From rec.arts.sf.reviews Fri Mar 6 13:14:37 1992 Path: herkules.sssab.se!isy!liuida!sunic!psinntp!psinntp!rpi!usc!sdd.hp.com!uakari.primate.wisc.edu!ames!bionet!raven.alaska.edu!never-reply-to-path-lines From: ecl@mtgzy.att.com (Evelyn C Leeper +1 908 957 2070) Newsgroups: rec.arts.sf.reviews Subject: DOWN THE BRIGHT WAY by Ralph Reed Message-ID: <1992Mar4.222852.9125@raven.alaska.edu> Date: 4 Mar 92 22:28:52 GMT Sender: wisner@raven.alaska.edu (Bill Wisner) Organization: University of Alaska Computer Network Lines: 44 Approved: wisner@ims.alaska.edu DOWN THE BRIGHT WAY by Ralph Reed A book review by Evelyn C. Leeper Copyright 1992 Evelyn C. Leeper Another reviewer has recently suggested this as a possible Hugo contender. Well, in this world anything is possible, but I have to disagree on this one. This novel suffers (for me, at any rate) from the same fault as Reed's other novel, BLACK MILK. (Each, by the way, contains an excerpt from the other at the end of the book, possibly to confuse anyone who might skip to the end to find out what happened.) This fault is that after setting up an interesting premise with a lot of promise, Reed does nothing with it. In DOWN THE BRIGHT WAY, Reed postulates an infinite number (more or less) of parallel Earths connected by the Bright, a sort of highway that one can travel between them. Millions of years after the creation of the Bright, the Wanderers send out two parties, one in each direction of the Bright, to try to find the Makers who created it. (I find myself asking why the Bright is linear. Some ordering of Earths along a line--a single dimension doesn't seem to make a lot of sense.) Now to my mind the most exciting possibilities of this story are in the parallel Earths. But these are almost entirely glossed over so that all the rivalries and conspiracies among the Wanderers can be developed. The only time the parallel Earths become important is when Reed needs something to menace the entire set-up. But for that, this seems more like a spy thriller than a sweeping science fiction novel. There's nothing wrong with spy thrillers, but why bother with the science fiction part? It's as though you sent a team of time travelers back to ancient Egypt and then had them sit in their tent arguing about who was the team leader the whole time, pausing only briefly to notice a huge number of frogs, swarms of flies, a rain of fire, a swarm of locusts, and finally what seems to be a large number of people walking by. The team interactions might normally be interesting, but the reader wants to rip open the tent door and go outside. %T Down the Bright Way %A Ralph Reed %C New York %D April 1991 %I Bantam Spectra %O paperback, US$4.50 %G ISBN 0-553-28923-3 %P 312pp Evelyn C. Leeper | +1 908 957 2070 | att!mtgzy!ecl or ecl@mtgzy.att.com