Agency
2020 • 402 pages

Ratings37

Average rating3.6

15

Gibson's follow-up to The Peripheral is set in the same world(s) as that novel but this time he's expanded on it. In The Peripheral it was established that through some arcane technological wizardry it became possible to communicate with an alternate timeline, or Stub as they are called, one that at some point in the past branched off from our own. In Agency there are multiple Stubs, the creation of which are something of a hobby for the bored super-rich of our future (one where the so-called Jackpot has happened, a combination of pandemics and economic disasters and global warming that has killed off 80% of the world's population and left an authoritarian world government called The Klept).

Now, in a “present day” stub where Clinton won the election and Brexit never happened, the world edges closer to nuclear conflict in the Middle East and Verity (the “app whisperer”) is a young woman starting a new job with a tech company called Cursion to test a new form of AI software. Which sets her life off on a whole new course when the AI, called Eunice, is shown to be more advanced than anything previous and Cursion tries to shut her down. Meanwhile in the 22nd century future Ainsley Lowbeer, nominally a police inspector but really a Stub troubleshooter, contacts Verity through Will Netherton (a publicist) and a Eunice designed combat drone piloted by Conner from the original Stub featured in The Peripheral.....clear so far?

It's a lot to take in and the ultra short chapters that alternate between Verity and Lowbeer's timelines take some getting used to. It's like tuning in a radio. Once you get the right frequency the story kicks into gear and Agency carries you through Verity's desperate escape from the clutches of Cursion with the aid of various people Eunice has put in place before she was shut down. Meanwhile Lowbeer pulls strings to try and avoid the impending nuclear war in Verity's timeline while also fending off threat to her position from within The Klept.

It's a novel that moves at breakneck speed and the world-building is superb. The alternate reality is convincing as is the possible future that Lowbeer exists in. Gibson is a great writer, the prose unfussy and to the point, the story ever more engrossing and hopefully this won't be the last visit to the worlds he's created here.

Recommended.

January 23, 2021Report this review