fpw Wrote:[SIZE=3]First off, I was not insulted. Some of the remarks you (Steve) made in the opening post could be considered a tad belligerent and more than a tad disingenuous, but I have a thick hide. (A result, I suppose, of all the rejections before selling my first story.) This forum was designed to trade ideas and opinions, not kiss my butt, and I like the spirited discussion you’ve provoked.
I appreciate your saying that. My point was not to be insulting but to express my level of disappointment. Had you and I been sitting across from each other at a table, I probably would have used gentler words but would have said the same thing -- that the plotting of
Hosts was not up to your usual standards.
And before I continue, let me say that I understand the thick hide. My vocation is roughly the same as your avocation, although most of my paychecks arrive for non-fiction wordsmithing and I'm frequently "behind the scenes."
Quote:The problem -- and a number of replies have come close to it –- is confusing character mindset with reader mindset.
As the reader of a mystery-thriller. . . you’re examining everything with a microscope. . . . (Imagine living through every minute of your life on DefCon-4 alert.)
I do keep that in mind. However, in Repairman Jack, you have already established a character who
does live his life somewhere around Defcon 3. Ken has objected to my cavalier use of the term "paranoid" (although that's been Jack's self-description more than once, albeit tongue-in-cheek) so lets change that to hyper-vigilant. Especially when he knows there's a real danger out there. Knowing that there's a paranormal entity that is not only trying to killl him but which has threatened those he loves most would certainly make the character you've so vividly described highly alert for any indications of the wierd. Throughout
Hosts, however, he was not only not hypervigilant but he didn't recognize indicators when they tapped him on the shoulder.
Quote:Reader mindset makes you suspicious of everything. But in the character’s mindset he’s simply experiencing his quotidian existence.
Absolutely true -- except that Jack has every reason to be on constant alert for things not-so-quotidian. Even a normal human being who is
not a character in a thriller would be more on the alert than Jack was if they knew some powerful interdimensional entity was after their hide.
Now, my memory of the book tells me that at some point, Kate told Jack that he'd been recommended by a lady who, though a stranger, knew more about her than she should have, and further insisted that only Jack could help. Quickly skimming through the book once more, I didn't find that passage so perhaps my memory is incorrect. If so, I withdraw that particular example. But since Ken asked for others, let's look at the business with the microwave oven and how it interferred with the personality change.
There is nothing to that which,
by itself would definitely make Jack think, "Aha! This looks like the Otherness at work!" But it's something which, on the face of it, makes no logical sense. I cannot accept that a man so attuned to threats against him that he zeroed right in on the Kozlowski brothers would still not even begin to wonder "Is it possible that the Otherness is involved here?" By this point in the story, there have been enough truly bizarre things that it is inconceivable for Jack to not have even a glimmer of suspicion.
Okay, that being said, let's get back to the reason I posted in the first place. I wanted to know if other fans (and I do remain a fan) had noticed some of the glitches I did and could tell me whether they continue. The range of response, on this board and elsewhere, has run the spectrum from those who totally disagree with me about these things being glitches to those who said "okay, yeah, Jack was uncharacteristically dense in that one book but it was fun anyway and it hasn't happened since." So I'll keep on buying and reading the books.
Every creator, no matter how great, has turned out some flawed gems. Most have produced a few real clinkers. There are reasons why not every Shakespeare play gets a lot of stage time and why you probably won't hear Beethoven's First Symphony down at the concert hall. And while I wouldn't compare myself with either of those two, there are certainly creations of my own that I now dearly wish I'd done differently.
Also, as a point of trivia and good will, the only RJ book that I didn't purchase with my own funds was
Legacies, which was sent to me by the publisher for review. That was, alas, an error because it was not the type of book I was being paid to review at the time. After reading it, though, I did recommend it to the proper reviewer and also gave it a rave in an online reader's review. Unfortunately, due to organizational policies and politics, I had to do so as an anonymous reviewer.
Further, FWIW, you might like knowing that, despite my criticisms, the two author/subject combinations that have always lead to my instantly snapping up a book without second thought are F. Paul Wilson/Repairman Jack and Terry Prachett/Diskworld. (There used to be three, but the Elizabeth Peters/Emerson combination doesn't get quite so enthusiastic a response from me nowadays.)
A pleasure to make your acquaintance!
Steve