Blind Traveler Down A Dark River
PUBLISHER: Publish America LLP
ISBN: 1-4137-6999-3
PRICE: $19.95
RELEASE DATE: July 2, 2005
Summary
Douglas Abledan is a
blind man
using a GPS unit to navigate the world.
One day the device malfunctions. He stumbles upon the scene of a murder
about to take place. Due to the confusion caused by the failure of his
technology, it isn't until he hears a radio announcer reporting an
accidental shooting that pieces start falling into place. Unable to
convince authorities to look into the matter, he launches his own
investigation. In the year 2021 increasing global earthquakes threaten
civilization’s infrastructure. Unimat Incorporated is trying to stop
the destruction by introducing a new building material. Special
interests are up in arms. Environmentalists blame technology for the
problem and want a different solution. Steel workers worry about jobs
and safety. Now someone has hired a contract killer to stop the
project. How can Abledan expose the killer without becoming a target?
"Masterfully plotted, flawlessly written, Robert Bennett's dazzling
debut, Blind Traveler Down A Dark River, will hold you in its grip
until the very last syllable. Imagine the addictive combination of the
fast-paced police procedural and the elegant prose style of your
favorite mystery writer and you will have the essence of Bennett's
appeal. What makes this book infinitely more important, however, is
that here, for the first time, is a representation of disability on the
page that is neither patronizing nor sentimental, but sharply accurate,
respectful and solidly human. It is an achievement worth noting and
emulating, unique in today's writing community."
- Charles A. Riley II, Ph.D. -
- Professor of English, City University of New York
and former editor-in-chief, WE lifestyle magazine -
"Set in the not too distant future in New York City, the book Blind
Traveler Down A Dark River is an exciting, well-constructed, fast
moving story of a blind computer expert caught up in an intricate
murder story involving high technology and environmental terrorism. The
main character moves around using advanced electronics that tell him
where he is and what is around him. Forced into being a detective by
circumstances beyond his control, he finds himself in the middle of a
murder case that he must solve. This is an exciting and believable
story of a man who uses the high technology that helps him get around
in the world to solve a case that the police cannot! I found it to be
one of the most exciting and believable books I have read in a long
time! Kudos to the author Robert Bennett! My advice to everyone…. Get
the book! Read it! It will be one of the best books you will read this
year!"
- Michael Burks -
- Public Information Officer for International Center for Disability
Resources on the Internet -
“Mr. Bennett’s writing style reminds me of that of Mary Higgins Clark.
[In describing the technology used by the main character] he has
written about something that could exist in the not-too-distant future.
His vision of the ‘Navigator’ system captures the long run aims of
every group working on different types of personal guidance projects.
His characterization hits a few high spots in the general area of blind
travel - the fierce desire to be independent, the crushing emotional
condition of being "disoriented" and having calls for assistance
ignored.”
- Reginald G. Golledge, Ph.D. -
- Professor of Geography, University of California at Santa Barbara -
"I truly enjoyed the book. I feel it was very realistic and I don't
feel it ‘Super Heroed’ the blind character. It touched on stereotypes
about blindness but addressed them in a positive way. I thought it was
an excellent read and I would recommend it to my friends."
- Michael Lewis, med. -
- National Program Consultant, Blind Rehabilitation Service, Veterans
Affairs Central Office -
One of the neat things about this job is that occasionally, I get to
see books before the rest of y'all. Once in a while, a writer will ask
if I would be willing to review his book, and I will say, sure... Send
me a copy. In this case, Robert Bennett, the author of Blind Traveler
Down A Dark River (shortened to "Blind Traveler" for the rest of this
review) was still going over cover art and such with his publisher, and
so sent me an MS-Word DOC file. I read the first couple of chapters and
said, "This is pretty good, for a new writer." But reading a novel from
the computer is not real practical, and the alternative, printing out
400 pages, wasn't terribly attractive, although I've done it before.
Then I got my E-Book Reader, and everything changed. I stuck Blind
Traveler on the Reader, and voila! I could, and did, take it
everywhere, and read almost compulsively, and stayed up way too late.
Blind Traveler is a combination near-future SF/Mystery novel. And both
the SF trappings, and the mystery, are well done. In fact, the mystery
couldn't have happened without the cool gear owned by Douglas Abledan,
a blind man who gets around using special GPS enabled equipment
specially developed for the blind. The world that Abledan inhabits is
not that big of a jump from our own, but a few years from now, the
Earth's magnetic fields have shifted, and you think we have problems
with earthquakes NOW? Just wait. Anyway, a corporation has just created
and is getting ready to market a new construction material they call
Plasteel; lighter, cheaper, and stronger than steel. Just perfect for
construction in earthquake ravaged areas. What's not to love? Well,
evidently a lot, because the CEO is killed in what seems to be a random
drive-by. Only there was a witness. Douglas Abledan, blind man, saw the
whole thing happen. The problem? He was half a city away. As he is
walking to work one day his navigation device malfunctions. Suddenly he
seems to be in a part of the city that he does not recognize,
surrounded by images and sounds that confuse him. Through a series of
missteps he stumbles upon the scene of a murder about to take place. As
far as he is concerned, his equipment just malfunctioned, but when he
hears a radio report about a missing man a few days later, the scene he
“witnessed” starts to make sense. Now we have several mysteries to
solve. Whodunnit? As far as the police are concerned, it was a random
drive-by shooting. Sad, but it happens all the time. And Abledan,
confused and disoriented, physically a long way away, but according to
the device he desperately needs to live a normal life, he was there, at
the scene of the murder. If he can't trust his new senses, what can he
trust? So Abledan investigates. And he finds way more than he bargains
for. Robert Bennett has written a taut, well-constructed puzzler with
interesting characters, and an involving SF world.
- Jerry Wright -
- Bewildering Stories -
This book is a real find: believable science fiction, with a rousing plot line, a real page-turner! I couldn't put it down. Hard to believe this is the writer's first published novel. I love that the hero (totally lacking in self-pity or even resentment -- both of which would be understandable) functions courageously in the world, even though his somewhat-recent lost of sight means he is still not comfortable with the technology that he relies upon! The writer (no stranger to disability himself) presents his hero as a whole being who happens not to be able to see, who never plays the victim, although he walks the knife's edge of safety throughout the book. The characters are finely etched and fully support the well-rounded story, and I didn't see the ending in sight until it was over. Great book!
- Cindy Radke -
- Los Angeles, Ca. -
I started reading Robert Bennett’s “Blind Traveler Down a Dark River” without any pre-conceived notions. I didn’t look at the blurb, the preface or other reviews. With a paper book, I probably would have read the back cover first, but this was an e-book, so I just plunged in.
I read the first chapter about the CEO of a company that was trying to combine the best qualities of steel and plastic. So far, so good. I mean, why not? A very sensible idea and I’m surprised it hasn’t been done yet.
The guy had his problems: a drinking domineering wife and a trade union that wouldn’t quit. I liked him from the start and I was sad to realize he was not to be the main character, when around came a visually-impaired man whose story this actually is (and who’s responsible for the title of the book).
That’s when my grip on reality started to loosen. I’ve worked with GPS, I’ve even driven a car with a navigation system, but do the blind really use GPS to find their way around? And those driver-less buses, maybe they indeed exist overseas?
The writing was so believable and so unlike the conventional Science Fiction style, that it took several GPS experts, together with the book’s blurb, to convince me that this was, indeed, a futuristic setting and the year was 2021.
The premise of the book is simple: imagine a blind man who’s dependent on all this futuristic technology. Imagine the technology going haywire. Imagine him witness a murder… without actually being present at the scene.
A great premise. A very good book.
- Yvonne Eve Walrus -
- Author: Murder@Work -
- New Zealand -
What would it be like to be blinded as an adult? If it happens in 2021, the technology for blind people will afford them a nearly normal life, at least that's how author Robert Bennett envisions the future. A social worker with a background in criminal justice, he has written a gripping murder mystery starring a blind man, who, with the help of his GPS navigation system, is able to investigate and track down a killer.
I thoroughly enjoyed this page-turner and wouldn't be a bit surprised if the technology described in the book comes to pass.
- Mrs. Francine T. Silverman -
- Book author/Publicist -
- New York City, NY -