Game Changer is a near-future science thriller, as
brilliant neuroscientist Rachel Howard and Secret Service agent Kevin Quinn
rush to stop a madman intent on using a game-changing technology to his own
evil ends.
The book is
well-paced, filled with narrow escapes and numerous twists. While the general theme – the good and bad of
messing with people’s memory – comes through from the very beginning, Richards
provides an early twist that caught me off-guard and sets the tone for the rest
of the book. If there is a downside on
pacing and plot flow, it’s that these general reversals of position become a
bit repetitious, i.e., the good guys think they have everything in hand until
we find that the villain is still a step ahead, over and over. One or two fewer reversals would have worked
for me.
Douglas
Richards is a master at blurring the line between cutting-edge scientific
research and suspenseful fiction, which is always a winner with me. Nothing increases the pucker factor like not
knowing whether I need to be on guard now…or if I can sleep tonight. But I was also reminded that this technique
achieves its full impact only if the reader knows something of the relevant
science, and in this case, I was not aware of some of the specific neuroscience
developments he was building upon. So,
as strange as this may sound, I got an even greater appreciation for the book
by reading the author’s note at the end and checking some of the references. If you are a techno-geek like me, I recommend
it.
Perhaps I am
reading too much in this genre, however, as I am becoming somewhat tired of
heroes who are so atypical as to be more unreal than the technology that is
supposed to be at the center of the suspense.
Take neuroscientist Rachel Howard.
Being a neuroscientist is somewhat distinctive by itself. Then take the fact that she is so brilliant
that she is by all accounts years ahead of her peers – yes, years – but is
still humble and personable. I realize
that no one wants to read about the exploits of their neighborhood tax
accountant, but a story with a few characters that weren’t super-geniuses or beyond
world-class athletes or super-secret spooks might be nice. Six-sigma personalities have become the new
trite of technothrillers.
Even taking
into account these minor peeves, which are probably mostly unique to me, I
still found Game Changer a completely
fascinating read, making me wonder anew which of the many variants of this
game-changing technology we will see in our future. Because, it will be one of them.
No comments :
Post a Comment