscoe Mysteries Books 1–7

    Review: Detectives Roy & Roscoe Mysteries Books 1–7

    Tony Bassett, Detectives Roy & Roscoe Mysteries Books 1–7 (The Book Folks Crime thriller and mystery 2025)

    https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/243115585-detectives-roy-roscoe-mysteries-books-1-7

    Absolutely perfect crime novels

    I congratulate Bassett on the publication of this compendium. I am a fan of his crime fiction and have read and reviewed several of the books in this collection.

    His writing is excellent, his characters colourful, and his plots are always exciting.

    What I like most about Bassett’s novels is the (what seems to me to be) realistic police procedures, the great characters and the great plots. The working lives of the characters are portrayed realistically. Bassett’s policemen have believably cop-like dialogue and avoid clichés (donuts, etc). We never lose sight of the people while the plot is gathering facts. The large cast of coppers and suspects all have inter-connecting stories, and we see fascinating peeks inside the suspects’ private lives.

    Bassett is a master of suspense. We find out the clues at the same time the detectives find them, meaning that the pacing is comfortable, slowly developing, then a rush of drama. As in real life, some of the leads don’t pan out, which gives it a true-to-real-life feel. Not everything is done by our heroine; also as in real life, there are multiple officers involved.

    We’re never given too much all at once, and usually about three-fourths into the story, just when it’s getting almost too complicated to follow, we are given a summary of the suspects, clues and alibis through the mouths of the police in a team operational briefing. So, we never have to think, ‘hang on, what was that clue back on page 23?’ Bassett is skilled at weaving necessary backstory into the dialogue. You probably get enough clues to solve the crime yourself, although I usually don’t.

    I like that his main detective, Sunita Roy, is of non-Anglo heritage, making her a little bit out of ordinary from what we’re used to. She’s an interesting woman as well as police detective. Though she’s not full of herself, she has a keen mind, and when cracks the case, it’s usually because she has done a bit of lateral thinking that her bosses haven’t considered. The crime is always solved in some innovative way.

  • Review: The Better Angels

    Review: The Better Angels

    Robin Holloway, The Better Angels (Holand Press 2025)

    https://www.goodreads.com/review/show/8009771617

    The invasion of St. Helena Island in South Carolina by the Union forces drives away the white planters, leaving the ex-slaves considered ‘contrabands of war’, neither free nor slave.

    Northern white abolitionists like Laura Towne build a school to educate the children.

    While initially flabbergasted by the differentness of the culture and frustrated by their subservience, Laura spends her whole life loving and working in the good interests of ‘her people’.

    The ‘Port Royal Experiment’ is sincerely dedicated to bettering the lives of the ex-slaves, but there is debate on how to go about it. Some think the most important thing is to return the cotton fields to productivity and integrate the ex-slaves into the capitalist system. Laura loves and respects them, but fears for their vulnerability in the new world. Jupiter, the elegant black carriage driver, believes the blacks must fight for their freedoms.

    The first year’s cotton crop is not good, so they are ‘forced’ to list the plantations for sale. Mr Philbrick is trusted to make the initial investment, promising to offer plots to the freedmen ‘when it is possible’, but ‘possible’ keeps getting delayed. Will they get their ‘40 acres and a mule’ as promised? Will they get the vote?

    The structure is a mixture of diary entries, letters and exposition. Some of the exposition seems to be in the POV of Jupiter, but this is not clear. A very worthy subject, but as a novel, I found myself wanting a love story or some drama, or some slight fault in Laura’s angelic character.

    This is all about the psychology of oppression and the complexity of relationships when love is mixed with exploitation. It is also about angels. Fortunately, there are people on this earth and in history who dedicate their lives to making the world a better place.

    This review first appeared in Historical Novels Review.

  • Review: The Midnight Frequency

    Review: The Midnight Frequency

    Vicki Regan, The Midnight Frequency (2025)

    https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/231121146-the-midnight-frequency

    Time-travelling adventure to save the world, again and again

    Radio host Sarah Collins asks her late night audience to phone in with their ‘weirdest experiences’. Then, she has the weirdest experience of her life. She picks up a caller claiming to be a time traveller speaking from 2045 with a chilling prediction about Flight 2409. The prediction proves true, and Sarah receives more warning calls. The next one warns, ‘they’re coming for you.’

    As subsequent events prove the predictions her mysterious caller warns of, Sarah finds herself in danger from federal agents and from shadowy corporate bad guys who are trying to manipulate time for who knows what reason.

    She meets an ally, Dr Eleanor Hastings, an expert on ‘temporal anomalies’, and the two embark on a frantic mission to prevent the disasters their time traveller predicts. ‘Why me?’ Sarah wonders. Eleanor explains that her voice over the airwaves is ‘an anchor point across timelines’.

    Each time a disaster threatens, Eleanor says, ‘Let’s go save the world, again’. When they do, Sarah’s caller tells her she’s changed the timeline, ‘the future is now uncertain.’

    Timey-wimey conundrums ensue. In different timelines, different realities exist. Sarah’s mentor from the future tells her, time manipulation means ‘never being certain which version of reality you’re experiencing’.

    It’s tremendously exciting; by Chapter 2 Sarah is already running for her life and facing global destruction. The mechanics of the time traveling are more or less satisfactorily explained, though we never quite find out why the bad guys are doing this.

    The ending is quite cute, and does have a bit of finality, yet it’s open-ended enough to make you want to read Book 2.

    This novella is Book 1 in The Midnight Frequency Series.

  • Review: Among the Okapi

    Review: Among the Okapi

    John S Taylor, Among the Okapi (FriesenPress 2023)

    https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/152204115-among-the-okapi

    Memories of Africa cause ramifications for everyone back home

    The last students have left Anatomy class at Waverly College in Toronto where Fred is lab demonstrator. He’s determined to ask his head of department Dr Smith for a pay rise. An affair with the landlady Inge has not saved him from paying rent, but his mind is on a student from his hometown of Darby whom he remembered from high school, Esther.

    John Lyon is studying the sales figures of his lager-brewing company. A phone call promises that his son Jason will come home to visit. Wife Daphne is out at a meeting with the arts committee. Esther, their niece, orphaned at age 10, is staying there for a while. The two cousins have never met.

    Dr Smith commissions Fred to edit the study he did in Africa on the okapi. Esther, a vegetarian, wants to be excused from dissecting white rats. Dr Smith thinks she look familiar. Fred and Esther bond during a spot of undercover activity.

    Chapter 5, we break to quoting every other chapter from Dr Smith’s African journal—his tale of the okapi and of Alice. Every other chapter, however, goes back to the present-time narrative, so we don’t break the continuity.

    Dr Smith seems obsessed with a Mark Van Dusen, someone from the Africa days.

    These two sets of characters revolve around each other. Jason finally tells Dr Smith, ‘every time there’s been a serious problem in my family, it’s somehow connected to you.’

    The characters are all very well developed, and their histories intersect in interesting, complex ways. I would have liked a bit more enlightenment earlier on concerning Van Dusen. When we finally learn, it’s suitably astonishing, with misunderstandings all around.

    A very well written story.

  • Review: Dread: An Appalachian Horror Tale

    Review: Dread: An Appalachian Horror Tale

    David Grayson, Dread: An Appalachian Horror Tale (2025)

    https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/44288015-dread?ac=1&from_search=true&qid=gKTPYT6mDr&rank=1

    Something is stirring in the woods

    Ed awakes to deranged screams outside his cell in the Sanatorium. Fortunately his lunatic cellmate Joseph is still asleep. Ed remembers a different kind of torture in Fallujah.

    The first few paragraphs describe Ed’s life in the Sanatorium, but the Opening features interchanges between Joseph and other patients, making it more personal and more compelling.

    On page 16, we get the first hint of some horror, the mention of ‘lights in the woods’. The suspense builds from there. First, the monthly supplies of food and medicine didn’t arrive. The truck is discovered empty, the driver missing. The guards are behaving strangely. A series of events begins, which might otherwise be just normal glitches in the daily routine. But they build. Meanwhile, Ed flashes back to Fallujah.

    I was rather annoyed that the bad guys were never explained. Were they zombies? Why were they attacking the Sanatorium?

    Otherwise, this is an easy-to-digest novella, a lovely bit of horror just before bedtime.