At
the center, The God’s Eye View is
about balancing the government’s need to monitor its citizens in order to deter
terrorism and the rights of the individual to privacy. There are, of course, any number of these
balancing acts in our daily lives – in medical research, in the use of military
power, in the use of force in policing, and so on. But the monitoring vs. privacy tug-of-war will
continue to gain momentum as time goes on due to the meteoric rise of surveillance
technology. It is, quite simply, a theme
for the times and for the future, and for that reason alone, The God’s Eye View is a worthwhile read.
Of
course, the author has the government, in the form of NSA Director Theodore
Anders, so far beyond the point of equilibrium in this balancing act, there is
never any question of government vs. individual. It’s more a question of which individuals
will live and which will die in Director Anders’ quest to keep his last
technological marvel out of the public’s gaze.
Pitted against Anders is Evelyn Gallagher, the developer and primary
analyst on NSA’s camera and facial recognition network, just one small cog in
the overall NSA surveillance machine.
And with strict compartmentalization of information, Evie has no way to
know just what she is up against.
The
story is very well written, producing a fair amount of adrenaline in my
bloodstream that served no purpose other than keeping me awake to the wee hours. There were a couple of ideas that were somewhat
overworked, e.g., Evie is a divorced, working mother who would do almost
anything to protect her son. But
overall, the flow of the story was good.
For those who are squeamish, the violence is somewhat graphic, although
consistent with the plot. By comparison,
the sex was also somewhat explicit, but I’m not sure what the grope-by-grope
description did to further the story; it seemed out of place and serving no
purpose beyond checking another box in a commercial success formula.
My
primary concern with the book, however, was in the development of the
characters. Every author uses
stereotypes as a crutch. Readers immediately
recognize the boring accountant or the timid librarian. But usually, that method is reserved for
secondary characters when depth is unnecessary, saving the author a lot of stress
on the wrists. But in The God’s Eye View, it felt as if there
were few characters that were not primarily stereotypes. It ended up feeling like a world inhabited by
caricatures, rather than people. But
even so, that limitation did not outweigh a well-written plot and a timely theme.
Overall,
The God’s Eye View is a solid read, significant
because over time, technology-driven surveillance has the potential to give the
government absolute power over the populace.
And we all know that if power tends to corrupt, what absolute power will
do.
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