Delilah
Author at http://brothersinarmsfiction.com/delilah/delilah.html.
How Come My Dog Don't Bark When You Come Around? (Sentinel)
Reviewed by Kathryn A on 28th October 2001 (4)
Tags: Short Story
(33K)
The title of this caught my attention, even though I'd never read
this author before, and the summary said "Jim finds that two Blessed
Protectors are one Blessed Protector too many." Right, I thought. This
thing is probably going to have a noticeable amount of fanon in it. But,
c'mon, with a title like that, it's sure to be light-hearted to some
degree. Give it a go. I'm glad I did. This did, indeed, have a
fanatically protective Jim, and other fanon things like numbered house
rules, but it was all told with such dry humour it kept me smiling.
It opens like this:
A dog.
Somehow you should have known it would all come down to a scruffy,
flea-bitten, back-alley-sniffing mongrel with huge Disney eyes that rivaled
Sandburg's at his dampest. In spite of the house rules (#37 - Nothing with
fur allowed in the loft and that includes Mrs. Vineman downstairs and her
mangy fox collar, the damn thing looks like it's perpetually chasing its
tail around her neck.) In spite of serious eye-watering (from you and not
the dog). In spite of it all, Blair insists. ("Just for the night Jim,
it's pouring.") And if you haven't noticed you're not really good at
resisting one pair of big, damp eyes, never mind a stereo dose.
It carries on in that tone all the way through -- it doesn't matter if this
was canonical or not, it was yummy reading if one is in the mood for that
kind of style. And to top it all off, there was even an interesting
Sentinel-related insight at the end; that was cool.
Coming Up For Air
(1) Coming Up For Air (Sentinel)
Reviewed by Kathryn A on 24th March 2002 (4)
Tags: Novelette
(47K)
This is a very sad story. It's an alternative universe story which
tells of a might-have-been where "a little too late" is still not worse
than "never". Not quite. If you can bear such sadness, with a hopeful
ending, this is well worth it. The scenario is made very plausible, and
the author managed to repeat her successful chatty style which served so
well in her previous story, though this time it's from Blair's point of
view, not Jim's -- and not so funny. It would be nice to see a sequel
where the hope at the end is actually realized.
(2) Paying Karma's Dues (Sentinel)
Reviewed by Kathryn A on 27th April 2002 (1)
Tags: Short Story
(26K)
When I saw this at Cascade Library, I said "Hooray, she's done
a sequel already!" This is the second in the (hopefully) series
of stories started with "Coming Up For Air", and it carries on just as
well. The main problem is that it's too short. We want more!
I liked the way that the progress that Jim makes is realistically not in
leaps and bounds, and the way Blair is just trying so hard, but he can't
be there all the time... I know some people can't stand first-person
narrative stories (aka the "I-story") -- well, it's your loss, that's
all I can say. There are some bits here that just click, and other
touches that remind you of the problems of being a Sentinel, and the
patience that has been cultivated in those who care about Jim.
Stephen shrugged in the good-natured way of someone who had had to
buy practically every brand of orange juice that existed to find the
one Jim would drink. And that one only worked nine months out of the
year.
(3) Calling Carl J. (Sentinel)
Reviewed by Kathryn A on 17th July 2002 (1)
Tags: Short Story
(20K)
Well, this is the third story in the series, and the only bad thing
about it is that it's far too short. I wanna go "wah, is that all?"
at the end. I want for Blair to find out what his dreams mean.
Still, maybe next time. Anyway, apart from all that, this is just as
good as the previous ones. Again we have that wry Blair-voice, bouncing
from one thing to another. I loved the eclectic collection of books
that Blair rooted through when he was trying to find his Carl Jung.
And again we have that agonizing one step at a time progress with Jim,
which is both melancholy and uplifting.
(4) Living at Fourth and Talmadge (Sentinel)
Reviewed by Kathryn A on 18th August 2002 (8)
Tags: Novelette
(52K)
This is the fourth in the "Coming Up For Air" series, and it
follows so hard on the heels of #3 that I went back and re-read it
before I'd gotten more than a couple of paragraphs into this one.
"Blair's bad day stretches into two and only Jim realizes it." It's
almost hilarious, the way that nobody knows what's really going on with
an agitated Jim, with Simon breathing muttered imprecations on Blair's
name because nobody can find him... And just the way it's put together,
with the bits from a few unusual points of view, I really like it.
Actually, I'd like to borrow a word from one of the characters: "Wow!"
(5) Looking For Unicorns (Sentinel)
Reviewed by Kathryn A on 1st January 2003 (7)
Yep, here's the next chapter of the story. It makes me wish I
hadn't started reading this series, since I hate the frustration of
reading a work-in-progress when I'm enjoying it and have to wait for the
next bit. Which is why I normally avoid reading works-in-progress.
Except when I don't realize when I start that it is one...
This, again, is just as cool and quotable as the previous parts, as we
trail a little more along the path to mutual enlightenment.
Naomi was like a doctoral course in comparative religion. She could
prepare a Seder plate while quoting Baha'u'llah, then go off and commune
with Asatru. She would not be landing tail-first on a freezing cold
floor because, like Marco Polo, she'd found unicorns only because she
went looking for them.
(6) Humming Along with The Boss (Sentinel)
Reviewed by Kathryn A on 28th January 2003 (4)
Tags: Short Story
(32K)
This series continues in its moving, whimsical way.
I like the way that the title has resonance in more than one direction.
The way the story all fits together with what Blair is lecturing about
and what else is going on, some scenes both painful and amusing... this
is good. Keeping up the good work. Next one please!
(7) Conversing in a Universal Tongue (Sentinel)
Reviewed by Kathryn A on 7th May 2003 (1)
Tags: Short Story
(31K)
Here's the next chapter: "Blair searches for an ASL tutor for Jim
and one question gets answered."
"Sandburg." Simon is still working on his first cup, the time
when you need to tread lightly. "How are you?"
Okay, so I know I over-think. I mean 'how are you' probably just means
'how are you.' Not 'we're surprised you bothered to come back, you moron'
or 'we've reconsidered the whole helping-with-the-dissertation thing.'
Still the same wry, babbly Blair, and Jim still has surprises for us.