Just Finished Reading :
Fairyland by Paul J McAuley
Alex Sharkey is in trouble – deep trouble. Unable to pay his
protection to the local Mob boss and being threatened by the police to provide
evidence against him he’s damned if he does and damned if he doesn’t. But then
the Mob boss offers him a way to pay off all of his debt in one go. Jumping at
the deal Alex agrees to bio-engineer a synthetic hormone that turns sexless
artificial dolls into fully functional fairies. This is the world of mid-21st
Century Europe where nano-technology and bio-engineering has allowed anyone
with the necessary equipment to produce tailored viruses capable of just about
anything. It is a world where a company enhanced child tricks Sharkey into
producing the first of a new race capable of its own reproduction, a race just
as smart as man in many ways but without moral scruple. Travelling across a
barely recognisable Europe Alex tries to put the genie back in the bottle the
he and Milena released. But she has other plans both for her co-creation and
for Alex.
This is both a very good and seriously strange novel. It is
also one of the best almost-cyberpunk novels I’ve read. Concentrating on the
impact of biotechnology, rather that computer technology, it considers what
would happen if tomorrow’s hackers could hack the genome of any creature they
have access to – including humanity itself. Where hackers, rather than hiding
in their bedrooms breaking into computers on the other side of the world, break
into the double helix in their bathrooms and produce viruses who function are
only limited by their imaginations. It is both a deeply disturbing and
fascinating world picture and certainly one I would not like to live in –
though I suspect people living 100+ years ago would find our present day
reality equally horrifying!
5 comments:
Cool. I haven't read any McAuley, but I'll see if I can find some. There's a huge used book store that is liquidating their entire stock (about 200,000 books) that we went to yesterday. I'll have to make a trip back to see if I can find some of his.
Wow... 200K books! That's impressive. How many did you pick up?
Just about a dozen yesterday. Cheap too. Dollar for hardbacks, 50 cents for paperbacks.
It's a shame that I live so far away.... [grin]
In many ways, yes. My fave used book sale, the VNSA charity one we go to every year in February, is coming up in not too long.
Post a Comment