As the back book jacket reveals, Freenet is a novel about the “power of [free] information…in a
post-digital age.” The book explores what digital immortality means, when
“consciousness has been digitized and cybersouls uploaded to a near-omniscient
data-matrix.” This is a world where information “is currency and the truth
belongs to whoever has the greatest bandwidth.”
Stanton shared with me that he was inspired to write the novel
“from the simple observation of watching a woman lose her cellphone. Young people
today are so tied to technology that they freak out when the strings are cut.
In the future when life experience is delivered directly to the brain by wi-fi,
the personal loss will be catastrophic.”
Told in three parts, the book begins with Simara Ying—a
plugged-in V-net jockey and spacer—about to crash-land on the desert planet
Bali. Her rescuer, a naïve—almost too nice to be true—native, Zen Valda,
introduces her to his cave-dwelling culture with no social network support. The persistent
electromagnetic storms of Bali interfere with digital communication and wipe
all data. Like a baby removed from her comfortable womb, Simara survives
panic attacks and heavy withdrawal chiefly because she is bombarded so heavily
with Bali experiences that demand her attention. Lost without the support of
her V-net—a comforting web of infinite communication and information—Simara
struggles with Bali’s foreign ways. At every turn, she stumbles across some
custom or taboo, forced to rely on her own wits; making the kind of mistakes
she’s not used to making. More than a simple communication/information tool,
the V-net embraces Simara with confidence. Without it, she fears she may go
insane.
Intrigue arrives on Bali and chases Simara with a bounty on
her head for murder. Zen demonstrates a simple faith in her innocence and helps
her escape. Zen accepts a cochlear installation to connect him to the V-net,
thinking it will help him better communicate with Simara, who—already somewhat
distant—is even more so now that she has reunited with the V-net. The V-net instead overwhelms him with a
surging sea of irrelevant chatter and information, which threatens to drive him
insane. Struggling with chaotic information overload, he remains with Simara,
even after she estranges herself from him and is captured for murder. They
escape and survive an arranged “accident” by literally jumping into space from
an abandoned troopship about to crash.
The story deepens into nuanced commentary in the last third
of the book when Roni Hendrik, an energetic V-net anchorman of the Daily Buzz, pokes into the intrigue
surrounding Simara Ying. He discovers that she is biogenic, an omnidroid—bioengineered
from human DNA—and likely smuggled from Earth.
Omnidroids share a major cerebral augmentation that includes
unlimited access to the V-net, higher intelligence and an unknown possibility
of enhancements, including pre-cognition and telepathy across vast distances.
Created as effective firewalls and filters, omnidroids streamline all V-net
data for users across the galaxy. “Omnidroids [are] born into zero-day digital
space and live in a fantasyland far beyond the mortal sphere of intelligence,”
Henrik reflects, sensing a deeper story than a simple murder conspiracy.
“Physical experience and bodily sensation [are] only tiny fragments of their
transcendent existence, mundane accessories to digital infinity. In time,” Henrik
concludes, “life itself might become a vestigial appendage.”
Nina holding a pre-release copy of Freenet |
Hendrik, a humanist and closet idealist, pieces together
connections with Neurozonics a New
Jerusalem private corporation, responsible for the creation of biogenic humans.
With holdings in a vast range of areas and an streaming amoeba of interests, Neurozonics is “a grinning spider on a
translucent web of intrigue.” One discovery leads Henrik to more. He learns
that the omnidroid community, to which Simara belongs, acts and communicates
like a hive-mind, guided by a collective voice called “Mothership”. Other
omnidroids have been targeted for elimination—and killed. Hell-bent on getting
answers, Henrik confronts the owner of Neurozonics,
Colin Macpherson—the same Macpherson who created the wormhole. Macpherson was
uploaded earlier and runs his empire from digital space, part of the consortium
of eternal intellect.
Henrik’s meeting with Colin8 (the seventh clone of the
original Colin Macpherson) runs like a “Neo-Architect” lecture in which the
truth behind the omnidroids deaths is revealed. It’s not what you might think. Macpherson
divulges his vision, which includes the reason for omnidroids’ communication
abilities and the role of the Neurozonic
brain. The ultimate meaning and use of the omnidroid freenet ties to a greater
destiny that redefines what it is to be human and subverts the history of our
primordial origins.
The story flows seamlessly from one perspective to another
with crisp page-turning narrative, action and intrigue. Stanton trades some
richness of character for a page-turning plot and clever dialogue. If there is
a weakness in the narrative for me, it lies with Simara, the arcane omnidroid,
who remains mysterious—from her introduction aboard her ship about to crash
land, to the limited revelations of her character during her interactions with
Zen, both in her POV and in his. Considering her unique characteristics and
experiences as an omnidroid, I would have enjoyed more insight to her unique
outlook and perspective, especially when faced with no social network—perhaps
the most frightening experience for an omnidroid: to be disconnected from the
hive. On the other hand, Zen Valda as the simple Bali boy on an insane rollercoaster
ride is painted with a sensitive and graceful hand. Stanton also skillfully
portrays his news team, Roni and Gladyz, with finesse and subtly clever notes.
The dialogue and overall interactions between them is some of the most
enjoyable of the novel.
Ultimately, Stanton’s Freenet
flows like a fresh turbulent river, scouring and building up sediment then
meandering like an oxbow into areas that surprise. He lulls you into
expectation, based on your own vision of the digital world, then—like a bubble
bursting—releases a quantum paradox of wormhole possibility.
Freenet will be available in Canada on April 1 and in USA on
April 12. Preorders are open on Amazon in both countries.
Nina Munteanu is an ecologist and internationally published author of award-nominated speculative novels, short stories and non-fiction. She is co-editor of Europa SF and currently teaches writing courses at George Brown College and the University of Toronto. Visit www.ninamunteanu.ca for the latest on her books. Nina’s recent book is the bilingual “La natura dell’acqua / The Way of Water” (Mincione Edizioni, Rome). Her latest “Water Is…” is currently an Amazon Bestseller and NY Times ‘year in reading’ choice of Margaret Atwood.
Nina Munteanu is an ecologist and internationally published author of award-nominated speculative novels, short stories and non-fiction. She is co-editor of Europa SF and currently teaches writing courses at George Brown College and the University of Toronto. Visit www.ninamunteanu.ca for the latest on her books. Nina’s recent book is the bilingual “La natura dell’acqua / The Way of Water” (Mincione Edizioni, Rome). Her latest “Water Is…” is currently an Amazon Bestseller and NY Times ‘year in reading’ choice of Margaret Atwood.