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T2 Book 3: The Future War by SM Stirling
pub: Gollancz. 357 page enlarged paperback. Price:
£ 9.99 (UK). ISBN: 0-575-07157-5
check out website: www.orionbooks.co.uk
By
the time you read this review, ‘T3: The Rise of the Machines’ will
be in cinemas and it will be interesting to see how the events of
the film compare, coincide or are added to by these officially endorsed
books by SM Stirling.
Following closely on from the events of the second book, ‘Rising
Storm’, the third ‘The Future War’ covers much of the same events
that the T3 film looks to be dealing with. John Connor is growing
up and so is Skynet.
The
Connors know that Judgement Day is just around the corner and when
computer-built cars and buses start driving on their own and turning
against their drivers, Sarah and John know that the future is about
to become the present.
The bombs hit - Skynet's first strike against the
humans - and slowly John begins to build up the Resistance, aided
by Sarah and her partner Dieter (introduced in the first book).
With all governmental and policing systems gone, chaos rules.
Skynet has infiltrated the military, using unknowing
soldiers to do his bidding. Radiation from the bombs ensures the
cities are out of bounds and John and Sarah still have to convince
some people that they're not crazy. Soon, the Hunter-Killer machines
and the first Terminators are spotted and the Connors finally have
proof.
Elsewhere, Lieutenant Dennis Reese meets Mary Shea.
The story then skips between John and his first battles and commands
and Dennis and Mary and the join the Resistance, fall in love and
a few years later have a son, Kyle Reese - John Connor's father,
soon to be sent back to 1984.
Around them all the Resistance grows, winning some
battles and loosing others, turning the present into the cold, bleak,
war-torn future hinted at in the first two films. Kyle grows up,
becomes a soldier and when John is too late to stop Skynet's time-travel
experiments, he volunteers to go back into the past to stop a certain
Terminator killing Sarah Connor in 1984, sacrificing his life in
the process.
It seems you can't escape time, destiny or fate.
Kyle and Sarah survive, Skynet fails and the future is secured -
John Connor is born and the Resistance continues. But the war also
continues, in an uncertain and terrifying present.
SM Stirling skilfully captures the tone and pace
of the Terminator films and with the Future War clearly and smoothly
closes the gap between the first two films and T3, covering the
time-period from the end of ‘Rising Storm’ through Judgement Day
into the beginnings of the war and finally through the chaos of
a machine-destroyed future where John Connor is the 'Great Military
Leader', Sarah Connor becomes a legend and Kyle Reese gets to travel
in time.
As time passes the landscape changes. Children
are being born who have no knowledge of pre-Judgement Day society.
John and Sarah go from social outcasts to leaders and commanders.
Society has changed and Stirling neatly portrays
the feelings of confusion and terror, determination and frustration
that could easily describe such a society. The book is visual, linking
it to the visual and action-based style of the films, as well as
making use of the medium of the written word to get inside the character's
heads.
It makes for an easy and enjoyable read. These
books tie in nicely with the ‘Terminator’ films without being as
commercial as Tie-In 'making-of' books and novelisations of films.
A satisfying and useful addition to a Terminator fan's bookshelves
but also a fun and relatively light read for any science-fiction
and fantasy fan.
Laura Kayne
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