Soldiers in a mysterious afterlife may be the only ones who can stop a sinister world-threatening force in Arnold’s debut SF/fantasy novel.
United States Army soldier Michael Rene Gostani dies in combat during the Vietnam War. He awakens in a bizarre place that’s seemingly made of his memories. In this apparent land of the dead, Michael discovers an astonishing ability: he can manipulate the environment and form new landscapes. Elsewhere, in the 25th century, Maven Kelly Pear and Sgt. Nathan Doss fight together on the war-torn planet Vitalia. Nathan takes them to a “planted” spaceship-turned-city to recover some “fancy” tech, but he’s really looking for his love, Stephanie, who has disappeared. Two decades prior, in the same spot, 20 million people likewise vanished in what’s called the Great Abduction. Through unforeseen circumstances, Kelly and Nathan wind up in the afterlife, though they aren’t dead. Neither are those 20 million missing individuals, a group the two soldiers are now in the position of potentially freeing from their apparent imprisonment. But they’re in Meridian, which is the otherworldly city that Michael Gostani has created. It’s not so far removed from the war Kelly and Nathan left behind on Vitalia: Another realm, entirely separate from Meridian, is at odds with Michael’s city. And something awful looms on the horizon—the Aberration, a vaguely described entity whose arrival in this afterlife is imminent and who’s reputedly dead set on “wiping out and absorbing all life.”
Obscurity reigns in Arnold’s often murky story—there’s a suggestion that Meridian is Heaven, Hell, and purgatory all rolled into one. This introduces an intriguing dilemma for Nathan, who, as a devoutly religious man, may view Michael as a god. Copious details of the afterlife are left cryptic, from the true nature of the Aberration is (or what it will become) and the ways Kelly and Nathan can combat it to the “humanoids,” both friendly and hostile, who continually pop up. Characters (including Michael) are baffled throughout, with the story offering little clarification. Michael’s abstruseness elevates the narrative tension, as readers may have trouble deciding whether or not he’s a villain. Fortunately, Kelly and Nathan, who have been friends for as long as they’ve been soldiers, ground the story (Kelly, who suffers from post-traumatic stress disorder and anxiety, is distraught over losing access to the drug helping her cope). In detailing the logic-defying city of Meridian, the author churns out chaotic descriptions brimming with a hodgepodge of images: “The cracking and swooshing sound of conflagration is met with sight of a devastated medieval world: wood and stone and plaster ablaze and flattened, half of a stone dome ceiling collapsed, pieces the size of houses falling and exploding on the ground, black smoke billowing.” The final act provides readers with many, if not all, the answers, and the narrative works as either an opening series installment or a standalone story.
A first-rate cast headlines this gleefully offbeat piece of speculative fiction.