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Schapiro, Meyer: Masters of Art (Hardcover, 1983, Harry N. Abrams) 5 stars

Review of 'Masters of Art' on 'Goodreads'

5 stars

The second of Doug’s recent novels to be written with first person narration, Portals opens with a much more actiony feel than Unidentified. I didn’t particularly click with Noah to start with, but he grew on me, and his logical deductions and inferences were dazzling and exciting to read about.

The portals themselves were cleverly done, and the intricacy of the connections and AI-monitored travel rules leave a lot of room for more novels set in this universe. I really hope Doug can fly with this, he’s done a few series before and, to my mind, Portals is ripe for future exploits someday. Yet again, Doug excels at manipulating the reader and characters both (although any time I see that someone died in a Doug Richards novel I now disbelieve it until there’s a genuine body). As this story progressed, I was engaged and excited. I read the first 2 parts and went to bed, the addiction specialist idea bubbling up in my head. I paused at the start of part 6 to go feed myself and kept churning everything over in my mind. And then I finished the whole thing after that, gleefully sucking down every twist and turn and totally enjoying myself.