High Marks for Action in a Somewhat
Overused Plot
There are technothrillers that chill you with a
look at near-future technology gone wrong.
And there are ones that rock you with action that’s both real, near-term,
and perhaps out there a bit. The Last Firewall is solidly in the camp
of the latter.
Catherine (Cat) Matthews is an everyday student
(in a near-future world) with everyday concerns, such as boyfriends, and only a
few quirks. For one, she can see people’s
data streams in netspace and sever them.
But when she’s pushed into a life or death situation, she discovers
capabilities she didn’t know she had, starting her on a collision course with
an Artificial Intelligence with designs on the world. That course is littered with bodies and
battles, waged with everything from today’s bullets to tomorrow’s massive cyberattacks. Catherine is supported (and opposed) by a
cast of interesting characters – other AIs, robots, the creators of Artificial
Intelligence, human-AI hybrids. Other
than a couple of the villains, there’s hardly a human you’d recognize. But all the same, they feel more real than
you might expect, adding to the book’s appeal.
There are a few downsides. For one, romantic inclinations in the heat of
battle seem a bit out of place. Cat
discovering new capabilities just in the nick of time also gets a bit
overused. And the basic plot – an evil
AI taking over the world is somewhat trite.
That said, The Last Firewall
does that theme just about as well as any of them, blending an array of current
and possible future network technology.
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