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Zodiac (2017)

by Sam Wilson

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705383,007 (3.39)1
A series of uniquely brutal murders targets victims from totally different walks of life. In a society divided according to Zodiac signs, those differences are cast at birth and binding for life. All eyes are on Detective Jerome Burton and astrological profiler Lindi Childs - divided in their beliefs over whether the answer is written in the stars but united in their conviction that there is an ingenious serial killer executing a grand plan. Together, they will unravel a dark tale of betrayal, lost love, broken promises and a devastating truth with the power to tear their world apart . . .… (more)
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Showing 5 of 5
Interesting premise that imagines a system for categorizing people based on their Starsign. However, the story itself was all over the place, characters had ambiguous motives and the body count was a bit high. There was little or no redemption for the underdogs in the end, sort of like life. ( )
  moukayedr | Sep 5, 2021 |
This book was an interesting read. Murder mystery with conspiracy and hint of dystopian. It is set in a place where everyone is separated by their zodiac sign. A murder takes place and a detective works with an astrologer to solve it. The thing that intrigued me about this is the way the author kept doing a side story that ended up intersecting the main one. I give it 4 out of 5 for the reason that the killer became evident early on. Still a good read nonetheless. ( )
  BingeReader87 | Nov 22, 2017 |
Sam Wilson's debut novel Zodiac should be a smash hit: set in an alternate universe in San Celeste, a generic American city, the book features a society governed by an absolute belief in astrology, where an individual's future is predetermined by the date of his birth.

Like most cops, Detective Jerome Burton is a Taurean and when he starts investigating a series of particularly nasty murders, he looks for the killer among the Arians, the city's underclass, responsible for most brutal crimes that occur.

Wilson [a dodgy Aries himself] is not a believer but concedes “I read about a study that found that your zodiac sign really does match your personality, but only if you already believe in astrology and know what it says you should be, otherwise it’s no better than chance”

With the help of profiler Lindi Childs [a Leo] Burton discovers - certainly in his own case - the Sign System is flawed but reason cannot beat belief. “I made a world in which it doesn’t matter if it’s true or not. If enough people believe, then it becomes an unavoidable part of life.”

The victims are different signs and butchered in different ways – a Chief of Police [Taurus] who was gutted then buried in the earth, the Taurean element, the host of a TV popular show [Leo] was shot then burned alive [Fire is the Leonine element] – the killer is very specific in his targets and his methods.

Sam Wilson accepts that “beliefs and society shape who we are.“ but had fun turning his hero Burton into someone who firsts doubts then has personal reasons for rejecting the status quo.

Zodiac is a socio-astrological thriller-cum police procedural and ‘Signism’ can be seen as a form of Racism or Anti-Semitism: however, the author had no overt political agenda – “I thought that the Zodiac world would be interesting and fun to write, and I came up with a story that wouldn’t work anywhere else.”

This is a world that includes elements such as The True Signs Academy, a school where problem children are taught [painfully] to ‘embrace’ their true element, where different signs live in different areas, and where there is a designated “Ram Squad” to deal specifically with criminally-inclined Arians.

Sam Wilson makes it clear that ‘Signism’ is a bad thing but whatever parallels you may be tempted to draw between the Zodiac World and other oppressive regimes, he does not consider himself a political writer.

In fact, his influences are readable, accessible, popular and fundamentally excellent examples of how South African writers can take on the best of the rest and beat them at their own game.

” I was inspired by Lauren Beukes and Sarah Lotz for their high-concept thrillers, although I can’t compare my work to theirs. And I loved … some of the great writing on TV shows like Black Mirror and The Wire.”

Wilson is researching another thriller set in the same universe, but with a different situation characters. However, his message to those who loved Zodiac is that Burton and Childs may get a cameo. Fingers crossed! ( )
  adpaton | Aug 11, 2017 |
What star sign you are born under determines much about your life, so astrology enthusiasts say - but what if the whole of society were determined by birth sigh? In this world Capricorns are successful professionals, Taureans form the police force and Arians are the violent underclass. When a police chief is murdered and a girl goes missing Detective Burton looks for help from an astrologist. What is the link between a set of murders, a strange school that was quickly closed down and the crack police squad determined to control the Arian section of the city?

I'm not normally a fan of novels set in a dystopian alternative modern day scenario and there were aspects of this book I found really annoying because of that. However by mentally thinking in terms of race or caste I could place this book in the here and now and it had huge resonance. At its heart Zodiac is a police procedural and a strong one at that. ( )
1 vote pluckedhighbrow | Jun 26, 2017 |
I chose to read this book because I was curious if someone who has no knowledge of or belief in Zodiac signs and the overarching belief of Astrology could still come away from reading this with an understanding of the storyline and the author’s intent.

I was pleasantly surprised to be able to say the answer is yes. Like most living in America I was at least familiar with the existence of Zodiac signs and knew which was mine but my knowledge ended there. I have no familiarity though with positions of the sun, moon and stars as they pertain to events nor with personality traits that are assigned to each symbol.

Thankfully you do not need a thorough or even basic understanding of these things to understand and enjoy this story as the author does a very good job of including these details to ensure you don’t feel inadequate. Admittedly there were times I felt one of the main characters, who specializes in astrology, was speaking a foreign language but thankfully the author used various other characters and events to flush out these things so I as the reader could grasp the concept.
Sometimes I felt complete disbelief that police procedures and guilt relied so heavily on these seemingly arbitrary and asinine things to the extent I thought about not reading this anymore due to its “stupidity”. Then I realized the society created within these pages which placed such a heavy emphasis on a person’s worth, position in life, choices and guilt vs innocence was no different than a reality which does this exact same thing only instead of using zodiac symbols uses a person’s skin color or religious affiliation. Suddenly the storyline didn’t seem so farfetched or unbelievable.

I loved the originality and how the author blended past events seamlessly into the present to show the consequences of decisions and the long term ramifications.

Wilson is definitely an author to watch for and I can’t wait to see what he comes up with next.
( )
  ttsheehan | Feb 9, 2017 |
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A series of uniquely brutal murders targets victims from totally different walks of life. In a society divided according to Zodiac signs, those differences are cast at birth and binding for life. All eyes are on Detective Jerome Burton and astrological profiler Lindi Childs - divided in their beliefs over whether the answer is written in the stars but united in their conviction that there is an ingenious serial killer executing a grand plan. Together, they will unravel a dark tale of betrayal, lost love, broken promises and a devastating truth with the power to tear their world apart . . .

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