I started out enjoying this one way more. Not sure if my decreasing enjoyment as the book finished was due to the actual text/story of The Blade Between or because I was read a different Sam J Miller book in the middle of this one, and didn't like the other nearly as much. Though maybe important to note that I enjoyed the first half or so of the other Miller book (The Art of Starving) before my enjoyment waned, so maybe it was just that the second half of the books weren't as good as the first halves.
I loved the stories from Miller's collection, Boys Beasts & Men, but the novels don't seem to share the needy-lovey characterization and Tight, managed plotting of Miller's short stories.
Homage to Stephen King is super, SUPER clear (in both this book and the Art of Starving). I loved the IT-style/parallels of this book. BUT! Portions/themes/elements that King, I'm sad to say, pulls off really well, Miller left lacking.
For example. The WHALES! akin to the Turtle in IT, wherein IT eventually has a huge coked-up section talking about the Turtle's ancient relevance to Derry. The beginning of The Blade Between has an amazing section introducing the history of whales and whaling in Hudson, pre-empting the magical being/spirit trying to undo gentrification in Hudson. The spirit is relevant the entire book, but never ADDRESSED except briefly at the beginning, FYI-Hudson-has-a-history-of-whaling. The radio announcer in The Blade Between was really really interesting to me, but was never addressed. Hey, there's a magical presence on the radio, but you probably don't care about that so let's move on. I do care!! I want to hear more about that magical presence!!
There was also some weird.... addressings... of race in this book. When Attalah found out her husband was cheating on her, she tries to chalk it up to... Dom was conditioned by white society to put white needs above his own which is why he cheated on her with his white best friend.....??? Huh? And Dom was the one to tell Ronan, hey my marriage is open and I can sleep with other people. That one comment about her husband's semi-infidelity and chalking it up to different races... Attalah are you aware you're in a book about gentrification right now...? So many other places to direct this energy besides your clearly unhealthy open relationship with your husband.
Tom Minniq was an interesting character to me, and I was excited to see the revelation with Dom, and Ronan's LIFETIME of feelings about/for Dom, but there was never a moment for taking out Tom Minniq and resolving Ronan's relationship with Dom. Also, the resolution for Attalah's relationship with her mom, Hazel, kinda peeved me, because then why didn't we get an update on Ronan's dad?
SPOILERS! SPOILERS FOR THE VERY END! SPOILERS:
Also, I just don't like books where the resolution is the protagonist has to kill themselves to resolve the problem. The whole point of this book is Ronan's feelings are SO. Much. Bigger than he is. Ronan doesn't know how to handle the abundancy of his rage, guilt, etc. Because of his huge and mismanaged emotions, the evil whale spirit taps into this abundancy and over-exerts itself on the town, leading to violent crime, suicide, etc. A story doesn't have to be moralistic, but this one is, and the moral is, if your feelings are too big for you, the ONLY resolution is to kill yourself. Ronan says that! There's only one way out of this mess he caused! In a book about suicide, suicidal ideation, how your emotions impact others, and the like, it just felt kind of wrong to have the resolution to be suicide. I don't care that he became a time traveling ghost via suicide. That's cool for him, but not for me. Actually, as I write this review, I'm liking the book less and less.
Final thought, about the title: As soon as the blade between the ribs (a sensation, a tumor, a feeling, an illness, whatever you think it is) was presented in the first <50 pages of the book, I was really excited for a culmination scene of the nasty removal of the blade placed their in childhood, sharpening and growing throughout life. Vernon God Little talks about the blade being placed their by your mother, twisting when your mother wants something, and needing to nastily yank it out if you don't want to be at your mother's beck and call throughout your adult life. I was really really excited during The Blade Between when I realized it wasn't just Ronan experiencing the blade, and other Hudsonians had the blade too. I thought there'd be some cool city-wide removal of the blade. NOPE! Everybody felt it. Ronan killed himself. The end. Do they still feel it? Not anymore??? What's the resolution here beyond suicide? What's the revelation? What changed?
I really enjoyed the first half or two-thirds of this. So so so much potential. Not wasted, just misdirected against what I would want to see :(