One of the main
characters in William Gibson’s Mona Lisa Overdrive is the titular Mona. A drug-addicted
prostitute wandering the Sprawl, she accepts an offer too good to be true, and
loses her identity in the process: the surgeries she undergoes confuse any
sense of self not already rattled by narcotics.
Gibson’s novel classic cyberpunk, the gritty noir of near-future
permeates her story. Revisioning Mona,
Ian Hocking’s re-released Deja Vu
(2014, Unsung Stories) tells a
fast-paced cyberthriller about a young woman with a similar identity crisis.
His Mona, however, is agent of her own future.
Saskia
Brandt is Hocking’s Mona, and at the outset of Deja Vu is pressganged into a job she would rather not do but is
forced to take due to past decisions: she is to track down a murderer. Whisked away to London, she finds herself
paired with the cynical Jago, and together the two begin putting together the
pieces of David Proctor’s story. A
brilliant professor caught up in affairs over his head that result in the death
of a colleague, Brandt tracks Proctor at her own peril, and in the process
learns which past decisions haunt her today—and tomorrow.
William
Gibson does noir perfectly, Bruce Sterling is more political savvy, and Pat
Cadigan does the mindfuck of cyberpunk technology like no one else, but Hocking
does these classic cyberpunk elements no disservice. Streamlined to plot, Deja Vu utilizes familiar tropes to build a tightly packaged story
that quickly achieves the force of a speeding car, and in the process examines,
albeit lightly, the identity crises inherent to brain-bending tech. Advanced virtual reality, memory-wipe technology,
AI assistants, new weaponry, and a little time travel pull and push Saskia,
Proctor, and those caught in the chase toward cybernoir futures. Saskia may be author of her fate where Mona
was a victim of circumstance, but Saskia’s situation in no way prevents her
from getting ensared in the system, and in need of escape—fast.
In the
end, Déjà Vu is a straightforward
cyberpunk thriller, but a properly done one.
Hocking does not waste the reader’s time with spurious detail; the
narrative is honed to a bare glint. It
makes such novels as Richard Morgan’s Altered Carbon look positively bloated.
Non-stop plot, neon-edged scenes, and hardlined characters in a
cyber-fueled near future, Déjà Vu is
a quick, solid read that succeeds where a lot of imitation material falls flat.
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