| Silicon Embrace | ||||||||||||
| John Shirley | ||||||||||||
| Mark V. Ziesing, 282 pages | ||||||||||||
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A review by Glen Engel-Cox
Shirley's cyberpunk trilogy, A Song Called Youth (containing Eclipse,
Eclipse Penumbra), was filled with a feeling of punk rebellion, with a feeling
that the fat corporate cats would one day get their comeuppance when the youth
rose up in defiance. Compare this with the novel that become cyberpunk's seminal
work, Gibson's Neuromancer, wherein the world's going to hell no matter if you
are rich or poor, young or old (the one character who has a hope for something
better is the non-human). In his short stories, Shirley continued to express
that underlying theme that youth would some day win out.
Ten years later, John Shirley returns to SF with a new novel. Silicon Embrace
recalls some of the aspects of his earlier trilogy but also shows that Shirley
is not the same wide-eyed punk that he used to be. In those years, Shirley has
started a family and kept food on the table by writing for Hollywood rather
than New York. Given this, it shouldn't be a surprise if Silicon Embrace resembles
a post-apocalyptic punk version of the X-Files.
Yes, the aliens are among us, and they have been for thousands of years. The
fractionalization of the U.S., including a second Civil War, has resulted in
the world of 2017 resembling John Carpenter's Escape from L.A., complete with
megalomaniac warlords and ex-military commandos. Caught on the wrong side of
the California border, Quinn Helden, a young alternative media journalist, and
his crew join forces with a vet who has held his complex against the barbarian
forces. When they escape, they stumble across the new Area 51, the secret
agency working with the aliens to announce themselves to the world, as
well as announce the evil aliens. But in true paranoid X-Files fashion, the
agency isn't what it seems to be, nor are the aliens, nor is our hero, Quinn.
After the first 100 pages, I nearly quit this novel. The opening, in the
lawless world of post-Civil War California, was raw and disturbing, more
horror than SF.
I'm glad I didn't stop, though, because once the characters leave California,
the science fictional portion takes center stage and only rarely takes a break.
And the ending, for what seemed a novel about a world gone mad, had such hope
that I was startled to find that someone had not switched books on me when I wasn't looking.
I really should not have been surprised. Shirley has tricked me before. When
I thought I had him pegged once as a gritty punk rocker turned cyberpunk turned
horror writer (for example, the first six stories in his Scream/Press collection,
Heatseeker), he threw in a Wodehouse SF pastiche ("Quill Tripstickler Eludes a Bride"). I
expected his novel A Splendid Chaos to be a Neuromancer clone and it was strikingly
non-cyberpunk, instead SF about aliens that resembled the 70s more than the 80s. I
should have known that Shirley wouldn't play a simple song.
Silicon Embrace, although startling, has several flows, however. For one, it is
in desperate need of an editor to get Shirley to drop the pop culture references
(including one to his own rock band) in favor of descriptions with meaning for
everyone. Some of these references, including the ones to Chris Carter and the
X-Files, are too cute, and break the suspension of disbelief needed for SF.
Shirley should know better.
Published by one of the genre small presses with the highest production
values, Silicon Embrace is a beautiful book to look at. Once you get past
some of the ugly parts in the beginning, it is a beautiful book to read, as well.
Glen Engel-Cox is the creator of FIRST IMPRESSIONS, one of the first and most well-established SF review sites on the Web. | |||||||||||
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