"Paul Levinson's It's Real Life is a page-turning exploration into that multiverse known as rock and roll. But it is much more than a marvelous adventure narrated by a master storyteller...it is also an exquisite meditation on the very nature of alternate history." -- Jack Dann, The Fiction Writer's Guide to Alternate History

Tuesday, September 8, 2020

Review of Tobias Cabral's New Eyes: Newer Worlds

Tobias Cabral picked a good time to send me his 2018 novel New Eyes for review.   Mars is in the air.  Actually, it's always been in the air, or at least, at the top of the air, in the sky.  But NASA's Perseverance is on its way to Mars, with a landing date in February of next year.  Elon Musk wants to colonize the Red Planet (I'm 100% on board, here's a talk I gave at the 19th Annual International Mars Society Convention at The Catholic University in Washington, DC on 23 September 2016):

And I just saw, loved, and reviewed the first season of Away on Netflix.

Cabral's novel starts in February 2047.  Trips to Mars take just four days.  There's a space station named "Jeff Bezos," a ship named the "Elon Musk," and androids are "equipped with ‘minds’ that could not just pass but proctor the Turing Test" (italic and quotes around 'minds' in the novel).  And, at least one is capable of murder.  With the result that New Eyes is just as much in the tradition of Westworld and the new Raised by Wolves (see my reviews) as it is a descendant of The Martian Chronicles and The Martian.

But as the title suggests, the fulcrum of this narrative are eyes, in particular Gaspar's "Martian eyes".  The character's a "bio-cyberneticist," women desire his body, and his new eyes in effect make him a human on the way to becoming an android, in the time-honored Six Million Dollar Man way.

The novel also has resonance to the work of Orson Scott Card (sims play an important role, as in, you often can't tell what's really really real) and, to my eyes, at least, the novel reads a lot like Isaac Asimov (a big compliment in my book).   But as to the plot, well, Mars is "a mostly-unpopulated planet" at this point,  and this "young Martian society" is populated by humans and increasingly by androids.  Could this actually happen by 2047?  Probably not (more because of the androids than living on Mars).  But my late editor at Tor, David Hartwell, always told me that readers are willing to grant you at least one big part of a story they find unbelievable, and I'm happy to grant Cabral that.   I should also mention that Cabral throws in a bit more repartee humor than does Asimov -- someone comments that someone has a "nice assonance... that sounded naughty" -- and there's even some rapping in this story.

But that still doesn't tell you much about the nuts and bolts of the plot, does it?   You'll need to set your eyes on the novel to find that out.  Ok, I'm in a good mood.  Here's a quote from the novel: - think "alternate branches in a Many Worlds Hypothesis time travel story".  And enjoy.


first starship to Alpha Centauri leaves from Mars Vestibule ...


7 comments:

Noocyte said...

THANK you for the Lovely review!

Note: If someone told me we'd have sentient androids and a Mars city in 2047 (all other things being equal), I'd laugh in their face.

However, this qualifies as an "Alternate Future" tale (hence "Bravo Timeline"), given certain things going very differently in our own past (as per other tales of whose Meta-Arc this one partakes... ;-)

Paul Levinson said...

Fair point - although one could argue that alternate universes is itself a highly implausible or unbelievable concept - more implausible than time travel itself, as I point out here https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=x1P8xqSLsAw

Noocyte said...

Well, as I understand it, the math works out, quantum-wise. But regardless, whether one views this as infinite alternate realities existing "simultaneously" in a multiverse, or simply as an exercise in re-running *one* line of history with different parameters, it still offers the tasty option of exploring how things might have gone differently. Which is always fun (Just ask Harry Turtledove)!

Paul Levinson said...

I agree -- alternate realities are lots of fun to write, read, and explore. But my point, in the context of this review, is that androids and human life on Mars at the end of the 2040s in our reality is highly improbable. Making it an alternate reality -- not ours -- only increases the improbability load (unless it was abundantly clear from the beginning that this was an alternate reality, which "Bravo Timeline" does suggest, but didn't make clear, at least to my muddy brain) :)

Noocyte said...

There was actually a companion short story prequel ("Call Me Al") which was *supposed* to be released with New Eyes, and which would have made this much more clear (plus provided some important backstory for Michael). Alas, that never came to pass.

I'd be happy to send it to you (it's maybe a 20-minute read, at most) if you're interested.

Paul Levinson said...

Yes, by all means please do send to me - I'd love to read it.

Noocyte said...

Cool! I'll PM a link to you straight away!

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