The Omen Machine: Richard Rahl Returns

After reporting on Death’s Mistress by Terry Goodkind, set in the world of the Sword of Truth novels, I decided to go back and read the books I missed between the two series. The Omen Machine picks up the story of Richard Rahl and Mother Confessor Kahlan sometime after their victory over the wicked Jagang.

Ruling from the People’s Palace in D’Hara, Richard starts to hear what seems to be prophesy from some unlikely sources, prophesy that is coming true very quickly. Officials from around the Empire are up in arms, believing that Richard is keeping prophesy from them, especially when they hear of an Omen Machine spouting the same prophesies. These are tricky issues for Richard, but everything comes to a head when he realizes that Kahlan’s life is in danger.

The Omen Machine is the first of four books subtitled “A Richard and Kahlan Novel.” All the same characters are back from the original series, and I enjoyed spending time with them again. I did find the original series more interesting since it involved a lot of discovery by Richard, and Goodkind was particularly skilled writing about that. The breadth was also much greater, following many groups of people across the known world.

That said, The Omen Machine is a well-written book with much excitement. And true to form, Goodkind keeps readers in suspense until the very end, where he finally resolves all the critical issues. A good book, worth reading.

Travelers: A Fun Trip

Eric McCormick heads up a cast of time travelers in Netflix’s Travelers. McCormick as Grant MacLaren leads a team who has been sent back in time to correct problems which have led to their own dystopic present. But they don’t travel by time machine. They have found a way to send a traveler’s consciousness into a person moments before he or she was supposed to die. This leads to some interesting situations, because members of the team must somehow live the lives of the people they have become, while still fulfilling their mission.

McCormick’s character takes over the body and life of a successful FBI agent, which helps greatly with his mission due to the resources available to him. Other members of the team are not so lucky. One takes over a mentally challenged woman and is accused of having faked her disability. Another is now a heroin addict and still another is a high school football player with a history of getting into trouble. As you might expect, there are many challenges for these people — their assignment, their new families, and communication with their bosses in the future, usually through children.

The first season was very exciting. McCormick and the rest of the cast are all great, and I love the new twist on time travel. (Although Quantum Leap is similar, Dr. Beckett has no control over his leaping, not does he know his mission until he gets there). It was recently announced that there will be a second season. I can’t wait. Season 1 left the team in a bit of a mess. I want to see what happens.

The Chapel of Ease Leaves You Uneasy

In The Chapel of Ease by Alex Bledsoe, mystery surrounds a new musical opening Off-Off-Broadway. Written by Tennessean Ray Parrish, it is a love tragedy set in his home county and involves two couples — one corporeal and one spirit. The play, based on a true story, hints at something buried in the chapel where the play takes place, but never reveals what it is. Ray knows, but won’t even tell the cast.

The lead actor, Matt Johansson, becomes friends with Ray during rehearsals and learns something of his people called the Tufa and how they don’t want their stories told. Later, he meets one of them in New York, who seems to be there to stop the play.

After the preview performance for the press, Ray dies suddenly, and Matt volunteers to take his ashes back home. His ulterior motive is to find out the mystery of the chapel of ease, but while there, he discovers more about the Tufa people and their strange origins.

A compelling book, The Chapel of Ease takes the reader from the world of New York theater to backwater Tennessee filled with spirits, danger, and a strange people who just want to be left alone. Bledsoe has done an amazing job weaving a story around the legend of the Tufa. I highly recommend.

The Third Kingdom Rules

The Third Kingdom by Terry Goodkind is the second book which Goodkind refers to as “A Richard and Kahlan Novel.” It follows on the heels of The Omen Machine. I like this book better. It starts out with Richard and Kahlan in trouble, unconscious in the back of a wagon driven by two men who want to eat them. They escape from that dilemma but are still in trouble. It seems that the power released by Jit the Hedge Maid in the first novel, which Richard thought he had averted, has affected both him and Kahlan greatly. In fact, if they don’t get some help soon, they will die. Not only that, Richard discovers there is evil in the Dark Lands which he must fight. Unfortunately, Zedd, Nikki, and Cara are missing and Kahlan is unconscious. He must find his people, help Kahlan, and fight the evil, all while he is struggling with the darkness inside him inflicted by Jit. His only help is a teenage sorceress named Samantha, who is just starting to understand her powers.

The Third Kingdom is a lot more exciting than The Omen Machine. Starting out at a run, the action continues throughout. This is Goodkind at his best. The story continues in next book, Severed Souls. I just hope it’s as good.

3%: A Brazilian Dystopia

3% is a Brazilian series on Netflix about a civilization where 97% of the people live in squalor and 3% live in a land of plenty. At the age of 20, people can apply to enter the Process, a series of tests to select those who are worthy enough to leave the Inland and join the Offshore community. Some tests are social, some physical, some mental, but all are grueling — some can even result in death — and at any time a person can be eliminated and sent home.

In addition to the tension provided by the Process, more suspense is provided by a group known as the Cause, who oppose the Process and are trying to infiltrate it. Another wrinkle occurs behind the scenes. Ezequiel, the man in charge of the Process has a secret, and he is facing opposition from those who want him replaced.

This is an interesting concept, but not as well developed as I would like. The acting is flat, though that could be due to the fact that the dialogue is dubbed into English from Portuguese. In addition, as a Brazilian production, the series is probably low budget and lacking many of the resources available to an American production. That being said, they do a good job of evoking a mood of desperation among the contestants and a sense of something not quite right among those in charge. Clearly, the Offshore is not as utopic as they want everyone to believe.

I will probably watch more episodes of this show when they are released, but I will not recommend it as highly as other Netflix sci fi shows I have seen. Good, but not great. Watch it if you need a sci fi fix, but know that it’s lacking in some areas.