The Box of Tricks has the mind-boggling technology one expects in a sci-fi
book, along with the battle between good and evil. But under all the expected sci-fi trappings, Alistair
Potter still delivers well-developed characters and even a message to his
readers, all wrapped in humor and wit.
The
story centers around Tom Mathers, a mild-mannered, somewhat socially inept taxi
driver from Edinburgh. Thrust into his
strange new reality, Tom matures. But
even by the end of the book, his timidity is often the appropriate trait and
common sense is generally the correct tactic.
Other than a strong sense of loyalty to friends and a desire to do
right, Tom was an everyday hero, and I appreciated that fact. Romantic interest Suzie and co-protagonist
Fanshawe also come across as believable, although toward the riskier end of the
scale.
Pacing
is also excellent. The author moves
steadily through challenges revealed, skirmishes waged, and alliances formed,
saving a few unexpected twists for the end.
The aptness of the pacing is also apparent in Potter’s treatment of his
social message about our stewardship of the planet. It would be easy for that message to become
overbearing…but it doesn’t. The author
maintains a velocity that keeps us engrossed and entertained.
I
wouldn’t say the book is a laugh-a-minute tome – what American reader would say
that about British humor? But it does
have a tongue-in-cheek witticism that was very appealing. If you want to take the possible end of planet
earth completely seriously, you may need to look elsewhere.
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