Ratings5
Average rating3.5
In a mystery set a year after the events of Shovel Ready, Spademan accepts a job to take out a hated philanderer, only to discover that the man holds information about a terrorist plot against the limnosphere.
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2 primary booksSpademan is a 2-book series with 2 primary works first released in 2014 with contributions by Adam Sternbergh.
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I will admit to being a bit nervous about this – Shovel Ready hit me in a sweet spot and I wasn't sure that Sternbergh was going to be able to follow it up with an unnecessary (I thought) sequel. Also, as long as I'm being honest – without looking at my post or notes, I'm not sure I could've described what about Shovel Ready appealed to be so much. It took less than 2 pages of Near Enemy for it to come back to me – yeah, good story, world building and all; but it was the voice and the distinctive way Sternbergh employed the voice that really worked for me. Obviously, in two pages I had no idea if he could pull it off in terms of story/character/etc., but that voice was there, so I was going to enjoy finding out.
Even more than Shovel Ready (I think), this is a Cyberpunk novel as told by Elmore Leonard. It's been a year since we left Spademan and the rest, and if there's anyone who expected a happily ever after for any involved, well, I think they didn't pay close enough attention to the book. Perseophone and her baby are tucked away upstate, and Spademan's back to work. Once again, though, he doesn't complete a hit. He finds the target, Lesser, while he's in the Limnosphere, and is persuaded to wait a moment until he emerges. Lesser gives the wildest story about what happened to him inside – so wild it's technically impossible. Spademan's curiosity is piqued, so he lets Lesser live while he looks into the veracity of his claims.
Spademan's investigation leads him into a maze of politics, police corruption, Islamic activism, assassins that make Spademan look amateurish, and a strange quasi-religious/quasi-Luddite group. The plot's really not that twisty – it can't be while being told in Sternbergh's minimalistic style – but it's definitely not straight-forward. And though I saw the big surprise twists coming – their reveals were very satisfying. It's violent – but not as violent as you'd think a novel about an assassin in a very dystopian New York would be.
One example of the violence is a fight scene in the Limnosphere that suggests the climactic battle in The Matrix missed a golden opportunity by not taking fuller advantage of the impossible and/or strange that would be possible in a virtual world.
Of course the ugliness isn't limited to the damage that people can do to others' bodies – there's plenty of other trauma to be found. One example is Spademan's description of how the City reacted to the last major terrorist attack:
Cops came after midnight.
Special ops. Special cops. The lethal kind, who never bothered to memorize Miranda rights.
Clad in black. Move in tandem.
Red laser dots dancing over locked doorways.
Hand signals. Gloved hands. Give the go-ahead.
Boots unleashed on doors. Doors caved in with a clatter. Suspects scrambling as they're yanked from their beds, still tangled up in the sheets. Some half-dressed, some half-cursing, dragged into hallways under sweeping flashlight beams, wrists zipped up in plastic cuffs, then shoved down the staircase. Some more than shoved.
A few unfortunate escape attempts shot down as they fought back. Or at least that's how it got written up in the reports.
Near Enemy
Shovel Ready
Note:I received this book for free from Blogging for Books for this review. Which was generous and cool of them, but didn't impact what I said about the book.
“The far enemy is the one you hate, the one you're sworn to fight against. The near enemy is the one you're close to, who you trust, but shouldn't.”
Near Enemy is the sequel to Shovel Ready. You have Spademan, your garbageman turned contract killer living in post-dirty bomb NY. In this book, Spademan is attempting to figure out how to stop another potential plot against an already decimated NY. With all this going on, he still has to deal with protecting his “family” and keeping Persephone and Mark safe.
I really enjoy the writing style of these books. Sentences are very short, choppy, and to the point. It adds to the noir, hard-boil detective genre. It is action packed and fast-paced. Once I got into the book, I flew through it, plus these books are short at around 300 pages. Spademan is this dark brooding character that you cannot help but love, even though his choices are morally ambiguous.
In this installment, we find out a lot more about the dirty bomb and the initial terrorist plot. We also get a larger glimpse at how the city has moved on from the attack through the limn. The limn is this dreamlike state that allows someone to go to a different world to live their days. This book focuses on the idea of the terrorists attacking from inside, specifically from within the limn rather than overtly.
I definitely enjoyed this installment more than the first due to the faster plot. I think I connected more with stopping an imminent terrorist plot than the corrupt minister of Shovel Ready. The one thing I didn't like was that from the beginning the villain was plotted as being Muslim. While this fits with current ideas on who terrorists are, I think it perpetuates the growing mistrust of all Muslims. I think it is unjustified that from the beginning, they are targeted as the bad guys. I'm currently in a class that focuses on US policy post 9/11, so I do have a certain lens that I'm reading this through. I just think it is unfair to have the initial terrorist attack in the limn be carried out by a woman in a Burqa.
Other than that, I really enjoyed this book and look forward to future books by Adam Sternbergh.
I received a copy of this book through BloggingForBooks in exchange for an honest review