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Ebook734 pages11 hours
Expiration Date
By Tim Powers
Rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars
3.5/5
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About this ebook
Nebula Award Finalist: In the second book of the Fault Lines Trilogy, Tim Powers dazzles with a dark and extraordinary urban fantasy set in an otherworldly LA, as a young boy finds himself targeted by malevolent ghost hunters
There is a Los Angeles that few people can see, a shadowed metropolis of ghosts, ghost hunters, and ghost junkies who crave the addictive rush of inhaled spirits. When eleven-year-old Koot Hoomie Parganas decides to flee the constrictive grasp of his New Age parents, he inadvertently steps into this world. Escaping with his parents’ most prized possession, Koot is soon the object of the most intense supernatural manhunt in history. On an ordinary day, Los Angeles can be treacherous; this “other” LA could prove downright fatal for an unsuspecting youngster who’s suddenly the target of every hungry ghost hunter prowling the City of Angels. But Koot will not be taken easily. And though not everyone racing to Koot’s side means him harm, they are greatly outnumbered by malevolent forces driven by a terrible, undeniable need.
Expiration Date is the second book in the Fault Lines Trilogy, which begins with Last Call and concludes with Earthquake Weather. At once exhilarating and terrifying, this book is a bravura display of the brilliant, bold invention that has moved bestselling author Peter Straub to declare World Fantasy and Philip K. Dick award-winner Tim Powers “one of my absolute favorite writers.”
There is a Los Angeles that few people can see, a shadowed metropolis of ghosts, ghost hunters, and ghost junkies who crave the addictive rush of inhaled spirits. When eleven-year-old Koot Hoomie Parganas decides to flee the constrictive grasp of his New Age parents, he inadvertently steps into this world. Escaping with his parents’ most prized possession, Koot is soon the object of the most intense supernatural manhunt in history. On an ordinary day, Los Angeles can be treacherous; this “other” LA could prove downright fatal for an unsuspecting youngster who’s suddenly the target of every hungry ghost hunter prowling the City of Angels. But Koot will not be taken easily. And though not everyone racing to Koot’s side means him harm, they are greatly outnumbered by malevolent forces driven by a terrible, undeniable need.
Expiration Date is the second book in the Fault Lines Trilogy, which begins with Last Call and concludes with Earthquake Weather. At once exhilarating and terrifying, this book is a bravura display of the brilliant, bold invention that has moved bestselling author Peter Straub to declare World Fantasy and Philip K. Dick award-winner Tim Powers “one of my absolute favorite writers.”
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Author
Tim Powers
Tim Powers is the author of numerous novels including Hide Me Among the Graves, Three Days to Never, Declare, Last Call, and On Stranger Tides, which inspired the feature film Pirates of the Caribbean: On Stranger Tides. He has won the Philip K. Dick Memorial Award twice, and the World Fantasy Award three times. He lives in San Bernardino, California.
Read more from Tim Powers
Declare: A Novel Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Medusa's Web: A Novel Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Hide Me Among the Graves: A Novel Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5Dinner at Deviant's Palace Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5What If Our World Is Their Heaven?: The Final Conversations of Philip K. Dick Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5Two Science Fiction Adventures: The Skies Discrowned and An Epitaph in Rust Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5Three Days to Never: A Novel Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5
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Reviews for Expiration Date
Rating: 3.7180617511013216 out of 5 stars
3.5/5
227 ratings9 reviews
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Expiration Date is a "companion novel" to Last Call. It isn't a sequel, but it shares the same world. A few characters with minor roles in Last Call end up being central in Expiration Date. Expiration Date also has a theme in much the same way Last Call did. While Last Call is about the Fisher King, the book also explores the world of professional poker players, and the weirdness that is Las Vegas. In a similar way, Expiration Date is about ghosts, but it also indulges a nostalgia for the Hollywood of silent films and the glamorous world of show business. This gives each book a distinct character, despite a common fictional universe. Eventually, it all gets wrapped up in the third book, Earthquake Weather. But that is a review for another day.I always really enjoyed the premise of this book. That premise is that ghosts are real, and ghosts flit about mindlessly repeating the things they did when they were alive. Sometimes, the result is comic, as when old ghosts accrete enough substance to panhandle for spare change to buy liquor. Other times, it is tragic, when a lonely and bewildered ghost tries to make a human connection, and accidentally causes its new friend to drop dead. And, if you are sorcerously hip, then you know that ghosts are the greatest high ever known when inhaled, with the side effect of providing the user with unnaturally long life. A whole underground is devoted to hunting, preserving, and then ingesting hapless ghosts. Which turns out to be pretty easy, since they are also witless. In a Thomistic turn, the electromagnetic remnants that are ghosts don't possess the capacity to be rational because they have no souls, but they do have memories and desires, which are enough to cause them to try to imitate their former lives. Ghosts are also attracted to certain people. Specific ghosts can become linked to you through strong emotions, particularly guilt. But some people, like Edison, attract ghosts like moths to a flame. The key tool for protecting yourself from ghosts is a mask. Ghosts kill you by overlapping your timeline [in a relativistic space-time sense, an idea that Powers has used in a number of novels and short stories] and abruptly ending it by mixing their lack of life with your vitality. To avoid that, you need to make sure the ghost can't find your timeline, your identity. The methods are varied, but the ability to obfuscate your birthdate, your marriage, and your children is key.By taking this idea and running with it, Powers is able to invent a secret history that explains a number of unusual incidents in the life of Thomas Edison. Lots of weird things happen all the time, and sober histories usually don't make much of them, although comprehensive ones do document them. But, Edison had a greater share than most. For starters, Henry Ford really did convince Thomas' son Charles to catch his father's dying breath in a vial. But the rest of it happened too. In 1878 Edison traveled to the American West, stopping to view a solar eclipse, and then completing the rest of his journey by riding the cow-catcher of the locomotive. Edison also forced his children to jump in the air while he threw firecrackers at their feet. Those are pretty strange things to do, but if you were attempting to shake the unwanted psychic attention of ghosts and other ne-er-do-wells, it might be just the thing. Crafting this secret history involving Edison [and Harry Houdini] is classic Powers. However, I've found that what I really enjoy about this book, and much of Powers' writing, is the compelling way in which he writes about human brokenness. The ensemble of characters that fall into orbit around Edison's ghost are all haunted [literally] by their past mistakes. Their journey to deliver Edison's ghost from LA's occult underground is also a pilgrimage of repentance and healing.Ghosts themselves are not capable of forgiveness or redemption, but in the right circumstances they can help provide those things to the living. Thomas Edison's ghost's ability to light up every dormant wisp provides an opportunity to face the past squarely, and stop running away from it.For a long time, I greatly preferred Last Call to the other books in this loose trilogy. I still like Last Call best, but I no longer find it to be head-and-shoulders above the others. The characters in Expiration Date make mistakes, suffer from poor judgment, and experience temptation. Ultimately, some of them do find redemption. Others come to judgment for their sins. This moral realism grounded in Powers' Catholic faith takes a fun premise with a sprawling cast of characters and turns it from a book I used to consider second-rate into something quite remarkable.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5My reaction to reading this novel in 2002. Spoilers follow.Powers' specialty is creating a secret, fantastical, occult history from disparate elements, a process so cunningly done that, as one review blurb remarks, you conclude, at story's end, "Of course. Everything fits. I can see that now." Here Powers plots his story in the interstices of (as near as I can tell without further research) historical facts about Harry Houdini and Thomas Alva Edison's lives, the permanently docked Queen Mary, early motion picture history, Lewis Carroll's Alice books (ghosts love to quote the books, at least the older ones, and the quotes from the books that head each chapter line up with the plot) and the electrical "medical" devices of Wilshire (of Wilshire Boulevard fame). Powers also puts in some convincing details about electrical work, particularly that associated with movies, and his gun stuff was brief but accurate. And, of course, Powers, being a native of Los Angeles, convincingly presents the city. We also have a bit of Theosophy and early spiritualism. I liked the idea of sucking up, for reasons of immortality and connoisseurship, the ghosts of dead people and a whole network of ghost junkies inhabiting Los Angeles, a city where many of the street people are ghosts who have sucked up garbage to give them a corporeal, if obsessive and simple-minded existence. I also liked Nicholas Bradshaw, the dead man, who, unlike almost all ghosts, has retained his mental faculties and is still attached to his old body and lives a rather pathetic existence in which he is denied sleep and dreams. I found Powers narrative strategy surprising. He doesn't wait to reveal most of the secrets of his characters' lives and their motives. The two longest secrets he keeps are the nature of Sherman Oaks "gagging" on a ghost and the exact reason for the falling out of Sukie and Pete Sullivan (Sukie tries to sexually seduce brother Pete.). He keeps the story rolling through description, atmosphere, and action though he does dole out some secrets, like Sherman Oaks' past, gradually. I found it interesting that the last part of the book, the part of the novel with the showdown on the Queen Mary where Neal Obstadt, Sherman Oaks, Bradshaw, Edison, Loretta deLarava meet their respective ends, is long and called "Epilogue". That subtitling gives a hint as to one of the centers of the novel: the gradual assembly of a family in Pete Sullivan, Elizalde, and Kootie Parganas. Normally, I don't like the plot cliché of a man and a woman, strangers to each other, who become lovers after the plot throws them together. Here I can think of rational reasons to fault Powers use of that cliché: Elizalde is sexually uninterested in men or women yet implicitly consents to, with Sullivan, become Kootie's parent and Kootie seems to accept the idea of surrogate parents a little quickly after his own are murdered. However, all three members of this family are damaged in some way. Sullivan realizes that he needs to become attached to something permanent (as opposed to the ghosts which are often bound to certain people and places by ties of guilt and shame). On the other hand, his transient life is a little like the corporeal ghosts -- an information wave manifesting itself through different materials. He is sexually attracted to Elizalde. She feels the need to care for something, and Kootie, while resourceful and brave, misses having parents and, while he loved them, he found their Theosophical philosophies and teachings and rearing methods oppressive and limiting. Also all three are bound together by danger and fate of a sort. It is when Sullivan announces that he considers the three a family that the "Epilogue" starts. I liked ghosts being bound to the living by shame and guilt, and I liked the various rationales and systems used for ghosts. Edison's ghost and Sullivan approach the issue by emphasizing ghosts relationship with electromagnetic forces. Elizalde emphasizes Catholic and traditional Hispanic mythological beliefs in regard to them. Powers' technique serves as a lesson for effective fantasy. He covers a lot of detail, shows cause and effect relationship, but he doesn't try to rationalize his ghosts using a scientific framework. He uses the language and metaphors and technology of electricity to talk about the ghosts but, for instance, he doesn't explain why they are can talk on a cobbled together "spirit telephone". Indeed, (though I may not have paid close enough attention) Powers doesn't explain a lot: the exact nature of "birth ghosts"; why do ghosts occasionally come to Kootie's home even before the vial of Edison's breath is taken out of the statue of Dante?; what, exactly, does Edison want -- death or existence in the sea?; why do ghosts blow up when they realize they're dead?; why does deLarava have six birth ghosts? But Powers skill at atmosphere, the details of his secret history, and characterization helped me forgive in lapses in why.
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5Tim Powers is one of my favorite writers, but EXPIRATION DATE isn't among my favorite of his books.
I've started and stopped it several times in the past, but this time I have the next in the loose series, EARTHQUAKE WEATHER to read and I was determined to push through and get to the end. But to be honest, I found it a bit of a slog.
It's as well written as any of Powers' books, but I don't think the central idea of ghosts being able to be caught and sniffed as a kind of psychic cocaine is strong enough to hold this rather rambling plot together. That, and the fact that the main protagonist is an eleven year old kid who gets a ton of shit thrown at him in the story rather turned me against the whole thing from an early stage.
There are some of the great visual touches and dexterity with a sentence that we expect from Powers but too much of the story consists of people going somewhere to get something, then going somewhere else to get something else, then meeting someone who will tell them where to go to get the next thing. It's like a modern L.A. version of a rather dull Dungeons and Dragons adventure and as such I found myself flicking pages to get to the good bits.
I think the main problem is one of too many point of view characters. We could have lost the lawyer completely from the story and it wouldn't change it a bit, and likewise the female psychiatrist was often just hanging around to be someone for one of the protagonists to talk to.
Still, even second rate Powers is better than most other things, and there was enough to entertain me to make sure I made it to the end this time.
Onward to EARTHQUAKE WEATHER... - Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5I loved this one almost as much as the first book, Last Call. The new characters are really good, very different, but the reader can see this is the same world as that of Last Call. Fantastic.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Of the three books in the Fault Lines trilogy, I think this is the strongest. It's hard hitting and not for those with weak stomachs, but his primary viewpoint characters are sympathetic and believable.One of the things I've noticed about his works is the way they draw on real-world facts (generally about various famous people, but also scientific news items and other things we see as true) to strengthen the sense of reality about everything we read in his books. For example, much of what he says about Thomas Edison can be found in any biography, but in Powers' hands, these verifiable facts, such as Edison's work selling newspapers and candy on trains when he was twelve, lend credence to the fantastic things he says about Edison. Reading Powers' books, I often find myself contemplating looking some little tidbit of information up, but I'm unwilling to take the time away from the story and wind up trusting him, just because so much of what he's told me fits into what I believe to be true.
- Rating: 2 out of 5 stars2/5A book I wanted very much to read and enjoy but which defeated me, I love reading yet felt nothing more than an overwhelming sense of drudgery every time I opened this book. It should have been interesting, the characters should have been interesting, the world in which it was set should have been interesting -- yet all I felt was an emotional vacuum.
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5i dunno why i find Tim Powers difficult to read, in spite of his excellent powers of invention. but somehow i always have to plow through them doggedly, which sorta takes the fun out. in spite of, here, the most marvelous conceit, of ghosts more real than the living world, prized by collectors, pursued by ghost junkies who want to swallow them, taste the vintage. should be a romp, and he takes the whole concept to every possible conclusion. but i still like his books more in retrospect than when i'm reading. aside: boy, Thomas edison's really a popular guy these days; seems like he turns up everywhere.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Very strange story but the characters were interesting and likeable.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Second book in the trilogy. Its not necessary to read the 1st book but you should. This book is slightly on the long side but that is Powers for you. Great book.