| Title: | Arcana Caelestia |
| Notice: | Directory listings are in topic 2 |
| Moderator: | NETRIX::thomas |
| Created: | Thu Dec 08 1983 |
| Last Modified: | Thu Jun 05 1997 |
| Last Successful Update: | Fri Jun 06 1997 |
| Number of topics: | 1300 |
| Total number of notes: | 18728 |
by Walter John Williams
Tor books, 1987
An espionage thriller set in the cyberpunk near future. Etienne
Steward (Alpha) grows up in the docks of Marseilles, running with
the gangs. He enlists with Coherent Light, a 'policorp' (corporate
nation) and is trained as a Zen warrior. Artifacts of a lost
alien civilization are discovered on the planet Sheol, and a
vicious war erupts among the policorps over control of the
technologies they represent. Shortly after the war, the alien
Powers discover humanity and set up extremely profitable trading
agreements. Steward survives the war, but is left adrift and
traumatized.
But this isn't his story. This is the story of Etienne Steward
(beta), a clone of the Alpha. For a certain (high) fee you can
take out clone insurance - the preservation of your memories for
later dumping into a blank body. The Beta amakens to discover
that his Alpha has been murdered, apparently while chasing Colonel
De Prey, his old commander on Sheol. He resumes his Alpha's
interrupted quest in an effort to discover his own past and his own
purpose.
All well and good. The action is fast and the setting imaginative.
It has the appropriate amount of paranoia and double-crossings for
a thriller, and the layers of intrigue get steadily grimmer as
they are peeled away. Unfortunately, I found it hard to sympathize
with the protagonist. He struck me as cold and brutal, someone
who practiced the Zen martial arts to cover his almost complete
lack of soul. The title refers to his behavior on Sheol, to his becoming
an uncaring force of destruction. The Beta also leaves a trail
of violence and death behind him, to little ultimate good as far
as I could see.
Also, this is another example of Williams' phenomenal ability to
imitate other writer's styles. In "Knight Moves" he produced a
fine Zelazny novel, in "The Crown Jewels" he extended Alexei
Panshin's series about Anthony Villiers, and apparently
"Hardwired" (which I haven't read) is vintage Gibson. This one
borrows the setting of "Schismatrix" and "Vacuum Flowers". All
of these are fine books ("The Crown Jewels" was particularly
funny), but when is he going to find his own voice? For a writer
of his obvious talent to produce pastiches is a criminal waste.
/jlr
| T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 611.1 | SOFBAS::JOHNSON | in 70mm with 6-track Dolby Stereo | Thu Sep 22 1988 12:00 | 20 | |
I just read this ... I had short patience with it for the first
chapter or two; it seemed too blatant an attempt to write "like
Gibson." Obviously, nobody can write "like Gibson" as well as Mr.
Gibson himself, so why try?
But as it went along, I found it picks up a certain energy of its
own and after a while you can forget that "N"-book more or less
altogether. Williams has strung together a nice, fast-paced narrative
that keeps you interested and, in the end, even puts together some
(I thought) very nice and unexpected plot twists.
All in all, by the end I had really enjoyed it, rather more than
I feared I might from the opening pages. If you pick this up to
read (especially if you've read the "N"-book already) hang with
it; it accelerates nicely and by the end it's purring along at rather
a nice clip.
Matt
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| 611.2 | Facets | RGB::REDFORD | Sun Mar 03 1991 10:58 | 15 | |
Walter Jon Williams has a new book of short stories out, "Facets".
Highly recommended. Some of the stories are award winners, such
as "Dinosaurs" (humanity evolves beyond such primitive needs as
consciousness) and "Side Effects" (unexpected, but not unwelcome
results of trying the enormous output of the pharmaceutical
industry on uninsured patients). Some I haven't seen before, such
as "No Spot of Ground", about how Edgar Allan Poe fared as a
Southern general in the Civil War. "The Bob Dylan Solution",
about how to take care of aging rock stars, is so logically
necessary that I expect it to happen any day.
Be warned, though, that some of the paperbacks duplicate pages
117-148 in place of pages 149-180. Check your copy before buying.
It's an incredible printing error, but what can you expect from
Tor Books. /jlr
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