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| Subject: | REVIEW: "Transmission", Hari Kunzru |
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| Date: | Wed, 17 Nov 2004 07:47:09 -0800 |
BKTRNMSN.RVW 20041001 "Transmission", Hari Kunzru, 2004, 0-525-94760-4, U$24.95/C$36.00 %A Hari Kunzru %C 10 Alcorn Ave, Suite 300, Toronto, Ontario, M4V 3B2 %D 2004 %G 0-525-94760-4 %I Penguin/Signet/Roc/Dutton %O U$24.95/C$36.00 416-925-2249 Fax: 416-925-0068 service@penguin.ca %O http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0525947604/robsladesinterne http://www.amazon.co.uk/exec/obidos/ASIN/0525947604/robsladesinte-21 %O http://www.amazon.ca/exec/obidos/ASIN/0525947604/robsladesin03-20 %P 276 p. %T "Transmission" I should like this more than I do. It's not only a story about technology, but about viruses, and even about the antivirus industry. Unfortunately, it's not a really great story. Boy wants to come to America. Boy gets to come to America. Boy is a fish out of water. Boy gets job. Boy loses job. Boy writes a virus. Etc. However, I may be wrong in my assessment of the plot. It's hard to say that there *is* a plot: this seems to be just a loose collection of short stories, or even mere sketches. The writing is generally pedestrian: almost completely devoid of wit or poetry. (From the book jacket bio, it would appear that Kunzru was a journalist before he started writing novels. It shows in the turgid but steady relation of activities, without any explanation of motivations or character development that might make readers care.) While there are occasional flashes of style in places, in this work they only seem to make the dull, plodding progression of one darned thing after another that much more annoying. The characters are unattractive. They also seem to be inconsistent, but it is difficult to say that for sure, since we don't get to know very much about them. Personally, I stopped caring, fairly early on. The book is intended to be a comedy, or at least a satire: Ugly Americans/westerners, fish-out-of-water young Indian programmer. However, any supposed social observations are not exactly biting but merely whiny: real satire should have a point. The only message in the book seems to be that people are venal and stupid. This would seem to be a) apparent, and b) not worth taking almost 300 pages to point out. The technical references at the beginning of the book are reasonable. (Given the people who gave technical assistance, it would be a wonder otherwise.) However, Kunzru has learned just enough to pick up some buzzwords, without understanding the underlying concepts. The virus that is created in the book is the mythical supervirus: impossible to detect, infinitely malleable, and capable of infecting any possible computer or operating system platform. Just how it performs these miracles is left unstated. Basically, I suppose I am being hard on the book because it was disappointing. There are all kinds of interesting things to say about the clash between the world of style and the world of substance. (And interesting questions to ask about where information technology fits.) There are points to be raised about cross-cultural recruiting, management of technology, and even virus activity itself. Instead, Kunzru has given us a work where the impossible virus does silly and trivial things, ultimately ending up as little more than a running gag. copyright Robert M. Slade, 2004 BKTRNMSN.RVW 20041001 ====================== (quote inserted randomly by Pegasus Mailer) rslade@vcn.bc.ca slade@victoria.tc.ca rslade@sun.soci.niu.edu Those who do not learn from computer history tend to repackage it - Slade's Law of Computer `Progress' http://victoria.tc.ca/techrev or http://sun.soci.niu.edu/~rslade
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