Maggers and Ken both raise some valid points, but I think you both miss the key issue here:
Maggers:
Quote:I don't think it would be out of the ordinary at all for a new client to say that only Jack could help.
Ken:
Quote:There are many other people who call Jack, and we don't find out how they come to learn of him. Why should The Russian lady with the dog be so terribly unusual?
The Russian lady is unusual because it wasn't somebody passing on a reference to a friend or acquaintance. This was somebody who was a total stranger to Kate, who clearly knew more about Kate than she should have known. That would be curious under any circumstances.
Now remember, we are not talking about how ordinary people would react and what they would find usual or unusual. We're talking about Jack. Jack spends his life on the alert for danger. If, in the course of events, he were to learn that Mad Mike Murphy, ringleader of a team of serial-killer ventriloquists, was after his head, he would be on the alert for
anything that might indicate danger. Did that guy in the grocery line say "thank you" without moving his lips? Is that woman carrying overnight luggage or a dummy case? Jack would be watching for that stuff and would check out anything that made him suspicious. That is a fundamental part of his being.
However, by
Hosts he knows that an entity with paranormal abilities is trying to kill him. He
should be watching for any parallels to known dangers. He isn't! And in this situation, that warning to his sister should be a red flag. Maybe not enough to make him automatically assume an Otherness plot, but more than enough to make him pay close attention. He doesn't even do that.
Maggers:
Quote:I see it as evidence of Jack's simply being human. Why would he connect everything to the Otherness.
Ken
Quote:There is no parallel between them. The "street drug" in ATR went inert peridocally, while there is a contaminant in the medication used in Hosts. In Hosts, Jack learns of the mutation you mention right at the end.
Ken, you're right about the mutation. It's been several months since I read
Hosts and my memory slipped on details. In the beginning, he's aware of only a contaminant. But that makes no substantial difference.
Although the drugs involved in the two stories are totally different, Jack doesn't know that. the
does know that the Otherness has already operated once through a drug that resulted in extreme personality changes. Again, if that alone wouldn't make him assume the Otherness is involved -- and Maggers is right in saying that it, by itself, probably should not -- it
is something that should alert his paranoid mind to the possibility.
especially following his sister's encounter with the myserious Russian lady. By now, he should definitely be looking for evidence of the Otherness, even if he's not
sure its involved.
Maggers:
Quote:Jack just thinks he's an ordinary pirate-like character, living on the fringes of society, just outside the law. He still looks to earthly reasons for explanations.
Except that he ALSO knows that there is something outside our usual physical laws that wants him dead. Yet he ignores that fact much of the time. Is that really in character? I'd say no.
Ken:
Quote:Yep, she arrives at his side while he is semi-delirious, having somehow passed through a locked third-story apartment door that is virtually as strong as a vault -- and mysteriously disappears again. No sounds of opening or closing doors -- poof, she's there, she gives him a drink, makes some cryptic remarks, and poof she's gone again taking Susans dog with her. How strange that these events should have a dream-like quality to someone with a high fever.
Again, this view would make sense if it were an isolated incident, but you're overlooking both character and context. Jack is now perfectly aware that things can get through locked doors. He has even had prophetic dreams. And at this point, he's not yet semi-delirious but merely feverish. Furthermore, this event happens after the two red flags I've already discussed plus at least one or two more. No, I don't recall what they are any longer and I'm not going to invest the time in going through the book page by page to seek them out. But even with just those two, this is enough to put Jack on full-blown alert. He might conceivably
wonder whether it was only a dream, but he would definitely be acting as if it
might not be. That is his character.
Ken:
Quote:You said in your original post, "... this sort of sloppy storytelling is really beginning to annoy me." That's not insulting?
That is critical. I cited specific examples of what I consider sloppy storytelling and I labelled them as such. And I told what effect it had on me. Not sugar-coated, certainly, and while I probably could have couched the opinion in more diplomatic terms, it is not an insult. An insult is a personal attack or at the very least a put-down not backed up by reasoned argument. For example, something along the lines of "...maybe you ought to go back to Bugs Bunny cartoons," could, in certain contexts, be considered an insult minimalizing the work of of Tex Avery, Chuck Jones, Mel Blanc, Stan Freberg and the rest of the brillliant crew that worked on those animations.
Ken again:
Quote:Pity you don't hold yourself to a very high standard.
You think? Tell you what, you're free to criticize my professional work all you like. Back it with facts, please. Otherwise, you're 40-some years too old for the sort of Jr. High snipefighting that this, and especially your following, comment exemplifies. And I'm 30-some years too old treat it seriously. If you want to debate differing views on storytelling in general and RJ in specific, I'll be glad to do it and treat your opinions with respect, even if I disagree. Just leave the personal crap to the immature. This is the one and only response I'll make to it.