Friday, December 19, 2008

The Unseen

Reading is my passion or at least one of them. So when the opportunity to review new books presented itself, I jumped at the idea. The deal is simple...the publisher sends me a book, I read it and write an honest assessment of what I think. I get a free book and the publisher gets a review.  Some books I'll like, some I'll love and some I will probably hate. So here goes:

Imagine an undercover culture of people who keep themselves apart from humanity. They work off the grid not because they have to but because they want or need to live their lives unseen. Then imagine what would happen if one member of this sub-culture discovered others who shared his compulsion to watch the lives of others not out of any perversion but rather in a quest for a connection with a subconscious memory or feeling of happier times.

Most of us have had the opportunity to "people watch" at the mall, the beach, in school, even as we drive from one place to another. It is a harmless pastime that can help to pass a few minutes or hours of inactivity and keep boredom at bay. In T.L. Hines' novel, The Unseen, the harmless pastime is a way of life that the author's hero, Lucas.

Lucas is a young man raised to be separate. When he is not washing dishes to add money to his getaway stashes, Lucas spends his days and nights living in abandoned buildings, eating leftovers and forgotten lunches from office break rooms and watching strangers. His code of ethics is simple. He watches until he feels a connection with someone, some hint that the person is aware of him. Once a connection is felt, he creates a history, a present and sometimes a future for his subject. He doesn't interact and he never goes into their private homes to watch them behind closed doors. An orphan in more ways than one, a chance encounter changes the game and moves Lucas from life on the periphery to the types of connections he never imagined. And isn't really sure he wants. 

As the basis for a novel, the story of Lucas as he discovers  a group of people with a similar compulsion to watch, it would have been more than enough to create a compelling read. Unfortunately, T.L. Hines doesn't have enough confidence in his original premise and before the end of the novel has thrown in so many unbelievable coincidences and random plot twists as to leave me feeling as if I had read not one book but at least three and none of them very good.

The biggest problem with The Unseen is that T.L. Hines doesn't know what type of book he wants to write. After setting up a fairly intriguing character in the loner Lucas, Hines introduces Donavan as the conduit for Lucas to learn of the Creep Club. The club is a group of people driven like Lucas to watch the lives of others but unlike him they also need to record and share what they see. Within days of his first encounter with Donavan, Lucas has broken his cardinal rule and is watching people in their homes. Unfortunately what he sees is a couple planning a murder and unlike the rest of the Creep Club members, Lucas wants to get involved and save the intended victim. Again, the novel could have been saved at this point if Hines had followed this story thread to a somewhat logical conclusion. Unfortunately he decides to add a government conspiracy, genetic engineering, mind control and the kitchen sink to the story instead. The result...one great big muddled mess.

So there you have it my first review. Would I recommend this book? No...not unless you're someone who enjoys reading a story that really does have everything but the kitchen sink.

Friday, March 07, 2008

Why God Why?

Today I received a pass along email from my sister. It was from a friend of hers whose sister has been missing since 1985. The sister, a 15 year old, disappeared on the way home from school and hasn't been seen since. Twenty-three years! Since I'm really close to both my sisters and even close to my brothers, I can't imagine not knowing where one of them is for 23 years. I can't imagine or understand God allowing that kind of pain for that length of time. Where is the joy cometh in the morning? Where is HE?

Lisa, my sister's friend, must have asked the same questions but I can't speak for her so it's only a guess. As I watched her video, http://www.youtube.com/user/MissingMySister I couldn't help but wonder how we keep walking in faith when God seems so distant and the world just plain cruel. Anyone want to take a shot at that one?

I don't think asking "Why" of God is a bad thing. I don't think it means I am less of a Christian but there are many people who do. These are the people who will say, "God works in mysterious ways" and expect you not to cry. I will cry and rail against God even while I love Him. It's my right as a flawed but trying to be faithful child. I want Lisa to find her sister. I want her 23 years of uncertainty to be over. I want her to know that God hasn't forgotten her. But all I know of Lisa is that she wants to find her sister.