by Jim Rush ‧ RELEASE DATE: N/A
From stealthy tracking to all-out sprints, hand-to-hand battles and mental combat—a triumph in every respect.
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CIA agent Browning is implanted with a sensory-enhancing microchip to help track down rogue test subjects in the author’s debut action novel.
Browning, working in Afghanistan, is pulled away for a covert operation. The job will require skills he’d once used for a position he willingly left behind—as a proficient assassin. He is surgically embedded with “the System,” essentially a replication of the ampullae of Lorenzini: the electroreceptors sharks use to locate prey. The System was intended as a lie detector to gauge people’s responses, but there are side effects, namely driving subjects to the brink of madness. Browning levels the playing field against three officers at large, all implanted with the System and sporting murderous impulses. Rush’s book thrives on precise action and rousing scenes of pursuit. Browning is initially fed intel on only one of the officers and is not provided with more information until he’s finished with the first target. This approach keeps the story focused—one evildoer at a time—and also adds suspense, as it’s apparent that each System-infused officer is more deadly than the next. The “villains” are given ample points of view and are wonderfully diverse. Mila, in particular, is humanized; she seems to have fallen prey to a failed experiment and, in one of the novel’s best sequences, is introduced like a potential victim. The book makes the most impact with Browning and his progression with the System. It moves from a weapon to a burden, as he gradually begins to rely on it more and more while fraught with an ever-present headache. Rush peppers the prose with humorous descriptions and metaphors—Browning is considered a “custom-built assassin,” and the sound of gunfire is compared to a “family of giants” arguing. The ending is wholly gratifying, one that will certainly stick in readers’ minds.
From stealthy tracking to all-out sprints, hand-to-hand battles and mental combat—a triumph in every respect.Pub Date: N/A
ISBN: N/A
Page Count: 176
Publisher: Dog Ear Publisher
Review Posted Online: Aug. 9, 2012
Review Program: Kirkus Indie
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by Susan Count ‧ RELEASE DATE: N/A
A short, simple, and sweet tale about two friends and a horse.
A novel tells the story of two spirited girls who set out to save a lame foal in 1952.
Mary, age 12, lacks muscle control of her legs and must use a wheelchair. Her life is constantly interrupted by trips with her widower father to assorted doctors, all of whom have failed to help her. Mary tolerates the treatments, hoping to one day walk unassisted, but her true passion involves horses. Possessing a library filled with horse books, she loves watching and drawing the animals at a neighboring farm. She longs to own one herself. But her father, overprotective due to her disability and his own lingering grief over Mary’s dead mother, makes her keep her distance. Mary befriends Laura, the emotionally neglected daughter of the wealthy neighboring farm owners, and the two share secret buggy rides. Both girls are attracted to Illusion, a beautiful red bay filly on the farm. Mary learns that Illusion is to be put down by a veterinarian because of a lame leg. Horrified, she decides to talk to the barn manager about the horse (“Isn’t it okay for her to live even if she’s not perfect? I think she deserves a chance”). Soon, Mary and Laura attempt to raise money to save Illusion. At the same time, Mary begins to gain control of her legs thanks to water therapy and secret therapeutic riding with Laura. There is indeed a great deal of poignancy in a story of a girl with a disability fighting to defend the intrinsic value of a lame animal. But this book, the first installment of the Dream Horse Adventure Series, would be twice as touching if Mary interacted with Illusion more. In the tale’s opening, she watches the foal from afar, but she actually spends very little time with the filly she tries so hard to protect. This turns out to be a strange development given the degree to which the narrative relies on her devotion. Count (Selah’s Sweet Dream, 2015) draws Mary and Laura in broad but believable strokes, defined mainly by their unrelenting pluckiness in the face of adversity. While the work tackles disability, death, and grief, Mary’s and Laura’s environments are so idyllic and their optimism and perseverance so remarkable that the story retains an aura of uncomplicated gentleness throughout.
A short, simple, and sweet tale about two friends and a horse.Pub Date: N/A
ISBN: N/A
Page Count: -
Publisher: Hastings Creations Group
Review Posted Online: Oct. 15, 2016
Review Program: Kirkus Indie
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by Katie Keridan ‧ RELEASE DATE: Nov. 2, 2018
Therapeutic, moving verse from a promising new talent.
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Keridan’s poetry testifies to the pain of love and loss—and to the possibility of healing in the aftermath.
The literary critic Geoffrey Hartman once wrote that literature—and poetry, in particular—can help us “read the wound” of trauma. That is, it can allow one to express and explain one’s deepest hurts when everyday language fails. Keridan appears to have a similar understanding of poetry. She writes in “Foreword,” the opening work of her debut collection, that “pain frequently uses words as an escape route / (oh, how I know).” Many words—and a great deal of pain—escape in this volume, but the result is healing: “the ending is happy / the beginning was horrific / so let’s start there.” The book, then, tracks the process of recovery in the wake of suffering, and often, this suffering is brought on by romantic relationships gone wrong. An early untitled poem opens, “I die a little / taking pieces of me to feed the fire / that keeps him warm / you don’t notice that it’s a slow death / when you’re disappearing little by little.” The author’s imagery here—of the self fueling the dying fire of love—is simultaneously subtle and wrenching. But the poem’s message, amplified elsewhere in the book, is clear: We go wrong if we destructively give ourselves over to others, and healing comes only when we turn our energies back to our own good. Later poems, therefore, reveal that self-definition often equals strength. The process is painful but salutary; when “you’re left unprotected / surrounded by chaos with nothing you / can depend on / except yourself / and that’s when you gather the pieces / of the life you lost / and use them to build the life you want.” The “life you want” is an elusive goal, and the author knows that the path to self-definition is fraught with peril—but her collection may give strength to those who walk it.
Therapeutic, moving verse from a promising new talent.Pub Date: Nov. 2, 2018
ISBN: 978-1-72770-538-6
Page Count: 196
Publisher: CreateSpace
Review Posted Online: Jan. 9, 2019
Kirkus Reviews Issue: Feb. 15, 2019
Review Program: Kirkus Indie
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