Angel Time by
Anne Rice
Book review From Mike Sullivan
The Bottom Line
If only she had given it more time. Anne Rice,
renowned mistress of the modern vampire and accomplished author, tackles
another fantastic realm in Angel Time. A distraught assassin is asked by
one from the realms of the heavens to join the other side. He does. And then
they go back via "angel time" to shape another's history. This could
have been an intriguing origin to a potential new series. Instead, it reveals
glimpses of better stories, but the main storyline doesn't excite like the
speed of light.
Pros
- Rice
writes with a strong attention to detail.
- The two
stories told in retrospect (Toby's and Fluria's) are haunting and moving.
- There's potential here...
Cons
- ...but
Rice needs a new storytelling approach to make this read as dynamic and
mysterious as needed.
- There's
not enough menace or action to warrant an angel needing an assassin for
the mission.
- Rice
should have studied a real thriller's pacing & dialogue to make this
thriller crackle.
Description
- 'Angel
Time' by Anne Rice was published in October 2009.
- Publisher: Knopf
- 268 pages
Guide Review - 'Angel Time' by Anne Rice - Book Review
The first half
of Angel Time deals with Toby O'Dare's first-person confessions of
atheism and assassination until an angel drops in and forces his beliefs to
change through a revelatory travel down memory lane. This takes the first 130
pages or so. The other 135 pages deal with Toby's mission for the good side as
the angel goes on a different travel with him back in time to help a Jewish
family from being killed during the Dark Ages.
The angel's recollection of Toby O'Dare's
fall from faith and into hired killer is a good read. So is the Jewish Fluria's
confession of how she had twin girls with a man who became a Christian. These stories
are both told in retrospect, and they showcase Rice's strong ability to tell a
good tale. Why she didn't focus more on these stories may be the fault of her
editor or a lack of time. Rice has the potential for two novels worth of sin
and redemption in the stories of Toby and Fluria. The strong characters,
symbolism and well-earned empathy would have been a pleasure to sit with longer
and ponder, like the angels who reflect on these things.
Instead, we get the shortened versions
with the forced ""angel time" storytelling device to connect the
tales. In the end, it all feels a bit shallow. Toby's first-person narrative
feels too fake, too often including weak emotional leaps and trite dialogue.
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