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11Oct/11Off

Review: Blindfold, by Kevin J. Anderson

I recently listened to the audio book edition of Blindfold, and was both pleased and disappointed, as you'll see in my review.  Let me paraphrase the publisher's summary:

"Atlas is a struggling colony on an untamable world, a fragile society held together by the Truthsayers.  The Truthsayers are trained from birth as the sole users of Veritas, a telepathy virus that lets them read the souls of the guilty. Truthsayers are Justice—infallible, beyond appeal. Falsely accused of murder, Troy Boren trusts the young Truthsayer Kalliana... until, impossibly, she convicts him. Still shaken from a previous trial, Kalliana doesn't realize her ability is fading. But soon the evidence becomes impossible to ignore. The Truthsayers’ Veritas has been diluted so that Justice is truly blind while someone in the colony is selling smuggled telepathy. From an orbital prison to the buried secrets of a regal fortress, Kalliana and Troy seek to unravel the conspiracy that threatens to destroy their world from within. For without truth and justice, Atlas will certainly fall…."

This book was less than I expected from this author, as I was a fan of The Saga of Seven Suns.  But in this particular case, the more intriguing ideas were glazed over in the spirit of space opera.  I enjoy both hard sci-fi and space opera for what they are, but I want my space opera to only gloss over non-important or staple aspects of the genre in the interest of focusing on character, drama and plot. A few concepts addressed in the book that should have been given a more hard sci-fi treatment: rejuvenation process that allows someone to live for centuries, colony ships that travel for decades from Earth to Atlas, and the Veritas drug itself.

The narrator was excellent. I'm the first to criticize a mediocre narrator but this Jim Meskimen was a pro at attaching distinct voices to the characters so they could be recognized even without the author's help in identifying the speaker.  His pacing and inflection were right on target, though there were some rare moments when he seemed to think the sentence was over prematurely. Not a big deal.

The characters were somewhat flat, with the most interesting ones being given secondary roles.  There are basically four "main" characters who advance through the plot independently for the most part, and none of which deserve to be picked up for a sequel, if that were to ever happen.  I won't call them out specifically, because that might be considered a spoiler.

The world was also not very alive.  There was plenty of anecdotal descriptions of random aspects of the new world but they seemed to have been inserted as an afterthought.  Perhaps after the editor pointed out the world could have been another major character and was being completely ignored.

I know believability can be a silly thing to criticize in this genre, but there were several occasions where I found myself asking "Really? Come on, now..."  Like when the Truthsayers bite a Veritas capsule, they get an immediate rush and they turn into telepathic sponges, but I'm somewhat disbelieving that a virus-induced surge of neural activity can take effect that fast. The fast-acting viruses known to man take hours to really have an effect.  I realize this is an alien virus, but human biology still has it's place.  I would have liked the author to at least acknowledge this anomaly or better yet, explain it.

Bottom line: If you lean more heavily towards space opera than hard sci-fi, the book might appeal to you a great deal more.  I myself give it 3 of 5 stars.

Product link: Blindfold

 

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