Reviewed by: Pete Barber
Genre: Technothriller
Approximate word count: 105-110,000 words
Availability
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Author:
Mark J Maxwell is a writer living in Dublin, Ireland. The London Project is his first novel.
Mark would love to hear from you. He can be reached on twitter or at his website.
Description:
Set in a
near-future London, England. Tech giant, Portal, has transformed the lives of the city’s residents. Portal’s
centralized network is ubiquitous, its free services utilized for everything
from communications to entertainment, transport to health care.
On the eve of the network’s expansion throughout the UK,
Detective Sergeant Louisa Bennett investigates the death of a young girl. Her
body covered in lacerations, the victim’s autopsy reveals an unidentifiable
cellular structure permeating her brain. The case is further complicated when
no trace of the girl can be found on Portal.
Appraisal:
This was a
mixed-bag read for me. On one hand, the author’s description of Portal was
nothing short of brilliant. Not only from a technological perspective, but also
from the social and cultural changes the technology caused in the lives of
London’s citizens. Cars that drove themselves, healthcare records merged and
immediately accessible, personal feeds that included the emotional responses of
the provider available instantly to everyone who is hooked into the system. Now
that makes Twitter following look stone-aged. TV ads tailored to the viewer’s preferences
and featuring the viewer as a lifelike avatar in the action—wow! Great stuff. I
really got my geek on J.
Portal has
sensors embedded in road signs, street lamps . . . just about everywhere. Everyone
is tracked and traced both through their connected devices and through face
recognition software, which is a huge boon to law enforcement and is where the
flaw that drives the plot occurs.
Detective Louisa
Bennett is tasked with investigating the murder of a teenage girl who has no
profile in Portal. So, not only must the detective find out whodunit, but also
figure how this girl can possibly be unknown to the system. The story follows
Louisa as she works her way to a solution to the murder and in the process
discovers a huge conspiracy.
Overall the
novel worked, although there were some sketchy plot devices used later in the
story to force the climax. But for this reader it moved too slowly. Louisa’s
investigation involved a couple meetings with higher-ups in Portal, and some
involvement with MI6. These side plots threw more characters into the mix and
were written with as much detail as the main line, so rather than the story
accelerating to a grand finale showdown, it meandered so much that I found
myself skip reading parts of the final third.
But this is
a first novel, and Mr. Maxwell is a good writer with a knack for building futuristic
worlds.
Format/Typo Issues:
UK English
spelling and usage, but nothing that would cause a major misunderstanding.
Rating: **** Four stars
2 comments:
I really loved reading this book and can totally understand where you said you got your geek on.
www.allthesmallthingsandbig.blogspot.com
Yay, Naomi! We geeks have gotta get our kicks where we can find them. Thanks for the comment.
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