Reviewed by: Pete Barber
Genre: Sci-fi-Thriller
Approximate word count: 70,000-75,000 words
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Author:
Alex
(Aleksei) Bobl is the author of eleven books. He’s based in Moscow, Russia.
Description:
In a
dystopian world, a major corporation—Memoria—develops technology that enables
memories to be selectively erased. Memoria’s control of the city-based
population has been solidified by the authorities such that each citizen is
obliged by law to undergo memory modification each year. Most of the city
dwellers seem to enjoy this process and return even more frequently to have
unpleasant memories removed.
Only the
Militants, located behind barbed wire fencing on the outskirts of the cities,
live free. Memoria develops a new technology that will give them even more
active control over the population and they devise a subterfuge by which all
citizens, Militant and otherwise, will be “vaccinated.” The populace
enthusiastically volunteers because they believe they are having a new and
desirable skill imprinted on their minds, but instead, this is a dastardly plot
to turn them into mind-slaves.
Appraisal:
This was a tough slog for me. The premise seemed weak. If Memoria’s
objective was control and power, why would they allow the Militants to live
free on their borders. Not only did they live free, but the Militants provided
all the basic services for the cities—they grew the food, provided the water,
handled the garbage and sewage. I was unclear exactly what the city folk did.
The story opens with the protagonist, Frank, an ex-boxer, being framed
for the murder of his girlfriend. Before her death, the girlfriend (Frank is
dumbfounded to discover she is a significant player in Memoria, even though
he’s considering inviting her to move in with him!) mailed a package that would
expose Memoria’s plan to control everyone in the world. The rest of the book is
a chase where the corporation and some bent-politicians try to reclaim the
package from Frank and frame him for any bad stuff that happens, and Frank
tries to release the information in the package to the general public.
Frank falls in with some old colleagues who just happen to have all the
skills and the connections inside Memoria needed to thwart the evil
corporation. Our ex-boxer miraculously turns into someone with Mission
Impossible skills: shimmying down elevator shafts and knocking out anyone he
punches like Popeye jacked-up on spinach. And should his fortunate choice in
friends or innate fighting prowess fail, have no fear, fate will intervene to
rescue him from the seemingly impossible situation he’s trapped in.
The plot isn’t experienced through scenes in the book, instead, I was
told who was doing what to whom (and why) through dialog between the characters
and through Frank’s internal narrative. I couldn’t understand how Frank et-al
drew their conclusions based on the information I was given, and because I
didn’t experience the events they talked about, I couldn’t get engaged with the
plot.
The dialog felt flat and long (because they were explaining the story)
with ‘action beats’ that often seemed formulaic and disconnected from the topic
of conversation so they ended up being distracting rather than giving life to
the characters and their situations.
I didn’t connect with any of the characters. I didn’t understand what
Memoria really wanted (they seemed to have it all anyway). I was often confused
by the action sequences, which seemed frenetic and often jumped around without
setting the scene clearly—or maybe I was just glazing over.
I can’t tell if my confusion derives from this being a translated story
(I think it was originally written in Russian), but an English-speaking editor
could surely figure that out.
Format/Typo Issues:
Comma usage
was non-standard. A comma was often used where a period belonged at the end of
dialog. It jarred my eye. At one point someone called “Orphan” turned into
someone called “Oprah”. Many sentences didn’t make sense e.g. “Frank pulled his
leg out, turned around and kicked the stranger’s face red with excitement.” Or
“Frank shut the door close and turned back.
Rating: ** Two stars
1 comment:
The only difference between fact and fiction is fiction needs to be credible.
I'm sure Russians look at the behavior and conduct of their government different than we do, a legacy of living under the communist boot. I was alarmed to find myself comparing this story to America's Blue States on the Coast, and the Red States in fly-over country, and the different lifestyle between city and rural people. The Blue / Red culture clash is real.
For example, living out in the sticks, I would never consider not owning a car, or relying on public transportation. I don't want to rely on the government for much of anything. The city people dismiss my self-reliance as just being an ignorant redneck, blind to their own prejudice they cast on me.
So, I'm not surprised the message got lost in translation.
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