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Nightmare, by Steven Harper

  • May. 20th, 2009 at 1:58 PM
Christmas - Snow

A while back I finished reading Nightmare [Amazon | Mysterious Galaxy], by Steven Harper. This is the second book in Harper’s Silent Empire series, in which certain individuals known as Silent have the ability to enter The Dream, a kind of telepathic linking of sentient minds.  The Dream provides instant communication between the stars, and as a result the Silent are highly valued.

It’s been a while since I read Dreamer, the first book in the series.  So it threw me a little to realize this book jumped backward chronologically, exploring the backstory of Kendi Weaver.

It’s not a nice backstory. Kendi’s family is captured by slavers and separated. Kendi is discovered to be silent, which makes him far more valuable. Kendi is eventually freed, and finds himself drawn into a mystery surrounding a killer who murders people within the Dream.

There’s a lot going on in this book. The murder mystery is well done, though the ending has a strong element of coincidence to it regarding the whereabouts of our killer. (Is that vague enough?) The story of Kendi’s enslavement felt … hm. It didn’t feel like a slave narrative. I could empathize with Kendi’s pain, but at the same time, a part of me was thinking “This isn’t anywhere near as bad as it could be.” Whether or not that’s a good thing depends on how painful you want your slave stories, I guess. I thought it worked well for the story, since the book is about Kendi’s growth rather than any particular phase of his life.

I also liked the way Harper handled Kendi’s sexuality. It’s hard enough coming to terms with those adolescent drives and feelings. Try being a gay slave trying to sort it all out. Kendi’s crushes and his struggles to accept himself worked well. Not preachy, and not the core of the story, but a part of his life that most readers will be able to relate to.

As for the Dream, that’s just nifty. Communal telepathic reality. How cool is that? I loved watching Kendi and his friends learning to explore the Dream, as well as the history of the Children of Irfan (a Silent group), and all the different implications of Silent communication.

All in all, I’d definitely be interested in reading book three in the series to see where Harper goes with it.

So, anyone else read this book or the series? What did you think?

Mirrored from Jim C. Hines.

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Comments

( 6 comments — Leave a comment )
[info]realmjit wrote:
May. 21st, 2009 05:23 am (UTC)
Yep. read all three, am missing #4. Loved it all. his Mind duology is another kettle of fish.

Haven't read any of his TV/Movie tie-ins, though.
[info]jimhines wrote:
May. 21st, 2009 11:49 am (UTC)
What was up with the Mind duology?
[info]realmjit wrote:
May. 21st, 2009 01:49 pm (UTC)
the main character has MPD (or DID, if you prefer). Totally different story, much darker in many ways. The main character's past demons are much more personal.

It's still a good story, it just needs a warning label.
[info]mtlawson wrote:
May. 21st, 2009 02:29 pm (UTC)
Well, Jim, you post a thoughtful review of a book that interested you, and you get four comments (including this one). You stir the pot on the Neil Gaiman blog entry, and you get 90. I guess that's proof that emotive issues bring people out.

Nice review. I think I'm going to have to add this to my "to be read" pile when I finally whittle that pile down to manageable levels. Thanks.
[info]jimhines wrote:
May. 21st, 2009 07:24 pm (UTC)
Thanks! For some reason the reviews don't tend to stir up much response. I suspect that's even more true with older books where either fewer people have read the work, or else they just don't remember.

You know, I was going to suggest you start with Dreamer, which is the first book in the series. But given the chronology, you could probably start with either one and you'd be fine. I'll be curious to hear what you think!
[info]mtlawson wrote:
May. 21st, 2009 09:01 pm (UTC)
Honestly, I don't mind these reviews at all, even if I don't respond. I'd been out of reading the SF/F genre for so long (around 16 years or so, with the notable exception of Robert Jordan) that most works since the early/mid 90's are new to me.

I'll let you know when I get the book read, but judging from the pile I've got to read, it may be a while.
( 6 comments — Leave a comment )