| After the Blue | |||||
| Russel Like | |||||
| Brunswick Galaxy Press, 253 pages | |||||
| A review by Lisa DuMond
After the Blue had a harder road to life than most of the novels on your bookstore
shelf. At one point, it appeared dead-in-the-water as its original publishing house stalled,
slowed, and then gave up the right to print it. But, Russel Like wasn't giving up that easy; he
researched the possibilities and decided to self-publish. Usually, that is fairly reliable
evidence that a book should have remained unseen, but in this case it is definitely the publisher's loss.
Uncovering this little treasure will be your gain.
Earth, in the not-so-distant future is a radically changed planet. Most of the world
lies in ruins, reclaimed by the wilderness always waiting nearby. No planes drone
overhead. No television signals bounce from satellites. No monster concert tours scream
into the night. No people no more. Or hardly any.
This is the world after the Gruumsbaggians' momentous and catastrophic visit from the
stars. The people of Earth pretty much boils down to the town of Jamesburg, New
Jersey. Aside from a few "wanderers," Jamesburg is it. And the folks of the small
town are getting along just fine until they encounter something they hoped never to see.
A century after their initial visit, the Gruumsbaggians have returned. The humans fear
it is to finish the job their bacteria started. Soon, they realize the answer is much
worse: the aliens have come back to repair the damage they inadvertently caused. Even
worse, they are armed with the sketchiest and just plain wrong conclusions about how
Earth operated. That isn't going to stop them, though, from getting the planet and its
people back to where they think we were when they so rudely interrupted.
After the Blue is a first novel, but it doesn't show.
Russel Like writes with an easy, assured style and a dry wit that speaks of years of experience. Or,
maybe, he's just one of the lucky ones who gets it right on the first try.
The showdown between the remaining humans and the Gruumsbaggians is a case of our own pop
culture coming back to haunt us. It's a struggle to overcome a well-meaning, but misinformed
invasion force. If there is a disappointment at all, it is that the humans feel compelled
to sink to violence to fight back. But, that's all right; when have humans ever failed to disappoint.
Perhaps, in the case of Russel Like, we have an author who knew he had a good thing and refused
to give up. Let's just assume he didn't stoop to violence to achieve his
goal. I'm fairly certain he didn't.
Lisa DuMond writes science fiction and humour. She co-authored the 45th anniversary issue cover of MAD Magazine. Previews of her latest, as yet unpublished, novel are available at Hades Online. |
|||||
|
|
If you find any errors, typos or anything else worth mentioning,
please send it to editor@sfsite.com.
Copyright © 1996-2009 SF Site All Rights Reserved Worldwide