Second
Trip
was first published in 1972. Even so, the story seems just as fresh today.
The book begins:
Even the street felt wrong beneath his feet.
Something oddly rubbery about the pavement, too much give in it. As though they
had changed the mix of the concrete during the four years of his troubles. A
new futuristic stuff, the 2011-model sidewalk, bouncy and weird. But no. The
sidewalk looked the same. He was the
new stuff.
Immediately, Silverberg thrusts the reader straight
into the mind-world of Paul Macy who is a rehabilitated Nat Hamlin.
Rehabilitation entails a brainwash, followed by an immersion in a false
personality. But, fresh out of rehab, he encounters Hamlin’s old girlfriend,
and a small piece of Hamlin awakens in his mind and grows to threatening
proportions.
A Jekyll and Hyde tale, delving into the psyche of a
disgusting violent sculptor and a manufactured personality. There are the
literary, scientific and artistic allusions we’ve come to expect from the
eclectic Silverberg, garnished with philosophy. His metaphors are always apt,
description is pitched just right: brief, but enough to show, not to tell.
“She had a parched, ravaged look, though, as if
fevers of the soul had been consuming her substance. Her eyes, though large and
bloodshot, never were still. Always a birdlike flickering from place to place.”
This is Lissa, a drop-out psychic, who proves both
friend and foe in Macy’s battle with his other self, Hamlin.
A psychological thriller in a believable near-future
setting, concerning real characters, real emotions and realistically portrayed
situations. Vintage Silverberg.
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