Ned
Beauman’s 2012 The Teleportation Accident
slides along a wet blade of charm and wit, most often of the irreverent
variety. A raucously fun read, it draws
blood for the rich language, uniquely realized personal stories, and left-field
view of early ‘30s flapper life in Europe and Los Angeles. Beauman’s follow up Glow is to be enjoyed for similar reasons, though the blade seems
to have dulled some in the meantime.
Glow is the story of Raf and his
unintentional involvement in a global synthesized drug scheme involving Burmese
revolutionaries, a slippery American corporation, and the most eclectic thing
of all, the city of London and its raver youth culture. Music and drugs everything, Raf’s life takes
a new direction when riding home from a rave very early one morning after
trying a new drug called glow. A fox
sitting in the seat behind him, afterwards he sees even stranger things,
particularly silent white vans kidnapping people off the streets. It isn’t long before his friend Theo is
snapped up. But meeting a
half-American/half-Burmese woman calling herself Cherish is what really turns
Raf’s life upside down. Can she help him
get Theo back and get him another hit
of glow?
Like
The Teleportation Accident, Glow is a lot of fun at the surface
level. The language dynamic, often
playful and darkly comedic, Raf’s tale takes many unexpected turns
linguistically, and the backstreets and sub-cultures of London come to life
under Beauman’s pen. Obviously a lot of
time spent structuring the backstory to achieve a desired effect, those who
enjoy puzzling out the underlying reality of a character’s plight, from the
streets to big business, will certainly enjoy Glow.
But
where The Teleportation Accident dug
a little deeper into its social and historical roots, Glow remains largely at the surface. The plot wholly contrived, it’s a lot of fun
but difficult to parallel to what is, has been, or might be. The foxes, corporate interests, Burmese
connection, character interaction, and otherwise are too far-fetched to engage
much at the sub-textual level. Like
Paolo Bacigalupi or Ken Macleod, Beauman has latched onto a few corrupt
realities of modern economy, but uses them for story purposes, the commentary
largely limited by plot. Moreover, Glow doesn’t have the same linguistic
zip that The Teleportation Accident
possesses—yet it’s obvious Beauman was trying for a similar style. There are flashes of the same brilliance, but
the effect remains flat by comparison.
This being said, Beauman on an off day still puts the majority of
contemporary genre in their place.
In
the end, Glow is a novel with a lot
of bells and whistles. Bursting to the
brim with corporate conspiracy, real-life re-enactments, ultra-modern
pharmaceutical drugs, pirate radio, 20-something life in modern London, raves,
Burmese curry, the war on terror, synthesized drugs, foxes in urbania, big
brother social networking, electronic music, and a plot that goes over the top,
it’s a drug in itself: a quick fix that leaves you feeling good but has no lasting
impression... For foxes I would instead
read Jon Courtenay Grimwood’s 9Tail Fox. For drug induced strangeness in London, I
would head to Jeff Noon’s Vurt.
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