(pb; 1984, 2004: fourth book
in the Nightworld Cycle a.k.a. the Adversary Cycle. First book in the Repairman
Jack series. Re-released in 2004 under its original title, Rakoshi, by
Borderlands Press.)
From the back cover
“Much to the chagrin of his girlfriend, Gia, Repairman Jack doesn’t deal with appliances: He fixes situations—situations that too often land him in deadly danger. His latest job is to find a stolen necklace, which, unknown to him, is more than a simple piece of jewelry.
“Some might say it’s cursed,
others might call it blessed. Jack’s quest leads to a rusty freighter on
Manhattan’s West Side docks. What he finds in its hold threatens his sanity and
the entire city. But worst of all, it threatens Gia’s daughter, Vicky, the last
surviving member of a bloodline marked for extinction.”
Review
Tomb, with
its realistic-neo-noir-meets-supernatural-thriller elements, is an immediately
immersive novel, one of my favorite Wilson books thus far. Like the best
thrillers, it’s timeless (in its underlying themes and character motives) and (especially)
timely, with interesting and relatable characters (even, initially, its main
villain) and Wilson’s dependable, better writing: fast-paced, with salient,
not-too-detailed emotional scenes and a main protagonist worth remembering.
Excellent fourth entry in Wilson’s Nightworld/Adversary Cycle, one that serves as
the first book in the Repairman Jack series as well. Followed, chronologically
speaking, by the second Repairman novel, Legacies. (The events in the fifteen-book
Repairman series take place between Adversary/Nightworld Cycle’s The Touch, 1986,
and Nightworld (1992, revised and republished in 2012.)
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