Quick Takes on Some Quick Reads: The Time Traveler’s Guide to Dating; Ice by Neil Lancaster; Shall We Gather by Alex Bledsoe

The point of these quick takes posts is to catch up on my “To Write About” stack—emphasizing pithiness, not thoroughness. These three were all short reads, making it very difficult to write much more than this, anyway.

The Time Traveler's Guide to Dating

The Time Traveler’s Guide to Dating, Issue 1

by Todd Gilbert, Brandon McKinney, Zachary Brunner, Daniel Bruckner
Series: The Time Traveler’s Guide to Dating, #1
PDF, 22 pg.
Read: April 4, 2020

I saw an advertisement for this on Instagram last weekendsomething about a Time Travel Rom-Com in six free issues. I decided it was worth a shot.

This is the story of an assistant manager at a “big box” store, angry and resentful over being denied a promotion (a series of them, I think). He sets out to exact his revenge by (the reader can see) future versions of himself.

So far, I’ve read the first issueit’s a clever story, I like the art. I really don’t like the protagonist, but have hope he can be redeemed (or another major character emerges to get behind). But for the moment he’s an impetuous, selfish fool, and I’m sort of rooting against him.

I’m not going to check back in on this until I finish the series, but I’m looking forward to the rest of it.

Ice

Ice

by Neil Lancaster
Series: Tom Novak Thriller
Kindle Edition
Read: April 4,2020

So, it seems that a Mexican drug cartel is trying to bring a new, extra addictive variety of Meth into London. We see both a user recruited by the cartel’s representative and a less-than-ethical tax specialist who finds himself laundering money for them. Novak comes into both of their lives in his efforts to stop this incursion.

So, here’s the cool thingminor spoilerNovak takes on a criminal enterprise and doesn’t hurt/shoot/kill anyone. That’s a nice thing to see.

But, this just wasn’t a good story. It feels like an outline, there’s no real drama or suspense. There’s a lot of talking, a lot of exposition.

I don’t like not saying good things about Novak or Lancaster, but aside from the novelty of Novak not leaving a trail of death and destruction, there’s not a lot of positive things to say. I like the idea of this, I just didn’t dig the execution.

Shall We Gather

Shall We Gather

by Alex Bledsoe
Series: Tufa
Kindle Edition, 18 pg.
Tor Books, 2013
Read: March 24, 2020

There’s not much of a plot here, eitherbut there is one. This is primarily a way to look at two charactersthe outsider desperately trying to make a home in Cloud County, Rev. Craig Chess, and Mandalay Harris. Someone (no one we’ve met before) is dying and he asked for Chess to come. Outside, Chess meets Mandalay for the first time and the two have a couple of interesting conversations. There’s a bit more to it than that, but that’s enough for this.

I really liked watching these two interact, sizing each other up. Mandalay is at her creepifying best and Chess is his earnest, loving self. As much as he and I would debate essentials of the Faith, Chess has always been one of those fictional characters that’s easy to respect as well as like. I always appreciate the way that Bledsoe writes him.

Short (very short), but absolutely worth the time. It’s the one thing that I’ve taken off the TBR list since I started those Down the TBR Hole posts because I’ve read it. Will hopefully not be the last.

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4 Comments

  1. But bad guys deserve to die! So if there is no shooting or even hurting, what? They feel bad?
    But don’t worry, I have shot them ALL in my imagination, so book justice has been served!

  2. Interesting stories you’ve picked up. While they don’t seem to stand out much, I’m glad that they didn’t all feel like a waste of time. Thanks for sharing. 🙂

    • No, not a waste of time…but I needed a little more from all of them (thankfully, those are readily available)

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