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Secret Realms [Paperback]

Tom Cool (Author)
3.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (8 customer reviews)


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Product Details

  • Paperback
  • Publisher: Tor Books (1998)
  • ASIN: B000OTGSW6
  • Average Customer Review: 3.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (8 customer reviews)

More About the Author

See www.tomcool.us

Tom Cool is a true name.

I was born in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, in 1954, when the Earth had only one satellite. I grew up in Rennerdale, a small, peaceful town nestled in an Appalachian valley. It was an anarchic paradise, with no crime, police, traffic lights or any apparent government, although there was a volunteer fire department down by the pond.

That, and a huge Nike missile site that loomed on the western ridge. Its giant radar rotated above the town for most of my childhood. The Nike site's mission was to shoot down Soviet bombers before they could nuke Pittsburgh.

The book that hooked me on science fiction was THE AMSIRS AND THE IRON THORN, by Algis Budrys, 1967, which concerns a small human settlement dominated by a huge alien artefact.

At the age of fifteen, I wrote my first science fiction novel, SENTINELS, which has since been lost in fire.

In 1976, I graduated from Penn State's creative writing program with honors, in the honors program of English. Thus prepared for life, for the next few years, I worked as a hodcarrier in northern Ohio and backpacked throughout north and central America, eventually ending up in the Guatemalan jungle with no money and no official papers. How I got home from there is another story.

In 1979, for a variety of reasons, I joined the United States Navy. During my naval career, I served at stations in Denver, Norfolk, Panama City, Monterey, Pearl Harbor, Alameda, Washington D.C. and Miami. I made four deployments in aircraft carrier battle groups to the Mediterranean, the Pacific, the Indian Ocean and the Arabian Gulf.

The Navy treated me well, sending me to the Naval Postgraduate School in Monterey, California, where in 1987, I earned a Master of Science in Computer Science. Later I worked as an agent of the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency and the Office of Naval Intelligence, developing software in support of military intelligence analysis. My final tour of duty was as the Deputy Director of Intelligence for Plans and Programs, United States Southern Command. I retired a commander in 1999.
Tom Cool and the Lone Sailor statue, Navy Memorial, Washington D.C.
Two sailors, circa 1998

After taking a year off, I began working as a computer engineer for The MITRE Corporation, a not-for-profit company.

My published works to date are three science fiction novels, SOLDIER OF LIGHT (with John de Lancie), SECRET REALMS and INFECTRESS. My stories are "Universal Emulators" (Fantasy & Science Fiction, July 1997) and "Frozen," which was included in the anthology TREACHERY and TREASON in early 2000.

My beloved wife is Eva. We have two wonderful children, Natasha Katinka Cool and Tai Tai "Fiery Rage" Cool.

 

Customer Reviews

8 Reviews
5 star:
 (4)
4 star:    (0)
3 star:
 (2)
2 star:
 (2)
1 star:    (0)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
3.8 out of 5 stars (8 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Not quite successful, March 6, 2006
This review is from: Secret Realms (Hardcover)
'Secret Realms' has the makings of a pretty good story. There is love, and pain, and a burgeoning sense of humanity and self-knowledge. There is a cast of archetypal characters. Actually, not only are they archetypal, their names pretty much point them out, so you don't even have to figure out who is who. Dreamer is dreamy, Snake is sneaky, and Trickster's got plenty a trick up his sleeve.

The premise of the book is that there is a bunch of characters living in this virtual reality environment, where they go through increasingly complicated battle problems. They aren't aware that they are training to be warriors in the next war against Japan. They're also not aware that their bodies are actually being kept in a cage, encased in some sort of strand which holds them up and responds to their movements. Like most of the technological phenomena in this book, these strands' actual method of operation remained pretty unclear.

The main character has growing revelations and epiphanies concerning the nature of reality. Finally, with the help of an outside character who only interacts in the VR environment sometimes and is not trapped there, he discovers the workings of the world and how to manipulate it. Then he frees the other people in the VR so they can be in the real world, and then all kinds of bad stuff happens. As the book jacket puts it so well, "And the first thing they discover is pain."

The VR environment is rendered masterfully, and is very entertaining. Despite knowing that the world was not real, I found the scenes in the environment to be quite engaging. For the characters, the world clearly is real, and their ties to it feel very believable and genuine.

However, this book has some other major problems. First, there is the incredibly cheesy and moralistic dialogue and themes. There are passages in this book which make Ayn Rand's "Anthem" look strikingly subtle. Like, "The tribe, he realized, was humankind. Together, they were all victims in the same realm. The realm of the real world. Victims of war."

Secondly, the technical aspects of this book are hopelessly muddled. The rules of the VR environment and its interaction with the real world remain extremely unclear at best and clearly impossible at worst. I am not sure whether or not such an interface could be described in a realistic manner, but it does not happen in this book. In general, the main character's technical feats are conveyed so implausibly that they merely leave the reader baffled.

But, all in all, it was a pretty good read. The author seems to be striving for something more insightful and literary than a mere sci-fi yarn, but never quite hits it - the thematic aspects of the book are too moralistic and blatant. I wish he would have been content to write a good VR/survival story, and spent a little more time focusing on a plausible atmosphere and plotline. I would recommend this book if you are looking for sci-fi paperback type story: some short term entertainment and a cyberspace fix, but not much substance.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Excellent story -- a daring concept made convincing., July 2, 1999
No one can deny that the provisions for modern (global scale) warfare are closing the gap between the training simulations and actual combat with a bewildering rapidity. Secret Realms deals with the use of an enclosed virtual simulator which has been designed for the purpose of developing the entire human potential for tactical and strategic thinking in select individuals who have been ruthlessly isolated from actual real-life experiences in their virtual simulator from infancy (a project implemented by those ultimate pragmatists, the Chinese). I personally have little use for computer games, but the author has managed to make the virtual trainee's imaginative environment fascinating, and more important, has made the characters alive and important to the reader in their bizarre context. Tom Cool has combined first-rate story-telling with an exceptional visual imagination to produce a great story.
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5.0 out of 5 stars Incredibly detail-oriented, November 26, 2002
Having only read a few sci-fi novels in my lifetime, I took a chance and read "Secret Realms" by Tom Cool. I was very impressed with it. The author spent great effort in being very detail-oriented. It was obvious that he had the technical knowledge to go with his military background in creating a plot that had depth and high interest. I found the concept of growing up in a virtual world almost mind boggling, but accept its plausibility; the concept took me into new territory of thought as I read it. I would highly recommend (and already have recommended) Cool's book. I have already put in an order for his first book, "Infectress," and am looking forward to receiving it.
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