MAGAZINE

  - Hivemind social net
  - News
  - Features
  - Blogs
  - Events Calendar

  - Editorials
  - Monthly Zine
  - Offworld Report
  - Our Daily RSS Feed
  - Google Toolbar scifi

   
  More on SFcrowsnest's mag
 BOOKS & FILMS

  - Movie/TV Reviews  
    > Recent movies
    > Movies by year
    > Movies by title

  - Book Reviews  
    > Recent books
    > Books by year
    > Books by title

The Court of the Air
 
The Kingdom Beyond the Waves

The Rise of the Iron Moon

 ONLINE MOVIES

 STEPHEN HUNT

  - Home  
  - Worlds  
  - Biography  
  - Bibliography  
  - Appearances  
  - Reviews  
  - Blog  
  - Community  
  - Press  
  - Links  

 VISIT OUR ADVERTISERS

  Become an Advertiser

  SCIFInder

  - Web Site Directory
 
- Search the Net

  OTHER SITES

  - StephenHunt.net
  - WoodenRocket.com

  TOOLS

  - Check your E-mail
  - Non Sci-Fi News

The Execution Channel by Ken MacLeod
01/08/2007 Source: Pauline Morgan 

pub: Orbit. 307 page hardback. Price: £17.99 (UK). ISBN: 978-1-84149-348-0 pub: TOR/Forge. 285 page hardback. Price: $24.95 (US), $31.00 (CAN). ISBN: 978-0-765-1332-4.

Buy The Execution Channel in the USA - or Buy The Execution Channel in the UK

check out website: www.orbitbooks.net and www.tor-forge.com

In the early days of SF, when alternative histories were popular, the term Jonbar Hinge was coined. This is an event, the outcome of which can change the course of history. In many instances, the significant point that changes history is a what if... moment. One of the classics is in Ward Moore's 'Bring The Jubilee' in which the Confederates win the American Civil War. Closer to now, several authors have speculated on what would have happened if Hitler had won the Second World War or his invasion of Britain had succeeded, as for example in Philip K. Dick's 'A Man In A High Castle' or Len Deighton's 'SS GB'. In 'The Sundial In The Grave' by Mary Gentle, one faction wants to cause a deviation from history as we know it, the other allow events to unfold naturally. The idea that a very small event can alter the progress of history is explored by Jon Courtney Grimwood in 'Stamping Butterflies'.



In some novels it is obvious from the first page that this is an alternative history. Ken MacLeod is much more subtle. It isn't until you are a hundred pages into 'The Execution Channel', when one of the character posts a message on the Internet, that you realise that this is an alternative modern history. The key event is the Florida vote in the 2000 presidential election. What would have happened if Gore had won? Would anything have changed? 9/11 would probably still have happened. It means nothing to al-Qaeda who is in charge in the White House. So subsequent events are highly likely to still have happened. The differences in intervening years would probably be small so that this close to the hinge, they are not truly noticeable. Changing history is a major undertaking, whereas small events are very capable of changing the course of individual lives. It is these changes that make for a good plot-line. They also go a long way to explaining the alliance between Russia, China and France as an opposing faction to the warmongering USA and Britain.

The action revolves around the members of one family. Roisin Travis is one of the few members remaining at the peace camp outside Leuchars Airbase in Scotland. She witnesses and photographs the arrival of a strange object on an American transport plane just before the base erupts in an apparent nuclear explosion. The group rapidly decamp, aiming to get the pictures into the public domain as soon as possible. Then Grangemouth oil refinery goes up shortly followed by the M40 near Birmingham as supporting pillars are blown away. Chaos reigns.

Caught in the traffic hold up on the motorway is her father, James Travis. He works for a software company but has been secretly working for the French for the last few years. He falls under suspicion for causing the explosions. His proximity to the motorway explosion does not help his case.

Alex Travis, James' son, is a soldier in the army based in Kazakhstan. When the situation escalates, he is arrested.

The novel takes its title from a TV channel. The technology has developed in subtle ways. Surveillance cameras in many places have had secretly built into them, the ability to detect sudden or high-pitched noises that indicate violence or torture. The Execution Channel broadcasts world-wide, deaths by violence. For Roisin and James, the situation dramatically changes when Alex's death is broadcast on the channel.

This book is very tightly and logically plotted. If it has any problems, it is that too many of the characters deal either with software programming, data manipulation or Internet broadcasting. Since they are frequently using the technology, at times and especially towards the beginning of the book, they are not easy to distinguish. It is, however, a good indictment of modern life and is an edgy novel of how much of what is detailed here and really takes place?

'The Execution Channel' belongs to a growing cadre of near future technological thrillers but is also a development in the alternative history sub-genre of Science Fiction.

Pauline Morgan

click here to buy Stephen Hunt's The Kingdom Beyond the Waves

Get our Free MagBacktop of the page

Home | About Us | Write for Us | Subscribe to our Free Magazine | Advertiser Login

All content, unless otherwise indicated, is © www.SFcrowsnest.com 1991-2008 - our content management proudly powered by CuteNews


Advertise on SFcrowsnest: Click here

Recent Book ReviewsBook review archive