Monday, October 08, 2007

The Owl -- Robert Forward

I don't know much about Robert Forward except that he wrote for a lot of TV shows, including She-Ra. That might explain a lot about The Owl. The premise is this as stated on the cover: "Alexander L'Hiboux Never Sleeps." Sounds a bit like the the idea Lawrence Block used in his series about Evan Tanner, but the execution is entirely different.

While Block's books are breezy and funny,
The Owl is deadly serious. It's also very much in the style of pulp novels about The Spider and The Shadow. Al (or Owl) "wanders the streets stalking his prey, handgs out in all-night diners, and never stays in one place long enough to cast a shadow."

What the Owl does is get revenge for the people who pay for it. Two years of their salary, whatever that might be, is what he requires. Then he'll kill whoever you say needs killing if he decides to take the job. "In such cases the law is powerless. The Owl is not." Not that Al doesn't do a lot of killing of whoever needs it for free. He kills people all the time. It's best not to irritate him. After all, he suffers from insomnolence.

L'Hiboux might be schizophrenic. He narrates the story in first person, but he drops into third person all the time when he's talking about his alter ego. Of course athletes do that, too, so maybe he's not nutty at all.

The book is graphically violent from page one or two, and The Owl absorbs more punishment than any two or three or four people in other novels of this sort. Mike Hammer is a wimp compared to The Owl.

The climax of the book is really a long one, maybe not a record, but close. Over 100 pages are devoted to The Owl's assault on a cargo ship and his taking of the revenge. I was getting a little tired long before the end.

A TV movie was made from The Owl in 1991, and it must have been pretty terrible if the reviews on the IMDb are any indication of its true quality. Judging by the summary, the plot of the movie is nothing like the plot of the novel.

I suppose the novel was intended as the first in a series, but no other was published. In the U. S., at least. It seems that maybe The Owl 2 was published in England. And, God help me, I think I might order it. Somebody stop me!

9 comments:

Anonymous said...

Who played The Owl in the movie, Bill? I'm too indolent to look it up.

Randy Johnson said...

Easy, Bill. We'll talk you down.

Unknown said...

Adrian Highlander Paul was The Owl, Jeff.

Anonymous said...

the only thing bad about the book that i can see is that the Owl is a fictional character. i like the idea that he demands two years of the customers' salaries, rather than a flat fee. that personalizes the complicity in an interesting psychological way. i might have to get the thing myself to see if this interesting angle is exploited. thanks for the review.

Unknown said...

Believe me, that angle isn't exploited at all. It's just mentioned. You're right about the psychology, though. The Owl does it so he can be sure the person who hires him is really serious.

Anonymous said...

I take it Robert Forward isn't the physicist and sf writer Robert L. Forward.

Unknown said...

Seems doubtful, despite the claim of at least one Internet dealer.

Juri said...

How probable is that they are different from each other? But doing a bit of search it seems pretty probable! THE OWL is not mentioned in any of Robert Lull Forward's net bibliographies and he doesn't mention it in his autobiography that's on his site.

Unknown said...

Yes, it must be that there are two Robert Forwards.