Official Review: Pyromania by Rebecca Maye
- Nathrad Sheare
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Official Review: Pyromania by Rebecca Maye

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The ideas of the story and characters are intriguing. The mysteries McNutt makes of certain plot points, such as the return of Dosco and the identity of the Great Rat, inspire further reading. She is sure to answer the MOST important questions, for instance, that which is raised at the beginning of the story: "Is there hope for the world after almost everyone has been destroyed by creatures without the biological, intellectual, and emotional limits of normal human beings?" She has the Great Rat "reset" the world.
Unfortunately, there are quite a few holes where the details should be. We don't get clear pictures of each of the protagonists until we've nearly reached the end of the book. The world as it has been desolated by Dosco and his forces (Wherever they went) is not very well described, either. Zero's suicide is one of the more emotional parts of the story, or should be, but there are too few words on her to connect her to a reader's empathetic mind. Therefore, her tragedy is left as a "Bang, boom, and, in other news..." Alecto's death, when it finally does occur (I write this in reference to the many moments of coughing and bleeding) is not particularly dramatic. Repetition, repetition, repetition- after enough of that, such foreboding character quotes as "You're not going to die!" lose their power completely and the desired effect of their contrary fulfillment evaporates. There could be a little more detail on The Great Rat in the moments when Sysco gets to speak with her in person. From what McNutt divulges of her appearance, she seems as if she could be arresting. I'm one of those readers who is always fascinated to see the sobstory that makes the villain what he is, but my interest in Dosco was not satisfied to that end, neither was I able to 'see' any more of him in McNutt's words than his red eyes. He is not a fully developed character, though he is one of the focuses of the story.
The dominance dialogue has in the novel over narration doesn't seem to work very well. Not a few words of it seem to keep the reader idle. I'll mention the repetition of phrases and exclamations again, which does not enrich the emotional content of the plot. Rather, to McNutt's work it poses a danger of provoking feelings of boredom in a reader. Repetition is good in moderation, but variation is what keeps the entertainment factor up.
The narrator's voice is perhaps too vivid, very opinionated. This distracts from the psychology and emotion of the characters in the story, who should be the focus at all times.
I wish McNutt the very best in her endeavors as a writer. I hope my words here don't merely read as critical, but as helpful in some way. Any story can work, but its success depends on how it's written and rewritten. I believe "Pyromania" has potential to be something much bigger than it is in the world of the novelists, but a few more drafts may be necessary to make it all that its author purposed it to be. "The perfection of one's craft requires more than one draft." I repeated that to myself several times a day during my writer's therapy sessions, more specifically the hour a day I'd reserve to study the Gotham Writer's Workshop's "Writing Fiction," perhaps the most helpful book on writing I've ever read in my life. My obsession with making the first draft the best and only draft definitely required rehabilitation. I'd like to see this book become a science fiction lover's dream. With further revision, I think it will. In its present form, however, I give it two out of four stars.
***
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-Edgar Allan Poe
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Sounds interesting, but I don't know if it is for me.
- Nathrad Sheare
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Now that I'm able to, I'd like to extend my condolences to you, Rebecca, if you're reading this, for the loss of your friend. In life, we lose a lot of people, and not one of the losses we suffer is any tear the lesser than any of the others. I wish you hope and time enough for you to move forward with your life. I'm glad for your having found a person you connected to so closely as you did to your friend. Not many of us get that. Hang in there.
-Edgar Allan Poe
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Here's wishing, with you, the best of luck to Rebecca, and condolences as well.
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-- 20 May 2014, 21:41 --
I certainly don't want you to think I'm being cruel, Rebecca. I hope you're doing all right.
-Edgar Allan Poe
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-Edgar Allan Poe
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-Edgar Allan Poe