arr's novel opens with a short enigmatic prologue set in the year 2024.
The action then retreats to 2023 for the majority of the narrative, eventually
looping fully around to catch up with the now-clarified prologue and extend it
through climax and coda.
Dr. Gideon Wolfe, psychiatrist, historian and best-selling author, learns
serendipitously of an apparent tampering with the omnipresent digital media record
of the recent assassination of the female president of the United States.
Following the thread of
the conspiracy--despite the admonitory murder of his partner, a PI named Max
Jenkins--Wolfe ends up in a Florida prison interviewing a suspect, an anthropologist
named Eli Kuperman. During their talk, a weird and dramatic escape opportunity occurs
when an all-powerful airship smashes open the prison. Wolfe takes the option
offered to him of climbing onboard the outlaw ship to learn more.
The miracle ship is the invention and property of brother-and-sister geniuses,
Larissa and Malcolm Tressalian, the adult children of dead Internet billionaire
Stephen Tressalian. Subject to unethical genetic engineering--Malcolm, the first
subject of the yet-unperfected process, was left a cripple, unlike his sexy athletic
sister--the pair have paid for their intellects with various physical and emotional
problems. And now, they reveal, they intend to reshape the world according to their
principles and vision.
Humans are sheep, lulled by the opium of the Internet into accepting whatever
cruel practices their greedy global masters choose to employ. However, the Tressalians,
by planting hoaxes in the Web, hope to reveal the foundation of lies on which the world
rests, thus sparking a revolution. Inducted into the international team of
soldier-savants--Eli and Jonah Kuperman, Julien Fourche, Leon Tarbell and Justus
Slayton--Wolfe soon finds himself fighting and scheming in Afghanistan, Scotland,
California, France and Malyasia. But one of Malcolm's schemes goes horribly awry,
resulting in the nuclear destruction of Moscow by a rogue Mossad agent named Dov
Eshkol. This proves too much for Wolfe, who bails out into Africa. But after a brief
sojourn among the warring natives of the degraded dark continent, Wolfe is reunited
with his understanding cabal of friends to participate in Malcolm's final grandiose
plan.
Voyaging with a 21st-century Verne
The hardest, most disconcerting thing to nail initially about this foray into SF
by best-selling historical novelist Caleb Carr (The Alienist) is the tone.
Broad and old-fashioned, nearly comic-bookish at times, the voice leads the reader
into assuming at first that a farce, burlesque or parody is being presented.
But no, it eventuates that Carr is attempting to tell a straightforward,
state-of-the-art, mimetic near-future tale. But the choice of the fussy,
pedantic, moralistic Dr. Wolfe as the narrator militates against any kind
of sleek Gibsonian effects.
Moreover, Carr's primary genre role model appears to be no one more modern than
Jules Verne. The megalomaniacal genius-reformer Malcolm Tressalian and his
super-airship are straight out of Verne's Robur the Conqueror. And when
this Thunderbirds-vintage craft first plunges under the sea, the reader
wants to shout, "Holy Captain Nemo!"
Despite these two drawbacks--a stuffy, stiff protagonist (the love scenes
between Wolfe and Larissa feature dialogue such as "You unimaginable swine!"
and "No need to go to town with it") and a plot and themes straight out of the
revolutions of 1848--Carr manages to move the action along crisply, with many
punchy short chapters. His extrapolations and speculations are clever enough,
but all seem to hinge on whatever headlines were weekly prominent in Time
magazine (where installments of this book first appeared), from female genital
mutilation to "water wars." Finally, the climactic deus ex machina
involving time-travel is full of more logical holes than even Michael Crichton's
Timeline.