Martti Seppanen, a private detective in a futuristic Los Angeles, finds himself taking on a bizarre murder case in which the victim whose status as human is in question, the weapon is a bioengineered disease, and the killer uses mental powers to control others. Original.
John Dalmas—pseudonym for John Robert Jones—wrote many books based on military and governmental themes throughout his career. He grew up in Minnesota and Michigan and resided in Spokane, Washington. He was a parachute infantryman in WWII and was discharged in 1946 without ever being put seriously in harm's way. He has worked as a longshoreman, merchant seaman, logger, construction worker, and smokejumper. He attended Michigan State University, majoring in forestry, but also took creative writing.
An odd blend of Alt-Time Sci-Fi, psycho-telepathy (I guess that is the correct terminology...) and gumshoe detective work. I think this collection of shorter stories works for that very reason; none of them was bloated up to full novel length like a boxer trying fight 4-5 weight classes beyond his body size. An interesting diversion.
This is a collection of three stories that branch from our timeline sometime after the end of World War II. The Geogravitic Power Converter (GPC) has brought cheap, clean, abundant energy and a new physics. The protagonist, Martti Seppanen is a detective, his wife Tuuli is a professional psychic.
These stories read like an early Heinlein. The stories move right a long -- Dalmas seems to be a competent story teller -- but he is undisciplined about the impact of psychic powers. The Martti and Tuuli always seem to have psychic forces looking after them. Dalmas is also undisciplined about the use of POV, breaking into third-person omniscient when he cannot tell the story within Seppanen's POV. The "Puppet Master" in the title is such a shadowy figure, that Seppanen doesn't realize he is a threat for most of the narrative.
Three stars, however, because one scene where a hit-man sets up an ambush for Seppanen is both thrilling and memorable.
This was the weirdest blend of sci-fi, supernatural, investigative, etc etc etc. with one (1) novella, (1) novel, and one (1) novelette... on the bright side, I really learned about the difference between a novella, novel, and novelette via one physical book!
John Dalmas died at age 90 in 2017. Reading his books, you'd think he was a young writer in 2020. The Puppet Master, was different than eight of his other books I've read, but every bit as enjoyable. This is set in the USA and feels very contemporary. The ending was reasonable but seemed too abrupt and simple. It is followed by a unique story novella with the same detective, Martini Seppanen. Much shorter than the main title, but every bit as good, plus with a more satisfying ending.