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Original Essays | February 8, 2012

Kent Hartman: IMG A Raider by Any Other Name



Perhaps you are aware of the fact that there is an oddly popular trivia game floating around that a group of clever (and likely bored) college... Continue »
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kalapickm has commented on (1) product.

The Dive
The Dive

kalapickm, June 6, 2007

THE DIVE crawled inside my head in a way that few others have in my lifetime.

I must confess that the whole notion of someone faking his own death to start a new life caught my attention from the start. Why would someone go to this extreme? What internal or external crisis would propel a man to risk throwing away everything he had worked so hard to achieve?

The first chapter was very intense, in the sense that it was quick paced and very visual?like the beginning of a movie. The author goes out of his way to make it feel personal, directly challenging the reader to think along side of the main character.

For this reason, the first chapter was profoundly disturbing. The writer painted a picture of a basically unsympathetic, materialistic man, who, I disliked?an anti-hero. Yet, much of why I disliked Michael Charon had to do with the fact that I was constantly battling the notion that there was much about this guy?s thought life that struck me as real, as genuine. It hit close to home. Perhaps too close for comfort. I was relating to certain aspects of this man?s escapist, criminal daydreaming?that bothered me immensely. It also sparked an intense curiosity that kept me reading.

Without knowing it, the author had already drawn me in to the central question of THE DIVE. After the fourth chapter, I flipped back to the dedication on page two:

?To everyone who continues to
Fight the good fight, daring to
Struggle against the complacency
that comes with defining yourself
narrowly. The Dive is dedicated
to every man an woman not yet
satisfied with his or her identity,
who realizes that they are an
eternal work in progress.?

At that moment I realized that I now sympathized with Michael Charon completely. Somehow the author had skillfully captured me, despite my initial resistance. This guy was essentially a criminal. Now I was convinced he was redeemable, maybe even remarkable. By chapter eleven I was a full partner in Michael?s quest for identity. Moreover, I began asking myself how I defined myself.

The author deployed a bit of literary slight of hand to get me there. A curve was thrown my way. Perhaps I should say: ?curves.? A woman, that is.

The story really takes on greater dimensionality with the introduction of Maria Pressman. Maria is a writer who Michael meets by chance while in Berlin, Germany. A romance blossoms as Michael and Maria are thrown into some unusual situations involving the political radicals that she has been researching for her latest book.

I don?t want to give away the rest of the book, but this much must be said: the author did a fine job creating tension as Michael and Maria are plunged into perilous situations. As billed, THE DIVE is indeed ?a romance-laced, intrigue-driven tale???The story of a man who goes to the extreme of faking his death in order to start a new life... and the woman who saves him from himself.?
The second half of the book is about Maria?s efforts to rescue Michael from some serious trouble he has gotten himself into. She is developed as a strong and intelligent character that I would assume women will find extremely attractive.

From the midpoint on, the author switches to Maria?s perspective. It is a refreshing change up that gives THE DIVE a certain male-female balance to it. Though, let me warn you: just because you see things through Maria?s eyes doesn?t mean that the intensity of this story subsides?quite the opposite! THE DIVE is not a simple romance. Not even close.

In the end, I was left wanting more, with the certain knowledge that this story had more ground to cover.
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