Home
about Stephen Hunt's SFcrowsnest.com
EUROPE'S MOST VISITED SF/F WEB SITE
   

New York Blues (Volume 2 of The Virex Trilogy) by Eric Brown

Pub: Gollancz. 309 page paperback. Price: £ 5.99(UK). ISBN: 0-57507-301-2.

Check out website: www.orionbooks.co.uk


I haven't read the first book in this trilogy but I had it on good authority that it probably wasn't necessary to have done so for the second to make sense - so I risked it. It's a sci-fi detective novel, after all and I like sci-fi and detective novels ...

Despite having my interest piqued by the mention of Laputa (the flying island in Gulliver's Travels but which I know better from Hayao Miyazaki's anime of the same name), for the first three chapters I thought I was going to be disappointed.

Take one archetypal 1930's private investigator, tough on the outside with a softer interior, trying to keep the agency going after the death of his partner.

Transplant him into the year 2040 and a New York not all that different, ostensibly, from today. Give him the traditional beautiful actress' missing sister to trace, add a few technical gadgets and away you go... (The short, choppy sentences irritated me, too.)

And then I reached chapter four and everything changed: Halliday (the detective) suddenly became real. I think it was caused partly by finding out the subject of the mysterious file that he was downloading in the previous pages and partly by the first real insight into his character that chapter four brings.

However it happened, I now cared about him, what happened to him and to the people who share his world.

The story itself is well-crafted and intricate and raises a number of interesting - or should that be worrying? - questions, for me at least. If it were possible to live out one's life in a reality of one's own choosing, how many people would opt to do just that? Would steal, cheat and kill to pay for it?

What value would 'real life' hold if one could simply escape from it, become whatever or whomever one wanted? Indeed, which would be the more real, the life of the physical body or the life within your own mind? The repercussions are frightening to consider. I should add that these aren't literally addressed in the story but they certainly loomed large in my mind as I was reading ...

I thoroughly enjoyed 'New York Blues'. The characters are extremely well delineated and memorable, the plot compelling, the descriptions of Halliday's world succinct and believable. I want to read the rest of the series.

More to the point, Eric Brown is a name I will remember and look out for in future.

Joules Taylor
www.wordwrights.co.uk


HobbitsFREE SF MAGAZINE
Sign up for the Crowsnest SF e-magazine - full of funny reports and gossip. Be the first to find out about hot science fiction happenings & news!
        

more on the magazine...

CHAT ABOUT THIS STORY

NEWS ARCHIVE

 

OTHER REVIEWS - December 2002

Forests Of The Heart by Charles De Lint

NEW. Add this news to your own web site for free!

Other Reviews: December 2002

Books

Speed Of Dark by Elizabeth Moon

Star Trek: I'm Working On That: A Trek From Science Fiction To Science Fact by William Shatner with Chip Walter

Geomancer (Volume One of The Well Of Echoes) by Ian Irvine

Peace by Gene Wolfe - Fantasy (Gollancz) - SF masterworks reprint.

New York Blues (Volume 2 of The Virex Trilogy) by Eric Brown

Narcissus In Chains by Laurel K. Hamilton

The Boris Vallejo Portfolio

The Julie Bell Portfolio

To Hold Infinity by John Meaney

Mounment by Ian Graham

T2: Infiltrator and T2: Rising Storm by S.M. Sterling

Burning Brightly (The Legendary Story Of Herald Lavan Firestorm) by Mercedes Lackey

Dark Light (Engines Of Light: Book 2) by Ken Macleod

The Isle Of Battle (The Swan's War Book 2) by Sean Russell

Star Trek: Captain's Peril by William Shatner with Judith and Garfield Reeves-Stevens

Wild Cards: Deuces Down edited by George RR Martin

Videos and Music

Once More with Feeling - Buffy the Vampire Slayer- Original Cast Album

The Tomorrow People 2:2 - A Rift In Time

 


CHAT ABOUT THIS STORY

Advertise Here (More ...)

 

 
HTML Text AOL
nest home | search engine | site directory | shop | library | tools | about us |

... www.sfcrowsnest.com © 2004 C
Want a free SF/F Zine? Then send an email to: hologramtales-subscribe@topica.com