File Size: 1534 KB
Print Length: 337 pages
Simultaneous Device Usage: Unlimited
Publisher: WordFire Press (October 14, 2013)
Sold by: Amazon Digital Services, Inc.
Language: English
ASIN: B00FWG9CLA
If you’re as well read as I think you are (and you must
be…why else are you reading book reviews? You’re looking for something good to
read, right?) then you should have some familiarity with the name Mike Baron.
Mr. Baron first landed on my radar when I discovered his innovative science
fiction comic book “Nexus” which he co-created with Mike Rude. Much like other
great comic book pairings like Stan Lee and Jack Kirby, Steve Englehart and
Marshall Rogers or Marv Wolfman and Gene Colon, the two of them made magic
together and if you haven’t read “Nexus” yet then you should correct that at
your earliest opportunity.
Mr. Baron has also written many other comic book titles
but in recent years he’s been working in prose, writing some really compelling
novels such as “Helmet Head” which I really enjoyed. That’s a book you really
ought to pick up as it reads like the lost novelization of a John Carpenter
movie. Yeah, it’s that good.
SKORPIO
is almost as good. It’s not a roller coaster ride like “Helmet Head’ which
reads like a runaway train going downhill from start to finish. Mr. Baron takes
his time setting up the situation and the characters before he gets to the guts
of his story but I appreciate a writer who has the confidence to take his time
to take us where we need to go so he can most effectively deliver the goods
later on and yeah, SKORPIO delivers.
Vaughan Beadles is a Professor of Anthropology at
Creighton University in Illinois where he enjoys a near rock star status. He’s
too handsome for his own good with a gorgeous wife and beautiful baby boy.
Beadles is riding high due to his acquisition of relics belonging to a
previously lost Southwestern Indian tribe, the Azuma. But all that comes to a
screeching halt when Beadles is framed for stealing some of the artifacts. And
if that wasn’t enough, one of his students dies from a scorpion sting that he
got when Beadles lets the kid get an unauthorized sneak peek at the artifacts.
His life rapidly falls into ruin. His wife leaves him,
he loses his job and all of his money goes toward his legal fees. The only way
Beadles can see to salvage his life is to find where the Azuma actually lived
and prove his theories to be true. In his quest to find the birthplace, Beadles
runs into a truly amazing diverse cast of characters. Some of them you’ll
wonder what the hell they’re doing in the book but trust me, part of the enjoyment
of reading SKORPIO is seeing just
how Mike Baron pulls all of these characters together and makes them integral
components of the story.
It takes a while for the title character to show up but
when it does it’s worth the wait. Skorpio is a vengeful ghost of hideous power
who appears in the sunlight, which is a nice twist as ghosts are usually
associated with the nighttime. I also liked Mr. Baron’s choice of protagonist.
Vaughan Beadles isn’t exactly squeaky clean in his dealings and he’s a bit of
an opportunist, always actively looking for an angle to advance his career and
fatten his bank account.
In fact, most of the characters in SKORPIO are a little more on the gray side than you might expect
but I enjoyed that as it gave the book an unpredictability I found refreshing.
There’s never any way to tell what these characters are going to do or say and
for me, that’s always welcome in my fiction.
Mike Baron’s prose is as uncomplicated and
straightforward as the word “No.” He
doesn’t go in for flowery purple prose. He’s a born storyteller who is
concerned with only one thing: telling you a good story. He’s not interested in
showing off his vocabulary or trying to impress you with his cleverness in
turning a pithy phrase. He just wants you to have a good time and I certainly
did have a good time reading SKORPIO.