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Dark Heavens by Roger Levy
pub: Gollancz. 389 page paperback. Price: £ 6.99
(UK). ISBN: 0-575-07406-X
check out website: www.orionbooks.co.uk
Buy
this book!
In 'Dark Heavens', Roger Levy has created a cyberpunk thriller
of confident skill and taut, spellbinding plot. I haven't enjoyed
a new SF writer this much since Richard Morgan's 'Altered Carbon'.
A dark, twisting plotline throws up a number of cunning twists
and similarities to Philip K. Dick abound in the satirically over-exaggerated
government's attempts to save a dying Earth, in the most devious
of ways.
The
Earth in Levy's future is in its death throes, wracked by earthquakes
and poisoned by human industry. Rifts and chasms score London. It's
dangerous to walk outside without a rebreather and being treated
for skin cancer is an everyday process.
In such a miserable world, there are two options. An alternative
world, Dirangesept, has been found but its inhabitants, known only
as 'beasts', are somewhat reluctant to yield to human invasion.
Warriors from the two previous invasions have either been killed
or come back unhinged with the beasts inside their heads.
A third invasion is planned but at the start of the book seems
unlikely to do anything but fail once again. The more morbid way
out of Levy's hellworld is by suicide. The tattered administration
has legalised these so-called 'Leavings' providing the suicidee
passes a sanity test. Suicides in which a preacher or leader kills
rather than helps victims are illegal but mostly overlooked.
Cy Auger works prosecuting these mass murderers, but finds his
efforts often thwarted by the apathetic government around him. Cy's
wife is in a coma after a terrible accident at their wedding in
which all their friends were killed. As he investigates a series
of suicides in the London Medical School, he finds possible links
to the accident.
Increasing attempts by the administration to curtail his work
send him into a spiral of discovery and betrayal. Roger Levy writes
well, with a thriller-esque style that's easy to read. I read the
novel in two days and stayed up until 3am on the second day to finish
it off. It was that gripping.
The dystopian society is revealed with almost gleeful irony and
strays at times a little too close to truth. It's not difficult
to imagine a society like this one. The use of detective elements
adds constant mystery to the plot and I often read on to find out
what was going on, only to be rewarded with another question that
needed answering, so I read on again... 'Dark Heavens' isn't perfect.
The ending is rushed and doesn't quite live up to the rest of the
plotline, leaving a few elements unresolved. The story is, however,
more about the uncovering of secrets than the resolution of action
and the pacing of the unravelling scandal is immaculate.
This is one of the best books I've read in a long time and is well
worth a purchase.
Roger Levy could very well be a force to reckon with in the coming
years.
Tomas L. Martin
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