Fight Me


Well, it hasn't been a banner year thus far for speculative fiction. Hoping to find a compelling read, I decided to try something different. The press release claimed that Austin Grossman's Fight Me was akin to The Boys and Watchmen. "The Avengers meets The Breakfast Club. . . wry and engaging" reads one cover blurbs. This felt like the perfect title to drag me out of my reading slump.

Alas, Fight Me is none of those things. Though the book does aspire to be something more, it lacks the depth and the characterization to be anything more than the script of a B-movie superhero flick.

Here's the blurb:

Dr Rick Tower is a mild-mannered English professor easing into middle-age at a medium-sized New England college. A genial blur, he thinks. Even his vices are unremarkable.

But it wasn’t always like this. Not until they changed his name, altered his looks and told him: ‘pretend you were never different’.

Because, decades earlier after a very bad day at high school, he was committed to a secret government facility with three other kids, Cat, Jack and Stephanie, each special in their own way. Tested, tutored and trained, this extraordinary quartet were then told to save the world.

It was the best thing that ever happened to them. Until it became the worst.

Now, twenty years after the tragedy that forced him into academic non-entity, a mysterious disappearance means Tower must reunite with his former comrades. Each returns with their own agenda. And while great power might come with great responsibility, there’s little of that on display from any of them.

Combining compelling storytelling and fierce imagination with a rich cast of characters, Fight Me is a page-turning and distinctive thriller, a unique tale of good and evil, and a memorable portrait of man trying to do the right thing at any cost. Against impossible odds...


I found the premise intriguing, which is why I wanted to read this novel in the first place. And it does start well. Problem is, Fight Me falls short almost as soon as it gets going. And the more the story progresses, the more it becomes obvious that Grossman doesn't have much to work with. Not sure the author had the wherewithal to pull off the kind of tale he wanted to tell. There is absolutely no depth to speak of. Forget about Watchmen, this is generic cookie-cutter material. Adding some sex, drugs, and booze to the mix doesn't change the fact that this isn't original by any stretch of the imagination.

The book's structure follows two timelines; the present and flashback scenes from the past to help flesh out events and the protagonists. And yet, for every scene that adds to the story, a bunch of others add little or nothing, or even create a bit of confusion. At times Fight Me feels like a draft that hasn't gone through editing just yet.

The characterization is probably the aspect that leaves the most to be desired. Regardless of how weak the plot is, Grossman still could have pulled it off to a certain degree had the cast been great. Unfortunately, it wasn't meant to be. Other than Alex, aka Rick Tower, who's the main character and through whose eyes we watch the story unfold, Jack, Cat, Stephanie, and Meg would definitely have benefited from more exposition. Though the lack of exposition gave Meg a more mysterious outlook, which worked well with her personae. Still, although he tried to give them some depth and personality, the author ended up with a bunch of cardboard cutouts. To make matters worse, the antagonist, Sinistro, is kind of lame as well.

In many ways, Fight Me was a failure to launch. I was hooked by the first few chapters, but I quickly lost interest when I realized that the plot didn't seem to go anywhere. In the end, the novel became a veritable slog and I almost didn't finish it.

I was likely hoping for a thrilling endgame and captivating finale that never materialized. Thinking back, the whole novel often feels so random. Not sure what was Austin Grossman's objective, but personally I got nothing out of this work.

The final verdict: 5/10

For more info about this title, follow this Amazon Associate link.

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