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106 of 116 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
A great "beach" read, right Sawyer?, May 8, 2006
You've crashed on a mysterious island, filled with polar bears, strange people, and mysterious hatches, that apparently all add up to something, but what it is, you just don't know. So, to spend your time, while hiding the island's weaponry, you read what you happen to find in the wreckage. That being, a mystery book, written by one Gary Troup (whose name, mysteriously, anagrams into "purgatory"). Fortunately, prior to his disappearance on that fateful Oceanic flight, he submitted his manuscript for this mystery novel, and thus, we get a chance to read the book, discovered by Hurley and so infatuated Sawyer, "Bad Twin".
"Bad Twin" tells the story of Paul Artisan, a private eye with a penchant for tracking down insurance scammers and cheating spouses. He meets up with one Cliff Widmore, a rich businessman, who hires Artisan to find his long lost identical twin brother Zander. Adventure ensues as Paul island hops from New York to Key West to Cuba, and meets up with the usual suspects; beautiful women, naked gurus, crusty sailors with secrets to hide. As a stand alone mystery, the book is fairly solid if not overly challenging.
Those of us who are Lost fans, however, the book layers in a second meaning. As Paul returns home, and checks in with his own personal guru, a retired professor named Manny, we learn snippets of information that may or may not relate to the show. Discussions of King Lear, redemption, and yes, the philosopher John Locke, pepper the plot between the action scenes. Throw in a trip to Australia on board Oceanic Airlines, and other little surprises (like the twins birthdays), it was enough to whet the whistle of this Lost fan.
So, find some airplane wreckage, curl up on a beach with some borrow glasses, and enjoy this fun little romp through the mysterious world of Paul Artisan and the even more mysterious world of Lost. It's too bad they put Gary Troup on the plane though. It would have been nice to read another mystery by him!
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20 of 22 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
4 Books in One, May 10, 2006
If you haven't bought this book yet, buy it, and read it, NOW. Whoever actually wrote this (Steven King? Elmore Leonard? A surprise guest like John Grisham or Scott Turow?) is a storytelling wizard. Bad Twin is really four books in one.
The first story is the search for the twin -- a taut and clever yarn that follows all the rules of the detective genre. The second book consists of all of the "Easter eggs" -- some of them quite obvious, others pretty subtle, that refer to things that have been seen on LOST.
The third book -- pretty intriguing! -- is made up of thoughts and coincidenses that seem to belong to the universe of LOST, but haven't actually been seen on the show. Are they clues to things that will happen? Are they peices of the puzzle/game that's now heating up on the Web?
The fourth book is the one that weaves together all the others, in ways that range from the sly to the definately spooky. This is a fun read and a real brain tickler. I absolutely loved it and I can't wait to read everyting else this author, whoever he or she is, has in print!
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19 of 21 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Now I know what POSTMODERN means!, May 4, 2006
For years, in book reviews and stuff about pop culture, I've seen the word "postmodern"--but I never knew exactly what it meant, other than hip, brainy, and strange. After reading--okay, inhaling--Bad Twin, I think I finally get it. This is a book that toys with everything we think we know about fiction, reality, and how storytelling works. It grabs the reader on a lot of different levels, and is...well, hip, brainy, and strange!
On one level, Bad Twin is an old-fashioned, straight-ahead detective story--and a really good one, with vivid characters, snappy dialogue, plenty of twists and turns, and even a sexy little love story thrown in. It's so tidy that I wouldn't be surprised if the real author--just a guess--was an old master like Elmore Leonard.
But wait, that's just the first level. Here's where it gets weird...
The supposed "author", Gary Troup, is himself a fictional character from the fictional universe of LOST. So which world does the story of Bad Twin belong to? Our world or the world of the Island? So now we have a fiction within a fiction, a mystery within a mystery. Is the detective only trying solve a murder?--or is he also--consciously or otherwise--following clues about the Island? And if the fictional Troup perished in the crash, is it just coincidence that the book echoes so many of the themes of the show? All those twins and mirror-images: Truth and fiction; coincidence and fate; suffering and redemption...
This book is a total page-turner the first time through, and probably complex enough to deserve a second reading.
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