Building from
the Jackpot concept of The
Peripheral, The
Agency introduces new tangents
(including, what if Hilary won the 2016 election) and plays the old
Gibsonian trick of featuring new characters while slyly working in
familiar ones. In the Hilary storyline, a new character named Verity
is introduced. Hired by a start-up in San Francisco to test new
technology, she spends the better part of the novel’s beginning
trying to understand the strange avatar software being developed for
the military. In the second, the Jackpot storyline, exists the new
technology Verity is working with named Eunice. At the umbrella
level, the relationship and tension between these two “women”
drives international and interdimensional plots and cabals.
As one might
expect with Gibson, none of the novel’s politics are overt or
sharply pointed. In fact, the reader must look to the negative
space—what isn’t described—to find the elements of a non-Trump
era. Otherwise, as is normal with Gibson’s style, the innovative
elements are presented as perfectly normal, inherent to the settings
and scenes, often throwaway, fashion. Like The Peripheral, The
Agency seems a conglomeration of all Gibson’s books to date. The
futuristic, technological, corporate conspiracies of the Sprawl, the
near-future impact of disruptive tech in the Bridge, the present day
power of art, data, money, and brand in the Blue Ant—all these are
combined into a mish-mash story that will entice or put off.
While I
recognize Gibson’s genius, place in history, et al, I’m of the
“put off” variety. The coherence of this novel and the prior are
subjective. Specifically, they
suffer from the problems
inherent to a lot of branching timelines/realities stories. Where
everything is possible, nothing is interesting. In these novels
readers become privy, through Gibson’s choices, of the
realities/places beyond our own. Given the story setup, however, it
seems clear there is an infinite number of these possibilities
beyond. Why then, are those small number of realities the subject of
the story? Or, why then do those couple of realities impact our own
where others do not? Logic dictates that the infinite other
realities would likewise have a mix of altruistic or nefarious
intentions for our reality, malevolent to benevolent, doomsday to
world peace. Where are they? Perhaps just a personal thing, but my
brain gets angry at this. It’s the writer cherrypicking their own
conception (which is their right), but without following logically
through on the premise. With Ian McDonald’s Planesrunner trilogy,
for example, a cap was inherent to the parallel universe concept:
only seven were possible given some hand waving. This in turn
created the books’ mental canvas for readers’ imaginations to
play out on. In the case of Agency,
the canvas is not limited. A Lovecraftian myriad of possibilities
exists, of which the small few described in the novel have an impact
on our world, with no explanation or exploration why the others
don’t. I’ve gone personal in this paragraph as I recognize this
is a personal, not universal, thing, i.e. enjoy at your own desire.
In the end,
The Agency
is a book similar in style and substance to The
Peripheral. If you liked it,
there is an extremely good chance you will like The
Agency. As with The
Peripheral, I feel Gibson could
have done a better job distinguishing his settings, and providing a
few more details into the backdrop of the novel’s concept. That,
however, is a personal thing which may not trip you up. If the idea
of secret police in combination with emergent technology across
parallel worlds is enticing, Gibson may have provided you a feast.
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