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Realtime

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From Mark W. Tiedemann, the bestselling author of the Isaac Asimov's Robot Mysteries Mirage and Chimera, comes a thrilling new mystery

America in 2050 is a very different place. In the wake of a triumphant isolationist movement and a massive depression, state's rights supersede federal authority on all levels, and in the subsequent balkanization of economy, class, and politics, getting anything done in the "national interest" is a tortuous, nearly impossible task.

For Grant Voczek and Reva Cassonare, working for different, normally uncooperative agencies, overcoming these barriers takes on a personal edge when a Treasury agent is found murdered in St. Louis. They must work together to find the killers -- and the reason behind the killing. What they discover leads them through a maze of political and corporate collusion involving currency fraud, graft, and the systematic harvesting of people who cannot defend themselves because they do not legally exist. For Grant and Reva, failure would not be simply unacceptable -- failure would be a felony of conscience.

416 pages, Paperback

First published October 1, 2001

14 people want to read

About the author

Mark W. Tiedemann

68 books94 followers
Also credited as Mark Tiedemann and M. William Tiedemann.

Mark W. Tiedemann has published twelve novels---three in the Asimov's Robot Universe series, /Mirage, Chimera /and/ Aurora/---three in his own Secantis Sequence, /Compass Reach, Metal of Night, /and /Peace & Memory/---as well as stand-alones /Realtime, Hour of the Wolf/ (a Terminator novel), and /Remains/, plus /Of Stars & Shadows/, one of the Yard Dog Doubledog series, Logic of Departure, and the historical novel Granger's Crossing. As well, he has published over seventy-five short stories, all this between 1990 and 2023. /Compass Reach/ was shortlisted for the Philip K. Dick Award in 2002 and /Remains /was shortlisted for the James Tiptree Jr. Award in 2006.

For five years he served as president of the Missouri Center for the Book (http://books.missouri.org) from which position he has recently stepped down. He is now concentrating on writing new novels, a few short stories, and stirring a little chaos in the blogosphere at DangerousIntersection.org and his own blog at MarkTiedemann.com

Oh, he still does a little photography and has started dabbling in art again after a long hiatus.

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Displaying 1 - 3 of 3 reviews
Profile Image for Jeffrey.
137 reviews15 followers
April 25, 2008
A so so post-collapse Sci-Fi procedural mystery novel. I found myself just not that interested in the mystery or interested in the characters.
53 reviews
April 10, 2025
I really struggled through the first half of this book, but found the second half much more engaging.
Profile Image for ScoLgo.
23 reviews2 followers
September 24, 2016
Good near-future techno thriller. No real big surprises as far as the mystery goes but that did not detract from my enjoyment of the book. Tiedemann can be a sly story-teller. Instead of drawing you a picture using crayons, he builds the world and the characters by sketching minor details; he might mention a little something about the political landscape that gives you an idea that America, in this book, is a very different place from what it is today. Or he might describe a piece of technology that the characters use that is clearly futuristic to us, but is commonplace to them. Even the clothing, cars, and character behavior is odd at first. As the story unfolds though, it all comes together into a cohesive whole that is, on the one hand, complex and. on the other, simply rendered. No mean feat that.

In typical Tiedemann fashion, (this is the 5th novel of his that I've read), the bulk of the story is driven by character interactions and action sequences. To keep up with what is happening, you will need to read between the lines and pay attention to what people are saying. It's not hard, but that is what will be expected of you as a reader. Thankfully, your task is made easy by the fact that the dialogue is smart, direct, and to the point.

The other appeal of this story is the development of the main character... When we first meet him, Grant Vozcek seems to be an arrogant, condescending, self-centered jerk. Ummm... hold on, there is actually no 'seems to be' about it. He is all of that. But then a strange thing happens; as the story progresses, so does Grant's persona. As details emerge, we find out why Vozcek is the way he is and, as he interacts with FBI agent Reva Cassonare, he also begins to look beyond his own motivations and triggers and finally comes out the other end changed in a positive way. It's not easy for me get to like a character that I started off disliking. Tiedemann manages to bring me around with this one. At the end Vozcek remains a tad unlikable, but he's a much better person than when we first meet him. Another example of 'no mean feat'.

My biggest complaint is agent Reva Cassonare... While she is depicted as being a strong female character, she really just ends up being a typical supporting act for our male hero (or anti-hero as the case may be). Too bad because her character has a lot of potential. Still, that's a small nit to pick for an otherwise smart and entertaining read.

I recommend this book to anyone that enjoys the types of environments created by PKD, Bruce Sterling, William Gibson, or Neal Stephenson. While the style is somewhat different, the world-building is of that caliber.
Displaying 1 - 3 of 3 reviews

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