The Traveler (novel)
From Freepedia
The Traveler is a 2005 novel by John Twelve Hawks, which impressed some (but not all) critics.
The book is about an alternative contemporary reality, laced with magic and fantasy, one in which the U.S. is part of a society overseen by a secret organization which wants a perfectly controlled population. This control is manifest through the use of surveillance cameras, centralized databases, the urge to use RFID-like tags for each citizen, and assorted spy gear (heat sensors, etc...).
The opposition to this organization comes in two forms: small pockets of people who have decided to live "off the grid" and the harlequins.
The Harlequins, now numbering only a handful of people, are a group of fighters sworn to defend the travellers. A traveller is a person who is able to break the light free from his body and travel through the barriers to the other realms.
Although the basic plot is one which is not new, the author uses it to provide a setting for discussion of larger issues, such as free will, the nature of good and evil, etc.
The underlying premise for the world in which this book is set greatly resembles the cosmology of Tibetan Buddhism (and other eastern cosmologies). Most notably, the second realm is explicitly labelled the realm of the hungry ghosts. But, each realm in the enumerated hierarchy is associated with a given human shortcoming- much like in Hinduism and Buddhism. One gets the impression that the travellers are intended to bring the boon of their multi-realm knowledge back to the inhabitants of the fourth realm to aid them in break from their own samsaric cycles.
It is the first volume in a projected trilogy titled The Fourth Realm. Reputedly, the movie rights have already been sold.
External links
- The Traveler, by John Twelve Hawks from the Philadelphia Inquirer
- The Traveler, by John Twelve Hawks Positive review
- The Traveler, by John Twelve Hawks Critical review



