2020-03-07 New Zealand Listener

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54 LISTENER MARCH 7 2020


by STEVE NEWALL

H


aving established a narrative
device allowing a future society
to tamper with events in previ-
ous eras in 2014’s The Peripheral,
science-fiction icon William
Gibson seemingly couldn’t resist the
temptation to do the same himself with
its sequel, Agency.
He spent a year rethinking the book in
the wake of the 2016 US presidential elec-
tion, then decided to set his novel in the
future as well as our very recent past – or,
at least, a version of it.
In the earlier of Agency’s intertwined
chronologies, Hillary Clinton is president
and the UK didn’t vote for Brexit. But it’s
hardly a utopia and the world is on the
brink of nuclear war.
The President exists mostly in the back-
ground, her blessedly defeated opponent
seldom mentioned by name, if occasion-
ally in familiar gross detail: “She was
looking at how the artist had rendered his
hands. Grabby.”
Instead, at the forefront of the novel is
Verity, a tech-head “app whisperer” who
takes on a job to test a new digital assis-
tant, a setup that evokes Gibson’s work
in the early 2000s when his fascinating
futurism was overtaken by contemporary
culture. “The future is already here – it’s
just not evenly distributed,” he said in
2003 at the time of Pattern Recognition, his
first novel with a contemporary setting.
Echoing this sentiment, Verity’s
assistant uses cutting-edge artificial intel-
ligence and introduces itself as “Eunice”.
Barely hours into sentience, it is globally
connected and learning at a phenomenal

pace. Eunice’s capabilities – her agency



  • are what optimists of the future need
    to avoid World War III, and they need
    Verity’s help.
    If that’s not enough of a ticking clock,
    the people who made Eunice want to put
    her back in her box right away.


As ever, the author demonstrates his
trademark adeptness in conveying com-
plex ideas in detail-rich yet economical
fashion, even if Agency might not deliver
quite the thrill of discovery as its predeces-
sor did.

A


s with The Peripheral, those inter-
vening in this era are 22nd-century
survivors of “the jackpot”, a near-
apocalypse survived by a fifth of the
world’s population, now rich in both
resources and technology. Uber-rich future
humans have developed the ability to
manipulate “stubs”, alternate universes
accessed through powerful quantum com-
puting of mysterious origins. Stubs can be
privately owned and collected as play-
things. Gibson exploits this storytelling

Hillary Clinton is


president and the UK
didn’t vote for Brexit.

But it’s hardly a utopia.


potential with glee; it provides him with
the means to tell interlinking stories set
in two time periods, free from time-travel
paradoxes.
The gang that got together in The
Peripheral focuses here on the new Trump-
free stub and its looming crisis in which
the duo of Verity and Eunice might be the
only hope.
Eunice’s near-omnipotence is great
for Verity to have on her side in what
becomes something of a hectic odd-couple
race to the finish, even if this forces Verity


  • as with other characters in the book
    in their own ways – to place her trust in
    unseen actors with opaque motivations,
    casting the title in a new light.
    Agency will please Gibson fans – it func-
    tions more than effectively as both a sci-fi
    thriller and a warning that there may be
    more to worry about than the latest politi-
    cal developments – but it doesn’t prove
    quite as head-scratchingly satisfying as
    The Peripheral. Perhaps that’s because you
    can’t experience the thrill of jumping into
    this bold sci-fi universe
    twice. That shouldn’t
    dent enthusiasm for
    a final instalment in
    this trilogy, and with
    any luck it won’t take
    another Trump to
    make it happen. l
    AGENCY, by William


AL Gibson (Viking, $37)


AM


Y


Playthings of


the powerful


A present hacked by


malevolent forces


from the future is


threatened with


nuclear war.


BOOKS&CULTURE


William Gibson: conveying
complex ideas in detail-rich
yet economical fashion.
Free download pdf