Hearts of Glass

(1) Seasons of Change (Highlander)

By Cameron Dial
Reviewed by Kathryn A on 31st March 2003 (7)
Tags: Novel
(309K)

This one follows after "Generations", though I realized before I got to the end of this story, that the author's story "The Forsworn" is also incorporated into this universe. This story is also set just after the last episode of Highlander:The Raven "Dead on Arrival". When Methos comes across a mortal attacking the newly-immortal Nick Wolfe, he intervenes -- and the consequences get very complicated. This was a good story -- good plot, and good Methos. I really like the Methos here; he's both humanly vulnerable as well as his calculating, planning self. The plot was rather out there in one way; like a Catholic conspiracy theory, with quotes from Revelations and ramblings about the Essenes (reminiscent of Barbara Thiering's wild theories), and some rather alarming assertions about St. John which make me glad this is fiction. Still, it was very Highlandery.

One problem about the resolution at the end was that I felt as if an entire scene had been left out -- how they actually got out of the situation they were in. One could guess, but that really wasn't sufficient.

But it makes me pant for more anyway, because I love this Methos.

(2) Seasons of Rest (Highlander)

By Cameron Dial
Reviewed by Kathryn A on 31st March 2003 (8)
Tags: Novel
(489K)

This is a long story -- and more on that later. It opens with a quote from a poem which very well sets the scene and the tone; weary loneliness, as it follows both Methos' search for Duncan MacLeod, and also cuts back to what Duncan had actually been doing. The intercutting is good, because you it gives the detective work a sort of immediacy, rather than the dismalness of a cold trail. Indeed, the stuff with Duncan is very much a slice-of-life, both relaxing and adventuresome. (And the kittens, we must admire the kittens!) With Methos, meanwhile, he gets the bad end of the stick more than once, as people put what he's doing in the worst light -- because of course, he hasn't actually told anyone he's looking for MacLeod; he just took off...

Unfortunately, in the length department, this story is really too long, not due to its length, but due to the amount of repetition in it; it felt as if it had been written over an extended period of time, long enough for the author to have forgotten that she'd already written that flashback, made that point, used that phrase, earlier in the story (or just in the story before). Having read both this one and the previous one one after the other, it stood out to me. Now, not all the repetitions were bad -- I did like the way that MacLeod kept on dreaming that he heard Fitz saying "Look up, MacLeod"; but for the most part, it just got tiring.

Whether it was the above repetition or not, I sort of felt, by the end of it, that we'd had a very long journey -- without having actually gone anywhere.

(3) Transitions (Highlander)

By Cameron Dial
Reviewed by Kathryn A on 31st March 2003 (9)
Tags: Short Story
(8K)

This is the last story in this sequence, an epilogue, really, and this time the story is frustratingly short -- just one scene, which resets the stage, closing this book and leaving the way open for another to begin.