It reads like an action movie, set in a dark future, where
nations are a thing of the past and the rich and poor are separated by a deep chasm…
We’ll make that an R18 movie, for bad language (our anti-hero, Avery Cates, is
inordinately prone to the use of the "f" word) and violence – we have a
very high body count here, though not all of them are exactly human. So, this is not a
book for children or sensitive persons. Avery Cates is a Killer, an assassin for hire, in
a starkly violent world with overtones of Bladerunner. Here
there are robots, guns, hover vehicles, guns, cybertech, guns, psionics… oh, and more
guns. He’s a surprisingly sympathetic character for all that – he’s not
into killing children, and avoids killing people who aren’t shooting at him (or
he’s being paid to kill). He’s in trouble because he killed an undercover cop
(by mistake) and now the King Worm, head of the DIA (the cops’ cops) has hired to
kill Dennis Squalor, founder and chief prophet of the Electric Church. Now, I’ve read
about full-body cyborgs, human brains in mechanical bodies before, but the idea of this as
a religious exercise is new to me. The rationale is that the only way to work out your
salvation is over time – lots of time – and that means you need to be immortal.
And so, you are invited to become a cyborg, a brain in a android body, one of the Electric
Monks. The question is, are all those converts willing? And are they as happy as they
seem? If you like cyberpunk and dark future action movies, you’re guaranteed to love
this book. |