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#TWWBF2021 #CelebratingLove #Adaptations Panelist Karen Janowsky


 



The following reviews are from my September 2019 readings of earlier editions.*


The Persistence of Memory, Book 1: Déjà vu

Karen Janowsky

New Adult(ish) speculative fiction with romantic elements

Mill City Press February 2019


The Persistence of Memory is a beguiling mash-up. It begins as a brutally immersive Holocaust testimony set in Germany in 1938. At the age of twenty-one, New Yorkers Daniel Hecht, his two best friends, and his mom discover that their U.S. citizenship can’t protect them from the racial hatred of the Nazis. Survival exacts steep costs that exchange one generation for another and smoothly transitions this story into science fiction. In the 21st century Daniel is a decorated war hero who is disillusioned, jaded, and patriotic. His inner turmoil and traumatic experiences generate emotional whiplash. Enter amnesiac Nina Archer. Who is she? What are her origins? Why does she fluently speak an ancient language? Add mystery and romance (mostly sweet, until very abruptly, it becomes explicit) to this layered and multifaceted tale, which includes social commentary about humanity’s mistakes replicated in every generation: slavery, genocide, abandonment of military service members in peacetime, and entrenched gender roles as artificial and misleading constructs of identity.


Some of the harmful influences of the braggadocio of toxic masculinity are addressed with humor as found on page 244 when Daniel thinks, “…he could figure out how to make her climax, somehow. Men he knew talked about how easy that was all the time… They couldn’t all have been exaggerating.” Daniel is out of his element in assorted ways.


Once Nina is introduced she shares the spotlight with Daniel, then gradually dominates the focus. Additional comments about her narrative arc increase the odds of spoilers, but a major personal conflict resolution in which Nina apologizes with specificity and Daniel with vagueness didn’t work for me.


The Persistence of Memory, Book One: Déjà vu is also a saga about a team of crime fighters with a range of attitudes like adult members of John Hughes’s Breakfast Club combined with the dedication to protecting the world found in the Justice League and the Avengers. Mythology, philosophy, ancient history, and more, this author incorporates multiple belief systems and cultures into this hybrid tale that features an organically inclusive cast of interesting characters whose experiences make readers wonder if time is spherical. Like the face of an analog clock, does life always send humans back to where they started?


Book Two is near the top of my very long, personal TBR list.


[minor proofing notes: Due to the overall excellent craftsmanship of The Persistence of Memory, Book One: Déjà vu, the few instances of missing prepositions, articles, a set of closed quotation marks, and a duplicate set of open quotation marks were noticeable. Sometimes there’s no offsetting comma in dialogue where a character is addressed by name. Is this the result of new de facto style guidelines as influenced by texting and social media?]


*More recent editions have corrected the minor proofing oversights mentioned.




The Persistence of Memory, Book 2: All Our Yesterdays

Karen Janowsky

Adult speculative fiction with romantic elements

Mill City Press February 2019



Book One: Déjà vu started with a recent history set in scenes of violent sensory immersion. Book Two: All Our Yesterdays begins as an acoustic Homeric delivery of the ancient origin story and end-times tale of the legend of Ishtar.


What do sentient beings remember?

How do they remember?

Why do they remember?

Where do they store those memories, and when—and how—do they apply the lessons learned from those memories to their lives?


Although Book Two is more of a romance than Book One without sacrificing its action hero intensity, it uses Nina and Daniel’s firmly established personal relationship to explore themes about the importance of having an ethical moral compass in battling philosophical extremism and religious zealotry within the context of their emotional intimacy, and as members of the World Intelligence Security Endeavor. WISE suffers its own internal chain of command and battle weariness issues. The ironically named Concordance Group is only one of their many violent and determined adversaries.


Challenges and crises bombard Nina and Daniel and their friends. The unsatisfactory personal conflict scenario between Nina and Daniel in Book One gets revisited in surprisingly profound ways in Book Two, when Daniel realizes on page 98: This was not Nina’s problem, but his.

How refreshing.


In an odd internal debate passage the crime of attempted sexual assault seems to be equated with unprofessional behavior during the aftermath of a deadly field operation, which may intend to highlight one of the issues in legal persecution of sexual assault crimes compared to reprimands given, or not, for non-criminal infractions against workplace protocols.


Once again, this gifted storyteller blends genres, timelines, generations, nationalities, religions, mythologies, and universes to weave an intricate saga that embodies organic inclusion as it entertains and engages readers on multiple levels.


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