thisisatest Wrote:All coincidences seem to point to RJ taking on Rasalom in the rewrite. Don't do it. Glaeken's still the MAN.
thisisatest Wrote:Steve D
It took me over two months to read Crisscross. I savored it like a fine wine (I don't drink, but every other person says it). Pity is, I didn't enjoy it as much as the other RJ books. All The Rage is still fresh in my mind, even though I read it years ago. Crisscross, however, is already slipping from my memory even though I spent three months with it, reading and rereading many passages. Overall, what bothered me was the Cult theme. I remember years ago, someone pointed out to F. Paul Wilson about the Moonies running guns and he replied something to the effect, "Hmmmm....very interesting. Must note this down." I wondered what he would do with that note, and I think that note evolved into Crisscross. But the cult was not interesting enough to drive the plot for me. The two main villains were not very villainous. The Scientologists in real life are truly villainous. One of their creeds is to wipe out those who they perceive to oppose them, even if only in print. In other words, the Dormentalists could not match the villainy of a real cult, and after reading so much about the Scientologists over the years, I don't see how I could not be disappointed. And to see Brady sent off to jail as the ending? I would have rather seen Jack off him as he did the blackmailer. The Haunted Air and All The Rage still stand atop the RJ oeuvre as standalone novels. Crisscross for me seemed like a puzzle piece for the rewrite of NIGHTWORLD rather than a standalone. I did, however, love the Glaeken section foreshadowing. I hope this development doesn't alter the role Glaeken plays in the NIGHTWORLD finale. All coincidences seem to point to RJ taking on Rasalom in the rewrite. Don't do it. Glaeken's still the MAN.
APhew Wrote:I seriously doubt that will happen. R & G have been at each other for a VERY long time. For RJ to step in at the last moment would be next to criminal for the final confrontation. It began with Rasalom and Glaeken and that's how it will end.
Of course, I am not F. Paul, what's in the cards is completely unknown to me. I speak only out of a sort of reassurance to myself.
thisisatest Wrote:Steve D
The two main villains were not very villainous.
Mr_Falcon Wrote:Steve-
Nope, what makes Jack so addictive is that killing is his last refuge: his fixes are often much more interesting.
In some ways, Jack embodies the philosophy Salvor Hardin ('Violence is the last refuge of the incompetent'). Yes, Jack uses violence and is hardly incompetent, but he always looks at other solutions first. That's what makes him great!
Mr_Falcon Wrote:In some ways, Jack embodies the philosophy Salvor Hardin ('Violence is the last refuge of the incompetent').