This book is an energetic and sprawling epic which begins in a dystopian underworld of infinite dead-ends and culminates in a shattered realm where anything has become possible. The protagonist is Arturo, very much the anti-hero of his own story, a scrabbling grifter at the very bottom levels of society, living in the carcass of a planet while the elites fritter away their frivolous lives in Sky City. This book is the story of Arturo’s journey from nothing to everything.
Arturo, despite the humblest of beginnings, is a keen observer of the world and people around him and possesses an endless thirst for knowledge and experience. We initially meet Arturo in a Dickensian dystopia, just trying survive with his sister, but his quest for survival quickly morphs into a Copperfield-like pursuit for a better life across one of the more interesting cityscapes since the dark cities of Wolfe’s “Book of the New Sun” and Bellona in Delany’s “Dhalgren.”
The setting of the novel is uncertain. Could it be the near future? Perhaps. While there are indicators that this is so, it could also be set in the distant future, an alternate timeline, or on another planet. There are echoes of familiarity, but place names are used in odd ways, or out of step with what we expect. Vaguely familiar names sometimes lead nowhere, or have roots in mythology or heavy-metal bands. Genetic engineering (and other advanced technology) is common, so when we’re confronted with Sasquatches at one point in the novel, we’re not sure whether we’re dealing with survivals, artificial creatures, or aboriginals of some alien world. One scene in the novel takes place in a phantasmagorical zoo in which Neanderthals are among the exhibits…a character explains that the engineered Neanderthals are their ancestors, but mentions that homosapiens are also in their family tree.
This is a great novel for anyone looking for a science fiction epic that is challenging, fast-paced and entertaining. It will also certainly appeal to fans of crime and urban fiction who do not mind a setting that is not only outré but constantly evolving, much like the narrator protagonist. I look forward to reading more work from this author, but in “Sky City” he has set the bar rather high for himself.