A step up from the first story, which I enjoyed as well! A conclusion open-ended enough that maaaaybe the author could return to this world, but it also satisfyingly ties up loose ends.
When last we left our protagonist “Twinkle Eyes” in THE LOST PUZZLER, things were more dire than even I realized! Spoiler alert…he’s dead. :0 But thanks to significant global AI constructs (we’re about 500-600 years into the future) his consciousness survives.
The driving force of the first novel, the puzzler Rafik (also now a mind in the machine) exists here only in the beginning of the novel as a friendly face. At the behest of the AI Adam which, up until the apocalyptic “Catastrophe,” ran the gears of Earth like a benevolent god, “Twinkle Eyes” and his trusty sidekick, Galinak, are put into new bodies and sent back to Earth to track down a new puzzler to save the world (haven’t we been here before? More on that later.) Problem is, Adam and Rafik aren’t the only….minds…to do this. Someone else has reawakened “Peach,” a pre-Catastrophe special agent, for the same purpose.
This book is able to take a step back from the characters and plot sometimes in order to assess the larger worldbuilding. The reality of the, er, present is gory, dim and “medieval.” But now, we get confirmation of the technological greatness of the downed Tarakans. Yes, things get a little hazy for me with regards to who was human, who was…superhuman? And who was a “Guardian Angel,” which mostly feels like a clone army. Not great when the AI is compromised.
Because there is enough philosophy in this piece to get into the idea that Adam, which ostensibly exists to defend Tarakan, starts seeing itself as a hammer and everything that is not Tarakan as a nail. Thanks to Peach and the other pre-Catastrophe newbie, antagonist Mannes, we understand that Adam was influencing global events so that the rest of the world was starting to hate Tarakan. Maybe enough to incite something like World War III. Dun dun duuuun.
…which is what Adam wanted in order, “rationally speaking,” to save Tarakan. Which is why Mannes and his buddies ultimately developed Cain, to reel Adam in. Things don’t go as planned, given that Earth is now a “medieval” post-apocalyptic landscape. The problem for me is, neither Adam or Cain were on the page enough as “characters” for me to truly invest in them. It’s the foibles of the humans that always drove the story.
And that’s fine, because they were fun to follow! It’s quite obvious how much Kless loved writing (and audiobook narrator Michael David Axtell loved narrating) the bromance between Twinkle Eyes and Galinak. Twinkle Eyes himself had a tiiiiny bit more of a personal arc than he did last time, so that’s something. I also appreciated the grittiness and nuances to Peach and Mannes, who will likely be appreciated by many fans of the post-apocalypse, grimdark subgenre.
Vincha is also back in a supporting role, because her Puzzler daughter is the new maguffin character. Which I guess speaks to the fact that this character was naturally underdeveloped, but it still rankled. Why was it that Rafik still got to feel like a person but Andrea was just a cypher? Boo. (There was just one moment where she was reaming out her mother for a stressful childhood where I saw the promise of an actual three-dimensional being underneath this plot device. But it quickly receded again.)
But overall I enjoyed the ride to greater heights well beyond the scope of book one. The plot continued to be breakneck but engaging. And it left enough room for that spark of hope at the end, that maybe things can get better for humanity again! If Kless were to continue with the series, I’d get my hands on the next volume.