Today's review is the first from a new pal, Average Jeff.
Genre:
Political/Sci-Fi
Description:
“In
1970s Buenos Aires, with the city under military occupation, people
disappear at a terrifying rate. They are the desaparecidos,
those who vanish forever.
Camouflaged
by the ongoing crisis, someone abducts young adults for another goal.
These desaparecidos are used to create a compliant,
easily-manipulated population.
Lucas
and Vera Freund are among those abducted. The young couple—both
brilliant scientists—have stumbled onto a discovery that could
change humanity forever. To shield their work from those who would
abuse it, they’re willing to make the ultimate sacrifice. Years
later, Frances Fons and Julian Haller meet in Zurich. They know
nothing of the horrors that transpired in Argentina.”
Author:
The is
Julia Starling's first book: Against
the Oaks of Bashan.
Starling “is a medical doctor and psychotherapist. Born and raised
in Buenos Aires, Argentina, she spent five years in the UK finishing
her clinical studies and then moved to California to complete her
psychotherapy training. She currently lives in Northern New Mexico
with her husband.”
Appraisal:
The
Oaks of Bashan
opens wonderfully, with an ingrown biblical ceremony of contrition,
complete with gargoyle-like incantations. It fits neatly with the
book’s title, the allusion to Bashan, a terrible battleground in
the Book of Genesis that remains a terrible battleground today, the
Golan Heights between Syria and Israel. And, to my delight, the next
chapter of the Oaks
leaped across time to land among the preparations for a sulfurous
lawn party. Wonderful. But just as I reached for the petit fours, I
stumbled over the first of many leaf piles of impassable adjectives.
The
Oak’s descriptions
got told and elaborated upon and tormented until they betrayed more
than they revealed. “People marveled at her ability to create the
most exquisitely delicate tastes, to tap into pleasures of times
gone—and often speculated on the intriguing juxtaposition of the
seemingly earthy predisposition, this almost peasant-like simplicity,
with the perfumed air of French aristocracy that emanated from her
indifferent, icy urban demeanor.”
And
so on. What started with two moody chapters intimating an era of
political horrors fell down the rabbit hole of melodrama. Where
there was the appearance of story development, it clogged with
flummery that failed to drive the story forward. No single scene
gained purchase enough to mount the rungs on the ladder of suspense.
Language substituted for action. Pronouns quailed for antecedents,
and adjectives turned on each other with the noble aim of contrast
but succumbed to conflict. “A peasant-like simplicity” crashed
against “the perfumed air of French aristocracy,” which was then
mugged by the chef’s “icy, urban demeanor.” Contrast? Yes.
Laborious? Yes. Rule: No fifty-word sentence about a victimized wife
whose foodie talents grow byzantine should go unedited.
Against
the Oakes of Bashan had
so much going for it when it began, but its trees never grew into a
forest; maybe it was all those leaf piles. What was advertised as a
tale of Argentina’s political horrors driven by the turbines of
sci-fi doom has its possibilities. But the author’s work was felled
by its own axe. Too bad. It all started so well.
FYI:
The
reader would do well to know some Spanish, or take classes. Where, in
some works, the use of foreign terms piques a description, the use of
Spanish nouns, possibly Argentine idioms, in this book, lost me.
Format/Typo
Issues:
No
significant issues.
Rating:
** Two Stars
Review
by: Average Jeff
Word
Count: 65-70,000 words
2 comments:
Welcome, Average Jeff. I wanted to let you know I enjoyed your review today. :)
Loved this review!
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