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The Graveyard Game

The Graveyard Game

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Baker's Best yet!
Review: There's something wonderful about watching an author's style evolve. In her earlier novels of the Company, Kage Baker was clearly having fun, but at times (notably in Sky Coyote), she seemed to sacrifice character development for cheap humor. In her fourth novel, The Graveyard Game, she has proven to be capable of fully integrating the tragedy of her erstwhile heroine, Mendoza, with solid, complex character development.

The Company is a shadowy organization (officially called Dr. Zeus) that has mastered time travel and immortality, and the cyborgs they've created as a part of their immortality process are the stars of the series. Mendoza, the heroine of the first and third novels, is this novel's macguffin. Her arrest at the end of Mendoza in Hollywood is unknown to all but a few Company operatives, and when, in the year 1996, Facilitator Joseph (who rescued Mendoza when she was a child, and views himself as her father), and Literature Specialist Lewis (who has been in love with Mendoza for centuries) find out about the arrest, they set out to discover what happened to her.

Of course, since the Company monitors its agents remotely, and since few know what has happened, their quest spans hundreds of years, and starts to uncover the vast conspiracy that was only hinted at in Sky Coyote. Joseph already knew something was amiss -- the Enforcers, a group of Company operatives from the old days, when violence was a more common tool of the Company, have all vanished. Joseph's own "father," Badu, is among the missing, and he left an encrypted clue about his fate with Joseph (from which the book gets its title).

Lewis, meanwhile, is uncovering even more unsettling news about Mendoza's fate, and that of her second human lover, Edmund Bell-Fairfax. Events that had previously been thought to be coincidences now appear to have been contrived by the Company. And the Company itself seems to have dark origins that were only hinted at previously. As Lewis and Joseph delve further into the conspiracy, and as the 24th century (and the official creation of the Company) approaches, the book takes our heroes down a paranoia-laden path, as they find reasons to distrust both their human masters at the Company and even some of their fellow cyborgs.

Although Baker takes us through three centuries of conspiracies and tragedy (especially as we discover the fates of Mendoza's colleagues from the previous novel), she paces The Graveyard Game wonderfully, fleshing out Lewis and Joseph as genuinely interesting characters, providing some wonderfully humanizing (and humorous) moments along the way, including a delightful scene in which our heroes go on a chocolate bender -- chocolate having the same effect on them as alcohol on mortals. Lewis's love of Mendoza (and his obsession with Bell-Fairfax), and Joseph's anguish at losing both his father and his daughter, add a depth to their quest for the truth about who they are, and who they work for. This makes the tragic denouement all the more poignant.

Baker's writing style has come a long way over the course of four novels. She has moved from writing fun romps to writing some of the best character-driven science-fiction out there. With The Graveyard Game, she has proven that she deserves to be placed on the same shelf as such writers as Connie Willis, John Barnes and Nancy Kress. It would be a delight to see her shortlisted (and even winning) a World Fantasy Award in the near future.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Best so far!
Review: This book is my favorite, so far. It was much more interesting than the last two. Lots of 'strings' left hanging for the next book. Can't wait to see what happens next. Really enjoyed the Joseph and Lewis characters--especially the Theobramos binge in SF.

I love reading about historical California (probably because I'm a native).

I'd highly recommend 'Black Projects, White Knights' and hope that the characters will show up in next novel. Especially Budu!

Is Alec Mendoza's reincarnated lover?

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Best so far!
Review: This book is my favorite, so far. It was much more interesting than the last two. Lots of 'strings' left hanging for the next book. Can't wait to see what happens next. Really enjoyed the Joseph and Lewis characters--especially the Theobramos binge in SF.

I love reading about historical California (probably because I'm a native).

I'd highly recommend 'Black Projects, White Knights' and hope that the characters will show up in next novel. Especially Budu!

Is Alec Mendoza's reincarnated lover?

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Baker may be losing his grip on the plot . . .
Review: This fourth volume in the series is a considerable improvement over the last two. Things are coming to a head among the cyborgs employed (owned) by the Company, as time marches on toward the Silence that will occur in or before 2355. Mendoza is still missing, and Joseph and Lewis find ways to search for her -- and for the mysterious reappearing tall Englishman who caused her to go AWOL in the third volume. However, Baker this time introduces another extraneous and unnecessary element in the form of "fairie folk" who have been hunting Lewis for some 1,700 years. This annoying development smacks of deus ex machina. Well, we'll have to wait for the fifth (and probably last) volume to see if the author can bring all this together.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Graveyard Game
Review: Very creative concept. Wide scope - all of human history. Quite science fictionish with the cyborgs and all. At times very amusing. Not entirely satisfying. Ending rushed. Would prefer one terrific book to a series of books that are part killer and part filler, but I understand that a girl's gotta make a living. Better than your average bear.


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