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A Philip K. Dick Award Winner from "a brilliant writer": In a ravaged California, a man tries to rescue his lost love from a soul-devouring religious cult (William Gibson). In the twenty-second century, the City of Angels is a tragic shell of its former self, having long ago been ruined and reshaped by nuclear disaster. Before he was in a band in Ellay, Gregorio Rivas was a redeemer, rescuing lost souls trapped in the Jaybirds cult of the powerful maniac Norton Jaybush. Rivas had hoped those days were behind him, but a desperate entreaty from a powerful official is pulling him back into the game. The rewards will be plentiful if he can wrest Urania, the official's daughter and Gregorio's first love, from Jaybush's sinister clutches. To do so, the redeemer reborn must face blood-sucking hemogoblins and other monstrosities on his way to discovering the ultimate secrets of this neo-Californian civilization. One of the most ingeniously imaginative writers of our time, Tim Powers dazzles in an early work that displays his unique creative genius, earning him a nomination for the Nebula Award. Alive with wit, intelligence, and wild invention, Dinner at Deviant's Palace is a mad adventure across a dystopian future as only Tim Powers could have imagined it. This ebook features an original introduction by the author. … (more)
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Now, all that quibbling quibbled, it definitely has some interesting stuff going on, including a fairly coherent evil scheme as evil schemes in sf go and a protagonist that I found pretty likeable despite his constant protestations of unlikeability (see also: reference to Catholic writers above.) But, if you've not read Powers before, I would recommend The Drawing of the Dark or Last Call above this.
He is approached to redeem his first girlfriend and... well all
In this post apocalypse tale, Powers reuses elements of earlier stories and some characteristic plot and viewpoint devices to give us a pretty fast moving adventure story which is a reversal on the hardboiled detective plot that probably inspired it.
The
Duffy, the protagonist of Powers' The Drawing of the Dark was also an artist at one time and hopes to rekindle and an affair with an old love, Epiphany, as Gregorio Rivas wants his beloved Urania back. Epiphany dies but Urania lives. However here, Rivas discovers, in a very credible piece of psychology, that he only obsessed about her because he couldn't have her.
There are a couple of distinctive Powers elements. One is the maiming of the character (a quite self-conscious plot element of Powers which he rightly thinks raises the stakes involved in his hero's struggles and makes their pain more real).
As the hemogoblin feeds on Rivas, he takes not only more of his energy but also more of his personality as he gains in corporeality. This is first and foremost the story of a man who changes from a self-absorbed (his thinking of lyrics based on his experiences while he undergoes various trials seems both very writerly and and self-centered man into someone willing to undergo the submerging of his self, peril to his body, and reconfrontation with the horrors of the Jaybush cult that he knows too well (though, of course, he doesn't know everything about them) to rescue Urania -- never mind that the object of his faithful and heroic sacrifice is not what he thinks. He makes a good faith effort. It is the reversal of the plot where a soft man hardens under adversity. Rivas softens, lets down his zealously guarded borders, and doesn't want to be reabsorbed with the personality elements he has literally left behind with the hemogoblin.
I notice that Powers uses what, for him, is the characteristic style of concentrating almost exclusively on his viewpoint character of Rivas (in other books, like the American Fisher King books, he has several viewpoint characters) but he does have slight interludes from the hemogoblin's point of view, and fellow redeemer (sort of a deprogrammer) Fracas McAn is very briefly a viewpoint character. Powers, even at this point in his career, does a wonderful job with extensive interior monologue which serves well to make Rivas a real character complete with absurd and understandable and realistic reactions to danger. As Powers has noted (after someone else pointed it out to him), this is another book with a climax set on the water -- here at the Deviant's Palace.
A fast moving, post-apocalyse adventure with quite good characterization and a novel reversal of a typical plot.
Extended review:
In the city of Ellay, where life in some mutated form goes on following a nuclear cataclysm, Gregorio Rivas is twice rare: he's a gifted musician and composer with some unique skills, and he's a redeemer, the
A charismatic cult leader by the name of Jaybush has been amassing followers, keeping them in thrall with drugs and mass hypnosis. Only the most cunning, resourceful, and daring can get in and bring someone out. Rivas is hired to redeem the daughter of a rich and powerful man--a woman who happens to have been his cherished first love. Everything is on the line for him as he struggles to penetrate the cult without falling under its spell and ultimately confronts the evil at its core.
In the wake of the 1978 tragedy in Guyana I read a number of books on destructive cults, the psychology of cult programming and deprogramming, and Jim Jones and Jonestown in particular. I continue to find the subject fascinating and deeply disturbing, in fictional treatments as well as personal memoirs. As a dystopian novel, this 1985 fantasy by Tim Powers seems dated in a number of ways, but the imaginative quality is nonetheless extraordinary and the writing compelling. The subject matter drew me in and held me. The particularly repugnant aberrations known as hemogoblins, which may owe a little something to Dante, are far more chilling than any conventional fictitious monster.
I haven't had equally high opinions of everything I've read by Tim Powers, but he is a writer I can trust, and that more than anything else made this a timely choice for me. It was a good time for something absorbing, however dark.
On a reread - I found it considerable different than what I thought it originally was. The book is well done. We have a post-apocalyptic California
On the whole - this book is weird. Like twisted weird. Its not a bad thing, but it is relentless. From the Jaybird cult, to who Deviant is. Its a completely weird book, and there isn't much that is positive in it. Luckily, its short, covers some very interesting ground, and its logically consistent.
As stated originally, its a book I'm not sure I like, but the book is intriguing.
Like Jerry Pournelle, Powers has set a number of his books in and around Los Angeles. I happen to be pretty familiar with LA, but I like this kind of thing even when it is not an area I’m familiar with. But since this is a post-apocalyptic LA, Powers gets to have some fun with the location. My personal favorite is the Ellay-Ex Deep, the circular bay that is reputed to glow in the center, and from whence radioactive delights are fished up to be served in the titular palace.
Ellay itself is what passes for a bastion of civilization, a center of trade in a mostly agricultural landscape. Gregorio has a pretty comfortable life there, playing his violin-like pelican in a bar, drinking, whoring, and enjoying the dissipations of being a post-apocalyptic rock star. At least until a baldy sport shows up at Spinks and offers him a ridiculous amount of money to go on one last redemption.
I hadn’t been aware of the use of the term “sport” in a genetic sense until I read Dinner at Deviant’s Palace. I mostly thought of the word “sport” as a upper-crusty way of referring to a friend, like in The Great Gatsby. Greg uses the term as an insult when he rejects the bald man’s offer, nearly getting himself into a duel over it. I enjoy the word play that Powers engages in here, as I suspect most native English readers would not think he was calling the man a mutant to his face. There is a lot of that in this book, and I enjoyed it immensely.
Unlike The Drawing of the Dark, I didn’t often find Dinner at Deviant’s Palace laugh out loud funny. The themes of the book are typical for Powers, but the voice is very different. It is often dry and witty, but also dark, with touches of horror. I appreciate this difference, as Greg is a very different man than Brian Duffy. Brian is a charming old reprobate; Greg is just kind of an asshole. It is possible that this book is a less popular one just because of Greg’s personality, which is distinctly unlovely.
Greg does share some traits with Brian: he’s left-handed, deft with a blade, and more than a bit of a drunkard. That latter item is in itself a common theme of Powers works. Powers himself has said that he had to give up drinking in the mid 1990s, which would have been about ten years later than he wrote this book. Not only Brian Duffy and Greg Rivas, but Scott Crane and other Powers protagonists have tended to drink to excess. For all of these characters, it fits well. Rock stars, old soldiers, and men dealing with grief often turn to drink. However, another profession that tends to be tipplers are authors, and I’ve often felt that Powers was writing from personal experience here.
Yet, despite Greg’s flaws, he is not just a protagonist, but a hero. A genuine white hat. For all his selfishness and vanity, Greg does eventually agree to try and redeem the daughter of the richest man in Ellay [although not without attempting to drive a very hard bargain first]. Because Greg cannot abandon Urania to the tender mercies of the Jaybirds. He knows what they are like, because he was one.
Greg was the best redeemer in Ellay because he knew Norton Jaybush and his followers, the Jaybirds, well enough to infiltrate the group and spirit away new recruits before their minds were ruined. In a providential twist, Greg’s personality equips him well for this role [and his drinking and talent for music come in handy too]. However, Greg is retired from redeeming for a reason: adventuring is a young man’s game.
Greg Rivas isn’t old by any stretch, but I do appreciate Powers’ lively sense of what it means to age. Greg’s knowledge is just as relevant as ever, but when success or failure depends upon the quickness of your knife and how long you can go without sleep, even getting into your thirties is going to lower your odds.
That Greg agrees to do this at all, given that he knows he has a good chance of failure, is why I see Greg as a hero rather than an anti-hero. Little does he realize the price he will pay. In addition to Powers take on getting old, it is rare for a Powers protagonist to make to the end of a book with all of their bits intact. And yet, for all the physical peril that Greg faces, dying is far from the worst thing that could happen to him.
Greg’s quest is both enabled and undermined by his incipient dissolution, and his fate hinges on: who is Gregorio Rivas? Come along on an adventure and find out.