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289 pages, Paperback
First published July 8, 2014
Norio moves so fast Aman barely has time to flinch. He has plenty of time to roll about on the floor rubbing his jaw afterwards, though.
Aman’s always felt it was unfortunate that the First Wave happened at a time when most of the globally popular works of fiction were fantasy in one form or the other, the whole super phenomenon was tough enough to deal with without the occasional outburst of vampire and zombie plagues.
This whole obsessive self-analysis thing is just the last few generations. Our ancestors didn’t take selfies. Until someone finally understands the science behind what’s going on, it’s just a bunch of people trying to live their lives.
There’s a dead dog on top of the third arch. Filing it all under Mysteries of India I Don’t Need to Solve, Norio leans back in his seat and reaches for his NutriPac.
Maybe this is what being in your thirties is like for everyone. Life not turning out how you expected it to. Regrets, misses, what-might-have-beens. What really twists the knife in is that we have superpowers. If our lives don’t meet our expectations, what’s the point?”
This has the same problems as the previous book, Turbulence. I did enjoy the first third more than any section of the first novel probably because the returning characters now have a history. However, the action sequences are overlong and get boring quickly, the characters never develop or evolve, and there is still no real atmosphere to speak of. The ending was a true letdown, the mystery of where all these superpowers came from in the first place is never explored but the question is asked quite a few times in the text. The villain, Norio, is characterized fairly well. I did like that Aman had created an island lair for himself, but he spends most of the central part of the novel as someone’s prisoner again, and even the villain from the last book, Jai, appears once again only to make a commitment to the “good guys”.
The gonzo Prague episode was pretty good as giant mutant bugs, human-mutant-bug-hybrids, and brain-eaten zombies overran it and heroes had to blast their way through. Still, it sounds cooler than it was. I cannot recommend this one unless you liked the previous novel. I for one, will not be reading any follow-ups or sequels should they appear.