For as
prolific as Charles Stross has been since the turn of the millennium (literally
almost two novels per year and roughly fifty pieces of short fiction in the
fourteen years since), there are only two collections in his oeuvre: Toast (2002) and Wireless (2009). Collecting
ten short stories and novelettes published between 1990 and 2000, Toast captures the best of his pre-millennium
short fiction. Though possessing
inchoate style (due to dependence on forebears), the flow of ideas is
everything Stross would erupt to become.
Singularity
in play since the beginning of his career, Stross openly discusses the topic in
the collection’s introduction. However,
there is no selection (speaking specifically about the initial publication of Toast and not that which added
“Lobsters”) which captures the acceleration of intelligence and technology like
Stross’ later works, e.g. Accelerando,
Saturn’s Children, Palimpsest, etc. That being said, almost all of the stories
do, in some way, utilize, survey, or hint at the rudiments of singularity. “Antibodies”, for example, while rooted in
dark math, features settings and action sequences that employ devices and
motifs readers commonly associate with the movement, up to and including
parallel realities.
Dealing
specifically with the past, present, and near-future seeds of singularity,
there are a handful of stories in Toast
which, rather than develop a plot, provide an overview of technological
development. “TOAST: A Con Report” is a
literal walk through of a futuristic convention that, in a round about way,
describes the evolution of near-future tech.
“Dechlorinating the Moderator” likewise takes a look at a near-future
convention and finds Stross theorizing about theories—a dream convention
emerging in the glow of pseudo-scholarship.
And lastly “Extracts from the Club Diary” which, through the eyes of a
Victorian British coffee club secretary, offers vignettes into how technology
developed in the 20th century. A
humorous piece for the manner in which Stross keeps the science coffee-focused,
the last vignette, however, drives home the economic and social effects of
science.
Stross
openly a fan of H.P Lovecraft, there are a couple of stories which beg, borrow,
or steal elements of the paranoid recluse’s ideas. “The Colder War” takes a look at At the Mountains of Madness fifty years
later, overlaying an Iran Contra Affair motif. Well-structured and fragmented
effectively, Stross shows improving writer-ly chops. Conversely, “A Boy and His God” is a much
weaker piece (perhaps why it was replaced with “Lobsters” in the later edition
of Toast?). An intentionally far-fetched, running-away
with a Cthulu alien pet, the story doesn’t amount to much but a little bit of
fun.
Toast also contains a few stories which play with
ideas more conventional—a contrast made more obvious by the qualities of
imagination Stross invests in later work.
“Ship of Fools” is a story about a man who boards a cruise ship to
escape the Y2K threat and ends up in the same room as his ex-wife. Cyberpunk even by Stross’ standards, “Yellow
Snow” is the story of a man with (literally) his own personal drug
factory. Thinking to get rich by putting
it to use with other available technologies, not everything goes as hoped. With hints of Philip K. Dick and Alfred Bester, “Bear Trap” is the story of a man caught up in a technological web
wherein the difference between psi powers and super-advanced technology is
small. Overwritten, this is not one of
the best stories in the collection.
Perhaps the most conventional of them all, “Big Brother Iron” is an open
take on Orwell’s Nineteen Eighty-four
in which the autocrat is a bunker-housed computer. Told through the eyes of a high level
government operative, the story never decides whether it wants to parody or
expand Orwell’s narrative, and ends up on the fence.
In the
end, Toast is a collection of stories
that bridge post-cyberpunk to the Accelerated Age. Many of the stories possessing familiar
elements parlayed in conventional motifs, there remain, however, strong hints
of the writer Stross would become—i.e. now writing in the vanguard of the movement. A fizzling imagination spits and sputters
throughout the stories, flashes of brilliance appearing intermittently—reality
evolving, paranoia fueled, tech drenched imagination that openly admits science
is advancing so fast as to obsolete the stories. Toast
may not be Stross’ best work, but, being the first full-length work he
published, gives every indication of what he would become.
The
following are the contents of the original printing of Toast. (Please note that later editions replaced “A Boy and His
God” with “Lobsters” and added an Afterword):
Introduction:
“After the Future Imploded” by Charles Stross
“Antibodies
“
“Bear
Trap”
“Extracts
from the Club Diary”
“A Colder
War”
“TOAST: A
Con Report”
“A Boy and
His God”
“Ship of
Fools”
“Dechlorinating
the Moderator”
“Yellow
Snow”
“Big
Brother Iron”
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