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Wednesday, May 11, 2005
Reading List: The Black Arrow
- Suprynowicz, Vin. The Black Arrow. Las Vegas: Mountain Media, 2005. ISBN 0-9762516-0-4.
-
For more than a decade, Vin Suprynowicz's
columns
in the Las Vegas Review-Journal (collected in
Send In The Waco Killers
and
The Ballad of Carl Drega)
have chronicled the closing circle of individual freedom
in the United States. You may find these books
difficult to finish, not due to any fault in the writing, which
is superb, but because reading of the treatment of
citizens at the hands of a government as ignorant
as it is imperious makes your blood boil. Here, however, in his first
venture into fiction, the author has written a book which
is difficult to put down.
The year is 2030, and every complacent person who asked rhetorically, "How much worse can it get?" has seen the question answered beyond their worst nightmares. What's left of the United States is fighting to put down the secessionist mountain states of New Columbia, and in the cities of the East, people are subject to random searches by jackbooted Lightning Squads, when they aren't shooting up clandestine nursery schools operated by anarchist parents who refuse to deliver their children into government indoctrination. This is the kind of situation which cries out for a superhero and, lo and behold, onto the stage steps The Black Arrow and his deadly serious but fun-loving band to set things right through the time-tested strategy of killing the bastards. The Black Arrow has a lot in common with Batman--actually maybe a tad too much. Like Batman, he's a rich and resourceful man with a mission (but no super powers), he operates in New York City, which is called "Gotham" in the novel, and he has a secret lair in a cavern deep beneath the city.
There is a modicum of libertarian background and philosophy, but it never gets in the way of the story. There is enough explicit violence and copulation for an R rated movie--kids and those with fragile sensibilities should give this one a miss. Some of the verbal imagery in the story is so vivid you can almost see it erupting from the page--this would make a tremendous comic book adaptation or screenplay for an alternative universe Hollywood where stories of liberty were welcome.