From Publishers Weekly
"Where does the life end and the machine begin?" asks one of the cyberscientists in Robson's 1999 UK debut, now making its overdue American appearance after the critically acclaimed Natural History (2004). Yes, it's the same old AI question framed in Matrix-style allure, and many readers are likely to find the whole idea a little too familiar. Nonetheless, while Natural History is a superior read with a tighter plot, this messier treatment is also thought-provoking SF. When Anjuli O'Connell, an "AI psych" and self-described "human file server," discovers the body of fellow OptiNet employee and friend, Roy Croft, after he's uploaded his essence into 901, OptiNet's giant AI, Anjuli becomes involved in a deadly game. Is Roy, an anarchist and machine liberation advocate who interfaces with others through projected holographs of silver screen legends, dead or part of 901? Anjuli must find Roy's old diary, the "Source," and the key to the mystery. Roy's zealot father and Anjuli's testimony in an important trial further complicate the quest. Sometimes, the confessional style-narrative slows to a snail's pace, while Anjuli mulls over the puzzle pieces and takes a brief detour into a goofy subplot with her cyborg boyfriend. Still, this is a fascinating peek into the development of one of SF's brightest new stars.
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About the Author
Justina Robson is an author from Leeds in Yorkshire, England. She has been writing since she was a child in the 1970s and her first novel, Silver Screen, was published in August 1999. Her short stories have appeared in various magazines in the UK and the USA. Silver Screen was shortlisted for the Arthur C Clarke Award 1999 and the British Science Fiction Association Best Novel Award. Her second novel, Mappa Mundi, together with Silver Screen won the Amazon.co.uk Writers Bursary 2000 and was also shortlisted for the Arthur C Clarke Award 2001. Natural History, a far future novel, was published on April 18th 2003. The novel placed second in the 2004 John W Campbell award and was shortlisted for the Best Novel of 2003 in the British Science Fiction Association Awards. It was recently published in the USA by Bantam Dell in January 2005.
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