Genre: Mystery, Science Fiction
Publisher: Bethany House Publishers
Publication Date: July 2009
Reviewed by Kaci Hill
I’ve been a fan of Karen Hancock’s from the beginning, and it’s been two years since her last book, Return of the Guardian-King, which wrapped up her Legends of the Guardian-King series. So, suffice it to say, her fans have eagerly waited this new book, which returns to earth in the present day and, like Arena, engages the worlds of science and faith. But both lovers of the Arena style and lovers of the Legends style will be pleased, I think, and get a taste of both worlds, in some sense.
The Enclave follows geneticist and former military (how’s that for a combination) Cameron Reinhardt and fellow scientist Lacey McHenry as they try to unravel the secrets behind Kendall-Jakes Longevity Institute. At the bottom of physical attacks, seduction, secrecy, deception, genetic manipulation, and psychological warfare lies a disturbing reality of men playing gods. And caught in the middle is a group of children just praying they survive.
For me, reading The Enclave was akin to visiting an old friend. Hancock has a wonderful method of combining the physical and the spiritual so that they complement each other. Faith is woven into the story naturally, underscored and developed as the story progresses. Rather than be in conflict, faith and reason move as one, rather than hammer truth, it unfolds readily. Even the subplot in New Eden serves as a mirror as well as a means for the reader to engage the children affected unwittingly by those inside Kendall-Jakes.
Hancock’s characters are also memorable, from the awkward but steady Cam to the endearing, sweet Zowan, to the wholly depraved villains. The characters struggle through decisions, trying to align their faith and the world around them, working through almost impossible scenarios that don’t seem to have any desirable outcome. And, as a personal side note, I love how their faith plays out in ways I could actually envision real, full-time working Christians actually doing. Some bend over backwards just to read their Bibles; others succumb to the routine and neglect the reading of the Word. The same environment, whether hostile (and believe me, this one is malicious) or benign, produce in different people different results. There is no cookie-cutter faith. They struggle to answer questions, wrestle through real-world dilemmas, and, in the end, hold God faithful.
And that, really, I think is the beautiful mingling of the Legends of the Guardian-King and the Arena worlds—the harmony of the spiritual and the physical, the real-world playing out of things unseen. There are other things as well, but the stark reality is that I Am is here.
So, hat’s off to Karen. I look forward to whatever comes next.




3 Responses
[...] Enclave received another very kind review by Kaci Hill over at Fiction Addict. You can read that here. Thanks, Kaci. And I want to note, more to myself than anyone, that now there have been two kind [...]
Posted on September 17th, 2009 at 10:59 pm
I read a review on this one, and it sounds very interesting. Some ‘science-fiction’ isn’t so ‘fiction’ any more!
Posted on September 18th, 2009 at 9:19 am
I agree, Kaci. Great book.
Posted on September 18th, 2009 at 9:30 am
Add A Comment