From Publishers Weekly
Reality and virtual reality meet in Chapman's charming and suspenseful second novel, following Raw Data. Bondsperson Lorna Donatello approaches San Francisco computer fraud investigators Julie Blake and her partner/lover Vic Paoli to find bail-jumper Arnie Lufkin. Lufkin, a hacker accused of stealing half a million dollars from his employers, had been working on a revolutionary VR program. Lorna gives the investigators a CD-ROM, which she had mistakenly thought was a music CD, on which, she says, is Lufkin's latest project. Intrigued, the investigators agree to look into the case, but before they start, Julie finds a threatening poem on her computer screen when she logs on. She and Vic track Lufkin to an employment headhunter who, though she may have helped him after he skipped bail, is now dead of poisoning. After Julie "witnesses" the murder on the CD, the duo is convinced that Lufkin, who was reported as having jumped from the Golden Gate Bridge, is not only alive but dangerous. Chapman's computer tale is reader-friendly entertainment.
Copyright 1994 Reed Business Information, Inc.
--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.
Julie Blake, first introduced in
Raw Data (1991), returns in her second appearance, and it's about time, too. Again set in the Silicon Valley/San Francisco area and featuring computer nerds, this tale finds Julie about to open her own business investigating computer fraud, in partnership with Vic Paoli, her very hunky boyfriend. Their affair has progressed quite nicely, but their business is going nowhere. When Lorna Donatello, owner of a bail-bond business, asks them to find her missing boyfriend, Julie declines. But when it turns out that the boyfriend is Arnie Lufkin, the best-known virtual-reality programmer in the business, who has recently been arrested for embezzling half a million by hacking into his employer's general-ledger software, Vic persuades Julie that they should take the job even if it's not exactly computer fraud. Julie reluctantly agrees and almost immediately becomes the victim of a hacker, who interrupts her computer to warn her to back off from the search. This only whets her appetite, of course, and soon she is tracking Arnie by using the virtual-reality programs he left with Lorna. Chapman obviously knows the computer business inside out, and she uses it to great effect in this deftly plotted, wonderfully intriguing mystery. The only complaint is that we had to wait three years for Julie's second adventure--let's hope for a third in a third of the time.
Stuart Miller
--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.