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Whole Wide World
 
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Whole Wide World (Hardcover)

by Paul McAuley (Author)
3.7 out of 5 stars See all reviews (6 customer reviews)

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Product details

  • Hardcover: 400 pages
  • Publisher: Voyager; 1st UK edition edition (3 Sep 2001)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10: 0002259036
  • ISBN-13: 978-0002259033
  • Average Customer Review: 3.7 out of 5 stars See all reviews (6 customer reviews)
  • Amazon.co.uk Sales Rank: 1,720,211 in Books (See Bestsellers in Books)

Product Description

Amazon.co.uk Review
Paul McAuley continues to show his SF versatility in Whole Wide World, a noir thriller opening in a near-future London where government obsession with pornography, surveillance and regulating the Internet still hasn't made crime go away. Quite the contrary.

When a girl is slowly, horribly murdered as a sick piece of performance art relayed by WebCams to the world, the undersized detective-inspector narrator becomes obsessed with this case. Though disgraced and stuck in the backwater of the Met's former Information Technology Unit (eclipsed by much sexier IT squads), he doggedly keeps following leads--including red herrings planted by hostile colleagues.

The killing connects to international porn barons, to the twilight world of thuggish "security" firms and contract killers, and to SF hardware secrets of the omnipresent street cameras that allow automatic 24/7 surveillance of absolutely anyone. Who is the "Avenger" who taunts the narrator with e-mail routed through anonymous data havens in prosperous, unregulated Cuba? Meanwhile, atrocities of the recent InfoWar--when data terrorists wreaked havoc on the City--still cast a long, unfair shadow over his career.

When this crime's deeper motives and implications become clear, there's further frustration. Certain villains are beyond British law, or above it. Even the UK government invokes all its powers of censorship to keep the lid on. It's entirely against orders that our DI hero flies to Cuba for a finale of high-tech shenanigans and violent action.

Despite the bleak background of Whole Wide World, there's a thoroughly satisfying outcome. A good, tough and thoughtful SF thriller. --David Langford

Review
'This is the big one. Fast, intense and right on the edge of the headlines.' Greg Bear 'Paul McAuley pulls off that rare balancing act of exploring big concepts while telling an absorbing and entertaining story' New Scientist 'Usually you get ideas or voice. With McAuley you get both - in spades. Without question the most exciting of Britain's new-edge writers' Michael Marshall Smith

Near-future police thriller from the author of such significant SF yarns as The Secret of Life (2001) and the far-future Confluence Trilogy. As the UK slowly recovers from the effects of the InfoWar-electronic/computer devastation and street violence promulgated by a mysterious alliance of external terrorists and internal insurrectionists-millions of cameras connected to the smart computer system ADESS keep London completely under surveillance. John, a drunken, despairing detective, loathed and despised by many of his colleagues for apparent cowardice during the InfoWar, bears various nicknames (his fellow officers, disparaging his stature, call him "Minimum"; to his sometime girlfriend Julie, he's "Dixon," an old-time bobby, unarmed and on foot, patrolling a community where he knows everybody). Despite being sidelined into the near-defunct police computer unit T12, he's drawn into the torture/murder of performance artist Sophie Booth, the deed done before a live Webcam by someone wearing a Margaret Thatcher mask. John suspects a previous acquaintance, the oleaginous, psychotic computer whiz Barry Deane, who unfortunately has a cast-iron alibi: in anything-goes Cuba, he was running porn Web sites (illegal in the UK) for his Maltese mafia bosses. But why did Sophie Booth's murderer strip the hard drives from her computers? What was Anthony Booth, Sophie's fabulously rich uncle and developer of the ADESS system, doing in Sophie's flat? And how could Sophie apparently vanish from ADESS's purview at will? A rare combination of soft-boiled hero, gut-churning crime, official puritanism, and commercial arrogance, whose chilling, all-too-believable backdrop will be instantly recognized by anyone familiar with the UK's already prevalent CCTV schemes. (Kirkus Reviews)

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Customer Reviews

6 Reviews
5 star:
 (1)
4 star:
 (3)
3 star:
 (1)
2 star:
 (1)
1 star:    (0)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
3.7 out of 5 stars (6 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

 
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Complex but intriguing techno-thriller, 19 Mar 2004
By dogbarkssome (England) - See all my reviews
(TOP 100 REVIEWER)      
This review is from: Whole Wide World (Paperback)
At first glance Whole Wide World appears to be a mainstream thriller, and a definite change of pace from McAuley’s usual science fiction output. In fact, this novel is very close in feel to McAuley’s earlier novel Pasquale’s Angel, as a hard-boiled murder mystery is played out against a familiar but altered background.

The setting this time is very near future Britain, where despite the growth of the information age the authorities (aided by the ‘Protect the Children’ act) clamp down on the internet with an almost puritanical zeal. This skewed background gives the novel an interesting grounding, while the lead character follows a more conventional investigation of a net-broadcast murder linked to the designer of the ever-present security camera’s constantly observing the populace.

The plot is suitably twisty, with plenty of complex leads to follow, though the story possibly over-extends itself with its Cuban finale dragging out the final confrontation. There’s little attempt to hide the identity of the bad guy throughout, this is a novel that prefers to concentrate on the whys and wherefores. The lead is sympathetic, but while he’s no Dirty Harry ultimately the ‘disgraced cop goes it alone against his superiors wishes’ is a little clichéd and predictable.

Not McAuley’s best, but a good solid near-future thriller with some thought-provoking angles on Big Brother technology.

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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Great read - I hope it does not come close to reality, 22 Jul 2002
By A. J. Sudworth "tonysudworth" (UK) - See all my reviews
(TOP 500 REVIEWER)    (REAL NAME)      
This review is from: Whole Wide World (Paperback)
This book is a murder story ( a gory one at that) bringing in very neatly the changes to our lives that the Internet has brought. The extrapolation of the effects of CCTV, RIP laws allowing access to all our electronic activity and terrorist activity that destroyed the financial system create a background for a very dark future here in the UK where Cuba(!) is held up as a model for a free society and it is the UK where censorship has run wild.

The lead character is damaged by his past experiences as a policeman but has retained a clear view of right and wrong that seems to very blurred in this story (on both sides, criminal and business).

Personally, this book has a soundtrack because of the references to music from the period 76-82(ish) - the images conjured up the music of the Clash (sadly , no reference to 'I Fought the Law' and 'Police and Thieves', although that may have been a bit obvious..) of a society barely hanging together works very well indeed. The hero also has a mechanical owl which gives a link to Bladerunner and the same type of society

The plot is complicated, and you do wonder on occaision who the 'good guys' are but the story draws you in - I think it would make a very good film as well

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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Almost brilliant, 19 Jun 2002
By Jonathan Waterlow - See all my reviews
(TOP 1000 REVIEWER)    (REAL NAME)   
So this is cyberpunk. I'd often wondered. And it's very good, too. I hadn't read any of Paul McAuley's work before this, and was pleasantly surprised to find the quality within the suitably "cutting-edge" type cover.

The story is essentially a crime novel, with the ever-popular copper with a slightly dubious lifestyle, but the book also deals with the issue of constant observation from technology, in a Big Brother-esque manner. The internet is a major element in the crime, and it's good to see an author who has taken the contemporary on board and brought us a very-near future which incorporates something so popular and growing now; it makes the story a lot more believable and frightening in its potential accuracy.

McAuley's prose is for the most part smooth and well-paced; from the beginning this is a very well written book. Unfortunately, towards the end this tails off, and the impression is of the book rambling on too long after it should have finished. After a certain point, where the baddie is revealed, this book should have ended...but McAuley takes it on and on where it really doesn't need to go. The impact of the ending is essentially lost, and I put the book down with a somewhat diluted response to the highly positive one I'd had all the way through up till the closing chapters.

Nevertheless, this is a very entertaining book, and one I would definitely recommend to both crime and science-fiction readers alike. Clearly not McAuley's best work, this is a cut above many specific crime writers of today.

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Most Recent Customer Reviews

3.0 out of 5 stars A disapointing effort from UK's finest sf writer
As the best British sf writer of his generation,it was with hopes raised that I began www,but after a good start the plot fizzles into formulaic and uninspiring territory,readers... Read more
Published on 5 Jan 2002

2.0 out of 5 stars McAuley is no James Ellroy!
Although I have enjoyed McAuley's previous novels for their rich imagination, good pacing and finely drawn characters, I found his new book to be dull and sluggish, uninteresting... Read more
Published on 15 Sep 2001

4.0 out of 5 stars Quite a feat
I approached this with trepidation. I'd tried to read McAuley's Arthur C.Clarke award winning 'Fairyland' and just couldn't get on with it, so didn't hold out much hope for a... Read more
Published on 11 Sep 2001

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