T2 Infiltrator (S. M. Stirling), T2 book 1
I love when authors are handed either a deal too good to pass up or are needing some extra barbecue cash, and take up the mantle of authorship to write shitty movie adaptation books. Piers Anthony wrote the novelization of ‘Total Recall’ (based on the PK Dick short), Orson Scott Card novelized ‘The Abyss’.. and apparently S.M. Stirling wrote a trilogy of Terminator Universe novels.
I picked up T2 Infiltrator for a two dollars at Goodwill. Anyone who knows me is aware that I really think Stirling is a bad writer. I like his plot lines and a lot of characters, but in general, I find that his books piss me off more than they are enjoyed, they drag on and are soooo soooo soooo heavy handed.. In this case,? I thought, ‘hey, its Stirling, I should give it a shot. Worst expected scenario is that it would be hum drum and just pass some time’. Turns out that it was a damn good book.
Knowing that time is elastic, and apt to revert to it’s original shape, SkyNet’s goal is now to work in the background. It’s primary goal is to bounce the time line back to its original shape. To do this, SkyNet needs a more malleable and versatile tool. In the future, SkyNet is building a new terminator (go figure, right?), this one is grown in a captured slave human’s womb. It is born and immediately surgically implanted with gear, grown in spurts via chemicals, and given constant combat training. A permanent mental connection/lifeline to the SkyNet system to ensure an addiction to the computer “mother’.
This new Infiltrator model’s (the I-950) biggest problem is emotions. Drugs, surgery, and training have removed most of these obstacles, but these pesky emotions are actually why the Infiltrator was created. If you cant feel, you cannot successfully infiltrate. Humans have a tendency to be able to notice unfeeling machines. The trouble is making sure that the Infiltrator can be aware of emotion, but still hold true to it’s design.
The book starts off very slow, but the background info is needed. Picking up right after the end of the 2nd movie, Cyberdyne has been blown to hell and back and is burning rubble. Dyson’s family is torn up at the loss of their father/husband/brother. The Connor mother/son have disappeared to South America. It speeds up though, and gets difficult to put down within a reasonable period of time.
Book 2 and 3 are in the mail to me, I suppose I can say I like Stirling a lot better when he is writing under someone else’s initial premise, as opposed to his own. The book has been crafted in a way that makes none of the existing plot lines incorrect, this helped with my opinion.
One annoyance -? It is hard to “Suspend disbelief” when things hit so close to reality.. see the below for an example.
Based on this book, all it takes to hide a killing machine from the future is to:
- put it in a pleasantly shaped female body
- teach it to use sex as a weapon
- make it manipulative and cold
- teach it to ignore it’s emotions unless they prove useful
- make sure that it knows how to convincingly employ ‘small talk’
- assume it is always right and that its desires are predestined;
I have to wonder.. Is nearly every woman I ever met a robot/cyborg out to kill mankind?
- Pages: 544
- Publisher: Harper Voyager (2002)
- ISBN-10: 0380808161
- ISBN-13: 978-0380808168
I get where you're coming from on Stirling. Harry Turtledove walks that line in his Alternative History novels. I find I care enough about the characters to get past the heavy handed plot lines.
ReplyDeleteThe Abyss novelization? I really liked it. I found the first three chapters really enjoyable in how they gave a vivid past to each of the three main characters that helped me "buy" the choices they made in the main body of the story. It's why I love books more than movies in that way, you get more time and more of a context to the characters.
Also, you're Killing Machine recipe was one of the many problems I had with the new Battlestar Galactica, i.e. #6 (also, talk about heavy handed...)
i actually really enjoy novelizations, but i do think that they seem to occur when an author is tight on cash, this is perception, but it would make an interesting author survey :)
ReplyDeleteAbyss and the Willow novel rank high in my view of the genre..
now, how do i get all the movie adapting authors to pay attention to some well crafted survey spam that should be cobbled together and mass mailed to them....