Series: Book 2 in the Century Next Door series
Rating: Not rated
Tags: Science Fiction, Lang:en
Summary
A stunning evocation of humanity's violent downward slide,
Barnes's fourth SF novel is set on Mars during the early part
of the 22nd century, in a universe chimerically similar to
that of his first, Orbital Resonance. The novel consists primarily of a series of escapades
undertaken by narrator Joshua Ali Quare, whose violent career
path under the aegis of the Organization, a successor group
to a super-efficient amalgam of KGB/Communist Party, is the
ultra-leftist equivalent of many Heinlein protagonists. Born in 1968, Joshua had been recruited by the KGB in the
late 20th century, which infected him with a virus that
incapacitates him in a near-coma every 15 years, from which
he awakens, rejuvenated, 10 years younger each time, but
nearly amnesiac. Joshua has been ruthless in pursuit of his missions, most
of which have concerned scientific discoveries. Like others
around him, he has lost almost all human feeling: he voices
only the occasional expression of regret after "serbing" a
sorority or defiling his father's grave. The environment Barnes creates is appalling: Josh and his
cohort-in-crime, Sadi, appear to delight in their repeated
antisocial actions and attitudes. Josh spouts such homilies
as "if you don't want a brain to think the wrong thoughts,
the surest way is to put a hole in it." Whether or not one is put off by the pervasive cynical
mentality, as a picture of the degradation of society in the
22nd century, the novel is gripping.