84K

Claire North

Book - 2018

The penalty for Dani Cumali's murder: £84,000. Theo works in the Criminal Audit Office. He assesses each crime that crosses his desk and makes sure the correct debt to society is paid in full. These days, there's no need to go to prison - provided that you can afford to pay the penalty for the crime you've committed. If you're rich enough, you can get away with murder. But Dani's murder is different. When Theo finds her lifeless body, and a hired killer standing over her and calmly calling the police to confess, he can't let her death become just an entry on a balance sheet. Someone is responsible. And Theo is going to find them and make them pay. --amazon.com.

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Subjects
Genres
Science fiction
Dystopias
Suspense fiction
Dystopian fiction
Thrillers (Fiction)
Published
New York, NY : Orbit 2018.
Language
English
Main Author
Claire North (author)
Edition
First edition
Item Description
Includes 'extra' section that includes previews of various books and meet the author.
Physical Description
483 pages ; 21 cm
ISBN
9780316316804
Contents unavailable.
Review by New York Times Review

These heart-hammering thrillers take readers to some very dark places. SCIENCE FICTION AND FANTASY thrillers are often seen as frivolous, action-packed page turners, as critically dismissed as they are compulsively consumed. But a fast pace is more than a generic quality; speed today deserves attention as a subject in its own right, whether in the propagation of misinformation through social networks, the opaque and instantaneous transfers of capital into cryptocurrencies and tax havens or the cataclysmic changes in our climate. The acceleration at the hearts of these vast structures and systems is outpacing our ability to discuss and constrain their effects on us - so here are some books that work hard to catch up. CLAIRE NORTH'S 84K (Orbit, paper, $15.99) IS a VICIOUS, engrossing portrait of unregulated capitalism carried to its logical conclusion. In a near-future Britain, human rights have been abolished; people are only as important as their worth to the Company that runs the government. People convicted of crimes, no matter how heinous, are fined; failure to pay sends them to "the patty line," where they work in indentured servitude until they've settled their debt to society. Functionally, what this means is that the wealthy can do whatever they please while more and more people are forced into work camps, especially as it's cheaper for the Company to employ those who've been convicted of crimes than those who haven't. Theo Miller is an adjuster employed by the Criminal Audit Office. His job is to determine the value of human lives and the indemnity owed for any given crime. But Theo - a milquetoast, middle-class middleman - isn't entirely what he seems: His name and history are a lie. When Dani Cumali, a woman from his secret past, turns up threatening to expose him, he grudgingly helps her - until he finds her dead, her assassin casually phoning in the murder in order to pay the indemnity. From that point on, Theo takes up Dani's struggle to reveal the depth and breadth of the Company's evil. "84K" is a mixed bag. On the one hand, it's a terrifying look at capitalism's slippery slopes and a realistic depiction of how a person's will can shrivel into apathy and fear. On the other, it's not an easy reading experience. This may be intentional on North's part as a sort of structural storytelling: Capitalism is vague and diffuse, so why shouldn't the narration follow suit? North has used carriage returns as punctuation in other novels, but usually for mechanical reasons, like indicating a body swap; in "84K," random line breaks combine with almost constant ellipses to lend the novel a distracted air, where no one seems able to carry a thought to its conclusion. This is a deliberate stylistic choice - but it's also exasperating, even allowing for the fact that Theo is meant to be an exasperating character, an Everyman whose motivations are arbitrary and haphazard. That aside, "84K" is absorbing and timely; a book to wrestle and argue with, but first and foremost, to read. NICOLA GRIFFITH'S SO LUCKY (MCDX FSG Originals, paper, $ 15) is a compact, brutal story of losing power and creating community, fast-paced as a punch in the face. Mara Tagarelli, director of the Georgia AIDS Partnership, is used to fighting her way to victory on others' behalf - but shortly after separating from her wife of 14 years, she loses her job and learns she has multiple sclerosis. Finding few resources available to people with M.S., Mara sets out to create them. But as she navigates the disease's effect on her life, job and relationships, she grows aware of a shadowy, grinning thing stalking her peripheral vision - and becomes certain that a string of murders and home invasions is targeting the community she's building. "So Lucky" is beautifully written, with a flexible, efficient precision that embodies the protagonist's voice and character. Like "84K," it draws attention to people on society's margins and the behavior of those who think ignoring misfortune will prevent it from happening to them. But unlike "84K," where the prevailing tone is helplessness and cautionary horror, "So Lucky" is a shot of angry adrenaline. It's also welcome and wonderful to see a book that shows queer women dealing with the aftermath of divorce and the tangled difficulties of turning deep friendship into long-distance romance. And Mara is frequently terrible, which I appreciated more than I can easily say. I'm hungry for depictions of women who make bad decisions and wrestle with the consequences, who shed prejudice and learn compassion, who are more than aspirational figureheads. i loved the protagonist of Rebecca Roanhorse's trail of lightning (Saga, paper, $16.99) for similar reasons. Maggie Hoskie inhabits a world only a few years in our future, where energy wars have culminated in a cataclysmic flooding called the Big Water, and the Navajo reservation has saved itself with supernatural help, sprouting enormous walls of white shell, turquoise, abalone and jet around its borders. Within them, the reservation has become the nation of Dinétah - but while the worst of the apocalypse has been kept out, Dinétah has its own problems. The Big Water has ushered in the Sixth World, and with it, all the spirits and monsters that used to inhabit people's dreams. Maggie is a monster hunter who emerges from isolation to help find a missing girl - but the creature that stole her is rooted in parts of Maggie's past she'd rather not confront. Since Maggie needs help investigating this new threat, her adopted grandfather suggests she work with his smooth-talking grandson Kai. Short on friends and long on enemies, Maggie lets him tag along. Maggie is brusque and antisocial, and she carries her own weight in pain and doubt; the interplay between her and sunny Kai is delightful. I loved the world-building, too: After decades of reading genre futures in which black and brown people don't exist, it's deeply satisfying to find fiction in which histories of genocide actually equip them to survive disasters. As Maggie observes: "The Diné had already suffered their apocalypse over a century before. This wasn't our end. This was our rebirth." But problems of plot and motivation nagged me throughout. In the book's opening encounter, Maggie takes grotesque action on a flawed premise - but that first action is never revisited or questioned once Maggie learns better. Nor was the plot's resolution as satisfying as it could have been, though it neatly sets up a sequel. Ultimately, "Trail of Lightning" made me want nothing so much as a television show. Someone please cancel "Supernatural" already and give us at least five seasons of this badass indigenous monster-hunter and her silver-tongued sidekick. In the meantime, I'm looking forward to the next volume. in a setting that could be a prequel to "Trail of Lightning," Eliot Peper's BANDWIDTH (47North, $24.95) is a thoughtful meditation on the ethics of power among those who broker it. Not far in our future, San Diego is a perpetually burning wasteland, the Arctic has melted and Dag Calhoun, a partner at a lobbying firm called Apex Group, helps rich people get richer from catastrophe. But while working on behalf of Commonwealth, a company that provides internet to most of the planet, Dag is recruited by a secret organization called the Island. Their ability to hack into people's feeds - the augmented reality through which everyone experiences the world - grants them unprecedented powers of surveillance and persuasion. But while Dag's in the business of breaking the world, the Island's in the business of saving it - and they want Dag to be their double agent. "Bandwidth" is a book that savors everything: Dag dwells as much in the scents and tastes of coffee and tequila as he does in philosophical problems of means justifying ends and the limits of ethical persuasion. Peper manages a great deal of complexity without sacrificing clarity or pace, and I read it all in a single fascinated sitting. That said, the book gives me pause where its women are concerned. A portion of the plot hinges on the premise that one's sexual predilections can be deliberately and artificially curated, and while I could see the effort made to embed that premise in the novel's context, it still left a bad taste in my mouth; similar logic underpins rhetoric about "turning people gay" or "curing" homosexuality. Still, the depth and vulnerability of Dag's perspective, his loneliness and the value he places on his few real friendships, kept "Bandwidth" feeling real and urgent. In an afterword, Peper observes that "in an age of acceleration, contemplation is power." It's a good note on which to end - perhaps with an exhortation to digital readers to seek this column in print, where you can linger and contemplate to your heart's content. amal EL-MOHTAR won the Nebula, Locus and Hugo awards for her short story "Seasons of Glass and Iron." Her novella "This Is How You Lose the Time War," written with Max Gladstone, will be published in 2019.

Copyright (c) The New York Times Company [June 17, 2018]
Review by Booklist Review

*Starred Review* North, the author of such splendid novels as The First Fifteen Lives of Harry August (2014) and Touch (2015), continues to create wonderfully rich worlds and deeply compelling characters. Here it's England in the not-so-distant future. Years after civil rights were abolished, and the country turned over most of its governance to a massive corporation known as the Company, a man who calls himself Theo Miller works in the Criminal Audit Office; he's an accountant whose job is to assign monetary value to crimes (perpetrators can then pay the money or take their punishment). When an old friend is murdered, the man who calls himself Theo this phrasing is important takes it upon himself to investigate the reason for her death. In the process, he uncovers a conspiracy of epic proportions, one whose exposure could rock the country to its foundations. One of the many joys of a Claire North novel is the way in which she chooses to tell the story; each book is unique, written in a prose style that perfectly complements and enriches the story. Here passages written in a sort of prose-poetic style (sentences end or begin midway through; thoughts are interrupted; punctuation is left out) vividly convey the dramatic tone of the moment. Another captivating novel from one of the most intriguing and genre-bending novelists currently working in the intersection between thriller and science fiction.--Pitt, David Copyright 2018 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Lyrical language, stream-of-consciousness dialogue, and a nonlinear structure complicate this otherwise straightforward tale of entrapment within, and resistance against, a future England where every crime can be resolved through financial restitution or indentured servitude. As part of the Criminal Audit Office, Theo Miller determines what each offense is worth: £780 for sexual harassment, £84,000 for murder, and so forth. But when Dani, his ex-girlfriend, is murdered while attempting to expose the all-powerful, all-controlling Company for its corruption and abuses-and she names Theo as her missing daughter's father before she dies-Theo is determined to finish what she started, even if it means destroying both Company and country in the process. His investigation takes him to all corners of England, from rich enclaves to hopeless slums, as the dark secrets of his own past unfold. North (The End of the Day) paints a vivid and disturbing picture of a corporate-run future devoid of human rights. The complex intricacy of her narrative voice makes this more of a poetic vision quest than a straightforward adventure, and the experimental style and tangled plotline show an admirable grasp of technique but may frustrate readers expecting a more conventional dystopian thriller. (May) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Library Journal Review

What is the value of a human life? Now that the English government has been privatized, all services monetized, prisons closed, and only people who can pay their way are able to move up, The Company uses Auditors such as Theo Miller to assess the exact value for crimes. If the perpetrators can pay, they go free; if not, it is into forced labor for The Company. Theo is content in his job, until a woman from the time before he was Theo returns with a tale of a lost daughter, his lost daughter, and corruption that could shake The Company to the ground. Now the man known as Theo, who once held a different name, is on the run, finally seeing the truth behind the slave-state of The Company. As he tries to find his daughter, to save his own life, and solve a murder, Theo also must find out who he really is. Verdict North (The Sudden Appearance of Hope) has captured the horror of capitalism without empathy. Her prose style, dreamlike and full of unfinished thoughts and rambling sentences, is distracting enough that it might dissuade people from finishing the novel. But if readers can overcome the unusual style, the dense slow-to-start plot carries through to the end. [See Prepub Alert, 11/21/17.]-Jennifer Beach, Longwood Univ. Lib., Farmville, VA © Copyright 2018. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

A story about the value of one human life.The man known as Theo Miller works in the Criminal Audit Office, setting the prices for various crimes against society. In a world without the concept of human rights, a capitalist world run completely by the Company, prison is "deeply inefficient." Far better to charge a price for each crime and send those who can't pay to work off their debts. It's Theo's job to calculate the cost of crimeso much for manslaughter, with deductions if, say, the victim was a resident alien. It's a bleak but orderly world that's disrupted when a woman from his past appears, because she knows that he's not who he says he is, and in return for keeping quiet, she wants to know where her daughter is. To find her, the man known as Theo Miller must risk destroying his own quiet little lifeand a lot more lives with it. North (The End of the Day, 2017, etc.) has created a compellingly dark and gritty world where everything has a price and those who can't pay aren't treated as human. The sometimes stream of consciousness of the story, with past and present folding over on one another, does distance the reader from events and reduces the tension of Theo's quest to uncover the truth. Still, the story is strong enough to keep the reader interested.Style gets in the way of substance here, but North is an original and even dazzling writer, and fans of her work will enjoy this grim tale of capitalism taken to a terrifying extreme. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.