Mindset follows a small group of outcasts who are abandoned in space and forced to survive anyway they can with the limited resources available to them. It examines both the technical and social problems that the survivors face and suggests real solutions based on actual science. It’s slightly unorthodox as the focus is, quite deliberately, on the collective rather than any particular individual.
Three of my books, Returning, Mindset and Antithesis, have each been finalists in the Sir Julius Vogel Awards in the category of Best Adult Novel. These are the New Zealand Science Fiction awards.
The books I write are intended in the first instance to tell a good story and secondly "once the tale is told" to leave the reader with something to ponder. To this end, all my stories attempt to provide an original take on some commonly held belief, be it cultural, social or scientific.
Being a fan of both science fiction and classic murder mysteries, these tend to be common themes, with elements of both often combined in a single story.
As a person who likes to read a book in a single sitting, I limit each work to around forty-five or fifty thousand words. Unfashionable I know, but it's what I prefer.
Born in England in 1946, I moved to New Zealand with my parents and older brother at the age of four and, apart from five years in my late twenties spent traveling the globe, have lived here ever since. After a fairly rudimentary education, I found work as an Architectural Designer and this became a life-long occupation. I started writing late in 2006.
Mindset is a story basically of us. A future us where the world is divided between those with telepathy and those who don’t (AKA The Blanks). Most of the world is link by this telepathic ability, the internet is gone and so are most things, the world is almost a utopia where everyone can read the others mind. Basic communication needs are not required.
Then there’s those without telepathy. They are looked on with suspicion as their minds cannot be read. They are the undesirables. And the telepathic society has decided to put them aboard a ship and send them off to Mars.
Several ships to be exact and we meet this futuristic story with those being bundled to the final ship. Everything is automated, they have nothing to worry about, they are told. And they have not been lied to. Kind of. There are things they are not told, but they shan’t be mentioned here.
Mindset is a story of like-minded humans trying to survive. The story delves into social commentary but in a way that tells the story and doesn’t subtract from it. There is no Soapbox action going on in here.
For the most part, the story is tight and follows a set plot driven path. There is little characterization, but for the most part it is not needed. Although I do think that when they reached Mars and met some of the remaining members of a previous crew, the story dragged on a bit as the characters made up their minds and set a course of action, which led to a very satisfying conclusion.
This book is hard SF and will be an interesting read for into this genre.
Pat Whitaker has two books in this years short-list for the 2009 SJV awards; Mindset is one of them.
A Review of MINDSET, A Novel by Author Pat Whitaker
Review by Thomas C. Stone
It could be said that the novel MINDSET, by Pat Whitaker, is a story of survival, but the truth is, it is more than that. It is a story about the construction of a new society and the cooperation required between individuals first in order to survive, then to flourish. MINDSET begins in a future where Telepaths have risen to prominence and even dominant the population of Earth. The non-telepathic are an encumbrance to the new order and so are rounded up and sent to camps, isolating them from the rest of society. The final solution is to rid Earth of all non-telepaths and this is done by shipping them out to Mars. The story focuses on the last group to leave Earth.
Whitaker uses the premise to imagine how a cooperative group of people could form in the midst of dire circumstances. When the non-telepaths reach Mars, to their chagrin they discover the Mars settlement has collapsed and there is no way to reach the surface of the planet. Chaos reigns and only a handful of the previous settlers have survived. With only their own devices, a desperate new plan is hatched, one that will take them in an entirely new direction – farther into space to the resource-rich asteroid belt.
The group must endure seemingly insurmountable technical difficulties while adhering to a new set of social rules. Author Whitaker displays his passion for the sciences as he describes approach vectors and velocities, fuel consumption problems, and practical space navigation. There is plenty of science in MINDSET but not at the expense of character development. His characters struggle to exist in a closed environment with an uncertain future. They recognize that without a cooperative effort, they are doomed to failure. Problems and solutions are discussed and analyzed without the aegis of an elected leader and it may be that for some readers, this is the most interesting aspect of the book. Could such a cooperative society evolve out of need without the force of law and without a hierarchy of authority?
MINDSET is a good read for a rainy Sunday afternoon. It is a tale of the perseverance of the human spirit and the ultimate triumph of that spirit. Additionally, there are surprising twists to Whitaker’s story that will delight the most jaded reader. Whitaker combines imagination with rock-solid science in offering up MINDSET.
Pat Whitaker's book 'Mindset' is a page turner that I couldn’t put down until the end. Although science fiction, Whitaker's realistic characters confront many issues, which could easily apply to today's trials and tribulations in many societies. Telepathic humanity sees those not telepathic as a problem they wish to resolve without causing mass guilt. During their deportation to Mars, the curiosity of the main character, ‘Blake’ leads other non-telepaths to join him in learning and creating alternatives to survive during uncertain times. The sheer determination of this group, without any promise or leadership, makes this compelling reading. The attitude of having nothing to lose drives the characters to explore options, learning from scratch, technology and a means to work together without judgment, taking all opinions and theories seriously.
Obviously, the author has done his research into space travel, which comes across in Mindset. A book I would highly recommend that goes beyond the journey of just a group of travelers.
Succinctly: Serious lack of 'show me', 'tells' you everything instead. Extremely cardboard characters, lack of development, almost no emotion. Handy that everything works out 'just so' every time for them as they toddle their merry way across the universe. (Plot seems overly contrived.) The 'science' may all be realistically imaginable, but the story just jumps past any real working-through of issues to come up with solutions, or just fails to follow through on things it built up. Add some negatives for the grotesque and misleading cover illustration - thought this was a horror book when I first saw it! Yuck!