Jesse Cullum is a native. And he knows the passageway will be closing
soon. He's fallen in love with a woman from our time, and he means to follow
her back—no matter whose secrets he has to expose in order to do it.
MY REVIEW:
The protagonist is Jesse Cullum, a drifter in his
mid-twenties who grew up rough in a San Francisco brothel and was forced
to leave town under mysterious circumstances. Jesse suffers from PTSD, but his
nightmares are rooted not in wartime horrors, but in his dark and dangerous
California past, which includes a traumatic incident involving his younger
sister, Phoebe. Four years ago, as Jesse drifted across the plains of Illinois,
he stumbled across Kemp's workers constructing two tall towers surrounded by a
huge wall. Because Jesse is big, strong, and intelligent, they hired
him as a security guard for the City travelers. First, though, they cured
his syphilis and vaccinated him against all of the horrific diseases that
flourished within the 19th century population. Now that Jesse is in his
fourth year with the City, he's beginning to wonder what's next in his life
because Kemp's Mirror will be open for just one more year. Kemp has always said
that the City would remain in this time slot for just five years. Kemp believes
that staying any longer would create a culture bleed that would adversely
affect the people and alter historical events in dangerous and unpredictable
ways.
One day, Jesse gets a visitor—a 21st century woman named
Elizabeth DePaul. Elizabeth is a former soldier and a single mother who works
for Kemp. Her daughter, Gabbie, lives with Elizabeth's mother in North Carolina
(in the 21st century), and her husband is in jail for drug trafficking.
Elizabeth is definitely a modern woman, and her appearance in Tower 2 (the
Tower to which the locals are confined within the City) is a shock because she
studs her conversation with profanity, wears trousers, carries a gun (and other
weapons), and has a take-charge attitude that is shocking and offensive to the
locals (especially to the men). Elizabeth tells Jesse that because he saved
President Ulysses S. Grant's life earlier in the day, the President wants to
thank him personally. Then, he gets to meet August Kemp and is assigned to
partner with Elizabeth on a series of missions. The initial problem they deal
with is the mystery of the gun that the would-be assassin used in his attempt
to take Grant's life. It was not a 19th century weapon; it was a 21st century
Glock 19 that was somehow smuggled through the Mirror from the future. After
Elizabeth and Jesse work together to solve this case, they are separated for a
while—assigned to other missions. But by this time, they have made a personal
connection that neither is willing to give up.
As the story proceeds, we learn more and more details about
the mysteries of Jesse's life and about the dark secrets held by August Kemp.
Eventually, Kemp's enemies make life extremely dangerous for the City people, and
as Jesse and Elizabeth carry out one last mission, they make some decisions
that change their lives forever.
Wilson includes frequent moments of wry humor as Elizabeth
and Jesse go about their work. For example, when Jesse asks why he keeps being "pegged
as a local, and your clerks all peer at me like I'm Lazarus come forth," Elizabeth tells him, "It's
your beard...You look like a refugee from ZZ Top. You look like Zack
Galifianakis auditioning for a Civil War comedy." At one point,
Elizabeth complains about all of the vaccinations required of travelers, and
Jesse politely—but sarcastically—responds: "I
apologize for our diseases We'd do without them if we could." Jesse is a master of
understatement, as illustrated by this exchange with Elizabeth when they
encounter the decaying carcass of a horse in an alley:
"Oh God," Elizabeth said, covering her mouth.
"Do animals never die where you come from?"
"Of course they do. We try not to let them decay in public
places."
"That must make city life more pleasant," Jesse said.
And I
laughed out loud when Elizabeth (who is a rather large woman) turns to
Jesse and asks that age-old question:
"Does this bustle make my ass look fat?"
"No."
She laughed. "It's a joke. Sorry."
"Is
it? I've seen those magazines tourists leave behind. Women as bony as
tubercular mules."
"Fashion models."
"You're not like that."
"Okay, yeah."
"You're much more wholesome and...rounded."
"Right, thank you. Sorry I mentioned it."
Wilson is a master at seamlessly knitting the details of his
characters' lives into the plot. Nearly all of them are interestingly original.
With the exception of just a few who waver on the edge of stereotype, most of
them come across as real people—through their straightforward language, their
realistic actions, and their authentic emotions. Jesse is truly a fascinating
character, and I soon found that I was grasping at every one of Wilson's hints
about Jesse's past, trying to figure out what had gone so wrong in his life. Jesse
is such a strong and noble man that he dominates the novel with his plainspoken
conversation, his candid reactions to the wonders of the City, and the
deep-seated guilt and fear that keep him from sleep.
I was surprised and disappointed to find so few reviews of
this book on Amazon.com (although all were at the four- and five-star level)
because this is a terrific novel that more readers should be enjoying. If you
are looking for something fresh and inventive in the time-travel category with
a host of quirky characters and a rich, unpredictable plot, this novel is for
you.
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