Ratings34
Average rating3.7
I love games. I run a game club at the elementary school wear I work. I play board games with friends every Saturday. I've done video games, pen and paper RPGs, and a messload of Tabletop games. I feel that games are great training for life and give people much needed practice at strategy and cooperation.
Halting State takes that idea to the next level.
The book is clearly a different sort of novel from the beginning. It is told in the second person, immediately immersing the reader into one of three characters alternating by chapter. At first, this was a little disconcerting, especially trying to make my brain read in a thick Scottish brogue, but I was able to adjust to it and appreciate Stross' finesse with his theme. In any case, Stross creates such a fascinating vision of the future, the reader wants to inhabit the world.
The story centers around the idea of Life as Game. Most people in the future LARP, but they do it with the assistance of augmented reality glasses(neatly prediction of Google Glass in 2007). The glasses are as common and indispensable as smart phones today, and indeed are basically an app (again, this was written in 2007 before smart phones were indispensable). Cops use the glasses to tag and read information about locations and people, gamers use it to take a trip to the Plateau of Leng or Discworld instead of their morning commute. The plot involves the ways such a tech dependence could be exploited. Yet, Stross sets the book in Edinburgh and makes reference to how very little has changed. Coffeemakers are more complicated, but stone buildings don't fall down. Cars can drive themselves, but no one can bug a piece of paper. Stross cautions against putting all our eggs in the wireless basket, but he makes a point of emphasizing the real world we have to fall back on.
The characters, our guides through this world, are all believable and easy to inhabit. I especially appreciate that Stross uses two female narrators, both of whom are written as characters and instead of stereotypical damsels or “Strong Female Protagonist” archetypes. They are real characters with real strengths and weaknesses. Stross even uses two female police officers. Admittedly, Liz Kavanaugh is much more interesting than our narrator, Sue Smith, and I'm quite excited to know that the next book in this universe has Liz as the lead protagonist. Sue's chapters are a bit more dragging than Elaine's or Jack's, probably because Sue is there to be the non-technical interpreter for readers like me who know next to nothing about code or accounting. Jack and Elaine, on the other hand, are very fun personas to slip on, especially Elaine, the Claymore wielding accountant.
The technical details of the plot did go pretty far over my head, and I think the ending would pack a lot more punch for people better versed in technology than I am, but regardless of your level of expertise in the field, you should be able to appreciate Stross' vision of the future. You truly fill as if you are playing Spy vs. Spy, reading the flavor text and preparing for your character's next move. I highly recommend this book to fans of MMORGs and anyone who thinks maybe we are a little too plugged in these days.