Silver Screen
From AwardAnnals
| Book: | Silver Screen |
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| Author: | Justina Robson |
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| Publisher: | Pan Books Ltd |
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Reviews
Amazon.com
This first novel by a young British author offers an enjoyably different, even subversive, slant on AIs and cyberspace. Insecure and overweight heroine Anjuli O’Connell is a flawed genius whose photographic memory makes her worry about how human she is. Her best friend, after all, is the quirky corporate AI named 901—successor to past versions of 900, the mysteriously disaster-prone 899, etc. A human friend dies to upload his mind into cyberspace, seeking that SF dream of bodiless immortality…which doesn’t work as expected. Another pal interfaces with terrifying biomechanoid weapons—suits that pull their wearer into mental symbiosis, a new “I” continuous with the old but different: “Where does life end and the machine begin?” Meanwhile 901’s grasping multinational owners OptiNet, and the Machine-Greens who preach AI liberation, seem equally murderous. As 901’s humanity or otherwise becomes a case for the Strasbourg Court, expert witness Anjuli is targeted by assassins and entangled in the hunt for a Hitchcockian McGuffin known as the Source, perhaps literally the secret of life. This requires a hair-raising solo commando assault, in that biomech suit, on a cult church’s heavily fortified abbey bunker. Robson’s plot zigzags in unexpected directions, especially with revelations about the Source; there’s tragedy and trauma, but happy surprises too. An impressive SF debut. —David Langford

