I’ve often talked with my wife about how our lives have changed. We
remark on how improvements in technology have changed our day-to-day lives in
such significant ways that our kids live totally different lives than we did
twenty years ago. Having those types of discussions has led me to wonder
what a person who was born one hundred or one hundred and fifty years ago would
think about us today. Would they even recognize what we do as a normal
life? Would they understand most of what is going on around them?
How would they deal with or understand things like computers, the internet,
ipods, phones, or video games just to name a few?
Why do I bring this up, you ask? Because reading THE FRACTAL PRINCE by
Hannu Rajaniemi made me feel like that person from the mid 1800’s coming to
today. I felt like someone who had been thrust into a world that I didn’t
and almost couldn’t understand. And I say that not as a bad thing.
I’m not gonna lie to you, this book was a tough read, especially at
first. Terms are thrown around and I had to make sense of them myself
until the context of it gave me foundation for what the terms meant.
Still, I eventually figured this world out and it was a world full of wonders
and problems.
I’ve tried writing down a synopsis of what this book is about several
times. And as much as I read it and think I understood THE FRACTAL PRINCE, I’m having a
heck of a time trying to sum it up in only a few paragraphs. The terms in
the book that got in my way at first make it hard to tell you about some of the
concepts. You don’t know what those terms mean or why they should matter to
you. In fact the whole novel is so centered on this technology far far in
the future that I’m just gonna give up. Instead I’ll give you the synopsis from Amazon:
“The good thing is, no one will ever die again.
The bad thing is, everyone will want to.”
A physicist receives a mysterious paper. The ideas in it are far, far ahead
of current thinking and quite, quite terrifying. In a city of “fast ones,”
shadow players, and jinni, two sisters contemplate a revolution.
And on the edges of reality a thief, helped by a sardonic ship, is trying to
break into a Schrödinger box for his patron. In the box is his freedom. Or not.
Jean de Flambeur is back. And he’s running out of time.
See what I mean? If that synopsis doesn’t help you much, don’t worry. It didn’t help me
either. This is not an easy book to tie down with a few sentences.
And I don’t think it’s supposed to be.
In the end the problem I had writing about this book is the problem I had
with the book. It seemed so in love with the technology that it failed to tell as compelling a story as I would have liked. I can think
back on it and remember some of the events and even some of the
characters, but the problem was that all of that was so overshadowed just trying
to figure out and understand the novel. It makes Rajaniemi's follow-up to THE QUANTUM THIEF (which I liked well enough - check out the review here) a tough book to flat-out recommend.
I certainly enjoyed reading it and I loved the sensation of seeing a far-future that was so utterly alien. That sense of wonder in my opinion is
the reason to read the book. The story was secondary to it. If you
like those big ideas and that scope and imagination then I would say THE FRACTAL PRINCE (and it's predecessor) is for you. If you want a rip roaring yarn that’s hard to put down
because you just HAVE TO KNOW what’s going to happen next, then I might give it a pass.
Age Recommendation: 16+ It just seemed rather complicated
Violence: Not much that I recall
Language: A bit here and there
Sex: A weird sci-fi-type scene at the beginning, not too graphic but
certainly there
Want to give these novels a shot? Here are your links:
THE QUANTUM THIEF
THE FRACTAL PRINCE
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