Just Finished Reading: Arachne by Lisa Mason (FP: 1990)
[263pp]
Her creation had cost a small fortune. Her body was
sculptured in the latest style, her cybernetic implants were top shelf and her
training at the best schools decades long. She was ready, ready to take her
place in the world, ready to start earning the big bucks and ready to pay back
her enormous debts. When Carly Nolan got her placement at one of the most
prestigious law firms in post-quake San Francisco she knew that she had it
made. But then, like a buddle bursting, everything went wrong. Just as she
started her opening remarks on her very first case the nightmare happened – her
link into ‘telespace’ failed and refused to re-connect. When she finally
reappeared multiple seconds later the AI judge was less than impressed with her
excuses. For wasting its valuable time the judge decreed that Carly needed to
undergo an immediate therapy probe to determine the issue behind her problems
and suspended her law licence until it was all sorted out. From potential
golden girl to office pariah on her first day – how the mightily in debt have
fallen. Seeing no option to comply Carly makes her appointment with an AI known
as Prober Spinner to find out what happened to her Link. But the AI Prober has
other ideas of what it can achieve with Carly under its probe. Spinner is part
of an underground illegal AI racket bidding for parts of human souls they leave
in ‘telespace’ every time they use the Link. Carly Nolan might be Prober
Spinners ticket to the big time if only it can find a way of extracting her
soul without being discovered.
This was, as you can imagine, a bit of an odd
one. Clearly Cyberpunk in nature (or at least background) it was advertised as ‘LA
Law scripted by William Gibson’. Sadly it wasn’t quite that good but it certainly
had a few moments. The environment of a shattered and, as yet, unrecovered San
Francisco was well handled complete with weird gangs, lots of homeless people
and the great mass of urban poor/precariat. The legal firm is suitably
cut-throat and is full of highly unlikable go-getters on various mood enhancing
and skills enhancing pharmaceuticals which are suitably and nastily addictive.
So the Cyberpunk vibe is definitely there. Most of the characters are pretty
disposable (and often disposed of!) and, apart from Ms Nolan herself, there are
few that you end up actually caring about. Prober Spinner is an interesting
character as an AI on tracks – I saw ‘him’ as an almost analogue of ‘Number 5’
from Short Circuit – but even it/him along with Carly Nolan didn’t really have
enough heft to carry the whole novel. I think the thing I liked most about
Cyberpunk in general was missing here. Cyberpunk is, in my mind, the essence of
high-tech low-life. Here we had some fairly high-tech but the low life aspects
were very much in the background where they stayed. Although the main character
was using her (largely artificial) skillset to escape from the lower strata of
that world we don’t see very much of it from her point of view. I think it
would have been more interesting if somehow she’d ended up back at the shallow
end but with her enhanced skills now put to more nefarious ‘street’ uses.
Saying all that this was, generally, a pretty reasonable read and I certainly
enjoyed it enough to finish it. But saying THAT I won’t be spending any time
looking out for the sequel. Reasonable.
2 comments:
a fair disparity with old lady detective mysteries...lol
One of those is my next read.... although the *review* won't be for another 5-6 weeks!
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