Mister Justice, 1973
[This] is Piserchia's first novel, and her
strangest. The early twenty-first century is a time of social breakdown,
and the breakdown is being fought (or abetted--it's not clear) by an
uncatchable vigilante who calls himself Mr. Justice. Sometimes he leaves
criminals bound and gagged at police stations, with proofs of their
crimes. (The proofs are typically in the form of photographs of the crimes
being committed, although there were no witnesses.) Sometimes he exacts
his own retribution. Finally, the Secret Service opts for a long-term
solution to the problem: They recruit a twelve-year-old boy with
exceptional potential, put him in a school which can enable him to realize
that potential, and aim him at Mr. Justice. Years pass, during which
Daniel Jordan grows up and starts his hunt, and during which society
continues to break down. It's an early work, raw and imaginative, and the
one portraying the most squalid of Piserchia's worlds. Of her better
novels, it's also the one readers are most likely to dislike. --Dani Zweig, from Belated Reviews
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Mister Justice, 1973
[This] is Piserchia's first novel, and her strangest. The early twenty-first century is a time of social breakdown, and the breakdown is being fought (or abetted--it's not clear) by an uncatchable vigilante who calls himself Mr. Justice. Sometimes he leaves criminals bound and gagged at police stations, with proofs of their crimes. (The proofs are typically in the form of photographs of the crimes being committed, although there were no witnesses.) Sometimes he exacts his own retribution. Finally, the Secret Service opts for a long-term solution to the problem: They recruit a twelve-year-old boy with exceptional potential, put him in a school which can enable him to realize that potential, and aim him at Mr. Justice. Years pass, during which Daniel Jordan grows up and starts his hunt, and during which society continues to break down. It's an early work, raw and imaginative, and the one portraying the most squalid of Piserchia's worlds. Of her better novels, it's also the one readers are most likely to dislike.
--Dani Zweig, from Belated Reviews
back to reviews index
- tom moody 3-10-2002 7:33 am