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Archform: Beauty [Mass Market Paperback]

L. E. Modesitt Jr. (Author)
4.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (13 customer reviews)

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Book Description

May 18, 2003
Most readers recognize L. E. Modesitt, Jr. as the author of a favorite fantasy series, be it The Magic of Recluce or The Spellsong Cycle. It's always a special treat when he turns his hand again to SF, and Archform: Beauty is no exception.

Four centuries in the future, the world is rich -- nanomachines watch the health of the wealthy and manufacture food and gadgets for everybody -- but no utopia, as we see in the lives of five very different people. A singing teacher suffers for her music and fights bureaucracy and apathy. A news researcher delivers the essential background details but can't help looking deeper and wondering about the real story behind the grim incidents that make the headlines. A police investigator, assigned to study trends, begins to see a truly sinister pattern behind a series of seemingly unrelated crimes and deaths. A politician aids his constituents, fights the good fight and tries to get re-elected without compromising his principles. A ruthless businessman strives to make his family powerful, wealthy and independent.

Theirs is a world where technology takes care of everyone's basic needs but leaves most people struggling to extract a meaningful life from a world crowded with wonders but empty of commitment and human connection. Alternating the voices and experiences of these five characters in a tour de force of imaginative creation, Modesitt overlaps, combines and builds their disparate stories into a brilliant tale of future crime and investigation, esthetic challenge and personal triumph. In the same way that he has built fantasy landscapes of surpassing fascination, Modesitt creates a believable future, one imbued with a deep understanding of the way politics works and how people act and react when their sense of themselves, of justice and truth, is exploited by others for power and control. When there's nothing left to need or want, will beauty live on in people's lives or disappear forever? L.E. Modesitt, Jr. asks difficult questions, sets himself unlikely challenges and, once again delivers an absorbing tale that enlightens, entertains and uplifts all at once.

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Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com Review

Technology, philosophy, politics, and mystery combine in this well-told tale of murder and corporate machination. Archform: Beauty weaves together the stories of five people in 24th-century North America who find themselves involved in a political conspiracy that spawns a string of murders. An old-style singer despairs over graceless contemporary music that uses overlaid resonances to emotionally manipulate the listener; a police investigator identifies a disturbing pattern of suicides and murders; a powerful senator and an equally powerful corporate tycoon pursue their own agendas toward a potentially violent collision; and a news researcher with a flair for background finds himself drawn into all of their affairs as pieces of various puzzles begin to come together.

Modessit handles the five voices well, particularly those of the detective, singer, and researcher, and sets their stories against a well-realized social and political background, incorporating interesting philosophical questions about reality and beauty into the action without slowing the pace. --Roz Genessee --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

From Publishers Weekly

Best known for his fantasy fiction (the Saga of Recluce), Modesitt has outdone himself in this highly original SF novel, using future technology to satirize and amplify the gulf that separates science from art. In the 24th century, politics remains much the same, with radical, Islamic fundamentalism still posing a threat. The author rapidly introduces five separate narrators, but since he delineates each with the skill of a latter-day Dickens, the reader doesn't feel overwhelmed. Nor does Modesitt overdo the future slang, which is always clear in context (what was once the United States is now "NorAm"). One of the five narrators, Senator Cannon of the Deseret District, insists on sticking to his principles in seeking re-election. Meanwhile, Lt. Eugene Chiang, who shows how little police work has changed, is investigating the "impossible" suicides of a string of concertgoers. Chiang's engaging exchanges with classical music teacher Cornett illuminate the ways technology can undermine an art form. One is reminded of Arthur C. Clarke's tale "The Ultimate Melody," as Cornett battles to make others appreciate music as art instead of as product. Set against a background of biological terrorism, Modesitt's tale explores social issues (only the rich can afford privacy as well as injections of microscopic, medical robots to stay healthy) sure to resonate with many readers. This brilliant novel is as thought provoking as it is entertaining.
Copyright 2002 Cahners Business Information, Inc. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

Product Details

  • Mass Market Paperback: 352 pages
  • Publisher: Tor Science Fiction (May 18, 2003)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0765343649
  • ISBN-13: 978-0765343642
  • Product Dimensions: 6.8 x 4.5 x 1 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 5.6 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (13 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #818,984 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

After spending years writing poetry, political speeches and analyses, as well as economic and technical reports on extraordinarily detailed and often boring subjects, I finally got around to writing my first short story, which was published in 1973. I kept submitting and occasionally having published stories until an editor indicated he'd refuse to buy any more until I wrote a novel. So I did, and it was published in 1982, and I've been writing novels -- along with a few short stories -- ever since.

If you want to know more, you can visit my website at www.lemodesittjr.com.

 

Customer Reviews

13 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
4.2 out of 5 stars (13 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

7 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Well thought out future thriller, August 22, 2003
By 
lb136 "lb136" (New York, NY USA) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: Archform: Beauty (Mass Market Paperback)
In "Archform Beauty" the prolific L.E. Modesitt, master of the plain tale plainly told, opts for something more complicated--an intricate five-voices point of view (a singer, a reporter, a cop, a politician, and a businessman), and a tangled plot line. He resolves everything nicely, as the five protagonists, who don't know each other when the book begins, converge by the end.

While the book is set in the 25th century, it has more of a near-future feel (change the Martian Republic to some rogue state on earth and it's likely the technology described is no more than a generation or two away). People communicate instantly via "linking"; fabricated food is fabricated in "formulators"; cars are electric.

And the author doesn't relish the future he imagines--one in which "resonance" enhances music, and maybe manipulates minds as well. In short, it's a world without beauty, and this irks Mr. Modesitt more than somewhat, and he'll probably get you on his side also.

It's seemlessly written and fast paced. And it's less of a whodunit than it is a "how will they figure it out?" You know what the bad guys are up to before the good guys do and, as Alfred Hitchcock knew well, that is the kind of scenario that creates the most suspense of all.

Notes and asides: Sigh. Like most futuristas, Modesitt feels compelled to make reference to "the holos." But since he actually describes how this tech might work instead of search and replacing "movies" with "holos" after he completed his first draft, I am not deducting any stars. The shortening of city names is disconcerting and not believable and sometime merely silly (Denv for Denver). Paris has been around a long time, and nobody's ever tried to shorten it to Pris.

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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Beauty in Action, August 31, 2007
By 
This review is from: Archform: Beauty (Mass Market Paperback)
Archform: Beauty (2002) is a standalone SF novel set about four centuries in the future. After the collapse of the Commonacracy, North America was re-unified, with the capital in Denv. The political climate is very different, however, as are the laws and enforcement. A major change is the privacy laws.

In this novel, Luara Cornett is an Adjunct Professor of Music at the University of Denv. She teaches two classes in Music Appreciation and has six private students in Voice. Still, university pay is not enough even for her rather frugal lifestyle. She also does backsinging for rez-based net commercials and occasionally she is hired for art song recitals.

Lieutenant Eugene Tang Chiang is Trends Analysis Coordinator for the Denv District Department of Public Safety. His staff is finding signs of social disturbance, but not in any particular location. The new strain of Ebol14 from the West Asian biowar labs is causing some of the unrest, but the unexplained overdoses and suicides among the young are the most unsettling.

Jude Parsfal is a senior researcher for NetPrime. He searches out historical data and interesting angles to current news stories. He is working on the background of water diversion within the southwest, but his editor diverts him to the McCall death. While the initial investigation concluded that this death had resulted from an accident, the Regional Advocate now claims that her husband had reprogrammed the electral's defense screens to crush the car.

Eldon Cannon is the Senator for Deseret District. He is Chairman of the Economics and Commerce Committee. In the upcoming elections, Cannon is facing a strong bid for his seat by Hansen. His campaign consultant has discovered that Hansen will be depending heavily on a new type of rez-ad tailored for each genotypical group. Cannon decides to anticipate his opponent by using the new techniques early in the campaign and with a positive message.

Christopher Kemal is the new family head since the death of his father. He had been running the family business for ten years, but the death will now make it official. He moves from the office of the President to that of the CEO after the funeral and then continues his normal routine. He has a private conversation with Evan McCall about the death of his wife and the DPS suspicions, then discusses his father's will.

In this story, Luara performs art and classical songs at a private party and gets into a conversation with an older man about music. She passionately argues that music is an essential element of civilization. It promotes rational thinking and accelerates learning. When the older man points out that rezrap and rezpop have widespread followings, Luara declares that they are not music in the same sense as classical works.

Senator Cannon thinks on the subject and has his staff prepare a small prototype program to increase the amount of music appreciation in the colleges. He also suggests that the program will make good publicity for his campaign. Then he proposes a small documentary of the subject with an interview of Luara Cornett as the centerpiece. His campaign manager quietly laughs at the idea, then points out that Luara has been doing the backsinging for his rez-ads all along.

When Evan McCall seemingly commits suicide out of remorse by jumping off his sixth floor balcony, Lieutenant Chiang is asked to focus on the case. Certain aspects strongly suggest that the death was not suicide, but murder. He gets his friend Kama O'Doull of Westside Physical Systems to check the building systems with a couple of DPS techs. They find signs of tampering.

This story digs into the affairs of the Kemal family. Although they are protected by the privacy laws, physical evidence of wrongdoing provides a hole into these affairs. Then information about foreign influence in Noram corporations becomes available and the privacy barriers crack open a little further. Chris Kemal has been a very bad boy.

Beauty is in the eye of the beholder. One person's beauty is another individual's noise. Still, some forms of beauty are admired widely and for a long time.

As the title implies, this story portrays each protagonist as creating or protecting beauty in their lives. It describes examples of beauty in music, politics, the media, problem solving and family guidance. Yet such efforts sometimes conflict with each other. In reality, the sense of beauty is a product of value systems, for that which is valued is seen as beautiful.

If beauty can be ranked, then the scope and duration of each form of beauty might be the key factors. Music is an abstract and universal form of beauty, although it is an acquired taste. Politics sometimes is a quieter, but still long lasting form of beauty. The media can convey a more restricted and fleeting sort of beauty, although recordings provide some persistence.

Problem solving is probably very constrained in scope and consequence, but can occasionally have rather widespread effects, especially when these solutions create new technology. Family guidance produces the most limited form of beauty in many respects and often is the most likely to conflict with similar efforts; still, raising a family is a very widespread artform.

The author is much like Senator Cannon in at least one respect. He is married to a woman much like Luara Cornett and obviously listens to her about music. One hopes that his wife approves of the portrayal.

Highly recommended for Modesitt fans and for anyone else who enjoys tales of human relationships, political machinations, and true romance.

-Arthur W. Jordin
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5 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The way near-future novels should be written!, October 20, 2002
By 
This review is from: Archform: Beauty (Hardcover)
Mr. Modesitt is one of my favorite authors of all time. His character development, focusing on regular people who *influence* history by reacting to situtations they're forced into gives each and every novel a depth and realism not often found.
In Archform: Beauty, Mr. Modesitt follows one timeline, through the eyes and situtations of 5 distinct people. Sometimes, the story is advanced through one person, and a time period, be it hours or days, may pass before the next 'chapter' is begun and the next character picks up the story. Othertimes, you'll be reading a chapter that overlaps with a previous chapter.
Regardless, this book is complex and believable. Futuristic technology that is just a *streach* beyond what we have and know to be possible. Politics that are infinitely believeable, with water disputes, terrorism, new diseases springing up, the 'haves and have-nots', and obtuse threats from the 'third-world' equivalent. And through it all, individuals who are worried about their jobs, families, and finding the money to pay for necessary repairs to their homes. This is *life*, just a bit in the future.

The most impressive thing about this book is simply that Mr. Modesitt presents extra or extraneous situtations and items that you will try desperately to figure out how they all tie in together, until in the last portion of the book you realize the actual thrust of the book, and that the additional items are all just the depth and coloring of the world. Amazing work here.

I gave this book 5 stars, although it is not perfect. Mr. Modesitt often introduces new words to books, and I feel seldom exactly defines them adequately. I tend to appreciate explanations laid out simply and obviously, and in this book there are several new terms presented which you must figure out their intent throughout the book.

I highly recommend this book; it is among the best developed I've read, and an example of the continuing excellence of my favorite author!

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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
As the last notes of the orchestra fade into oblivion, the audience surges to its feet, the applause thundering across the hall. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
nanite systems, rez stuff, privacy cone, privacy solicitor, holo projection, holo display, defense screens, holo image
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Senator Cannon, Jude Parsfal, Les Kerras, Martian Republic, Nanette Iveson, Lieutenant Chiang, Professor Cornett, Dean Donald, Moulin Noir, Southern Diversion, Chris Kemal, Dean Smythers, Heber Smith, Luara Cornett, Coordinator Dewey, Golden Age, Marc Oler, Uncle Chris, Crescent Productions, Deseret District, Emile Brazelton, Ernesto Tazzi, Red Moon, District Advocate, Elletch Bridge
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