IN-DEPTH REVIEWS for Neurolink...
Neurolink Review, by Noah Robischon,
Entertainment Weekly.
Twenty-third-century banker Dominic Jedes must cope with a high-tech
replica of his tyranical deceased father as well as a worker rebellion
on a sunken submarine. Log-line, Wall Street meetes The Empire
Strikes Back. Source of angst, the workers expected Jedes to offer
a deal to rescue everyone, but "he was a banker, not a miracle
worker." Key concepts, utopian recycling, bio-modification.
Lowdown, Dante's Inferno goes cyberpunk in Buckner's toxic future
tale of working-class bravado. A-.
Neurolink Review, by John C. Snider, SciFiDimensions
In the mid-23rd century the earth is in quite a pickle. The environment
has been overwhelmed by global warming and pollution: the air
and oceans are considered poisonous; the populations huddle together
in enclosed cities in the far north and south. Society itself
is overwhelmed by nearly omnipotent corporations, and the vast
majority of humanity live as "protes" - protected employees
who eke out a living under the boot heels of the ".Coms".
Dominic Jedes is a scion of the ruling elite, the cloned son
of Richter Jedes, president of ZahlenBank. The elder Jedes has
extended his lifespan to nearly three centuries, using genetic
treatments and repeated organ transplants. But no amount of money
can prevent the inevitable, and when Richter dies he cheats death
by having his consciousness transferred into a Neural Profile
(NP for short), "a new kind of bank for storing a person's
mind."
Like his father, Dominic is insensitive to the plight of the
working class. When a decrepit mining submarine called the Benthica
threatens to lose money for ZahlenBank, Dominic offhandedly decides
to "set free" the protes who live and work on the Benthica.
After all, liberating protes (thus eliminating their access to
the .Coms' live-sustaining infrastructure) is tantamount to a
death sentence. The protes die; the books get balanced; problem
solved.
Except the protes don't die; in fact, from a secret undersea
location they start broadcasting an invitation to protes from
all over the world to leave their .Coms and join them! Now, a
minor inconvenience has become a global crisis - with the protes
agitating, markets stalling and the other .Coms screaming, Dominic
must find the Benthica as soon as possible and shut down that
transmission!
As if Dominic's job isn't hard enough, he discovers en route
that the NP has infected him with a "nanoquan" version
of itself. Now he has the voice of his recently-deceased father
riding piggyback inside his own head!
Neurolink is the
second book by Nashville-based writer M.
M. Buckner, and it's a worthy, suspense-filled follow-up to
her freshman novel Hyperthought (which was nominated for both
the Philip K. Dick Award and Scifidimensions'
own SESFA
Award!). Set in the same futuristic milieu as Hyperthought, Neurolink
goes beyond cyberpunk's usual fatalistic sensibilities - Dominic's
quest offers hope against seemingly impossible technological odds.
It's cyberpunk with an old-fashioned social conscience: think
Neuromancer
meets Metropolis.
And since Neurolink is published in mass market paperback at a
mere $6.99, it's hard to get a better bang-for-the-buck. Those
greedy .Com bastards would be proud!
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