With
scalpel-sharp diction and splash of ideas, what often goes overlooked
in William Gibson’s oeuvre is that the author may also be a master
of theme. Given so much credit for minimalist writing and sensawunda
science fiction, some readers become enamored by this dynamic surface
and fail to gain a sense of what lies beneath, namely understated
commentary on society, politics, and technology. 2010’s Spook
Country, second in the so-called Blue Ant trilogy, is no
exception—and may very well be the most overlooked of the
overlooked.
The three
strands of Spook Country’s
story braid consist of Hollis Henry, former rock-n-roller turned
journalist; Tito, a Chinese-Cuban living in NYC who, with his family,
helps facilitate various crimes involving the latest technology, and
Brown, a covert operative ostensibly associated with the US
government who has been given the assignment of tailing Tito. The
three unaware, a mysterious shipping container in Vancouver of
unknown contents forms the point at which all their various and
peculiar stories converge.