| Judas Eyes | ||||||||
| Barry Hoffman | ||||||||
| Gauntlet Press, 420 pages | ||||||||
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A review by Lisa DuMond
The authorities appear to be unable to stop Mica Swann, Shara's target in this outing, as
she embarks on a cross-country killing spree leaving a trail of bodies in her wake
and no clear motive in sight. But, the police don't have the experience and insight
that Shara brings to a case. Police don't understand the blood lust, the need to
kill. That's something Shara understands all too well. What she doesn't understand
yet is the true nature of the predator she is after.
This is Hoffman's third outing with Shara Farris. Hoffman's protagonist -- it's
difficult to think of her in the classic hero mode -- has approached the point where
she is almost superhuman, which approaches the point where it stretches credulity
just too far, turning the mortal, fictional character into a comic book
character. Hoffman handles this by introducing an element of the supernatural into
the saga. Rather than making this more unbelievable, it supplies information
that seems to explain a lot. The move from dark realism into dark
fantasy is an easy transition and a logical one.
In the Eyes series, the shift is a perfectly natural one.
Despite the rapid pacing and interest of the plot, it is really Hoffman's characters
that form the core of his work. Everyone who shows up on these pages is damaged
goods -- running from or to their ultimate destruction. Shara is just this side of
psychotic, after a traumatic and violent past. Her partner, Briggs, is a cop no
more, after an arrest gone horribly wrong. Mica is... well... Mica is a psychological disaster area.
The usual warning: Judas Eyes is heavy on the violence and certain of the
topics may make some of the more sensitive readers distinctly uncomfortable. You're
tough though; you can handle that. This is an R-rating, not the dreaded NC-17,
so don't be afraid to plunge right in.
Of course, you might be afraid once you're into the story, but isn't that the whole point?
In between reviews, articles, and interviews, Lisa DuMond writes science fiction and humour. DARKERS, her latest novel, was published in August 2000 by Hard Shell Word Factory. She has also written for BOOKPAGE and PUBLISHERS WEEKLY. Her articles and short stories are all over the map. You can check out Lisa and her work at her website hikeeba!. |
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