From rec.arts.sf.reviews Mon May 29 15:29:05 2000 Path: news.ifm.liu.se!news.ida.liu.se!newsfeed.sunet.se!news01.sunet.se!uninett.no!news.maxwell.syr.edu!dca1-hub1.news.digex.net!intermedia!howland.erols.net!bloom-beacon.mit.edu!senator-bedfellow.mit.edu!dreaderd!not-for-mail Sender: wex@deepspace.media.mit.edu From: "Aaron M. Renn" Approved: wex@media.mit.edu Subject: Review: The Path of Unreason by George O. Smith Organization: GNU's Not Unix! Newsgroups: rec.arts.sf.reviews Followup-To: rec.arts.sf.written Date: 25 May 2000 12:29:13 -0400 Message-ID: X-Newsreader: Gnus v5.7/Emacs 20.4 Lines: 78 NNTP-Posting-Host: deepspace.media.mit.edu X-Trace: dreaderd 959272154 10902 18.85.23.65 Xref: news.ifm.liu.se rec.arts.sf.reviews:2732 The Path of Unreason, George O. Smith Review Copyright (c) 2000 Aaron M. Renn Conclusion: A Masterpiece There's something about old movies from the 40's and 50's - even the great ones - that just doesn't click with me. The actors seem to be just a little too much, well, acting for my taste. As an example, I saw a recently restored print of Alfred Hitchcock's "Rear Window" with a couple friends. While this film has garnered nearly unanimous praise from legitimate critics, it left all of us scratching our heads wondering what the fuss was about. I mean it was good, but it wasn't _that_ good. I have the same reaction to most of the science fiction of that era. But not this book, which completely blew away my expectations. When declaring a book a masterpiece, some justification is order. I can sum up mine in two words: psychological intensity. It was no accident that I mentioned Hitchcock above. This novel almost immediately ascends to Hitchcock-like levels of suspense, and it never comes down*. "The Path of Unreason" grabbed me almost immediately and proved nearly impossible to put down. James Forrest Carroll was a physicist studying the mysterious phenomenon known as "Lawson radiation." This peculiar radiation was discovered 34 years previously, but virtually nothing was known about it except one startling fact: it appeared to propagate instantaneously. There's one other curious thing about Lawson radition: every top physicist previously studying it suffered a catastrophic mental collapse, causing amnesia and permanent regression to a childlike intellect. Carroll was the latest victim but, unlike those previous, he shows some signs of recovering. While he remembers nothing of physics or his former life, he is able to take care of himself and move about. While walking about the research facility one day, he notices a young messenger girl being abducted by men in a black limousine. He attempts but fails to rescue her then, wondering what he will do while he watches the car roll away, he sees her impossibly come walking out of the building that had been her original destination. What unfolds is a story that every X-Files episode aspires to be, involving the secret conspiracies of what Carroll is certain are space aliens, but what everyone else believes to be just a manifestation of his psychosis. Which one is true? This is of course the key question of the book - apart from the survival of planet Earth of course! This might not sound like an original plot. Indeed, Smith acknowledges as much in the story itself. But where so many others have butchered the alien conspiracy story into cliche, Smith manages to deliver a superb performance that is fast paced and intense, featuring solid characters and solid writing. Of particular note is the ambiguous ending that leaves us with almost as many questions as we started with, without setting up what today would be the obligatory sequel. "The Path of Unreason" is quite simply without any substantial flaws. And at 212 pages it is again proof that superior quality and length are not directly proporational. Unfortunately, it is also out of print. I picked it up used at a now defunct bookstore in Indianapolis. If you see a copy, purchase it immediately. This book is a rewrite of a novella titled "Kingdom of Blind" that appeared in "Startling Stories" in July 1947. * "North by Northwest" is probably a better parallel to this book than "Rear Window" %A Smith, George O. %T The Path of Unreason %I Ballantine Books %D 1975-10 (original publication 1958) %G ISBN 345-24613-6 %P 212 pp. %O mass market paperback, US$1.50 Reviewed on 2000-05-17 Aaron M. Renn (arenn@urbanophile.com) http://www.urbanophile.com/arenn/