Genre: Speculative Fiction
Subgenre(s): Science Fiction Reviewer: Harriet
Klausner Reviewed: 12/7/2000
By 2023, the force of the Internet lies in
misinformation and outright lies that easily fools the general
public into accepting what it says as Gospel truth. Many individuals
stare at their monitor in the same manner couch potatoes watched TV
in the previous century. The world is a bad place where excesses
have gored the environment and Mother Nature seems bushed. Few
places seem pure of the IT disease, but those isolated spots mostly
in Africa and Asia are breeding grounds for deadly outbreaks.
Historian and best-selling writer Gideon Wolfe learns that the
assassination of President Emily Forrester five years ago was
digitally altered to trick the public. The widely viewed web page
containing the killing is very popular but has split an already
divided nation further. Gideon tries to prove his contention only to
meet a group of scientists and military experts who were the
professional liars behind much of the official public misinformation
floating on the Net. Now they fear their web of deceit has released
the nuclear genie and unless they can rebottle it, Armageddon will
follow.
The concept of KILLING TIME is brilliant with the Internet
serving as an information source that contains many misleading items
and outright lies that seem veracious. The 1984-like story line
slows down a bit due to too many cliffhangers (sort of like a
nineteenth century serial novel) disjointing the pace. However, the
description of the future world and the players surfing the Internet
are intelligently described and provides the entertainment that
makes Caleb Carr’s dark tale worth reading by futurologists.
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