In the not-to-distant future, people start developing a disease called SDS, Sensory Deprivation Syndrome. SDS carriers can take away your senses with a single touch. Some deprive you of vision, taste, sound, or other senses. Some deprive you temporarily—and some deprive you forever.
Robert is an SDS carrier who paralyzes with a touch. He works as an assassin, paralyzing people and killing them while they cannot move. But when Cassandra breaks into his apartment and tells him that there are others out there like him—and that Deprivers are beginning to choose up sides, he decides to join hers. She needs his help to rescue her brother Nicholas from a group of anti-Normal Deprivers who want to control the future of Deprivers and the Deprived.
I liked this book more than I liked the book that inspired it, the short story anthology The Touch. For one thing, it’s less depressing—it has hope to it, which doesn’t really show up in the short stories in the earlier book. For another, I liked following one set of characters for more than fifteen pages.
That said, I wanted Altman to do more with his characters, to go further with SDS. The most interesting part came right at the end, and left me frustrated and wanting it to be better explained. The book didn’t live up to its potential. It was an interesting, thought-provoking read, but it could have gone one step further to be really fantastic.