
Asha Amarasuriya
is a Ceylonese woman who was raised on a tea plantation in the middle of her
island, having grown up in a highly protected and privileged situation. As an
adolescent, she was mentored by Dov Cohn, in an Israeli system for close combat
called Krav Maga. After working with him for several years, he suddenly
disappeared without explanation. Asha found her way to the U.S. where she
became a Krav Maga instructor. It was doing that work when she met a new
student, Lynn Chevalier, an investigative reporter, who was working on a story about
the darknet, the secretive side of the internet where really bad guys do their
dealings.
Peper takes the
action from the Bay Area to Burning Man when Lynn announced that she had an
extra ticket, and Asha accepted her offer to travel there in response to a
demand for her parents in Sri Lanka that she accept an arranged marriage.
Peper’s description of Burning Man is incredible, and there was nefarious
action going on behind the scenes there with regard to the darknet. It’s
difficult to write more without giving away too much of the plot, but this
novel has all the necessary elements - good and interesting character
development and a fast moving plot. The secondary characters were equally good
and helped with the story development. Given Asha’s martial arts talents, you
can guess that some hand-to-hand combat occurred, and Peper knows how to write
a fight scene. This story grabbed me from the outset with the introduction of
Kelemete Koloi, a Tongan Crip from Salt Lake City.
I read Neon Fever Dream straight through, so if
you take my advice and buy this book, you’re in for a treat.
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