Something of a Dr.
Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, John Brunner is one of the more intriguing though lesser
recognized figures in science fiction history.
Much the same as Robert Silverberg, he cut a path for himself in genre
writing what is essentially pulp sci-fi but later began introducing novels of
significantly greater depth to his oeuvre.
Stand on Zanzibar, The Sheep Look Up, and The Jagged Orbit are some of the most
important novels the field has produced.
Drastically elevating the form above common genre trappings, a fourth
novel is generally added to this list of socially and politically motivated works
from Brunner: 1975’s The Shockwave Rider. Though technically a forerunner to the
plethora of cyberpunk texts that would emerge soon thereafter, the novel, in
fact, bears more in common with the socially conscious, atypically structured,
politicized novels of the New Wave.
Regardless of taxonomy, it remains a prescient look at the power of
information control and the fragmentation of society and identity.
The Shockwave Rider is the story of Nickie
Haflinger. Raised at a hidden government
school at a cost of three million tax payer dollars per year, the secrets of
the system he slowly learns are enough to turn him off, and eventually away. Escaping into the world as a young adult, he
uses near autistic savant capabilities to re-program the network to assume a
new identity each time he is discovered by the government. By turns a televangelist and rich playboy
(among other professions), he lives aimlessly, and only to avoid detection as
he tries to sort out his own place in the world. But called out by the daughter of a major
corporate CEO, the façade he’s created for himself slowly begins to peel away. Trouble is, exposing himself leads government
searches all the closer.
The Shockwave Rider, like Brunner’s other
major works, is set in a near-future America that has undergone political and
social change. Extrapolating upon Alvin
Toffler’s Future Shock, the United
States Brunner portrays has fragmented into smaller pieces of varying social
structures and practices but remains loosely under the control of a government
entity via a datanet they wield as their main tool of power. Large corporations likewise having access to
the datanet, together they represent the ruling class, leaving most common
people either ignorant or subservient to what is happening in the upper
echelons of economy and politics. The
Big One having struck California, what remains of the former state is now
something of a frontier area, and it’s there that Haflinger eventually finds
himself exploring other means of existence as the government draws ever closer
on his trail.
The cover
image a close archetype to William Gibson’s Neuromancer,
The Shockwave Rider is as prescient
as James Tiptree Jr.’s “The Girl Who Was Plugged In” in terms of the
stereotypical cyberpunk motif. But the similarities
are at the conceptual level, only. Those
looking to pick up The Shockwave Rider
and catch a piece of proto-cyberspace will not find the techy, noir, tactile
realia Neuromancer is replete
with. Brunner maintaining a humanist
approach, the datanet and humanity’s interaction with it are located in the
story in less practical and more theoretical fashion. Identity and public vs. private data
malleable from a political perspective, Haflinger’s personality provides the
keyhole through which the concerns of data control, freedom of information, and
the existence and availability of knowledge are locked and unlocked. As concerned with the relationship between
individuals, society, and information technology as George Orwell was in Nineteen Eighty-four, Brunner captures
much of the neuroticism and angst of living in the information age: Haflinger
is anything but a man in control of himself.
Thus, cyberpunk, proto-cyberpunk, information age science
fiction—whichever you want to call The
Shockwave Rider, it fits as long as the underlying humanist is recognized.
Less edgy
noir and more soft science fiction, Brunner is not as focused on style but more
on delivering a layered: scenes from Haflinger’s present as he is interrogated
by government officials, scenes from the past leading to his capture, and an
abstract, variegated selection of
thoughts, quotes, and commentary filling the interstices. Divided into unnumbered chapters, the novel
can feel as fragmented as the US Haflinger roams; the shifts between the
perspectives can be disassociating. (Those who have read The Jagged Orbit and Stand on Zanzibar will find The Shockwave
Rider has the same alinear narrative.)
The chapters moving unexpectedly and briskly, some are only a sentence
in length while others are several pages.
But all cause pause. Obscure
chapter titles forcing the reader to stop and think, not to mention what
follows often intentionally murky, the story flows irregularly as the bits of
commentary supplement plot. The result
is that readers are dropped into Brunner’s imaginings of a man living
near-future US with few signs or guideposts, and must think to catch up. With
the majority of science fiction spoon feeding the reader, The Shockwave Rider is really something to sink the mind into.
In the
end, The Shockwave Rider is the
character study of a man trying to preserve his independent sense of being in a
United States splintered into social factions and a datanet through which real
political and economic power flows. One
of Brunner’s more subtle, humanist novels, readers looking at the cover and
expecting early William Gibson will be disappointed. Less edgy tech wise but equally powerful from
an existentialist perspective in a world replete with data, the novel ends on a
note more Ursula Le Guin’s The Dispossessed than Neuromancer. Social commentary rampant, the setting and
personality issues portrayed are drawing closer to reality each day, making the
novel yet another important science fiction work from one of its lesser
recognized practitioners.
At the same time, I was reading Thomas J. Ryan's The Adolescence of P-1, which also deals with a computer virus but this virus is an AI that spreads to all connected computers. Damn good for a one-off-novel author! And this is ONE Brunner I haven't been able to procure, oddly.
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