Thursday, April 03, 2025

The Touch by F. Paul Wilson

 

(pb; 1986: third book in the Nightworld Cycle, aka Adversary Cycle. Originally published as a standalone novel, later incorporated into said Cycle.)

 

From the back cover

“After a dozen years of practicing medicine as a family physician, Dr. Alan Bulmer discovers one day that he can cure any illness with the mere touch of his hand.Although he tries to hide his power, word inevitably leaks out, and soon Alan’s life begins to unravel. His marriage and his practice crumble. Only rich, beautiful, enigmatic Sylvia Nash stands by him. And standing with her is Ba, her Vietnamese gardener, who once witnessed a power such as Dr. Bulmer’s in his homeland, where it is called Dat-tay-vao. Ba knows too well that the Dat-tay-vao always comes with a price. And Alan has only begun to pay.

(This edition includes the short story ‘Dat-tay-vao,’ prequel to The Touch, which tells the story of the events bringing the Dat-tay-vao to the USA.”)

 

Review

Touch, the third thematically (and later character-)linked book in F. Paul Wilson’s Adversary Cycle, is an excellent fiction read/thriller, with its vaguely supernatural/warm humanity Good versus violence/darkness theme, fully realized/complex characters, sly humor, warmth and steady-build, vividly described situations and physical locations. Touch doesn’t begin to come together until three-quarters of the way into it, and when it does, it truly pays out, with a few instances of brief splatterific gore and violence.

My favorite character in Touch is Båo, whose devotion to those he cares about as well as his balancing of light and (sometimes violent) darkness provides the balance I wish other characters in this book had, e.g. Alan Bulmer, people-dumb and addicted to dat-tay-vao (“the Touch”) who’s so naïve, he almost makes Jefferson Smith (Jimmy Stewart) in Mr. Smith Goes to Washington (1939) look cynical. At several points, I mentally retitled Touch as Mr. Smith Gets a Healing Power.

While reading Touch, I didn’t see any specific links to the first two Adversary novels The Keep and Reborn. One reddit user (schlam16) has noted that “the [Adversary] finale, Nightworld [1992] also draws in Repairman Jack from The Tomb [1984], and characters from The Touch.”

Great read, The Touch, worth owning. Followed, story-wise, by The Tomb.

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