I honestly did not expect this to be a mid-grade techno thriller novel when I first picked it up. Based on the front cover proclaiming “it’s already too late” and the back proclaiming “prepare yourself” I was expecting something quite different. To be fair, the description on the back is that of a novel, but I was expecting more like a prediction story of all the horrible things that are going to happen on Y2K. My particular copy is also signed by the author with the note “For Bill and Jeanne, Prepare and Survive…” So, I’m wondering how absolutely disappointed Bill and Jeanne were when nothing at all happened.
I also think the author totally lost control of his own story whilst he was writing it. The whole premise is that Y2K is going to happen, and the world will descend into chaos and anarchy, except the author creates a software firm run by a character named Mark Solvang (who totally feels like an author insert) who can totally solve Y2K if given enough time. In fact, he nearly does (well, his company does), but as the clock strikes midnight, things crash and fail anyway. Is it because Y2K is inevitable? Nope, it’s because of internal sabotage, traitors, and the Chinese – which sort of shoots his entire warning in the foot.
His narrative structure is also weird. It’s like he gets bored with telling the story from Character A’s perspective, so he wants to switch to Character B, but Character B’s story has advanced a few days beyond Character A, so we switch back and forth in time a lot, as much as a week at times. And sometimes when we switch, we get an actual date and time and sometimes we just get the date. And when we get the time (aside from on New Year’s Eve itself), it doesn’t really matter to the story, since I don’t really care if Character A is currently at 2:09 a.m. on January 2nd, because I know that as soon as we go to Character B, it’s going to be January 9th, so the 2:09 a.m. seems completely superfluous.
The world also seems to live in a complete vacuum, as absolutely no one reacts to the rolling Y2K problem. It hits Japan, Japan goes dark, Europe still plans massive parties. It hits Europe, Europe goes dark, the USA still plans massive parties. New York goes dark and people in Los Angeles are still ready for their party. Everyone is seemingly unaware that this is all happening. I know “communications are down” but that would make it more suspicious to me, not “oh well, must have been one hell of a party.”
At any rate, the plot moves forward with the Chinese feinting an attack on Hawaii which the US is barely able to fend off as they slowly repair the Navy’s computerized weapon systems, but in the chaos of Y2K, China seizes Taiwan and the Spratly Islands. Meanwhile, after the riots, looting, and fires are brought under control, the people of the United States begin to discover that they like living primitive lifestyles and even as the power comes back on, they decide to turn the lights back off.
It’s weird to me that the author describes that every light in the house turns on, as well as all the TVs and radios, when the power is restored. I mean, maybe I’m weird, but I only turn the lights on in the room I’m actively using, and even then, I find the dimmest of lights.
The author also reveals his far-right, pastoralist views in this novel. Early on, as the main character is on an interview spree about Y2K, the only interview put to page is one between him and Rush Limbaugh, in which Rush comes across as an entirely reasonable, rational, calm person truly concerned about the coming humanitarian crisis. A secondary character, who is a police officer, goes on a little rant about how were he anything other than a white male he could have any job he wanted and get promoted consummate to his skill level, but of course only women and minorities get promotions and jobs these days. And finally, of course, life without electricity, heat, communications, electronic entertainment, sanitation, etc., is far superior. We should all learn from Y2K that dry camping is the ideal form of living. Odd how humanity ever advanced beyond that…must be some sort of liberal, pro-minority plot…
It's funny to me that this novel ends in a cliffhanger, for it makes me wonder if the author was planning a follow-up sequel, but as he published this in 1998, he was, perhaps, unable to finish it before 2000, and when absolutely nothing happened as the calendar rolled over, perhaps he was too embarrassed to finish it.