[7/10]
The problem with troubleshooting is that trouble shoots back.
- Anonymous
I put back the series after book seven, thinking I have arrived both at a sort of closure for the main storyline [the chase after a rogue magical practitioner] and at saturation point with a given setting [I got lost among one too many tie-in novellas].
A vacation in London induced me to come back to the investigations of Peter Grant, as a backdrop to my own rambling walks through the city, and I must say some of the old charm of the series is back. I can think of few better guides for my steps than Peter’s passionate and funny asides about architectural oddities, his multicultural references, jazz soundtrack and interest in exotic foodstuffs.
The fact that the present book is actually a police procedural dealing with a hot issue in today’s computer controlled world is an added bonus.
“Somebody has to watch the machines,” said Mrs. Chin. “We are the people at the Library who do that.”
“Watch the machines for what?”
“Signs of life,” she said.
The debate about how we define, develop, deploy and control Artificial Intelligence is one that should have all of us involved. Peter Grant, following clues about the theft of some ancient punch-card music tiles, examples of the earliest form of mechanical calculator developed by Charles Babbage, lands an undercover job as a security consultant for the Serious Cybernetic Organization, a Silicon Valley transplant into London.
SCO is led by one of those proverbial American tech billionaires cast in the mould of Elon Musk et Co. This Terrence Skinner has a secret project in development at the isolated upper floor of Serious Cybernetics Organization, but he also feels the need for personal bodyguards around his person.
Peter Grant feels quite at home among the geek population of software developers at SCO, and hopes the job will allow him a less dangerous pastime while he offers support to the Bulge, as the abode of his growing twins inside lovely river goddess Beverley became known.
But the job of hunting for spooks and other magic practitioners is never safe, so Peter must rely on his whole support team from previous books, starting with his boss Thomas Nightingale, his contacts in the Metropolitan police force and his contacts with the faeries and river deities.
I wish these secondary characters could have played a bigger role in the current episode, but it was good enough with Peter in the lead role and with several new faces introduced. Mostly because the theme of Artificial Intelligence interest me deeply [I started writing code on punch cards in the 80s], but also because Peter is up to his old tricks as a tongue-in-cheek narrator, always spot on with a pop-culture reference, even if some of them leave me baffled. Zebedee, anyone?
You can always tell when a geek is making a knowing reference, and this was definitely one of those. Although what it was a reference to, I would have to look up later.
Anyway, there’s a lot of Douglas Adams and 2001: A Space Odyssey and table-top role playing games to satisfy me on this point. Although I don’t think I saw Japanese tentacle manga referenced as cephalophilia before. One of my favourite moments is meeting again with Molly and with her artistic fae sister at the Folly, one busy cooking, the other following her models around with an easel and paints.
Pale-skinned, she had a narrow face with sharp features and black, almond-shaped eyes. She would have looked like something from ‘Downton Abbey’ but only if they’d had a Halloween special directed by Guillermo del Toro.
The last Easter Egg for me appeared during a picnic in Regent Park, organized by Beverley and filled with all sorts of ethnic culinary goodies, among them staples of Romanian cuisine brought by my compatriots to the shores of Albion: zacusca, telemea and papara.
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In conclusion, a good return to the series, not quite as gripping as the earlier books but with a good plot about Deep Thought, an A. I. with a twist.