This is a fantasy/sci-fi hybrid that is a portal story, blending and interweaving two different worlds/times/realities. It reminded me of the Starz TV series Outlander, which I’m rather partial to. But other stories of this kind some to mind, such as Michael Crichton’s Timeline. In the case of Q-16, we’re alternating between our modern day world, set in Ontario, Canada, and a world of epic fantasy, of castles and sword and sorcery battles, and prophecies. Our heroes are human teens (this is also YA lit) and a rag tag team of other humanoid species. The idea of moderns hooking up with ancients to battle a mad tyrant hell-bent on taking over the multiverse is both unique and fun, and a powerful premise to construct a series upon.
The foreshadowing in the early part of the story is both humorous and ironic. Our heroes in the modern day world have a penchant for fantasy films with castles and swords and horses and dragons; they just bemoan the fact that the modern day world works nothing like that. Walking home after the movie they find out how wrong they are when the sky bursts open, and they are accosted by a talking Phoenix and a Thunderbird. The emissaries from another realm invite the teens on a mission to save the world. “But we’re just teens!” “Yes, but you have the ability to believe.” The teens, after showing no short amount of skepticism, agree to the challenge. But then are left with little more than the cryptic engraving left by the birds: “Q-16.” Shortly after that, following up on the clue, our heroes are being introduced to the teleporter that connects their worlds, and the legacy they’ve inherited by way of their birthright to guard over that portal, and our heroes are off. The book wastes no time dallying; the pace is relentless from the onset. The fun and energy and effective teen dialogue and psychology are reminiscent of the recent spate of Narnia films.
Long before our heroes are even aware of it, the reader finds out what they’re up against, a most formidable psychic assassin. We see him demonstrating his abilities, and then being recruited by his king to go after the three teens whose job it is to guard the eye to all worlds. This guy was convincingly scary in a Darth Vader sort of way, and I definitely wouldn’t want him coming after me. As with all compelling bad guys, he has dimension and character. The author ably sidesteps any one-note depiction of an evil nemesis which is the chief mistake that serves as a death knell for many books where action and adventure feature heavily. To make matters even more forbidding for our heroes, the psychic assassin is on his way long before the kids’ training and indoctrination is complete; in fact, it’s barely started. So they are ill-prepared for the epic dangers they’re facing.
But once the kids start their training in learning how to use their psychic powers, the book of course, becomes that much more fun. They must discipline themselves to avoid the temptation to use their powers back in the current day, where they can risk revealing themselves. And those temptations are not easily overcome, considering the trials and taunts the typical teen faces in high school.
I found the author’s command of medieval times authoritative and compelling; no small feat considering how much they stood on ceremony in those days. The romantic story thread is dialed up to the max, which should appease the teenage crowd.
This is a big book that demands a fair chunk of your time. All the more true since it’s not one that’s easily speed-read. But I imagine it would qualify as good holiday reading, or for those vacations when you have a larger chunk of time to devote.
My one nitpick is actually with the opening. The hook chapter, which included an epic battle scene, kept that battle scene off-camera for the most part, and instead cuts straight to the festivities in its aftermath by the celebrating victors, and jumps straight into a romantic story thread during the party. I think both the battle’s aftermath and the pining over the beloved would have been much better treated as a relief from an exciting battle which we actually got to experience, especially when you consider that this is supposed to be a hook chapter. The prologue is also relatively brief and I would like to have spent a little more time getting a feel for this world before cutting away to present day. But despite a soft open, the author ultimately treats the reader to the full monty over the ensuing nearly 500 pages. So there’s no reason to ultimately feel cheated.