Meta is a superhero story, but one that stands out for its clever writing and exceptionally well written characters.
The story follow’s humans with superhuman abilities, known as Meta’s because they wear ‘Meta Bands’ that allows them to gain these abilities, which differ depending on the person wearing them.
As with all of these stories, there are those that are good, and those from the dark side of the dark side of the fence. At the end of the day, powers are just powers, it is how the person uses them that makes them good or evil.
However over a decade ago, when there was the first lot of Meta’s, after they had been around for a while, they all just disappeared – not long after an epic battle to get rid of one of the worst of the ‘Evil’ Meta’s.
Enter our main character, Conner Connelly (Obviously Tom is a fan of Stan Lee and dual letter names!), a somewhat uninteresting 16yr old kid with not much going for him, who lives with his older brother who runs a blog on Meta’s as their parents were murdered by the aforementioned Evil one.
After a particular incident, Conner finds himself in possession of a set of Meta bands.
Through a series of events, he runs into this mysterious figure Midnight, who is a quasi-super hero, but not a Meta, who makes Batman look like a happy go lucky kind of dude. Midnight was around with the 1st lot of Metas and survived the confrontations, and kind of tries to train him.
What follows is what you would expect, a 16yr old with amazing abilities and powers trying to help in situations, but not necessarily always doing the right thing.
Whilst it might seem that this is something that has been done before, I mean let’s be honest, there are plenty of OMG, I have superpowers!! books around, this is done really well, giving it almost a new spin.
For starters, the way that the powers have been gained is kind of unusual, and it is never really uncovered, allowing for a bunch of different conspiracy theories. Secondly, the fact that there was a 1st wave, that died off, and now, a decade later some people have taken on some amazing powers again makes for an interesting story.
But the thing that stands out most of all for Reynolds work is his characters. When you read one of these stories, you absolutely want some decent action sequences, with all the battles and powers etc, but you also want to have some really decent characters, and unfortunately, that is what is lacking in a large majority of the books. Not so in Meta. Tom Reynolds Characters are exceptional, well thought out, with each of them having a well-defined role within the story, some great dialogue, but also his characters are so realistic and believable. They have proper emotional responses to things that happen. The suffer shock rather than just laughing things off, they have the thousand yard stare, the main hero can’t do everything like his school work, keep the girl and be the super hero.
Even the older brother, who is totally obsessed by his job, still actually takes the time to stop and nag his little brother about things, and knows things about him.
The Midnight character is brilliant, moody, obsessed, totally driven, but we know pretty much nothing about him, other than his work, because he doesn’t want us to know, and that is the character. He doesn’t have multiple lives because he is this super-obsessed almost psychopath, totally given to his work and forsaking all else.
This is one of very few books I have come across that really looks at the emotional feelings and impacts of being a nobody who suddenly develops superpowers and how that affects those around them really has. Reynolds has also managed to pull this off in a way that is not corny or makes you roll your eyes every 3 seconds.
This is one of the best ‘I’ve just become a Superhero’ stories I have read due to the quality of the characters and the great story, and I am definitely looking forward to the next parts.