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Gridlinked by Neal Asher
pub: TOR. 426 page hardback. Price: $25.95 (US),
$35.95 (CAN). ISBN: 0-765-30735-9
check out website: www.tor.com
British
Science Fiction is doing well at the moment, with many new authors
like Alastair Reynolds, Richard Morgan and China Mieville breaking
through and revitalising the UK SF novel arena.
Now the books are slowing making their way across the Atlantic,
where hopefully they can make similar impressions on American readers.
It happens that in the month I review Neal Asher's third novel,
'Cowl', his debut book, 'Gridlinked' arrives on my desk in its first
US printing.
A
useful illustration of the amount of time it takes for a British
success to make the transition to America, to be sure. It also allows
me to compare how far Neal Asher has come since 'Gridlinked'.
In actual fact, I enjoyed this debut novel more than Asher's latest
time-travelling adventure. 'Gridlinked' is a more typical cyberpunk
novel, in the vein of Iain M. Banks. Its use of AI and half-biological/half-mechanical
creatures coupled with a gritty, combat-laden plot make it a worthy
addition to the genre.
Ian Cormac is a secret agent for the AI that runs Earth and has
become essential to the guiding forces in the galaxy. His is a very
James Bond figure and many believe him to be a myth. Cormac has
been cybernetically connected to the AI net for ten years more than
the maximum limit due to his indispensability but now is ordered
to disconnect due to fears he is losing his humanity.
Cut off from his 'gridlink' and chased by a psychotic separatist
leader intent on revenge for the murder of his sister, Cormac travels
to Samarkand, where a sabotaged runcible - Asher's trans-light device
- has killed the entire population. He and his mercenary crew must
find out what happened there and deal with the separatist's own
force of trained killers when they follow.
Asher writes extremely readable Science Fiction, with a lot of
the tricks thrillers use to keep the reader involved. It works,
as the characters spiral together for a satisfying final conflict.
The frequent skirmishes between the two elite soldier groups is
always tense, especially when the psychotic leader and his equally
insane android sidekick are involved.
The bad guys in this one are both memorable and identifiable, just
as enjoyable to follow as Cormac's side of the story. 'Gridlinked'
is not as ambitious or breathtaking as Asher's latest novel but
it works better by trying to do less. 'Cowl' was often hard work
to figure it all out, whereas in this book it's all clear and you
can just sit back and enjoy the experience.
Asher has a flair for Science Fiction and is well worth checking
out.
Tomas L. Martin
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OTHER REVIEWS - April 2004
Other reviews: April
2004
Lucifer's
Dragon by Jon Courtenay Grimwood
The
Companions by Sherri S. Tepper
Gridlinked
by Neal Asher
The
Matrix Comics
Beyond
Infinity by Gregory Benford
Sunshine
Patriots by Bill Campbell
Zulu
Heart by Steven Barnes
The
Skies Of Pern by Anne McCaffrey
Eight
Keys to Eden by Mark Clifton
The
Adam Strange Archives Volume 1
Wit'ch
Gate: Immortal Magic - Infinite Vengence by James Clemens
The
Knight by Gene Wolfe
Hound
by George Green
Dime
Store Magic by Kelley Armstrong
Deep
Space Nine: Rising Son by SD Perry
Absolution
Gap (The Inhibitors series book 3) by Alastair Reynolds
Alchymist
(The Well Of Echoes book 3) by Ian Irvine
Hal
Spacejock by Simon Haynes
Hal
Spacejock: Second Course by Simon Haynes
Dead
Until Dark by Charlaine Harris
Mothership
by John Brosnan
The
Dancers At The End Of Time by Michael Moorcock
Newton's
Wake by Ken Macleod
The
Crow: The Story Behind The Film by Bridget Baiss
White
Devils by Paul McAuley
British
Summertime by Paul Cornell
The
Year Of Our War by Steph Swainson
April
2004: Hardback to Paperbacks
The
Chesley Awards: A Retrospective by John Grant and Elizabeth Humphrey with Pamela
D. Scoville
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