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Mappa Mundi (Paperback)

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Key Phrases: White Horse, Mappa Mundi, Deer Ridge (more...)
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (5 customer reviews)

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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

Starred Review. British author Robson's third novel to appear in the U.S. (after Natural History and Silver Screen) maintains throat-tightening suspense from its teasingly enigmatic introduction of its major characters to its painful conclusion that evil will succeed if well-meaning people try to achieve good at any cost. "Matter is only energy with information and identity was only information" is the guiding hypothesis of a number of idealists attempting to improve humanity through "Mappa Mundi," a mind-altering program. FBI specialist Jude Westhorpe, who's part Cherokee, tracks soulless Mikhail Guskov, the mastermind of a plot to steal the program's secrets, while fey genius-level British psychologist Natalie Armstrong fights inner battles against a father she can never please and her own debilitating self-pity. Meanwhile, the CIA and Pentagon work on developing mind-control technology worse than anything George Orwell imagined in 1984. Shortlisted for the 2001 Arthur C. Clarke Award, this near-future SF thriller presents convincing characters caught in profound moral dilemmas brought home through exquisite attention to plot details and setting. (Sept.)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

From Booklist

The living human brain has finally been mapped, and there is software in development that can read and write to living minds. Psychiatric psychologist Natalie Armstrong sees in this an opportunity to help people with depression and other mental disorders. The military sees it as an opportunity for good old-fashioned mind control. FBI agent Jude Westhorpe, on the trail of a cold war criminal with his fingers in every imaginable pie, and Natalie are thrown together after Jude's sister is nearly killed in what appears to be a test of mind-control software. Jude seeks Natalie out for answers, and they wind up working together in a race to keep the technology out of hands that will abuse its more sinister possibilities. Robson's take on the problems associated with anything that can rewrite a human personality is a complex one, and also a solidly written, entertaining story. Regina Schroeder
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

Product Details

  • Paperback: 523 pages
  • Publisher: Pyr; 1st Edition/1st Printing edition (September 5, 2006)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1591024919
  • ISBN-13: 978-1591024910
  • Product Dimensions: 9 x 6 x 1.3 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.5 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (5 customer reviews)
  • Amazon.com Sales Rank: #1,081,980 in Books (See Bestsellers in Books)

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Justina Robson
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Average Customer Review
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14 of 14 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Excellent, well-written read!, October 10, 2006
The first thing I read of Robson's was her LIVING NEXT DOOR TO THE GOD OF LOVE, which I wasn't too thrilled with. However, I recognized a fine writing talent at work, and since MAPPA MUNDI certainly sounded like a very different story, I decided to give Robson another chance.

I'm so glad I did.

First off, I'm still enthralled and amused by the cleverness of this book. It took me a hundred pages to understand why, but the book's divided into four parts: "Legend", "Compass Rose", "Map", and "Update". "Legend" is, at first glance, very odd: each chapter is focused on a character, and they read like vignettes, or short stories. It's odd, but I stuck with it because Robson has a marvelous way of capturing the intangible. Childhood, emotion, human reaction. All of this is jam-packed in the very beginning of the story, which kept me reading, even when I didn't know what was going on.

What I figured out, once I reached "Compass Rose", is that each part is like an element of a map: "Legend" is the key. It sets up the players of the novel by giving you a kernel of who they were at one point in their lives. It's very personal, and makes every single one of them human. "Compass Rose", then, gives us the direction of the story. The inciting incident that brings all the characters together. And of course, "Map" is the story itself. And "Update" is more of a sidenote, an epilogue that lets the reader know what's come out of all these events. A rather non-traditional part of the book, but still cool. Note the mosquitoes.

I can't stress how wonderfully the story is done. In the hands of other writers, this would've been a mess teeming with coincidence, but here, it just worked. I think part of what sold this for me was the fact I met the characters independent of each other, so once I realized their paths were crossing in more ways than one in the story, I was really excited to see how it would all play out. Better still, Robson does an excellent job with her antagonists. Not a single character in here is flat: every one is well portrayed and has its own level of heartbreak. Robson excels at human dynamics in this book.

It's also generally incredibly hard for the reader to know what's going on when their protagonist doesn't. It's easy to see the protagonist as stupid for not seeing the "obvious" clues in front of him/her (anyone who's watched the show Alias knows what I mean), but in this book, it works fabulously. I think it's because Robson takes great care with her characters and plot, making sure that each character is acting true to himself/herself, so that a real tension is created between people because the reader can't wait to figure out how this house of cards is going to collapse.

Plot itself? Very well done. I like how things tie together, and while I always zone out a bit on the science aspects of science fiction (I know, that makes me a bad science fiction reader), this works really well. I liked seeing the different levels of how the science worked in the story (some where this is called a medical thriller, and that would fit the bill), and how everything, in the end, played out like it was supposed to.

Overall, this book left me very satisfied, and it's something I can easily recommend to anyone reading or writing SF. This does just about everything well, and since Robson's a stylist, the prose is almost always a joy to read. I will warn that she has a wonderful handle on metaphor, but because this is speculative fiction, there are times, especially at the beginning, where one isn't sure if what's happening is literal or not. This is definitely not a deal breaker, and this isn't a problem once you get into the story itself. But it is something to be aware of. :)

I'll definitely be looking into more of her books.
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6 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars terrific thought provoking medical science fiction mystery, September 3, 2006
In England research psychologist Dr. Natalie Armstrong diligently works on mapping the human brain so that physicians will one day be able to mend traumatized brains and truly cure the mentally ill. She is closing in on her objective thanks in part to MAPPA MUNDI software.

As Natalie knows she nears achieving her life's goal, FBI Specialists Jude Westhorpe and Mary Delany investigate the activities of a Russian defector Mikhail Guskov who has been involved in gene mapping and other scientific breakthroughs. Jude and Mary believe that Mikhail has plans for Natalie's research and are assigned to prevent him from doing so. However across the Atlantic, Jude, though afraid, realizes he is no longer an obscure field agent as someone wants him dead; he assumes it is Mikhail while Natalie is stunned that instead of freeing humanity, her nanotechnology is wanted by powerful entities to mentally enslave people.

This is a terrific thought provoking medical science fiction mystery that grips the audience with its theme that good intentions can lead to bad endings if abused by those in charge. Readers will ponder the options between thought control slaves vs. healthy and happy people as initially most of the audience will say no that is in no way possible, but soon begin to realize it is absolutely plausible; even without the nano technology, manipulation is the norm rationalized to anchor the power base. Justina Robson provides a powerful thriller that will haunt fans who will compare events to what is going on today as science and politics are manipulated to serve selfish purposes.

Harriet Klausner

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0 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Not Free SF Reader, October 21, 2007
This review is from: Mappa Mundi (Paperback)
Mind control structure struggle.


When I started this it seemed to me to be like something you would get if you crossed Gregory Benford and John Le Carre.

Or, rather interesting from the beginning.

The heart of the matter is research into a project that will enable the altering of people's minds and the way they think via organic programming, even administered as a spreading virus.

In a book like mentioned at the beginning you will of course have conspiracies, from Russia to the USA, whose own federal agencies are divided in what to do with such a discovery. Use it, destroy it, or weaponise it?

All in all, a rather good book about a very disturbing concept.




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Most Recent Customer Reviews

5.0 out of 5 stars Engrossing fast-paced plot recommended for any fan of hard science fiction.
Justina Robson's MAPPA MUNDI provides engrossing action in telling of a medical nanotechnology advancement which affects psychologist Natalie's research, suddenly catapulted into... Read more
Published on January 4, 2007 by Midwest Book Review

1.0 out of 5 stars The US details in this book just don't stand up
It annoys me when foreigners writing about the US can't get their details right. A quick reading by an American could have picked up on the Anglicisms that slipped into this... Read more
Published on November 2, 2005 by Rainy Day Reader

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