Title: 
Saving The InnocentsAuthor: Randall Kenneth Drake
Author’s Web site
: 
http://rkdrake.comGenre/category: Mystery/Suspense/Action
ISBN: 
0-9747161-0-3
Only $5.99 only  at
 author's Web site
Reviewed by Dianne
Donovan originally for Midwest Book ReviewSaving the Innocents is all about courage, strength, and 
personal effort;
and as it chronicles the life and efforts of one Mary Jane 
Chevalier (an
'everywoman' who feels powerless but in fact is powerful), it 
also reflects
modern society's milieu - and thus will resonate with readers 
looking for
positive stories about courage and determination in the face of 
impossible
odds.
But Saving the Innocents isn't a story without 
violence: indeed, the first
paragraph has Mary Jane facing death with little 
more than the snap of her
gum as a response: "She thought it funny . . . what 
went through her mind
while waiting for the bullet. Time slowed down in that 
moment. Several
thoughts and feelings flashed - alternating waves. Her body 
felt relaxed at
first, as though relief had finally come. Freedom. And she 
welcomed it."
The first striking thing to note about Saving the Innocents 
is its attention
to detail and description, which capture powerful images 
with a pen finely
honed by the moment: "The sound was like a bumblebee as it 
split the
smoke-filled air. She swung her body around with a gathering force, 
and
brought the cue from behind her like a broadsword - the way a 
Viking
marauder would in the long ago of Scotland. The wooden blade made 
a
thunderous crack into the side of the big man's knee, the cue 
splitting
apart."
Mary's passion for finding her father is only 
equaled by her determination
to save the weak who, much like herself, have 
limited choices when facing
violence. And so her very nature inevitably 
becomes linked to two very
special people who enter her life on the run and 
who create a double mystery
for her to pursue. True to her helpful nature, 
Mary Jane feels compelled to
assist; and that action in turn will transform 
her own life as she becomes
absorbed in a deadly manhunt,  determined to save 
the innocents she's
stumbled upon and, ultimately, herself.
Mary Jane 
feels like an unknown: while she makes efforts in life, she
largely feels her 
achievements are too little . or so her conscious says.
Her decision to 
search out an absent father who changed her life through his
actions is what 
results in the unexpected: the discovery of a man and a
little girl hiding 
out because they have seen too much.
Now, some notes on this novel's 
unusual roots: they were inspired by the
author's infatuation with movies and 
with the songs of Sarah McLachlan,
Alanis Morissette and Sheryl Crow. Parts 
of this story actually came to him
in a series of flashback-like scenes which 
he dutifully penned as they came;
but it was McLachlan's music that prompted 
a flood of inspiration prompted
by a realization that each line of one of her 
songs described one of the
scenes Randall Kenneth Drake was already 
writing.
And it was Morisette's song 'Mary Jane' and 'You Learn' combined 
with Crow's
lyrics in 'Am I Getting Through' which both contributed to the 
character of
Mary Jane Chevalier. Listen to this music for further insights 
into that
protagonist and her origins - at the risk of gaining advance 
insights into
where the plot is going. In fact - listening to the music of 
all three as
background to reading provides a kind of multimedia experience 
that any
singular song, artist or the book alone couldn't impart.
The 
scenes originated with a story Drake stumbled upon in a bar, of an
abandoned 
child left by her mother in front of the 'best house she would
like to live 
in'. And so psychological and physical abandonment are one
element in a novel 
that weaves a complicated story line powered by a woman
who is strong, but 
believes herself to be weak. It's unusual to find a
strong female heroine in 
a novel but Mary Jane IS that heroine, fighting for
the weak and making a 
difference not just in her world, but in the worlds of
others.
To add 
a dose of complexity, the protagonists all hold names indicative of
their 
underlying roles in the story line: thus Delphia acts as an oracle and
seer, 
Chevalier is actually a knight in disguise, and Mary Jane (much to 
the
reader's surprise) embodies ALL these qualities, exhibited during the 
course
of her quest.
It's all about a quest involving 'finding an 
angel', fantasies designed to
cope with soul-threatening encounters, issues 
of death and values in life,
and an epic quest disguised as a search for 
meaning. In this case not only
does Mary Jane find her cause and meaning from 
life, but events come full
circle in posing an angelic presence for Sera, the 
little girl who needs
rescuing.
Saving the Innocents is also about 
preparing for battle, caring for self and
strangers alike, and what motivates 
the deepest of emotions: "All her life
she had wanted to be noticed - to love 
and be loved - to be someone's
champion. The answers had come from the most 
unexpected sources. Nick,
Delphia, Jack, and Sera. An ex-fireman, a crippled, 
blind woman . . . an
odd, devoted, loyal man - and a little girl."
As 
protagonists join the story and begin their dance of interaction 
and
influence, readers are treated to much more than a mystery or crime 
story:
it's a story of courage, survival against all odds, and revelations 
that
change everyone involved. The heart and soul of Saving the Innocents 
lies in
Mary Jane's choices and determination which create a true heroine's 
journey
in which Mary Jane's emotions and observations act as a driving force 
behind
an epic quest for salvation that spills from the personal to 
(ultimately) an
entire circle of characters.
Any looking for a novel 
that wraps its reader in a cloak of complexity and
warmth will find Saving 
the Innocents filled with satisfying twists, turns,
and protagonist 
interactions that create scenarios of understanding,
connection and, 
ultimately, redemption.
----- 
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