Home
about Stephen Hunt's SFcrowsnest.com
EUROPE'S MOST VISITED SF/F WEB SITE
   

New York Dreams (The Virex Trilogy volume 3) by Eric Brown
pub: Gollancz. 325 page paperback. Price: £ 6.99 (UK), $ 9.99 (CAN). ISBN: 0-575-07494-9.

check out website: www.orionbooks.co.uk


Ye gods, it's almost exactly two years since I read and reviewed 'New York Blues', the second in the trilogy! It says a lot for the quality of this author's writing that I can remember 'New York Blues' in great detail without having re-read it in the meantime...

Detective Halliday is rich enough not to need to work after completing his previous case, but with his partner dead and his lover with another man, his life has become hollow and meaningless. Over the course of the last year, the amount of time an individual can legally spend in their own personal reality has increased to 24 hours out of 48. This is just what Halliday does - on a stretch of beautiful, tree-clad Virginia coastline that now only exists in a dream, with Casey, the homeless waif he took in at the end of the first book.

Well, a virtual version of her, at any rate. He's chosen to keep their relationship platonic, although he is beginning to feel he wants - needs - more. Casey, however, both real and virtual, is only seventeen, too young for Halliday in his opinion. Guilt-ridden, lonely and suffering the physical effects (wasted muscles, nausea, disorientation) of spending too much time immersed in VR, he's saved from making a complete disaster of his life by a call from the chairman of Cyber-Tech. Halliday has worked for and with Wellman in the past (in the first book of the trilogy, in fact). The dying man offers him a job...

What follows is a beautifully crafted, fast-moving and exciting tale encompassing murder, industrial espionage, kidnapping, self-discovery, artificial intelligence and explorations into the nature of life, sentience and immortality. Yet it's written in a thoroughly pragmatic and wholly believable way. The concepts dealt with are enormous in scope, yet seem perfectly right and natural in context. The immensity doesn't actually hit the reader until the end of the book.

There are also passages of great beauty and a delicate descriptive touch when dealing with the 'realities' of VR and an immensely satisfying conclusion. 'New York Dreams' is complex without being complicated, moving, startling and all too grimly real in places. Altogether a fine, compelling read.

I'm off to track down other Eric Brown novels ...

Joules Taylor
www.wordwrights.com


HobbitsFREE SF MAGAZINE
Sign up for the Crowsnest SF e-magazine - full of funny reports and gossip. Be the first to find out about hot science fiction happenings & news! 
        

more on the magazine...

CHAT ABOUT THIS STORY

NEWS ARCHIVE

 

OTHER REVIEWS - November 2004

Aliens vs Predator

NEW. Add this news to your own web site for free!

Books

Five Great Novels by Philip Dick

Prometheus Road by Bruce Balfour

The Hellraiser Chronicles edited by Stephen Jones

Dark Terrors 6 edited by Stephen Jones and David Sutton

Behind The Mask Of The Horror Actor by Doug Bradley

The War Bug by Biff Mitchell

The Dragon Lensman by David A. Kyle

The Overnight by Ramsay Campbell

Thunderbirds 2 by Barry Gray

World Of If by Rog Phillips

New York Dreams by Eric Brown

Days Of Infamy by Harry Turtledove

Berserker's Star by Fred Saberhagen

For Those Who Fell by William C. Dietz

Duel & The Distributor by Richard Matheson

Medalon by Jennifer Fallon

Blood Rites by Jim Butcher

Son Of Avonar by Carol Berg

Guardians Of The Keep by Carol Berg

Blood Price by Tania Huff

The Forgotten

Crache by Mark Budz

The Last Battle by Chris Bunch

Industrial Magic by Kelley Armstrong

Iron Council by China Mieville

Lensmen From Rigel by David A. Kyle

Demons Of Chitrakut by Ashok K. Banker

Graphic Novels, Calendars & Art Books

Majestika: The Art Of Monte Michael Moore

Dan Dare: Pilot Of The Future: Voyage To Venus Part 1 & 2 by Frank Hampton

The Art Of Fairy presented by David Riche

Terry Pratchett's Discworld Collector's Edition 2005 Calendar

The Art Of Discworld by Paul Kidby and Terry Pratchett

Stan Lee And The Rise And Fall Of The American Comic Book by Jordan Raphael and Tom Spurgeon

Mags

On Spec: The Canadian Magazine Of The Fantastic vol 16 no. 1 # 56 spring 2004

Nemesis Magazine # 3 March 2004

Movies and TV

Firefly - The Complete Series

The Prisoner


CHAT ABOUT THIS REVIEW

Advertise Here (More ...)

 

   
HTML Text AOL
nest home | search engine | site directory | library | tools | about us |  

... www.sfcrowsnest.com © 2004 C
Want a free SF/F Zine? Then send an e-mail to: hologramtales-subscribe@topica.com