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1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

Robert Luxley has a biological problem that he does not understand and cannot control: one touch from his bare hand will leave you paralyzed for fifteen minutes. He thinks he’s one of a kind, until he meets Cassandra, another carrier of what she calls Sensory Deprivation Syndrome.

Fearing discovery, Luxely follows Cassandra through a dark underground of “Deprivers” in a desperate search for her brother, Nicholas, who has been taken hostage by a radical gang of carriers with a terrifying agenda. Meanwhile, as knowledge of SDS spreads, panic erupts, and soon no Depriver anywhere will be safe.

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    • AudioFile Magazine
      Sensory deprivation syndrome carriers deprive humans of various sensory experiences, simply by touching their bare skin. When reactionary politicians learn of SDS, their attempts at containment trigger revolution among its carriers and those who love them. Christopher Lane adopts a low-key, somber tone, spicing his performance with skillful renditions of several regional and foreign accents. He shows equal mastery of Lakota, Brooklyn, and various Southern tongues in the U.S., and Russian, Dutch, and French accents abroad. The story's slow start suggests a dull experience, but the sinister and insidious ramifications of medical prejudice in a misinformed population soon inspire listener interest. Lane's performance never stretches the boundaries of believability. R.P.L. (c) AudioFile 2004, Portland, Maine
    • Publisher's Weekly

      November 24, 2003
      Altman, co-creator of the theme anthology The Touch
      , a well-received charity venture that allowed contributors to riff on the imaginary Sensory Deprivation Syndrome (communicated through skin contact with a "Depriver"), has taken SDS and built a two-part novel around it, but its effects pale beside similar comic-book antihero fare such as the popular X-Men films or The X-Files
      . In part one, Cassandra, Queen of the Depriver underground, recruits Robert Luxley, a Depriver assassin whose touch causes 15 minutes of paralysis, to help retrieve her brother Nicholas from the clutches of the ambiguously evil Mr. Deveraux. With the help of Sparrow, a mystically inclined Lakota Indian, Robert learns how to recognize other Deprivers by their auras. Unfortunately, the action quickly bogs down as various characters discuss ethical options instead of wholeheartedly battling the factions that would use SDS for their own nefarious ends. In part two, Alex Crowley, a normal man who loved his Depriver wife and now wants revenge for her murder, turns to Sparrow's Indian mentor for help. The better parts of the novel focus on Alex's vision quest. After he becomes a secret agent, he has to fight his conscience more than he fights the bad guys. This book succeeds neither in creating archetypal comic-book antiheroes nor in humanizing the characters enough to give them three-dimensional depths.

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  • OverDrive Listen audiobook

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  • English

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