”Foolish norm. Always keep your eyes on a dragon.”
Despite knowing next to nothing about the Shadowrun RPG, who can resist a really GREAT HumbleBundle bargain (?) … ’cause I can’t (!) … and so I snapped up their offer on an instant eighty-plus book library of the game’s inspired novels (which in hindsight seems like about seventy-nine books more than I’ll ever have a chance to read). Of course, I had to start with the very first book in the original series … I have a lot of ‘completist’ issues, okay (?) … Robert N. Charette’s Never Deal With A Dragon. And yeah, this was quite good; I can definitely see how this powered a whole bookshelf of content.
Like most RPG settings, the Shadowrun world is incredibly complex and layered, but Charette pushes us under its surface with a minimal amount of struggle, immersing us in a classic cyber-punk environment mixed with high fantasy magics, elves with Internet access, sorcerers slumming in burned-out tenements, and dragons lusting less for piles of gold coin and more for the C-suites of some major international corporations. There’s a lot of world-building here, and Charette is really good at it. At the same time, he’s also spinning a maze-like tale of corporate espionage as protagonist Sam Verner slips from salaryman to budding sorcerer.
If you’ve read other game-inspired novelizations, you know exactly what you’re getting here: heroes, villains, monsters, episodic encounters as steps on an epic quest, and … here’s where it’s different … an above average amount of mistrust, betrayal and subterfuge (maybe even a bit too much subterfuge … I admit … there were times when I began to lose track of who was tricking whom). Never Deal With A Dragon is a hefty 500 plus pages (on my Kindle anyway) … way longer than most novels of this ilk … and it’s likely the volume made me miss a few nuances. Antagonist Alice Crenshaw’s motivation, for example, kind of stuck in my craw for most of the book; I couldn’t quite figure the chip on her shoulder. But with a sentence, Charette makes sense … wait for it until you hit page 451. And when things get bloody … well, he is kind of merciless.
With some years on me, my hunger (and appreciation) for these old RPG inspired works is really slipping toward an obsession and this … this was just good, old-fashioned RPG fiction in top form, something I would have thrilled to years ago (had I played this game) in between roleplaying sessions. Do I have time for more Shadowrun in my life? Uh, no! But does Charette’s opening book make me want more? Uh, yes!