Reviewed by: Pete Barber
Genre: Science Fiction
Approximate word count: 75-80,000 words
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Author:
Richard
Levesque has spent most of his life in Southern California. For the last
several years he has taught composition and literature, including science
fiction, as part of the English Department at Fullerton College. His first
book, Take Back Tomorrow, was
published in 2012, and he has followed it with other science fiction and urban
fantasy novels, novellas, and short stories..
Description:
California
has won the war and is controlled not by a government of the people, but by
Cal-Cor, an all-powerful corporation that controls information and whose shares
are the only trading currency. Cal-Cor develops new technology that will
deliver not only total control to information, but also to the minds of everyone
who is plugged in. Lomax, a private detective, gets pulled into the mix when
his daughter is accused of murdering a key Cal-Cor employee.
Appraisal:
I skipped my normal selection routine for this book after I read the
opening sentence: “I was dreaming about
Las Vegas when the ferret woke me.” Yup, no contest, I was all-in.
This was a fun read. Told in first person, Lomax, our main character, is
a cool guy carrying a lot of baggage. The world Mr. Levesque builds, set in
some not-too-far future, is a believable extension of modern-day American. The
States have gone to war. California won and is where the party is. The other
states are where you get shipped to if you screw with Cal-Cor--the corporation
that runs the Sunshine State.
Lomax lost the use of one eye in the war of independence, which prevents
him from operating iyz. Iyz are a
potential extension of Google Glasses. Everyone who’s anyone wears them to stay
connected. The Iyz hook to the web, and information is projected from the iyz
to the user. Images and information are manipulated using two thimble-like
devices. Some folk even have their finger controllers embedded. Because our
hero has only one eye, he can’t operate iyz, so he’s digitally impaired—hence
the title of the book, and the name of his detective agency—Strictly Analog.
I love sci-fi that builds worlds populated with interesting social and
technical possibilities. Here are a few concepts I particularly enjoyed:
Lomax and many other people can only afford to live in one of those
storage facilities where you rent by the month to store your surplus junk. His
front door rolls up.
All purchases are made with ‘shares’ on a card—no money, honey.
He may be analog-only, but he uses a banglight to save his daughter when
she’s attacked by a gang of thugs—illegal, and no bigger than a lighter, this
neat device sends crippling pain through a pair of iyz—handy if you don’t wear
them.
Cars are all electric, but they come with noisemakers to simulate an
engine, or perhaps a purring cat, or roaring tiger.
And, of course, iyz. And therein lays the plot, because some techno
genius has developed a better and more direct way of communicating and controlling
everyone who uses them. Finding this renegade sucks Lomax into a vortex where
his teenage daughter’s life is at risk. Lomax may need to go digital to save
her.
Format/Typo Issues:
Too few to
mention.
Rating: ***** Five stars
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