Tentacles, Guns and Sushi…My Review of Eric Lahti’s Speculative Fiction, Henchmen

DM Shepard
5 min readJul 30, 2020

Eric Lahti’s Henchmen

Evil is that thing that we don’t want to happen to us. If it happens to someone else, someone we don’t agree with, though, it’s justice.

Lahti, Eric. Henchmen (p. 183). Kindle Edition.

http://ericlahti.com/

Having stalked-I mean, followed Eric on Twitter for some time, I’ve had the Henchmen saved on my laptop for what seems like an eternity. I’ve been waiting for some downtime to indulge in this gritty action story. Eric’s writing did not disappoint (and after reading it, I bought several of the other book in the series). The best way to sum up this speculative fiction is if Michael Crichton and Stephen King got together and wrote their own version of Oceans 11 crossed Aliens with crossed with Lock, Stock and Two Smoking Barrels. The difference is that Eric provides enough tech to satisfy the geek in me without devolving into writing a text book like some of Crichton’s work. The toughest part about this review is going to be avoiding spoilers, because this is well worth a read and I don’t want to give away the fun parts.

Their Mission?-All the Wrong Things for the Right Reasons

From the opening page, Eric sucks you into this team’s mission to bring down the government. Eric’s intelligent and sarcastic narrator Steven reminds me of the spy Michael Western from the TV Show Burn Notice. Steven is an ex-government agent who has been burned and is now working for “a seven-foot-tall bombshell.” It’s clear from the start that, Eve, the leader of this ensemble is more than she seems, and Eric does a great job of giving just enough to tantalize, but leaving us with questions about her supernatural origins and her real goals. After a successful heist, they decide to celebrate with some naked sushi in Vegas. When a gang shows up and threatens their “hostess,” they realize the secret she carries may be useful to their cause. From there, the ride down the rabbit hole gets wilder with this crew of misfits. Supernatural creatures, government conspiracies and tentacles start coming out of the woodwork-literally.

The Anti-hero

While anti-heroes have been around for a long time, in recent years, pop culture has seen a surge in popularity in this trope/archetype. In opposition to the squeaky-clean, square-jawed, high moralled characters of the past, the anti-hero is flawed and at times dark. Often times, the anti-hero is more relatable than the perfect hero. The Henchmen does a great job of showing this group of anti-heroes and their motivations for participating in what would be considered treasonous insurrection.

Civil Disobedience

“If the injustice is part of the necessary friction of the machine of government, let it go, let it go: perchance it will wear smooth-certainly the machine will wear out… but if it is of such a nature that it requires you to be the agent of injustice to another, then I say, break the law. Let your life be a counter-friction to stop the machine. What I have to do is to see, at any rate, that I do not lend myself to the wrong which I condemn.”

Henry David Thoreau, Civil Disobedience and Other Essays

One of the deeper themes in Eric’s book revolves around government corruption, control, and blind obedience to law. He isn’t picking on either political party, but calling out the whole system as being no longer for the people. It is a great talking point in these turbulent times when we have people marching in the street. What is true patriotism?

“Patriotism means to stand by the country. It does not mean to stand by the president or any other public official, save exactly to the degree in which he himself stands by the country. It is patriotic to support him insofar as he efficiently serves the country. It is unpatriotic not to oppose him to the exact extent that by inefficiency or otherwise he fails in his duty to stand by the country. In either event, it is unpatriotic not to tell the truth, whether about the president or anyone else.”

~ Theodore Roosevelt

Henchmen is very relatable in our current state of affairs in this country. When I spoke with Eric about the themes in his book, we joked that when he wrote it originally, he never expected the plot to be as wild as what happened in 2020/early 2021. His story brings up some great talking points on blind patriotism. It will totally piss off people on the extremes of either party. It’s definitely not a story for the easily offended or politically correct. But if you are in the mood for a gritty, wild adventure in the desert of New Mexico, then this novel (and series) is for you. I can’t wait to dive into the sequel, Arise.

Thanks for reading!

About the Author

I joined the Navy at 18 to escape a small town in the Mojave Desert. A diagnosis of MS disrupted my dreams of becoming a super spy. I made limoncello from my lemons and became an electrical engineer instead. My fascination with live high voltage drew me to Alaska. I came for the job, but stayed for the adventure. I enjoy blogging about my journey as a woman working in STEM, my experiences dealing with everything MS has handed me, and the wonder of the Alaska wilderness. My husband and I have undertaken the task of turning 30 acres of remote land into an off-grid retreat, we just signed the paperwork to incorporate our non-profit in February of 2021.

I write stories about women in STEM who save the day and the hot guys who sometimes help along the way as well as historical fiction about the Klondike Gold Rush. I self-published my first horror novella, The Dark Land, on Amazon in May of 2020. I will release the sequel, The Devil’s Valley, in May of 2021. Both stories are set in the wilderness of Wrangell-St. Elias National Park, and draw on the Athabascan “Head Waters Peoples” legends of the Cet’ann, or “The People With Tails”.

The legend of Alaska’s Headless Ravine is steeped in blood. Its hunger for human flesh never sleeps, even in the deepest cold of winter. Courage skill and love will be stretched to the limits on the isolated boundaries of The Dark Land.

Originally published at https://dmshepard.com on July 30, 2020.

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DM Shepard

Electrical Engineer | Horror Author | Running wild far north of normal with a drone | MS Warrior |Turning 31 acres of Alaska Wilderness into an off-grid retreat