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The Zenith Angle

charlie writes "Bruce Sterling has been writing on the cutting edge of SF for close to thirty years now. After 2000's Zeitgeist he took some time out to write a non-fiction book, Tomorrow Now -- but it's nice to see he's returning to fiction with a new novel, The Zenith Angle, due out in hardcover on April 27th. While his first novels were set in the far future, his recent novels have approached ever closer to the present moment, so it's not too surprising to see that The Zenith Angle is being marketed as a technothriller." Read on below for the rest of Stross' review. The Zenith Angle author Bruce Sterling pages 320 pages publisher Del Rey rating 10 reviewer Charles Stross ISBN 0345460618 summary High-impact infowar technothriller for the technoliterati

Full disclosure forces me to mention that the publisher sent me an advance copy in the hope that I'd write a cover blurb it -- and I did. I'm really impressed. To sum it up in a single sentence suitable for a dustjacket slot, Bruce has written a Catch-22 for the Slashdot generation: a wry, cynical, informed peek at the paranoid world of the post-9/11 cyberspookerati that shines a bright light on the hidden arsenal of infowar.

So what's it all about?

Meet Derek Vandeveer: your typical shy, retiring, brilliant computer scientist working for an internet startup, married to an equally shy and retiring astronomer. And his former college roommate, Tony Carew: your typical dot-com boardroom monkey, a slick, extroverted hustler with a bizjet and a girlfriend from Bollywood. 9/11 happens, and their worlds are never going to be the same again. One of them is going to betray everything he holds precious, the other is going to dive head-first into the twilight world of internet-era espionage, and when they meet again the consequences will be explosive.

The plot romps along with ironic, discursive energy, from the Rocky Mountain hideaway of an increasingly eccentric billionaire industrialist to the bolt-hole basement where America's guardians wait out the long watch for an act of atomic terrorism -- but we're in safe hands here, because we've got Sterling for a guide. This is the future. This is now.

At this point in a normal review I'd start comparing the product to other novels. In fact, if I was Bruce Sterling reviewing this book and it was written by somebody else, I'd say something like: "this is a book that stands proudly in the tradition of Neal Stephenson's Cryptonomicon [if Cryptonomicon was, like, a normal-length novel instead of a trilogy in a corset] and Bruce Schneier's Secrets and Lies"[but hang on, Secrets and Lies isn't even fiction -- where am I saying, here?] ..."

But I'm not Bruce (and I don't have the chutzpah to put words into his mouth because he's a better reviewer than I am). So let's just say, my take on affairs is that The Zenith Angle doesn't really stand in any kind of tradition at all (even though it does read better if you also dig Schneier and Stephenson). It's one of a kind. What we've got is one of the godfathers of cyberpunk taking a long, hard look at where we've come to. And it's a frightening place indeed. He's been tracking this territory in WIRED for several years now: from the frontiers of hacking (which he documented in 1994's The Hacker Crackdown ) to the weirdly convoluted secret history of the military-industrial complex.

By inclination and occupation Sterling is one-half journalist, one-half futurist, and one-half gonzo cyberpunk novelist -- and he somehow crams it all into this book, a 150% full-on technothriller with science fictional sensibilities, or an SF novel about a future that has imploded into the present. This is good, excellent, stuff. Trust me, you'll like it. Pre-order it from Amazon or buy it next month when it comes out -- but read it anyway. It's seminal and it's scary.

Besides Amazon, you can pre-order The Zenith Angle from bn.com. Slashdot welcomes readers' book reviews -- to see your own review here, read the book review guidelines, then visit the submission page.

9 of 110 comments (clear)

  1. Authors by HeghmoH · · Score: 4, Informative

    I've never read anything by Stirling, and I was going to skip the review until I saw who wrote the review. There's something oddly ironic about reading a review just because it was written by one of your favorite authors.

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    1. Re:Authors by maxentius · · Score: 4, Informative

      Indeed. It's good to see Mr. Stross's name once in a while.

      Hey Charlie, remember D. West?

      For those of you who aren't familiar, Charles Stross is one of Britain's hot young SF writers. Check out the novel "Singularity Sky," from Ace Books.

      For more instant gratification, try this.

      --
      Imagine a Beowulf cluster of neurons.
    2. Re:Authors by Wellspring · · Score: 4, Informative

      Bruce Sterling is phenomenal.

      I'm actually one of those guys who loved his early work more than his more recent stuff. I find alot of what I read lately a little on the preachy side. He's still a very smart guy-- and a brilliant writer.

      Read The Hacker Crackdown-- it's literary freeware, and so there's no excuse not to.

      Then, go buy Schizmatrix Plus. This is one of my all-time favorite science fiction books. I can't find the words to tell you how great this book is. It manages to be both epic and intensely personal.

  2. Fellow Slashdotters, prepare to be dazzled! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Funny

    Well, as Timothy already mentioned, the name of the book that I read was The Zenith Angle. It's about these ... angles. Angles ... with computer programmers ... and ... plots that romp on ... and Bollywood ... Did I mention this book was written by a guy named Bruce Sterling? And published by the good people at Del Rey. So, in conclusion, on the Slashdot scale of eight to ten, ten being the highest, eight being the lowest, and nine being average, I give this book ... a ten. Any questions? Nope? Then I'll just sit down.

  3. Parallel to William Gibson by OblongPlatypus · · Score: 4, Informative

    William Gibson has been doing the same thing; also a sci-fi writer, his latest novel Pattern Recognition is set in the present just like The Zenith Angle.

    Personally I'm a big fan of Gibson, but have read very little by Sterling. Can anyone who's read both comment on similarities and differences between the two?

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    -- If no truths are spoken then no lies can hide --
    1. Re:Parallel to William Gibson by spun · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Sterling actually likes technolgy, Gibson doesn't. Gibson is a better word-smith, Sterling has more interesting ideas. Gibson is a pessimist, Sterling is an optimist. Sterling understands Science, Gibson understands Poetry. That being said, if you like Gibson, you will almost certainly like Sterling, though perhaps for different reasons

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      - None can love freedom heartily, but good men; the rest love not freedom, but license. -- John Milton
  4. Bruce Sterlings previous work has been weak by wintermute42 · · Score: 5, Interesting

    After reading William Gibson's Neuromancer I wanted to read more science fiction like it. At the time there was a sort of boomlet of "cyberpunk" authors. In addition to the master, Gibson, some of them were pretty good. I liked Walter Jon Williams' book Hardwired. K.W. Jetter wrote some pretty interesting stuff. Jon Shirley wrote the Eclipse books which were a sort of cool combination of rock, drugs and cyberpunk distopia. And then there was Bruce Sterling. I've always seen Sterling as a wana-be Gibson. Unfortunately for Sterling he does not have Gibson's brilliance as a writer or Gibson's unique world view. Of the writers listed above, Sterlings has always seemed to me to be the weakest. I've found Sterling's writing in WIRED equally empty. Sterling might be viewed as a science fiction Tom Clancy (he even seems to share Tom Clancy's right wing political views).

    William Gibson has written one really weak book, The Difference Engine and this was co-authored with Sterling. It is interesting to note that they have not written anything together since. Gibson must have come to realize that he is far weaker with Sterling than without.

    I just finished Charles Stross' Singularity Sky (which I think was reviewed on Slashdot). I thought that it was excellent and I look forward to reading more of Stross' work. I rate Stross far higher than Sterling. Where Sterling is a techno-wana-be, Stross is the real thing. The author I would compare Stross to the most is Ken MacLeod (who I also like).

    I have not had a chance to read Sterling's latest (which I think I'll get from the library). But if you're spending money, I'd spend it on Stross, Ken MacLeod, Dan Simmons (his latest book Illium is interesting). Or if you have not read Ian MacDonald, try his book Terminal Cafe which is one of the great speculations on the implications of nanotechnology.

    1. Re:Bruce Sterlings previous work has been weak by bluetrident · · Score: 4, Interesting

      I agree. Oh course, Gibson will remain supreme, but i think that Pat Cadigan is another author worthy of reading. She (yes, she's a female) is a great storyteller and her use of 'porn' in her stories is quite interesting.

      And we have all read Neal Stephenson, and I think his move to more of a fiction-based story is quite interesting. Since 'Cryptonomicon', he's basically telling a normal story with a bunch of tech/crpyto stuff thrown in.

      I always thought Sterling was a bit weak in his storytelling and writing skills. Even 'The Difference Engine' was a struggle for me to make it through. Stephenson's psuedonym, Stephen Bury, reminds me of Sterling, but with a much better writing ability.

      Enjoy.

  5. My blurb by mouthbeef · · Score: 5, Interesting
    I got an advance copy for blurbage at the same time as Charlie (Me: "What's a technothriller?" Sterling: "It's like a science fiction novel, but it's got the President in it."). Here's my dustjacket take:

    "Sterling has his fingers on about a hundred different pulses in this book, which vibrates with fantastic in-jokes and insights from Bollywood to dot-bomb, from mil-spec gear-pigs to earnest cybercops. The story rockets along like a hijacked airliner heading straight at you, like a flash-worm compromising every unpatched Windows box on the net at once. I read it in one sitting, and I'll read it again before the month is out. Lots of books are called "thrillers" but very few are this thrilling."

    BTW, Sterling called this kind of writing "Nowpunk" at his SXSW talk last week: http://craphound.com/sterlingsxsw04.txt