Monday, November 18, 2024

Deathlands #8 - Ice and Fire

The Deathlands series continues to be one of my favorites of the post-apocalyptic era of men's fiction of the 1970s-1990s. I have a lot of series installments to get through, which probably won't occur in my lifetime. But, I continue to plunge forward with two or three installments each year. After the success of the the seventh installment, Dectra Chain, I was anxious to see where the series travels next. 

Ice and Fire is an unusual series entry as the main characters are within a redoubt for over 100 pages. Typically, series fare positions the characters in the first chapter leaving a redoubt and then determining their whereabouts. In this novel, the group emerge into a spacious redoubt complete with running water, a surplus of food, comfortable showers, and a quality of life that few have seen in the Deathlands. But, there is also a reasoning behind the extended stay.

Within this redoubt is a cryogenics chamber housing a number of frozen people. Hesitantly, the group release the pressure locks and find that most of the humans inside are now skeletons after experiencing over 100 years of frosty hibernation. However, the group luck out and find an intact living human being in Rick Ginsberg. He is a young man who worked for the U.S. military and was a redoubt specialist. But, over the course of his long frozen nap he has forgotten what the redoubts are and how to use them – specifically how to plan locations for the redoubts to transport humans. Rick learns the awful fate of the planet after the nuclear stew and joins the group in a non-combatant role as they emerge from the redoubt to discover they are in the Sierra Nevada mountain range and that most of California is basically at the bottom of the Pacific.

The plot of Ice and Fire features the group entering a crazy town called Snakefish. It is here that the citizens worship gigantic mutant snakes, one of which was killed by Ryan and the gang earlier in the book. They keep that part of their ordeal secret from the town. They learn that there is a Baron trying to keep law and order but a family of ruthless power-hungry savages want to take over. Assisting them is a gang of Hell's Angels bikers. Ryan and company are caught in the crossfire and must pick a side.

This was a fun book that works like a western. The town's civil unrest lies between two warring factions just like any traditional cowboy yarn that features ranchers fighting for every acre of beef. There is an underlying plot as well that concerns Lori and Doc's relationship. If you will recall, Lori is a teenager and Doc is in his 60s or 70s. But, the two have an unusual emotional and physical bond. But, Lori wants other men and she chooses one of the power-hungry savages. I won't spoil the book, but readers may not see Lori any longer after Ice and Fire

If you enjoy Deathlands then this is another standout novel that is packed with energetic storytelling, ceaseless action, and an emotional journey for some of the key characters. Recommended. Get it HERE.

Note - There is a funny little easter egg when the group find a law-office door that states Angus Wellson: Divorce Counselor. Angus Wells was a fellow Piccadilly Cowboy writer

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